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 <title>open Democracy News Analysis - The light within: Muslims in transition, Omair Ahmad  - Comments</title>
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 <title>The light within: Muslims in transition, Omair Ahmad </title>
 <link>http://www.opendemocracy.net/faith-aboutfaith/article_786.jsp</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;Bruce Bawer&amp;#146;s article, &lt;a
href=&quot;http://www.partisanreview.org/archive/2002/3/bawer.html&quot; target=_blank&gt;Tolerating
Intolerance: The Challenge of Fundamentalist Islam in Western Europe,&lt;/a&gt; was an
interesting read, and in many ways perceptive, but also very obviously was
written from an outsider&amp;#146;s point of view. And I guess that therein is the
problem that Bawer himself is raising: it is hard for an outsider to have a
clear view of the various Muslim minority communities in the west. In fact,
because of blatantly anti-democratic regimes in power in the areas where
Muslims are a majority, it is only a stunted, servile and intolerant form of
Islam that has gained ascendancy. The leaders are often populist, often
unpopular, and do not have greater standing in a community other than through
blind faith in family and tradition. 

&lt;p&gt;Interestingly, and hopefully enough, the Islamic
community is transforming, more in places such as the United States than in
others. And the people who are transforming are not Walter Mourad, the secularised Lebanese&amp;#150;American businessman Bawer
referred to.
The larger Muslim community sees them more as people to be pitied than
emulated. Bawer really misses the point when he equates a higher humanism and
secularism (western civilisation) as a cure for the zealots and
fundamentalists. Secularism is only a form of disaffection and disengagement.
Only those who explicitly call themselves Muslims and are willing to fight the
stranglehold of a few old men (with no qualifications except that of agreeing
blindly to the ideas written and forged only God knows how long ago) are going
to change Islam: Muslim women, the young, and possibly the people who are going
to get up and shout that they are Muslim and gay, although if you quote me on
this last one my family will be horrified&amp;#133;but I guess that illustrates the
point.

&lt;p&gt;For the most part Muslims are not from the rich,
Christian west, they are from the poor, colonised non-west, and they have
little cause or reason to embrace a culture that they see as having carried out
genocide, rape, and unhindered looting in their countries. To a great degree
that image is still the predominant one throughout the rest of the world. 

&lt;p&gt;Not many people would weep bitter tears for the end of
western civilisation, because for more than a millennium it has meant misery.
Although this has changed to a great degree, there are more than enough
instances of &amp;#145;the west is the best and everything else deserves to be wiped
out&amp;#146; syndrome in the air. For example, George W. Bush&amp;#146;s &amp;#145;you are either for us,
or against us&amp;#146;. Western civilisation will most likely survive and adapt as all
civilisations have. But currently it is finding itself on the back foot. The
best way to make sure that the best features survive is to make sure that the
bright and adventurous among the community of &amp;#145;immigrants&amp;#146; get access to
resources, which they can then use to change their own communities. 

&lt;p&gt;The change in Muslim communities will happen on the
basis of religion, and the arguments will be of a religious nature. The people
who will be best able to do this are those who teach their own. I see this in
the United States where a generation ago the choices were either to be American
or to be Muslim, and today, despite 11 September and all, there is a good and
viable choice of being both. This is both because the communities have their
own institutions through which they speak to the state, and many of those
people speaking have an attitude that allows for more than one point of view to
be addressed. 

&lt;p&gt;That is what Bawer should be talking about rather than
a threat of deluge.

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Belden:&lt;/b&gt;Could you tell us more about the better choices
available to Muslims in the US now? Do you see a younger or more creative
leadership that is creating a different emphasis, a different kind of Islam, or
a different kind of economy, culture? I am truly ignorant about this.

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Ahmad: &lt;/b&gt;I wrote the last mail without a clear theme, except
that I thought that Bawer&amp;#146;s writing was somewhat confused. He failed to
differentiate between strains of Islam, and too often lumped &amp;#145;immigrant&amp;#146;,
&amp;#145;Islam&amp;#146; and &amp;#145;fundamentalist&amp;#146; together positing all of them opposite secular,
western values.

&lt;p&gt;The hope and the dynamic leadership I see in the US is
chiefly through institutions such as the &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.isna.net/&quot; target=_blank&gt;Islamic
Society of North America&lt;/a&gt; (ISNA) and the &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.cair-net.org/&quot; target=_blank&gt;Council
for American&amp;#150;Islamic Relations&lt;/a&gt; (CAIR) that started out mostly as
conservative reactions to the western value system around them, but then are
being slowly being taken over by a new generation of leaders. This has been
best revealed after 11 September 2001. (&lt;a
href=&quot;http://archive.salon.com/news/feature/2001/09/26/muslims/&quot; target=_blank&gt;This article&lt;/a&gt;
in &lt;i&gt;Salon&lt;/i&gt; is largely solid, although I am unsure of how in context all
the quotes are). 

&lt;p&gt;Moreover, the one huge factor that Bawer leaves out is
the community that has converted (or in Islamic parlance, reverted) to Islam.
The current vice-President of ISNA is a white Caucasian woman, Ingrid Mattson. 

&lt;p

&gt;Possibly the most important person in the American
Islamic community is &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.isna.net/&quot; target=_blank&gt;W. Deen Mohammed&lt;/a&gt; (see
details under Board of Advisors), who made the choice of rejecting anything
that his father had allowed or preached that was in contravention with Quranic
injunction, thereby bringing the majority of the Black Muslim population in
line with Malcolm X&amp;#146;s later teachings and very far from Louis Farrakhan and the
Nation of Islam. 

&lt;p&gt;Both ISNA and CAIR have a long way to go, they are far
from perfect. Yet there are more people emerging, and I see them being
accepted. It is of great significance that these organisations function under
the spotlight of a democratic system and are not excluded from it.

&lt;p&gt;Bawer makes the mistake of thinking that there is only
one good path to reconciling religion and the state, and he does not realise
that he is unconsciously choosing the western and largely Christian tradition.
But Christianity&amp;#146;s roots and relations with the state are embedded in a history
of being outside the state, or negotiating its position as a state religion
within an empire (Christianity and the Holy Roman Empire from the end of the
4th century onwards), or with the pre- and post-Westphalian nation states of
Europe with their own state religions. Islam&amp;#146;s relations have been either that
of an emerging movement faced with a militarily superior enemy that was also
related to it (therefore dialogue had to take place), or as the religion of a
ruling elite that needed and depended on a bureaucracy (and often a military)
that was made of people of different faiths (and therefore again a need for
dialogue), or lastly once again a vehicle for rebellion and self-assertion
(whether through the anti-colonial debate, or through people such as Malcolm
X). 

&lt;p&gt;This tradition is much closer to that of Judaism than
it is to Christianity, and I wish that people would realise that. And just as
some of the &lt;i&gt;halakha&lt;/i&gt; of rabbis in some of the extremist settlements tend
to be somewhat silly and often counterproductive, in the same way some of the &lt;i&gt;fatwas&lt;/i&gt;
of &lt;i&gt;imams&lt;/i&gt; in non-democratic societies and situations tend to be dumb, if
not downright ugly. 

&lt;p&gt;Ugly situations quite often breed ugly products. It
might be a cliché, but I&amp;#146;ll go with it.

&lt;p&gt;My problem is that people too often do not try to
engage the youth of these communities in either intellectual activity or
debate. What makes a difference is the parents&amp;#146; level of education, and that
available to the children. The &lt;i&gt;Economist&lt;/i&gt; carried a series recently on
which groups make better immigrants. Surprise, surprise, higher-educated,
better-salaried people, who can then afford a good education for their children
and do not feel alienated from the society at large tend to make better
immigrants. Low-wage workers and their succeeding generations don&amp;#146;t.

&lt;p&gt;&lt;a
href=&quot;http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?pagename=article&amp;node=&amp;contentId=A59586-2002Sep9&amp;notFound=true&quot; target=_blank&gt;Karen
Armstrong&lt;/a&gt;, in an article about a month or so ago in the &lt;i&gt;Washington Post&lt;/i&gt;,
argued that fundamentalists base their appeals on the statement that their way
of life is in danger. By attacking them on their way of life you only validate
their fears and arguments, which then become true. The process has to be such
that you must bring them into the community while excluding violence and
illegality. Get people to make stupid comments on the TV and you&amp;#146;ll see how
many condemn them. You&amp;#146;ll also know who to prosecute. Bawer notes the instance
of the debate of the fundamentalist and the Muslim woman on TV, but doesn&amp;#146;t
seem to realise the lesson. Allow both sides of such communities an open forum
and you&amp;#146;ll accord some legitimacy to idiots (a price one pays in a society that
values freedom of expression) but you also get to see them make fools of
themselves (as Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell regularly do) and be blown off
by members of their own communities.

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Belden:&lt;/b&gt; Bawer is describing a particular moment, and
extrapolating it into the future, while you are describing a community in
process of change. And I&amp;#146;m wondering if the US is in fact a place where that
change is happening faster and more hopefully than in Europe. Do you have any
sense of this? In your first response when you said &amp;#145;the Islamic community is
transforming, more in places such as the United States than in others&amp;#146; did you
mean more in the US than in Europe, or more in both the US and Europe than
elsewhere?

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Ahmad:&lt;/b&gt; I am more familiar with the US community because I
have more relatives there, and I have been there myself for the last one and a
half years. But I think a similar debate and transformation is happening in
Germany, as well as small steps taken in France. In France the similarity of
Islam being there as a redemptive tool for those coming out of jail is remarkably
similar to the African&amp;#150;American experience. There has been &lt;a
href=&quot;http://www.opendemocracy.net/debates/article.jsp?id=5&amp;debateId=57&amp;articleId=679&quot; target=_blank&gt;a
debate&lt;/a&gt; on &lt;b&gt;openDemocracy&lt;/b&gt; about the situation in Germany.

&lt;p&gt;I have a problem with people taking a particular
moment and extrapolating therefrom. Cultures change and transform, or they
become static and die out. Western Europe during its Dark Ages is a perfect
example, where were we supposed to extrapolate from there? I prefer searching
for emerging trends and figures.

&lt;p&gt;There are, though, additional factors when it comes to
the US: the very vibrant non-governmental organisation (NGO) culture, the
presence of the media (for good or ill), and the Jewish and civil rights
experience from which Muslims are learning. Although this is sometimes amusing
and frustrating because quite often many of the Muslim organisations tend to be
reflexively anti-Israeli and borderline anti-Jewish. Most of them see Israel
through the lens of their own experience of being colonised and brown versus
white. Few go far back enough in history to see the redemptive and liberating
nature of Zionism for the Jewish people. And for some, especially those who
have lost family, land or homes, it is next to impossible.

&lt;p&gt;But overall I think that, yes, in both Europe and in
the US the Muslim community is maturing more than in others (with the possible
exception of Indonesia) because of the protection of minority rights, and a
position in a democratic stable set up. 

&lt;p&gt;In the Middle East, Muslims have been lied to by their governments for so long that conspiracy theories are a natural cottage industry. Of course, many of them exist in the United States too; but with far less impact, as the truth is more readily accessible. Where there is freedom to speak the truth cultures will adapt and grow; where not, they will stultify and become closed in on themselves. 


&lt;p&gt;And it is interesting that the Prophet said, &amp;#145;the
highest form of &lt;i&gt;jihad&lt;/i&gt; is to tell the truth in the face of the tyrant.&amp;#146;
In this, obviously, the Muslim community has itself to blame, because it hasn&amp;#146;t
had the courage to confront its own tyrants as it is religiously mandated it
should do. 
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 <comments>http://www.opendemocracy.net/faith-aboutfaith/article_786.jsp#comment</comments>
 <category domain="http://www.opendemocracy.net/faith_and_ideas/index.jsp">faith &amp;amp; ideas</category>
 <category domain="http://www.opendemocracy.net/taxonomy/term/1659">Omair Ahmad</category>
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 <category domain="http://www.opendemocracy.net/faith-aboutfaith/debate.jsp">what about faith?</category>
 <pubDate>Mon, 25 Nov 2002 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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