The Last Stand of Islamic Revivalism* |
April, 2002 |
Daryoush Homayoun |
On September the 11th an incredibly brutal terrorist attack shook the world out
of its benign neglect. It awakened the West to the dangerous phenomenon of
Islamic revivalism or fundamentalism, a phenomenon that first showed its
destructive potential in the Iranian Islamic Revolution.
We can call this phenomenon either revivalism or fundamentalism, since both
imply a return to a golden past. The term Islamism is also used in this
respect, covering all totalitarian tendencies wanting an Islamic social and
political order based on the example of the Prophet and early Caliphs and
enforced by all means. The origins of the Islamic Revivalism goes back to late
18th century Arabia, where a certain Abdolvahhab, tried to relive, almost to
the letter, the life and achievements of the prophet. With his message of pure
Islam, Islam according to Qor’an, and as manifested in the prophet’s words and
deeds, he set out to conquer Arabia and bring his pure Vahhabi Islam to the
Islamic world. After some spectacular victories, he was defeated by the
Egyptian surrogates of the Ottoman Sultan; but his message survived and a
century later led to the establishment of the Saudi Kingdom. It is by no means
accidental that Bin Laden, another Vahhabi from the same land, is now the most
prominent representative of that message.
The two characteristics of Islamic revivalism apart from going back to the pure
Islam of its prophet, is unbounded enmity towards the West, and a devotion to
violence. West is considered the source of evil in the world, dominating and
corrupting Muslims. Its power should be crushed by all means, terrorism and
genocide included.
From Abdol-vahhab’s defeat in early ninetieth century, the Islamic revivalism
experienced more and more setbacks. Al Mahdi in Sudan was similarly defeated by
superior western arms; various terrorist groups, notably Akhvan in Egypt and
Fadayian in Iran, were largely eliminated. Nevertheless, it remained the most
influential movement in Islam, helping to misguide and frustrate various
Islamic societies in their efforts to modernize. It kept alive the illusion of
Islam’s intrinsic superiority to western civilization, and by hindering
freethinking--Islam as The Taboo-- strengthened authoritarian tendencies. The
golden age of Islam as a paradigm condemned all modernizing efforts in these
societies to half measures and damaging compromises.
Islam in government and as a political philosophy had proven its inadequacy
from the beginning. It undoubtedly made the Arabs one of history’s most
successful conquerors and colonizers. (V.C. Naipaul has a strong point calling
Arab colonialism the most complete, because it makes colonized people not only
ignorant about, but hostile towards, their pre-colonial heritage.) However, it
failed from the very start in creating a real community. Islamic societies
continued living in despotism, exploitation and insecurity. After the vitality
of the first centuries --fed by military might--wore down, Islam with its claim
over all aspects of human existence, its dogmas and rigidity, became the
greatest cause of backwardness.
For the Islamic revivalists of various schools, the answer for backwardness has
ironically been to go further backward. Abdol-wahab and Al Mahdi were defeated
not because of their anachronism, but for lack of firearms, so Islam should
acquire western means, and regain both its purity and superior place. This
mechanical approach to the problem of backwardness and development, from mid
20th century came under the strong influence of “Third Worldism” and Marxism,
and became the mainstream ideology of Muslim intelligentsia --the vast army of
half educated and unemployable. Whatever it lacked in hatred towards Western
values of freedom and human rights, it took from those bankrupt ideologies.
The single greatest impetus given to the Islamic revivalism, was the Islamic
Revolution in Iran. Almost like the Muslim conquest of Iran in 7th century,
the triumph of the revivalists in a country that was leading the Muslim world
in economic and social development and was becoming a model for many of them,
created a tremendous momentum. Iran’s wealth and power, hand in hand with
revolutionary élan, enabled the ruling Islamic clergy to set the agenda for the
new phase of Islamic revivalism. Exporting revolution became a new slogan for
the old revivalist dream, and state sponsored terrorism and virulent anti
Western propaganda its 1nstrument. The Islamic republic started by hostage
taking of the American diplomats and went so far as placing weapons in
diplomatic mailbags, sending armed men among Hajj pilgrims, and turn its
embassies into centers of revolutionary activity.
Another great boost for Islamic revivalism was the anti Soviet war in
Afghanistn. Although US support was crucial, their triumphalism reached new
highs after that. As Abdol Aziz Azzam, one of Bin Ladin’s teachers at King
Abdol Aziz University taught his students, if an infidel state could be
defeated, all others could be likewise. Here we come to another source of this
resurgent movement, the oil ( mostly Saudi ) money. Saudi official western
oriented policy notwithstanding, this country, run as a family gas station, is
the main sponsor of Islamic extremist groups around the world. The Vahhabi
clergy that has a free hand in all matters religious, has huge sums augmented
by donations from some members of the 7000 strong royal family for revivalist
propaganda. They support innumerable religious institutions from mosques to
schools, the so-called Madreseh, to charities. Of such schools there are 40,000
in Pakistan alone, many of them benefiting from Saudi largesse.
The above quote from Azzam was just a random one. In most Arab and many Islamic
countries the whole educational system and media is anti western, especially
attacking its values. These are all backward societies with dictatorial
governments sitting on top of volcanoes in varying stages of activity. Whatever
their relations with various western nations, they vehemently oppose democracy,
freedom of speech, equality of women. As an astute observer has said, these
regimes are in a state of truce with their own people, at the expense of others
– subjects of Islamic violence and hatred. Bin Laden sums up these “others” as
“Crusaders and Jews” to be annihilated.
* * *
Islamic extremism has its solid roots in Islam itself, both
as a creed and as a state. Islam began by extreme violence towards any dissent
and opposition, and soon became an empire. It has never shed that
imperial-colonial ambition. The problem with Moslem societies on the whole is
the stark contrast between ambition -- which means believing in a potential –
and the reality of their historic failure in almost all aspects of human
endeavor. The solution, at least for the revivalists, lies in going back to
what was the cause of their excellence, i.e. the pure Islam of Mohammad and his
immediate successors. It is the easiest way out of poverty, tyranny, foreign
domination, backwardness. It does not entail any change of attitudes and
values; only an adherence to the Qor'an and tradition. Generations after
generation of Muslims are brought up with such beliefs, tolerated, if not
sponsored or even promoted by their corrupt, un-representative ruling classes.
Much is being said about the Palestinian problem as being at the heart of the
international terrorism, which is another name for Islamic extremism. Without
denying that this issue is playing very well into the hands of the revivalists
and the vital necessity of reaching a just agreement, there is really no
correlation between the two. This phenomenon long preceded the problem in the
Middle East and no practical solution would be enough for the extremists. Anvar
Sadat was assassinated by the Islamists for regaining all Egyptian territory
after reaching an agreement with Israel. Any solution for Palestinian problem
short of abolition of Israel would be considered a sell out.
The very fact that Middle East is one of the most tense and crisis prone areas
of the world is an indication that external elements are secondary to the
contradictions of a civilization that has failed despite all human and natural
resources. Its intrinsic instability is not confined to itself, as is mostly
the case in Africa, but because of the geo-strategic importance of the Middle
East, it usually overflows to other areas. So apart from reducing tensions in
the area, there must be a more comprehensive approach to the problem of
international terrorism--a kind of terrorism emanating from the special
circumstances of the Islamic middle east.
We see the beginning of such an approach in the West’s forceful response to Al
Qaida terrorists and their Taliban supporters. The Islamic revivalists, in
their desperate situation need success to survive. Up to September 11 they had
got away with hostage taking in Tehran, massacring Americans in Beirut and
Khobar, destroying two US embassies in Africa, damaging an American warship in
Aden, even bombing one of the world trade center towers. The inevitable sense
of invincibility was a big factor in daring to execute the mortal blow of that
day. Now every terrorist group and state is confronted with the horrifying
prospect of what has been done to the Taliban and bin Laden group.
Islamic revivalism, which intellectually is bankrupt, has fared even worse
militarily. It has failed as a government in Iran; and now is failing as a
military force in Afghanistan. A whiff of western technology – byproducts of a
supposedly inferior civilization -- proved more than enough for turning the
soldiers of Islam into dust. Given the importance of material power for Muslims
everywhere, this military debacle is all the more devastating.
* * *
September 11th and its aftermath proves the following
three propositions:
1st, there is such a thing as international terrorism and it has everything to
do with Islamic revivalism or fundamentalism.
2nd, there is a clash between western and Islamic civilization, in the sense
that a good part of the latter not only rejects the civilization of the west,
but actively tries to destroy it. Other civilizations even if not trying to
catch up with the West or prefer their own values, are not at war with it.
3erd, it is high time for all and especially Muslim societies themselves to
confront the problem in all its aspects and end ignoring or covering it up.
Military operations and counter terrorism measures are very important, but the
war on terrorism has many other aspects.
The West as a prime target of this brand of terrorism should try to solve the
politico-economic problems fueling it. Uprooting terrorist cells and destroying
Terrorist organizations should be pursued relentlessly and by any means and for
as long that takes. But the political and social cesspool, the breeding ground
of this particular terrorism, must be dried up. The Palestinian issue, whatever
its relation to the problem, comes first. It is a problem affecting much more
than the main protagonists. There is now a good opportunity to bring it to a
mutually agreeable end.
But as has been shown, there are deeper sociological roots and now the
conditions are more favorable for tackling them. After Iran, Algeria and now
Afghanistan, it is safe to assume that Islamists’ obsession with material power
and violence has been dealt a mortal blow. The fundamentalist regime in Iran
will continue for a while in its slide into oblivion; various revivalist groups
everywhere will fume in their mounting frustration; and the dream of bringing
back the Golden Age will fade in the face of deepening crisis of Islam as a way
of organizing human affairs.
What the West could do is to support democratic forces and encourage democratic
trends in these societies; putting pressure on despotic rulers and defending
human rights. “Real Politic” has had its limits and helped strengthening
monstrosities like Saddam Hussein and the ruling Mullahs of Iran. Oil is
important but should not be the driving force of foreign policy. The West is
not just a driver interested in a gas station. Until Islamic societies enter
the world of enlightenment, coming out of their extended dark age, there could
not be any guarantee against the wrath of teeming multitudes in their tens of
millions, who have no better future than as martyrs.
International terrorism cannot operate without secure bases. Iraq, Syria,
Libya, Somalia, Yemen, and last but not least the Islamic Republic have been or
still are providing bases for it; Saudi Arabia being a major financial
source--apart from drug money. That sort of support could be stopped by a
combination of forceful diplomacy and economic pressure.
The direct relationship between dictatorship and terrorism is now so clearly
established that there is no need to elaborate here.
* * *
The main task, however, lies with Muslim societies
themselves. They must emancipate themselves from the hold of dictatorial
regimes and reactionary religious establishments. Only the people, and the
intellectuals at their forefront, could break the vicious circle of political
and cultural suppression strengthening each other and further weakening the
society. The fight would have no better starting point than attacking the
taboos, discussing freely what has been shrouded in sanctity.
There is a lot of talk about the secularism in Islamic countries. Here one
should beware of clishes. Secularism is not just having a non-religious
constitution. Turkey has had such a document for eight decades, and the
Islamic taboo is almost as strong as in say, Pakistan, which along Egypt and
Saudi Arabia is a hotbed of the worst aspects of Islamic revivalism. Secularism
starts with freedom of speech, fought for by thinkers and writers who are
prepared to take risks, and supported by people who are fed up with their diet
of
irrelevant teaching. Education and media are the two battlegrounds that if not
won, keep these societies from joining the world of 21st century. Emancipation
of woman holds the key to winning in that battleground. Nothing holds the
Islamic impasse as much as feminine subjugation. The Turkish government in its
quest for EU membership recently took a giant step and made women, in affairs
of family, legally equal to men.
There is a strong case for fighting poverty in connection to anti terrorist
campaign. However, the fact that many of the masterminds and recruited of Al
Qaida come from Saudi Arabia, one of the richest lands, tells another story.
Without democracy and human rights no amount of money has created stable
political systems and popular content. Islamic terrorism is a direct product of
a culture not only unwilling to accept Modernity, but opposing it to the point
of -- in the case of an important minority --taking arms against it. Islam in
its long encounter with Modernity has responded in many ways, like all
traditional societies. But the vehemence and doggedness of the Islamists is
unique. Other civilizations try to adjust to, and reach the level of western
civilizations. Many Muslims want to barricade against it.
Nobody wants to abolish Islam. Whoever wants to be a believer is free to do so.
But Islam, like any other phenomenon, cannot escape scrutiny and the working of
free thought. It has dominated so many countries for so long, and has to yield
to critical assessment. In the end its place in Muslim societies would be more
or less like Christianity in the West, notwithstanding fundamental differences.
It would continue as a faith – but without any enforcement.
Iran is a trendsetter in this respect. Secularism, even a certain aversion to
any religious interference, is flowing from the depths of society. People might
or might not be religious, but it is not a defining factor in the choices they
make -- including friends and foes. This is the wave of the future in the
Islamic world.
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* Speech made at UC Sacramento,
April 02