The Origins of Suicidal Terrorism
Printed From: IslamiCity.org
Category: Religion - Islam
Forum Name: Quran & Sunnah
Forum Description: Understanding Quranic ayat and Sunnah
URL: https://www.islamicity.org/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=2988
Printed Date: 22 November 2024 at 1:24pm Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 12.03 - http://www.webwizforums.com
Topic: The Origins of Suicidal Terrorism
Posted By: rami
Subject: The Origins of Suicidal Terrorism
Date Posted: 14 November 2005 at 6:41pm
Bi ismillahir rahmanir raheem
assalamu alaikum
Bombing Without Moonlight
The Origins of Suicidal Terrorism
� Oct 2004 Abdal-Hakim Murad
1. Amnesia
Attention deficit disorder seems to flourish under conditions
of late modernity. The past becomes itself more quickly. Memories, individual
as well as collective, tend to be recycled and consulted only by the old. For
everyone else, there are only current affairs, reaching back a few months at
most. Orwell, of course, predicted this, in his dystopic prophecy that may have
been only premature; but today it seems to be cemented by postmodernism (Deleuze),
and also by physicists, who are now proclaiming an almost Ash�arite scepticism
about claims for the real duration of particles.
This
is a condition that has an ancestry in the stirrings of the modernity
which it represents. Hume anticipated it in his stunning insistence on
the non-continuity of the human self: we are �nothing but a collection
of perceptions which succeed each other with inconceivable rapidity and
are in perpetual flux and movement;� or so he thought. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn1" name="_ednref1 - [1]
Modern fiction may still explore or reaffirm identities (Peter Carey)
and thus define human dignity as the honourable disposition of at least
some aspects of an accumulated heritage. But this is giving way to the
atomistic, playful, postmodern storytelling of, say, Elliot Perlman,
which defines dignity - where it does so at all - in terms of freedom
from all stories, even while lamenting the superficial tenor of the
result. It is against the backdrop of this culture that the scientists,
now far beyond Ataturk's �Science is the Truest Guide in Life�, raise
the stakes with their occasionalism, and, for the neurologists, the
increasing denial of the autonomy of the human will - a new
predestinarianism that makes us always the consequence of genes and the
present, not the remembered past. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn2" name="_ednref2 - [2]
Our
public conversations, then, seem to be the children of a marriage of
convenience between two principles, neither of them religious or even
particularly humanistic. The elitist mystical trope of the moment being
all that is, significantly misappropriated by some New Age discourses,
has become the condition of us all, albeit with the absence of God.
Journalism thus becomes the privileged discourse to whose canons the
public intellectual must conform, if he or she is to become a credible
guide. More striking still is the observed fact that amidst our current
crisis of wisdom it also seems to provide the language in which the
public discussion of faith is carried on. Thus Catholicism becomes the
humiliated cardinal of Boston, not St Augustine. Its morality is taken
to be that which visibly clashes with the caprice of characters in Home and Away,
not a severe but ultimately liberating cultivation of the virtues
rooted in centuries of experience and example. Judaism, in its turn,
becomes the latest land-grab of a settler rabbi, not a millennial
enterprise of faith and promise. Of course, our new occasionalism does
invoke the past. But it does so with reference either to scriptures,
stripped of their normative exegetical armature, or to those events
which remain in the consciousness of a citizenry raised on
enlightenment battles with obscurantism. So again, we recall Galileo,
not Eckhart; we recall the interesting hatreds of the Inquisition, not
the charity of St Vincent de Paul. Otherwise, our culture is
religiously amnesiac. Winston Churchill, near the end of his life,
began to read the Bible. �This book is very well-written,� he said.
�Why was it not brought to my attention before?�
It is in
this frankly primitive condition that we seek to discuss religious acts
which, against all the predictions of our grandparents, claim to
interrupt the progress of history towards a world in which there will
be no continuity at all. To our perplexity, history, despite Fukuyama,
does not seem to have ended. Humans do not always act for the economic
or erotic now; Tamino still seeks his Sarastro. A residue of real human
diversity persists. For the human soul is not yet, as Coleridge wrote,
Seraphically free,
From taint of personality. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn3" name="_ednref3 - [3]
This failed ultimacy, this sense that we, the Papageni, have to dust
down the armour of an earlier generation of moral absolutes, when
history was still running, when the victory of the corporations and of
Hollywood was not yet assured, accounts for the maladroit condition of
the world�s current argument about terrorism. The most active in
seizing the moment, as they elbow impatiently past the fin de si�cle
multiculturalists and postmodernists, are the oddly-named American
neoconservatives, who invoke Leo Strauss and roll up their sleeves to
defend Washington against Oriental warriors who would defy the
dialectics of history and seek to postpone the apotheosis of
Anglo-Saxon consumer society, which they see as the climax of a billion
years of evolution. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn4" name="_ednref4 - [4] But despite such ideologised adversions to the longue dur�e,
secularism seems to have little to offer that is not short-termist and
reactive, and determined to reduce the globe to a set of variations on
itself.
Traditionalists, who should be more helpful,
seem paralysed. Much of the fury and hurt that currently abounds in the
Christian and the Muslim worlds reveals a sense that the timetable
which God has approved for history has been perverted. Christendom is
not a virgin in this respect; in fact, it was first, with scholastic
and Byzantine broadsides against Christian sin as invitation to
Saracenic chastisement (Bernard, Gregory Palamas). Then it was the turn
of Islam, when, from the seventeenth century on the illusion of the
Muslims as materially and militarily God�s chosen people was dealt a
series of shocking blows. Now it is, once again, the turn of
Christendom (if the term be still allowed), which is currently
wondering why history has not yet experienced closure, why a former
rival should still be showing signs of life, either as the result of a
misdiagnosis, or as a zombie-like revenant bearing only a superficial
resemblance to his medieval seriousness. Certainly, the American
president and his frequently evangelical team see themselves in these
terms. Architects of a society which, Disney-like, appropriates the
past only to emphasise the glory of the present, these zealots appeal
to a prophecy-religion in which the Book of Revelation is the key to
history. For them, too, the promised closure is imminent, and its
frustration by the Other an outrage.
President Reagan, while less captivated by end-time visions than his successors, could offer these thoughts to Jewish lobbyists:
You know, I turn back to your ancient prophets in the Old Testament and the
signs foretelling Armageddon and I find myself wondering if we�re the
generation that is going to see that come about. I don�t know if you�ve
noted any of these prophecies lately, but, believe me, they certainly describe
the times we�re going through. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn5" name="_ednref5 - [5]
The protagonists of the current conflict, then, are unusual in their
confidence that history has not ended, although millennialism seems to
hover in the background on both sides, helped along by the frequently
Palestinian scenery. The triumph of the West, or the resurgence of an
Islam interpreted by bestselling Pentecostal authors as a chastisement
and a demonic challenge, signals the end of a growing worry about the
religious meaninglessness of late modernity. Tragically, however,
neither protagonist seems validly linked to the remnants of established
religion, or shows any sign of awareness of how to connect with
history. Fundamentalist disjuncture is placing us in a kind of
metahistorical parenthesis, an end-time excitement in which, as for St
Paul, old rules are irrelevant, and Christ and Antichrist are the only
significant gladiators on the stage. Fundamentalists, as well as
mystics, can insist that the moment is all that is real.
2. Sunna Contra Gentiles
In
such a world of pseudo-religious reaction against the postmodern
erosion of identity, it follows that if you are not �with us,� you are
with the devil. Or, when this has to be reformulated for the benefit of
the blue-collar godless, you are a �cheese-eating surrender monkey�.
Where religion exists to supply an identity, the world is Augustinian,
if not quite Manichean. The West's ancient trope of itself as a free
space, perhaps a white space, holding out against Persian or Semitic
intruders, is being coupled powerfully, but hardly for the first time,
with Pauline and patristic understandings of the New Israel as unique
vessel of truth and salvation, threatened in the discharge of its
redemptive project by the Oriental, Semitic, Ishmaelitic other. In the
West, at least, the religious resources for this dualism are abundant
and easily abused. Take Daniel Goldhagen, for instance, who in his most
recent book suggests that the xenophobia of the Christian Bible is
qualitatively greater than that of any other scripture. New
Bibles, he urges, must be printed with many corrections to what he
describes as this founding text of a lethal Western self-centredness. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn6" name="_ednref6 - [6] Semites of several kinds would be well-advised to beware a culture raised on such a foundation.
It
is remarkable that both sides, in constructing themselves against a
wicked, fundamentalist rival, mobilise the ancient trope of
antisemitism. The Self needs its dark Other, preferably nearby or
within. That Other has standard features: in the case of Christian
antisemitism it is that it stands for Letter rather than Spirit, for
blind obedience rather than freedom, for an discreet but intense
transnational solidarity in place of Fatherland and Church. It is
sexually aberrant (hence the Nazi polemic against Freud). It hides its
women (who should, instead, join the SS, or practice nacktkultur).
It imposes archaic and unscientific taboos: diet, purity, circumcision.
Such are the categories in which an almost dualistic West historically
defines its relationship to its nearest and most irritating Other. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn7" name="_ednref7 - [7]
Antisemitism
is, in Richard Harries' words, a 'light sleeper'. But part of its
strength is that it is not asleep at all; and never has been. As
Christendom seeks its identity, the Dark Other today is now more
usually Ishmael. Torched mosques, terrified asylum-seekers, bullied
schoolchildren, and, we may not unreasonably add, a journalistic
discourse of the type that is now being labelled �Islamophobic�, are
less new than they seem. They represent a vicarious
antisemitism. �Islamic law is immutable� is a chorus in the new Horst
Wessel song. �Circumcision is barbaric.� �Their divorce laws are
medieval and anti-woman.� �They keep to themselves and don�t
integrate.� Such is the battle-cry of the resurgent Western right: Pim
Fortuin, Jean-Marie Le Pen, Jorg Haider, Filip de Winter. It has become
startlingly popular, though always volatile at the polls. Thus is the
old antisemitic metabolism of Europe and its American progeny being
reinvigorated by the encounter with Ishmael. Again, history has started
up again, and again our amnesiac culture ignores the vast cogwheels,
deep beneath the surface, which move it.
On the other
side, now, crossing the Mediterranean, or the Timor Sea, we generally
find not a bloc of sincere fundamentalist regimes, but an archipelago
of dictatorships, Oriental despots after the letter, which are in
almost every case answerable not to their own electorates - for they
recognise none - but to a distant desk in the State Department. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn8" name="_ednref8 - [8]
These are the neo-mamluks, ex-soldiers and condottieri of a system that
penalises ethics. Ranged against them we observe the puritans,
iconoclasts with El Greco eyes, whose claim it is to detest the
modernity of the regimes. Such puritans, led by the memory of Sayyid
Qutb, have no illusions about the nature of secular rule. They see
clearly that the regimes are more modern than those of the
West, because more frank in their conviction that science plus commerce
does not equal ethics. Where the Western journalistic eye sees
retardation, the Islamist sees modernity. Hitler and Stalin were more
modern than Churchill and Roosevelt, more scientific, more
programmatic, more distant from the past. The future is theirs, and it
is neither Christ�s millennial reign nor the triumph of small-town
America. It is Alphaville.
The Islamist, then, is not the
caricature of the envious, uncomprehending Third Worlder. Typically he
has spent much of his life in the West, and is capable of offering an
empirical analysis, or at least a diagnosis. Sayyid Qutb, in his
writing on what he calls �the deformed birth of the American man,� sees
Americans as advanced infants; advanced because of their technology,
but puerile in their ignorance of earlier stages of human development. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn9" name="_ednref9 - [9]
There is something of Teilhard de Chardin in his account, which inverts
Tocqueville to identify an American idiot-savant mania for possession.
Technology made America possible, and ultimately, America need claim
nothing else. Linked to Christian fundamentalism, it is an enemy of
every other story; and unlike the East, it will not remain in its
place. It must send out General Custer to subdue all remnants of
earlier phases of human consciousness rooted in nature, spirituality or
art. Its client regimes are therefore its natural, not opportunistic,
adjuncts in its programme to subdue the world. They are not a
transitional phase, they are the end-game.
Antisemitism
forms part of this vision too, certainly. But since, as Goldhagen
confirms, this is an essentially Christian phenomenon, to be healed by
correcting the views of the Evangelists, in an Islamic context which
lacks a letter-spirit dichotomy it seems a hazier resource for identity
construction. Qutb was influenced by the Vichy theorist Alexis Carrel
(1873-1944), through his odd, vitalist tract L�Homme, cet inconnu, which remains an ultimate, though unacknowledged, source text for much modern Islamism. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn10" name="_ednref10 - [10]
No medieval Muslim thinker of any note wrote a book against Judaism,
although homilies against Christianity were quite common. If medieval
Islam had a dark Other, it was more likely to be Zoroastrianism than
Judaism, which, in Samuel Goitein�s phrase by which he summed up his
magisterial work A Mediterranean Society, enjoyed a close and �symbiotic� relationship with Islam. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn11" name="_ednref11 - [11] But today�s Qutbian Islamist purges midrashic material from Koranic commentary, and studies the Tsarist forgery The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, and, even, Mein Kampf.
Nothing can be discovered, it seems, in the Islamic libraries, so that
this importation into an ostensively nativist and xenophobic milieu
becomes inescapable - the fundamentalist�s familiar appeal to necessity.
As he surveys the wreckage of Istanbul synagogues and Masonic lodges, the journalist, as ibn al-waqt,
is oblivious to the happier past of Semitic conviviality in the Ottoman
Sephardic lands. And perhaps he is right, perhaps, under our
conditions, the past is another religion. But the paradox has
become so burning, and so murderous, that we cannot let it pass
unremarked. The Islamic world, instructed to host Israel, was
historically the least inhospitable site for the diaspora. The
currently almost ubiquitous myth of a desperate sibling rivalry between
Isaac and Ishmael is nonsensical to historians.
Here, at
the dark heart of Islam�s extremist fringe, we find what may be the
beginnings of a solution. No nativist reaction can long survive proof
of its own exogenous nature. And no less than its Christian analogues,
Islamic ghuluww, at least in its currently terroristic forms,
betrays a European etiology. It borrows its spiritual, as well as its
material, armament from Western modernity. This, we may guess, marks it
out for anachronism in a context where intransigence is xenophobic. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn12" name="_ednref12 - [12]
This
is an unpopular diagnosis; but one which is gaining ground. It cannot
be without significance that outside observers, when not blinded by a
xenophobic need to view terrorism as Islamically authentic, have
sometimes intuited this well. Here, for instance, is the verdict of
John Gray, in his book Al-Qaeda and What it Means to be Modern:
No cliche is more stupefying than that which describes Al-Qaida as a throwback
to medieval times. It is a by-product of globalisation. Its most distinctive
feature - projecting a privatised form of organised violence worldwide - was
impossible in the past. Equally, the belief that a new world can be hastened
by spectacular acts of destruction is nowhere found in medieval times. Al-Qaida�s
closest precursors are the revolutionary anarchists of late nineteenth-century
Europe. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn13" name="_ednref13 - [13]
And Slavoj Zizek, a still more significant observer, is convinced
that what we are witnessing is not �Jihad versus MacWorld� � the
standard leftist formulation - but rather MacWorld versus MacJihad. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn14" name="_ednref14 - [14]
This implies that if ghuluww
has a future, it will be because modernity has a future, not because it
has roots in Islamic tradition. That tradition, indeed, it rules out of
order, as it dismisses the juridical, theological and mystical
intricacies of medieval Islam as so much dead wood. The solution, then,
which the world is seeking, and which it is the primary responsibility
of the Islamic world, not the West to provide, must be a
counter-reformation, driven by our best and most cosmopolitan heritage
of spirit and law.
A point of departure, here, and a
useful retort to essentialist reductions of Islam to Islamism, is the
fact that orthodoxy still flies the flag in almost all seminaries. The
reformers are, at least institutionally, in the Rhonnda chapels, not
the cathedrals. Perhaps the most striking fact about regulation Sunni
Islam over the past fifty years has been its insistence that religion�s
general response to modernity must not take the form of an
armed struggle. There have been local exceptions to this rule, as in
the reactive wars against Serbian irredentism in Bosnia, and Soviet
intrusion into Afghanistan. But a doctrine of generic jihad against the West has been conspicuous by its absence. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn15" name="_ednref15 - [15]
It
is not immediately clear how we gloss this. In the nineteenth century
Sunni Islam frequently elected to resist European colonial rule by
force, giving rise to the figure of the Mad Mullah who formed part of
the imperial imagination, in the fiction of John Buchan, or Tolstoy�s Hajji Murad.
In the twentieth century, however, the traditional pragmatism of
Sunnism seemed to generate an ulema ethos that was certainly not
quietist, but had nothing in common with Qutbian Islamism either. Hence
the Deobandi movement in India, and its Tablighi offshoot, supported
the Congress party, and generally opposed Partition. Arab religious
leaders sometimes resorted to force, as with the Naqshbandi shaykh Izz
al-Din al-Qassam in mandate Palestine; but the independence movements
were overwhelmingly directed by secular modernists. The ancient
universities, al-Qarawiyyin, al-Zaytuna, al-Azhar and the rest,
regarded the modern period as a mandate for doctrinal retrenchment and
the piecemeal ijtihad-based reassessment of aspects of Islamic
law. In other words, mainstream Islam�s response to the startling
novelty of a modernity that was forced on its societies at the point of
an imperial or postcolonial bayonet was self-scrutinising and cautious,
not militant.
Traditional wisdom and the texts, of course,
were the reason for this. Sunnism, as inscribed by the great Seljuk
theorists, had put its trust in prudence, pragmatism, and a strategy of
negotiation with the sultan. So in British India, the Hanafi consensus
decided that the Raj formed part of dar al-islam. In Russia,
Shihab al-Din Marjani took the same view with regard the empire of the
Tsars. But for Qutb, all this was paradigmatic of the error of
classical Sunni thought. Islam was to be prophetic, and hence a
liberation theology, challenging structures as well as souls, not by
preaching and praying alone, but by agitation and revolution. Given his
education and sitz im leben in the golden age of
anti-colonialism, probably nothing could have extricated Qutb from his
critique of what he saw as Sunni indifferentism, rooted, he suspected,
in Ash�ari deontology and a presumed Sufi fatalism. The prophetic is
not meant to be accommodating; it fails, or it succeeds
triumphantly. The normative political thinkers, Mawardi, Nizam al-Mulk,
Ghazali, Katib �elebi, and their modern advocates, had to be
jettisoned. Technological empires had made the world anew, and, if it
was to cope with an increasingly bizarre and offensive Other, Islamic
thought had to be reformed in the direction of an increasingly
unconditional insurrectionism.
Qutb�s resurrection of Ibn
Taymiya, via Rashid Rida, became paradigmatic. In the fourteenth
century this angry Damascene had attacked ulema who acquiesced in the
rule of the nominally Muslim Mongols. Loyalty could be to a righteous
imam alone. Rida and others had taken pains to dissociate this from the
Kharijite slogan �No rule other than God�s�, for an unpleasant odour
hung about the name of Kharijism. But de facto, the hard wing
of Hanbalite Islam seemed vulnerable to a Kharijite reading.
Prototypical al-Qaida supporters wrote to condemn the Syrian
neo-Hanbali scholar Nasir al-Din al-Albani, when he released a series
of taped sermons entitled Min Manhaj al-Khawarij, �From the Method of the Kharijites�, in the early 1990s. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn16" name="_ednref16 - [16] Often the word used by less radical puritans in Saudi Arabia for those engaged in terrorism is, precisely, �Kharijite�.
What
everyone agrees, however, is that al-Qaida is far, far removed from
medieval Sunnism. For some, it is Kharijite; for others, an illicit
Westernisation of Islam. As Carl Brown puts it, �it cannot be stressed
too often just how much Qutb�s hardline interpretation departs from the
main current of Islamic political thought throughout the centuries.� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn17" name="_ednref17 - [17] For Brown, Qutbism is kharijism redux;
but we would add, with Gray, that it is a Westernised kharijism. Like
all identity movements, it ends with only a very arguable kind of
authenticity.
The convergence between a malfunctioning
Hanbalism and modern revolutionary vanguardism may owe its strength not
to a shared potential for an instantiated xenophobia, although this
will attract many party cadres; instead, I suspect, it relates to
deeper structures of relationality with the world and its worldliness.
The new Islamic zealotry is angry with the Islamic past, as Ibn Taymiya
was. For Ibn Taymiya, the ulema had not adequately polarised light and
dark. In the case of the mystics, they had disastrously confused them.
There is something of the Augustine in Ibn Taymiya: a concrete
understanding of a God who is radically apart from creation, or, in
patristic terms, alienated from it, and a consequently high view of
scripture that challenges Ash�arite and Maturidi confidences in the
direct intelligibility of God in the world, and revives essentially
dualistic readings of the Fall narrative. It may be that Ibn Taymiya�s
roots in Harran, scene of neo-Gnostic and astral speculations, parallel
Augustine�s Manichean background. But there is certainly a furious,
single-minded zeal in both men that expresses itself in a deep
pessimism about the human mind and conscience, and hence the worth of
intellectuals, poets, logicians, and mystics. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn18" name="_ednref18 - [18] In such a cosmology, which deploys the absolute polarity abhorred by Deleuze�s Pli
(his love of nomadic arts, with their �blocs of sensations� is
Islamically suggestive) gentilizing becomes first, not second nature.
Seljuk
accommodationism, by contrast, had been driven by an ultimately
Ghazalian moralism that feared the spiritual entailments of this
crypto-dualism. Nizam al-Mulk, paradigm of high Sunni realpolitik, does
not enforce a norm, but enforces the toleration of many norms. He finds
that like all scripture, the Koran is super-replete, overflowing with
meaning, and no exegete may taste all its flavours; this destabilising
miracle may express itself in schism, historically the less favoured
Islamic option, or in adab al-ikhtilaf, the forced courtesy of
the scholar-jurist well aware of the ultimately unfixable quality of
much of holy writ. The Sunni achievement, which was a moral as well as
a pragmatic achievement, was to incorporate a wide spectrum of
theological and juristic dispute into the universe of allowable
internal difference. For zealotry, as Ghazali puts it, is a hijab, a veil. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn19" name="_ednref19 - [19] It is a form of, in the Rabbis� language, loving the Torah more than God. A besetting odium theologicum which can only be healed through self-scrutiny and a due humility before the often baffling intricacy of God�s word and world.
It
was on the basis of this hospitable caution that non-Qutbian Sunnism
engaged with modernity. Reading the fatwas of great twentieth-century
jurists such as Yusuf al-Dajawi, Abd al-Halim Mahmud, and Subhi
Mahmassani, one is reminded of the Arabic proverb cited on motorway
signs in Saudi Arabia: fi�l-ta�anni as-salama - there is safety
in reducing speed. Far from committing a pacifist betrayal, the
normative Sunni institutions were behaving in an entirely classical
way. Sunni piety appears as conciliatory, cautious, and disciplined,
seeking to identify the positive as well as the negative features of
the new global culture. Thus it is not the orthodox, but the merchants
of identity religion, the Sunna Contra Gentiles, who insist on totalitarian and exclusionary readings of the Law and the state. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn20" name="_ednref20 - [20]
If
this is our curious situation, if al-Qaida is indeed a product and
mirror not of the Sunni story, but of the worst of the Enlightenment�s
possibilities, if it is, as it were, the Frankenstein of Frankistan (as
Zionism is a golem), how effective can be America�s currently
chosen antidote? This takes the form of killing, imprisoning and
torturing the leadership, and many of the rank and file, using the
methods which have been reported by British and other detainees
released from Guantanamo Bay, and by Red Cross officials disturbed by
news from Bagram air base in Kabul. Again, our occasionalism has
allowed us to forget the history of revolutionary movements, which
suggests that such measures are self-defeating, sowing the dragon�s
teeth of martyrdom, and announcing to the world the depth of the
torturer�s fear. A civilisation confident of victory would not resort
to such desperate means. For after violence and internment, there is no
last resort. Both moral advantage and deterrent threat have already
been used up.
Traditional Sunnis intuit that al-Qaida is a
Western invention, but one which cannot be defeated in a battleground
where the logic is Western. This was one of the messages that emerged
from the 2003 summit meeting of eight hundred Muslim scholars at
Putrajaya. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn21" name="_ednref21 - [21]
Al-Qaida is inauthentic: it rejects the classical canons of Islamic law
and theology, and issues fatwas that are neither formally nor in their
habit of mind deducible from medieval exegesis. But it is not enough
for the entire leadership of the religion to denounce al-Qaida, as it
did at Putrajaya, and then to hope and pray that the same strange logic
of modernity that bred this insurgency can spirit it away again. The
West inseminates, but does not so easily abort. Faced with this, the
Sunni leadership needs to be more alert to its responsibilities. Even
the radical Westernisation of Islamic piety remains the responsibility
of Muslim ulema, not, ultimately, of the Western matrix that inspired
it. And it has to be said that the Sunni leadership has not done
enough. Denunciations alone will not dent the puritan�s armour, and may
strengthen it; this the Counter-Reformation learned by experience.
3. Jus in bello
The war against
neo-Kharijite ideology can only be won by Sunni normalcy. Washington�s
rhetoric of �religion-building� disguises either a Texan missionary
instinct or the triumphant relativism of the secular academy. Franklin
Graham and the Ashcroft Inquisition will fail, as Christianity always
does against Semitic monotheism, while liberalism, at once its rival
and its hypocritical bedfellow, cannot be relied on to supply ethics
under conditions of stress. For the Occidental energy all too often
responds to such conditions either by apathy (remember the wartime
Parisian intelligentsia), or by suspending the ethical teleologically,
the classic revolutionary gambit since the days of the Paris commune,
if not the English civil war.
The zealots of both sides
insist that the validating of �soft targets� is a representative
Islamic act. How might they respond to evidence that it is, in fact, a
representative secular-Western one? The evidence, as it turns out, is
compelling, being a matter of historical record. Despite its claims in
times of obese complacency to abhor the killing of the innocent, the
secular West reverts with indecent haste to Cicero�s maxim, Silent enim leges inter arma
- laws are silent during war. And it is in this Occidental culture, and
not in mainline Islam, that we should seek the matrix of radical
Islamism. Let us survey the record.
W.G. Sebald has been
a recent and helpful contributor here. He writes lyrically of the
vengeance visited by the RAF on Germany�s cities in the early 1940s,
focussing on the thirty thousand who died in Operation Gomorrah (!)
against the city of Hamburg. The object of such campaigns was military
only in a very indirect way, for Churchill�s purpose in what he called
�terror bombing� (where it was not straightforward vengefulness) was to
sap the morale of Germany�s civilian population. As Sebald shows,
Parliament restructured the whole British economy to support the area
bombing campaign, for one reason alone: it was the only way in which
Britain could successfully strike back. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn22" name="_ednref22 - [22]
In
1930, the British population had generally shared the view of one
politician that to bomb civilians was �revolting and un-English.� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn23" name="_ednref23 - [23]
But with its back against the wall, the population changed its mind
with impressive speed. In 1942, Bomber Command�s Directive No. 22
identified the 'morale of the enemy civil population� as the chief
target. By the end of the war, a million tons of high explosive had
rained down on German cities, and half a million civilians were dead.
By that time a majority of Britons explicitly supported the bombing of
civilian targets. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn24" name="_ednref24 - [24]
As the MP for Norwich put it: �I am all for the bombing of
working-class areas of German cities. I am Cromwellian - I believe in
�slaying in the name of the Lord�,� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn25" name="_ednref25 - [25] while after Operation Gomorrah, a popular headline crowed that �Hamburg has been Hamburgered.� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn26" name="_ednref26 - [26]
A third of the war economy was directed to serve this onslaught, with
the development of new weapons of mass destruction, such as incendiary
bombs, designed specifically to maximise devastation to private homes. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn27" name="_ednref27 - [27]
Yet after Dresden, which the postwar official history hailed as the
�crowning achievement� of the bombing campaign, Churchill was forced to
reconsider:
It seems to me that the moment has come when the question of bombing of German
cities simply for the sake of increasing the terror, though under other pretexts,
should be reviewed. Otherwise, we shall come into control of an utterly ruined
land. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn28" name="_ednref28 - [28]
This was no sort of repentance. To his last breath Churchill
defended the terror campaign which he had instigated and which
underpinned so much of his popularity. Mass destruction from the air of
a target whose details were often obscured by clouds or the absence of
moonlight, was not, for this icon of English defiance, a moral problem.
A
largely secular person of the stamp of our wartime Prime Minister was
clearly following a fairly standard Enlightenment philosophy which had
replaced the wars of kings with the wars of peoples. Clausewitz, the
chief architect of post-medieval military thought, was certain that
�war is an act of force which theoretically can have no limits,� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn29" name="_ednref29 - [29]
a view that the most influential military theorists of the twentieth
century extended to the use of airpower to terrorize civilians (Liddell
Hart, Douhet, Harris). One might have hoped that this illustration of
the moral calibre of secularity was found appalling by the Christian
conscience of the day. But the stance taken by the leaders of British
Christianity was already deeply influenced by modernism. The Archbishop
of Canterbury William Temple, followed by his brother bishop of York,
consistently refused to join the anti-terror minority within the
Anglican church. As a historian records, �only a handful of the clergy
objected outright to area bombing;� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn30" name="_ednref30 - [30]
George Bell, the outspoken Bishop of Chichester, was a lonely exception
in upholding earlier ideals of a just war which had regarded women and
children as sacrosanct.
After the war, the victors reset
the moral template to its rhetorical default position, and their
earlier fatwas in favour of terror bombing were relegated to an outer,
uncomfortable edge of the national memory. Once again, England and
America (which had carried on its own targeting of civilians in Japan) http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn31" name="_ednref31 - [31]
reverted to the traditional notion of civilian immunity, with its
pre-Enlightenment roots. So five years later, the British press felt
able to excoriate Menachem Begin as a terrorist, simply because, as he
puts it in his memoirs: �our enemies called us terrorists [�] but we
used physical force only because we were faced by physical force.� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn32" name="_ednref32 - [32]
And today, who can claim that Al-Qaida�s logic is different? The 777
has become the poor man�s nuclear weapon, his own Manhattan Project.
Again, he has turned traitor to the East by embracing the utilitarian
military ethic of his supposed adversary. He, even more than the
regimes, shows the cost of Westernisation.
In this light,
how may we take the pulse of the West�s denunciation of �Muslim
terror�? Let us recall Adorno�s First Law of sexual ethics: always
mistrust the accuser.
4. Samson Terroristes
The
targeting of civilians is more Western than otherwise; contemplating
the Ground Zero of a hundred German cities, this can hardly be denied.
Yet it will be claimed that suicidal terrorism is something new, and
definitively un-Western. Here, we are told by xenophobes on both sides,
the Islamic suicide squads, the Black Widows, the death-dealing pilots,
are an indigenously Islamic product. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn33" name="_ednref33 - [33]
And yet here again, when we detach ourselves from the emotive
chauvinism of the Islamists and their Judeo-Christian misinterpreters,
we soon find that the roots of such practices in the Islamic
imagination are as recent as they are shallow. The genealogy of suicide
bombing clearly stretches back from Palestine, through Shi�a guerillas
in southern Lebanon, to the Hindu-nativist zealots of the Tamil Tigers,
and to the holy warriors of Shinto Japan, who initiated the tradition
of donning a bandanna and making a final testament on camera before
climbing into the instrument of destruction. The kamikaze was literally
the 'Wind of Heaven', a term evocative of the divine intervention which
destroyed the Mongol fleet as it crossed the Yellow Sea.
Hindu
and Buddhist tributaries of Middle-Eastern suicide bombing are
conspicuous, and it is significant that the Islamists, driven as ever
by nativist passion, recoil from them in fits of denial. (How happily,
in the sermons, hunud rhymes with yahud!) Yet some scenic images may be instructive for those who take the philosophy of isnad seriously. After describing the Christian martyr Peregrinus, who set fire to himself in public, Sir James Frazier records:
Buddhist monks in China sometimes seek to attain Nirvana by the same method,
the flame of their religious zeal being fanned by a belief that the merit
of their death redounds to the good of the whole community, while the praises
which are showered upon them in their lives, and the prospect of the honours
and worship which await them after death, serve as additional incentives to
suicide. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn34" name="_ednref34 - [34]
But it was in South India that holy suicide seems to have been most endemic:
In Malabar and the neighbouring regions, many sacrifice themselves to the
idols. When they are sick or involved in misfortune, they vow themselves to
the idol in case they are delivered. Then, when they have recovered, they
fatten themselves for one or two years; and when another festival comes around,
they cover themselves with flowers, crown themselves with white garlands,
and go singing and playing before the idol, when it is carried through the
land. There, after they have shown off a good deal, they take a sword with
two handles, like those used in currying leather, put it to the back of their
necks, and cutting strongly with both hands sever their heads from their bodies
before the idol. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn35" name="_ednref35 - [35]
The atmaghataka, the suicidal Hindu, was a familiar sight of
the premodern Indian landscape, where �religious suicides were highly
recommended and in most cases glorified.� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn36" name="_ednref36 - [36] Suicide often functioned as the culmination of a pilgrimage: �the enormous Tirtha
literature (literature on pilgrimage) curiously enough describes in
detail suicide by intending persons at different places of pilgrimage
and the varying importance and virtues attached to them.� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn37" name="_ednref37 - [37]
Ibn Battuta and al-Biruni, among other Muslim visitors, had been
particularly shocked by Hindu customs of sacred suicide, particularly
bride-burning and self-drowning. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn38" name="_ednref38 - [38]
Altogether, in such a culture the development of suicidal methods as
part of war is hardly surprising; they are deeply rooted in local
non-monotheistic values.
Today�s Tamil extremists extend
this tradition in significant ways. Each Tamil Tiger wears a cyanide
capsule around his neck, to be swallowed in case of capture. The
explosive belt, used to assassinate hated politicians as well as
Sinhalese marines and ordinary civilians, predates its Arab borrowing:
the first Tamil suicide-martyrs in modern times appear in the 1970s. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn39" name="_ednref39 - [39] The Tiger�s Hindu roots http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn40" name="_ednref40 - [40]
thus nourish the current Palestinian practice; as one observer notes:
�the Black Tigers, as the suicide cadres are known, have been emulated
by the likes of Hamas.� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn41" name="_ednref41 - [41]
But there is also a strong Western precedent, in pagan antiquity, in early Judaism, and in Christianity.
Suicide
had been a respectable option for many ancients. Achilles chooses
battle against the Trojans, knowing that the gods have promised that
this will lead to his death. Ajax takes his own life, in the confidence
that this will not affect his honour. Chrysippus, Zeno, and Socrates
all opt for suicide rather than execution or dishonour. Marcus Aurelius
praises it to the skies. It was only the neo-Platonists and late
Platonists (who not coincidentally became the most congenial Hellenes
for Islam) who systematically opposed it. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn42" name="_ednref42 - [42]
The
Biblical text nowhere condemns suicide. (Judas is condemned for
betrayal, not for taking his own life; although Augustine will claim
otherwise.) On the contrary, it offers several examples of individuals
who chose death. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn43" name="_ednref43 - [43]
Saul (the koranic Talut) falls on his own sword rather than be
humiliated in Philistine captivity (I Samuel 31). Jonah (Yunus) asks
the frightened mariners to cast him into the sea (Jonah 1.12), and begs
�Take my life from me,� (4.3) for �it is better for me to die than to
live� (4.8-9). Job (Ayyub) prays: �O that I might have my request, and
that God would grant my desire; that it would please God to crush me�
(Job 6:8-13), and even �I loath my life� (7:15). Later, during the
Maccabean revolts, the hero Razis falls on his sword to avoid falling
into the hands of the wicked (2 Maccabees 14:42, 45-6). A notion of
vicarious atonement has developed, so that the militant�s suicide which
enrages the enemy brings a blessing to the people (4 Maccabees
17:21-2). http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn44" name="_ednref44 - [44]
The
early rabbis typically accept self-immolation in situations of military
desperation, to avoid humiliation and to impress the enemy. The deaths
of Saul and Samson were regarded as exemplary. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn45" name="_ednref45 - [45]
And in 'the Jewish Middle Ages, enthusiasm for martyrdom (at least in
Ashkenaz - northern Europe) became so great that it proved a positive
danger to Jewish existence.� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn46" name="_ednref46 - [46] Religious voices raised in support of 20th century Zionism could link this tradition to their own militancy. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn47" name="_ednref47 - [47] Hence Avram Kook, the first Ashkenazy Chief Rabbi of mandate Palestine (in Walter Wurzburger�s words)
permitted individuals to volunteer for suicide missions when carried out
in the interest of the collective Jewish community. In other words, an act
that would be illicit if performed to help individuals, would be legitimate
if intended for the benefit of the community. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn48" name="_ednref48 - [48]
In the nascent Christian movement, Jesus came to be presented as a
suicide, albeit one who knew that he would be resurrected. Some
historians are convinced that Jesus, having armed his band with swords
(Luke 22:36), formed part of the larger Zealot movement against Roman
oppression, http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn49" name="_ednref49 - [49]
while others adhere to the orthodox view that his deliberate death was
to be a cosmic sacrifice for human sin; but in either case, the
dominant voice in the New Testament presents him as going to Jerusalem
in the awareness that this would bring about his certain death (see
Mark 10:32-4). Hence the insistent courting of martyrdom by many early
Christians praised by Tertullian (here in the words of a modern
scholar):
In 185 the proconsul of Asia, Arrius Antoninus, was approached by a group
of Christians demanding to be executed. The proconsul obliged some of them
and then sent the rest away, saying that if they wanted to kill themselves
there was plenty of rope available or cliffs they could jump off. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn50" name="_ednref50 - [50]
And for Chrysostom, blasting the infidels, the Christians were
better than the ancients, since Socrates had had little choice, while
Christians volunteered for martyrdom. In fact, most orthodox Christian
martyrs appear to have been volunteers, many of them appearing from
nowhere to clamour for the death penalty, or emerging from the crowds
to join the flames consuming one of their brethren. It was only with
Augustine that this self-immolating behaviour came to an end, as
involuntary martyrdom was established as the only acceptable Christian
norm in the West. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn51" name="_ednref51 - [51]
Orthodoxy,
however, remained closer to the primitive tradition. As Frazier records
(of sixteenth to nineteenth-century Russia): �whole communities hailed
with enthusiasm the gospel of death, and hastened to put its precepts
into practice.� Although at first the volunteers were dropped into
doorless rooms in which they starved to death �for Christ�, fire became
the most popular method.
Priests, monks, and laymen scoured the villages and hamlets preaching salvation
by the flames, some of them decked in the spoils of their victims; for the
motives of the preachers were often of the basest sort. They did not spare
even the children, but seduced them by promises of the gay clothes, the apples,
the nuts, the honey they would enjoy in heaven. [�] Men, women and children
rushed into the flames. Sometimes hundreds, and even thousands, thus perished
together. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn52" name="_ednref52 - [52]
Combining the practice of suicidal martyrdom-seeking with the
pursuit of warfare, resulted, for Europeans as well as for Tamils, in
what would today be called suicidal warfare. This had the advantage of
generating tremendous publicity for the cause in worlds such as the
Indic and the Greco-Roman which, like today�s, had a penchant for the
bizarre. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn53" name="_ednref53 - [53]
And for this, the most spectacular precedent was in the Bible. Brian
Wicker, a modern Catholic interpreter, remarks that �to us, Samson just
appears like a cross between Beowulf and Batman,� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn54" name="_ednref54 - [54] while Bernhard Anderson in his book The Living World of the Old Testament, neutralises the Samson story by viewing him as the object of divine punishment. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn55" name="_ednref55 - [55]
Yet he is presented by the narrator of Judges 13 to 16 as an
unambiguous hero, and traditionally the churches regarded his
self-destruction and his massacre of three thousand Philistine men,
women, and children, as a valid act of martyrdom. Augustine and Aquinas
both pose the question: why is self-murder not here a sin, and answer:
because God had commanded him, and the normal ethical rule was thus
suspended. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn56" name="_ednref56 - [56]
------------- Rasul Allah (sallah llahu alaihi wa sallam) said: "Whoever knows himself, knows his Lord" and whoever knows his Lord has been given His gnosis and nearness.
|
Replies:
Posted By: rami
Date Posted: 14 November 2005 at 6:42pm
Bi ismillahir rahmanir raheem
Continued;
This suicide-warrior rises to the top of Western literature in Samson Agonistes.
Milton is here smarting from the horror and shame of the Restoration.
Once again, England is under the idolatrous law of king and bishops, a
kind of jahiliyya, and Cromwell�s city of glass has been
shattered. His poem, then, is autobiographical: Samson is a true hero,
humiliated, blinded by an unjust king, kept captive in the world of the
dark Other. Like the refugee-camp inmate he is
Exposed
To daily fraud, contempt, abuse and wrong,
Within doors, or without, still as a fool,
In power of others, never in my own. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn57" name="_ednref57 - [57]
His duty, confronted by a hypocritical War on Terror, is to take
effective revenge by any means necessary. His father, recognising this
grim necessity, makes the usual statement of fathers of suicide bombers
everywhere:
Nothing is here for tears, nothing to wail,
Or knock the breast, no weakness, no contempt,
Dispraise, or blame, nothing but well and fair.
And what may quiet us in a death so noble. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn58" name="_ednref58 - [58]
The theme continues, through Handel, to reach Saint-Saens. In the latter�s opera Samson and Delilah the Samson legend, far from falling by the wayside of progress and fraternit�,
seems the perfect icon for France�s contemporary humiliation before
Prussian technology. The guns of Krupp have frustrated France�s destiny
in her mission civilatrice, and the chosen people must be
avenged. The story seems perfectly modern: there is the theme of the
tragic power of sex - Delilah becomes a second Carmen - and we witness
the inevitability of total destruction in a grand, cast-iron G�tterdammerung. Ernst J�nger, Stalingrad, and the suicidal B-52 captain in Doctor Strangelove are not far behind.
But
perhaps the most recent, and also the most fascinating, mobilisation of
the Samson �ideal� in Western literature is the novel Samson by
the Zionist ideologue Vladimir Jabotinsky. �Homeland, whatever the
price!� is the captured Israelite�s slogan. Like the Islamist, the
Zionist hero stresses the impossibility of conviviality:
The second thing I have learned in the last few days is the wisdom of having
boundary�stones [�] Neighbours can agree so long as each remains
home, but trouble comes as soon as they begin to pay each other visits. The
gods have made men different and commanded them to respect the ditch in the
fields. It is a sin for men to mix what the Gods have separated. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn59" name="_ednref59 - [59]
Like a good Islamist, the Zionist Samson combines this xenophobia
with a passion to acquire the Other�s technology. When asked if he had
a message for his own people, he cries:
They must get iron. They must give everything they have for iron �
their silver and wheat, oil and wine and flocks, even their wives and daughters.
All for iron! There is nothing in the world more valuable than iron. Will
you tell them that? http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn60" name="_ednref60 - [60]
Like the Islamist, too, Jabotinsky�s suicide-hero is envious of the unbeliever�s skills at organisation:
One day, he was present at a festival at the temple of Gaza. Outside in the
square a multitude of young men and girls were gathered for the festive dances
[...] A beardless priest led the dances. He stood on the topmost step of the
temple, holding an ivory baton in his hand. When the music began the vast
concourse stood immobile [...] The beardless priest turned pale and seemed
to submerge his eyes in those of the dancers, which were fixed responsively
on his. He grew paler and paler; all the repressed fervor of the crowd seemed
to concentrate within his breast till it threatened to choke him. Samson felt
the blood stream to his heart; he himself would have choked if the suspense
had lasted a few moments longer. Suddenly, with a rapid, almost inconspicuous
movement, the priest raised his baton, and all the white figures in the square
sank down on the left knee and threw the right arm towards heaven �
a single movement, a single, abrupt, murmurous harmony. The tens of thousands
of onlookers gave utterance to a moaning sigh. Samson staggered; there was
blood on his lips, so tightly had he pressed them together [...] Samson left
the place profoundly thoughtful. He could not have given words to his thought,
but he had a feeling that here, in this spectacle of thousands obeying a single
will, he had caught a glimpse of the great secret of politically minded peoples. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn61" name="_ednref61 - [61]
Lest this be thought an aberrant, marginal use of the suicide-hero,
let us recall the words of another Zionist thinker, Stephen Rosenfeld:
�All our generation was brought up on that book.� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn62" name="_ednref62 - [62]
Samson
provides an important Biblical archetype for the national hero who is a
semi-outcast among his own people, but who saves them nonetheless. In
the dying months of Nazi Germany, selbstopfereinsatz missions were flown by Luftwaffe pilots against Soviet bridgeheads on the Oder. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn63" name="_ednref63 - [63] In 1950, Cecil B. DeMille used Jabotinsky�s novel as the basis for his film Samson and Delilah. And a still more recent example is the film Armageddon,
in which a group of socially marginalised Americans sacrifice their
lives by detonating their spacecraft inside a comet that is on a
collision course with Earth. In doing so they are defying tradition and
even lawful orders, but they earn thereby the eternal gratitude of
their people. As Robert Jewett and John Lawrence have shown, this image
of the American hero as the ordinary man impatient of traditional
authority who risks or destroys himself to save the world (John Brown,
Charles Bronson, Sylvester Stallone, Captain America, Superman,
Spiderman, and Captain Picard in the final episode of Star Trek), is the great monomyth of today�s West. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn64" name="_ednref64 - [64]
In some Eastern parts, the popularity of magically vanishing Bin Laden
figures, who emerge from undistinguished lives to break conventional
laws in order to save the world, offers another suggestion of how
deeply Westernised Arab culture has become.
Let no-one
claim, then, that suicide bombing is alien to the West. It is a
recurrent possibility of Europe�s heritage. What needs emphasizing,
against the snapshot thinking of the journalists, is the absence of a
parallel strand in Islamic thinking. For Islam, suicide is always
forbidden; some regard it as worse than murder. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn65" name="_ednref65 - [65]
Many Biblical stories are retold by Islam, but the idea of suicidal
militancy is entirely absent from the scriptures. Saul�s suicide is not
present in the Koran, nor do we find it in Tabari�s great Annals (which wish simply to record that he died in battle). http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn66" name="_ednref66 - [66] The Koranic Jonah does not ask to be pitched overboard, and Job does not pray for death. Similarly, the suicidal istishhad
of Samson is absent from the Koran and Hadith, no doubt in line with
their insistence on the absolute wickedness of suicide. The same
Islamic idealism that cannot accept David�s seduction of Bathsheba, or
Lot�s incest, has here airbrushed out Samson�s killing of the innocent
and his self-destruction.
Again, the point is clear: the
scriptural and antique sensibilities which provided some cultural space
for suicidal warfare in Western civilisation appear to have very thin
foundations in Islam. Flying into a skyscraper to save the world is
closer to the line which links Samson to Captain America, with a detour
through the Book of Revelation, than to any Muslim conception of futuwwa.
Here are Buruma and Margalit, in their important study of Westernised anti-Westernism:
Bin Laden�s use of the word �insane� is more akin to the
Nazis� constant use of fanatisch. Human sacrifice is not an established
Muslim tradition. Holy war always was justified in defence of the Islamic
state, and believers who died in battle were promised heavenly delights, but
glorification of death for its own sake was not part of this, especially in
the Sunni tradition. [�] And the idea that freelance terrorists would
enter paradise as martyrs by murdering unarmed civilians is a modern invention,
one that would have horrified Muslims in the past. Islam is not a death cult. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn67" name="_ednref67 - [67]
Let us now move on to consider other hints of the Western roots of
radical Islamism. One symptom may be detected in a shared fondness for
conspiracy theories. The messianic importance of the hidden deliverer
is emphasised by the machinations of the forces of darkness which are
ranged against him. The mu�amara, or Plot, is everywhere, as Robert Fisk, that dauntless lamentor of Mid-East fantasies, regularly observes. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn68" name="_ednref68 - [68] A sadly typical example is given by Abdelwahab Meddeb:
When I was at Abu Dhabi in May 2001, a number of my interlocutors, of various
Arab communities (Lebanese, Syrian, Sudanese, etc.), confirmed the warning,
spread by the local newspapers, to the public of the countries of the Near
East not to buy the very inexpensive belts with the label Made in Thailand.
These belts, the people told me, were actually Israeli products in disguise
and carried a kind of flea that propagated an incurable disease: one more
Zionist trick to weaken Arab bodies, if not eliminate them. These interlocutors,
otherwise reasonable and likable, gave credit to information as fantastic
as that. Those are the fantasies in which the symptoms of the sickness of
Islam can be seen, the receptive compost in which the crime of September 11
could be welcomed joyfully. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn69" name="_ednref69 - [69]
Again, this is historically unusual for Muslims. Healthy communities
far from Western influence find it incredible. The current prevalence
of a kind of Islamic McCarthyism, often hysterical in its attempts to
reduce a complex and enraging modernity to a monomaniac opposition, is
simply another indication of how far the Islamists have travelled from
the tradition. Religion makes us more attentive to reality, while
secularity, bereft of real disciplines of self-knowledge and
self-disdain, permits a dream-self. �They think that every shout is
against themselves,� says the Koran of the hypocrites (63:4), while
praising the believers for their clearsighted faith that only God is
simple, and it is only He that should be feared. The correct mindset is
specified in scripture:
Those to whom the people said: �The people have gathered against you,
therefore fear them!� But it increased them in faith, and they said:
�Allah is enough for us, an excellent Guardian is he!�
So they returned with grace and favour from Allah, and no harm touched them.
They followed the good-pleasure of Allah, and Allah is of great bounty.
It is only the devil who would make [men] fear his allies. Fear them not;
fear Me, if you are believers. (3:173-5)
The context is the aftermath of Uhud, when waverers warned of the
strength of the combined enemies around Medina. Paranoia thus becomes
the marker of imperfect faith and undue respect for the asbab. But despair is kufr: Islam�s Samson could never say:
Hopeless are all my evils, all remediless;
This one prayer yet remains, might I be heard,
No long petition, speedy death,
The close of all my miseries, and the balm. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn70" name="_ednref70 - [70]
Moreover, it requires an apparently unbearable humility for the
Islamist conspiracy theorist to recognise that until very recently
Muslims have seldom been perceived by the United States as a noteworthy
enemy. For most of its history, America has opposed and feared and
stereotyped Englishmen, Rebels, Red Indians, Spaniards, Huns, Reds or
Gooks. The current preoccupation with Muslims is shallow in the US
memory, if we discount the brief and long-forgotten enthusiasms of the
Decatur episode.
Again, as with the conspiracy theories
which urgently needed to see 9/11 as the work of Mossad, and the
utilitarian justification of the vanguard�s suspension of the ethical,
the radical Islamists are an expression of the very Westernising
alienation they profess to defy. In a sense, the West hates them
because they are more modern than itself, and thus remind it of the
unbearable risks it has taken by following the road of Enlightenment.
It is as Meddeb reminds us: �Who are those who died while spreading
death in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania? [...] They are the sons
of our times, the pure products of the Americanisation of the world.� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn71" name="_ednref71 - [71]
Self-immolation in Gaza to bring down the unbelieving temple. This is tragedy in Wagnerian mode. It is suicide, selbstmord,
not really prefatory to redemption, but to publicity and therapy. It
was Nietzsche, not any Islamic sage, who wrote: �The thought of suicide
is a great source of comfort: with it a calm passage is to be made
across many a bad night.� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn72" name="_ednref72 - [72] After being �eyeless in Gaza, at the mill with slaves,� Samson experiences �calm of mind, all passion spent� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn73" name="_ednref73 - [73] - the English idiom begins with Milton�s ending, linking, as do some readings of the Samson legend, eros and thanatos, desire and death.
But
it is Nietzsche who introduces the modern superhero. If �the splendrous
blond beast, avidly rampant for plunder and victory� cannot take the
revenge which heals his heart, he will end his unworthy existence in a
magnificent, Hitlerian funeral pyre. Samson thus becomes an anticipation of modernity.
Religion,
if it has the right to exist at all, must consider this a spurious
healing. Neither vainglory nor despair can have a place in the
metabolism of a religion based on the idea of God�s unique mastery of
history, the polar opposite of dualistic paganism, or of the romantic
Enlightenment dream which found its tragic moods congenial. The
scriptures denounce hamiyya, the feverish identity-politics of
the pagan Arabs; the post-orthodox Islamist admits it to his heart.
�Roots of Muslim Rage� is the title of Bernard Lewis� most notorious
piece on Islamism. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn74" name="_ednref74 - [74]
His pathology of the roots is far astray; but the rage is undeniable.
How are we to understand such rage in the heart of a religion built on
submission to the Divine will, hulwihi wa-murrihi, the bitter
and the sweet of it? Which insisted that �it is not the wrestler who is
strong; it is the man who masters himself when angry�? http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn75" name="_ednref75 - [75] Why did the Blessed Prophet pray for �a certainty by which You render slight in our eyes the calamities of this world�? http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn76" name="_ednref76 - [76]
The
roots are, as it turns out, instrumental reason, natural causality, and
the enthroning of Aristotle over Plato, or Newton over St Denys.
Without the certainty of an omnipotent God (and is not Islam here
better at restraining passion than all other faiths?) the experience of
adversity leaves us prey to wild emotion. It was this same jahili
craving for revenge that led Churchill astray, as one historian
suggests: �In this superheated and bloody time emotion may have
masqueraded as political thinking in a rationalizing Prime Minister�s
mind.� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn77" name="_ednref77 - [77]
Religion
is never more tested than when our emotions are ablaze. At such a time,
the timeless grandeur of the Law and its ethics stand at our mercy.
�Let the qadi not judge when he is angry,� as it is said. But here is
the reality of Gaza:
�Hamas operations are not directed and have never been directed against
children,� says Hamas political leader Ismail Abu Shanaab. �It
is directed at military targets.� When pushed, however, he goes further.
�To be frank with you, there are a lot of the moralities which got broken
in this war,� he says. �They are letting the Israelis kill Palestinians
and they want the Palestinians to be moderate, to be moral. We cannot control
the game because it has no rules, it has no limits.� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn78" name="_ednref78 - [78]
Revenge, rage, the teleological suspension of the ethical. It is
Churchillian, but also aromatic with a not-yet-dispersed Marxism. Here,
for instance, is Mawdudi, a tributary of the Hamas vision:
�Muslim� is the name of the international revolutionary party
which Islam organizes to implement its revolutionary program and Jihad is
that revolutionary struggle which the Islamic party carries out to achieve
its objectives. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn79" name="_ednref79 - [79]
As Abdullah Schleifer goes on to remark:
Mawdoodi took as his enduring model a progression of dynamic relationships
- the movement, the party, revolutionary struggle, the revolution - defined
by one of the major desacralizing forces in contemporary times, in pursuit
of a concept of state that draws its substance from non-Islamic sources, and
all with that same innocence of the modern Muslim importing his �value-free�
technology. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn80" name="_ednref80 - [80]
The antinomian quality of this furious insurrectionist method
confirms Gray�s suggestion that Islamism is simply another modern
weapon against religion. For theists, the ethical can never be
suspended; on the contrary, it is needed most when most under strain.
Yet the militant transgressions of radicals form only part of a much
wider picture of covert but deep surrender to Enlightenment thought.
Islamism, that soi-disant
hammer of the Franks, is ironically modern in very many ways. It is
modern in its eagerness for science and its hatred of �superstition.�
It is modern in its rejection of all higher spirituality (Qutb
recommends, instead, �al-fana� fi�l-�aqida�). http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn81" name="_ednref81 - [81]
It is modern in its rejection of the principle of tradition, and,
despite itself, cannot but impose the insecurities of Western-trained
minds (and are they not all engineers and doctors?) on scripture.
Intertextuality and the community of sages are barred. The theopolitics
of classical Islam, where both scholarship and the state are
invigorated by mutual tension (the Men of the Pen and the Men of the
Sword), is replaced by the finally Western model of the ideological
totalitarian state, with a self-appointed clerisy (albeit composed of
technocrats) requiring absolute control over policy and the Shari�a.
The modular diversities of pre-modern Muslim societies, where villages,
tribes, and millat minorities regulated themselves, give way to
the Islamist appropriation of the machinery of centralised
post-colonial etatism. Social subsets which flourished for centuries
under, say, Ottomanism, already eroded by centralising colonial
regimes, are finally liquidated by a vision that is purely Western,
albeit camouflaged by loud religious language. As Maryam Jameelah puts
it, in a courageous article in which she publicly announces her
disillusionment with the Islamist model:
The tragic paradox of the life and thought of Maulana Sayyid Abul Ala Mawdoodi
was his subconscious acceptance of the very same Western ideas he dedicated
his entire life to struggling against. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn82" name="_ednref82 - [82]
In such a system, those who should be serving God end up obeying the
men of the state who are His all too fallible interpreters. They
worship in fear of the police, not in fear of God. Dissidence becomes a
simultaneous treason and blasphemy. The failure of this totalitarian
model of the �Islamic State�, this �carceral Islamism� which makes a
Muslim land a prison rather than a landscape of options and regional
variety, is today everywhere apparent, and is a sign, perhaps, that God
will not allow victory to such a perversion. For the Muslims will not
long be allowed to bow before any other than God.
6. Dies Irae
Is this attack on
tradition a modernity with a future? Zealotry itself is not normally
refuted, it has to subside. Often that subsidence is enabled by schism:
Cromwell could not be replicated because of the powerfully fissiparous
quality of Dissent. Calvin�s Geneva hardly outlived him. Hutterites,
Levellers, Anabaptists, and the other fragments of the Protestant
detonation could perpetuate themselves, but their energy source seemed
to have a half-life. Islamic extremism, what has historically been
called ghuluww, excess, and has occasionally, though not often,
troubled the religion�s equilibrium, usually knows a similar deflation
through internal factionalism and the disappointment which seeps into
all annunciatory movements when the world does not either improve or
come to an end. In the case of Muslim puritanism, we see, currently,
infighting, as in Algeria, and on the streets of Riyadh. Apathy may not
be long postponed.
This seems likely, to the extent that
Islamism is the product of indigenous decay, a second Reformation. But
will its porosity to Enlightenment thought prolong or accelerate this
decay? (How ironic that Islam�s Reformation should come after
its Enlightenment!) Here predictions about Islamism may not be so
different from predictions about a certain kind of exhibitionist
postmodernism. Take Foucault, for instance. On his death, he had been
praised by Le Monde as �the most important event of thought in
our century.� He was an iconic Western iconoclast, but more honest
about the consequences of modernity than most liberal seekers after
virtue. He had been strongly pro-Khomeini, and had also praised the
Baader-Meinhof terrorists. Like many Islamists, he was a lapsed
Marxist, concerned with making a statement, with angering the
middle-class West, with disruption. A second Bakunin, he was concerned
not with advancing a detailed and realistic agenda, but with a
passionate desire to shock. And like his hero Nietzsche, he died of a
venereal disease, his immensely careless sexual habits indicating the
powerful allure of suicide for the sake of making a statement. We need
to ask: is this too close for comfort to radical Islamism, with its
penchant for �pater les blancs by whatever means? For how long
can the West portray the Islamists as its own polar opposite? Will it
be harder to forget the zealots than to forget Foucault?
This
is less hopeful: Foucault has not been forgotten. The ambient vacuum
which permitted a philosophy of the absurd in France and in the Middle
East shows no signs of abatement. Capitalist shortsightedness wedded to
postmodern philosophy may offer the only real life-support system that
the Muslim reformation can hope for. Thus the defeat of the Muslim
aberration may depend on nothing less than the defeat of the current
global system, and its replacement with an order grounded in the
ethical brilliance of the monotheisms. This diagnosis places us far
beyond both Qutb�s chauvinism and the narcissism of the neocons. The
same classical Islamic strength through cosmopolitanism that helped our
ancient order to endure as a non-totalitarian expression of certainty
must be remobilised to affirm the Other�s heart, in order to reconnect
the global system with religious reality. That is, a successful �war on
terror� cannot be detached from a humanly consensual war on
environmental loss, on unfair trade, on identity feminism, and on
genetic manipulation. If it is so detached, it will be lost.
Blake
portrays the spirit of the industrial age as Urizen, blind ignorance,
fettered in laws of causality unveiled by Newton, and sunk in feral
emotionalism. Religion is indispensable to the nurturing of a true
humanism because it fights this, and insists that humanity has a telos, and that the soul is therefore sacrosanct.
To
succeed, then we must be able to realise that self-judgement, that
greatest and most irreplaceable gift of the Abrahamic religions, is
more than an evolutionary confidence trick. Consider J�rgen Habermas�
latest book, which reflects on human nature as challenged by genetic
science. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn83" name="_ednref83 - [83]
Postmodernism seems to problematise self-judgement; and its associated
ethical practice seems to reduce Aristotle�s greatness of soul, which
he, against later monotheist reaction, considered a virtue, to superbia,
greatest of the seven deadly sins. But Habermas reminds us that
confronted by genetic science, we are required, after a long hiatus, to
judge ourselves. For science seeks our permission to rebuild our bodies
to reduce the suffering of future generations; yet in the process it
must ask us to define what we presently are. Liberal ethics, which
resist both such definitions, and any exercise in using human beings
for our own purposes, however idealistic, are thereby interrogated.
Habermas is quite clear that the West�s conception of virtue is a
Christian ghost, rooted in a Kantianism that has been the basis of
liberal notions of individual autonomy. Yet he seems convinced that
this ghost still lives, and can be maintained perpetually, and may even
serve as the stable basis of ever more ambitious projects for universal
codes of human rights, in the arena of bioethics, as elsewhere. This
will include, presumably, the war on Carrelian Islamism.
John
Gray, iconoclastically again, is unsure that this is as coherent as it
is helpful. Gray, whose understanding of Al-Qaida as an Enlightenment
project we noted earlier, would rather we revisited Schopenhauer�s
deconstruction of Kant. Frightened ethicists have deceived themselves
that there is no Christianity in this Christian ghost. Yet true
Kantianism would reject the categoric imperative as a false projection
upon the Noumenon. Our desperate desire to find a new moral anchorage
after the sinking of Christian scholasticism blinds us to what is for
Gray the unanswerable insight that without God, we are beyond good and
evil. Schopenhauer saw, as Gray put it, �that the enlightenment was
only a secular version of Christianity�s central mistake.� http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn84" name="_ednref84 - [84]
There is no soul, only the individual will, and we have no reason to
suppose that we are any more free in our decision-making than the
animals from which religion taught us that we were so categorically
distinct. Our consciousness is just one more part of the world.
Heidegger turns out to be worse: he insists that he excludes Christian
paradigms, but internalises them implicitly in his consideration of the
human plight, suffering, guilt, and the paradox of being. And while
Schopenhauer maintained a pure and private pessimism, Heidegger sought
to intuit Being in his tribe. �The F�hrer himself and alone,� he
exclaimed, �is the present and future German reality and its law.�
Hitler�s xenophobia allowed the philosopher to repair his wounds, and
reconnect with Being. Qutbian fundamentalism is not far away.
It
is impossible to exaggerate the debt Giddens� �runaway world� owes to
Christianity, for showing so much vitality even after Nietzsche
proclaimed the death of its God. But for the Gospels, the Western
empire would not have benefited from Kant�s conjuring trick, or Rawls�
benign adversion to �good people�. Yet the fact of its precariousness
remains; and the risk of a tribal resolution is enormous. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn85" name="_ednref85 - [85] Science harnessed to Geist
dragged up Hitler; and something similar has beset Islam. Solidarity,
mythologically voiced, technologically imposed, is to be the cure for
our desperate alienation. Remember the words of the Furies in Aeschylus:
For many ills one attitude is the cure
When it agrees on what to hate. http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_edn86" name="_ednref86 - [86]
The danger, then, is that liberalism will prove too weak to prevent one form
of Enlightenment chauvinism � carceral Islamism � from triggering
a sudden revival of another such form � Hitlerian essentialism. The prosperity
of the far-right across the liberal West shows how far this march has already
come. Postmodernity is methodologically incapable of resisting this; and monotheism
must step into the breach. A monotheism, however, which bears all the arms it
has acquired and sharpened during its travels: its intellectual appropriation
of Athens, its hospitality to the autochthonously non-Semitic, its insistence
on diversity, all enabled and preserved by the centrality of spiritual purgation.
The civil war within Enlightenment modernity that Gray identifies as the essence
of the �war on terror� is suicidal. Only a ressourcement
in the anchored past can deliver us.
NOTES
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref1" name="_edn1 - [1] Cited in Joh n Gray, Straw Dogs:
thoughts on humans and other animals (London, 2002), 75.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref2" name="_edn2 - [2] Daniel Dennett, Consciousness Explained
(London, 1992); Daniel Wegner, The Illusion of Conscious Will (Bradford,
2002).
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref3" name="_edn3 - [3] Rime of the Ancient Mariner.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref4" name="_edn4 - [4] For the neocons see now Stefan Halper
and Jonathan Clarke, America Alone: The Neo-Conservatives and the Global
Order (Cambridge, 2004).
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref5" name="_edn5 - [5] Cited in Robert Jewett and John Shelton
Lawrence, Captain America and the Crusade against Evil: The Dilemma of Zealous
Nationalism (Grand Rapids and Cambridge, 2003), 131.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref6" name="_edn6 - [6] Daniel Jonah Goldhagen, A Moral
Reckoning: The Role of the Catholic Church in the Holocaust and its Unfulfilled
Duty of Repair (London: 2002), 369-70; e.g. �The Catholic Church and
other Christian churches [�] could include in every Christian Bible a
detailed, corrective account alongside the text about its many antisemitic passages,
and a clear disclaimer explaining that even though these passages were once
presented as fact, they are actually false or dubious and have been the source
of much unjust injury. They could include essays on the various failings of
the Christian Bible, and a detailed running commentary on each page that would
correct the texts� erroneous and libellous assertions.�
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref7" name="_edn7 - [7] Cf. Julia Lipton, �Othello Circumcised:
Shakespeare and the Pauline Discourse of Nations�, Representations
57 (1997), 78: �Christian typologists also used Esau, Pharoah and Herod
to couple the Jew and the Muslim as carnal children of Abraham facing each other
across the world-historical break effected by the Incarnation.�
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref8" name="_edn8 - [8] See Fukuyama: �A country that
makes human rights a significant element of its foreign policy tends toward
ineffectual moralizing at best, and unconstrained violence in pursuit of moral
aims at worst.� Harper�s Magazine, August 2001, p. 36.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref9" name="_edn9 - [9] Salah Abd al-Fattah al-Khalidi, Amrika
min al-dakhil bi-minzar Sayyid Qutb (Beirut, 2002).
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref10" name="_edn10 - [10] Roxanne L. Euben, Enemy in the
Mirror: Islamic Fundamentalism and the Limits of Modern Rationalism (Princeton,
1999), 52; citing Qutb�s Khasa�is al-Tasawwur al-Islami;
Youssef Choueiri, Islamic Fundamentalism (London 1990), 142-9. As Choueiri
concludes: �What Qutb fails to inform his vanguard, however, is that the
code of conduct he subsequently elaborated in his �commentary� on
the Koran matches that of Carrel much more than Muhammad�s own Traditions.�
The result is not an indigenous form of governance, but �a Third World
version of Fascism.�
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref11" name="_edn11 - [11] Samuel Goitein, Jews and Arabs
(New York, 1955), 130: �Never has Judaism encountered such a close and
fructuous symbiosis as that with the medieval civilization of Arab Islam�.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref12" name="_edn12 - [12] Many Muslims who have rejected
the new radicalism in favour of authenticity will sympathise with the experience
of Franky Schaeffer, who in the 1970s was an extreme Calvinist advocate of totalitarian
government. In the 1980s, shocked by the reality of fundamentalist leaders,
he joined the Greek Orthodox Church, denouncing the Protestant radicals as �a
hybrid composed of fragments of ancient Christian faith and thoroughly modern,
anti-traditional, materialist and often utopian ideas.� Cited in Steve
Bruce, Fundamentalism (Cambridge, 2000), 122.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref13" name="_edn13 - [13] John Gray, Al-Qaeda and What
it Means to be Modern (London, 2003), 1-2.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref14" name="_edn14 - [14] Slavoj Zizek, Welcome to the
Desert of the Real (London and New York: Verso, 2002), 146.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref15" name="_edn15 - [15] See for instance Richard Martin,
�The Religious Foundations of War, Peace and Statecraft in Islam�,
in John Kelsay and James Turner Johnson (eds), Just War and Jihad: Historical
and Theoretical Perspectives on War and Peace in Western and Islamic Traditions.
(New York, Westport and London, 1991.)
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref16" name="_edn16 - [16] Naqd Kalam al-Shaykh al-Albani
fi Sharitihi Min Manhaj al-Khawarij. N.d., n.p.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref17" name="_edn17 - [17] L. Carl Brown, Religion and
State: the Muslim approach to politics (New York, 2000), 156-7. It needs
to be added that Qutb�s aberration is typical of those who carry out radical
ijtihad without the needful qualifications in shari�a sciences.
For instance, he develops his absolutist rejection of any conversation with
the West in his Ma�alim fi�l-tariq (Cairo, 1980), 145, on
the basis of out-of-context Koranic verses (2:109, 2:120, and 3:100), which
warn only of the dangers of cooperating with some of the ahl al-kitab.
To try and force the issue, he then produces a hadith from Abu Ya�la,
�Do not ask the People of the Book about anything �� (Abu
Ya�la, Musnad [Damascus and Beirut, 1985/1405], IV, 102), apparently
unaware that this hadith is weak; see �Abduh �Ali Kushak, al-Maqsad
al-A�la fi taqrib ahadith al-Hafiz Abi Ya�la (Beirut, 1422/2001),
I, 83. In any case, who is more absurd than the radical who rejects all Western
influence, and then writes books with titles like Khasa�is al-Tasawwur
al-Islami (�Special Qualities of the Islamic Conception�)? Qutb�s
whole manner of expression would be unimaginable without modernity.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref18" name="_edn18 - [18] Abdelwahab Meddeb, Islam and
its discontents (London, 2003), 48-52. Qutb�s waning interest in literature
is one symptom of this.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref19" name="_edn19 - [19] Abu Hamid al-Ghazali, Disciplining
the Soul, tr. T. Winter (Cambridge, 1995), 86.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref20" name="_edn20 - [20] �Asian Muslims in particular
have come to reify the shari�a as much as any Orientalist, converting
the law into a symbol of ethnic identification.� Lawrence Rosen, The
Justice of Islam: Comparative perspectives on Islamic law and society (Oxford,
2000), 186.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref21" name="_edn21 - [21] www.dfw.com/mld/bayarea/news/6281132.htm?1c.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref22" name="_edn22 - [22] W. G. Sebald, On the Natural
History of Destruction (London, 2004), 17.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref23" name="_edn23 - [23] Stephen A. Garrett, Ethics and
airpower in World War II: the British bombing of German cities (New York
and Basingstoke, 1993), 28.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref24" name="_edn24 - [24] Garrett, 90; Harvey Tress, British
strategic bombing through 1940: politics, attitudes, and the formation of a
lasting pattern (Lewiston, 1988), 304.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref25" name="_edn25 - [25] Garrett, 90.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref26" name="_edn26 - [26] Garrett, 103.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref27" name="_edn27 - [27] Tress, 335.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref28" name="_edn28 - [28] Cited in Garrett, 20.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref29" name="_edn29 - [29] Cited in Garrett, 132.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref30" name="_edn30 - [30] Garrett, 96.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref31" name="_edn31 - [31] General Curtis LeMay, who planned
the Tokyo attacks which killed perhaps a hundred thousand civilians, remarked
that they were �scorched and boiled and baked to death.� (John W.
Dower, War Without Mercy: Race and Power in the Pacific War [New York,
1986], 50.)
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref32" name="_edn32 - [32] Menahem Begin, The Revolt (revised
edition, London 1979), 59-60.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref33" name="_edn33 - [33] A substantial literature now exists
seeking to identify suicide bombing as a paradigmatically Muslim act. See, for
instance, Shaul Shay, The Shahids: Islam and Suicide Attacks (Transaction,
2003); also Christoph Reuter, My Life is a Weapon: A Modern History of Suicide
Bombing (Princeton, 2004). This forms part of a larger determination to
show the radicals as authentic expressions of Islamic tradition (see, for instance,
the works of Emmanuel Sivan). The level of Islamic knowledge present in this
literature is usually poor; see for instance Reuter�s belief (p.22) that
the Mu�tazilites were founded by Ibn Sina and Ibn Rushd! Reuter is a Stern
journalist, whose patronage by Princeton University Press shows the fragility
of the standards of American academic institutions in times of international
crisis.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref34" name="_edn34 - [34] Sir James Frazier, The Golden
Bough. Part III: The Dying God (London, 1913), 42. For a more recent study
see Jacques Gernet, �Les suicides par le feu chez les bouddhiques chinoises
de Ve au Xe siecle�, M�langes publi�s par l�Institut
des Hautes �tudes Chinoises I (1960), 527-558. For Buddhist suicide
in India see W. Rahula, �Self-Cremation in Mahayana Buddhism� in
his Zen and the Taming of the Bull (London, 1978), 111-6. Rahula amplifies
(p.113): �Usually a self-cremation was done in public, but there were
some monks who burnt themselves secretly. One monk burnt himself in a cauldron
of oil. Some made a modest offering to a stupa by cutting off a finger
or a hand, wrapping it with cloth drenched in oil, and setting fire to it.�
The practice is traced back to the time of the Buddha himself; as F. Woodward
records: �The Buddha approved of the suicide of bhikkus; but in these
cases they were Arahants, and we are to suppose that such beings who have mastered
self, can do what they please as regards the life and death of their carcases�
(�The Ethics of Suicide in Greek, Latin and Buddhist Literature�,
Buddhist Annual of Ceylon [1922], p.8).
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref35" name="_edn35 - [35] Ibid, 54. See also the ritual described
on page 47, in which the king of Calicut �had to cut his throat in public
at the end of a twelve years� reign.�
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref36" name="_edn36 - [36] Upendra Thakur, The History
of Suicide in India: An Introduction (Delhi, 1963), xv-xvi.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref37" name="_edn37 - [37] Ibid., 9. See also the section
on �Religious Suicide�, on pp.77-111.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref38" name="_edn38 - [38] Rihlat Ibn Battuta (Beirut,
1379/1960), 411-3, focussing on the practice of bride-burning, but referring
also to Hindu self-drowning rituals. See also Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Biruni,
Tahqiq ma li�l-Hind (Hyderabad, 1377/1958), p.480: �Those
among them who kill themselves do so during eclipses; or they may hire a man
to drown them in the Ganges. Such people hold them underwater until they die.�
For more on this practice see Thakur, 112.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref39" name="_edn39 - [39] Edgar O�Ballance, The
Cyanide War: Tamil Insurrection in Sri Lanka 1973-88 (London, 1989), p.13,
for the first Tamil suicide martyrs in the 1970s. Other Tamil Tiger terrorist
habits include beheading (p.10), taking Western hostages (p.40), and drug-dealing
to fund operations (p.120).
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref40" name="_edn40 - [40] For the religious puritanism of
the Tamil Tigers (no extramarital relations, no alcohol, etc.), see Dagmar Hellmann-Rajayanagar,
The Tamil Tigers: armed struggle for identity (Stuttgart, 1994), 37.
Sometimes considered to be Marxist, the Tamil Tigers are primarily inspired
by national and religious tradition (ibid., p. 56).
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref41" name="_edn41 - [41] Amantha Perera, �Suicide
bombers feared and revered,� Asia Times, July 17, 2003. For more
on Islamist borrowings from Tamil suicide warfare see Amy Waldman, �Masters
of Suicide Bombing: Tamil Guerillas of Sri Lanka� (New York Times,
14 January 2003).
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref42" name="_edn42 - [42] Cf. Plotinus, against the Stoics:
�if each man�s rank in the other world depends on his state when
he goes out, one must not take out the soul as long as there is any possibility
of progress� (Ennead I.9; cf. also the Elias fragment of Plotinus found
after this section in Armstrong�s Loeb translation). This is similar to
the Islamic virtue of praying for a long life in the service of God. (Ibn Hanbal,
Musnad, VI, 23.)
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref43" name="_edn43 - [43] �Within Israelite society,
as early as the period of the united monarchy, voluntary death, given the proper
circumstances, was understood as honorable and even routine.� (Arthur
J. Droge and James D. Tabor, Noble Death: Suicide and Martyrdom among Christians
and Jews in antiquity [San Francisco, 1992], 56.)
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref44" name="_edn44 - [44] See J.W. van Henten, The Maccabean
martyrs as saviours of the Jewish people: a study of 2 and 4 Maccabees (Leiden
and New York, 1997).
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref45" name="_edn45 - [45] Droge and Tabor, 87, 100.
See also Sidney Hoenig, �The Sicarii in Masada � Glory or Infamy?�
Tradition 11 (1970), 5-30; Sidney Goldstein, Suicide in Rabbinic Literature
(Hoboken, 1989), 41-2.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref46" name="_edn46 - [46] Daniel Boyarin, Dying for God:
Martyrdom and the Making of Christianity and Judaism (Stanford, 1999), 171.
It is not insignificant that �during the Moslem period, mass suicides
among Jews do not seem to have occurred� (Goldstein, 49).
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref47" name="_edn47 - [47] The former Ashkenazy Chief Rabbi
of Israel, Shlomo Goren, allowed suicide as an alternative to prisoner-of-war
status, following the examples of Saul and Masada (Goldstein, 49).
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref48" name="_edn48 - [48] Walter S. Wurzburger, Ethics
of Responsibility: Pluralistic Approaches to Covenantal Ethics (Philadelphia,
1994), 92. For more, see Goldstein�s chapter entitled �Suicide as
an Act of Martyrdom�, pp.41-50.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref49" name="_edn49 - [49] �In strictly historical terms
it is unlikely that Jesus of Nazareth ever expected to give his life as �a
ransom for many� (Mark 10:45). Rather, his intention was to bring about
the restoration of Israel and to usher in the kingdom of God.� (Droge
and Tabor, 115.) Islam would probably be more impressed by the Lucan Jesus,
who apparently never intended to die.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref50" name="_edn50 - [50] Droge and Tabor, 136.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref51" name="_edn51 - [51] Droge and Tabor, 134-9, 152-5;
167-83. Voluntary martyrdom continued in some places, such as early Muslim Cordova,
where 48 Christians were beheaded between 850 and 859: �the majority of
the victims deliberately invoked capital punishment by publicly blaspheming
Muhammad and disparaging Islam.� They were eulogised by the Church. (K.
B. Wolf, Christian Martyrs in Muslim Spain [Cambridge, 1988], 1.)
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref52" name="_edn52 - [52] Frazier, 45.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref53" name="_edn53 - [53] Glen Bowersock, Martyrdom and
Rome (Cambridge, 1995), 66-7.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref54" name="_edn54 - [54] Brian Wicker, �Samson Terroristes:
A Theological Reflection on Suicidal Terrorism�, New Blackfriars,
vol. 84 no.983 (January 2003), 45. I am indebted to Wicker for much of the information
in the next two paragraphs.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref55" name="_edn55 - [55] Bernhard Anderson, The Living
World of the Old Testament (London, 1958), 111.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref56" name="_edn56 - [56] Droge and Tabor, 186.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref57" name="_edn57 - [57] John Milton, Poetical Works
(Edinburgh, 1853), II, 76.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref58" name="_edn58 - [58] Milton, 125.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref59" name="_edn59 - [59] Vladimir Jabotinsky, Prelude
to Delilah (New York, 1945), 131. This is a translation of the original,
published as Samson in 1926.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref60" name="_edn60 - [60] Jabotinsky, 330.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref61" name="_edn61 - [61] Jabotinsky, 200.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref62" name="_edn62 - [62] Stephen Rosenfeld, �Straight
to the Heart of Menachem Begin�, Present Tense (Summer 1980), 7.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref63" name="_edn63 - [63] Antony Beevor, Berlin 1945,
the downfall. (London, 2002), 238. Focke-Wulf fighter-bombers packed with
explosives would deliberately ram Soviet bridges and command centres.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref64" name="_edn64 - [64] Jewett and Lawrence, 35-9.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref65" name="_edn65 - [65] �Abdallah ibn Qutayba, �Uyun
al-akhbar (Cairo, 1348/1930), iii, 217.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref66" name="_edn66 - [66] Tabari, History, Volume III:
The Children of Israel, translated by William M. Brinner (Albany, 1991),
139.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref67" name="_edn67 - [67] I. Buruma and A. Margalit, Occidentalism:
A Short History of Anti-Westernism (London, 2004), 68-9.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref68" name="_edn68 - [68] Robert Fisk, Pity the Nation:
Lebanon at War (London, 1990), 78, 79, 85, 139, 166, 175, 178, 302, 320,
374, 408, 523, 530, 567, 603.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref69" name="_edn69 - [69] Meddeb, 115.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref70" name="_edn70 - [70] Milton, 93.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref71" name="_edn71 - [71] Meddeb, 9.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref72" name="_edn72 - [72] Friedrich Nietzsche, Beyond
Good and Evil, tr. Helen Zimmern (London, 1907, repr.1967), 98.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref73" name="_edn73 - [73] Milton, 126.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref74" name="_edn74 - [74] Bernard Lewis, �Roots of
Muslim Rage,� The Atlantic Monthly, September 1990
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref75" name="_edn75 - [75] Bukhari and Muslim from Abu Hurayra.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref76" name="_edn76 - [76] Tirmidhi and al-Hakim (1, 528),
from Ibn �Umar.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref77" name="_edn77 - [77] Tress, 289.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref78" name="_edn78 - [78] http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/2179606.stm
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref79" name="_edn79 - [79] Cited by S. Abdullah Schleifer,
�Jihad: Sacred Struggle in Islam IV,� The Islamic Quarterly
28/ii (1984), 98.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref80" name="_edn80 - [80] Schleifer, 100.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref81" name="_edn81 - [81] William E. Shepard, Sayyid Qutb
and Islamic Activism: A Translation and Critical Annotation of Social Justice
in Islam (Leiden, 1996), p.xxxiii. Here we have, again, the phenomenon of
�loving the Torah more than God�.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref82" name="_edn82 - [82] Maryam Jameelah, �An Appraisal
of Some Aspects of the Life and Thought of Maulana Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi�,
Islamic Quarterly xxxi (1407-1987), 116-130, p.130.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref83" name="_edn83 - [83] J�rgen Habermas, The Future
of Human Nature (London: 2003).
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref84" name="_edn84 - [84] Gray, Straw Dogs, 41.
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref85" name="_edn85 - [85] See Gray, Straw Dogs, 102-3:
�The egalitarian beliefs on which Rawls�s theory is founded are
like the sexual mores that were once believed to be the core of morality. The
most local and changeable of things, they are revered as the very essence of
morality. As conventional opinion moves on, the current egalitarian consensus
will be followed by a new orthodoxy, equally certain that it embodies unchanging
moral truth.�
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm#_ednref86" name="_edn86 - [86] The Eumenides 996-7.
------------- Rasul Allah (sallah llahu alaihi wa sallam) said: "Whoever knows himself, knows his Lord" and whoever knows his Lord has been given His gnosis and nearness.
|
Posted By: rami
Date Posted: 14 November 2005 at 6:44pm
Bi ismillahir rahmanir raheem
What is the Islamic stance regarding kidnappings & killings in Iraq and Russia?
Walaikum assalam wa rahmatullah,
Allah Most High has told us in the Qur�an:
005.008 O you who believe! Be steadfast witnesses for Allah in
equity, and let not hatred of any people seduce you that you deal not
justly. Deal justly, that is nearer to your duty. Observe your duty to
Allah. Lo! Allah is Aware of what you do.
005.009 Allah has promised those who believe and do good works:
Theirs will be forgiveness and immense reward.
Islam is a religion that is based on Divine Revelation. This Divine
Revelation is encapsulated in the Shariah that the Messenger of Allah
(Allah bless him and give him peace) came with and which was preserved
and interpreted in every generation by those whom the Prophet (Allah
bless him and give him peace) himself called his �inheritors��the
scholars of Sunni Islam.
The problem with the individuals behind actions such as the
kidnappings in Iraq, or the monstrosity in Beslan is that they are
motivated by their raw passions and act on ignorance. Thus, they are
misguided, and act in misguided ways, while the Messenger of Allah
(Allah bless him and give him peace) told us that, �None of you believes
until their whims are made to follow the guidance I have come with.� [Nawawi�s
40 Hadith, from Kitab al-Hujja; Nawawi said: it is rigorously
authenticated (sahih)]
Those who take the law in their own hands are brigands and outlaws,
and have nothing to do with the example of the Messenger of Allah (Allah
bless him and give him peace), who was sent as a mercy to all humanity,
a light of guidance, an exemplification of all good. Can any of us ever
imagine the Beloved Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him and give him
peace) ever doing anything like these acts? Or condoning anything like
this?
Don�t miss:
http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/moonlight.htm" id="" name="" target=" - Bombing
Without Moonlight: The Origins of Suicidal Terrorism
by Shaykh Abdal Hakim Murad
And Allah alone gives success.
Wassalam,
Faraz Rabbani
------------- Rasul Allah (sallah llahu alaihi wa sallam) said: "Whoever knows himself, knows his Lord" and whoever knows his Lord has been given His gnosis and nearness.
|
|