Islam Has Become Its Own Enemy:
Muslims In Denial
Ziauddin Sardar
Sunday October 21, 2001
The Observer
http://www.observer.co.uk/comment/story/0,6903,577787,00.html
Muslims everywhere are in a deep state of
denial. From Egypt to Malaysia, there is an aversion to seeing terrorism
as a Muslim problem and a Muslim responsibility.
The meeting last week of the Organisation
of the Islamic Conference in Qatar condemned the 11 September attacks, but
refused to accept any responsibility. Instead of taking the lead in
tackling the problem, once again they are being railroaded into joining a
'global coalition'.
Terrorism is a Muslim problem for some very
good reasons. To begin with, most of the terrorist incidents actually
occur within the Muslim world. In Pakistan, for example, terrorist
violence is endemic. Marauding groups of fanatics, such as Sepa-e-Shaba
('Soldiers of the Companion of the Prophet') and Sepa-e-Muhammad
('Soldiers of Muhammad'), have spread terror throughout the country. In
Egypt, militants of Islamic Jihad have killed tourists, and members of the
extremist organisation Gama-e-Islami have made the life of ordinary
Muslims a living hell. The Abu Sayyaf group of the Philippines, far from
fighting for 'liberation', is nothing more than a band of ruthless
kidnappers who kill other Muslims without hesitation.
Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, Algeria,
Bangladesh, Lebanon, Iran - there is hardly a Muslim country that is not
plagued by terrorism.
It goes without saying, then, that the bulk
of victims of terrorism are also Muslims, 11 September notwithstanding.
This is particularly so when we consider that violence and brutalisation
has become the norm in unending quests for self-determination in such
places as Palestine, Kashmir and Chechnya. Terror and counter-terror forms
an endless cycle that has cost countless Muslim lives.
Thus, terrorism, the horror it provokes and
the consequences it breeds, are more familiar to Muslims than to any other
people.
Yet, while they have been shocked and
sympathise with the victims of the atrocities in the US, Muslims have
stubbornly refused to see terrorism as an internal problem. While the
Muslim world has suffered, they have blamed everyone but themselves. It is
always 'the West', or the CIA, or 'the Indians', or 'the Zionists'
hatching yet another conspiracy.
This state of denial means Muslims are ill
equipped to deal with problems of endemic terrorism. Indiscriminate
violence, terror by governments against their own people, by opposition
groups and between factions, has now become such an integral part of the
political discourse of failed polities that it is taken for granted.
In the US-led coalition against the
Taliban, liberal Muslims have found an ideal substitute for
self-examination and the critical, internal struggle needed to address
home-grown problems.
The coalition now waging war against
terrorism in Afghanistan harbours another danger for Muslims. In the
indiscriminate politics of coalition, the first people that the hesitant
Muslim states will turn against are the few voices of sanity in their
midst. As Anwar Ibrahim, the former Deputy Prime Minister of Malaysia and
a rare lucid voice, points out, the democratic cause in Muslim countries
'will regress for a few decades as ruling autocrats use their
participation in the global war against terrorism to terrorise their
critics and dissenters'.
Anwar has to know. The article was written
from the prison cell where he is serving a 15-year sentence. His crime? To
stand against the tyranny of Mahathir Muhammad's government.
This is not the time, he says, to stir up
anti-American sentiments, or sermonise over US foreign policy. It is time
to ask 'how, in the twenty-first century, the Muslim world could have
produced a bin Laden'.
The answer has two components. Anwar hints
at the first. There is simply no place in the Muslim world to express
dissent. Autocratic, theocratic, despotic regimes allow no political
freedom, all thought is outlawed, and brute suppression is the norm. In
such circumstances, violence is seen as the only way of expressing
dissent.
In his youth, Anwar Ibrahim founded a
dynamic Islamic movement. I also spent my youthful days working for
various Islamic movements; it was how we first met in the borderless
internationalism of the worldwide Muslim community. And it is in the
Islamic movements that we must look for the second reason for the violent
state of affairs in Muslim societies.
In the Sixties and the Seventies, the
Islamic movements, such as Jamaat-e-Islami of Pakistan and the Muslim
Brotherhood of Egypt, represented hope, the language of justice, the ideal
of self-reliance for the masses languishing in misery. A plethora of
Islamic movements and initiatives made their appearance; and we toiled
against autocracies and despotism in Muslim societies.
But the movements became a mirror image of
what they were fighting. The leadership passed from intellectuals to
semi-literate demagogues. What the Islamic movements have generated is
fanatic militancy, a fundamentalism that is as autocratic, illiberal and
repressive as the established order they seek to dethrone. Instead of
allowing debate, and a rethinking about the contemporary meaning of Islam,
fundamentalist notions became something to die for and finally something
to kill and destroy for in pure hatred.
The failure of Islamic movements is their
inability to come to terms with modernity, to give modernity a sustainable
home-grown expression. Instead of engaging with the abundant problems that
bedevil Muslim lives, the Islamic prescription consists of blind following
of narrow pieties and slavish submission to inept obscurantists. Instead
of engagement with the wider world, they have made Islam into an ethic of
separation, separate under-development, and negation of the rest of the
world.
The struggle against violence in the Muslim
world is much more than a struggle against murdering fanatics like the
Taliban. Or despotic leaders like Saddam Hussein and Mahathir Muhammad. It
is also a struggle against the Islamic movements whose simplistic and
virulent rhetoric often ends up sanctifying the fanatics and demonises
everything else in the absolutist, unquestioning terms of all totalitarian
perspectives.
The answers to the problems of the Muslim
societies are not hard to find - merely difficult to initiate. Political
freedom, open debate, the liberation of society to be civil, plural and
humane - these are obvious remedies. But the Islamic movements have become
a barrier to them.
We need reasoned creativity and critical
awareness. These used to be favourite phrases of Anwar Ibrahim. But his
most frequent prescription was humility. The humility to acknowledge one's
own mistakes and shortcomings.
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