
To
understand the contemporary world, we all need to know something
about Islam-beyond the inane contribution of ignorant politicians
(ie John "Mesofacist" Ashcroft). So I have found
this little primer on Islam for Americans (suitable for ages
13 and above, so appropriate for high school use), dealing
not with its theology so much as its general character as
an important force in the world, presently encountering unprecedented,
unprincipled attack from various quarters. (Oh, and by the
way, I'm not a Muslim, but what those on the Christian right
revile as a "secular humanist.")
- Islam
has been around for approximately 1400 years. Established
on the west coast of Arabia 900 years before European settlement
in America, and spreading rapidly throughout Southwest Asia
and North Africa soon thereafter, it was not designed as
an anti-U.S. movement!
- The
basic teachings or requirements of Islam are not difficult
to grasp. They constitute the "Five Pillars of Islam":
(1) profession that there is no God but God ("Allah,"
in Arabic), and his Prophet (the last of the prophets, the
"seal of the prophets") is Muhammad; (2) daily
prayer; (3) fasting during the month of Ramadan; (4) charity;
and (5) the pilgrimage to Mecca. Whatever you may think
of this package, it's not terribly threatening to the non-Muslim.
- Islam's
teachings are contained in a fairly compact book, the Qur'an,
which Muslims believe was dictated to the Prophet Muhammad
by the archangel Gabriel. They believe of it precisely what
Jews and Christians believe of their scriptures: that is,
it's the Word of God. This book, like the Bible, demands
belief in monotheism; refers to Adam, Noah, Abraham, Jesus,
etc. (far more space is given to Mary, mother of Jesus,
in the Qur'an than in the New Testament); has a substantial
legalistic component reminiscent of the Old Testament Book
of Leviticus, and poetic content as beautifully uplifting
as the Book of Psalms. For religious and secular scholars
alike, it is absolutely clear that Islam stems from the
Judeo-Christian tradition. Indeed, we should think in terms
of the "Judeo-Christian-Islamic tradition."
- (Some
fundamentalist Christians, of course, see Islam as the work
of Satan, and medieval Christians in Europe saw it as a
heresy rather than as "paganism. The point is---for
better or worse---Muslims have a whole lot more in common
with the dominant religious trends in the U.S. than do,
say, Buddhists or Hindus.)
- Muslims
are about 20% of the world's population; Christians, about
30%. (The U.S. Muslim population is estimated between 5
and 8 million; U.S. Jews between 5 and 6 million). The global
Jewish population is statistically quite small, so one can
say the Judeo-Christian-Islamic population is roughly half
the world's total. The consequences of a protracted religious
war, pitting Christians and Jews against Muslims, are highly
unpleasant to consider.
- The
Qur'an depicts Jews and Christians as "People of the
Book," meaning that they have their own scriptures
bestowed upon them by God (Allah is simply the Arabic world
for God, related to the Hebrew Elohim; we should see it
as analogous to the German word Gott, the French Dieu, or
the Spanish Dios. It's not the personal name of a deity
within a pantheon, like Thor, Aphrodite or Siva.)
- Muslim
scripture counsels respect for these communities, and indeed,
in the history of Islam, within Islamic societies Jews and
Christians have fared FAR better than non-Christians in
Christendom. Muslims ruled all or part of Spain from around
800 to the late 15th century, when Columbus' great patrons,
King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella "drove the Moors
(Muslims) out of Spain," forced everybody to embrace
Catholic Christianity (or be killed), and promoted the exquisite
Christian tortures of the Inquisition. Under Muslim rule,
Christian and Jewish communities generally flourished from
Spain to Iraq. On the other hand, until recent times, Christian
intolerance prevailed throughout Europe.
- The
Qu'ran does NOT call upon Muslims to KILL all non-Muslims.
It calls for the destruction of "infidels," meaning
principally Arabs who, during the time of Muhammad, practiced
idolatry and polytheism. Again: this is a seventh-century
book, produced in a specific historical context! It, and
the Muslim religion, should be studied and understood objectively,
dispassionately. Islam emerged very quickly, and within
decades united under its banner-the banner of monotheism---the
various tribes of Arabia. Its violent rejection of idolatry,
however offensive to the modern, secular, humanist mind,
is hardly unique. It can be compared to the ferocious suppression
in Christian Europe of paganism (often associated with witchcraft).
- And
for perspective, while the Qu'ran does call for the extermination
of "infidels," the Old Testament is replete with
its own exhortations to genocide. According to the Biblical
narrative (of dubious historicity, but believed by hundreds
of millions), the Hebrews under Joshua's leadership, invading
Canaan from Egypt, killed twelve thousand "men and
women together" in the town of Ai-because God wanted
them to (Joshua 8:25). The Hebrews put all the people of
Hazor to the sword (they "wiped them all out; they
did not leave one living soul." Judges 11:14). The
poetics of hatred are as conspicuous in the Bible as in
the Qu'ran. A personal favorite of mine, from Psalm 137,
refers to the Babylonians: "A blessing on him who takes
and dashes your babies against the rock!" Such references
are characteristic of Judeo-Christian-Islamic literature,
and are best examined in historical perspective.
- Islamic
"fundamentalism" is not a species apart from other
fundamentalisms, including the Christian, Jewish, and Hindu
varieties. They are all anti-modern, anti-science, anti-intellectual,
rarely harmless and potentially (if not necessarily) fascistic.
They demand belief in received dogma, inscribed in texts,
rather than open-ended scientific inquiry. They either legitimate
the existing order, or call for a return to a past social
order in which class and gender relations were properly
sorted out in line with the Divine Will.
- Some
(including non-religious people in or from Muslim countries)
criticize Islam (appropriately, in my view) for what they
consider backward and reactionary features. This is not
the place to deal with such criticisms, nor am I the right
person to do it. I will merely observe what many others
have observed: Christendom underwent the Enlightenment-an
evolution towards secularism, rationalism, and scientific
thought in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries-which
the Islamic world, in general, has not yet experienced.
To become "modern" (more specifically, to become
capitalist), the West had to become more ideologically tolerant
(i.e., less religious), and allow a freer market in ideas
than had been possible when the Church monopolized learning.
If mullahs monopolize education in much of the Muslim world,
they serve a function identical with that of Europe's medieval
Catholic clergy.
- But
our own Enlightenment is not irreversible. Top U.S. officials
reject the theory of evolution in favor of the ludicrous
"theory" of "creationism," and seek
to criminalize abortion on the grounds that a fetus is a
human being created by God. Recent changes in U.S. law (allowing
the use of vouchers to support religious schools at taxpayer's
expense), and the failure of the courts to prosecute behavior
which plainly violates the constitutional separation of
church and state, demonstrate that medieval thinking and
fundamentalism retain a strong hold in sections of U.S.
society, and are well represented in the Bush administration.
The American people are, I submit, far more threatened by
Christian fundamentalism than its Islamic counterpart. And
for a Pentecostalist Christian like John Ashcroft, who believes
every word of the Bible literally, to inveigh against Islam
(as he has) is (to use the English proverb) the "pot
calling the kettle black."
- Islamic
fundamentalism (or what some, including CNN Moneyline's
Lou Dobbs calls "Islamism," meaning a specifically
political Islam) has NOT, historically, posed a great threat
to Western interests (by which I mean corporate, oil, and
geopolitical interests) but rather been exploited to SERVE
those interests. Remember Lawrence of Arabia? What was his
objective other than to forge a British alliance with the
Hashemites, who would certainly qualify as "Islamists"
by Lou Dobb's standards, during World War I? Later, the
British boosted the Saudi royal family (patrons of the Wahhabi
school of Islam, usually described as among the most conservative,
embraced by Osama bin Laden as well as the Saudis in general)
into power. The U.S. inherited Saudi Arabia as a client
state after World War II, and we all know how well U.S.
oil companies have done there ever since. (Aramco alone,
prior to its nationalization in the mid-1980s, yielded some
$ 3 trillion from the Arabian reserves.)
- The
U.S. helped create, recruit, and finance the fundamentalist
Mujahadeen, including some 30,000 young volunteers who came
from throughout the Muslim world to fight "godless
Communism" in Afghanistan in the 1980s. The U.S. encouraged
them to view their war as a jihad (in the sense of a "Holy
War," a meaning the term usually does NOT carry), and
put many in contact with young Osama bin Laden, then an
ally. The Reagan administration was in love with fundamentalist
Islam, so long as it served its purposes.
- The
California-based company Unocal was cordially negotiating
right up to Sept. 11 with Afghanistan's Taliban for an oil
pipeline through Afghan territory, State Department official
and oilman Zalmay Khalilzad was arguing up through 1998
that the Taliban were friendly, potential business partners
who did "not practice the anti-U.S. style of fundamentalism
practiced in Iran."
- Muslims
of the world have many thoroughly LEGITIMATE reasons to
resent U.S. policy. Nearly absolute support for the settler
state of Israel in its relationship with the indigenous
Palestinian people. Imposition of brutal sanctions on Iraq,
contrary to logic and morality. Maintenance of bases throughout
the Persian Gulf, in defiance of local sensibilities and
interests. Support for brutal regimes, including that of
the Shah of Iran and that of Indonesia's Suharto (who unquestionably
has more blood on his hands than even that arch-villain
and former U.S. buddy Saddam Hussein).
- Muslims
typically DO NOT hate the U.S. as an abstract concept, reject
U.S. culture in toto, or seek the destruction of American
civilization. Many are, indeed, uncomfortable with some
aspects of American behavior, as are most people in the
world, from Central America to Japan. But a Zogby International
poll, released June 11 of this year, shows that in nine
Muslim countries, including Bangladesh and Malaysia, the
most admired foreign country is the U.S.
- Muslims
and Jews in Palestine/Israel have NOT always hated one another,
and the current Middle East conflict does NOT go back many
centuries. Rather, it began with the influx of foreign Jews
into the region after World War I, which became a flood
as a result of the Holocaust, and with international support
resulted in the formation of Israel as a specifically Jewish
state in 1948. Jewish settlement and terrorism (well-documented
by the Jewish Israeli historian Ilan Pappe) resulted in
the displacement of 750,000 Palestinian Arabs (including
both Christians and Muslims). The Arab-Israeli conflict
is not, fundamentally, about Islam, or a clash between Islam
and other faiths, but about this-worldly land grabbing,
settlement, dispossession and oppression that has enraged
the Muslim world, as it should enrage any thinking, moral
human being. Unfortunately, fundamentalist Christians in
this country tend to depict this history of injustice as
the fulfillment of Biblical prophecy, and they will brook
no dissent when it comes to the Zionist cause that they
have embraced as their own. ("God gave them the land,
so don't bother me with historical details. End of discussion.")
Hard to imagine a delusion more injurious to world peace
and to the cause of justice.
Finally:
In understanding Islam, Americans should give some thought
to one of the pivotal episodes in world history, the Crusades,
or Wars of the Cross, that ripped up the Holy Land between
1096 and 1291. During these two centuries, European Christians
seeking to "win back for Christendom" territory
that had fallen to the Muslim Turks-territory that had been
ruled by Muslims since the early seventh century anyway, on
terms generally agreeable to Jews and Christians as well as
Muslims-committed unspeakable atrocities. In July 1099 Jerusalem
was conquered, the Roman Catholic soldiers massacring all
the Muslim and Jewish inhabitants, including women and children.
Nor was the Crusaders' zeal exhausted upon non-Christians;
frustrated at lack of success in Palestine in 1204, they instead
sacked Constantinople (modern Istanbul), then the center of
Eastern Orthodoxy. In comparison, the behavior of the Muslim
armies was chivalrous, the twelfth-century Kurdish leader
Saladin in particular winning high praise from Christians
and Muslims alike for his humanity.
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