February 18, 2015
If
I read one more article or hear one more speech by a Western politician telling
us that we are experiencing a war within Islam between radicals and moderates,
or a battle for the future and soul of Islam, I will seek medical options for a
long hibernation so I can wake up in another era, when more sensible analysis
is used to understand and roll back the expanding circles of violence that
plague many countries.
We
suffer enough stress and danger in the Arab region from political violence,
aging tyrants, foreign invasions, local criminal and militia groups, colonial
settler expansions, and frayed, hemorrhaging socio-economic systems that we do
not need this added intellectual bludgeoning by the international battalions of
perplexity and confusion who find comfort in old-fashioned wholesale racism and
reductionism (“Islam is this, Islam is that”) that explains nothing other than
their own bewilderment.
Declaring
that Islam is at war with itself, or that we witness a battle for the soul and
heart of Islam, is vulgar reductionist, essentialist nonsense. But it is a
nonsense that is totally understandable in its current context of violent,
nationally dislocating events. It is much easier to declare a war within Islam
than to do the hard work—and admit the hard truths of some shared
culpabilities—to understand accurately the several simultaneous frightening
phenomena we see all around us: Our world has suddenly become tainted by
violent young men who kill with glee across the Middle East, governments fall,
borders fray or dissolve, established criminal groups like Al-Qaeda expand, new
extremist militants like the “Islamic State” (ISIS) hold their ground in
Syria-Iraq and attract pockets of like-minded fanatics in Egypt, Libya and
other lands, Arab, Iranian and Western armies fight back, and a handful of
troubled individuals in Western countries carry out isolated murders in their
home capitals, often with some links to Al-Qaeda, ISIS and the like.
Why
would some young men born and raised in France, Denmark, Canada, Germany
Belgium, Great Britain or other impressive societies travel to ISIS lands to
fight for what they see as their existential cause, or turn against their own
societies? Why do new pockets of these extremist criminals spring up regularly
in new countries, like those in Libya who slaughtered Egyptian Christians this
week? Why, above all, do some of these killers who brandish the holy book of
Muslims mostly kill fellow Muslims in the Arab-Asian region
Explaining
this as a great battle underway within Islam strikes me as reflecting a
combination of racism, ignorance, perplexity and some old fashioned
Orientalism. The outcome of this battle, we are told, will shape the Islamic
faith and its adherents for centuries to come, maybe until the end of time and
the coming of the Mahdi (Messiah). The facility with which some people move
from reading the day’s ugly news into eschatological verdicts about 1.4 billion
people across the world is striking, laughable and troubling.
Those
who recklessly analyze the condition of Islam itself should instead do the
harder work of understanding the realities of a handful of killers, or a group
of misfits, or a gang of criminals, or pockets of dislocated outcasts, or some
desperate youth on the verge of sure death by life-long marginalization and
hopelessness. Instead, they affirm pompously the contested condition of all
Islam, all 1.4 billion Muslims living in hundreds of very different societies,
practicing very different social and political values. My own impression,
living my whole life among some of those multitudes of Muslims, is that
1,399,925,000 of them live in peace and a middle class commitment to family
values, education and hard work that seem more like old-fashioned Protestant
work ethic legacies than anything else I have witnessed in my life.
The
angry young killers and criminal terrorists among them were not amongst us a
generation or two ago. Why and how did they suddenly appear in the last few
decades? What caused the most fanatical and brutal among them, like the ISIS
group, to suddenly see the imminent coming of the Mahdi?
These
phenomena are not eschatological signs or divine signals. They are
socio-political mechanical processes that have logical and verifiable causal explanations;
they can be analyzed like the knocking of a car engine, the pain of a sore
muscle, or the drips of a leaky water fountain. The symptoms of radical Muslim
militants who speak in the language of religion are of this world, indeed, our
world, should we dare to trace how our societies and policies allowed young
farmers, immigrants, or taxi drivers to transform into crazed killers and
criminals—whether this occurred and continues to occur in Arab or Western
jails, in the rubble of their bombed out neighborhoods, or in the
death-sentence prisons of their own societies where they absorb the numbing,
transformative realities of chronic hopelessness and dehumanization.
Islam
is what it has always been, a religion with complexities and varieties of adherents.
The trouble today is about relatively small groups of extremists and deviant
killers who speak of Islam. Only fools would confuse the two.
Rami G. Khouri is
published twice weekly in the Daily Star. He was founding director and now
senior policy fellow of the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and
International Affairs at the American University of Beirut. On Twitter at:
@ramikhouri.
Copyright ©2015 Rami G.
Khouri—distributed by Agence Global