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Muslims after Boston 
LOS ANGELES 

Sub Categories: » HOMEPAGE / OPINION/ MUSTAFA AKYOL 

Wednesday,April 24 2013

I have been on the West Coast of the United States for about a week, but every 
time I turn on the TV, I see news and comments on something that happened on 
the East Coast: The horrible bombing at the Boston Marathon which killed three 
innocent people and injured scores of others.

This terrorist attack was certainly cruel and horrifying. For me, it was also 
painfully disturbing that the main suspects are Muslims. The two Chechen 
brothers who were captured by the Boston police – one dead, one half alive – 
seem to fit into the typical “militant Islamist” category: After leading 
relatively secular and modern lives in the U.S., at the older one, Tamerlan, at 
least, seems to have a born-again moment and a “radicalization” process back in 
the Caucasus.

Of course, nothing is clear yet. It is not even clear whether these two young 
men are really the culprits of the attack. Yet the unfolding of the events have 
been enough for the media to conclude that this is yet another case of 
terrorism in the name of Islam. A recent piece in the Wall Street Journal puts 
it clear enough: “Make No Mistake, It Was Jihad.”

Therefore, unless a big surprise comes up in the upcoming weeks, the Boston 
attacks will go down in the record as something related with Islam. And it will 
make the lives of Muslims living in the West more difficult.
Of course, no extremist can ever represent a whole community, let alone the 
Muslims of the whole world. That is why we call them extremists. Yet it is 
inevitable that the crimes of the few, especially since they are committed with 
some assumed justification from Islam, will raise questions about the attitudes 
of all Muslims. We Muslims can ask from Western societies that this not be the 
case, but we should also be realistic about it.

Therefore, it is imperative that Muslims, especially Western Muslims, speak out 
on this issue of Islam and violence and do so in a reasonable and compelling 
way.

This rarely happens, though. Hence the West keeps asking, “Why do moderate 
Muslims not speak out?” In fact, this is sometimes an unfair question, because 
the Muslims who do speak out are hardly highlighted by the Western media. The 
media, after all, believes “whatever bleeds leads,” and whoever is radical and 
disturbing should make the news.

However, the problem is not only limited to the biases of the Western media. On 
the Muslim side, here is what I see: Among the world’s 1.2 billion Muslims, 
some 10 percent, give or take, sympathize with the terrorist attacks on Western 
societies. They see them as a justified retaliation against what the West has 
done to Muslims, real or perceived.

The rest, say 90 percent of all Muslims, believe that indiscriminate violence 
has no place in Islam. (So, they are the “moderates.”) But most of them have 
another persuasion as well: They believe that all this rhetoric about “Islamist 
terrorism” is created by the West for imperialistic goals. Every instance of 
such terrorism, from Sept. 11 to Boston, in this view, are conspiracies crafted 
by the CIA, Mossad, or some other imagined evil.

In other words, these mainstream moderate Muslims just cannot accept that there 
can be Muslim fanatics who do genuinely believe in Islam, but who do horrible 
things in its name. Yet that is exactly the reality that we have in the world 
today. And it will be much better if we face it honestly and self-critically, 
without opting for denial and conspiracy. 
April/24/2013


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