Blame the politics, not the religion Islam
Karen Armstrong, London

Last year I attended a conference in the U.S. about security and 
intelligence in the so-called war on terror and was astonished to hear one 
of the more belligerent participants, who as far as I could tell had nothing 
but contempt for religion, strongly argue that as a purely practical 
expedient, politicians and the media must stop referring to "Muslim 
terrorism".

It was obvious, he said, that the atrocities had nothing to do with Islam, 
and to suggest otherwise was not merely inaccurate but dangerously 
counterproductive.

Rhetoric is a powerful weapon in any conflict. We cannot hope to convert 
Osama bin Laden from his vicious ideology; our priority must be to stem the 
flow of young people into organizations such as al-Qaeda, instead of 
alienating them by routinely coupling their religion with immoral violence. 
Incorrect statements about Islam have convinced too many in the Muslim world 
that the west is an implacable enemy. Yet, as we found at the conference, it 
is not easy to find an alternative for referring to this terrorism; however, 
the attempt can be a salutary exercise that reveals the complexity of what 
we are up against.

We need a phrase that is more exact than "Islamic terror". These acts may be 
committed by people who call themselves Muslims, but they violate essential 
Islamic principles. The Koran prohibits aggressive warfare, permits war only 
in self-defense and insists that the true Islamic values are peace, 
reconciliation and forgiveness. It also states firmly that there must be no 
coercion in religious matters, and for centuries Islam had a much better 
record of religious tolerance than Christianity.

Like the Bible, the Koran has its share of aggressive texts, but like all 
the great religions, its main thrust is towards kindliness and compassion. 
Islamic law outlaws war against any country in which Muslims are allowed to 
practice their religion freely, and forbids the use of fire, the destruction 
of buildings and the killing of innocent civilians in a military campaign. 
So although Muslims, like Christians or Jews, have all too often failed to 
live up to their ideals, it is not because of the religion per se.

We rarely, if ever, called the IRA bombings "Catholic" terrorism because we 
knew enough to realize that this was not essentially a religious campaign. 
Indeed, like the Irish republican movement, many fundamentalist movements 
worldwide are simply new forms of nationalism in a highly unorthodox 
religious guise. This is obviously the case with Zionist fundamentalism in 
Israel and the fervently patriotic Christian right in the U.S.

In the Muslim world, too, where the European nationalist ideology has always 
seemed an alien import, fundamentalisms are often more about a search for 
social identity and national self-definition than religion. They represent a 
widespread desire to return to the roots of the culture, before it was 
invaded and weakened by the colonial powers.

Because it is increasingly recognized that the terrorists in no way 
represent mainstream Islam, some prefer to call them jihadists, but this is 
not very satisfactory. Extremists and unscrupulous politicians have 
purloined the word for their own purposes, but the real meaning of jihad is 
not "holy war" but "struggle" or "effort." Muslims are commanded to make a 
massive attempt on all fronts -- social, economic, intellectual, ethical and 
spiritual -- to put the will of God into practice.

Sometimes a military effort may be a regrettable necessity in order to 
defend decent values, but an oft-quoted tradition has the Prophet Muhammad 
saying after a military victory: "We are coming back from the Lesser Jihad 
(ie the battle) and returning to the Greater Jihad" -- the far more 
important, difficult and momentous struggle to reform our own society and 
our own hearts.

Jihad is thus a cherished spiritual value that, for most Muslims, has no 
connection with violence. Last year, at the University of Kentucky, I met a 
delightful young man called Jihad; his parents had given him that name in 
the hope that he would become not a holy warrior, but a truly spiritual man 
who would make the world a better place. The term jihadi terrorism is likely 
to be offensive, therefore, and will win no hearts or minds.

At our conference in Washington, many people favored "Wahhabi terrorism". 
They pointed out that most of the hijackers on Sept. 11 came from Saudi 
Arabia, where a peculiarly intolerant form of Islam known as Wahhabism was 
the state religion. They argued that this description would be popular with 
those many Muslims who tended to be hostile to the Saudis. I was not happy, 
however, because even though the narrow, sometimes bigoted vision of 
Wahhabism makes it a fruitful ground for extremism, the vast majority of 
Wahhabis do not commit acts of terror.

Bin Laden was not inspired by Wahhabism but by the writings of the Egyptian 
ideologue Sayyid Qutb, who was executed by President Nasser in 1966. Almost 
every fundamentalist movement in Sunni Islam has been strongly influenced by 
Qutb, so there is a good case for calling the violence that some of his 
followers commit "Qutbian terrorism." Qutb urged his followers to withdraw 
from the moral and spiritual barbarism of modern society and fight it to the 
death.

Western people should learn more about such thinkers as Qutb, and become 
aware of the many dramatically different shades of opinion in the Muslim 
world. There are too many lazy, unexamined assumptions about Islam, which 
tends to be regarded as an amorphous, monolithic entity. Remarks such as 
"They hate our freedom" may give some a righteous glow, but they are not 
useful, because they are rarely accompanied by a rigorous analysis of who 
exactly "they" are.

The story of Qutb is also instructive as a reminder that militant 
religiosity is often the product of social, economic and political factors. 
Qutb was imprisoned for 15 years in one of Nasser's vile concentration 
camps, where he and thousands of other members of the Muslim Brotherhood 
were subjected to physical and mental torture. He entered the camp as a 
moderate, but the prison made him a fundamentalist. Modern secularism, as he 
had experienced it under Nasser, seemed a great evil and a lethal assault on 
faith.

Precise intelligence is essential in any conflict. It is important to know 
who our enemies are, but equally crucial to know who they are not. It is 
even more vital to avoid turning potential friends into foes. By making the 
disciplined effort to name our enemies correctly, we will learn more about 
them, and come one step nearer, perhaps, to solving the seemingly 
intractable and increasingly perilous problems of our divided world.

The writer is author of Islam: a Short History
http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaileditorial.asp?fileid=20050713.F04&irec=3




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