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Memo to
Americans
In the wake of the September 11
attacks, Americans are asking, why are some Muslims so angry at the US that they
would perpetrate such an inhuman act? And how could Islam be a source of
motivation or justification for such an act? Muqtedar Khan, Ph.D. offers
some insights.
October 29th, 2001
Dear Americans,
I hope this memo finds you all
well on the way to recovery. I pray that God, who is most merciful and most
benevolent, will be with you every step of the way as you recover from the
collective anguish and fear precipitated by the events of Sept 11. God promises
in the Quran (2:286) that He does not burden a soul beyond its capacity to bear
pain. He will keep his promise.
The catastrophic attacks on the
World Trade Center and the Pentagon have raised several questions about Islam
and militant Muslims. The chief among them are, why are some Muslims so angry at
the US that they would perpetrate such an inhuman act? An even more puzzling
question is how could Islam or any religion be a source of motivation or
justification for such an act?
Before we answer the above
questions, I want to thank all those wonderful Americans (specially President
Bush) who came out to protect American Muslims, their mosques and their
properties from a xenophobic backlash. I congratulate you for displaying such
humanity and safeguarding the American way even under such adverse and
challenging circumstances. May Allah reward you all and this nation for its
restraint. As it is the American Muslim community feels beleagured, ostracized,
marginalized and scared; those of you who came out in our support made a big
difference.
Now I turn to the difficult task
of making the events of Sept. 11th intelligible. I need your patience and your
understanding to accomplish this. It is important to clarify that in spite of
its gross inhumanity, the attack on America is certainly not the most egregious
of crimes against humanity. The Spanish inquisition, the holocaust, the genocide
in Bosnia, the systematic elimination of the native American population, the
ethnic cleansings in Africa, and Cambodia, and even the atrocities against the
Bosnians are in sheer number of casualties much bigger crimes. One may also
recall that in India nearly 50,000 Sikhs were slaughtered in less than a week as
revenge for the assassination of Indira Gandhi in early 1980s. The attack on
American is significant because of its spectacular nature, its target –
the world’s sole superpower – and the fact that a part of it was
caught on tape.
Why are Muslims Angry at the US?
There are several theories being
advanced by various commentators explaining why Muslims generally hate the
United States. The silliest of them is the one that the Bush administration and
the conservative elements in America entertain. They insist that Binladen and
other Islamic militants hate America because they hate American values of
freedom and democracy. Nothing can be further from the truth. Indeed most
Muslims are great admirers of democracy and freedom and insist that these values
are not only consistent with Islam but were the bedrock of the glorious Islamic
civilization. They point to the diversity, tolerance and harmony at the peak of
Islamic civilization to substantiate their claims.
As Islamic awareness increases in
postcolonial Muslim societies and Islamic activists try to rebuild their
civilization they find that the economically motivated alliance between secular
authoritarian regimes in the Muslim world and the West, in particular the US, is
the biggest barrier to freedom, democracy and self determination. Turkey,
Algeria, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait are just a few examples of states were
non-democratic regimes thrive and repress popular movements with US support.
In 1953 a CIA coup replaced the
democratic government of Muhammad Mossadeq in Iran with a monarchy so that Iran
could become a client serving US interests in the Middle East. In Algeria the
west financed and legitimized a military coup that prevented Islamists from
coming to power after winning an election. In the 1960s, and again in 1990s
Turkey forced Islamists out of power, even after they had won popular mandates,
with the tacit support from the US. Even now all that American establishment can
think of, as an alternate to the Taliban in Afghanistan is the reinstatement of
a senile monarch, not the establishment of democracy.
The utter lack of peaceful
channels for protest and dissent in the entire Arab world has slowly radicalized
most moderate Islamic oppositions. The use of brutal force by secular regimes
has further incited reactionary violence from Islamic militias. There is also a
false notion circulating that Islam and democracy are incompatible. Today nearly
650 million Muslims live in democratic societies. As of now there are two Muslim
nations with over a 100 million people that have women heads of state –
Indonesia and Bangladesh. The US has not had one in over 220 years!
It is not a hatred of democracy
and freedom but the desire for one that has made many Muslims hate the US whom
they blame for the perpetuation of undemocratic polities in their world. Surely
there are some Muslims who argue that democracy like everything Western is
UnIslamic and evil. Fortunately such misguided people are few and have very
little influence in the Muslim World.
Many Muslims also believe that the
US is inherently opposed to Islam and Muslims. Binladen for one has claimed that
by maintaining troops in Saudi Arabia (to protect the monarchy from any popular
revolutions) the US actually occupies the two most important Muslim holy sites,
Mecca and Medina. And through Israel, which is seen as an outpost of Western
imperialism in the Arab world, the US occupies Jerusalem the third most holy
Muslim city.
Add to this the systematic
destruction of Iraq, the death of over half a million Iraqi children through US
sponsored sanctions, and the daily atrocities, assassinations and dispossession
of the Palestinians by a US armed and funded Israeli army, it is not difficult
to imagine why US is not seen as a beacon of freedom and virtue in the Muslim
World.
Does this mean that angry Muslims
are allowed to perpetrate collateral damages that include over 5000 innocent
Americans? Certainly not. The purpose of this article is not to condone what
happened on September 11th. What happened was horrible, inhuman and unIslamic.
But reflection over Muslim grievances can help us understand how even devout
people can be driven to commit themselves to terror. Systematic repression
dispossesses people of their humanity, inciting them to commit inhuman acts.
Americans must take these
grievances seriously and address them in good faith and that, in my opinion, is
the best way to fight resentment, anger and the resulting violence.
How Can Islam permit/incite
terror?
Any observer of the Palestinian
problem, who does not nurse malice towards Islam, will understand why many
Palestinians would resort to suicide bombings against Israel. Surely, if we were
to equip them with F-16s and Apache helicopters they would also fight fair and
square with Israel. As far as killing of innocent civilians is concerned, the
Israeli army kills many times more Palestinian children than the casualties
caused by suicide bombers. Those are realities of the region. Islam however, is
irrelevant to the Israeli-Palestine violence.
Distorted interpretations of Islam
are used by Hamas and Islamic Jihad as a rhetorical instrument for mobilization
of resistance and justification of their actions. Islam specifically forbids
suicide (Quran 4:29) and the killing of civilians, women and children (Bukhari:
Book of Jihad). The important point is that it is not the Islamic belief of
Palestinians that leads them to suicide bombing but rather the logic of the
circle of violence and the hatred many of them now nurse against their
occupiers. Also remember that Japanese pilots in World War II and Tamil Elam
Tigers (of Buddhist and Hindu religions) have used suicide bombing more often
than Muslims. Long before Hamas emerged, a suicide bomber had assassinated Rajiv
Gandhi, India’s Prime Minister.
Islam, according to Max Weber,
Freidrich Nietzsche and Hegel is the most practical, rational and realistic of
all religions. It is this realistic element in Islam that does not fully
advocate pacifism, permitting the use of force. The theory of Jihad (Struggle in
the path of God) forbids violence except when 1) Muslims are not allowed to
practice their faith (freedom of religion is threatened) 2) when people are
oppressed and subjugated (in pursuit of freedom) and 3) when people’s land
is forcibly taken from them.
Islam allows a range of responses.
One can forgive the oppressor or one can respond in kind. There are Quranic
sources encouraging both positions.
And slay them wherever you find
them, and drive them out of the places from where they drove you out, for
persecution is worse than killing (2:191).
Tell those who disbelieve that if
they cease persecution of believers that which is past will be forgiven them
(8:38).
There is no hierarchy of verses in
the Quran. Those who privilege the first verse over the second will wage war to
fight injustice. And most militant Muslims invoke this verse in the defense of
their actions. But then there are Muslims who privilege the second verse and
seek diplomatic end to persecution through forgiveness. The two verses above are
exemplary of the tension between realism and idealism in Islam. But in the final
analysis Islam is what Muslims make of it.
While war in search of justice and
to escape persecution is permissible in Islam, what happened on Sept. 11th
certainly is not. I wonder how those Muslims responsible for the slaughter of
American civilians would rationalize their actions in the light of this Quranic
verse:
He who has killed one innocent
soul, it is as if he has killed all humanity. And he who has saved one soul, is
as if he has saved all humanity (Quran 5:32).
To my mind there is absolutely no
justification and no way of rationalizing what happened on Sept. 11th. I am
convinced that Islam does not shape the perpetrators’ values and their
beliefs. Islam is a religion of peace and I pray that good Muslims (Quran
11:116) will rescue Islam from the clutches of those who use it for their
political purposes.
Until Americans revisit their
foreign policy practices and good Muslims challenge distorted interpretations of
Islam consistently we may not come out of the circle of terror and
counter-terror.
Muqtedar Khan, Ph.D.
Director of International Studies, Adrian College, MI
Association of Muslim Social Scientists
Center for the Study of Islam and Democracy.
Read other articles by Muqtedar
Khan here.
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