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Muslims want to
know more on Pope's view of Islam
Following a wave of protests against
Pope Benedict's remarks on Islam, Muslim intellectuals in Turkey are asking what
he really thinks about their faith and what long-term consequences his views
will have.
By Tom Heneghan, Religion Editor Reuters Friday, September 22, 2006
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| Shujaat/Aljazeera.net
(United Arab Emirates) |
"Step aside
and let me help you with that."
Jalal Al-Rifa'i/Ad Dustour (Jordan) |
Muslim thinkers in Turkey, where
the German-born Pontiff is due on a sensitive visit in late November, suspect
Benedict suffers from "Orientalist" delusions about Islam and wants to move the
Roman Catholic Church away from dialogue with it.
His argument that Christianity is
rational could be an indirect way of saying Islam is unreasonable and has no
place in Christian-rooted Europe, they say.
At the same time, they set clear
limits on the dialogue they want, boxing it into a series of polite exchanges
where the tough issues Benedict wants to discuss risk remaining taboo.
"He should explain a lot of
things," said Bekir Karliaga, philosophy professor at Istanbul's Marmara
University. "His apology was not enough for the feelings of the Muslim world."
The Pope has invited ambassadors
of Muslim countries at the Vatican, and Muslim religious leaders, to a meeting
on Monday at his summer palace, a senior Vatican official said on Friday.
The meeting is part of diplomatic
efforts to explain that his speech in Germany has been misunderstood, the
Vatican said.
Benedict has said his
much-criticized speech in Regensburg, in which he quoted a 14th century
Byzantine emperor as saying Islam was evil and violent, did not reflect his own
thinking.
But quoting an emperor under siege
from Muslim armies suggests Benedict thinks Islam has not changed from the days
when it was a military threat to Europe, Kerim Balci said.
"This suggests that nations don't
change," said Balci, editor of the Aksiyon news weekly published by an
influential movement led by Islamic preacher Fethullah Gulen.
"That would mean Christian nations
don't change either ... and so the Crusader soul is still alive," he said. "That
would give power to those who are against conducting a dialogue."
FAITH AND REASON
Much of Benedict's speech was
devoted to the argument that Christianity is rational because it is based on
faith in God bolstered by the insights of ancient Greek philosophy.
Balci said this was a Western
argument that made little sense in Islam because it would discount many Muslim
practices that aim to gain favor with God in the afterlife.
Tariq Ramadan, a Swiss-born Muslim
intellectual now at Oxford University in Britain, recalled Benedict has spoken
out in the past against Turkey's bid to join the European Union.
"The Pope attempted to set out a
European identity that would be Christian by faith and Greek by philosophical
reason," he wrote in a syndicated column this week.
"Islam, which has apparently had
no such relationship with reason, would thus be foreign to the European identity
that has been built atop this heritage."
Balci also criticised the Pope for
saying the Prophet Mohammad opposed forced conversions when he was politically
weak but changed his views when he took power in Mecca. "That is an Orientalist
view of Islam," he said.
Cemal Usak, another Gulen movement
activist long involved in inter-religious dialogue, was concerned about recent
changes he saw in the Vatican's approach to other religions.
He noted Benedict folded the
Vatican department for inter-religious dialogue into its culture ministry in
February.
"From this I understand that the
Vatican doesn't see other faiths as religions, but as just another culture," he
said.
"When Pope John Paul was pope,
there was no problem for Muslims," he said, referring to Benedict's predecessor
and his enthusiasm for a dialogue with Islam. "Pope Benedict may not like Islam
but he has to respect Muslims."
TALK, BUT ON WHOSE
TERMS?
Gunduz Aktan, a columnist for the
daily Radikal, accused the Pope of wanting a dialogue "based on the argument
that Islam is open to violence but closed to reason and democracy."
Karliaga and Usak did not want
dialogue between Islam and the West to deal with issues such as they saw
Benedict making between Muslim theology and violence.
"You can't discuss on a
theological level," Karliaga insisted. "You must base the dialogue on the
non-theological part. Religion and violence are two different things."
Usak rejected proposals for
Muslims to read the Koran in a less literal way to bring their understanding of
it more in line with the modern world.
"It's impossible and against
reality to ask a Muslim to reinterpret the Koran," Usak declared.
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