9/11- Yes, This Is About Islam
20 Dec, 2006
[Originally Published in NY Times on Nov 2, 2001]
LONDON -- "This isn't about Islam." The world's leaders have
been repeating this mantra for weeks, partly in the virtuous hope of
deterring reprisal attacks on innocent Muslims living in the West,
partly because if the United States is to maintain its coalition
against terror it can't afford to suggest that Islam and terrorism
are in any way related.
The trouble with this necessary disclaimer is that it isn't true. If
this isn't about Islam, why the worldwide Muslim demonstrations in
support of Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda? Why did those 10,000 men
armed with swords and axes mass on the Pakistan-Afghanistan
frontier, answering some mullah's call to jihad? Why are the war's
first British casualties three Muslim men who died fighting on the
Taliban side?
Why the routine anti-Semitism of the much-repeated Islamic slander
that "the Jews" arranged the hits on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon, with the oddly self-deprecating explanation offered by the
Taliban leadership, among others, that Muslims could not have the
technological know-how or organizational sophistication to pull off
such a feat? Why does Imran Khan, the Pakistani ex-sports star
turned politician, demand to be shown the evidence of Al Qaeda's
guilt while apparently turning a deaf ear to the self-incriminating
statements of Al Qaeda's own spokesmen (there will be a rain of
aircraft from the skies, Muslims in the West are warned not to live
or work in tall buildings)? Why all the talk about American military
infidels desecrating the sacred soil of Saudi Arabia if some sort of
definition of what is sacred is not at the heart of the present
discontents?
Of course this is "about Islam." The question is, what exactly does
that mean? After all, most religious belief isn't very theological.
Most Muslims are not profound Koranic analysts. For a vast number of
"believing" Muslim men, "Islam" stands, in a jumbled, half-examined
way, not only for the fear of God — the fear more than the love, one
suspects — but also for a cluster of customs, opinions and
prejudices that include their dietary practices; the sequestration
or near-sequestration of "their" women; the sermons delivered by
their mullahs of choice; a loathing of modern society in general,
riddled as it is with music, godlessness and sex; and a more
particularized loathing (and fear) of the prospect that their own
immediate surroundings could be taken over — "Westoxicated" — by the
liberal Western-style way of life.
Highly motivated organizations of Muslim men (oh, for the voices of
Muslim women to be heard!) have been engaged over the last 30 years
or so in growing radical political movements out of this mulch of
"belief." These Islamists — we must get used to this word,
"Islamists," meaning those who are engaged upon such political
projects, and learn to distinguish it from the more general and
politically neutral "Muslim" — include the Muslim Brotherhood in
Egypt, the blood-soaked combatants of the Islamic Salvation Front
and Armed Islamic Group in Algeria, the Shiite revolutionaries of
Iran, and the Taliban. Poverty is their great helper, and the fruit
of their efforts is paranoia. This paranoid Islam, which blames
outsiders, "infidels," for all the ills of Muslim societies, and
whose proposed remedy is the closing of those societies to the rival
project of modernity, is presently the fastest growing version of
Islam in the world.
This is not wholly to go along with Samuel Huntington's thesis about
the clash of civilizations, for the simple reason that the
Islamists' project is turned not only against the West and "the
Jews," but also against their fellow Islamists. Whatever the public
rhetoric, there's little love lost between the Taliban and Iranian
regimes. Dissensions between Muslim nations run at least as deep, if
not deeper, than those nations' resentment of the West.
Nevertheless, it would be absurd to deny that this self-exculpatory,
paranoiac Islam is an ideology with widespread appeal.
Twenty years ago, when I was writing a novel about power struggles
in a fictionalized Pakistan, it was already de rigueur in the Muslim
world to blame all its troubles on the West and, in particular, the
United States. Then as now, some of these criticisms were
well-founded; no room here to rehearse the geopolitics of the cold
war and America's frequently damaging foreign policy "tilts," to use
the Kissinger term, toward (or away from) this or that temporarily
useful (or disapproved-of) nation-state, or America's role in the
installation and deposition of sundry unsavory leaders and regimes.
But I wanted then to ask a question that is no less important now:
Suppose we say that the ills of our societies are not primarily
America's fault, that we are to blame for our own failings? How
would we understand them then? Might we not, by accepting our own
responsibility for our problems, begin to learn to solve them for
ourselves?
Many Muslims, as well as secularist analysts with roots in the
Muslim world, are beginning to ask such questions now. In recent
weeks Muslim voices have everywhere been raised against the
obscurantist hijacking of their religion. Yesterday's hotheads
(among them Yusuf Islam, aka Cat Stevens) are improbably repackaging
themselves as today's pussycats.
An Iraqi writer quotes an earlier Iraqi satirist: "The disease that
is in us, is from us." A British Muslim writes, "Islam has become
its own enemy." A Lebanese friend, returning from Beirut, tells me
that in the aftermath of the attacks on Sept. 11, public criticism
of Islamism has become much more outspoken. Many commentators have
spoken of the need for a Reformation in the Muslim world.
I'm reminded of the way noncommunist socialists used to distance
themselves from the tyrannical socialism of the Soviets;
nevertheless, the first stirrings of this counterproject are of
great significance. If Islam is to be reconciled with modernity,
these voices must be encouraged until they swell into a roar. Many
of them speak of another Islam, their personal, private faith.
The restoration of religion to the sphere of the personal, its
depoliticization, is the nettle that all Muslim societies must grasp
in order to become modern. The only aspect of modernity interesting
to the terrorists is technology, which they see as a weapon that can
be turned on its makers. If terrorism is to be defeated, the world
of Islam must take on board the secularist-humanist principles on
which the modern is based, and without which Muslim countries'
freedom will remain a distant dream.
Salman Rushdie is the author, most
recently, of "Fury: A Novel."