"Radical Islam threatens the Enlightenment"

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/06/books/review/Ali-t.html?ei=5070&em=&en=de93b3085f32eaf1&ex=1199682000&pagewanted=print
 
<http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/06/books/review/Ali-t.html?ei=5070&em=&en=de93b3085f32eaf1&ex=1199682000&pagewanted=print>
 

The New York Times
January 6, 2008
Blind Faiths
By AYAAN HIRSI ALI

[Review of]
THE SUICIDE OF REASON: Radical Islam's Threat to the Enlightenment.
By Lee Harris.
290 pp. Basic Books. $26.

Several authors have published books on radical Islam’s threat to the
West since that shocking morning in September six years ago. With “The
Suicide of Reason,” Lee Harris joins their ranks. But he distinguishes
himself by going further than most of his counterparts: he considers
the very worst possibility â€" the destruction of the West by radical
Islam. There is a sense of urgency in his writing, a desire to shake
awake the leaders of the West, to confront them with their failure to
understand that they are engaged in a war with an adversary who fights
by the law of the jungle.

Harris, the author of “Civilization and Its Enemies: The Next Stage of
History,” devotes most of his book to identifying and distinguishing
between two kinds of fanaticism. The first is Islamic fanaticism, a
formidable enemy in the struggle for cultural survival. In Harris’s
view, this fanaticism has acted as a “defense mechanism,” shielding
Islam from the pressures of the changing world around it and allowing
it to expand into territories and cultures where it had previously
been unknown.

With few exceptions, Harris sees Islamic expansion as permanent.
Although this point is arguable, he bravely attempts to make the case
that the entry of Islam into another culture produces changes on every
level, from political to personal: “Wherever Islam has spread, there
has occurred a total and revolutionary transformation in the culture
of those conquered or converted.”

In describing the imperialist nature of Islam, Harris suggests that it
is distinct from the Roman, British and French empires. He views
Islamic imperialism as a single-minded expansion of the religion
itself; the empire that it envisions is governed by Allah. In this
sense, the idea of jihad is less about the inner struggle for peace
and justice and more about a grand mission of conversion. It should be
said, however, that Harris’s argument is incomplete, since he does not
address the spread of Christianity in the Roman, British and French
empires.

The expansion of Islam is perhaps more potent than the expansion of
the Christian empires (including Rome after Constantine) because the
concept of separating the sacred from the profane has never been
acceptable in Islam the way it has been in Christianity. The Romans,
the British and the French went about annexing large parts of the
world more for earthly or material gain than for spiritual dominance.
Under these empires, the clergy was allowed to propagate its faith as
long as it did not jeopardize imperial interests.

Harris goes on to argue that the Muslim world, since it is governed by
the law of the jungle, makes group survival paramount. This explains
in part the willingness of Muslims to become martyrs for the larger
community, the umma â€" uniting peoples separated by geographical
boundaries, with different cultures, heritages and languages.
According to Harris, this sense of solidarity is sustainable only with
the weapon of fanaticism, which obligates each member of the umma to
convert infidels and to threaten those who attempt to leave with
death. That is, the aim of Muslim culture, so different from that of
the West, is both to preserve and to convert, and this is what enables
it to spread across the globe.

The second fanaticism that Harris identifies is one he views as
infecting Western societies; he calls it a “fanaticism of reason.”
Reason, he says, contains within itself a potential fatality because
it blinds Western leaders to the true nature of Islamic-influenced
cultures. Westerners see these cultures merely as different versions
of the world they know, with dominant values similar to those espoused
in their own culture. But this, Harris argues, is a fatal mistake. It
implies that the West fails to appreciate both its history and the
true nature of its opposition.

Nor, he points out, is the failure linked to a particular political
outlook. Liberals and conservatives alike share this misperception.
Noam Chomsky and Paul Wolfowitz agreed, Harris writes, “that you
couldn’t really blame the terrorists, since they were merely the
victims of an evil system â€" for Chomsky, American imperialism, for
Wolfowitz, the corrupt and despotic regimes of the Middle East.” That
is to say, while left and right may disagree on the causes and the
remedies, they both overlook the fanaticism inherent in Islam itself.
Driven by their blind faith in reason, they interpret the problem in a
way that is familiar to them, in order to find a solution that fits
within their doctrine of reason. The same is true for such prominent
intellectuals as Samuel Huntington and Francis Fukuyama.

Harris does not regard Islamic fanaticism as a deviancy or a madness
that affects a few Muslims and terrifies many. Instead he argues that
fanaticism is the basic principle in Islam. “The Muslims are, from an
early age, indoctrinated into a shaming code that demands a fanatical
rejection of anything that threatens to subvert the supremacy of
Islam,” he writes. During the years that this shaming code is
instilled into children, the collective is emphasized above the
individual and his freedoms. A good Muslim must forsake all: his
property, family, children, even life for the sake of Islam. Boys in
particular are taught to be dominating and merciless, which has the
effect of creating a society of holy warriors.

By contrast, the West has cultivated an ethos of individualism, reason
and tolerance, and an elaborate system in which every actor, from the
individual to the nation-state, seeks to resolve conflict through
words. The entire system is built on the idea of self-interest. This
ethos rejects fanaticism. The alpha male is pacified and groomed to
study hard, find a good job and plan prudently for retirement: “While
we in America are drugging our alpha boys with Ritalin,” Harris
writes, “the Muslims are doing everything in their power to encourage
their alpha boys to be tough, aggressive and ruthless.”

The West has variously tried to convert, to assimilate and to seduce
Muslims into modernity, but, Harris says, none of these approaches
have succeeded. Meanwhile, our worship of reason is making us easy
prey for a ruthless, unscrupulous and extremely aggressive predator
and may be contributing to a slow cultural “suicide.”

Harris’s book is so engaging that it is difficult to put down, and its
haunting assessments make it difficult for a reader to sleep at night.
He deserves praise for raising serious questions. But his arguments
are not entirely sound.

I disagree, for instance, that the way to rescue Western civilization
from a path of suicide is to challenge its tradition of reason.
Indeed, for all his understanding of the rise of fanaticism in general
and its Islamic manifestation in particular, Harris’s use of the term
“reason” is faulty.

Enlightenment thinkers, preoccupied with both individual freedom and
secular and limited government, argued that human reason is fallible.
They understood that reason is more than just rational thought; it is
also a process of trial and error, the ability to learn from past
mistakes. The Enlightenment cannot be fully appreciated without a
strong awareness of just how frail human reason is. That is why
concepts like doubt and reflection are central to any form of
decision-making based on reason.

Harris is pessimistic in a way that the Enlightenment thinkers were
not. He takes a Darwinian view of the struggle between clashing
cultures, criticizing the West for an ethos of selfishness, and he
follows Hegel in asserting that where the interest of the individual
collides with that of the state, it is the state that should prevail.
This is why he attributes such strength to Islamic fanaticism. The
collectivity of the umma elevates the communal interest above that of
the individual believer. Each Muslim is a slave, first of God, then of
the caliphate. Although Harris does not condone this extreme
subversion of the self, still a note of admiration seems to creep into
his descriptions of Islam’s fierce solidarity, its adherence to
tradition and the willingness of individual Muslims to sacrifice
themselves for the sake of the greater good.

In addition, Harris extols American exceptionalism together with Hegel
as if there were no contradiction between the two. But what makes
America unique, especially in contrast to Europe, is its resistance to
the philosophy of Hegel with its concept of a unifying world spirit.
It is the individual that matters most in the United States. And more
generally, it is individuals who make cultures and who break them.
Social and cultural evolution has always relied on individuals â€" to
reform, persuade, cajole or force. Culture is formed by the collective
agreement of individuals. At the same time, it is crucial that we not
fall into the trap of assuming that the survival tactics of
individuals living in tribal societies â€" like lying, hypocrisy,
secrecy, violence, intimidation, and so forth â€" are in the interest of
the modern individual or his culture.

I was not born in the West. I was raised with the code of Islam, and
from birth I was indoctrinated into a tribal mind-set. Yet I have
changed, I have adopted the values of the Enlightenment, and as a
result I have to live with the rejection of my native clan as well as
the Islamic tribe. Why have I done so? Because in a tribal society,
life is cruel and terrible. And I am not alone. Muslims have been
migrating to the West in droves for decades now. They are in search of
a better life. Yet their tribal and cultural constraints have traveled
with them. And the multiculturalism and moral relativism that reign in
the West have accommodated this.

Harris is correct, I believe, that many Western leaders are terribly
confused about the Islamic world. They are woefully uninformed and
often unwilling to confront the tribal nature of Islam. The problem,
however, is not too much reason but too little. Harris also fails to
address the enemies of reason within the West: religion and the
Romantic movement. It is out of rejection of religion that the
Enlightenment emerged; Romanticism was a revolt against reason.

Both the Romantic movement and organized religion have contributed a
great deal to the arts and to the spirituality of the Western mind,
but they share a hostility to modernity. Moral and cultural relativism
(and their popular manifestation, multiculturalism) are the hallmarks
of the Romantics. To argue that reason is the mother of the current
mess the West is in is to miss the major impact this movement has had,
first in the West and perhaps even more profoundly outside the West,
particularly in Muslim lands.

Thus, it is not reason that accommodates and encourages the persistent
segregation and tribalism of immigrant Muslim populations in the West.
It is Romanticism. Multiculturalism and moral relativism promote an
idealization of tribal life and have shown themselves to be impervious
to empirical criticism. My reasons for reproaching today’s Western
leaders are different from Harris’s. I see them squandering a great
and vital opportunity to compete with the agents of radical Islam for
the minds of Muslims, especially those within their borders. But to do
so, they must allow reason to prevail over sentiment.

To argue, as Harris seems to do, that children born and bred in
superstitious cultures that value fanaticism and create phalanxes of
alpha males are doomed â€" and will doom others â€" to an existence
governed by the law of the jungle is to ignore the lessons of the
West’s own past. There have been periods when the West was less than
noble, when it engaged in crusades, inquisitions, witch-burnings and
genocides. Many of the Westerners who were born into the law of the
jungle, with its alpha males and submissive females, have since become
acquainted with the culture of reason and have adopted it. They are
even â€" and this should surely relieve Harris of some of his pessimism
â€" willing to die for it, perhaps with the same fanaticism as the
jihadists willing to die for their tribe. In short, while this
conflict is undeniably a deadly struggle between cultures, it is
individuals who will determine the outcome.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise
Institute in Washington, is the author of “Infidel.”

Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company




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