The Western Mind of Radical Islam
Daniel Pipes
Copyright
(c) 1995 First Things 58 (December 1995): 18-23.
Fat'hi ash-Shiqaqi, a well-educated young
Palestinian living in Damascus, recently boasted of his
familiarity with European literature. He told an interviewer
how he had read and enjoyed Shakespeare, Dostoyevsky, Chekhov,
Sartre, and Eliot. He spoke of his particular passion for
Sophocles' Oedipus Rex, a work he read ten times in
English translation "and each time wept bitterly." Such
acquaintance with world literature and such exquisite
sensibility would not be of note except for two points-that
Shiqaqi was, until his assassination in Malta a few weeks ago,
an Islamist (or what is frequently called a "fundamentalist"
Muslim) and that he headed Islamic Jihad, the arch- terrorist
organization that has murdered dozens of Israelis over the
last two years.
Shiqaqi's familiarity with things Western fits a common
pattern. The brother of Eyad Ismail, one of the World Trade
Center bombers recently extradited from Jordan, said of him,
"He loved everything American from cowboy movies to
hamburgers." His sister recalled his love of U.S. television
and his saying, "I want to live in America forever." The
family, she commented, "always considered him a son of
America." His mother confirmed that "he loves the United
States." Hasan at-Turabi, the effective ruler of Sudan, the
man behind the notorious "ghost houses" and the brutal
persecution of his country's large Christian minority, often
flaunts his knowledge of the West, telling a French
interviewer that most militant Islamic leaders, like himself,
are "from the Christian, Western culture. We speak your
languages." In a statement that sums up this whole outlook, an
Islamist in Washington asserted, "I listen to Mozart; I read
Shakespeare; I watch the Comedy Channel; and I also believe in
the implementation of the Shari`a [Islamic sacred law]."
This pattern points to a paradox: the very intellectuals
intent on marching the Muslim world back to the seventh
century also excel in Western ways and seem very much to
appreciate at least some of them. How does this happen? What
does it indicate about their present strengths and future
course?
Islamist leaders tend to be well acquainted with the West,
having lived there, learned its languages, and studied its
cultures. Turabi of the Sudan has advanced degrees from the
University of London and the Sorbonne; he also spent a summer
in the United States, touring the country on a U.S.
taxpayer-financed program for foreign student leaders. Abbasi
Madani, a leader of Algeria's Islamic Salvation Front (FIS),
received a doctorate in education from the University of
London. His Tunisian counterpart, Rashid al-Ghannushi, spent a
year in France and since 1993 makes his home in Great Britain.
Necmettin Erbakan, Turkey's leading militant politician,
studied in Germany. Mousa Mohamed Abu Marzook, the head of
Hamas' political committee, has lived in the United States
since 1980, has a doctorate in engineering from Louisiana
State University, and has been classified as a permanent U.S.
resident since 1990. Though for years he was able to elude law
enforcement, Abu Marzook was recently arrested at a New York
airport on his way into the country to register his son in an
American school.
Indeed, the experience of living in the West often turns
indifferent Muslims into Islamists. Discussing Mehdi Bazargan,
an Iranian engineer who spent the years 1928-35 in France,
Hamid Dabashi dissects the process many Muslim students
undergo:
Beginning with the conscious or unconscious,
articulated or mute, premise that they ought to remain
firmly attached to their Islamic consciousness, they begin
to admire "The Western" achievements. . . . They recognize a
heightened state of ideological self-awareness on the part
of "The West" that they identify as the source and cause of
its achievements. They then look back at their own society
where such technological achievements were lacking, a fact
they attribute, in turn, to the absence of that heightened
state of ideological self-awareness. The key
notion here, the French analyst Olivier Roy explains, is the
rather surprising idea that ideologies are "the key to the
West's technical development." This assumption leads Islamists
"to develop a modern political ideology based on Islam, which
they see as the only way to come to terms with the modern
world and the best means of confronting foreign imperialism."
Some of the leading figures fit this pattern. The Egyptian
Sayyid Qutb went to the United States in 1948 as an admirer of
things American, then "returned" to Islam during his two years
resident there, becoming one of the most influential Islamist
thinkers of our time. `Ali Shari`ati of Iran lived five years
in Paris, 1960-65; from this experience came the key ideas of
the Islamic Revolution. In other cases, Islamist thinkers do
not actually live in the West but absorb its ways at a
distance by learning a Western language and immersing
themselves in Western ideas, as did the Indo-Pakistani
journalist, thinker, and politician Sayyid Abul A'la Mawdudi
(1903-79). In other cases, reading Western works in
translation does the trick. Morteza Motahhari, a leading
acolyte of the Ayatollah Khomeini, made as thorough a study of
Marxism as possible in the Persian language.
Many of Islamism's intellectual lights also share a
background of technical accomplishment. Erbakan quickly rose
to the top of the engineering profession in Turkey as a full
professor at Istanbul Technical University, director at a
factory producing diesel motors, and even head of the
country's Chamber of Commerce. Layth Shubaylat, a Jordanian
firebrand, is also president of the Jordanian Engineers
Association. These men take special pride in being able to
challenge the West in the area of its greatest strength.
Actual terrorists also tend to be science-oriented, though
less accomplished. Ramzi Yusuf, the accused mastermind of the
World Trade Center bombing, is an electronics engineer and
explosives expert with an advanced degree from Great Britain;
Nidal Ayyad was an up-and-coming chemical engineer at Allied
Signal; and Eyad Ismail studied computers and engineering at
Wichita State University. This same pattern holds in the
Middle East: Salah `Ali `Uthman, one of three terrorists who
attacked a bus in Jerusalem in July 1993, was a student of
computer science at the University in Gaza. The most notorious
anti-Zionist terrorist of recent years is Yahya Ayyash,
nicknamed "The Engineer." Many Islamist Egyptians who engage
in violence against the regime have science degrees. The
Islamist leaders are not peasants living in the unchanging
countryside but modern, thoroughly urbanized individuals, many
of them university graduates. Notwithstanding all their talk
about recreating the society of the Prophet Muhammad,
Islamists are modern individuals at the forefront of coping
with modern life.
In contrast to this familiarity with Western ways, the
Islamists are distant from their own culture. Turabi admitted
to a French interviewer, "I know the history of France better
than the history of Sudan; I love your culture, your painters,
your musicians." Having found Islam on their own as adults,
many Islamists are ignorant of their own history and
traditions. Some of "the new generation," Martin Kramer notes,
"are born-again Muslims, ill-acquainted with Islamic
tradition." Tunisia's Minister of Religion Ali Chebbi goes
further, saying that they "ignore the fundamental facts of
Islam." Like Mawdudi, these autodidacts mix a bit of this and
that, as Sayyed Vali Reza Nasr explains:
Mawdudi's formulation was by no means rooted in
traditional Islam. He adopted modern ideas and values,
mechanisms, procedures, and idioms, weaving them into an
Islamic fabric. . . . He sought not to resurrect an
atavistic order but to modernize the traditional conception
of Islamic thought and life. His vision represented a clear
break with Islamic tradition and a fundamentally new reading
of Islam which took its cue from modern thought.
On reflection, this lack of knowledge should not
be surprising. Islamists are individuals educated in modern
ways who seek solutions to modern problems. The Prophet may
inspire them, but they approach him through the filter of the
late twentieth century. In the process, they unintentionally
substitute Western ways for those of traditional Islam.
Traditional Islam-the immensely rewarding faith of nearly a
billion adherents-developed a civilization that for over a
millennium provided order to the lives of young and old, rich
and poor, sophisticate and ignorant, Moroccan and Malaysian.
Alienated from this tradition, Islamists seem willing to
abandon it in a chimerical effort to return to the pure and
simple ways of Muhammad. To connect spiritually to the first
years of Islam, when the Prophet was alive and the faith was
new, they seek to skip back thirteen centuries. The most
mundane issues inspire them to recall the Prophet's times.
Thus, an author portrays the "survival tactics" employed by
Muslim students at American universities to retain their
Islamic identity as "much like the early Muslims during the
Hijra [Muhammad's exile from Mecca to Medina]."
Islamists see themselves, however, not as tradition-bound
but as engaged in a highly novel enterprise. According to
Iran's spiritual leader, `Ali Hoseyni Khamene'i, "The Islamic
system that the imam [Khomeni] created . . . has not existed
in the course of history, except at the beginning [of Islam]."
Ghannushi similarly asserts that "Islam is ancient but the
Islamist movement is recent." In rejecting a whole millennium,
the Islamists throw out a great deal of their own societies,
from the great corpus of Qur'anic scholarship to the finely
worked interpretations of law.
On the contrary, they admire efficient factories and
armies. The Muslim world seems backward to them and they
urgently seek its overhaul through the application of modern
means. When this process goes slowly, they blame the West for
withholding its technology. Thus, `Ali Akbar Mohtashemi, the
Iranian arch-radical, plaintively bemoans that "the United
States and the West will never give us the technology" to
pursue what he quaintly calls "the science of
industrialization."
The Islamists' goal turns out to be not a genuinely Islamic
order but an Islamic-flavored version of Western reality. This
is particularly apparent in four areas: religion, daily life,
politics, and the law. It's certainly not their intent, but
militant Muslims have introduced some distinctly Christian
notions into their Islam. Traditional Islam was characterized
by informal organizations. Virtually every major
decision-establishing a canonical text of the Qur'an,
excluding philosophical inquiry, or choosing which religious
scholars to heed-was reached in an unstructured and consensual
way. This has been the genius of the religion, and it meant
that rulers who tried to control the religious institution
usually failed.
Islamists, ignorant of this legacy, have set up church-like
structures. The trend began in Saudi Arabia, where the
authorities built a raft of new institutions. Already in 1979,
Khalid Duren wrote about the emergence of a "priestly
hierarchy with all its churchly paraphernalia":
A number of religious functionaries have come
into being whose posts were previously unheard of, for
example: the Secretary of the Muslim World League, the
Secretary General of the Islamic Conference, the Rector of
the Islamic University in Medina, and so [on] and so forth.
For the first time in history the imam of the Ka'ba has been
sent on tour of foreign countries as if he were an Apostolic
nuncio. The Islamic Republic of Iran soon
followed the Saudi model and went beyond it, Shahrough Akhavi
explains, to institute a Catholic-style control of the clergy:
The centralization that has occurred in the
religious institution in Iran is unprecedented, and actions
have been taken that resemble patterns in the ecclesiastical
church tradition familiar in the West. For example, in 1982,
Khomeini encouraged the "defrocking" and "excommunication"
of his chief rival, Ayatollah Muhammad Kazim Shari`atmadari
(d. 1986), although no machinery for this has ever existed
in Islam. Other trends, such as centralized control over
budgets, appointments to the professoriate, curricula in the
seminaries, the creation of religious militias, monopolizing
the representation of interests, and mounting a Kulturkampf
in the realm of the arts, the family, and other social
issues tell of the growing tendency to create an "Islamic
episcopacy" in Iran. Even more striking, Akhavi
notes, is how Khomeini made himself pope:
Khomeini's practice of issuing authoritative
fatwas, obedience to which is made compulsory, comes close
to endowing the top jurist with powers not dissimilar to
those of the pope in the Catholic Church. After all,
compliance with a particular cleric's fatwas in the
past had not been mandatory. In creating this
faux Christian hierarchy, Islamists invented something more
Western than Islamic. In similar fashion, Islamists have
turned Friday into a Sabbath, something it had not previously
been. Traditionally, Friday was a day of congregating for
prayer, not a day of rest. Indeed, the whole idea of the
Sabbath is alien to the vehemently monotheistic spirit of
Islam, which deems the notion of God needing a day of rest
falsely anthropomorphic. Instead, the Qur'an instructs Muslims
to "leave off business" only while praying; once finished,
they should "disperse through the land and seek God's
bounty"-in other words, engage in commerce. A day of rest so
smacks of Jewish and Christian practice that some traditional
Islamic authorities actually discouraged taking Friday off. In
most places and times, Muslims did work on Fridays,
interrupted only by the communal service.
In modern times, Muslim states imitated Europe and adopted
a day of rest. The Ottoman Empire began closing government
offices on Thursdays, a religiously neutral day, in 1829.
Christian imperialists imposed Sunday as the weekly day of
rest throughout their colonies, a practice many Muslim rulers
adopted as well. Upon independence, virtually every Muslim
government inherited the Sunday rest and maintained it. S. D.
Goitein, the foremost scholar of this subject, notes that
Muslim states did so "in response to the exigencies of modern
life and in imitation of Western precedent."
Recently, as the Sunday Sabbath came to be seen as too
Western, Muslim rulers asserted their Islamic identities by
instituting Friday as the day off. Little did they realize
that, in so doing, they perpetuated a specifically
Judeo-Christian custom. And as Fridays have turned into a
holiday (for family excursions, spectator sports, etc.),
Muslims have imitated the Western weekend.
Perhaps the most striking Westernisms Islamists have
introduced are associated with women. Islamists actually
espouse an outlook more akin to Western-style feminism than
anything in traditional Islam. Traditional Muslim men
certainly did not take pride in the freedom and independence
of their women, but
Islamists do. Ahmad al-Banna, the leader of Egypt's Muslim
Brethren, adopts a feminist outlook that leads him to
reinterpret Muslim history according to Western standards.
"Muslim women have been free and independent for fifteen
centuries. Why should we follow the example of Western women,
so dependent on their husbands in material matters?"
Traditional Muslim men took pride in their women staying
home; in well- to-do households, they almost never left its
confines. Hasan at-Turabi has something quite different in
mind: "Today in Sudan, women are in the army, in the police,
in the ministries, everywhere, on the same footing as men."
Turabi proudly speaks of the Islamic movement having helped
"liberate women." Following the adage that "the best mosque
for women is the inner part of the house," traditional women
prayed at home, and female quarters in mosques were slighted;
but Islamist women regularly attend public services and new
mosques consequently allot far more space to women's sections.
For centuries, a woman's veil served primarily to help her
retain her virtue; today, it serves the feminist goal of
facilitating a career. Muslim women who wear "Islamic dress,"
writes a Western analyst,
are usually well educated, often in the most
prestigious university faculties of medicine, engineering,
and the sciences, and their dress signifies that although
they pursue an education and career in the public sphere,
they are religious, moral women. Whereas other women are
frequently harassed in the public sphere, such women are
honored and even feared. By the late 1980s, Islamic dress
had become the norm for middle-class women who do not want
to compromise their reputation by their public activities.
Boutiques offer Parisian-style fashions adopted to Islamic
modesty standards. The establishment of an
Islamic order in Iran has, ironically perhaps, opened many
opportunities outside the house for pious women. They work in
the labor force and famously serve in the military. A
parliamentary leader boasts, not without reason, about Iran
having the best feminist record in the Middle East, and points
to the numbers of women in higher education. In keeping with
this spirit, one of Khomeini's granddaughters attended law
school and then lived in London with her husband, a cardiac
surgeon in training; another organizes women's sporting
events.
If the veil once symbolized a woman's uncontrollable (and
therefore destructive) sexuality, militants see it as the sign
of her competence. Turabi declares, "I am for equality between
the sexes," and explains: "A woman who is not veiled is not
the equal of men. She is not looked on as one would look on a
man. She is looked at to see if she is beautiful, if she is
desirable. When she is veiled, she is considered a human
being, not an object of pleasure, not an erotic image."
Curiously, some Islamists see the veil representing not
careers and equality, but something quite different: positive
sexuality. Shabbir Akhtar, a British writer, sees the veil
serving "to create a truly erotic culture in which one
dispenses with the need for the artificial excitement that
pornography provides." Traditional Muslims, it hardly needs
emphasizing, did not see veils as a substitute for
pornography.
Traditional Islam emphasized man's relations with God while
playing down his relations to the state. Law loomed very
large, politics small. Over the centuries, pious Muslims
avoided the government, which meant almost nothing to them but
trouble (taxes, conscription, corvee labor). On the other
hand, they made great efforts to live by the Shari`a.
Islamists, however, make politics the heart of their
program. They see Islam less as the structure in which
individuals make their lives and more as an ideology for
running whole societies. Declaring "Islam is the solution,"
they hold with Khamene'i of Iran that Islam "is rich with
instructions for ruling a state, running an economy,
establishing social links and relationships among the people,
and instructions for running a family." For Islamists, Islam
represents the path to power. As a very high Egyptian official
observes, to them "Islam is not precepts or worship, but a
system of government." Olivier Roy finds the inspiration to be
far more mundane than spiritual: "For many of them, the return
to religion has been brought about through their experience in
politics, and not as a result of their religious belief."
Revealingly, militants compare Islam not to other religions
but to other ideologies. "We are not socialist, we are not
capitalist, we are Islamic," says Anwar Ibrahim of Malaysia.
Egypt's Muslim Brethren assert they are neither socialists nor
capitalists, but "Muslims." This comparison may seem
overblown-socialism and capitalism are universal, militant
Islam limited to Muslims-but it is not, for the militants
purvey their ideology to non-Muslims too. In one striking
instance, Khomeini in January 1989 sent a letter to Mikhail
Gorbachev asserting the universality of Islam. Noting the
collapse of Communist ideology, he implored the Soviet
president not to turn westward for a replacement but to Islam.
I strongly urge that in breaking down the walls
of Marxist fantasies you do not fall into the prison of the
West and the Great Satan. . . . I call upon you seriously to
study and conduct research into Islam. . . . I openly
announce that the Islamic Republic of Iran, as the greatest
and most powerful base of the Islamic world, can easily help
fill up the ideological vacuum of your system. As
interpreted by a leading Iranian official, this letter
"intended to put an end to . . . views that we are only
speaking about the world of Islam. We are speaking for the
world." It may even be the case-Khomeini only hints at
this-that Islam for him had become so disembodied from faith
that he foresaw a non-Muslim like Gorbachev adopting Islamic
ways without becoming a Muslim.
Even as the militants pay homage to Islam's sacred law,
they turn it into a Western-style code, and three age-old
characteristics of the Shari`a disappear: its elaboration by
independent scholars, its precedence over state interests, and
its application to persons rather than territories.
Through the centuries, jurists wrote and interpreted the
Islamic law on their own, with little control by governments.
These jurists early on established that they were answerable
to God, not to the prince. Joseph Schact, a leading scholar of
this subject, explains: "The caliph, though otherwise the
absolute chief of the community of Muslims, had not the right
to legislate but only to make administrative regulations with
the limits laid down by the sacred Law." Rulers did try to
dictate terms to jurists but failed-in the years 833-849, four
successive caliphs imposed their understanding of the Qur'an's
nature (that it was created by God, as opposed to the
religious scholars, who said it had always existed); despite
energetic attempts by the caliphs (including the flogging of a
very eminent religious authority), the effort failed, and with
it the pretensions of politicians to define the contents of
Islam.
The jurists retained full control of Islamic law until the
nineteenth century, when the British, French, and other
European rulers codified the Shari`a as a European-style body
of state law. Independent Muslim states, such as the Ottoman
Empire, followed the European lead and also codified the
Shari`a. With independence, all the Muslim rulers maintained
the European habit of keeping the law firmly under state
control; by the 1960s, only in Saudi Arabia did it remain
autonomous.
Starting in 1969, Mu`ammar al-Qadhdhafi of Libya started
the new wave of expanding the Shar`i content of state laws
(for example, in the criminal statutes). He did so as ruler,
using the state apparatus to compel jurists to carry out his
orders. Islamists in many countries then emulated Qadhdhafi,
giving the state authority over the Shari`a even as they
extended its purview. They made no effort to revert to the
jurists' law of old, but continued practices begun by the
European powers.
When Islamists do on rare occasions protest this state
domination of the law, it carries little conviction. Turabi
remarks that "Islamic government is not total because it is
Islam that is a total way of life, and if you reduce it to
government, then government would be omnipotent, and that is
not Islam." Turabi's enormous power in the Sudan makes it hard
to take this critique seriously. Islamists accept Western ways
because, first, they know the imperial system far better than
the traditional Muslim one, and so perpetuate its customs.
Second, reverting to the traditional Muslim way would, Ann
Mayer of the Wharton School points out, "entail that
governments relinquish the power that they had gained over
legal systems when European-style codified law was originally
adopted."
The state takeover of law invariably causes problems. In
the traditional arrangement, the jurists jealously maintained
their independence in interpreting the law. They insisted on
God's imperatives taking absolute priority over those of the
ruler. Such acts as prayer, the fast of Ramadan, or the
pilgrimage to Mecca, they insisted, must never be subjected to
the whims of despots. Jurists got their way, for hardly a
single king or president, not even so ardent a secularist as
Turkey's Kemal Ataturk, had the temerity to interfere with the
Lord's commandments.
But Ayatollah Khomeini did. In January 1988, he issued an
edict flatly contravening this ancient Islamic assumption. In
a remarkable but little-noted document, the ayatollah asserted
that "the government is authorized unilaterally . . . to
prevent any matter, be it spiritual or material, that poses a
threat to its interests." This means that, "for Islam, the
requirements of government supersede every tenet, including
even those of prayer, fasting, and pilgrimage to Mecca."
Subordinating these acts to raison d'etat has the effect of
diminishing the Shari`a beyond recognition.
Khomeini-a classically educated scholar, an authority on
Islamic law, and an eminent religious figure-justified this
edict on the grounds that the interests of the Islamic
Republic were synonymous with the interests of Islam itself.
But this hardly explains so radical and unprecedented a step.
The real reason lies in the fact that, like countless other
twentieth-century rulers, he sought control of his country's
spiritual life. Khomeini may have looked medieval but he was a
man of his times, deeply affected by totalitarian ideas
emanating from the West.
In traditional Islam (as in Judaism), laws apply to the
individual, not (as in the West) to the territory. It matters
not whether a Muslim lives here or there, in the homeland or
in the diaspora; he must follow the Shari`a. Conversely, a
non-Muslim living in a Muslim country need not follow its
directives. For example, a Muslim may not drink whiskey
whether he lives in Tehran or Los Angeles; and a non-Muslim
may imbibe in either place. This leads to complex situations
whereby one set of rules applies to a Muslim thief who robs a
Muslim, another to a Christian who robs a Christian, and so
forth. The key is who you are, not where you are.
In contrast, European notions of law are premised on
jurisdictions. Commit a crime in this town or state and you
get one punishment, another in the next town over. Even
highways have their own rules. What counts is where you are,
not who you are.
Ignorant of the spirit underlying the Shari`a, Islamists
enforce it along territorial not personal lines; Turabi
declares that Islam "accepts territory as the basis of
jurisdiction." As a result, national differences have emerged.
The Libyan government lashes all adulterers. Pakistan lashes
unmarried offenders and stones married ones. The Sudan
imprisons some and hangs others. Iran has even more
punishments, including head shaving and a year's banishment.
In the hands of Islamists, the Shari`a becomes just a variant
of Western, territorial law.
This new understanding most dramatically affects
non-Muslims, whose millennium-old exclusion from the Shari`a
is over; now they must live as virtual Muslims. `Umar `Abd
ar-Rahman, the Egyptian sheikh in the American jail, is
adamant on this subject: "It is very well known that no
minority in any country has its own laws." `Abd al-`Aziz ibn
Baz, the Saudi religious leader, calls on non-Muslims to fast
during Ramadan. In Iran, foreign women may not wear nail
polish-on the grounds that it leaves them unclean for
(Islamic) prayer. Entering the country, female visitors are
provided with gasoline-soaked rags to clean their varnished
nails. An Islamist party in Malaysia wants to regulate how
much time unrelated Chinese men and women may spend alone
together.
This new interpretation of Islamic law creates enormous
problems. Rather than for the most part leaving non-Muslims
alone, as did traditional Islam, Islamism intrudes into their
lives, fomenting enormous resentment and sometimes leading to
violence. Palestinian Christians who raise pigs find their
animals mysteriously poisoned. The million or two Christians
living in the northern, predominantly Muslim, region of the
Sudan must comply with virtually all the Shar`i regulations.
In the southern Sudan, Islamic law prevails wherever the
central government rules, although "certain" Shar`i provisions
are not applied there; should the government conquer the whole
South, all the provisions would probably go into effect, an
expectation that does much to keep alive a forty-year civil
war.
Despite themselves, the Islamists are Westernizers. Even in
rejecting the West, they accept it. However reactionary in
intent, Islamism imports not just modern but Western ideas and
institutions. The Islamist dream of expunging the Western ways
from Muslim life, in short, cannot succeed.
The resulting hybrid is more robust than it seems.
Opponents of militant Islam often dismiss it as a regressive
effort to avoid modern life and comfort themselves with the
prediction that it is doomed to be left behind as
modernization takes place. But this expectation seems
mistaken; because it appeals most directly to Muslims
contending with the challenges of modernity, Islamism's
potential grows as do its numbers. Current trends suggest that
it will remain a force for some time to come.
Daniel Pipes is the Editor of the Middle East
Quarterly
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