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Why are you
here?
Why
have so many Muslims chosen to forsake Dar al-Islam and settle in the West where there is so much that is injurious and
unconducive to their
Islamic faith and morals? Is
Islamist activism among immigrant communities just a glaring symptom of a guilty
conscience among those who have migrated not for the cause of Allah but for worldly
benefits? A self-righteous
magazine article prompts British convert, Michael Young, to question the
methods, priorities and very commitment to Islam of Muslim immigrants.
"Stripping off street porn",
proclaimed a headline in a British Muslim magazine I came across a while back. The accompanying feature detailed the activities of a
group of Birmingham Muslims who paint over advertising billboards which they
deem offensive. An article on the website of Muslims Against Advertising
or MAAD, as they style themselves, gives a flavour of the posters they object
to:
-
an advert for a car which
featured a man looking inside his pants with the legend “size does
matter”.
-
a poster selling hair dye with
a picture of a woman looking inside her pants with the slogan “so long
lasting you’ll forget your natural hair colour”.
-
an advert for a bra which
showed two people simulating sex and the words “moan, moan, moan”.
How could a Muslim not take
offence? How could we do other than have sympathy with the motives of the
"poster improvement experts" of MAAD. Indeed does not the Quran
say:
"They believe in Allah and
the Last Day, and enjoin right conduct and forbid indecency, and vie one with
another in good works. These are of the righteous."
(Quran 3:114)
But perhaps things are not quite
that simple. Perhaps there is more than one dimension to this issue.
Sympathy with MAAD's motives is one thing, but their actions? And what
about the wider picture?
Firstly, are not men commanded to
look down when they see a woman and vice versa? And if they happen to
look, although the first glance is excused, is not the second haram?
"Say to the believing men
that they should lower their gaze and guard their modesty; that will make for
greater purity for them, and God is well acquainted with all they do. Say
to the believing women that they should lower their gaze and guard their
modesty."
(Quran 24: 30-31)
Now I can't help thinking that the
young men of MAAD spend quite some time looking at the immodest images of
scantily clad women on these posters. Indeed, instead of lowering one's
gaze, their website advises others who may wish to emulate their actions to
actively seek out "multiple locations displaying the same
advertisement".
Another reservation I have about
MAAD's activities is that by their "direct action" they are imposing
Islamic moral values on the wider population. It is quite legitimate for
Muslims or anyone else for that matter who are offended by certain adverts to
take action through the official body, the Advertising Standards Authority. And
if the advert in question has gone beyond the generally accepted guidelines,
then the ASA will take appropriate action. But the UK has long since ceased to be an actively Christian country
sharing many moral values with Islam. And it is certainly not a Muslim country
either. Indeed the entire combined ethnic minority population of
the UK - Muslims, Hindus, Sikhs and Afro-Caribbeans (some Christian, many
non-religious) - is only 7%. Therefore many people in this society do not necessarily have
a problem with the advertising posters which MAAD objects to. For example,
they may view them as humorous, sexy (a positive attribute in their eyes) or
simply in keeping with the spirit of the age and popular culture of this
country.
When MAAD take matters into their
own hands and explicitly identify themselves as Muslims acting out of Islamic
religious motivation, I cannot help but feel that this group and their fellow
travellers are violating Allah's command that "there is no compulsion in
religion". (Quran 2:256)
Would it not be more appropriate
to follow the commands of Allah (swt) and the example of prophet Mohammed (saw)
and deal with this issue in a milder way?
"Invite to the way of your
Lord with wisdom and beautiful preaching; and argue with them in ways that are
best and most gracious." Quran 16:125
"You have two characters
which God likes; gentleness and deliberation." (Muslim).
"Verily, God is mild and is
fond of mildness, and He gives to the mild what He does not give to the
harsh." (Muslim)
Why not request the advertisers to
respect the sensibilities of the local population in predominantly Muslim areas
and close to mosques? And why not speak to the advertisers in a
language they understand, that of commercial gain. It stands to reason
that by placing such advertisements in areas with a significant Muslim
population, they are targeting the wrong audience thereby wasting their money.
In fact, they are actually creating ill-will against their brand, not enhancing
its appeal.
The real
issue for Muslims
Turning now to the more general
point of how Muslim who choose to live in a non-Islamic country should behave
towards that society; just as
non-Muslim visitors to and residents of Islamic countries are expected to
respect the way of life of the local population, is it not reasonable for the
non-Muslim natives of Britain to expect a bit of peace and quiet to go about things their
own way in their own country? And do they not as a bare minimum have the
right to expect that these "holier than thou" Muslim immigrants obey
their own Quran?
"Give the unbelievers some
respite. Deal with them gently for a while."
(Quran 86:17)
Muslims constitute a small
minority of the UK population and the great bulk of Muslims who do live here are
non-indigenous - first or second generation immigrants. They either chose
to settle here and/or not return to their (extended) families in an Islamic
country. Which brings me to
my final and most important point. What Muslims consider
"indecent" advertising is but one small aspect of a British society
which places little or no worth on the values Islam holds dear. It is a
society which prevents Muslims from attending to even their most basic duties -
how often in the last year have you been able to attend weekday Zuhr salat in a
mosque or even pray it anywhere on time? It is a society which corrodes
the Muslim soul and whose all-pervasive influence imperils the Islam of the next
generation of Muslims - do you have any idea of the atrocious behaviour of many
Muslim pupils, male and female, in the state school system?
This begs the question: Why
have so many Muslims chosen to forsake Dar al-Islam where these influences are
much less to the fore? Why have they chosen to come to live here
and stay here where there is so much that is injurious and unconducive to their
Islamic faith and morals? Prophet Mohammed (saw) has told us:
"To strive for the cause of
Allah from daybreak to noon and sunset is better than the goods and enjoyment of
the whole worldly life."
(Bukhari)
And in another hadeeth from Sahih
Bukhari, Allah's Apostle (saw) said,
"The reward of deeds depends
upon the intention and every person will get the reward according to what he has
intended. So whoever emigrated for Allah and His Apostle (peace be upon him)
then his emigration was for Allah and his Apostle (peace be upon him). And
whoever emigrated for worldly benefits or for a woman to marry, his emigration
was what he emigrated for."
Could it be that all this
posturing about un-Islamic advertising is simply a token gesture to appease a
guilty conscience? Could it be that the many Muslims who have left the
lands of Islam and made their home in the West, have in fact emigrated not for
the cause of Allah and His Apostle but for material, worldly benefits, with their Islam
coming off a poor second?
Oh, and a word in passing here to
those Muslims who have come to Britain claiming not to be economic migrants but
to be seeking refuge from persecution, often on the basis of their Islamic
activities. The Organisation of the Islamic Conference has fifty-five
member states in which to seek refuge in a Muslim environment. Funnily
enough, the last I heard, the United Kingdom was not one of them!
Short of moving to an
Islamic country, it appears there’s no escaping sex in advertising.
That was the conclusion drawn by the writer of the feature from the MAAD website
which I referred to earlier. That article was originally published in the Sunday
Times. The writer was one Matthew Taylor who, I assume, is not a
Muslim. "Short of moving to an Islamic country…" Or
staying put in one. If even a non-believer can recognise that, then why
can't so many Muslims?
© IslamForToday.com 2002
Read other articles by Michael
Young here.
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