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References
An-Na’im, Abdullahi Ahmed. 1990. Toward an Islamic Reformation: Civil
Liberties, Human Rights, and International Law. Syracuse: Syracuse
University Press.
Atiyeh, George N. 1995. The Book in the Islamic World: The written Word
and Communication in the Middle East. Albany: State University of New
York.
Casanova, José. 1994. Public Religions in the Modern World. Chicago:
University of Chicago Press.
Cooper, John, Ronald Nettler, and Mohamed Mahmoud. 1998. Islam and
Modernity: Muslim Intellectuals Respond. London: I.B. Tauris.
Eickelman, Dale F. 1992. “Mass Higher Education and the Religious
Imagination in Contemporary Arab Societies.” American Ethnologist 19:4
(November): 1-13.
-------- and James Piscatori. 1996. Muslim Politics. Princeton: Princeton
University Press.
Esposito, John. L. 1992. The Islamic Threat: Myth or Reality. New York:
Oxford.
Esposito, John L. and John O. Voll. 1996. Islam and Democracy. New York:
Oxford.
--------.2001. Makers of Contemporary Islam. New York: Oxford.
Fuller, Graham E. and Ian O. Lesser. 1995. A Sense of Siege: The
Geopolitics of Islam and the West. Boulder: Westview.
Halliday, Fred. 1995.Islam and the Myth of Confrontation: Religion and
Politics in the Middle East. London: I.B. Tauris.
Hannerz, Ulf. 1992. Cultural Complexity: Studies in the Social
Organization of Meaning. New York: Columbia.
Hefner, Robert W., 2000. Civil Islam: Muslims and Democratization in
Indonesia. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Huntington, Samuel P. 1996. The Clash of Civilization and the Remaking of
World Order. New York: Simon & Schuster.
Kepel, Gilles. 1984. Muslim Extremism in Egypt: The Prophet and Pharaoh.
Berkeley: University of California Press.
--------. 1997. Allah in the West: Islamic Movements in America and
Europe. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Khaldun, Ibn. 1958. The Muqaddimah. Translated by F. Rosenthal. 3 vols.
New York: Pantheon.
Putnam, Robert D. 1993. Making Democracy Work: Civic Traditions in Modern
Italy. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Roy, Olivier. 1994. The Failure of Political Islam. Cambridge: Harvard
University Press.
Soroush, Abdolkarim. 2000. Reason, Freedom, and Democracy in Islam.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Wuthnow, Robert. 1988. The Restructuring of American Religion: Society and
Faith Since World War II. Princeton: Princeton University Press. |
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Prof. Dr. Robert W. Hefner
September 11 and the Struggle for Islam
Six hundred years ago the great Arab historian, Ibn Khaldun, observed that
popular religion in Muslim societies tends to oscillate between periods of
strict religious observance and others of devotional laxity. An astute
observer of social life, Khaldun (1958) attributed this cultural cycle to
features of ecology and social organization peculiar to the Middle East.
Urban settlements across the region, he noted, are located amidst
grasslands and deserts inhabited by nomads only nominally controlled by
urban-based rulers. In principle, the nomads share the townspeople’s
faith. Tempted by the pleasures of cosmopolitan living, however, town
dwellers tend over time to relax their moral guard and sink into what is,
from a zealot’s perspective, decadent impiety. Immunized by the spartan
demands of desert living, the nomadic population is more resistant to this
moral slide.
The result is that nomads have the potential to serve as a reserve army if
and when an Islamic reformer arises, decrying urban decadence and
demanding a return to the purity of the Word. Where he can tap nomad
resentment in this manner, Khaldun remarked, the reformer may succeed in
pressing the urban population into scriptural piety for a generation or
two. Eventually, however, urban temptations lure the townspeople back to
their old ways, creating the conditions for yet another cycle of religious
reform.
Khaldun’s model never really applied to the entire Muslim world or all of
Muslim history. The great Muslim kingdoms in Mesopotamia, Turkey, Islamic
Spain, and Southeast Asia were, relatively speaking, nomad free, yet they
too experienced periods of religious reform. It is nonetheless striking
how much of the Khaldunian model rings true still today.
Its central insight lies, not so much in the details of desert living, but
in its recognition that religious reformation and contestation have long
been features of Muslim society. Equally important, Khaldun reminds us
that, in modern as in classical times, movements for Islamic reform often
involve the attempts of pious preachers to link their religious ambitions
to some disadvantaged or aggrieved social class. Where such a linkage is
created, movements of Islamic reform may extend their horizons beyond the
aim of heightening piety toward the goal of social and political
transformation.
Directed as they were at the United States, the attacks of September 11
prompted a blizzard of speculation in the media on the nature and scale of
the “Islamic” threat. The boldly-lettered title on the cover of the
October 15 edition of Newsweek captured this concern vividly: “Why They
Hate Us: The Roots of Islamic Rage and What We Can Do About It.”
In the aftermath of a tragedy as great as the September 11 attacks,
America-centric reflections of this sort are understandable and necessary.
Nonetheless, it would be a shame if the focus on threats to our own
freedom led us to overlook the fact that the violence was directed, not
merely against the United States, but against moderate and
democratic-minded Muslims around the world. The attack was but the latest
chapter in a long struggle between moderate Muslims and Islamists
hardliners for the hearts and minds of Muslim believers.
Although, as Khaldun observed, competition between rival visions of Islam
is nothing new, over the past thirty years the struggle has taken a new
form. As late as the 1950s, the great majority of Muslims were still rural
people. After achieving independence, however, nationalist governments
launched ambitious programs of mass-education. By the 1970s, they had
succeeded in elevating rates of literacy and education to several times
their earlier proportions (Eickelman 1992).
Nation-building programs brought roads, markets, mass media, and intrusive
state administrations into previously well-contained communities. In the
1980s and 1990s, electronic communications and the media drew Muslims even
deeper into the new “global ecumene” (Hannerz 1992). Through these and
other changes, Muslim societies were opened to outside influences like
never before, and were forced to confront the vexing question of how to
deal with the diversity of our age.
All these developments posed serious threats to traditional Islamic
leaders, whose authority was premised on a neat unity of society and
religion. In the congested slums of Cairo, Kabul, or Jakarta, however, the
small-world anchors of family, lineage, and local imam no longer served as
effective compasses for residents. In the early years of independence and
nation-building, some of the anomie experienced by urban migrants was
neutralized by popular appeals to nationalism. Corruption, failed
policies, and simple bad luck, however, combined to insure that the
nationalist leadership in many Muslim countries failed to make good on its
promise of prosperity and progress.
It was in these unsteady circumstances that in the 1970s and 1980s the
Muslim world witnessed a religious resurgence of unprecedented
proportions. In the early postwar period, nation-building programs had
tried to privatize and depoliticize the profession of the faith,
subordinating Islamic life to secular ideologies and state-based agencies.
Rulers also sought to impose strict limits on the activities of the
guardians of religious knowledge, the ulama (lit., “those who know,” i.e.
classically trained Islamic scholars), requiring permits, for example,
when religious scholars preached in public. By the late 1960s, however,
the combination of general education and the mass-marketing of inexpensive
Islamic books (Atiyeh 1995) made Islamic literature accessible to a broad
reading public.
Although they lacked the credentials of traditional scholars, ordinary
Muslims came to believe that they, too, had a right to determine the forms
and meanings of their faith. A similar democratization of religious
authority had occurred, of course, in American Protestantism in the early
twentieth century (see Wuthnow 1988).
Through these and other developments, public life in Muslim societies
witnessed growing “competition and contest over both the interpretation of
[religious] symbols and the control of the institutions, formal and
informal, that produce and sustain them” (Eickelman and Piscatori 1996:
5). Traditional scholars found their role as interpreters of the faith
challenged by a host of rival Muslim leaders. The meaning of Islam itself
became the focus of fierce public debate.
Contrary to the claims of hardline Islamists and some reports in the
Western media, there was and is still today no uniform political
disposition to the resurgence (Hefner 2000). Some among the resurgents
insisted that Islam knows nothing of democracy, human rights, and civil
society. Exacerbated by the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians,
the plight of Muslims in Bosnia, and other international developments,
some Muslim leaders speak in a manner reminiscent of Western policy
analysts, warning of a “clash of civilizations” between Islam and the West
(see Fuller and Lesser 1995; Halliday 1996; and, on the clash of
civilization itself, Huntington 1996).
Others among the new Muslim leadership, however, have come to see their
faith as deeply consistent with ideas of democracy, civic freedom, the
rule of law, and partnership with the West (An-Na’im 1990; Esposito and
Voll 2001; Cooper, Nettler, and Mahmoud 1998). This stream within modern
Muslim politics has been given a number of names, including neomodernism,
Islamic liberalism, or, simply, democratic Islam.
The precise strength and ideological emphases of democratic Islam vary in
different national settings. In general, however, Muslim democrats embrace
the concepts of constitutional government, a balance of state powers,
civic freedoms, and a separation of religious and state authority.
The civic freedoms they emphasize include three directly opposed to
conservative Islamist views: freedom and equality in the profession of
religion, rather than the relegation of non-Muslims to the second-class
status of “protected minorities” (dhimmi); equal citizen rights for men
and women, rather than the hierarchical subordination of women to male
authority; and the freedom of Muslims to dissent from established
religious opinion, rather than risk banishment or death as apostates (see,
for example, An-Na’im 1990; Soroush 2000).
While rejecting the idea of an “Islamic” state, Muslim democrats typically
do not support the full privatization of religion, which is to say
religion’s retreat from public life and relegation to a purely private
realm. During the years following the Second World War, it was an article
of faith in Western policy circles that modernization requires that
religion retire from public life in this manner.
Today most specialists of religion in the West realize that, in fact,
religious traditions in countries like the United States continued to play
a vital role in public life (see Casanova 1994; Wuthnow 1988). The lesson
is that one can be religious and democratic at the same time.
The key as to how to do so lies in abandoning any ambition of fusing
religion and state, and instead concentrating one’s religious energies in
civil society and the public sphere. As with religious citizens in the
West, Muslim democrats insist their faith is compatible with civic habits
-- if and when it strengthens the public’s commitments to freedom,
equality, and tolerance. By strengthening democratic values, religion can
help to provide the social resources needed, in Robert Putnam’s (1993)
words, “to make democracy work.”
Like Judaism, Islam is a religion of divine law or shari`ah. Over the long
run, the democratic reformation of Islam will require painstaking
intellectual labors of Muslim jurists and intellectuals willing and able
to bring their tradition into dialogue, not just with the sources of the
law, but the demands of the late modern world (An-Na’im 1990). The
long-term success of this effort will in turn depend, not just on the
cogency of intellectual arguments, but on a balance of powers among rival
Muslim groupings in state and society.
It is this last fact that makes the United States’ current military
campaign in Afghanistan so fraught with opportunity and danger. Jihadi
Islamists are already using the campaign to mobilize against their
moderate rivals. Even if the U.S.’s military campaign in Afghanistan
should prove a success, the battle between these two visions of Muslim
politics and society will continue for many years to come.
Over the long term, a favorable outcome will require that the United
States and other countries dedicate themselves to resolving once and for
all the Israel-Palestine conflict. As long as that impasse remains, Muslim
democrats’ appeals for peace and tolerance across civilizations will
receive a cool reception in some Muslim circles. A positive outcome to the
struggle for Islam will also depend on the West’s long-term commitment to
educational and economic programs in the Muslim world. These are needed to
insure that the majority of Muslims realize that they have a stake in
their government, and in a global political order in which they are
treated as valued partners.
There is no clash of civilizations between Islam and the West. The really
decisive battle is taking place within Muslim civilization, where
ultraconservatives compete against moderates and democrats for the soul of
the Muslim public. The globalization so widespread in our age will never
bring about a world-wide homogenization of culture and identity. What the
process has done is make the interests we share with the great majority of
Muslims all the clearer.
One hopes that we Americans will not forget this fact as we move beyond
the events of September 11. The lesson to keep in mind is that our
suffering and outrage were shared by millions of Muslims. They look to us
now to remember just how deeply we share political challenges and a common
humanity. ►Robert W. Hefner, Department of Anthropology,
Boston University
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