http://www.atimes.com/atimes/World/WOR-01-140513.html

May 14, '13

SPEAKING FREELY

Dogma costs Islam innovative edge
By Nicholas A Biniaris 

Speaking Freely is an Asia Times Online feature that allows guest writers to 
have their say. Please click here if you are interested in contributing. 

Dionysius of Halicarnassus wrote that "history is philosophy through paradigm", 
[1] while Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel in his Philosophy of History lectures 
said philosophy can view history as a unified narrative with a central theme. 

Hegel asserted that history's central theme is the march of Geist to freedom. 
Upon this Hegelian sweeping vision, Marx built his own sweeping narrative as 
did Francis Fukuyama after 1989. 

Hegel may have been a better student of history than his epigones because he 
didn't dabble in actual social-economic-political problems but formed his own 
conceptual tools to approach his subject in a theoretical way. 

He also called Islam the "Enlightenment of the East". According to Hegel, the 
East gave freedom to one, the emperor, the Satrap; the Hellenes had given 
freedom to some, the free citizens of Polis; and the Reformation and the 
Enlightenment gave freedom to all. 

Has Islam given freedom to all? In a sense, Hegel was right in the context of 
Asian imperiums. Islam gave to the faithful a saying in the Mosque, a canon, 
the Koran, to judge the ruler. But nothing actually changed from the practices 
of Eastern despotism. Islam didn't produce free citizens as political agents 
but kept the subjects of Asiatic empires subject to the will of the one. 

Hegel got it all wrong. His ad hoc reading of history, as a philosophical 
research project had lost track of reality and a sense of historical 
proportion. 

Today, the West, as the inheritor of a Christian culture, and the Muslim world, 
the faithful ones, are in a protracted conflict. Christianity, a religion of a 
Middle Eastern origin with Egyptian-Jewish roots, turned from an activistic 
conception of the beyond, Resurrection and Last Judgment, to a strong political 
force when Constantine the Great adopted it as the official religion of the 
Roman Empire; it turned to a universal one with the emperor getting the title 
of "Equal-to-the-Apostle". 

However, the Christian salvational universalism was arrested on 636 AD at the 
battle of Yarmouk River in Syria where the nascent Arab-Muslim Revolution 
defeated the Byzantine Imperial Army. [2] It was the most decisive battle of 
the last two millenniums as present history points to. 

Prophet Mohammed, as an original thinker and revolutionary, transformed the 
religious-political imaginary of the Arabs in just two decades, destroying the 
idols of the tribes at Mekka and placing the beyond in the hands of a single 
creator who has no involvement in human affairs. 

His epigones moved out of the confined area of Arabia and conquered by the 
sword the Middle East and North Africa, the cradle of Christianity which 
withered from Asia and Africa with the exception of Asia Minor and Ethiopia. 

Islam became a universal religion, spreading in Asia, destroying central Asia 
Buddhism, the Zoroastrians, Shamanism, and attempted even to destroy Hinduism. 
Christianity had to wait another nine centuries to become a universal church 
through the rise of its military might and its imperial expansion. However, 
Asia remained non-Christian, with Islam, Hinduism, Chinese 
Confucianism-Buddhism and a minute Russian Orthodox Church. 

The second phase of the Christian universalism was the proselytization of the 
Russians through the Greek Orthodox Church. The third was the schism of the 
Christian Church to Western and Eastern dogmas. The universal church was 
divided between an emerging politically confident Europe versus a Byzantium 
besieged by Islam. 

The fourth and most crucial transformation of the religious grounding of Europe 
was the Reformation. This last event contemporaneous with printing and in the 
middle of the Copernican Revolution ended, many years later, with the 
Westphalian Treaty of 1648. 

One of the results of this religious Reformation was an unintended historically 
political transformation: the subsequent emergence of the nation state. This 
was the road traveled by the European Geist of the religious-political subject 
towards what is today an individualistic, liberal, capitalistic, technological 
and affluent secular social subject. 

The transformation of the social-religious to the secular-political lasted for 
several centuries and is still in progress. The accomplishment was tolerance, 
and even indifference, towards the religious as part of the public discourse, 
which was focused on the social, economic and political demands of the 
individual. 

Enlightenment and Islam
Was Islam the Enlightenment of the East? The Enlightenment in the West 
established natural theology and destroyed faith as a universal category of 
social interaction. On the contrary, to the East, Islam unequivocally 
established a religious-social imaginary. 

The Ummah [or community of Muslim people] was the testimony of Islam to the 
social as a political affiliation of the Dar al Islam (House of Faith) versus 
the Dar al Harb (House of War) or Garb (House of West in the Ottoman period). 
The distinction of Dar al Islam and Dar al Harb is a legal one. A state with a 
Muslim minority but with an Islamic legal system is a Dar al Islam as well. 

Islam is a system of religious orthopraxy, not of orthodoxy. This basic fact is 
what keeps Islam in a state of suspension versus the political democratic 
orthopraxy of the West. What is lacking from the edifice of Islam is a 
theological philosophical skepticism that raises the crucial distinction 
between the secular and the religious. 

For Islam, orthopraxy towards the religious sanctifies the political. The 
Reformation in Europe ended up with a Christian subject internalizing the role 
of faith as a personal engagement with God and not as redemption expected from 
the Church of Rome assumed to be the political underpinning of salvation. 

The Muslim world suffered its first transformation through a political rift, 
the Sunni-Shi'ite conflict. This rift was at times exacerbated and or defused 
through the universal Islamic state of the various caliphates, but it was never 
resolved through a Westphalian-type treaty acknowledging the political and 
religious inclusion of the two distinct expressions of Islam. 

Islam's political edifice, contrary to its initial endogenous Arabian phase, 
the four elected caliphs' period, became Imperial and hereditary. Actually, all 
up to the 9th century, Islam was the incubator of new ideas, science, 
philosophy and art. 

Its religious-political subject as a new historical-social construct absorbed 
and cultivated ancient Greek, Persian, and Hindu traditions and inspired 
creative tensions in the areas of its expansion. This was arrested most 
probably by the tradition of its own religious-political foundations. 

In Central Asia and India, the Mogul imperial family, in the 16th century, 
attempted a grant synthesis of religions by its efforts to reconcile the vast 
and diverse populations of its domain. It failed, but it was a historical 
paradigmatic failure that marked the difficulties of reconciling dogmas and 
cultural "otherness" in cases where the social-political imaginary was based 
upon religion, in empires of subjects. 

This would change radically with the emergence of the social-political, a 
self-contained notion, as it occurred through the great political revolutions 
in England, America, France and even Russia and China. 

The involvement of the West with the Muslim world is an old and tumultuous one. 
Today, an ancient world immersed in traditionalism and a 
patriarchal-hierarchical society is consciously or unconsciously trying to cope 
with a fast-changing human environment that demands adjustment and 
reconciliation with forces unleashed by the West. The complexity of this 
conflict confuses the means and ends of the combatants, with the pen or with 
arms. 

In recent decades, we have experienced a rise in what is called Islamic 
fundamentalism and the subsequent practice of terror as a political instrument 
to attack the West or to eliminate the "other", identified as heretical Islam. 

What the religious-political Muslim subject reinvented was revolutionary 
tactics from the past: intolerance, war against Dar al Garb, martyrdom, jihad. 
Osama bin Laden's legacy and al-Qaeda as a Muslim political movement is still 
playing a huge role in this transformation. 

The same holds for the Muslim Brotherhood as a political expression of change 
inside Islam. Al-Qaeda proclaimed a political agenda: the caliphate and the 
liberation of all Muslim soils from the heathen. This agenda is a contribution 
to the political discourse for the ongoing Muslim transformation that may shape 
the future of these masses if and when all other efforts fail to achieve even 
limited aims and expectations. 

The Salafist movement, as a new regressive effort of proselytization of young 
Muslim activists in the West, is an ideological approach that is perhaps 
politically controlled by the Saudis as another counter-Reformation movement 
versus a more secular approach by those Muslims living in the West. 

We observe various other moves on the chessboard of the Muslim world. The Boko 
Haram movement in Nigeria is becoming a serious threat to that country's 
cohesion. Similar movements occur in other African states as in Mali. Hence, 
Islam appears as a global religious-political movement. 

What is also global is firstly the liberal, technological, economic challenge 
of the West, secondly the challenge of the Chinese paradigm and also the rise 
of Hinduism and Buddhism. The last three challenges are endogenous to Asia, the 
area where Islam will face its actual test. Because it is there where no public 
opinion, politically correct journalism and a preoccupation with world opinion 
can stop a grassroots clash among these neighbors as the case is in Myanmar, 
Thailand and Philippines. Islam's preoccupation with the West is probably its 
most serious shortcoming. 

There are parts of the Algerian, Tunisian, Egyptian, Syrian, Pakistani and even 
Saudi societies that are struggling for a real down-up Reformation, trying to 
assess their rights and demands as citizens. If we look carefully at the 
Philosophy of History, the transformation of the Western paradigm, from the 
Christian to the secular and the scientific, was not a smooth one. 

A transformation of Muslim societies to the secular and the scientific will 
take time and considerable pain. We observe this in Syria, Iraq, Libya, Mali, 
and Egypt, and in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Bangladesh. These societies' 
demands are complex: economic, political, social, emancipatory, national, and 
even aesthetic. But what is the underlying substratum is Islam and its 
overbearing presence in the conduct of the individual's life. 

The ontological versus the epistemological
What is also important for this overcoming of tradition for the Muslims is the 
Turkish transformation, which is at the crossroads between the 
religious-secular divide. 

Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, as an Islamic scholar and an influential 
political agent, has defended the thesis that the foundation of the social in 
Islam is the ontico-religious reality that forms the basis for the new Islamic 
social-political paradigm. 

This holds, as he says, in contradistinction to the West's priority of the 
epistemological, which means an insatiable quest for knowledge of the mundane 
and an all pervasive skepticism. Davutoglu's thesis is that the 
social-political should be subject to the religious-ontological imaginary so 
that a new conceptual and political reality can stand equipotentially along the 
dominant Western one. 

Davutoglu defends a society that has as priority of its social-political 
imaginary a God and His revealed commands, but at the same time this edifice is 
amenable to a democratic political order. This is a new universal project, 
whereas the West after the collapse of its universal Christian Church has 
proposed a new paradigm: the universal rights of people qua human beings. 

This project supervenes upon the Hellenic model for rights qua citizens. The 
universality of the West's ideological discourse is as confused as the proposed 
Islamic paradigm. Universalism, as an ideological proposal, was an 
imperialistic concept religiously inspired. 

Today, the West is trying to project a secular universalism founded upon the 
political advent of democracy. This neo-democracy (the term is a pun) is a 
mass-democracy that constitutes a magma of skepticism, egoism, instant 
gratification, hedonism, illiteracy as an effect of the ocular of mass 
entertainment and an all-out effort to liberate ourselves from history. 

What is lacking is the structure and the tools to supersede scarcity, 
traditions, nostalgia, the social as creative self-reflection and even 
nationalism as a limit to globalization; in short mass-democracy cannot 
formulate any policy whatsoever, except the use of force. 

Can an Islamist model produce citizens and rights which will shape a "better" 
individual and governance than the Western one? Up to this day, the Islamic 
historical paradigm exhibits signs of dystopia among a modern and post-modern 
world. In a detailed comparison with the Western one, it fails to adapt even to 
the necessary social or economic demands of the Islamic masses themselves. 

As philosophers, we are bound to make the biggest of mistakes if we propose a 
definitive narrative of human praxis versus the contingency of our existence. 
On the other hand, history as praxis is a human drama with too many innocent 
victims and pain. To cross this valley of tears, we may seek redemption not 
solely through history but also through our own acts of humanity. 

Notes:
1. Hellene rhetor, historian and grammarian 60BC-7AD?
2. The Yarmouk Martyrs Brigade operates in Syria. 

Nicholas A Biniaris has taught philosophy and political theory at NYC in 
Athens. His historical novel The Call of the Desert was recently published in 
Hellas. He is a columnist and an economic and foreign policy analyst. 

Speaking Freely is an Asia Times Online feature that allows guest writers to 
have their say. Please click here if you are interested in contributing. 
Articles submitted for this section allow our readers to express their opinions 
and do not necessarily meet the same editorial standards of Asia Times Online's 
regular contributors. 

(Copyright 2013 Nicholas A Biniari

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