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Recapturing
Islam from the Terrorists
"Muslims cannot deny
forever that doctrinal extremism can lead to political extremism. They must
realise that it is traditional Islam, the only possible alternative to their
position, which owns rich resources for the respectful acknowledgement of
difference within itself, and with unbelievers."
by British convert to Islam, Abdal-Hakim Murad, 14 September
2001 (now with addendum)
As New York turns its gap-toothed
face to the sky, wondering if the worst is yet to come, Muslims, largely
unheeded by the wider world, are counting the cost of the suicide bombings. The
backlash against mosques and hijabs has been met by statements from Muslim
communities around the globe, some stilted, but others which have clearly found
an articulate and passionate voice for the first time. In comparison with the
pathetic near-silence that hovered around mosques and major organisations during
the Rushdie and Gulf War debacles, the communities now seem alert to their
cultural situation and its potential precariousness. Many of the condemnations
have been more impressive than those of the American President, who seems unable
to rise above clichés. The motives are twofold. Firstly, and most patently,
Sunni Muslims have been brought up in a universe of faith that renders the
taking of innocent lives unimaginable. By condemning the attacks, we know that
we defend the indispensable essence of Islam. Secondly, Muslims as well as
others have died in large numbers. The Friday Prayers in the World Trade Center always attracted more than 1,500 worshippers from the office community, many of
whom have now surely died. The tourists, who spent their last moments choking on
the observation deck, waiting for the helicopters that never came, no doubt
included many Muslim parents and their children.
But the Western powers and their
fearful Muslim minorities, both battered so grievously by recent events, now
need to think beyond press-releases and ritual cursings. We need to recognise,
firstly, that there has been a steady 'mission-creep' in terrorist attacks over
the past twenty years. Hijackings for ransom money gave way to parcel bombs,
then to suicide bombs, and now to kiloton-range urban mayhem. It is not at all
clear that this escalation will be terminated by further anti-terrorist
legislation, further billions for the FBI, or retina scans at Terminal Three.
America’s tendency to assume that money can buy or destroy any possible
obstacle to its will now stands under a dark shadow. Far from being a climax and
the catalyst for a hi-tech military solution, the attacks may be of more
historical significance as an announcement to the militant subculture that a
Star-Wars superpower is utterly vulnerable to a handful of lightly-armed young
men. There could well be more and worse to come.
Sobered by this, the State
Department is likely to come under pressure from business interests to ask the
question it never seems to notice. Why is there so much hatred of the United
States, and so much yearning to poke it in the eye? Are the architects of policy
sane in their certainty that America can enrage large numbers of people, but
contain that rage forever through satellite technology and intrepid
double-agents? Businessmen and bankers will now start to read carefully enough
to discern that it is not US national interest, but the power of the
American-Israel Public Affairs Committee, that tends to drive Washington’s
policy in the world’s greatest trouble spot. Threatened with disaster,
corporate America may just prove powerful enough to face AIPAC down, and
suggest, firmly, that the next time Israel asks Washington to veto the UN’s
desire to send observers to Hebron, it pauses to consider where its own
interests might lie.
Among Muslims, the longer-term
aftershock will surely take the form of a crisis among ‘moderate Wahhabis’.
Even if a Middle-Eastern connection is somehow disproved, they cannot deny
forever that doctrinal extremism can lead to political extremism. They must
realise that it is traditional Islam, the only possible alternative to their
position, which owns rich resources for the respectful acknowledgement of
difference within itself, and with unbelievers. The lava-stream that flows from
Ibn Taymiyya, whose fierce xenophobia mirrored his sense of the imminent Mongol
threat to Islam, has a habit of closing minds and hardening hearts. It is true
that not every committed Wahhabi is willing to kill civilians to make a
political point. However it is also true that no orthodox Sunni has ever been
willing to do so. One of the unseen, unsung triumphs of true Islam in the modern
world is its complete freedom from any terroristic involvement. Maliki ulama do
not become suicide-bombers. No-one has ever heard of Sufi terrorism. Everyone,
enemies included, knows that the very idea is absurd.
Two years ago, Shaykh Hisham
Kabbani of the Islamic Supreme Council of America, warned of the dangers of mass
terrorism to American cities; and he was brushed aside as a dangerous alarmist.
Muslim organisations are no doubt beginning to regret their treatment of him.
The movement for traditional Islam will, we hope, become enormously strengthened
in the aftermath of the recent events, accompanied by a mass exodus from
Wahhabism, leaving behind only a merciless hardcore of well-financed zealots.
Those who have tried to take over the controls of Islam, after reading books
from we-know-where, will have to relinquish them, because we now know their
destination.
When that happens, or perhaps even
sooner, mainstream Islam will be able to make the loud declaration in public
that it already feels in its heart: that terrorists are not Muslims. Targeting
civilians is a negation of every possible school of Sunni Islam. Suicide bombing
is so foreign to the Quranic ethos that the Prophet Samson is entirely absent
from our scriptures. Islam is a great world religion that has produced much of
the world’s most sensitive art, architecture and literature, and has a
rich life of ethics, missionary work, and spirituality. Such are the real, and
historically-successful, weapons of Islam, because they are the instruments that
make friends of our neighbours, instead of enemies fit for burning alive. Those
that refuse them, out of cultural impotence or impatience, will in the longer
term be perceived as so radical in their denial of what is necessarily known to
be part of Islam, that the authorities of the religion are likely to declare
them to be beyond its reach. If that takes place, then future catastrophes by
Wahhabi ultras will have little impact on the image of communities, whose
spokesmen can simply say that Muslims were not implicated. This is the approach
taken by Christian churches when confronted by, say, the Reverend Jim Jones’s
suicide cult, or the Branch Davidians at Waco. Only a radical amputation of this
kind will save Islam’s name, and the physical safety of Muslims,
particularly women, as they live and work in Western cities.
To conclude: there is much
despair, but there are also grounds for hope. The controls of two great
vehicles, the State Department, and Islam, need to be reclaimed in the name of
sanity and humanity. It is always hard to accept that good might come out of
evil; but perhaps only a catastrophe on this scale, so desolating, and so
seemingly hopeless, could provide the motive and the space for such a
reclamation.
Addendum
Although the response from Muslims
in the UK seems to have been very favourable to my essay, with one or two
requests that it be sent to national newspapers for reprinting on their pages,
it is inevitable that under pressure from real or potential rioters and
cross-burners, some Muslims consider premature any attempt to begin a debate
among ourselves about the cultural and doctrinal foundations of extremism.
It is true that no convictions
have been secured, and that in the Shari'a suspects are innocent until proven
guilty. However it is also regrettably the case that these suspects will not be
tried under Shari'a law, and that we need, in the absence of a traditional
framework of accusation and assessment, to hold our own discussions. This is
particularly urgent in this case, since the damage to the honour of Islam, and
the physical safety of innocent Muslims, in the West and in Central Asia and
elsewhere, is very considerable. We Muslims are now at 'ground zero'. As such,
we cannot simply ignore the duty to ask each other what has caused the attitudes
that probably, but not indisputably, lie at the root of these events.
My essay, which endeavoured to
kick-start this debate, takes its cue primarily from the UK situation, which is
no doubt less intense than in the US, but is nonetheless serious. In particular
I am concerned to insist that Muslims distance themselves from, for instance,
the janaza prayer for the hijackers that was held two days ago at a London
Wahhabi mosque (the term Wahhabi is more useful, since 'Salafi' can also refer
to the Abduh-Rida reformism and is hence confusing). Having spoken to the editor
of one of this country's major Muslim magazines, it is clear that the small
minority of voices which have been raised in support of the terrorist act were
in every case of the Wahhabi persuasion. Clearly, we cannot simply ignore this
on grounds of 'Muslim unity', since those people appear so determined to destroy
Muslim unity, and endanger the security of our community.
I hope that the recent events will
spur Muslims to consider the implications for the wider ethos in which we
understand our religion of the shift which we have witnessed over the past
twenty years or so away from accommodationist and tolerant forms of Islam, and
towards narrowmindedness. Al-Ghazali recommends a tolerant view of non-Muslims,
and is prepared to grant that many of them may be saved in the next world; Ibn
Taymiya, as Muhammad Memon has shown in his book on him, is vehement and
adversarial. In our communities in the West, and indeed worldwide, we surely
need the Ghazalian approach, not the rigorism of Ibn Taymiya. Not just because
we need to reassure our neighbours, but also because we need to reassure those
very many born Muslims who are made unsure about their attachment to Islam by
events such as this that they can belong to the religion without being harsh and
narrow-minded. Extremism can drive people right out of Islam. In 1999 the
Conference of French Catholic bishops announced that 300
Algerians were among the year's Easter baptisms. Noting that ten years earlier
Muslims never converted at all, they reported that the change was the result of
the spread of extreme forms of Islam in Algeria.
In Afghanistan, too, there are now
Christians for the first time ever, and I have heard from one ex-Taliban member
that this is because of the extremism with which Islam is imposed on the people.
The shift away from traditional Islam, and towards Ibn Taymiya's position, has
been widely documented, for instance by Ahmad Rashid, in his chapter
'Challenging Islam', in his book on the Taliban. The Saudi-Wahhabi connection
has been very conspicuous.
We must ask Allah to open the
hearts of the Muslims everywhere to recognise that narrow-mindedness and mutual
anathema will lead us nowhere, and that only through spirituality, toleration
and wisdom will we be granted success.
The most appropriate du'a' for our
situation would seem to be: 'Ya Hayyu Ya Qayyum, bi-rahmatika astaghiith', which
is recommended in a hadith in cases of fear and misfortune. It means: 'O Living,
O Self-Subsistent; by Your mercy I seek help.'
British convert to Islam,
Abdal-Hakim Murad, was born in 1960 in London. He was educated Cambridge
University (MA Arabic), and at al-Azhar University, the highest seat of
learning in Sunni Islam. He has studied under traditional Islamic scholars
in Cairo and Jeddah, including Shaykh Ahmad Mashhur al-Haddad, and Shaykh Ismail
al-Adawi. Abdal-Hakim Murad has translated several classical Arabic works,
including Imam al-Bayhaqi's 'Seventy-Seven Branches of Faith', and 'Selections
from the Fath al-Bari'. He is also
the Trustee and Secretary of The Muslim Academic Trust and
Director of The Anglo-Muslim Fellowship for Eastern Europe.
Read other
articles by Abdal-Hakim Murad on this site here.
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