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INTERNATIONAL

Universities and Islam 

Hearts, minds and Mecca

Jan 7th 2010 | ISTANBUL, LAGOS AND TORONTO 
>From The Economist print edition



The rising profile of Muslim students in the Western world



WHEN news emerged of the life-story of the Nigerian who tried to blow up a
flight from Amsterdam to Detroit on Christmas Day, there were cries of
bewilderment in some quarters, groans of dismay in others, and shouts of "I
told you so" from a small army of Cassandras.



Report Digital


Report Digital


Learning to mix

 

Whatever motivated Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab to become a terrorist, it was
not material deprivation; he came from a rich family. The biographical
detail that fascinated many terrorism-watchers was his record as president
of the Islamic Society at University College London, where he had studied
engineering.

Some found his choice of subject significant. A forthcoming book by Steffen
Hertog, a sociologist, will argue that terrorists include a high number of
engineers-not because of their need for bomb-making skills, but perhaps
because of a mindset that likes rigidity and binary choices. 

In the young man's homeland, meanwhile, people noted that for all their
problems-including the existence of rival, armed fraternities known as
"cults" but unconnected to faith-Nigerian universities are not known as
hotbeds of Islamic extremism. It was apparently the loneliness and confusion
of life in Britain that set this student on a path that led to terror. 

Long before his bungled effort hit the headlines, the role of Islamic
Societies (ISOCs in student jargon) in British colleges-and of similar
associations on other Western campuses-was sparking arguments. In 2008 a
report and opinion poll from the Centre for Social Cohesion, a
right-of-centre think-tank, had argued that these Muslim student
associations in Britain needed much more careful watching. They seemed to be
acting as incubators for fundamentalist ideas that favoured self-segregation
by Muslims, and dreamt of Islamic governance and law. And as the report
noted, several young Britons involved in terrorism had a record of ISOC
activism; for example, Yassin Nassari, convicted in 2007 of bringing missile
plans into Britain, had led one branch of the ISOC at the University of
Westminster. 

The CSC report triggered an angry response from Britain's Federation of
Student Islamic Societies (FOSIS) and 52 of its member bodies, calling the
study "ideologically biased" and "motivated by.malice". The current FOSIS
president, Faisal Hanjra, responded to the news of Mr Abdulmutallab's failed
attack by insisting that there was "no credible evidence" to suggest that
British universities were "arenas of radicalism".

But much of the information cited in the CSC report is uncontentious. At
almost every British university, there is an ISOC to which practising Muslim
students, seeking soulmates, soon gravitate. The societies' roles include
organising prayer rooms and Friday sermons, and securing halal food. Since
it was created in 1962, the leadership of FOSIS has often had some
ideological overlap with the Egyptian-based Muslim Brotherhood and Jamaat
e-Islami, the Pakistani Islamist party. That does not imply sympathy for
al-Qaeda's campaign of global terror, but it does imply adherence to a
version of political Islam.

In their countries of origin, Islamist political movements have long
experience of recruiting on campus and of forming small groups which owe
something to far-leftist prototypes. In Sudan, for example, veterans of the
Brotherhood, which took power in the 1989, retain vivid memories of student
activism, with a cell structure that Leon Trotsky would have recognised.
Such secrecy is not usually necessary in Western countries, but the memory
of working in semi-covert conditions must have an effect on the culture of
Islamist movements wherever they function.

In the 1990s another global Islamist movement, Hizb ut-Tahrir-which aspires
to a caliphate and eschews electoral democracy-was very active on British
campuses. It has since lowered its profile.

At the other end of the Islamic spectrum, Turkish students who find
themselves far from home (either in their homeland or in a foreign country,
such as Britain) often fall under the influence of the Fethullah Gulen
movement, which is impeccably moderate in its political views but encourages
Muslims to practise their faith rigorously. With its deep pockets, the
movement helps many students with practical problems like accommodation;
they are then urged to pray more often. 

Among Western countries, Britain stands out as a place where Muslim students
(who number about 100,000 or around 5% of the total student population) are
visible and self-confident. But all over the world, the increased profile of
Islam on campus has created tension, curiosity and unlikely partnerships.

Sohaib Nazeer Sultan, the newly appointed Muslim chaplain at Princeton
University, says that neither there, nor at the two other American campuses
where he has worked, did any student under his care show signs of real
extremism. But theological differences certainly exist, and have to be
managed. Some students hew to the mystical, Sufi reading of Islam whereas
others prefer the one-size-fits-all version of the faith that emphasises the
unity of all Muslims and is highly suspicious of cultural difference between
say, South Asians and Egyptians.

If Muslims on campus hang out together, Mr Sultan notes, it is not merely to
pray or burnish each other's faith; they are also looking for a modest
social life that does not involve intoxicants. In that quest they often find
allies, like Orthodox Jews.

At Canada's McGill University, controversy has been raging since 2005 when
the authorities deprived Muslim students (who now number about 2,000) of a
prayer room, on the ground that this was inappropriate for a secular
institution. The 600 or so who turn up for Friday prayers made their
supplications outdoors for a while, until cold weather forced them from one
temporary room to another. Nafay Choudhury, a leader of the Muslim Students
Association, says things are much better for his co-religionists at most
other Canadian colleges; the McGill Muslims are placing their hopes in an
appeal to Quebec's Human Rights Commission.

Across the Western world, many Muslim students feel defensive. A request for
information from Al-Furqan, an association of Muslim students at the
University of Amsterdam, whose aims include the improvement of Islam's
image, elicited the following reply: "Thank you for your interest in our
student association. However we would like to inform you that we have no
interest in answering your inquiry."





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