Monthly Archives: July 2009

2006: The crisis in Islam 1: Islam walking a tightrope between violence and reform / Samir Khalil Samir, sj

See the original of this article on the Asia News It site at this link.

Thanks much,
Steve St.Clair
============

The crisis in Islam 1:
Islam walking a tightrope between violence and reform
The crisis in Islam:
by Samir Khalil Samir, sj

The Islamic world is frontpage news. In places like Iran Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Lebanon a warlike Islam is facing off the West in increasingly harsh ways. In the West itself, Muslim communities grow in number as do conversions. But what might appear as a renaissance is in fact the sign of a profound crisis within the religion founded by the prophet Muhammad. Fr Samir Khalil Samir, a Jesuit and Islam scholar who teaches in Beirut, offers an across-the-board analysis of what ails contemporary Islam and the ways radical and progressive Muslims try to nurse it back to health. Here, exclusive for Asia news, is the first part of a series of article on the subject.


Beirut (AsiaNews) – The Islamic world is troubling to the Western observer: it appears as a force, an extraordinary power, which is on the move that no one can stop. This sensation – which frightens many Westerners – corresponds to what many Muslims call Sahwah, the Reawakening. Actually though this power is suffering from a profound crisis which is perceived by all Muslims: the inability to adapt to the modern world, to assimilate modernity.

In fact, Islam is going through a very profound crisis. It is a fact which is not only evident to outside observers. There is by now no Muslim, thinker, Arab or Islamic newspaper that is not discussing this fact: Islam is facing a crisis.

There is a distinction to be made. For radical Islamists – who are pursuing the project for a political Islam – the “blame” for the crisis falls on the West and its aggressiveness. For some, this crisis dates back to the Crusades; for others, to recent colonization; for others, to the creation of the State of Israel; for others still, it goes only as far back as American aggression in Afghanistan and Iraq. In all cases, what is ailing Islam comes from outside itself, from the Other.

There is however another group, ever more numerous, which affirms that Islam’s ailment is within itself. This position is usually found among liberal personalities, intellectuals. They too stop short of saying that the problem is right in the Koran: for them, the problem is in the interpretation made of the Koran, of Islam as a religious, political, social and cultural system. Judging by comments that appear in the press in Islamic countries, we can say that positions of radical Islamism amount to a good 20%; liberal tendencies account for some 10 to 20%.

All agree however that the time has come for reform in Islam.

A. HISTORICAL ROOTS

1. Islam’s slumber
A recurring topic in such debates is that of “Islam’s slumber”. Radicals attribute this “slumber” to four centuries of Ottoman domination, which would have curbed the religion’s development. Liberals instead affirm that this “slumber” began already in the 12th century and perhaps even earlier. In any case, all agree that this slumber created a “closure of the opening to interpretation,” the expression which literally translated from Arabic is “closure of the door of ijtihād.” In this context of reform, ijtihād is a key word. This word shares the same root with jihād, holy war. It expresses an effort which in jihād is oriented toward violence, to armed battle on the path of God. Ijtihād is the moral and intellectual effort to reform; it is “interpretation”.

Something that is continuously repeated in the Islamic world is that “the door has been closed to ijtihād”; little room has been left to interpretation, which has resulted in fossilization, stiffening. It is a discussion that has been present in the Arab world since the mid 1800s. For decades, there has been talk of “the closing of the door” to define the urgency of reform in Islam. For many liberals of the time, including the great religious leaders such as Khair ad-Dīn Al-Tūnisi (1810-1899), from Tunisia, Jamāl ad-Dīn al-Afghāni (1838-1897) from Persia, Abd al-Rahmān al-Kawākibi (1854-1902) from Syria, and, above all, Sheikh al-Azhar Muhammad ‘Abdoh (1849-1905) from Egypt, reform was to be made absorbing elements of Western culture and achieving a harmonious unity between the Islamic world and the Western world.

The First World War and the fall of the Ottoman Empire then brought to the secularization of Turkey and the abolition of the Caliphate (1923-4), as well as the control of various Arab nations by the West, England and France. All this marks the great religious-political fall of Islam which suddenly found itself divided into nations, with no caliph, no leaders, no guides.

2. Radicalism of the Muslim Brotherhood
This situation of crisis gave rise to the Muslim Brotherhood which was seen as the authentic solution, in opposition to that of reformists who wanted to imitate the West. Its founder, Hassan al-Banna (1906 – 1949), used a very simple argument: our great reformers wanted to reform Islam taking Europe as a model, and it was Europe itself which dismantled the Islamic world and deceived us. He was supported in his reasoning by the Imam Muhammad ‘Abduh’s dearest disciple, Sheikh Rashid Rida, a naturalized Egyptian originally hailing from Tripoli-Syria (now Lebanon), who had pronounced a simple principle: Islam is the solution to all problems of society (al-Islām huwa al-hall); there is no need to resort to anything outside Islam. It is enough to go back to the roots of Islam, namely to the Koran and the Tradition of the Prophet, taken literally.

In the effort to deal with the crisis, such a position does not strive to innovate, but to return to a “primitive” Islam, taking original Islam as a model. When “original” Islam is spoken of, what is meant is the conquering Islam. In fact, such a vision relies above all on the second phase of Mohammad’s life, the Medina phase (622-632), when Islam organized itself politically; and then on the era of the first caliphs, known as “the well guided”, who conquered the Middle East and the Mediterranean (632-660). That period is seen as that of real Islam, capable of conquering the world. The return to these origins, the reasoning goes, is what will allow Muslims to enlarge their worldwide conquests.

Since then, this tendency has become ever more radical, giving life to all those movements we call “Islamist” or “fundamentalist.”

As can be seen, such an approach provides a direct solution to the crisis, skirting the need for an in-depth analysis of the reasons for the crisis. If one asks: Why has Islam stayed behind (in science, in technology, in culture, in art, in the spread of ideas at the global level, in domination…)? The answer is obvious: because it was attacked, thwarted, imprisoned…The Other is to blame for the crisis.

3. Liberals and the interpretation crisis
The liberal position, instead, attributes the main responsibility for crisis to the erroneous way in which Muslims have interpreted the Koran: that of having made it into a political handbook, of having projected onto the Koran the sociological and cultural conceptions typical of a certain period, the domination of male over female, the desire for violence, ignorance etc. In the current period, liberals are speaking out against the ignorance of the people, the authoritarianism (the non-democracy) of their governments, and above all the poor training given to imams, which has, at this point, generated a popular Islam which is by the ignorant and for the ignorant.

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2006: The crisis in Islam 2: Violent fatwas worry Muslim governments / Samir Khalil Samir, sj

See the original of this article on the Asia News It website at this link.

Thanks much,
Steve St.Clair

=================

2006: The crisis in Islam 2:
Violent fatwas worry Muslim governments
by Samir Khalil Samir, sj

Rulers in Muslim countries are coming to terms with the fact that their religion is in a deep crisis. One sign is the growing number of fatwas or legal pronouncement ordering the murder of atheists, apostates, Israeli civilians . . . . But their calls for reform are just cosmetic. For Muslim governments the “violent and terrorist” Islam is a figment of the Western iimagination, except for a few liberal Muslims who are ready for self-criticsm. Here is the second in a series of articles analysing Islam’s crisis, by Fr Samir Khalil Samir.

Islam’s crisis is of interest to governments also. On December 7 and 8, 2005, a conference was held at Mecca which sought ways to stem the spreading crisis. Muslim politicians and intellectuals from all over the world attended the conference, which was called by the Organization of Islamic States. Here, I shall seek to examine it.

To start with, the document affirms and explicitly recognizes the crisis being experienced by the Muslim world. To strive to save Islam from the abyss, government leaders listed various causes of the crisis. The first is the flood of fatwas, which have become an affliction of Islamic societies.

1. The fatwa flood
Fatwas are judgements by more or less learned figures who seek to indicate the Islamic way to be followed in the various concerns of life. At the outset of Islam, fatwas were exceptional pronouncements, made by personnel with specific qualifications and accreditation: being political decisions, they were not at the discretion of every imam (prayer leader) nor of every faqīh (Islamic jurist). Later, the number of fatwa suppliers grew disproportionately, as they invaded every aspect of believers’ lives. These fatwas are often so awkward that Arab newspapers make fun of them.

The fatwahs targeted at Mecca were above all those in favour of violence. These are the ones that give Islam the image of being tied to terrorism. Representatives of Islamic governments said “Enough with imams who assume the right to say: Kill this group, or who legitimate jihād (holy war), to use the term used by the Islamic Conference. It should be said that, in Islam, the problem of violence is tied to war. And war, in order to be justified, must be preceded by a declaration of jihād.

2. Fatwas of violence and terror
When an imam declares a situation of jihād, it means that every Muslim, according to the means at his disposal, has the duty to fight the aggressor to defend and spread Islam. Such battles can be with arms and with physical violence, giving rise to warriors, the mujāhidīn. Those who are not able to fight directly can do their part by paying those who go to war. Another way of fighting — especially against atheists — is to defend Islam through writings. Even women, by having more children, contribute in their specific way to jihād. In any case, all Muslims without exception are called to jihād.

There has been, in recent years, a multiplication of the numbers of imams who order the killing of Israelis. The most famous imam in the Muslim world today, Yussef al Qaradāwi launched a fatwa that justifies Palestinian terrorist attacks against civilian Israelis. Al-Qaradawi is an Eyptian living in the Emirates, but he also travels a lot to Europe, London and Ireland, where the European Fatwa Institute is located. This institute has a very important role in Europe, at times positive, at times negative. Years ago, Al-Qaradawi made public a fatwa in which he explained that a kamikaze, a mujāhid, who blows himself up in a café, on a street or in a bus of Tel Aviv or elsewhere in Israel is a true martyr.

To understand the value of this fatwa, it must be said that Muslim tradition does not allow the killing of an unarmed person. Jihād can be carried out only against an armed opponent. Al-Qaradāwi found the way to justify the killing of civilians. He explains that, at this point, all of Israel is like an army, an aggressor against Islam, because all Israelis support the occupation of Palestine, of Islamic territory.

3. Correcting Islam’s image
After having criticized fatwas on violence, the Mecca document tackled the question of takfīr, the declaration that a person is kāfir, that is, a misbeliever, an atheist. Due to the crisis of Islam, the tendency has grown in the Muslim world for reciprocal accusations of “misbelief.” The Pakistani girl killed by her father in Brescia (Italy) in August 2006 was considered a “bad Muslim.” Many Islamic governments are accused of having betrayed the Muslim cause and of being “misbelievers”: this is the accusation that Al Qaeda makes against Saudi Arabia, but also Egypt, Jordan, etc…. In the war between Iraq and Iran, each of the two countries had first to demonstrate that the other was kāfir in order to be able to attack!

The Mecca document asks that such reciprocal ostracism be curbed, as it weakens the unity of the Umma, the Islamic community. Plus, this situation gives Islam an image of violence that misrepresents Islam which, by its nature, is according to the document, a religion of tolerance (dīn al-samāh). And Muslim governments are very worried about the image, negative and violent, that the rest of the world has of Islam. Fundamentalists instead are not worried about this image: in their opinion, this shows even more how corrupt the West is: i.e., to the point of not understanding that violence against Evil comes from the Good.

The document’s third point deals with efforts to save Muslim identity which is “under attack from all sides.” With some flattery of radical tendencies, the document slides into the “victimization” of Islam, saying that the crisis depends on the fact that the entire world is targeting and criticizing the Muslim religion. The document dwells on the fact that the West and the world have a deformed image of Islam. Thus, to save Islamic identity and correct the incorrect clichés of the international community, it was decided at Mecca to “give a positive image of Islam, of the authentic Umma.”

The document claims the fact that Islam created an Islamic civilization and, what is more, contributed to building a universal civilization. To attain a more positive image, the governments at Mecca have decided to “give priority to reforms and progress, in accordance with human civilization, taking inspiration however from sharia, justice and equality.” The document does not however go beyond these generic declarations of principle, and indicates in its conclusion the need for “a 10-year plan for reforming society.”

And to change the deformed image that the West has of the Muslim world, the governments have decided to spread a true understanding of Islam in the West. For these governments, which are influenced by radical ideas, the image that the West has of Islam is incorrect. The Mecca document risks being superficial in its analysis and solutions. What is at stake for them, in the end, is just “How to change Islam’s image?” correcting certain aspects here and there.

Only the liberal Islamic world has the courage to say: “This is the image that we Muslims give, it is not something invented by Westerners. If it does not correspond to true Islam, then that at is because we are not presenting true Islam.” The most radical question is being asked by liberal intellectuals: how to change our interpretation of Islam? The problem, in fact, is not just the violence of fatwas, or the way in which the West sees Islam, but a way to put Islamic religion into effect in daily life.

Furthermore, fatwas reflect the confusion experienced by a large section of religious Muslims. They are not able to reconcile Islam with modernity and are afraid to make mistakes that might distance them from “true Islam.” So they ask for fatwas, and the mufti (the suppliers of fatwa) come up with them on everything and on nothing, responding to the thousands of requests that they receive! That fatwas are being requested attests to confusion and religious ignorance; a fatwa is reassuring and dictates the conduct to follow in even the smallest details of daily life.

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2006: The Crisis in Islam 3: Imams’ ignorance holds back cultural development of those who want to live according to Islam / Samir Khalil Samir, sj

See the original of this article in the Asia News It website at this link.

Thanks much,
Steve St.Clair

===================

Imams’ ignorance holds back cultural development of those who want to live according to Islam
by Samir Khalil Samir, sj
09/06/2006

As the demand for fatwas, responsa on what is or isn’t lawful, goes up and the types of issues are increasingly wide-ranging, Muslims rely more and more on Islamic clerics and fundamentalists. yet in Morocco women are becoming imams. This is the third article on Islam in crisis, by Fr Samir Khalil Samir.

Most worrying to governments are fatwas involving violence, which are related to politics. But the crisis of Islam can be gauged above all by the fatwas that are produced each day, for every aspect of life, especially that of women.

In Egypt – home to the most imaginative and prolific muftis – all newspapers, radio and television stations have a segment dedicated to fatwas. Two or three times a week, people call in their questions and a mufti supplies answers. There are even call-centres in Cairo that can give you a fatwa on the spot. It is lucrative business: on one side there are the fatwa specialists on the other the people that call. There is a surcharge (sometimes as much as ten times) on the normal cost of the call: profits go in part to the businessman who sets up the religious enterprise, and in part to the mufti himself. People call from all over the world, and not just from Egypt, to know how to behave in this or that situation of daily life.

One question that is often heard is if it is alright to eat with a non-Muslim. This request arrives mainly from businessmen who travel to Germany, the U.S., London. The answer, depending on the juridical knowledge of the mufti, can be either yes or no. If I keep to the Koranic text which says, “This day the good things are allowed to you; and the food of those who have been given the Book is lawful for you and your food is lawful for them,” (5,5), then there should be nothing wrong with a “business lunch” with Westerners, when considering them as part of “those who have been given the Book.” But, if I consider that Westerners are in general misbelievers, then their food is not halāl but harām, forbidden. For, the purpose of all fatwas is to establish what is halāl (allowed) and what is harām (forbidden).

Another popular topic is how to behave with a woman: if a man can hold a woman’s hand in public; if spouses can kiss each other, how to make love, etc… Kissing in public is forbidden in Egypt. Offenders risk being arrested. But such fatwas go even farther: influenced by radicalism, muftis prohibit spouses from even kissing each other in private. The fundamentalist tendencies can be seen in fatwas prohibiting spouses to see each other nude; they prescribe that lovemaking be done only in the dark, or – as some say – that a thin veil be put between the two bodies… And all this is the subject of heated discussions on television!

In recent months, I had fun listening to the strangest fatwas: “should or should not a launderer (laundry shops are everywhere in Egypt) handle the clothes of a woman who normally does not wear an Islamic veil?” “If a woman gets out of the bath naked and there is a dog in the apartment, has she done something forbidden? Answer: “It depends on the dog. If the dog is male, the woman has done something which is forbidden.”

Another very amusing fatwa, reported by newspapers: “While I pray a woman goes by. Is my prayer valid or not?” Answer: “If a donkey, a woman, or a black dog goes by, the prayer must be repeated.” The explanation is incredible: “The donkey is an impure animal; the black dog could be Satan in disguise; women are impure regardless.”

In another newspaper, I read a fatwa dealing with girls: “It is permissible or not to play with a Barbie doll?” Answer: “No, because these dolls display the attractive parts of a woman’s body and that is sinful.” That is why the sale of Barbie dolls has been forbidden in Iran and Islamic dolls, which are dressed in the Muslim manner, with a headscarf, chador, burkha, have been introduced.

At times these fatwas create scandal among the faithful. I once saw on Egyptian television a debate which lasted over an hour on “to whom may a woman show her breasts.” Everything began with the normal habit of Egyptian women nursing their babies in public. Women uncover their breast on the bus, in church, in the street, everywhere: this has never caused any kind of shock in Egypt. But during the discussions, someone went as far as to ask: can a woman nurse her own driver? Shouts were heard from the audience, viewers called in to the television station to complain. The imam’s answer was: “It depends: according to the degree of kinship with the driver, such behaviour can be forbidden or allowed.” The mufti’s reaction to the enormous protests being voiced by spectators? “You are idiots,” he said, “This is not a problem of sensitivity, it is a juridical problem.”

There are people who take all this seriously. Once again, the increase in the number of fatwas clearly shows that there is widespread confusion and, at the same time, it also shows the effects of the fundamentalist interpretation of Islam: it is essential to know what is allowed and what is not. Common sense no longer comes into play.

2. Ignorance of imams and dependence on them
The problem that emerges here is not so much the morbid questions and answers, as the general ignorance of the people and their imams and muftis. There is a great desire among people to live by religious dictates. The point is that this has brought people to be almost absolutely dependent upon their muftis. The way to penetrate Islam into my life, from the most intimate matters to public ones, is to entrust myself to the religious expert who answers my questions.

In all truth, I must say that even in the Copt Orthodox Church the same danger exists. Each Friday, Patriarch Shenaouda III gives a long one-hour sermon. As he preaches, families send their children to him with notes on which they have written questions. At the end, the Patriarch chooses a few and gives answers. There are questions of all kinds – though not as ridiculous as those of the fatwas mentioned above… But they are questions on moral life: is it permissible to go to the cinema; can a young man and a young woman hold hands as they walk down the street; is it a sin to sing tunes from the radio; etc. There are also questions on faith, on the problems pertaining to the belief in God.

People’s ignorance and the desire for religiosity have generated this structure of total dependence on religious figures. This makes me think of the scholars of the law of Jesus’ time. That society too, given religious ignorance and, at the same time, the lack of any horizon other than religion, brought people to be totally subjugated to religious scholars. These “scholars” are no doubt experts in their speciality (law, traditions, sayings, etc.) but they can be ignorant from the humanistic point of view.

3. Training of imams
At the Mecca conference, the problem was dealt with only laterally: faced with the fast spread of fatwas and above all those involving violence, the governments limited themselves to saying that fatwas are not for anyone to pronounce. But the real root of the problem is that imams, muftis and, in general, “men of religion”, as we Arabs call them (rijāl al-dīn), are lacking a well-rounded education. Being ignorant, they also make the general public ignorant. Apart from the fact that many muftis and imams have proclaimed themselves to be such.

What kind of training do Islamic scholars receive? In the great majority of cases – and I am speaking of the Arab world, but I think that the Asian and Muslim-African worlds are no better off – their training is strictly religious and Islamic: it is based on the study of Arabic, the Koran and the sayings of the Prophet of Islam. But here, the word “study” means: memorizing the Koran, memorizing thousands of sayings (the so-called hadith, Mohammad’s sayings); memorizing thousands of fatwas, juridical pronouncements. Subsequently, basing themselves on a saying of Mohammad or a comment by a scholar of the early centuries, the imams will apply to a current situation some fact or saying of the past, using the principle of analogy: “Here, we are in an analogous, similar situation: we can therefore apply this or that saying, this or that criterion.” But even in such applicative efforts, memorized material is called upon; practically no effort is made to reflect.

Furthermore, imams receive no real training in sociology, psychology, literature that is not within the Arab horizon. Often, apart from Arabic (or their mother tongue, plus Arabic), they do not know other languages. It is very rare that they can read books in English, French or Italian. In fact, it is extremely rare: it can be said with certainty that not more than 5% of imams know a foreign language. All this creates a culture which is certainly very specialized, scholarly in fine points and in answers, but which is closed in on itself, as if in an airtight container. They are lacking the ability to situate the questions that they study in a larger, more universal framework; the ability to deal with a question from, among others, a historical, sociological, political point of view; in short, to have reference points which are outside their Islamic world.

4. Morocco’s experiment: female imams
Many Muslims and political figures recognize that their imams are ignorant and that their public teaching is truly unsatisfactory. Thus, various states are designing new educational systems. An interesting example of training has been developed in Morocco, where they have actually begun a school for imams which also includes women (who are not called imam, but murscidāt, “women who guide or advise”).

Every six months, the Moroccan Ministry of Islamic Affairs recruits dozens of men and women and offers them a one-year training period. Among the many signed up in the last round, 60 were young women. The school, at first sight, is very traditional in character: women are kept separate from men in class, and wear the traditional Moroccan headscarf (not the so-called “Islamic veil” imported from Saudi Arabia), etc. Training naturally includes Koran studies, but the curriculum is more open and allows for a favourable interpretation of modernity. Religious studies deal with law, the history of religion, etc.

What is absolutely new about this, however, is that students also take courses in human sciences, psychology, human rights and the mudawwana, the new family law enacted by the king of Morocco two years ago. This new mudawwana guarantees greater equality of rights between men and women; it has aroused numerous protests from fundamentalists, but it endures. The new imams that are being trained, men and women, serve to spread its values and to give it life. In fact, after the year-long study programme, women in particular are sent to mosques, prisons, hospitals, schools and associations to speak and preach to women, but not only. It is a sort of “feminization” of Islam which helps Muslims understand the importance of women in the Islamic world. Initial evaluations of the experiment have all been very positive. The murscidāt receive a salary from the government, equivalent to 450 euros which for Morocco is a good income. Reading various interviews that they have given, one can see that these women are inspired by a missionary spirit, of wanting to enlarge horizons for an Islam open to modernity. This experiment in Morocco is one of the best being proposed by Muslim states. In France, various private groups are trying to set up similar programmes, but they have not yet been able to train imams well.

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2006: The Crisis in Islam 4: Training European imams is Islam’s toughest challenge / Samir Khalil Samir sj

See the original of this article on the Asia News It website at this link.

Thanks much,
Steve St.Clair

============


Training European imams is Islam’s toughest challenge
by Samir Khalil Samir sj
09/07/2006

Most imams in Europe are foreign-born and incapable of reconciling their own Islamic background with that of the West. When this is the case as in Great Britain some young Muslims can be tempted by terrorism. Here is the fourth article in a series by Fr Samir Khalil Samir.


The training situation is very bad in Europe. It can be said that the problems of European Muslim communities are much worse than those suffered by Muslims in Islamic countries.

1. It’s a fact: Imams have not adapted to European culture
The states of Europe would like Muslims born in Europe or their Islamic communities to have European imams. Instead, the majority of Europe’s imams (approximately 90%) is not of European culture or training: they are sent by Arab countries, Turkey, Iran or Pakistan, to work with immigrants and to Islamize them.

These imams, educated in the traditional way, are not able to offer a harmonious vision between Western culture, in which European Muslims are born, and the Muslim culture that they are supposed to have, maintain, or reacquire. This creates many internal conflicts. Some imams – as is evident in Great Britain – are thus able to win young men over to Islamist (i.e. radical fundamentalist) tendencies, and, at times, actual terrorists emerge from these recruits. And how could an imam, ignorant of the culture of the European country in which he lives, help a young person to harmonize his religion with European culture? The only thing that he can tell him is that European culture is anti-Muslim or, worse still, anti-religion.

On the other hand, European governments, though striving to organize the Islamic presence in their states, cannot fully do so because in Europe there is the principle of a strict distinction between politics and religion. For this reason, every solution that European governments attempt is a temporary and by no way stable solution.

2. Lack of official representatives of Islam
The other problem is that there are no official representatives in Islam. For this reason, each Islamic group, supported by this or that imam, battles with other groups to impose its ideological supremacy, as can be seen in Italy, but also in France and elsewhere.

It should be noted that behind each group there is an international Islamic organization or a Muslim state. France is a case in point: Paris’ big mosque answers to Algeria, which provides the funds to keep it functioning. Then there are very traditionalistic groups which are financed by Morocco and Turkey, and groups financed by organizations close to the tendencies of the Muslim Brotherhood or Saudi Arabia.

Unfortunately, all the communities are subjugated to these organizations, veritable international lobby groups, whose funding depends on some of the most traditionalist Islamic groups. It is also well known that Europe’s mosques are spreading a kind of Islam which is more traditionalistic and backwards than the mosques of Islamic countries themselves. I have personally met numerous women in Italy who have “converted” to more radical Islam, while back in their Muslim country they had been more open-minded.

To this must be added the problem of European imams who are converts to Islam. Apart from some notable exceptions, these imams are the ones spreading an anti-Western Islam, instead of an Islam which has integrated the best of European culture (as one could expect from them). Perhaps to justify their own ways and choices, original Muslims are rarely attracted by such imams; they are, however, converting many Europeans and are making them even more closed than themselves!

The situation is dramatic because the states of Europe have no real authority over these groups; and, on the other hand, at the grassroots level, there is no commonly recognized authority to make reference to. The conclusion is that Islam in Europe is out of control; it is at the mercy of this or that foreign fundamentalist preacher.

3. Are the creation of Muslim faculties of theology a solution?
In order to nurture an Islam which is harmonized with European culture, some countries would want to open theological faculties of Islamic studies. But the problem is: who would teach in them? Lay scholars or Muslims? And of what tendency? France has been thinking for years of creating an integrated faculty of Muslim theology at various universities (such as in Alsatia, Paris or Marseille), but has not been able to overcome inter-Muslim conflict, nor juridical problems pertaining to the separation of politics and religion. The concordat which exists in certain cases with the Vatican is a model which cannot be reproduced with Islam which does not have a recognized authority.

Currently, the most renowned university in the Islamic world is Al-Azhar in Cairo. But the teaching done there is so unsuitable to university thinking that it would be catastrophic to train imams for Europe there. Nor would importing professors from Al-Azhar be a solution. The point is that, even in Cairo, there is an internal struggle between liberal and radical tendencies. Unlike Morocco where the king has also a religious function (kings of Morocco are considered descendents of Mohammad and “lieutenants of God”, amīr al-mu’minīn), Egypt is considered a lay state and is therefore rejected by religious extremism. This is why extremist currents rely on external groups, such as the Muslim Brotherhood or Saudi Arabia. On the other hand, Egypt and the Al-Azhar University itself cannot afford to irritate Saudi Arabia, which distributes heaps of funding… Egypt, like Europe, is able to give, at the most, general indications to communities on teaching, but is not able to get to the heart of the training problem.

The training of imams is the fundamental issue in the question of reform in the Islamic world because Islam’s image at the local and international level depends on them. To make a comparison with Catholicism, let’s consider what the reform of seminaries, which issued from the Council of Trent, has meant to the Church. And that was almost 5 centuries ago. Instead, Islam has not undergone any reform, but has maintained its traditional, mnemonic system. It has in fact gone backwards: in the 9th and 11th centuries, Islam strived to integrate sciences, but Islam has been outside the modern world for centuries now.

In my opinion, the only solution is to integrate Islamic teaching into the European university framework. But a problem remains, and it is financial. In the Muslim world, imams are state employees and receive a state income. Who would pay for imams in Europe? The local Muslim communities must learn to maintain their own guides. Otherwise, there is the risk that they will be financed by Muslim countries, who would want to impose their own imams. There is still a solution: the establishment of agreements with moderate Muslim countries to choose imams together, with these imams paid by the countries of Muslim immigrants.This means that checks on mosques are absolutely necessary. This is currently common practice in many Islamic countries: radical thinking (which can easily lead into terrorism) stems, in fact, from mosques and the mid-day Friday speeches (khutbah, not “sermons”) given there. It would also be good practice to demand that imams give their khutbah in the local language: Italian, French, German, etc. The objective is clear, in any case: imams must help the faithful to feel at home in the country in which they live and to overcome any conflicts between Muslim faith and Western culture. The choice of these imams is therefore fundamental, and is it a right of the state to check that the opposite does not happen, for the very purpose of helping and protecting immigrants.

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2006: The Crisis in Islam 5: Islam needs renewal from within, not withdrawal into itself, to overcome its crisis / Samir Khalil Samir sj

See the original of this excellent article on the AsiaNews.it website at this link.

Thanks much,
Steve St.Clair

===============
The Crisis in Islam 5:
Islam needs renewal from within, not withdrawal into itself, to overcome its crisis
by Samir Khalil Samir sj
09/08/2006 16:54

The absence of a recognised authority and the ignorance in which Islam’s religious world has fallen are among the main reasons for Islam’s increasingly tragic situation. A re-interpretation of the Koran is needed but no one dares talk about. Here is the fifth and final article in a series about Islam in crisis by Fr Samir Khalil Samir.

The first point to put into effect towards new approaches in training is the reinterpretation of the Koran. The sacred text of Islam, like all texts, needs to be interpreted, in the search for its overall meaning and striving to contextualize what is read. Until the beginning of the 20th century, there had been great reformers who had pushed in this direction: they were from India, Afghanistan, Syria, Egypt, Turkey, North Africa, etc. Then came the religious deterioration of imam training and this desire for reform, which had lasted for centuries, was extinguished.

Reinterpretation is necessary also because the Koran is full of internal contradictions which have always been evident, due to the varying circumstances of the “revelations”. It is for this very reason that Muslim theology developed the science of the “revelation circumstances” (asbāb al-tanzīl) which is by now often forgotten or neglected. To resolve the contradictions, ancient Muslim tradition developed the theory of “the abrogating and the abrogated”: i.e., there are verses that abrogate, cancel, override other verses. This theory comes from the Koran itself, where at a certain point God says to His prophet: “Whatever communications We abrogate or cause to be forgotten, We bring one better than it or like it. Do you not know that Allah has power over all things?” (Koran 2, 106).

The problem then becomes: which are the verses that cancel and which are cancelled? And who determines which is one and which is the other? This matter is very ambiguous as there has never been any kind of consensus. Thus the interpretation depends on pre-understanding of the individual. Those who take a violent, political, radical line will say for example that the verse known as “of the sword” (āyat al-sayf) overrides all the preceding verses that speak of tolerance and welcoming. This verse is found in two very similar parts of the Koran (2,193 and 8,39): “And fight with them until there is no sedition (fitnah), and religion should be only for Allah”1.

An even more ambiguous point is that concerning the veiling of women. There are three verses in the Koran which speak about the veil, but they are not clear. The interpretation varies depending on the meaning given to the words. Even the historical information on the way in which the veil was applied varies considerably. In Egypt, for example, from the 1920s onwards, very few women wore headscarves, and those who did, wore them discretely. They were reintroduced in the second half of the 1970s under the influence of the Saudis and their financial support. In other regions, the practice of wearing headscarves has existed for a long time. The interpretation of the Koran is decisive because there are women who suffer verbal or physical offence if they do not veil themselves, or who are simply forced to do so…

Interpretation becomes even more a key question in the important question of apostasy: there is no verse in the Koran that says that the apostate must be killed. Yet the sharia, Islamic law, requires that a convert from Islam be killed.2

There are many intellectuals in the Islamic world who ask that exegesis, interpretation, be applied to the Koran. But often they risk being condemned, excluded, exiled by their community. A typical example is that of Egyptian-national Nasr Hamed Abu Zaid who, having suggested that exegesis be applied to the Koran, was deemed an apostate. Thus, in a short time, he lost his university teaching post, his wife was pressured to divorce from him (but she refused), and to save his life, he was forced to emigrate to Holland. Through God’s grace, his wife was eventually able to join him in Europe where they live as exiles.

The fear of being condemned holds many scholars back. Years ago in Tunisia, I participated in a conference on the exegesis of holy texts, along with 6 other Christian theologians and 7 Muslim.

The sessions had been decided upon by the Muslim faculty of theology and were to be on the very question of the interpretation of sacred texts. Well, everyone spoke in general about exegesis, but no one dared to apply its principles to the Koranic text. A vertible impasse exists on this question. This depends on the fact that for Muslims, the Koran is a revealed text which descended upon Mohammad, and not a text simply inspired by God. In this latter case, interpretation is possible; in the former case, everything remains at a standstill. Speaking at a seminar on Islam held at Castel Gandolfo (location of the Pope’s summer residence, near Rome) in September 2005, Pope Benedict XVI stressed quite correctly that this Islamic conception of the Koran is one of the main difficulties in dialogue with Muslims.

Sharia and human rights
Another problem which stands in the way of the development of Islam is the interpretation of sharia. To be noted: the (bad) interpretation of sharia also depends on the (limited) training of imams.

Sharia is the concretization in daily life of Islam at the juridical level. It has, in this sense, a great influence because it generates binding laws. The sharia too is based on the Koran, on the sayings of Mohammad and on the circumstances of Mohammad’s life. The sayings and circumstances are called Sunna. The Koran is the main source for sharia. Another source is analogy, which relies on sayings (the authenticity of which no one wants to investigate). And here lies the problem: there are hundreds of thousands of sayings, which often contradict each other; the authenticity of the sayings are not certain, and yet imams and Koranic scholars strive to apply the experiences and criteria of centuries ago to present day situations.

Many Muslim jurists today are proposing the suspension of the part of the sharia called hudud, which foresees precise punishments: death, hand cutting, stoning, flogging. Traditionalists say that these punishments have a basis in the Koran. But, at least a part of the community, mainly intellectuals, affirm that this style of punishment is contrary to human rights. Thus, various jurists maintain the principle that it is necessary to reinterpret the Koran and sharia from the basis of internationally recognized human rights.

Women’s rights
And this brings us to the question of women’s rights. Many Islamic apologists maintain that Islam, unlike other religions, gives value to all women’s rights. Actually, if taken literally, Islam does not give any equality with men. And this at the juridical level, not only that of customs or mentality.

Here are few examples. A man can repudiate his wife with practically no limitations; a woman cannot repudiate her husband: at the most, she can ask him the favour of repudiating her. Men have total authority over their wives, in accordance to the Koran (4,34: “Men have authority over women, due to the preference that God concedes to the former over to the latter and because they spend their property [for them]”) and a wife is obliged to obey her husband even if he forbids her to go to the mosque (hadith). A husband has the right to have sexual relations with his wife whenever he wants, and she does not have the right to refuse him (Koran 2, 223: Your wives are a tilth (harth) for you, so go into your tilth (harth) when you like). In court, the testimony of a male is worth twice that of a female: it takes 2 women to counterbalance a man’s testimony. Sons inherit twice as much as daughters. There is a radical difference also in matters of prayer and acts of worship: being impure during menstruation or when she gives birth, a woman’s prayer or fasting or any other religious act is not accepted by God. She must strive to “recuperate” the days lost. It was decided, a few years ago in Egypt, that a woman could not be a judge, because a well-known prophetic hadith says “a woman is imperfect in terms of worship and intelligence” (al-mar’ah nāqisah dīnan wa-‘aqlan); as for worship, because she is impure during menstruation and would therefore contaminate the entire assembly, and as for intelligence, being too emotional, she would not be able to judge equitably. (This whole question was the subject of a television programme!) Furthermore, in the case of adultery, current practice is unfortunately to condemn the woman to stoning, while the man is not condemned, even though the Koran condemns both to flogging and never to stoning (24,2: “(As for) the fornicatress and the fornicator, flog each of them, (giving) a hundred stripes, and let not pity for them detain you.”)

This is why some countries are striving to reformulate family law. As already mentioned, new laws have been enacted in Morocco. In Algeria, a country that was once progressive, where women had given an enormous contribution to the fight for independence, no progress has been made. On the contrary, family law reforms tend to restrict the rights and legal equality of women.

Reform in Tunisia dates back to the 1950s thanks to the strength of political leader, Bourghiba, who was backed by an eminent Muslim jurist, Tahar Haddad (1899-1936). Often, Bourghiba established laws and asked muftis to justify them according to tradition. For example, Tunisian legislation recognizes monogamy only. But the Koran speaks explicitly of polygamy, allowing up to four wives plus all the servants that your right hands have (4,3). How then can the prohibition of polygamy be justified? The verse in question goes on to say: ” but if you fear that you will not be equitable (ta’dilū), then (marry) only one “. Now, verse 129 of the same chapter explicitly says: “And you have it not in your power to be equitable between wives, even though you may wish (it)”. Thus, the Koran authorizes up to four wives, adding however that if a man fears not being fair, he must limit himself to one. And further ahead it states that a man cannot be fair. Bourghiba concluded: “In fact, the Koran wished to guarantee monogamy. But keeping in mind the weakness of Arabs and the customs of the time, it temporarily authorized polygamy, subordinating it to a practically unattainable condition.”

As can be seen, free interpretation can allow for much adaptation. It should be said in all truth that the meaning of the verse on treating wives “fairly”, is not in the sense of “equal justice” – as is the interpretation of many Muslims – but in the sense of affection and sexuality: polygamy foresaw equal shares of sexual enjoyment, the same number of nights. Though many deny this, there are many examples from the life of Mohammad himself that support this.

The question of divorce also needs interpretation. According to a saying of Mohammad, “divorce is the most hated of the things permitted by God” (al-talāq abghad al-halāl). But then, in the life of Mohammad and in other sayings, the opposite can be found. What then is the proper Islamic position?

The current tendency among certain Muslim jurists is that of preferring human rights to sharia. The reformist, Libyan scholar, Mohamed Abdelmottaleb al-Houn, for example, says, “If we must choose between human rights and sharia, then we must prefer human rights.” But he is giving the reading of the enlightened, or let’s say, of the liberal.

Another reformer that I admire very much, a Lebanese named Ridwan As-Sayyed, is very explicit. He says: “Laws must…conform to human rights, seeking in private matters, where there is the possibility of choice, to tend towards sharia. But it is not a principle; it is not a necessary rule.”

Others instead relativize sharia, especially for Muslims living in the West. A typical example is what has been said by Tariq Ramadan, a famous Swiss Muslim thinker (grandson of Hassan al-Banna, founder of the Muslim Brotherhood), who has many times said: Sharia cannot be applied word for word, due to the fact that we are not in a Muslim country.” Ramadan is speaking of Europe, of Egypt… but what country can truly call itself Muslim? Even Saudi Arabia and Iran can be criticized! Actually, Ramadan’s reasoning is a small legal trick to justify that sharia not be applied. Some go even further, such as Elham Manea of Yemen, lecturer at the University of Zurich, who simply says that all the contents of the Koran that do not correspond to the mentality and principles of contemporary man must be left out as belonging to the mentality of 7th century Arabia.

CONCLUSION
In conclusion, no one is denying the reality of a profound crisis in Islam. It is rendered even more serious by international conflicts, which risk resolving the crisis through a short circuit of holy war. But there are increasing numbers of figures who are pointing to problems within the Muslim community.

The first problem is the lack of a recognized authority. Attempts are made to get around the problem by recognizing the Organization of Islamic States (which has no legal authority); or else, the European association of muftis is relied on, but it too is without authority.

The second problem is the ignorance in which the Islamic religious world has fallen. How can all this be reformed? We have seen various attempts: better training for imams; reopening the door of interpretation; suspension of Koranic law, at least “temporarily”: in order to reduce the negative impact on the most fanatical elements of the population; recognition of human rights or at least the attempt to integrate them into Islamic principles…

In concrete terms this means problems pertaining to democratization at the political level; social justice problems at the socio-economic level; family law and women’s rights at the basic level. At this point, everyone recognizes that the Islamic system that covered all these fields is out-dated, is no longer managed, nor is it manageable.

Being challenged by other cultures, Islam needs a renewal of its thinking from within, in order to regain strength. Instead, for the very reason that it feels weak, it protects itself by closing in on itself, thinking that it can save itself by going back to a “golden age” of the first caliphs. Muslim history teaches us the opposite: Islam was strongest and able to conquer when, in the 10th century, it opened itself to other cultures, in particular Greek culture, assimilating it and surpassing it. It thus offered the world its contribution in almost all sectors of knowledge, from philosophy to medicine, from technology to astronomy, etc.

To get out of the crisis in which we find ourselves, we all, Arabs and Muslims, must above all accept teaching from those who have surpassed us in the sciences and the arts. Once this entire heritage has been assimilated, we can begin to criticize it and to discern between what can be kept and what is to be rejected. Above all, we must accept the risk of abandoning acquired balances, passing through the rejection of many things, to find a new balance. But we are gripped by fear and this makes us lack courage. At the time of my youth, there were those who would say “workers of the world unite to fight the capitalists.” I would say today, “Thinkers of the Arab and Islamic world unite to fight obscurantism and the fear of what is different!”

Endnotes:
1. In Hamza Piccardo’s Italian translation, the word fitnah, essential to the Koran, is always translated in an interpretative way. Here, it is rendered once as “persecution” and another time as “politeism” to make more acceptable to Western readers the fact that God orders battle. Fitnah means neither one nor the other!
2. For further details on this point, see my study “Apostasy in the Koran and the inter-Muslim debate” in: Giorgio Paolucci and Camille Eid, I cristiani venuti dall’Islam (“Christians who come from Islam: Stories of converts from Islam”), preface by Samir Khalil Samir (Milan: Piemme Publishing, 2005), p. 9-27.

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2007: Why Muslims Follow Jesus: The results of a recent survey of converts from Islam / Christianity Today

See the original of this most interesting article on the Christianity Today website at this link.

Thanks much,
Steve St.Clair

===============
Why Muslims Follow Jesus
The results of a recent survey of converts from Islam
J. Dudley Woodberry, Russell G. Shubin, and G. Marks
Christianity Today, October, 2007

“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times,” Charles Dickens said about the time leading up to the French Revolution in A Tale of Two Cities. The same could be said today of Christian witness to Muslims, who belong to a bitterly divided community undergoing a revolution.

The anti-Christian part of the Islamic resurgence certainly qualifies as the “worst of times.” It burst onto the world scene with the Islamic Revolution of 1979 and into everyone’s living room on September 11, 2001, leaving victims and sometimes churches in its wake.

In the eyes of those who long for Muslims to know Jesus as they do, the unprecedented trickles—and in a few cases, floods—of Muslims who have chosen to follow Christ in previously evangelistically arid lands undoubtedly constitute the “best of times.” In the late 1960s, there was a major turning to Christ among the Javanese in Indonesia, following a conflict between Muslims and communists. We have seen similar movements in North Africa and South Asia, along with smaller ones elsewhere.

In fact, and perhaps counterintuitively, the number of new Christians each year outstrips the number of new Muslims, even though the annual growth rate is higher for Muslims (1.81 percent) than for Christians (1.23 percent). Over the last century, Christians have grown at a slower rate than have Muslims, with Muslims increasing from 12 percent to 21 percent of the global population during that time. But this is hardly surprising. Christianity has more total followers than Islam. More people need to become Christians annually simply to remain at roughly a third of the world population. Muslims are increasing in sub-Saharan Africa and among African Americans by conversion, but elsewhere the growth is mostly by birth or immigration. The major growth for Protestants, especially evangelicals and Pentecostals, has been by conversion.

So what attracts Muslims to follow Jesus? Between 1991 and 2007, about 750 Muslims who have decided to follow Christ filled out an extensive questionnaire on that basic question. The respondents—from 30 countries and 50 ethnic groups—represent every major region of the Muslim world. (Copies of the questionnaire are available from dudley@fuller.edu.) The participants ranked the relative importance of different influences and whether they occurred before, at the time of, or after their decision to follow Christ. While the survey, prepared at Fuller Theological Seminary’s School of Intercultural Studies, does not claim scientific precision, it provides a glimpse into some of the key means the Spirit of God is using to open Muslim hearts to the gospel.

Seeing a lived faith
First, we can look at the experiences that most influenced Muslims. For example, respondents ranked the lifestyle of Christians as the most important influence in their decision to follow Christ. A North African former Sufi mystic noted with approval that there was no gap between the moral profession and the practice of Christians he saw. An Egyptian contrasted the love of a Christian group at an American university with the unloving treatment of Muslim students and faculty he encountered at a university in Medina. An Omani woman explained that Christians treat women as equals. Others noted loving Christian marriages. Some poor people said the expatriate Christian workers they knew had adopted, contrary to their expectations, a simple lifestyle, wearing local clothes and observing local customs of not eating pork, drinking alcohol, or touching those of the opposite sex. A Moroccan was even welcomed by his former Christian in-laws after he underwent a difficult divorce.

Many Muslims who faced violence at the hands of other Muslims did not see it in the Christians they knew (regrettably, of course, Christians have been guilty of interethnic strife elsewhere). Muslim-on-Muslim violence has led to considerable disillusionment for many Muslims, from those who survived the 1971 war between the Bengalis of East Pakistan and the Pathans, Sindis, and Punjabis of West Pakistan, to Arab and Berber tensions in North Africa, and to Arab herdsmen fighting black African farmers in Darfur.

The next most important influence was the power of God in answered prayers and healing. Like most of the factors that former Muslims list, experiences of God’s supernatural intervention often increase after Muslims decide to follow Christ.

In North Africa, Muslim neighbors asked Christians to pray for a very sick daughter who then was healed. In Senegal, a Muslim marabout (spiritual leader) referred a patient to Christians when he was not able to bring healing. In Pakistan, after a pilgrimage to Mecca did not cure a disabled Shiite girl, she was healed following Christian prayer.

Closely related was the finding that some noted deliverance from demonic power as another reason they were attracted to Jesus. After all, he is the healing prophet in the Qur’an and has power over demons in the Gospels. In northern Nigeria, a malam (what some might call a witchdoctor) used sorcery against a man who was considering following Jesus. The seeker became insane, and his extended family left him. But then he prayed that Christ would free him, and he was healed.

It helps to note that a third of the 750-person sample were folk Muslims, with a characteristic concern for power and blessings. It is also worth noting that the Jesus portrayed in the Qur’an is a prophet who heals lepers and the blind and raises the dead. Not surprisingly, many Muslims find him attractive. Of course, power and blessings do not constitute the final word for Muslims. The Bible also offers a theology of suffering, and many Muslims who follow Christ find that their faith is strengthened through trials.

The third biggest influence listed by respondents was dissatisfaction with the type of Islam they had experienced. They expressed unhappiness with the Qur’an, which they perceive as emphasizing God’s punishment more than his love (although the Qur’an says he loves those who love him [3:31]).

As for Islam’s requirement that liturgical prayer should be in Arabic, a Javanese man asked, “Doesn’t an all-knowing God know Indonesian?” Others criticized folk Islam’s use of amulets and praying at the graves of dead saints.

Some respondents decried Islamic militancy and the imposition of Islamic law, which they said is not able to transform hearts and society. This disillusionment is broad in the Muslim world. Many Iranians became interested in the gospel after the Khomeini revolution of 1979 brought in rule by clergy. Pakistanis became more receptive after President Zia ul-Haq (1977-1988) tried to implement Islamic law. And Afghans became more open after Islamist Taliban conquest and rule (1994-2001).

As with Paul and Cornelius in Acts, visions and dreams played a role in the conversion of many. More than one in four respondents, 27 percent, noted dreams and visions before their decision for Christ, 40 percent at the time of conversion, and 45 percent afterward.

Many Muslims view dreams as links between the seen and unseen worlds, and pre-conversion visions and dreams often lead Muslims to consult a Christian or the Bible. Frequently a person in the vision, understood to be Jesus, radiates light or wears white (one respondent, though, said Jesus appeared in green, a color sometimes associated with Islamic holy persons). An Algerian woman had a vision that her Muslim grandmother came into her room and said, “Jesus is not dead; he is here.” In Israel, an Arab dreamed that his deceased father said, “Follow the pastor. He will show you the right way.” Other dreams and visions occurred later and provided encouragement during persecution. A Turkish woman in jail because of her conversion had a vision that she would be released, and she was. A vision of thousands of believers in the streets proclaiming their faith encouraged a young man in North Africa to persevere.

The message is the medium
The gospel message, especially its assurance of salvation and forgiveness, is also a significant attraction to Muslims. The Qur’an states that “those who repent and believe, and work righteousness … will enter paradise” (19:60). Yet it also states that God forgives whom he wills and punishes whom he wills (2:284), so Muslims do not have certainty of salvation. One Indonesian woman spoke of her fear, based on a tradition attributed to Muhammad, that the bridge over hell to paradise is as thin as a hair. An Egyptian said he was attracted to Christian faith because it preaches that people can be sure of their acceptance by God.

Next in attraction for Muslims is the spiritual truth in the Bible. The Qur’an attests that the Torah, the Psalms, and the Gospel (commonly understood as the New Testament) are from God. Even though Muslims are generally taught that these writings became corrupted, they often find them compelling reading and discover truth that they conclude must be from God. The Bible helped one Egyptian understand “the true character of God.” The Sermon on the Mount helped convince a Lebanese Muslim that he should follow the one who taught and exemplified these values.

Respondents were also attracted by the Bible’s teaching about the love of God. In the Qur’an, although God loves those who love him, his love is conditional. He does not love those who reject faith (3:31-32). There is nothing in the Qur’an like, “This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins” (1 John 4:10), or, “But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Rom. 5:8).

A West African was surprised by God’s love for all people, even enemies. Likewise, although the Qur’an denies that God is a father (37:152), many Muslims find this a comforting concept.

Particularly attractive to Muslims is the love expressed through the life and teachings of Jesus. The Qur’an already calls him faultless (19:19). Many Muslims are attracted to him by his depiction in the Qur’an and then go to the Gospels to find out more. A Saudi was first drawn to him at a Christmas Eve service in Germany—even before he knew German. Like many, an Iranian Shiite was attracted to Christ before he was attracted to Christianity. A North African Sufi found Jesus’ portrayal as the Good Shepherd particularly meaningful. When Christ’s love transforms committed Christians into a loving community, many Muslims listed a desire to join such a fellowship as next in importance.

Subconscious influences
For the most part, respondents did not say that political or economic circumstances influenced their decisions. But it’s hard not to notice that Iranians, Pakistanis, Afghans, Bangladeshis, and Algerians became more responsive after enduring Muslim political turmoil or attempts to impose Islamic law. Christian relief and development agencies try hard to guard against spiritually misusing their position as providers of desperately needed goods and services. But natural disasters in South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Sahel region inevitably put Muslims in contact with Christians trying to follow Jesus. It is no surprise that some of these Muslims also choose to follow Christ.

Yet while it is the “best of times” for Christian witness to Muslims, it remains also the “worst of times.” In many places, apostasy is tantamount to rejecting family, religion, culture, ethnicity, and nationality. Thus, many Muslim converts face persecution from family, police, or militants. Two friends were unable to fill out the questionnaire—one because he was apparently poisoned by his own family, the other because the government imprisoned him and later his tongue was cut out by a warlord so that he could no longer say the name of Jesus.

But Muslim converts to Christ know that such persecution can, in a mysterious way, be part of the best of times. Jesus, in fact, said it was a blessing. That’s because with or without persecution, Muslims are discovering an experiential truth unknown to them before. As a Zambian Muslim exclaimed, “God loves me just as I am.”

J. Dudley Woodberry is professor of Islamic studies at the School of Intercultural Studies, Fuller Theological Seminary, Pasadena, California, and served in the Muslim world for many years.
Russell G. Shubin is deputy director of national news and publications for Salem Communications in Camarillo, California. G. Marks has ministered in Malawi.

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2008: Looking for Home: Muslim-background believers in the U.S. struggle to find Christian community / Christianity Today

See the original of this post on the Christianity Today website at this link.

Thanks much,
Steve St.Clair

=============

Looking for Home: Muslim-background believers in the U.S. struggle to find Christian community
Christopher Lewis
Christianity Today, 2008

Sheltered in a Chicago-area Starbucks one afternoon, Tahir* is dreading the commute home. “My home situation is like a time bomb,” he sighs, describing the tense stand-off between his Christian faith and the Palestinian Muslim family that considers him a traitor.

Following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, anti-Arab sentiments initially angered Tahir and made him a more devout Muslim. But they also inspired an intense search of the New Testament, which slowly began to convince him of its truths. As Tahir’s new faith took shape, his family became ashamed. Things exploded during a dinner-table debate at which Tahir’s brother-in-law told Tahir’s wife, “If he’s no longer Muslim, your life with him is a sin!”
Today, as Tahir tries to quietly model Christ to his children, his wife warns that she will enroll them in a mosque or flee to Palestine: “Just because you sold your soul to the Devil doesn’t mean you’re taking the kids with you.” Tahir’s father has disowned him—”You are no longer my son”—and has threatened to recruit Fatah strongmen to beat him.
Like Tahir, many Christians from Muslim backgrounds are at once cultural and spiritual refugees, even as they settle into American addresses. They are struggling to reorient themselves in a new land and a new Christian identity while bearing the weight of their Islamic heritage.

Some seek an adoptive home in American evangelical churches, where they hear leaders preach about the missional “10/40 window” in North Africa and the Middle East. But not many evangelicals see the Muslim enclaves and seekers in their own backyards. Feeling alienated and misunderstood, these new converts sometimes leave American congregations.

Increasingly, though, these new Christians are finding community in a movement of “Muslim-background believers”—mostly in reclusive urban groups of 10 to 20 believers. Last fall, their leaders convened at conferences and summits in Toronto, Detroit, Indianapolis, Atlanta, Dallas, and Washington, D.C.

They are emboldened by books and videos by former Muslims. The sons of a martyred Iranian pastor directed the award-winning 2007 documentary A Cry from Iran. Last year, an anonymous YouTube posting unveiled a who’s who of 100 video testimonies and 50 web links to the ministries of Muslim-background believers.

Despite these resources, many of their fledgling fellowships are fraught with growing pains, leadership squabbles, and ethnic tensions—especially in more diverse Arab and Asian groups. A new Chinese Christian, for example, can explore his or her faith in a familiar ethnic community. But a Muslim-background believer often faces the culture shock of segregation and of a sudden minority status within fellowships of rival Muslim nationalities.

Although Iranian churches have sprung from the same rocky soil, they are more established in the U.S. When the U.S.-backed Shah fell in 1979, pastor Hormoz Shariat was a Muslim student revolutionary chanting “Death to America!” in Tehran’s streets alongside his young American bride, Donnell, a Muslim convert. Today, the couple’s church of 300 in Silicon Valley is believed to be the world’s largest gathering of Muslim-background believers. Arab Muslims generally do not reflect this Iranian receptivity to the gospel, where often the domino effect of one new believer turns an entire family to the Christian faith.

“In Arab countries, people see Islam as the answer,” Shariat says. “But in Iran, they now see Islam as the problem.”

Desperate for community, Tahir first located an Arab church in Chicago, only to find that some Arab Christians looked on the few Muslim-background believers with suspicion. “I was still a Muslim in their eyes, a second-class believer,” Tahir recalls.

He was surprised to then discover a small multicultural fellowship for believers raised in Muslim cultures: “And I thought I was the only lunatic.” For Tahir the group was a spiritual homecoming, albeit a tenuous one; it has disbanded three times in the last ten years amid discipline issues and leadership infighting.

Muslim cultures are highly communal, which can breed the clannish division and shame-and-honor system at work in the Sunni-Shiite, Hamas-Fatah, and Iraqi Kurd rivalries. “The same thing happens in fellowships of Muslim-background believers. It’s indicative of the culture,” says Roy Oksnevad, director of Muslim ministries at Wheaton College’s Billy Graham Center. Last year, Oksnevad helped reorganize the Chicago group with a leadership team that includes Western missionaries.

In New York City, more than ten groups have folded in one generation, including the breakup two years ago of a rare Arabic-speaking fellowship. But leaders see momentum building among the 200 known Muslim-background believers loosely connected by the Jesus for Muslims (JFM) network. JFM includes an English-speaking fellowship, an embryonic West African group, an expanding Turkish group, and pockets of Indonesians, West Indians, and Bangladeshis.

Besides leadership training, the network’s biggest need is social support for immigrants stranded between Muslim and mainstream society. Last September, JFM opened a transitional safe-house to shepherd persecuted Muslim-background believers through Bible studies and employment counseling. “We had some [who had been] sleeping in their cars and on people’s couches,” said executive director Fred Farrokh. “Christians talk of finding identity in Christ. But for Muslims, finding Jesus requires a loss of identity. Leaving Islam is [viewed as] an act of treason.”

Most new converts have no access to fellowships. Like Samir in Kansas City, they are loners. Their sanctuary is cyberspace. Their stories, usually told anonymously, reverberate on websites like MuslimJourneyToHope.com and Answering-Islam.org. Samir helps manage the latter from his basement, tap-tapping words of counsel to Muslim seekers in closed countries. As an apostate, he’s a target of fanatics—”I’d have beheaded you. Wait for your death; it will come from a source you don’t know”—and a lifeline for isolated believers in America: “An ex-Muslim is always an ex-Muslim! I’ll never get the new identity in Christ the Bible speaks of.”

Samir knows this gridlocked psyche. Once a Muslim proselytizer and Sunni spy for Saddam Hussein, he’s now a Christian missionary who also trains U.S. Army officers in Islamic culture. He is the only Muslim-background believer in his American church, but he is discipling a fellow Iraqi Christian who lost his gas station job when his Muslim employer learned of his conversion. “They are accustomed to community,” Samir says, “but now they live on their own islands.”

Surrogate Tears

Some Muslim-background believers look at American churches as surrogate families. But like Gentiles in the first-century Jewish church, many still feel marginalized and ostracized. Some are placed on a celebratory “ex-Muslim” pedestal, only to find that American churches are often unable to make a relational investment in their complex lives, which include divided marriages, disoriented bicultural children, financial woes, religious persecution, and tangled immigration issues.

Roughly two-thirds of the estimated three million Muslims in the U.S. are foreign-born, and the rate of immigration from Muslim countries has surged to a post-9/11 high. Now more than ever, the hijab-covered woman once viewed through a CNN lens is as close as the grocery-store checkout line. Though overlooked by many American churches, Farrokh says, “These [immigrants] are a valuable resource. We need to appreciate the potential of those who have counted the cost.” The delicate balance, Oksnevad advocates, is to nurture Muslim-background fellowships with their own identity and autonomy, while inviting them to come under an American church’s stabilizing support. “Our cultures need each other,” Oksnevad said. “Often, believers from Muslim backgrounds just want somebody to walk with them.”

That’s plenty evident during the lively, intimate communal meal that follows every gathering of the Chicago group in a suburban church basement. In Islamic culture, this hospitality ministry is more central than the sermon or worship, group leaders say.

“Islam is a total way of life,” says J. Dudley Woodberry, an Islamic scholar and professor at Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, California. “For Americans, religion is part of our culture. For Muslims, culture is part of religion.”

Woodberry encourages American churches to sensitize themselves by inviting mature Muslim-background believers to address their congregations, and by hosting training courses such as “Encountering the World of Islam,” which originated with the U.S. Center for World Mission.

Many believers are not ready to re-engage the Muslim world they left, especially on their own. “Some want to live in a [Christian] cocoon. I want to break out of it,” says Hakim, who was a Muslim Brotherhood sniper in the war zone of 1970s Beirut. Now a seminary student in Chicago, Hakim is trying to plant an Arabic-speaking church of Muslim-background believers.

His training ground is the foyer of a suburban college, where he’s guarding a booth piled with apologetics material in Arabic. Stationed 20 feet away are Muslim Student Association tables festooned with signs like, Jesus Is a Muslim! A bearded young man casts wary glances Hakim’s way. A week earlier, Hakim helped register a small “Muslims for the Messiah” student group. The mere presence of a new Christian booth ignited a boisterous confrontation.

Bilateral Relations
It’s a bit sunnier in California, the adopted home of Iran’s diaspora and about 15 Iranian churches. They represent about 9,000 Iranian Muslim-background believers in America, the only nationality cohesive enough to track, says Abe Ghaffari of Iranian Christians International in Colorado.

Missiologists say Persians have never identified as strongly with Islam as their Arab Muslim conquerors. While some studies estimate 500,000 to 1 million Iranian Muslim-background believers worldwide, Ghaffari counts fewer than 300,000—most of them isolated “secret believers.” But even Ghaffari is stunned by how Iran’s house-church movement of 50,000 has doubled in the last five years. “This is historic,” he says.

But it is not easy to develop even an Iranian church. Pastor Shariat came to Christ as a Ph.D. student in Southern California, where he tried to start an Iranian house church in the early 1980s. Eight tries, eight failures. “It was heartbreaking,” he says. “We’ve since learned to address things like competition and gossip very early on in the discipleship process. But we still have problems.”

He left his career as a Silicon Valley scientist to shepherd a thriving Bible study into a church that suffered two splits in the first ten years. Caught between several rival church factions, Shariat was voted out of the pastorate temporarily. “I wanted to quit,” he said.

This decade, however, Iranian Christian Church (ICC) has planted four churches, converted a warehouse into a $5 million church building and studio, and launched an international television ministry. A team of eight ICC phone counselors now handles 1,000 calls each month, which tripled after the Mohabat channel morphed into a 24-hour network in 2006. Translated as “agape love,” mohabat is an unusual Farsi-Arabic word.

“Deep in their hearts,” Shariat says, “Muslims hope God is really like that.”

Christopher Lewis is a freelance journalist in Kansas City, Missouri.
*Many of the names in this article have been changed to protect those featured.
Copyright © 2008 Christianity Today.
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2007: Persecution Harder Among Muslims Who Convert to Christianity, But Saved Souls Bring Great Joy to Believers / ASSIST News Service

See the original of this breathtaking news on the Assist News Service site at this link.

May they flourish!

Love and thanks,
Steve St.Clair
=================

Persecution Harder Among Muslims Who Convert to Christianity, But Saved Souls Bring Great Joy to Believers
By Michael Ireland
Chief Correspondent, ASSIST News Service
Friday, January 12, 2007

MALABAR , INDIA (ANS) — Persecuted Christians soon willingly forget hardships and forgive torture and beatings they have experienced when they see the unlimited number of lost souls who are coming to Christ and experiencing Salvation.

Pastor Paul Ciniraj of Salem Voice Ministries addresses a huge crowd of Muslim background believers during a day of prayer and fasting in Malabar, India.That was the thrust of a message by Pastor Paul Ciniraj Mohamed, the Director of the Salem Voice Ministries (SVM), based in Kerala, India, as he inaugurated a day of fasting and prayer for persecuted Christians at the annual conference of the SVM held in Malabar, India on Friday, January 12.

Ciniraj likened the experience of these believers to that of a woman forgetting the intense pain of labor during childbirth, and rejoicing when she sees the baby she has given birth to.

Ciniraj said Christian missionaries to the Muslim world and converts to Christianity from Islam are facing severe persecution around the globe.

“Many are murdered, shot dead, burned dead, beaten, kidnapped, lose their houses, lose their children and their families. But their blood is becoming the seed of the church and millions of million Muslims are converting to Christianity day by day.”

Salem Voice Ministries is involved in this great task to evangelize and establish the underground house churches in different nations, Ciniraj explaimed.

He continued: “There are about one billion and six hundred million Muslims all over the world. You may think is it possible to evangelize them? Yes! It is possible and within few years all of the Muslim nations will accept Jesus as Lord. Because our Lord ‘is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to usward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance, ‘ ” (2 Peter 3:9).Ciniraj said that each and every believer must possess a missionary spirit to convey the Gospel of the sacrificial death and resurrection of Jesus Christ to the Muslims “without pride, prejudice and fear.” He also described how Salem Voice Ministries approach Muslims with the Gospel.”Allah and Yahweh are not the same God,” he said.

“If one did not believe in Jesus as the living God then it is impossible to say they are the same God. We, the Christians must be clear that Muslims believe in Jesus, although not the same exact Jesus of the Bible, and (must) be direct and unabashed about our faith when we witness to Muslims.”

Ciniraj said the Islamic concept of Jihad is prescribed in both the Koran and Hadith, “But there are some specific protocols in Islam, like women do not carry out Jihad. And also Islam has a lower view of woman than Christianity.

“Although Jesus is acknowledged in the Koran, it has a low view of Jesus. He is portrayed as only human, not as the Savior. According to Islam, Jesus never died on the cross but was replaced by someone before he was crucified. And Islam has a low view of the Bible too,” Ciniraj said.

Islam does not believe in religious freedom, he said. “Iit is the most work-based religion in the world. A Muslim works hard to do good deeds and hope that Allah will like him and allow him to go to Heaven when he dies — but there are no guarantees. And Islam is divided among denominations.

“Millions are coming to faith in Christ by the power of the Holy Spirit, Ciniraj said. “It is mainly because of eternal security. And also they are attracted by the unconditional love and intimacy with God offered in Christianity.”

In his report to the conference, Pastor Shaji Ipe, the General Secretary of the SVM, it was stated that about 500 missionaries of Salem Voice Ministries are laboring for the Gospel in Muslim-populated countries.

“They approach Muslims with prayer and the divine love of Jesus Christ. Firstly they find out and visit depressed families which have any of its members held in prison or have long term sickness. Usually they won’t get enough care and love from the neighbors or relatives, but are criticized and abused unnecessarily,” Ipe siad.

“(Our) missionaries show them real love with counseling, nurturing, clothing, medications and healing. They assist those families by cleaning the house, cooking the food, bathing the sick, etc. They make concrete relationships with each of the families. At the same time they keep good relationships with neighboring families too. And they gather together children and adults to share with them stories and fun. In this way they start Bible classes and worship services,” Ipe continued in his report

.”Another dramatic development is that many Muslims — including Shiites in Iran and Iraq — are seeing dreams and visions of Jesus and thus coming into churches explaining that they have already converted and now need a Bible and guidance on how to follow Jesus. This is the fulfillment of Biblical prophecy of Joel, ‘In the last days, I will pour out my Spirit on all people. Your sons and daughters will prophesy, your old men will dream dreams, your young men will see visions. Even on my servants, both men and women, I will pour out my Spirit in those days…And everyone who calls on the name of the LORD will be saved,’ ” (Joel 2:28-32).

According to the research of Prof. Ilyas Ba Yunus, Al Jazeera.net, a leading Islamic TV channel, reported that six million Muslims are converting to Christianity in Africa every year, Ipe said.

“Thousands of Bangladeshi, Pakistani, North African, Kashmiri, Indian, Central and South Asian Muslims turn to Christ. Around 50,000 youngsters ex-communicated from Islam in Malaysia because of their Christian faith. Some 35,000 Turks converted to Christianity last year. A vast number of Mullahs and Imams accepted Christ. Two million ethnic Muslims converted to Christianity in Russia. 200,000 UK Muslims and 10,000 French Muslims also converted to Christianity,” he said.

Ipe concluded his report by quoting of Joel C. Rosenberg, the author of the New York Times best selling political thrillers, THE LAST JIHAD (2002), THE LAST DAYS (2003), THE EZEKIEL OPTION (2005), and THE COPPER SCROLL (2006), with more than one million copies in print, who writes that, “More Muslims converted to faith in Jesus Christ over the past decade than at any other time in human history. A spiritual revolution is underway throughout North Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia. As a result, a record number of ex-Muslims are celebrating Christmas this year, despite intense persecution, assassinations, and widespread church bombings.”

The huge crowd attending the conference included a majority of believers in Jesus Christ from the Muslim community.

To see this news item at the original site, log-on to: http://salemvoice.org/news124.html

For further information on this news item, contact:Pastor Paul Ciniraj, Director,Salem Voice Ministries,Devalokam (P.O), Kottayam,Kerala-686038, India.email: salemvoice@gmail.com web: http://salemvoice.org

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2009: Islamic Civilization in Peril / Dr. Ali A. Allawi

Dr. Ali A. Allawi was a Shiite academic in Iraq who served as a government minister in the government following that of Saddam Houssein. He is now a senior visiting fellow at Princeton University. He has just been named one of the first two Gebran G. Tueni human-rights fellows at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. His latest book, The Crisis of Islamic Civilization, was published in March 2009 by Yale University Press.
See the original of this article on the Chronicles of Higher Education website at this link.

Thanks much,
Steve St.Clair

================
Islamic Civilization in Peril
By Ali A. Allawi

I was born into a mildly observant Muslim family in Iraq. At that time, the 1950s, secularism was ascendant among the political, cultural, and intellectual elites of the Middle East. It appeared to be only a matter of time before Islam would lose whatever hold it still had on the Muslim world. Even that term — “Muslim world” — was unusual, as Muslims were more likely to identify themselves by their national, ethnic, or ideological affinities than by their religion.

To an impressionable child, it was clear that society was decoupling from Islam. Though religion was a mandatory course in school, nobody taught us the rules of prayer or expected us to fast during Ramadan. We memorized the shorter verses of the Koran, but the holy book itself was kept on the shelf or in drawers, mostly unread. The elderly still made the pilgrimage to Mecca to atone for their transgressions in preparation for death — more an insurance policy than an act of piety. I don’t recall ever coming across the word “jihad” in a contemporary context. The political rhetoric of the day focused on Arab destiny and anti-imperialism. A bit of religious fervor surfaced during the Suez crisis of 1956, when the radio broadcasts out of Cairo blared out martial songs calling for divine support against the Anglo-French-Israeli invasion, but that was an anomaly. Women, not only in my own family but also throughout the urban middle class, wore only Western-style clothes. They had long ceased to wear the hijab, or head scarf. My only connection to a premodern past was my grandfather, who continued to dress in the dignified robes and turbans of an old-line merchant.

Apart from religious holidays, there were few public observances of Islamic rituals. The rites of Muharram, a Shia Muslim practice to commemorate the Prophet Muhammad’s grandson Hussein, during which participants often indulged in self-flagellation, was celebrated, sometimes wildly, but I was advised to stay far away; such ceremonies were considered unbecoming of genteel folk, who preferred to hold semiliterary soirees to remember the passion of the martyr.

Modernity was flooding in everywhere. Cinemas and snack bars; cabarets and country clubs, freely flowing alcohol and mixed-sex parties; Baghdad was turning into Babylon, its hedonistic predecessor of yore. Things were not much different, as memoirs of the era testify, in Cairo, Casablanca, Damascus, Istanbul, Jakarta, Karachi, and Tehran.

When I first left Iraq, in 1958, whatever lingering interest I had in religion was ground down further by my exposure to the stifling atmosphere of an Anglican boarding school in England. Enforced attendance at chapel and endless formulaic sermons helped nurture an abiding distaste for organized religion. But in hindsight, I can see that the seeds of my rekindled interest in Islam may well have been planted during this time. I instinctively reacted to the slights against Islam that ran throughout the curriculum — the depiction of the Crusaders as brave knights defending against marauding Saracens, for example, or the casual dismissal of the leaders of the so-called Indian Mutiny against 19th-century British rule as bloodthirsty barbarians.

There were other Muslims in the school, mostly from Britain’s shrinking empire. They were no different from me; we all came from the same type of secularized background. Despite our resentment at the depiction of Islam, our presence in England seemed proof that modern civilization was anchored firmly in the West. Our Islamic past may have been glorious, but it was just that — the past. The future was in the West — the more Western, the better. I spent most of my last year at school dreaming of America.

In 1964, when I began my studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, it was impossible not to be swept up in the cultural and political convulsions of the era, even if you were an outsider. I enthusiastically participated in sit-ins and teach-ins, civil-rights and antiwar protests. I was fascinated by the struggle for black empowerment in America, which demonstrated that a spiritually charged movement could effect great change. Martin Luther King Jr. was a far cry from the establishment churchmen I had encountered in England. And Malcolm X was a practicing Muslim. I began to think about Islam as a force for social transformation.

Later, like many young people during the 1970s, I was preoccupied with the search for a meaningful ethic to fill the spiritual and moral void of the times, to find an inner balance against the excesses of the counterculture. Those thoughts crystallized in the unlikely setting of 1976 London, amid a disintegrating British economy beset by labor strife and the first whiffs of hyperinflation. Between April and June, London was host to the World of Islam Festival, an event designed to convey to the West the richness and diversity of Islam’s culture and civilization. More important, it showed the unity of Islamic civilization across its component nations, languages, and cultures.

The festival was animated by the spirit of one of Islam’s great unsung heroes of modern times, the Raja of Mahmudabad, who had helped support the initial idea for the project. Muhammad Amir Ahmad Khan — or Raja Sahib, as we all knew him — died in 1973. In the late 1960s, I had befriended one of his relatives, who then introduced me to the Raja. While I was doing postgraduate work at the London School of Economics and Political Science, I frequently sought out his company at his small home, adjacent to the Regent’s Park Mosque and Islamic Cultural Center, where he was director. The raja was a deeply idealistic and egalitarian person; his Islam was anchored in a commitment to good works. To express his solidarity with the poor, he performed manual labor and frequently wore coarse homespun clothes and walked barefoot. He was spiritual, even mystical, in his leanings, and his passion came through during the evenings in his company. He somehow combined deep fealty to Islam with a radical and even revolutionary personal predisposition. The raja left a powerful imprint on me, but I would not appreciate its significance until the 1976 festival.

The festival has since been criticized for being elitist and insufficiently representative of the social and political dimensions of Islam. In retrospect, some of that criticism may have been valid. The political dimension was overlooked partly because the Muslim diaspora in the West was not yet controversial, and partly because political Islam had not yet exploded on the scene. The festival was wide ranging, but the mark of the traditionalists — the philosopher Seyyed Hossein Nasr, the art historian Titus Burckhardt and the museum curator Martin Lings — was clear in a number of publications and events, which had a sharp tilt toward the inner dimensions of Islam. Traditionalists, who followed in the path of the French metaphysician René Guénon, linked the creative vitality in Islamic civilization primarily to its spiritual core, to the drive that propelled the believer to seek, find, and then express the manifestations of God in the outer world. To them, the heart of Islam resided as much, or more, in its spiritual dimension than in dogma, doctrine, or the sacred law, the Shariah. Traditionalist thought has not been free of controversy, either then or now, especially in its eclectic understanding of Islam and other world religions, and in its assertion that all great religious traditions meet at some commonly shared higher principle of spirituality. But at the time, it was a very unexpected, novel, and refreshing treatment of Islam.

Without actually seeking it, I had stumbled across an entirely new perspective on Islam, one no less resonant with possibilities for the future than the gathering forces of political Islam, which accelerated throughout the 1970s as Islamist movements began to rise up in the Middle East and beyond.

Often conflicting, those two currents of Islam have dominated my life ever since — the mystical, inner dimension of the faith, and the outer political and social expressions of it. But it is the eclipse of the former, and the way in which Islam is increasingly, even exclusively, understood in political and doctrinal terms, that makes me fear for the future of Islamic civilization.

A few years after the London festival, the world was turned on its head by the Iranian revolution. Political Islam burst on to the global stage, and whatever we may think of it, the Shiite-led revolution embodied the hopes and fears of millions of people around the world. Meanwhile a parallel upheaval was engulfing Sunni Muslims.

The jihad against the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan marked the rise of an extreme brand of militant Islamism. The people of the world — and Muslims in particular — were confronted with a host of questions and assertions about the proper place of Islam in society. Must Muslims strive for the establishment of an Islamic state? Is the Shariah compatible with modernity, democracy, and human rights? I daresay that every Muslim has been exercised in one form or another by the ascendance of political Islam — whether recoiling in alarm, perplexed and anxious, or enthusiastically embracing a more assertive role for religion in politics.

For a long time, the two worlds of Islam, the outer world of political and social action and the inner world of spiritual and moral realization, seemed entirely at odds with each other. One was angry at Islam’s subordination, insistent on recognition and power, on challenging the status quo; the other was serene, introspective, and immersed in the intangible. The canvas of the first was societies and nations; of the second, the self and the individual.

The rituals of worship in Islam were supposed to bridge those disparate worlds, but they were quickly bent to suit the demands of one or the other. Mosques became recruiting grounds for jihadis, while repressive governments manipulated Islam, often by demonizing other Muslim groups to cement their control and power.

The essential unity of Islam was greatly diminished, if not quite yet destroyed. People could no longer move effortlessly between the two realms of Islam. Muslims divided into warring sects, and the closing of the Muslim mind was an inevitable consequence of the growing significance of an intolerant and exceptionally doctrinaire strain of Islam, Wahhabism, cynically fueled by the largess of Saudi Arabia.

The Islamists have been strengthened by the momentous crises that have shaped the Muslim world over the past few decades. As I became more involved in politics, through writings, speeches, and then as an active member of the opposition to the Baathist regime in Iraq and subsequently as a cabinet minister in Iraq from 2003 to 2006, it became clear that few of the Muslims I encountered in the political arena were concerned with the spiritual aspects of Islam. In practice, Islamists behaved no differently, and often worse, than their secular counterparts. Abuse of power, squandering or outright theft of public resources, and corruption were all endemic to Islamist-led governments. Their brand of Islam was largely devoid of any deep, ethical content and was at odds with my understanding of Islam’s own legacy.

The preoccupation of the vast majority of Muslims with their outer material conditions, or often just survival, is not in any way reprehensible, but it is deficient. The crises that Muslims face cannot be addressed solely by the political, social, or jurisprudential aspects of the religion. The moral education of individual Muslims does not much interest the leaders of the Muslim world, whether in power or in opposition, in mainly Muslim lands or in the West. Muslims may have been overwhelmed by the scale of the real or imagined disasters befalling them — the legacy of colonialism and Western intervention, and their relative underperformance in a globalizing world — but that should not have prevented them from holding a mirror up to themselves. That mirror would have revealed a fading of their own civilizational drive and an increasingly obvious indifference to, and often abandonment of, the ethical and spiritual foundations of their faith.

Over the past 30 years, the divisions within Islam have triggered paroxysms of violence. Sectarian, ethnic, and racial hatreds have trumped the ideal of Islamic unity. The Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s, and the internecine struggle that accompanied the withdrawal of the Soviets from Afghanistan, are a few such examples. In post-Saddam Iraq, however, the full extent of the dissonance between Islamic political and religious life was laid bare. The murderous violence that was unleashed by radical Wahhabi-inspired Islamists was sanctioned with laborious jurisprudential “justifications” from leading religious figures. Saudi-based clerics applauded the egregious acts of violence and mayhem perpetrated by the Al Qaeda terrorists in Iraq, especially when they targeted the Shiites, a heretical group in Wahhabi demonology. Those rulings were accepted by many Muslims around the world, and they legitimated the slaughter of innocent civilians. The brutal response of the Shiite militias that followed, a counterterror in its own right, focused on the Sunnis of Iraq. Hundreds of thousands of Iraqis were killed and millions displaced or exiled. The country descended into chaos and strife.

Political Islamists of all stripes jettisoned entire ideologies supposedly based on an Islamic reading of politics and ethics — for which many of their allies had given their lives — in indecent haste as they scrambled for political advantage in the post-Saddam order. Not once during my three-year stint in the Iraqi government did I witness an Islamist party, Sunni or Shia, promote an Islamic cause that they had earlier propounded in their manifestoes. Gone were their proposals for an Islamic economy, an Islamic system of laws, or an Islamic state. For example, the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq and the Islamic Dawa Party, from which emerged consecutive prime ministers, Ibrahim Jaafari and Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, showed no interest in pursuing any even mildly Islamic program once they were installed in office. The ruling parties were driven by an obsessive desire for material gain and a desire to keep in the good graces of Washington.

A sad and dispiriting spectacle, it was evidence that Muslims had become divorced from the wellsprings of Islamic ethics: the search for a felicitous life, a harmonious and just society, and moral virtue, which in turn is a pathway to the Unseen. Isn’t the entire Koranic message addressed to “those who believe in the Unseen”? I began to systematically reflect on this dilemma, to try to understand the factors behind the decay of the spirit of Islam, and what the future might entail if that process is not halted or reversed.

Islamic civilization has its own perspectives on the relations between God and man, the individual and the group, the powers and responsibilities of the state, and the appropriate balance between human rights and duties, as well as the nature of justice, freedom, and equality. Such views are different from those held by other civilizations, and in particular from the dominant, Western-style world order. Almost by definition, Islamic civilization has to acknowledge the role of the transcendent (or the sacred or divine — call it what you will). If that element is absent, Islam cannot modernize without diminishing the integrity of the faith.

In classical Islamic doctrine, individual autonomy is constrained by the individual’s ultimate dependence on God. Consequently the entire edifice of individual rights — derived from either man’s natural state or a secular, ethical, or political theory — is alien to Islamic thought. The individual Muslim generates within himself or herself the virtues of the community, and vice versa. The result, ideally, is a bond between the individual and the group, with little possibility of ethical atomization at the individual level or an oppressive conformity at the group level.

The crisis in Islamic civilization arises in part from the fact that Muslims have been unable to chart their own path into contemporary life. Islam as a religion — or even as a remnant of a civilization — has never fully surrendered to the demands of a desacralized world. Those who rule over Muslims may behave atrociously, continuing a venerable tradition of misrule, violence, and corruption that has long plagued the Muslim world, but tantalizing thoughts of “what might be” still reverberate among the masses — and even among some of the elite.

In the past, the Shariah connected Muslims’ outer world with their inner realities. The eclipse of the Shariah by secular civil, commercial, and criminal law severed that connection. Some people see a desacralized world as a fertile ground for nurturing the private faith of the individual. Other religious traditions, especially those that form the basis of Western civilization, long ago withdrew from the public arena, effectively putting their seal of approval on the separation of church and state. But Islam cannot easily coexist with a political order that takes no heed of its inner dimensions. The integrity of Islam requires a delicate balance between the individual’s spirituality and the demands of the community as a whole.

Islam’s encounter with the West and the ascendant forces of modernity have made deep inroads into the outer world of Islam and, equally important, into the minds of Muslims. Some may deny it and fight numerous rear-guard actions, but this reality cannot be effaced until Muslims confront another harsh fact: All civilizations have an inner and outer aspect, an inner world of beliefs, ideas, and values that inform the outer aspects of institutions, laws, government, and culture. But the inner dimensions of Islam no longer have the significance or power to shape the outer world in which most Muslims live. Most Muslims — knowingly or not — have lost sight of the centrality of sacredness to their historic civilization. The Muslim world has effectively become desacralized, and that has changed how Muslims think, believe, and behave. Islam’s outer expressions — laws, institutions, governing structures, economic and cultural principles — have been in constant retreat.

The idea of the nation-state challenged the traditional notion of the Islamic political entity. The cohesion of families was threatened by shifting economic foundations and the advent of women’s rights. The Shariah had to acquiesce in the new canons of secular civil and criminal law. The open marketplaces of bazaars and traditional exchange patterns gave way to the international corporation, interest-based finance, and foreign investment. Those are the arenas in which the debate about the future of Islam is typically waged. But the answer to the question of whether a uniquely Islamic order can ever be recreated again does not lie only there.

The insatiable pursuit of ever-rising standards of living, coupled with an almost fetishistic belief in science and technology, is a nearly universal condition. The West has accepted secularization as an inevitable consequence of increasing wealth and power. That same recipe is now being offered to Muslims. Liberal reformers in the Muslim world, and their allies beyond, are in effect calling for a Christianization of Islam: concede the public arena to secularism and acknowledge that the break between Islam’s sacred interior world and the profane external world is definitive and legitimate.

The reformers, advocates of Muslim liberal democracy, are at least honest in that they forthrightly call for the wholesale adoption of the institutions and processes of modernity. But their vision of Islamic civilization is empty — a vague spirituality wafting over a society with a shallow cultural distinctiveness, one that has effectively merged with the dominant order.

The radical Islamists, on the other hand, and even the rank and file of so-called “rationalist” Muslims who insist that Islam has all the elements of Western-style humanism already embedded in it, suffer from a different conceit — namely that a happy compromise can be fashioned between Islam and modernity simply by running modern ideas through the filter of the Shariah: What is acceptable will be embraced, and what is not will be rejected. That approach, which has been entertained for more than a century, has produced neither material progress nor the foundations of a revivified Islamic civilization. The fundamental conundrum facing both rationalists and radicals is that the forces of modernity are the product of a different and ascendant civilizational order. Those forces can be internalized successfully only if they are refashioned, and then transcended, in a uniquely Islamic framework.

Such a framework must be rooted explicitly in the Islamic virtues of justice, moderation, the respectful accommodation of other cultures and religions, and the rejection of oppression and gross inequalities. Those immutable principles are spelled out in the Koran. They are milestones for the believers’ pathways to God. They should guide an ethical rereading of the Shariah that will not only revitalize Islam’s outer world, but also bring Islam closer to providing a new, constructive, and potentially appealing response to the growing problems facing humanity — including environmental degradation, the coarsening of public life, economic inequity among nations and peoples, and overconsumption. The Shariah has traditionally been pitted against modern practices and values, with the implication that it should give way to the prevailing ethos. Or the Shariah has been seen in entirely static terms, a blueprint for reviving some golden age of Islam. The latter is the approach of fundamentalist Muslims.

But an Islam reimagined along the lines sketched above can go beyond the travesty that is “Islamic banking” and produce institutions and enterprises that emphasize risk-sharing and cooperative finance. It can push for technological innovations that focus on conservation. In the hard sciences, Islam can privilege research that seeks to reveal the unseen substructures that underlie the physical world — what the great theoretical physicist David Bohm called the “implicate order,” which has not been investigated with the necessary energy because it counters the prevailing methods of scientific inquiry. Islam can open up entirely new vistas to find unity and wholeness in the natural world.

Muslims cannot simply partake of the technological fruits of modern civilization while simultaneously rejecting or questioning its premises. That makes them nothing more than inert consumers of the effort and creativity of others — even if they continue to smugly assert the superiority of their spiritual ways. That is the ultimate fallacy of the Islamists. Alternatively, Muslims might choose to package the products of Western civilization in ways that are culturally or politically acceptable to their own societies. They can even participate in the dominant civilizational order and risk fatally undermining whatever remains of Muslims’ basic identity and autonomy. That appears to be the path of the Gulf states, which have exuberantly embraced a frantic hypermodernity that is scantily garbed in Islamic idioms. This path also appeals to the Westernized professional classes who view their Islam as little more than a cultural ornament.

If Muslims want an outer life that is an expression of their innermost faith, however, they must rescue their own civilization from years of inactivity, lassitude, and indifference. Such an achievement requires overcoming conditions of great imbalance and adversity. The challenge is not insurmountable, but it will test to the limit Muslims’ commitment to Islam as a complete way of life. Muslims must invent a new means of expressing the outer dimensions of their religion, a new Shariah — ethics-based rather than rules-based, tilted toward social action rather than preserving the status quo. Muslims must confront the twin temptations of seeing the Shariah either as a malleable garb for whatever modernity throws their way, or as a fixed creed of intricately detailed rulings.

I have no doubt that Islam as a religion or as a code of outer conduct and transactions will continue. But I cannot say the same about Islamic civilization — a universe that is recognizably Islamic and that draws its vitality and inspiration from the inner and outer aspects of Islam and the bridge that connects the two. It is that world that is in danger of disappearing.

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2009: 2012 Match-ups: Obama, Romney Tied at 45%; Obama 48%, Palin 42%

See the original of this article on the Rasmussen Polls webpage at this link.

Thanks much,
Steve St.Clair

================
2012 Match-ups: Obama, Romney Tied at 45%; Obama 48%, Palin 42%
Rassumssen Reports
July 20, 2009

If the 2012 presidential election were held today, President Obama and possible Republican nominee Mitt Romney would be all tied up at 45% each, according to a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey.

The president, seeking a second four-year term, beats another potential GOP rival, Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, by six points – 48% to 42%.

In both match-ups, seven percent (7%) like some other candidate, with three percent (3%) undecided.

Palin is second only to Romney as the presidential candidate Republican voters say right now that they’ll vote for in 2012 state GOP primaries. But she’s also one of two candidates they least hope wins the party’s nomination.

Just 21% of voters nationwide say Palin should run as an independent if she loses the Republican presidential nomination in 2012. Sixty-three percent (63%) say the 2008 GOP vice presidential nominee should not run as an independent. Sixteen percent (16%) are not sure.

If Romney secured the GOP nomination and Palin chose to run as an independent candidate, Obama would win the resulting three-way race with 44% of the vote. Romney is the choice of 33% of the voters under that scenario, with Palin a distant third with 16% support. Three percent (3%) like some other candidate, and four percent (4%) are undecided.

Last November, Obama defeated Republican presidential nominee John McCain by a 53% to 46% margin.

When Romney is the Republican nominee, he beats Obama among unaffiliated voters 48% to 41%. But when Palin is the GOP candidate, unaffiliated voters prefer Obama by a 47% to 41% margin.

Men prefer the Republican over Obama whether it’s Romney or Palin, while women like the president better in both match-ups. Palin continues to fare more poorly among women than her male rivals.

In a three-way race, Palin hurts Romney by drawing 28% Republican support. Romney captures 52% of the GOP vote in that scenario.

In a three way race, unaffiliated voters break 40% for the president, 39% for Romney and 14% for Palin.

Nearly one-third of Republicans (32%) say Palin should run as an independent is she fails to get the party’s nomination.

But 40% of Republican voters say Palin’s decision to resign as governor of Alaska hurts her chances of winning the party’s presidential nomination in 2012.

Those who say economic and fiscal issues are their biggest concerns make up the majority of Republican voters, and Romney runs best among those voters if the 2012 GOP Presidential Primary in their state was held today. Palin is the top choice for those Republicans who put national security first and ties Romney for first among voters who list economic issues alone as the priority.

In mid-May, 37% of Republican voters said their party was leaderless, but this was a major improvement from March when 68% felt that way.

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