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Tuesday, June 26, 2007 | Reason : Science of Religion | print version Print | Comments

Document Journey Into Islam

by Tony Blankley, Huffington Post

Thanks to ranjani for the link.

Reposted from:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/tony-blankley/journey-into-islam_b_53787.html

authorI have just finished reading a deeply disheartening book by my friend Professor Akbar Ahmed. Dr. Ahmed is the former Pakistani High Commissioner to Britain and member of the faculties of Harvard, Princeton and Cambridge, current chair of Islamic Studies at American University -- and is in the front ranks of what we Westerners call the moderate Muslims who we are counting on to win the hearts and minds of the others.

I first met Professor Ahmed shortly after September 11. He, his friends and I broke bread several times and discussed the condition of Islam and the West. He graciously agreed to share a stage with me at the National Press Club to debate with me the merits of my book -- The West's Last Chance: Will we win the clash of civilization? As my book was very harshly received by many Muslims around the world, I don't doubt that Dr. Ahmed shared that stage with me at some risk at least to his reputation -- if not more.

We even considered doing a weekly cable TV show on the clash of civilization from our different (but respectful) points of view -- although nothing came of it. Dr. Ahmed is a worldly man of letters who profoundly believes that collective good can be accomplished by individual acts of good conscience -- that each of us (Muslim, Christian, Jew, Hindu) must connect with others and live out our convictions for our common humanity in the face of tribalism, religion and other dividing forces. Thus, his reach out to me, a fiery American nationalist TV commentator and editor, to find if not complete common ground, at least common friendship.

His new book, Journey into Islam: The crisis of globalization, is thus particularly heartbreaking for me. As a trained anthropologist, he took three of his students on a six-month journey around the Muslim world to investigate what Muslims are thinking.

His conclusion: Due to both misjudgments by the United States and regrettable developments in Muslim attitudes "[t]he poisons are spreading so rapidly that without immediate remedial action, no antidote may ever be found." And Dr. Ahmed has always been an optimist.

He divides Muslim attitudes into three categories named after Indian Muslim cities that have historically championed them: Ajmer, Aligarh and Deoband. Ajmers represent peaceful, Sufi mysticism. Aligarh represents the instinct to modernize without corrupting Islam. Deoband represents non-fatalistic, practical action oriented orthodox Islam. It traces to Ibn Taymiyya, a 14th-century thinker who lived when Islam was reeling from the Mongol invasions.

He rejected Islam's prior easy, open acceptance of non-Muslims.

In short, Dr. Ahmed is an Aligarh. As a young man he was one of new Pakistan's best and brightest led by Pakistan's founding father and first president Muhammad Ali Jinnah. They hoped to build a modern democracy, overcome tribalism and the more obscurantist aspects of Islam while still being "good Muslims." The Deobands are the Osama bin Ladens and all the other Muslims we fear today.

Even one or two years ago, I think Dr. Ahmed was reasonably hopeful that his views had a fighting chance around the Islamic world. So, my jaw dropped when I got to page 192 of his new book and he described his thoughts while in Pakistan last year on his investigative journey: "The progressive and active Aligarh model had become enfeebled and in danger of being overtaken by the Deoband model... I felt like a warrior in the midst of the fray who knew the odds were against him but never quite realized that his side had already lost the war." He likewise reported from Indonesia -- invariably characterized as practicing a more moderate form of Islam. There too his report was crushingly negative.

Meeting with people from presidents to cab drivers, from elite professors to students from modest schools (Dr. Ahmed holds a respected place in the Muslim firmament around the globe), he reports that 50 percent want Shariah law, support the Bali terrorist bombing, oppose women in politics, support stoning adulterers too death. Indonesia's secular legal system and tolerant pluralist society is being "infiltrated by Deoband thinking... Dwindling moderates and growing extremists are a dangerous challenging development." Although I dissent from several of Dr. Ahmed's characterizations of the Bush administration, Washington policy-makers and journalists should read this book because it delivers a terrible message of warning both to those who say things aren't as bad as Mr. Bush says, and we can rely on the moderate voices of Islam with a little assist from the West -- winning; and for those who argue for aggressive American action to show our strength to the Muslims (because, in bin Laden's words, they follow the strong horse).

To the first group he says that the "moderate" voice is in near hopeless retreat across the Muslim world. Don't count on them. To the second group he says, whatever Mr. Bush's intentions, our aggression only strengthens our enemies.

I think he knows his solution is forlorn: "Although the planet's societies are running against time... [we must] transcend race, tribe and religion and cherish our common humanity, every individual must become the message." Let us pray.

But for those of us who don't expect the milk of human kindness to suddenly start flowing, it behooves us to read Dr. Ahmed's honest assessment of the real state of Muslim world attitudes and coldly re-assess our various policy prescriptions in its light.

These are grim times, but we must resist indulging ourselves in hopeful fantasies. Every piece of our national security calculations must be realistically assessed against the available facts. What is working, what isn't, what to do?

Comments 1 - 9 of 9 |

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1. Comment #52222 by Mat on June 26, 2007 at 2:06 pm

Scary stuff. Truly scary. But not, I think, entirely surprising.

Other Comments by Mat

2. Comment #52298 by Donald on June 26, 2007 at 4:41 pm

Clear support for what Sam Harris has been saying.

How can we get western politicans to read some of this stuff? Perhaps it would have been slightly better to send "End of Faith" to the UK MPs rather than TGD.

I'd love to think that western leaders privately understand this, and prefer not to say it out loud. But everything we know about our politicians suggests they are really are blind to the reality of Islam.

Other Comments by Donald

3. Comment #52319 by 82abhilash on June 26, 2007 at 5:58 pm

I donot think any of you here have any respect for Islam. Some of you may have some doubts however about your own sincereity with regards to the nature of Islam. You may even think, perhaps even with the Ideology of Islam, there are good parts and bad parts - grains of gold lost in sand.

It is only for reasonable people to be self critical. That is perhaps why they are the last to voice their opinions. They take pride in being thoughtful and admit to mistakes once they realise it.

But here you are not mistaken and you should know that, none of us are mistaken. There is a book that clearly explains the nature of Islam - 'Understanding Islam through the Hadis'.

http://www.voi.org/books/uith/

The Indian author who wrote this had to go into hiding just like Salman Rushdie. His name is Ram Swarup

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ram_Swarup

This book is not banned in India, but is very difficult to obtain. 'The Satanic Verses' by the way is banned in India.

READ THIS BOOK AND YOU WILL UNDERSTAND ISLAM BETTER.

Other Comments by 82abhilash

4. Comment #52433 by Creeping Jesus on June 27, 2007 at 2:59 am

 avatarYou're right about some of us not respecting Islam.

Islam is a religion. It is an impossible fantasy about a non existent god and is purely and simply a lot of nonsense.

It also gets people killed.

What's to respect?

If it gets people killed in the name of something which doesn't even exist it ought to be despised rather than respected.

Tell me why I should respect it.

Other Comments by Creeping Jesus

5. Comment #52452 by Logicel on June 27, 2007 at 4:05 am

 avatar82abhilash, Thanks for those great links--I have been wanting to make the effort to become more familiarized with Islam.

Here's an excerpt from the intro in the book written by Ram Swarup (a critic of Islam, Christianity and communism):

To the infidel with his critical faculty still intact, the HadIs is a collection of stories, rather unedifying, about a man, rather all too human. But the Muslim mind has been taught to look at them in a different frame of mind. The believers have handled, narrated, and read them with a feeling of awe and worship.

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6. Comment #52457 by Logicel on June 27, 2007 at 4:13 am

 avatarAnother quote from the intro of Swarup's critical book on Islam:

A new fundamentalism is sweeping over the Muslim world, throwing up leaders like Khomeini and Mu�ammar Qaddafi. Wherever it triumphs, dictatorship comes in its wake. Fundamentalism and authoritarianism are twins.

According to some thinkers, this fundamentalism is nothing but a search by Muslims for self-identity and self-assertion. It is a weapon of self-defense, derived from the available symbols of their culture, against the materialist and bourgeois values of the West. But on calm reflection, it is also something more; it is also their dream of recapturing the grandeur of their old imperial days. Islam is by nature fundamentalist; and this fundamentalism in turn is aggressive in character. Islam claims to have defined human thought and behavior for all time to come; it resists any change, and it feels justified in imposing its beliefs and behavior patterns on others.


Other Comments by Logicel

7. Comment #52501 by Howzat on June 27, 2007 at 6:25 am

Interesting and disturbing.

I hope Reza Aslan reads the book!

Other Comments by Howzat

8. Comment #52554 by Ophelia Benson on June 27, 2007 at 9:12 am

"each of us (Muslim, Christian, Jew, Hindu) must connect with others and live out our convictions for our common humanity in the face of tribalism, religion and other dividing forces."

Each of us: Muslim, Christian, Jew, Hindu; note how the religiously-inclined are taken to exhaust the possibilities.

Other Comments by Ophelia Benson

9. Comment #52607 by Elentar on June 27, 2007 at 1:04 pm

 avatarModerate believers are actually fairly irrelevant to the spread or control of extremism. Religion has no method--unlike science, there is no way to win an argument. Indeed, religion can actually disable rationality entirely. You can't even engage in a rational argument with a fanatic. If there were actually a way to win religious arguments, there wouldn't be dozens of religions and thousands of sects.

That being the case, holders of different religious beliefs must either agree to disagree, or impose their beliefs by force. The deciding factor between these two options is whether the religion has enough power. Bush's greatest mistake wasn't in any offense to Muslims, but in attempting an intervention that he did not have the political support to succeed in, thus making the West appear weak. The Islamicists now think they are on a winning streak, and won't stop until they suffer a crushing defeat. Whether this comes in the form of a military defeat, or a more likely political, economic, and social collapse brought on by primitive ideology doesn't really matter--but you can't be this backward in the 21st century and expect to get away with it for long.

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