[COMMENT: This is a remarkable essay from an unexpected source -- Islam. The author recognizes that the obligation for honest dialogue (not the pseudo-dialogue-to-consensus which today substitutes for dialogue-to-truth) is an essential element in world politics and among world religions. Truth-seeking and truth-speaking are the fundamental obligations before all others, without which nothing else can succeed. Pray for him and that Christians catch the same vision. As with Elijah on Mount Carmel (I Kings 18). E. Fox]
From the Jul 25, 2005, issue of Time Magazine
We Muslims must admit that our religion might be motivating the bombers
I WAS SURPRISED LAST WEEK TO LEARN HOW EASILY SOME Westerners believe
terrorism can be explained. The realization unfolded as I looked into the sad
face of a student at Oxford University. After giving a speech about Islam, I
met this young magazine editor to talk about Islam's lost tradition of
critical thinking and reasoned debate. But we never got to that topic.
Instead, we got stuck on the July 7 bombings in London and what might have
compelled four young, British-raised,
observant Muslim men to blow themselves up while taking innocent others with
them.
She emphasized their "relative economic deprivation." I answered that the lads
had immigrant parents who had worked hard to make something of themselves. I
reminded her that several of the
9/11 hijackers came from wealthy families, and it's not as if they left the
boys out of the will. Finally, I told her about my conversation three years
ago with the political leader of Islamic Jihad in Gaza. "What's the difference
between suicide, which the Koran condemns, and martyrdom?" I asked. "Suicide,"
he replied, "is done out of despair. But remember: most of our martyrs today
were very successful in their earthly lives." In short, there was a future to
live for-and they detonated it anyway
By this time, the Oxford student had grown somber. It was clear I had let her
down. I had failed to appreciate that the London bombers were victims of
British society. To be fair to her, she is right that marginalization, real or
perceived, diminishes self esteem. Which, in turn, can make young people
vulnerable to those peddling a radical message of instant belonging. But
suppose the messages being peddled are marinated in religious rhetoric. Then
wouldn't you say religion plays some role in motivating these atrocities?
The student shifted uncomfortably She just couldn't bring herself to examine
my suggestion seriously And I suppose I couldn't expect her to. Not when
Muslim leaders themselves won't go there, Iqbal Sacranie, secretary general
for the Muslim Council of Britain, is an example. In the midst of a debate
with me, he listed potential incentives to bomb, including "alienation" and
"segregation." But Islam? God forbid that the possibility even be entertained.
That is the dangerous denial from which mainstream Muslims need to emerge.
While our spokesmen assure us that Islam is an innocent bystander in today's
terrorism, those who commit terrorist acts often tell us otherwise. Mohammed
Atta, ringleader of the Sept. 11 hijackers, left behind a note asserting that
"it is enough for us to know that the Koran's verses are the words of the
Creator of the Earth and all the planets" Atta highlighted the Koran's
description of heaven. In 2004 the executioners of Nick Berg, an American
contractor in Iraq, alluded on tape to a different Koranic passage: "Whoever
kills a human being, except as punishment for murder or other villainy in the
land, shall be regarded as having killed all mankind." The spirit of that
verse forbids aggressive warfare, but the clause beginning with except is
readily deployed by militant Muslims as a loophole. If you want murder and
villainy in the land, they say, look no further than U.S. boot prints in Arab
soil.
For too long, we Muslims have been sticking fingers in our ears and chanting
"Islam means peace" to drown out the negative noise from our holy book. Far
better to own up to it. Not erase or revise, just recognize it and thereby
join moderate Jews and Christians in confessing "sins of Scripture," as an
American bishop says about the Bible. In doing so, Muslims would show a
thoughtful side that builds trust with the wider communities of the West.
We could then cultivate the support to inspire cross-cultural understanding.
For an anti-U.S. rally instance, schools throughout the West should teach how
Islamic civilization helped give birth to the European Renaissance. Some of
the first universities in recorded history sprang up in 3rd century Iran, 9th
century Baghdad and 10th century Cairo. The Muslim world gave us mocha coffee,
the guitar and even the Spanish expression ole! (which has its root in the
Arabic word Allah). Muslim students would learn there is no shame in defending
the values of pluralism. Non Muslim students would learn that those values
took great inspiration from Islamic culture. All would learn that Islam and
the West are more interdependent than divided.
Still, as long as Muslims live in pretense, we will be affirming that we have
something to hide. It's not enough for us to protest that radicals are
exploiting Islam as a sword. Of course they are. Now, moderate Muslims must
stop exploiting Islam as a shield-one that protects us from authentic
introspection and our neighbors from genuine understanding.
Irshad Manji is the author of The Trouble with Islam Today: A Wake-Up Call
for Honesty and Change
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