http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=233848

 *The moderate Muslim*       Monday, April 12, 2010
Afiya Shehrbano

The last decade has been a particularly compelling one for many
self-conscious Muslims with regard to the moderate vs radical Islam debate.
Through the process, in varying degrees and capacities, a body of
self-acclaimed �moderate� scholars, students and vague academics have gained
relevance and even, international fame. There are those with iconic status,
such as Talal Asad and Mahmood Mamdani, who lend legitimacy to western
critical reasoning since they defend Islam against western attacks while
located in the West. Then there are small-time careerists such as Irshad
Manji and a spectrum of rainbow Muslims who have been well-received by
Europe and the US from Muslim countries and are speckled all over
new-founded Islamic departments within Western academia and media. Several
of these experts and scholars are often rejected (if they�re lucky,
persecuted) by their countries of origin - often not by their governments
but by obscure political opportunist forces. This tends to make them
subversive and academically sexy to western academia.

Often, such scholars have been largely irrelevant and ignored within their
societies of origin. This is because in Muslim-majority countries the
audiences tend to be less interested in academic debates and more interested
in piety, ritual and political delivery of religion. Also, in Muslim
societies there is such tremendous competition between religious discourses
that unless it�s a sensationalist blasphemous case purported by some
opportunist, it is unlikely to deserve monopolistic attention. In other
words, as in all disciplines and with all other persuasions of faith, the
higher academic debates elude the common people while the political ones
gain attention. It is due to the political relevance of Islamic scholars
that conflict erupts in Muslim-majority countries, not their academic
differences.

On the other hand, the scholarship that Muslim academics produce in the West
often attempts to disown radical Islamists or militant expressions of
Islamic belief and seeks recognition, even romanticisation, of the
subjectivity of the Moderate Muslim. This serves the political purpose of
western governments because the current globalised economy and spurts of
terrorism demand that politics stay more centrist, blunted, accommodative
and �safe� - for capital, not necessarily for people. In this environment,
the rhetoric of moderation and tolerance requires that we must purge
ourselves of every shade of non-moderate Muslim, ie, both the radical and
the secular. This has served as a popular political ploy for leaders, both
in Western countries but also in Muslim-majority ones.

What is the relevance of such projects? On the one hand, there is no denying
the importance of research, analysis, debate and disagreement on any topic
that lends itself to enhancing knowledge and ideas. However, it is when
academia begins to engage with the political, that the application of such
research comes up for discussion.

In an effort to buffer radical Islamic sentiment, moderate scholarship
attempts to build an alternative body of Islamic history and social norms
derived through an academic rather than political process. The trouble with
sapping out the politics from history is that it becomes rather dull,
pedantic and does not lend itself to the current (modern) political context.
So moderate scholars are split on this point; some suggest aligning Islamic
history to the current context and projected future, while the revivalists
tend to reject modernity and western universalism and are drawn to a newly
constructed, �culturally appropriate� alternative body of norms and laws for
Muslims. This latter proposal preoccupies western governments and societies,
where war has become unpopular and economically draining.

It also finds resonance in a new generation of young Muslims who have
witnessed the surge of anti-Muslim sentiment expressed by way of irreverent
cartoons, banning of veils and minarets in Europe. The careerist Muslim
scholars all around the world gained most in this period by using this as
evidence of the racism, Islamophobia and anti-liberal humanism that
preoccupies western politics and inflicts �moral injury� to Muslims
globally. This made it opportune for troubled leaders to construct the idea
of an alternative, soft, Sufi Islam. It didn�t matter that this makes
absolutely no policy sense and is simply a re-packaged way of suggesting the
state remain secular without actually saying so. Politically it has more
serious repercussions.

The trouble with such theory is that it gives a cover for intervention under
a more subtle guise. Republican-sponsored Islamophobia has given way in the
US to a liberal Democrat sentiment, seemingly prone to giving up on
defeating radical Islam by aggression. Instead, the current administration
seeks to pursue a policy that concedes to appeasing Muslim (male) sentiments
by funding projects that enable Muslims to develop themselves through
�Islamically appropriate� rights. This would mean not confronting,
disrupting or challenging existing patriarchal cultures or social practices
or getting into the troubling debate of whether they are religious or
cultural or both. What was earlier the hypocritical, sudden feminist concern
for Muslim women by the Bush administration has now become an equally
self-serving political approach by the Obama regime that wishes to graft a
presumed (moderate) Muslim identity on people in Muslim-majority countries.
This would suggest that development and relief should be carried out, to use
an example, by Islamic Relief rather than Red Cross; or projects should
assist Muslim women who can stay at home in veils and do home-based work
rather than changing the nature of the market to allow women equal and free
access; or, to form �peace jirgas� to resolve intra-Muslim conflict; or fund
and arm �culturally relevant� lashkar forces to defend real Muslims against
the spurious ones.

It�s one thing to respect religious sentiment but another to disregard the
multiplicity of internal cultural dynamics and struggles between competing
political identities within Muslim societies. Such a recognition would mean
no intervention, including not funding �culturally appropriate� projects nor
patronizing any religious persuasion (moderate or not). Instead, maybe the
only criteria for foreign assistance should be towards supporting democratic
civilian efforts rather than dictatorial and/or military ones.

Interestingly, those who admire western-based Muslim scholars who make
careers of promoting moderate Islam, do not accuse such intellectuals of
being influenced by western rationality or modernity. Ironically, however,
feminists and human rights activists who have spent their lives in their
home countries struggling for specific political rights, including equality
for women and secular rights in Muslim majority countries, are often
dismissed as �un-authentic�, �westernised�, misguided agents of secularism,
even liberal fundamentalists.

In the final analysis, the only purpose moderate Islamists (those who make a
career of promoting moderate Islam) have served is to have created a wider
wedge between the problematic and often, false binaries of the traditional
and modern, appropriate and inappropriate cultural and/or Islamic practices.
They serve the political purpose of a feel-good strategic use of religion
that accommodates some merger of what are considered, western rationality
and eastern conservatism. But ultimately, they are the fence-sitters who
have enabled the strategic use of Islam to further pragmatic political goals
without substantively making any deep, meaningful change. If anything,
moderate Islamists serve as buffers that may seem more acceptable than
radical ones but in the process they maintain the worst kind of patriarchal
and social conservatism because they endorse slow, gradual and limited
progress that does not contest the broader, entrenched and unequal status
quo.

The writer is an independent researcher based in Karachi. Email:
[email protected]

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