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Bin Laden's
violence is a heresy against Islam
"Mainstream theologians have
come out unanimously against the terrorists. What we must now ask them is to
campaign more strongly against the aberrant doctrines that underpin them",
writes British Muslim convert scholar, Abdal-Hakim Murad.
In what sense were the World Trade
Centre bombers members of Islam? This question has been sidelined by many
Western analysts impatient with the niceties of theology; but it may be the key
to understanding the recent attacks, and assessing the long-term prospects for
peace in the Muslim world.
Certainly, neither bin Laden nor
his principal associate, Ayman al-Zawahiri, are graduates of Islamic
universities or seminaries. And so their proclamations ignore 14 centuries of
Muslim scholarship, and instead take the form of lists of anti-American
grievances and of Koranic quotations referring to early Muslim wars against Arab
idolators. These are followed by the conclusion that all Americans, civilian and
military, are to be wiped off the face of the Earth.
All this amounts to an odd and
extreme violation of the normal methods of Islamic scholarship. Had the authors
of such fatwas [non-binding legal opinions] followed the norms of their
religion, they would have had to acknowledge that no school of traditional Islam
allows the targeting of civilians. An insurrectionist who kills non-combatants
is guilty of baghy, "armed transgression", a capital offence in
Islamic law. A jihad can be proclaimed only by a properly constituted state;
anything else is pure vigilantism.
Defining orthodoxy in the
mainstream Sunni version of Islam is difficult because the tradition has an
egalitarian streak which makes it reluctant to produce hierarchies. Theologians
and muftis emerge through the careful approval of their teachers, not because a
formal teaching licence has been given them by a church-like institution.
Despite this apparent informality,
there is such a thing as normal Sunni Muslim doctrine. It has been expressed
fairly consistently down the centuries as a belief system derived from the
Muslim scriptures by generations of learned comment. Until a few decades ago, a
Koranic commentary containing the author's personal views would have been
dismissed as outrageous. In the 19th century, the Iranian reformer known as
"the Bab" was declared to be outside the pale of Islam because he
ignored the accumulated discussions of centuries, and wrote a Koranic commentary
based on his own direct understanding of scripture.
The strangeness as well as the
extremity of the New York attacks has been reflected in the strenuous
denunciations we have heard from Muslim leaders around the world. For them, this
has been a rare moment of unity. Mohammed Tantawi, rector of Cairo's Al-Azhar
University, the highest institution of learning in the Sunni world, has bitterly
condemned the outrages. In Shi'ite Iran, Ayatollah Kashani called the attacks
"catastrophic", and demanded a global mobilisation against the
culprits. The Organisation of the Islamic Conference, normally well known for
its indecision, unanimously condemned "these savage and criminal
acts".
Why should apparently devout
Muslims have defied the unanimous verdict of Islamic law? The reasons - and the
blame - are to be found on both sides of the divide which, according to bin
Laden, utterly separates the West from Islam. On the Western side, a reluctance
to challenge the Israeli occupation of Muslim holy sites in Jerusalem has
unquestionably contributed to the sidelining of mainstream Muslim voices in the
Middle East. Those voices, speaking cautiously from ancient religious
universities and venerable mosques, have been reluctant to exploit, rather than
calm, the hatred of the masses for Israeli policy, and thus for the United
States. This perceived failure to make a difference has allowed wilder, more
intransigent voices to gain credibility in a way that would have been
unimaginable before the capture of Arab Jerusalem in 1967.
It is unfair and simplistic,
however, to claim that it is Western policy that lit the fuse for last month's
events. Without a theological position justifying the rejection of the
mainstream position, the frustration with orthodoxy would have led to a
frustration with religion - and then to a search for secular responses.
That alternative theology does,
however, exist. While Saudi Arabia itself has been consistent in its opposition
to terrorism, it has also on occasion unwittingly nurtured revolutionary
religious views. Before the explosion of oil wealth in the 1960s, its Wahhabi
creed was largely unnoticed by the wider Islamic world. Those erudite Muslims
who did know about Wahhabism typically dismissed it as simple-minded Bedouin
puritanism with nothing to add to their central activity - exploring Muslim
strategies of accommodation with the modern world.
When I myself studied theology at
Al-Azhar, we were told that Wahhabism was heretical - not only because of issues
such as its insistence that the Koranic talk of God's likeness to humanity was
to be taken literally, but also because it implied a radical rejection of all
Muslim
scholarship. Grey-bearded sheikhs
departed from their usual imperturbability to denounce the tragic consequences
for Islam of the claim that every believer should interpret the scriptures
according to his own lights.
This sort of radical move leads to
liberal re-readings of the Koran, as in the case of the South African theologian
Farid Esack, who has horrified traditionalists by advocating homosexual rights
among Muslims.
Much more commonly, however, it
allows young men whose anger has been aroused by American policy in the Middle
East to ignore the scholarly consensus about the meaning of the Koran, and read
their own frustrations into the text. Another result of this rejection of
traditional Islam has been the notion that political power should be in the
hands of men of religion.
When he came to power in 1979,
Ayatollah Khomeini remarked that he had achieved something utterly without
precedent in Islamic history. The Taliban, by ruling directly rather than
advising hereditary rulers, have similarly combined the "sword" and
the "pen". Far from being a traditionalist move, this is a new
departure for Islam, and mainstream scholarship regards it with deep suspicion.
Islamic civilisation has in the
past proved capable of, for the times, extraordinary feats of toleration. Under
the Muslims, medieval Spain became a haven for diverse religions and sects.
Following the Christian reconquest, the Inquisition eliminated all dissent. The
notion that Islamic civilisation is inherently less capable of tolerance and
compassion than any other is hard to square with the facts.
Muslims none the less have to face
the challenge posed by the new heresies. The Muslim world can ill afford to
lapse into bigotry at a point in history when dialogue and conviviality have
never been more important.
It is a relief that the mainstream
theologians have come out so unanimously against the terrorists. What we must
now ask them is to campaign more strongly against the aberrant doctrines that
underpin them.
Both "sides", therefore,
have a responsibility to act. The West must drain the swamp of rage by securing
a fair resolution of the Palestinian tragedy. But it is the responsibility of
the Islamic world to defeat the terrorist aberration theologically.
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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