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The True,
Peaceful Face Of Islam
"The vast majority of Muslims, who are horrified by the atrocity of
Sept. 11, must reclaim their faith from those who have so violently hijacked it."
Karen Armstrong, Time Magazine, October 1, 2001
There are 1.2 billion Muslims in
the world, and Islam is the world's fastest-growing religion. If the evil
carnage we witnessed on Sept. 11 were typical of the faith, and Islam truly
inspired and justified such violence, its growth and the increasing presence of
Muslims in both Europe and the U.S. would be a terrifying prospect. Fortunately,
this is not the case.
The very word Islam, which means
"surrender," is related to the Arabic salam, or peace. When the
Prophet Muhammad brought the inspired scripture known as the Koran to the Arabs
in the early 7th century A.D., a major part of his mission was devoted precisely
to bringing an end to the kind of mass slaughter we witnessed in New York City
and Washington. Pre-Islamic Arabia was caught up in a vicious cycle of warfare,
in which tribe fought tribe in a pattern of vendetta and countervendetta.
Muhammad himself survived several assassination attempts, and the early Muslim
community narrowly escaped extermination by the powerful city of Mecca. The
Prophet had to fight a deadly war in order to survive, but as soon as he felt
his people were probably safe, he devoted his attention to building up a
peaceful coalition of tribes and achieved victory by an ingenious and inspiring
campaign of nonviolence. When he died in 632, he had almost single-handedly
brought peace to war-torn Arabia.
Because the Koran was revealed in
the context of an all-out war, several passages deal with the conduct of armed
struggle. Warfare was a desperate business on the Arabian Peninsula. A chieftain
was not expected to spare survivors after a battle, and some of the Koranic
injunctions seem to share this spirit. Muslims are ordered by God to "slay
[enemies] wherever you find them!" (4: 89). Extremists such as Osama bin
Laden like to quote such verses but do so selectively. They do not include the
exhortations to peace, which in almost every case follow these more ferocious
passages: "Thus, if they let you be, and do not make war on you, and offer
you peace, God does not allow you to harm them" (4: 90).
In the Koran, therefore, the only
permissible war is one of self-defense. Muslims may not begin hostilities (2:
190). Warfare is always evil, but sometimes you have to fight in order to avoid
the kind of persecution that Mecca inflicted on the Muslims (2: 191; 2: 217) or
to preserve decent values (4: 75; 22: 40). The Koran quotes the Torah, the
Jewish scriptures, which permits people to retaliate eye for eye, tooth for
tooth, but like the Gospels, the Koran suggests that it is meritorious to forgo
revenge in a spirit of charity (5: 45). Hostilities must be brought to an end as
quickly as possible and must cease the minute the enemy sues for peace (2:
192-3).
Islam is not addicted to war, and
jihad is not one of its "pillars," or essential practices. The primary
meaning of the word jihad is not "holy war" but "struggle."
It refers to the difficult effort that is needed to put God's will into practice
at every level--personal and social as well as political. A very important and
much quoted tradition has Muhammad telling his companions as they go home after
a battle, "We are returning from the lesser jihad [the battle] to the
greater jihad," the far more urgent and momentous task of extirpating
wrongdoing from one's own society and one's own heart.
Islam did not impose itself by the
sword. In a statement in which the Arabic is extremely emphatic, the Koran
insists, "There must be no coercion in matters of faith!" (2: 256).
Constantly Muslims are enjoined to respect Jews and Christians, the "People
of the Book," who worship the same God (29: 46). In words quoted by
Muhammad in one of his last public sermons, God tells all human beings, "O
people! We have formed you into nations and tribes so that you may know one
another" (49: 13)--not to conquer, convert, subjugate, revile or slaughter
but to reach out toward others with intelligence and understanding.
So why the suicide bombing, the
hijacking and the massacre of innocent civilians? Far from being endorsed by the
Koran, this killing violates some of its most sacred precepts. But during the
20th century, the militant form of piety often known as fundamentalism erupted
in every major religion as a rebellion against modernity. Every fundamentalist
movement I have studied in Judaism, Christianity and Islam is convinced that
liberal, secular society is determined to wipe out religion. Fighting, as they
imagine, a battle for survival, fundamentalists often feel justified in ignoring
the more compassionate principles of their faith. But in amplifying the more
aggressive passages that exist in all our scriptures, they distort the
tradition.
It would be as grave a mistake to
see Osama bin Laden as an authentic representative of Islam as to consider James
Kopp, the alleged killer of an abortion provider in Buffalo, N.Y., a typical
Christian or Baruch Goldstein, who shot 29 worshipers in the Hebron mosque in
1994 and died in the attack, a true martyr of Israel. The vast majority of
Muslims, who are horrified by the atrocity of Sept. 11, must reclaim their faith
from those who have so violently hijacked it.
Karen Armstrong has written many
books on religion, including Islam: A Short History, published last year
by Modern Library.
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