Do you believe in modernity?
by Daniel Pipes
Jerusalem Post
November 26, 2003
If militant Islam is the problem and moderate Islam is the solution, as I
often argue, how does one differentiate between these two forms of Islam?
It's a tough question, especially as concerns Muslims who live in Western
countries. To understand just how tough it is, consider the case of Abdurahman Alamoudi, a prominent
American figure associated with 16 Muslim organizations.
FBI spokesman Bill Carter described one of those, the American Muslim
Council, as "the most mainstream Muslim group in the United
States." The Defense Department
entrusted two of them (the Islamic Society of North America and the American
Muslim Armed Forces and Veterans Council) to vet Islamic chaplains for the
armed forces. The State Department thought so highly of Alamoudi,
it six times hired him and sent him on all-expenses-paid trips to
majority-Muslim countries to carry what it called "a message of religious
tolerance." Alamoudi's admirers have publicly
hailed him as a "moderate," a "liberal Muslim," and someone
known "for his charitable support of battered women and a free health
clinic."
But this image of moderation collapsed recently when an Alamoudi-endorsed
chaplain was arrested and charged with mishandling classified material; when Alamoudi himself was arrested on charges of illegal
commerce with Libya;
and when Alamoudi's Palm Pilot was found to contain
contact information on seven men designated by the United
States government as global terrorists.
Distinguishing between real and phony moderation, obviously, is not a job
for amateurs like US government officials.
The best way to discern moderation is by delving into the record - public
and private, Internet and print, domestic and foreign - of an individual or
institution. Such research is most productive with intellectuals, activists and
imams, all of whom have a paper trail. With others, who lack a public record,
it is necessary to ask questions. These need to be specific, as vague inquiries
("Is Islam a religion of peace?" "Do you condemn
terrorism?") have little value, depending as they
do on definitions (of peace, terrorism).
Useful questions might include:
- Violence: Do you condone or condemn
the Palestinians, Chechens, and Kashmiris who
give up their lives to kill enemy civilians? Will you condemn by name as
terrorist groups such organizations as Abu Sayyaf,
Al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya,
Groupe Islamique Armée, Hamas, Harakat ul-Mujahidin, Hizbullah, Islamic Jihad, Jaish-e-Mohammed,
Lashkar-e-Tayyiba, and al-Qaida?
- Modernity: Should Muslim women have
equal rights with men (for example, in inheritance shares or court
testimony)? Is jihad, meaning a form of warfare, acceptable in today's
world? Do you accept the validity of other religions? Do Muslims have
anything to learn from the West?
- Secularism: Should non-Muslims enjoy
completely equal civil rights with Muslims? May Muslims convert to other
religions? May Muslim women marry non-Muslim men? Do you accept the laws
of a majority non-Muslim government and unreservedly pledge allegiance to
that government? Should the state impose religious observance, such as
banning food service during Ramadan? When Islamic customs conflict with
secular laws (e.g., covering the face for drivers' license pictures),
which should give way?
- Islamic pluralism: Are Sufis and Shi'ites fully legitimate Muslims? Do you see Muslims
who disagree with you as having fallen into unbelief? Is takfir (condemning fellow Muslims with whom one has
disagreements as unbelievers) an acceptable practice?
- Self-criticism: Do you accept the legitimacy
of scholarly inquiry into the origins of Islam? Who was responsible for
the 9/11 suicide hijackings?
- Defense against militant Islam: Do you accept enhanced
security measures to fight militant Islam, even if this means extra
scrutiny of yourself (for example, at airline security)? Do you agree that
institutions accused of funding terrorism should be shut down, or do you
see this a symptom of bias?
- Goals in the West: Do you accept that Western
countries are majority-Christian and secular or do you seek to transform
them into majority-Muslim countries ruled by Islamic law?
It is ideal if these questions are posed publicly - in the media or in front
of an audience - thereby reducing the scope for dissimulation.
No single reply establishes a militant Islamic disposition (plenty of
non-Muslim Europeans believe the Bush administration itself carried out the
9/11 attacks); and pretence is always a possibility, but these questions offer
a good start to the vexing issue of separating enemy from friend.