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Who are
the "moderate Muslims"?
The term moderate Muslims is
not only becoming important in the post September 11 discussion of Islam and the
West, it is also becoming highly contested. What do we really mean when we brand
someone as a moderate Muslim? Indeed the more interesting question is what does
the word mean to Westerns, looking-in to Islam, and to Muslims, looking out from
within Islam?
By Muqtedar Khan, Ph.D.
As one who identifies himself strongly with the
idea of a liberal Islam and also advocates moderation in the manifestation and
__expression of Islamic politics, I believe it is important that we flush out
this “political identity”. In an era when who we are determines what we do
politically, it is imperative that we clarify the “we” in politics.
American media uses the term moderate Muslim to
indicate a Muslim who is either pro-western in her politics or is being
self-critical in her discourse. Therefore both President Karzai of Afghanistan
and Professor Kahlid Abul Fadl of UCLA wear the cap with felicity, the former
for his politics the latter for his ideas.
Muslims in general do not like using the term,
understanding it to indicate an individual who has politically sold out to the
“other” side. In some internal intellectual debates, the term moderate Muslim is
used pejoratively to indicate a Muslim who is more secular and less Islamic than
the norm, which varies across communities. In America, a moderate Muslim is one
who peddles a softer form of Islam – the Islam of John Esposito and Karen Arm
Strong – is willing to co-exist peacefully with peoples of other faiths and is
comfortable with democracy and the separation of politics and religion.
Both, Western media and Muslims, do a disservice
by branding some Muslims as moderate on the basis of their politics. These
people should general be understood as opportunists and self-serving. Most of
the moderate regimes in the Muslim World are neither democratic nor manifest the
softer side of Islam. That leaves intellectual positions as the criteria for
determining who is a moderate Muslim, and especially in comparison to whom,
since moderate is a relative term.
Both Muslims and the media are generally on the
mark when they identify moderate Muslims as reflective, self-critical,
pro-democracy and human-rights and closet secularists. But who are they
different from and how?
I believe that moderate Muslims are different from
militant Muslims even though both of them advocate the establishment of
societies whose organizing principle is Islam. The difference between moderate
and militant Muslims is in their methodological orientation and in the
primordial normative preferences which shape their interpretation of Islam.
For moderate Muslims Ijtihad is the
preferred method of choice for social and political change and military Jihad
the last option. For militant Muslims, military Jihad is the first option
and Ijtihad is not an option at all.
Ijtihad narrowly understood is a juristic
tool that allows independent reasoning to articulate Islamic law on issues where
textual sources are silent. The unstated assumption being when texts have spoken
reason must be silent. But increasingly moderate Muslim intellectuals see
Ijtihad as the spirit of Islamic thought that is necessary for the vitality
of Islamic ideas and Islamic civilization. Without Ijtihad, Islamic
thought and Islamic civilization fall into decay.
For moderate Muslims, Ijtihad is a way of
life, which simultaneously allows Islam to reign supreme in the heart and the
mind to experience unfettered freedom of thought. A moderate Muslim is therefore
one who cherishes freedom of thought while recognizing the existential necessity
of faith. She aspires for change, but through the power of mind and not through
planting mines.
Moderate Muslims aspire for a society – a city of
virtue -- that will treat all people with dignity and respect. There will be no
room for political or normative intimidation. Individuals will aspire to live an
ethical life because they recognize its desirability. Communities will compete
in doing good and politics will seek to encourage good and forbid evil. They
believe that the internalization of the message of Islam can bring about the
social transformation necessary for the establishment of the virtuous city. The
only arena in which Moderate Muslims permit excess is in idealism.
Today, the relationship between Islam and the rest
is getting increasingly worse. Muslim militants are sowing seeds of poison and
hatred between Muslims and the rest of humanity by committing egregious acts of
violence in the name of Islam. In this precarious environment, it is important
that everyone finds and nurtures the many wonderful examples of moderate Muslims
one can still find.
Chandra Muzaffar in Malaysia, Tarik Ramadan in
Europe, Maulana Waheeduddin Khan and Asghar Ali Engineer in India, Khalid Abul
Fadl and Louay Safi in the US, Karim Soroush and Muhammad Khatami in Iran and
many many more who are committed to their Jihad (struggle) to revive the
spirit of Ijtihad. Fortunately the tradition is alive globally; it needs
the support and the attention of all who aspire for peace and understanding.
Muqtedar Khan, Ph.D.
Director of International Studies, Adrian College, MI
Association of Muslim Social Scientists
Center for the Study of Islam and Democracy.
Read other articles by Muqtedar
Khan here.
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