Posted by
Chris Travers on Monday, December 11, 2006 9:30:16 PM
I just finished reading a very interesting paper entitled "
Understanding Islamism"
by the International Crisis Group. This is a very fascinating
look at Islam, activism, and the role of the religion in the
society. This 35-page report is meticulously researched, and
documents the many ways that the inherently political nature of Islam
manifests among different groups. I am not a Muslim (I am a
pagan), and I strongly disagree with the social blueprint aspect of the
Muslim religion.
I have long argued that the image that Western leaders have invoked of
a "moderate" Islam which embraced Western values was fundamentally
un-Muslim, and this report has helped to clarify my thoughts on
why. It is certainly true that in any group, there are those who
are more moderate than others, and Muslims are no different.
However, in this post, I use a quoted "moderate" to indicate a false
image of moderation and an unquoted one to indicate a more objectively
verifiable image. One might well ask why Iran is said to typify
"radical" Islam, while the far more conservative (and Wahhabist) Saudi
Arabia is labled "Moderate." Especially when the ideology of the
Wahhabi movement is closer to that of Al'Qaeda than that of the
Shiite-dominated Islamic Republic of Iran (which oddly is much closer
to a Western society both in terms of values and governmental
structure). Looking at this dichotomy, the truth becomes
evident: moderates are those we want to do business with and
radicals are those we don't. There is no ideological correlation
between such a categorization.
First, as many have pointed out, Islam isn't really a religion of
peace. THe Koran and indeed Muslim history shows that the
religion does not shrink from war nor does it idealize peace in a way
that discourages many types of war. However, the other
characterization of Islam as a bloodthirsty and violent religion is
also inaccurate Islam is in fact neither a religion of peace or
war. The truth becomes evident on even a cursory (though
complete) reading of the Koran: Islam is a religion of law and is
therefore inherently political. The Koran itself is mostly
composed of social rules interspersed with invocations of the divine.
The inherently political nature of the religion means that the Islamic
community is always somewhat receptive to the idea that the
government and legal traditions of the countries in which Muslims live
ought to reflect Islamic pinciples, and in some cases, legal
traditions. Many Muslims may not worry too much about this as a
minority religion at least in the US, but the structure of the
tradition is such that devout Muslims will always be receptive to this
issue. Islam, therefore, does not support a separation of Church
or Mosque and State.
But before I go foreward I want to clear up a few things:
There is often a disagreement in the US among non-Muslims as to whether
Christians and Jews are considered "infadels" or "people of the
book." Through most of their history, most Muslims have taken the
latter approach. However, the Wahhabists differ and treat all
non-Muslims as "infadels" to be struggled against. They also
consider the Shiah to be heretics because of a number of reasons I
won't get into here. Fortunately, Wahhabism appears to be
declining in the Islamic world including even the Arabian peninsula.
Just because Islam is an inherently political religion does not mean
that every Muslim is a potential suicide bomber. There is a lot
of diversity of thought in the Islamic world regarding the political
aims and the means used to attain them. One cannot simply talk of
a homogeneous Islamist movement, though I would argue that Islam
intrinsically sponsors political activism in furtherance of the social
blueprint of Islam.
Ok. Now, what does that mean for us?
There is certainly a great deal of discussion in the Islamic world
about the rightful place of democratic institutions. Khomeini's
"government by Jurist" has largely proven to be a failure in part
because of controversy surrounding his succession by
Khamene'i. Because Khamene'i lacks the credibility with the
religious scholar community, he serves just as the voice of the clergy
rather than the independant, wise dictator that Khomeini
envisioned. In part for this reason, even at the present moment,
democractic institutions are gaining strength in
Iran. And in Iraq, the only major Shiite figure to
favor a Khomeini-style governemnt-by-jurist is Al-Sadr.
In the Sunni world, there seems to be a deep divide between three
camps. One espouses a decentralized effort to just make Muslims
behave (in all actualitiy this usually involves intimidation,
vigilantism, and the like). This appears to be the political
philosophy of the Sunni insurgents in Iraq, and is known as Salafism.
Other groups seek democratic institutions and laws in accordance with Islamic tradition.
However, most or all groups generally seek in their long-term vision to
make the society more in line with Muslim legal traditions.
How should we react as a nation?
I think it would be a very serious mistake to let Muslim communities in
the US label themselves as opporessed minority, or second class
citizens in a country that supposedly offers them Constitutional
protections for their religion. Comments like Prager's suggesting
that Muslims should swear on the Bible are thus deeply
counterproductive and help foster the idea that Muslims need to
struggle against our society and governemnt to address real grievances.
Instead, I think we need to do more to bolster the religion-independant
nature of our government, enuring that all minority religions are
protected and treated as equals by the law. While the courts are
leaning this way already, I think we need more prominant politicians to
suggest that although religion is not absent from the public square,
there is no preference to given to dominant religious groups.
I.e. we aren't going to go ahead and ban the Hijab from public schools
(or even try to).
Finally, I think we need to do something that is more likely to be
controversial but in the end is, I think, to everyone's interest.
We need to re-interate the fact that many of the references to "God" in
our national documents, pledges, etc. are listed along-side references
to Roman pagan goddesses (Liberty and Justice, for example).
Therefore, I would suggest that we change our money from saying "In God
we Trust" (a clearly Christian reference) to "One nation, under God,
with Liberty and Justice for all" and go on to suggest that the
inclusion of pagan diety names here is an expression not of defference
to Roman religious traditions but a way of including other structures
of religious thought.