http://www.aina.org/news/2007052295013.htm
The Definition of 'Jihad'

In a recent FrontPage interview, Mary Habeck, a professor at Johns Hopkins
and author of a book about the jihadists entitled Knowing the Enemy, makes a
number of observations about the jihad ideology, and why more Muslims don't
stand up to the jihadists, that are worth looking at more closely.


...Thus, Muslims are allowed to fight these unbelievers in a just jihad.
Their definition of jihad is quite different from that generally accepted by
Muslims today. Most Muslims say that jihad is first and foremost an internal
struggle to control one's desires or, if it is about fighting, jihad is a
defensive just war.

Most Muslims may indeed believe that. Yet while this likelihood provides
comfort for non-Muslims with its suggestion that most Muslims would prefer
to tend to their own souls rather than to wage war against their non-Muslim
neighbors, it actually doesn't establish what what both Muslims and
non-Muslims seem to wish it did. This is because the traditional pedigree of
the spiritual jihad is not as firm as it is often advertised to be. The
hadith in which Muhammad makes a distinction between "greater jihad" of
spiritual struggle and the "lesser jihad" of warfare doesn't appear in any
of the hadith collections that Muslims consider most reliable. Jihad
understood as warfare against unbelievers in order to establish the hegemony
of Islamic law has much greater support in Islamic scripture, tradition, and
historical practice -- and leading jihad theorists including Hasan al-Banna,
the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, and Abdullah Azzam, Osama bin Laden's
friend and intellectual mentor and co-founder with him of Al-Qaeda,
challenge the authenticity of the saying in their writings. This only
buttresses their claim, which Habeck notes below, to represent the "true
believers."


These extremists make jihad into the central tenet of their religion,
arguing that it is primarily about fighting both defensively and offensively
(to spread the just laws of Islam). They also say that any Muslim who does
not participate in their jihad is not a "true believer," and is at most a
sinner and at worst an unbeliever and can therefore be killed with impunity.

Habeck gives no hint here of the fact that the theology of offensive and
defensive jihad is far older than the "extremists," and is in fact rooted in
the Qur'an (2:193 and 9:29 and for offensive jihad) and Muhammad's
statements, notably the one in which he directs his followers to offer
non-Muslims conversion, subjugation, or war. Then there are the schools of
Islamic jurisprudence, which all teach the necessity for offensive jihad in
order to subjugate unbelievers under the rule of Sharia.

All this answers the follow-up question below far more convincingly than
Habeck answers it: the moderate Muslims don't speak out more forcefully
against the jihadists because if they do, the jihadists can easily portray
them as unfaithful Muslims, and quote Qur'an and Sunnah to establish their
position. And that can make the lives of the moderates difficult in many
ways.

Habeck is aware of this. Last year, Daveed Gartenstein-Ross reviewed her
book and noted that in it she drew a sharp distinction between jihadist
theology and "traditional Islam." I wrote to him, asking him a number of
questions about the content of this distinction and related matters, and he
discussed them with Dr. Habeck over lunch. At the time, he got permission
from her for me to publish her answers from his emails -- and he gave me his
permission also to publish what he wrote to me.

Here's what Gartenstein-Ross wrote to me in response: "I had lunch with
Prof. Habeck on 8/8, a couple of days after receiving your e-mail, and was
able to put the question to her myself. Prof. Habeck's answer was that she
used the term 'traditional Islam' sloppily in her book. She says that she
generally has used the term two ways: referring to Islam as practiced before
Napoleon's 1798 invasion of Egypt and referring to Islam as practiced in
individual societies such as Indonesia or Pakistan before exposure to
Wahhabism/Salafism or other foreign strains that alter the indigenous
practice." So in other words, she is referring to what I refer to as
"cultural Islam."

I had also asked if Dr. Habeck could name any orthodox sects or schools of
Islamic jurisprudence that rejected the necessity of jihad warfare in order
to institute Sharia. Gartenstein-Ross answered: "I also put to her your
question about traditional Islamic sects that 'reject the proposition that
the umma must wage war in order to establish Sharia.' She agreed without
hesitation that such sects have not existed within mainstream Islam
historically."

Yet despite knowing this, Habeck goes on in the FP interview to assert that
the jihadists have hijacked Islam, and to make several other dubious
assertions:


FP: Why are "moderate" Muslims so silent, in general, in the face of
jihadism? 



Habeck: There are probably many reasons for this, but I can give at least
three. First, many Muslims have spoken out against jihadism, but they have
been ignored by Western media. There was, for instance, a huge demonstration
against violence carried out in the name of Islam is Morocco not too long
ago (late 2005), but I don't remember reading anything about this is in the
mainstream media.

Maybe the mainstream media didn't cover it, but here is a story about it
from Lebanon's Daily Star. The story says that the demonstrators were
protesting "Al-Qaeda's decision to kill two Moroccan hostages in Iraq," and
were "holding banners and chanting 'Muslims are brothers. A Muslim does not
kill his brother.'" So they were upset about Al-Qaeda killing Muslims. That
is a phenomenon we have noted here many times: Muslims taking umbrage at
Al-Qaeda killing fellow Muslims. But where are the protests against Al-Qaeda
killing unbelievers? It is not enough for Muslims to "speak out against
jihadism" only when its victims are Muslims, but to remain silent when
they're non-Muslims -- not enough at least for non-Muslims.


I read memri.org and see many, many moderate Muslims speaking out against
these guys every day. Second, in many countries these guys control the
public arena and intimidate or even murder anyone who speaks out against
them. The intimidation carried out in Western countries recently shows the
power that just a few fanatics can have. Finally, there is a peculiar
dynamic going on in the Islamic world: most people do not trust their
governments or media to be reporting the truth, so they refuse to believe
that the jihadis are carrying out these terrible atrocities. It's far more
satisfying to believe that the government/US/Zionists are lying about all
this rather than to confront the fact that someone has hijacked your
religion for their own purposes.

Indeed. And it's also far more satisfying to pretend that the jihadists have
"hijacked" an essentially peaceful Islam rather than confront the ugly
reality of the deep roots that the jihad ideology has within Islam, even
when one has acknowledged that the facts are otherwise.

Now certainly most Muslims aren't jihadists. Most probably do think of jihad
primarily as a spiritual struggle. But to pretend that the jihadists don't
have the intellectual upper hand in the Islamic world today is to undercut
any chances for genuine Islamic reform, which can only proceed from an
honest acknowledgment of the realities of Islamic doctrine, not from
ignoring those elements and implying they don't exist.

By Robert Spencer
FrontPageMagazine.com

 



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