Maverick Cleric Is a Hit on Arab TV
Al-Jazeera Star Mixes Tough Talk With Calls for Tolerance

Sheik Yusuf Qaradawi has condemned the prospect of a U.S. war against Iraq
and voices support for Palestinian suicide bombings, but also embraces
modern technology, women's rights and democracy for the Muslim world.
(Anthony Shadid -- The Washington Post)

By Anthony Shadid
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, February 14, 2003; Page A01
DOHA, Qatar -- His head draped in a white scarf in the tradition of the
prophet Muhammad and his body made soft by years of religious study, Sheik
Yusuf Qaradawi spoke slowly, his words simple, measured and frank.

The U.S. military has occupied the Persian Gulf, he declared, and any Muslim
who dies trying to expel it should be deemed a martyr. An invasion of Iraq
will "grow the seeds of hatred," giving rise to another Osama bin Laden,
perhaps a thousand Osama bin Ladens. Palestinian suicide bombings --
martyrdom operations, he insisted -- are the weapon of the weak, their toll
justified as a defense of sacred land.

Moments later, he seamlessly shifted to words more welcome in the West.
Women must be given greater rights, he said, and autocratic Arab states must
turn to democracy. Islam must reform and celebrate tolerance. Terrorism like
the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks must be denounced. "By God, I was sympathetic
with the Americans from the beginning," the 76-year-old sheik explained in
an interview. "But truthfully, I didn't imagine then that America would go
on to declare a war against the world."

The views espoused by Qaradawi -- part religious scholar, part television
star and part enigma -- have made him one of the most celebrated figures in
the Arab world. His teachings are carried on what many contend is the most
popular weekly show on al-Jazeera, the Arab satellite network. In
translation, his tapes and videos are available as far away as Indonesia and
Malaysia.

Qaradawi's appeal provides an insight into the religious currents flowing
through the Middle East in the shadow of a war with Iraq. Despite the Bush
administration's continuous insistence that terrorism is the enemy, many in
this part of the world have interpreted the anti-terrorism campaign as a war
against Islam. In this landscape, seething with resentment and perceptions
of injustice, the Egyptian cleric is seen as a voice of moderation.

That might not seem obvious in the United States, given his views. But taken
as a whole, Arab analysts point out, Qaradawi's message gives voice to what
many view as the Arab Muslim mainstream, embracing awe of the United States,
fear of its power, admiration of its democratic ideals -- and loathing of
the way those ideals are often put into practice. Unlike the views of
Western-oriented reformers or secular activists, his message is heard around
the region.

"When you talk about Sheik Qaradawi, you're talking about an audience of
hundreds of millions of Muslims across the world, someone who actually
creates public opinion," said Azzam Tamimi, director of the Institute of
Islamic Political Thought in London. "If Sheik Qaradawi gives a fatwa," he
said, using the term for a religious ruling, "that fatwa will be heeded
tomorrow in hundreds of places around the world."
Qaradawi is among a prestigious and relatively small group of
Arabic-speaking religious leaders who emerged over the past decade at the
intersection of technology and faith, using modern communications to deliver
blunt and often provocative messages. At the same time, these people have
maintained independence from governments, enhancing their reputations as
straight talkers.

Qaradawi has the added reputation of being a reformer, a voice not afraid to
defy 1,300 years of sometimes sclerotic religious study. It is a measure of
attitudes in the Middle East that his critics chastise him not for his
support of Palestinian suicide attacks or his opposition to war in Iraq, but
for his demand that Christians and Jews be respected as "people of the book"
who share the God of Abraham.

Among those in the most militant strands of Islam, his fondness for movies
and music is scandalous. Qaradawi is said to enjoy listening to Um Kalthoum,
an Egyptian singer who is still a giant more than 25 years after her death.
His call for dialogue with non-Muslims, some contend, is naive. They see in
his embrace of democracy and his call for greater women's rights a slavish
imitation of the West. In elections last year in Bahrain, he wrote a fatwa
sanctioning women, especially those past their child-bearing years, as
candidates in municipal elections. A Saudi cleric quickly weighed in: Not
permitted, he ruled.

"The sheik is a one-and-only kind of guy," said Maher Abdullah, 43, the host
of "Sharia and Life," the 90-minute program on al-Jazeera that carries
Qaradawi across the Arab world and beyond. "He is a cast of his own."

Abdullah recalled that Qaradawi traveled with a delegation of religious
scholars to Afghanistan in 2001 to appeal to the Taliban to save the
towering, almost 2,000-year-old statues of Buddha in Bamian. More
conservative voices accused him of supporting idol worship and paganism.
"It's like they were talking about [Israeli Prime Minister] Ariel Sharon,"
Abdullah said.

Far more controversial was Qaradawi's consent to a fatwa in October 2001
that legitimized American Muslims fighting in the U.S. Army in Afghanistan.
Caller after caller lambasted Qaradawi, Abdullah recalled, but the Egyptian
cleric held his ground. "I had faxes saying, okay, Sheik Qaradawi, Afghan
orphans will put slogans on their chests saying our fathers were killed by
American Muslims because Sheik Qaradawi said they could do so," Abdullah
said.

And then there was the show still gossiped about more than four years later.
The topic was sex in marriage and, by the standards of a deeply conservative
Arab world, the talk about what was sanctioned under Islam was graphic.
Qaradawi was decidedly liberal. The crux of his message: The bottom line is
consent of both partners.

Qaradawi made clear in the interview that he was seeking to create a new,
moderate current in Muslim thinking, one that "seeks balance between
intellect and the heart, between religion and the world, between
spirituality and materialism and between individualism and the group." To do
so, Qaradawi is fighting tradition that, Abdullah said, "takes a bulldozer
to shift just a little." Some colleagues and family members point to a past
that fostered what they see as his independent path.

Qaradawi was born in 1926 in Saft Turab, an Egyptian village in the Nile
delta crisscrossed by irrigated cotton farms. His father died before his
birth. His mother followed before he was a year old. Raised by aunts and
uncles, Qaradawi was urged to choose a way to make a living -- running a
grocery or perhaps learning carpentry, said his son, Mohamed Qaradawi.

Instead, he memorized the Koran before his 10th birthday and embraced
religion as a course of study at Al-Azhar University, the preeminent seat
for Sunni Muslim scholarship in Cairo. From there, he was swept up by the
seismic events shaping Egypt after World War II. Like thousands of other
Egyptians, he embraced the teachings of Hassan Banna, founder of the Muslim
Brotherhood, who enunciated a message not unfamiliar today: religious
renewal, a fierce nationalism wrapped in faith and hostility to what was
perceived as an imperial West. Throughout was a subtle critique of the
weakness and corruption of the Arab world's own leadership.

The Brotherhood ran afoul of Egypt's rulers. Qaradawi was imprisoned first
under the monarchy in 1949, then three times after the revolution that
brought Gamal Abdel Nasser to power in 1952. He was tortured, but says
little about the experience. By 1961, he had left Egypt, settling in the
Persian Gulf state of Qatar and eventually distancing himself from the
Brotherhood's politics.

"His objective was never to satisfy anyone. He always had his own way of
thinking," said Mohamed Qaradawi, 35, a professor of mechanical engineering
at Qatar University. "He does feel it, the pressure. I believe he's a
moderate. He believes he's a moderate, yet there's all this pressure on him
from both sides to change his thinking. The Americans believe he's an
extremist; the [Muslim] extremists in places like London think he's sold
out."

During the interview, Qaradawi sat somewhat feebly in his home, which is
adorned with East Asian art and gold Koranic inscriptions set on black. But
he became impassioned when he spoke of the Palestinian uprising and suicide
bombings -- a term he rejects.

"God gave the weak weapons that enable them to resist the powerful," he
said, mixing the formal Arabic of scholarship with the colloquial Egyptian
Arabic. "With these weapons they can sacrifice their lives for the sake of
their countries and their people. These weapons are the only ones that
others cannot wrest away from them."
That view -- widespread in the region -- has wrecked Qaradawi's reputation
among some in the West. Soon after he issued a fatwa sanctioning such
attacks, he said, Qatari officials passed on a message to him from the U.S.
Embassy that his 10-year U.S. visa had been revoked.

The passion of his anti-U.S. statements has deepened since. He has denounced
the prospect of a U.S.-led attack on Iraq. While not calling for attacks on
U.S. soldiers, he said those killed trying to expel them should be
considered martyrs. He said he is not opposed to a U.S. presence in the
region, but that the latest buildup has evolved into an occupation laying
the groundwork for an illegitimate strike against an Arab and Muslim
country.

"My position is against this war, which has no justification. In my view,
the death, ruin and destruction it will bring will bequeath hatred between
West and East, between Americans and Arabs and Muslims," he said. "It's not
necessary."

He also lamented U.S. support for Arab governments in a region populated by
what he called "democracies of 99.99 percent."

Unlike many Muslim scholars, he said he believes that Israel and a
Palestinian state can coexist. In a region where bin Laden is often declared
innocent of the Sept. 11 attacks, he was forthright in assigning blame and
called on Arabs to give blood for the victims. In the interview, he praised
Western ideals, if not the way they are carried out in the Middle East.

Three of his four daughters have PhDs from British universities -- in
nuclear physics, organic chemistry and botany. The fourth has a master's
degree in biology from the University of Texas. His son Mohamed earned his
PhD from the University of Central Florida in Orlando. One of his two other
sons is working toward a master's degree in business administration at the
American University in Cairo.

"In the modern age, Muslims and Arabs considered America a friend to them,
the closest to them," Qaradawi said after demanding his guest drink the
carrot juice he had offered. "America had not occupied Arab nations or
Islamic nations. It didn't have the historical baggage that the British,
French, Spanish, Italians, even the Dutch, who colonized Indonesia, had. Its
history was unblemished."

There is still room for dialogue and respect, he insisted, despite the
prospect of war, and coexistence, even now, is a better goal than a clash of
civilizations. "We're all the sons of Adam," he said.

� 2003 The Washington Post Company


Faiz Sahri
School of Electrical Engineering
Purdue University
http://www.brotherfaiz.blogspot.com
(765)7432255


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