http://gulfnews.com/opinions/columnists/religion-is-here-an-echo-of-an-era-that-some-believed-was-gone-1.1141804

Religion is here — an echo of an era that some believed was gone
It is only through the opposition of ideas that we can learn to be 
self-critical, to work towards intellectual humility

  a.. By Tariq Ramadan, Special to Gulf News 
  b.. Published: 00:01 February 5, 2013 
  c.. 

  a.. Reader comments (4)
Last week, I participated in a fascinating debate at Cambridge University, 
featuring professor Richard Dawkins, an evolutionary biologist and fierce 
defender of atheism, and Dr Rowan Williams, former Archbishop of Canterbury. 
Our subject: the incompatibility of religion with modern society and the 
challenges of the 21st century. Professor Dawkins and his camp asserted that 
religion is more dangerous than beneficial; that it is inherently 'evil'. For 
him, the thesis of a Creator of the universe is little more than a (bad) idea, 
a totally non-demonstrable aberration. His approach was aggressive, 
cutting-edge, quite dogmatic — religion is dangerous; we should thus be 
critical of its wild claims and hope that it simply vanishes. For someone who 
poses as a rational humanist, it was a curious posture: We should “eliminate” 
our adversary and seek its destruction in the name of “scientific” facts that 
alone are true and alone deserve respect. Could dogmatism be the child of 
rationalism as well as of religion?

However, first things first.

The “truth” of the non-existence of the Creator is nothing more than a 
postulate that cannot be demonstrated, as Dawkins, like many scientists and 
philosophers before him, recognises. It is nothing more than an “opinion,” a 
“belief,” just as much the product of “faith” as the opposing thesis. Atheist 
rationalism cannot claim for itself a monopoly of scientific validity for the 
simple reason that its view of God is not “scientific,” is not proof-based and 
is in fact an assemblage of hypotheses and probabilities. However, most 
dismaying is the attitude and the quasi-religious intellectual posturing of 
those who seek the demise of religion. If religious people deny paradise to 
their opponents or to “non-believers,” atheists would likewise seek to 
eliminate “dangerous” believers with their “childish” ways and their heads in 
the clouds. One would have thought that the only truly humanist attitude — 
midway between two theses that cannot prove themselves rationally and 
definitively — would be to make a commitment to ongoing debate, then actively 
pursue it out of concern for mutual intellectual integrity.

It is only through the opposition of ideas that we can learn to be 
self-critical, to work towards intellectual humility. The 21st century — and 
the atheists — needs the presence of religion, just as religion must deal with 
the real challenges and the thinkers of the day in order to sharpen the 
conscience and the intelligence of those who study the timeless sacred texts in 
a spirit of responding to the questions of their time. At Cambridge, when time 
came to vote, the audience found Dawkins and his supporters in the wrong. A 
strong majority of the more than one thousand students present concluded that 
religion has been and mustremain an accepted reference to humanity.

Taking a position in public debates

However, beneath the question under debate lies a malaise as deep as it is 
revealing. In today’s world, religion can certainly make itself heard in civil 
society, but seemingly only in response to complex questions raised by the 
contemporary world or formulated by agnostic or atheist progressives. Religion 
is called upon to deal with issues ranging from science and evolution to the 
status of women and homosexuality. These are important questions and today’s 
religious conscience must address them and take a position in public debates.

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Yet, the tone is polemical, with religion taking a defensive stance in a 
constant effort to justify itself. The historical balance of power has shifted, 
with the norms of progressive atheist or agnostic thought now being often 
unilaterally imposed. Pressure is increasing, to the point where we seem 
sometimes not too far removed from a new form of intellectual inquisition. 
Given these circumstances, it can be difficult to argue religion’s manifold 
contributions to the cultural evolution of mankind throughout history. The 
modern era has come to resemble a kind of “scientific,” “progressive,” 
“rational” (and irrational) courtroom in which religion itself is on trial for 
“belonging to the past.”

In the West, the new-found visibility of Muslim citizens and residents has 
transformed Islam into a prime target. Millions of Muslims — whose mosques, 
dress and religious practices are quite visible — pose a challenge to their 
fellow citizens, to intellectuals and politicians. Religion is back, an echo of 
an era that some people believed was gone forever. Muslims, as individuals, 
face the same constant pressure over the basic tenets of their faith, their 
practices and their positions on Sharia, on jihad, on terrorism, women, 
violence, headscarves etc.

Their religion and their presence are now defined as problems; they must devote 
much of their time in explaining exactly how this perception has no basis in 
fact. Politicians, intellectuals, journalists and simple citizens seem unable 
to grasp the idea that the presence of Islam and Muslims may be of some 
interest, that they may make some contribution to western societies. The most 
open-minded avoid pointing to problems, but few are ready to admit that Muslims 
may make a positive contribution (or that they may learn something from them). 
They urge Muslims to live a more normalised existence. In other words, to be 
far less visible. Some Muslims — lacking confidence — rush into the breach. 
What cannot be conceived is a positive presence of Islam in the West, based on 
participation and contribution. No. Islam remains a problem to be dealt with 
and little more.

And yet, the Muslim tradition, like all philosophies and religions, summons the 
human conscience to concern itself with the meaning of life, with human 
dignity, with respect for human dignity against a background of dangerous 
practices such as genetic engineering and the growing legalisation of torture. 
Muslim spirituality, from the traditional schools of jurisprudence to mystic 
circles (Sufism), invites the conscience and the heart to reflect upon the 
terms and conditions of the liberty of beings, to contemplate with detachment.

It even calls into question the excesses of consumerism and commercial 
servitude. Can there be nothing to share with citizens whose spiritual 
traditions and practices give pride of place to responsibility and to the 
imperative of becoming a subject, a whole being, a responsible adult? Just as 
do philosophies, other religions and spiritual traditions, Islam asks 
fundamental questions about the ultimate goals that we assign to our 
activities, be they political, economic or scientific and to the means 
(technological, military, etc.) we employ to reach them.

We must not and cannot seek to convert others, nor to restrict knowledge and 
freedom, but to raise serious questions about ends, about ethics, about our 
personal dignity and that of all beings and of Nature itself. At the heart of 
Islam lies an imperative of solidarity that our well-developed individualism 
cannot do without: The rights of the poor must become an integral part of the 
human conscience’s duty.

Full-fledged critical subjects

Can our societies do without this kind of reflection? Don’t they have any need 
for a wholesome debate on ethical principles and ultimate goals? Does religion 
in general and Islam in particular have nothing else to offer than the 
interminable justifications that lie at the core of a pernicious ideological 
conflict? Will the West at last become aware of the rich diversity that lies 
within it? Will it be able to find a proper way to make use of the presence of 
Islam and of Muslims in its midst by understanding their positive contribution 
to the great philosophical debates that our era so desperately needs? Will it 
be able to reconcile itself with its own values of pluralism and equality? And 
will Muslims be able to free themselves from a posture shaped by a sense of the 
victimhood of a visible minority, by their feeling that they are objects of the 
negative perceptions of their fellow citizens? Will they muster the courage to 
become intellectually, scientifically, artistically and ethically visible as 
full-fledged critical subjects, as believers no less free for being so?

The horizon of our common future lies at the confluence of these two sets of 
questions. West and East. Such is the fate of the rich and poor; the 
existential question we all must resolve.

Tariq Ramadan is professor of Contemporary Islamic Studies in the Faculty of 
Oriental Studies at Oxford University and a visiting professor at the Faculty 
of Islamic Studies in Qatar. He is the author of Islam and the Arab Awakening.


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