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Rights and Liberties

The Making of the Muslim Reformist Movement

By Ali Eteraz, AlterNet. Posted October 16, 2007.


Reforming Islam is the only way to ensure that its individualist revolution doesn't take a darker turn than it already has.
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I went to a government school in the American south where I had constant interaction with religious supremacists. Such people believe that their moral mandate must be given preference, if not outright dominance. In the south, these people were Christian. Their imperative was to acquire converts who would eventually help make their political programme the law of the land.

Many times I put up with the noise of evangelical youth preaching on the steps with a megaphone. I was condemned to hell in class discussions. English teachers had to tread carefully through 19th century literature so as not to offend. I had to politely reject, and then oppose, Bible study groups.

My brother and I were the only Muslims in the school. We lamented the ceaseless invasion of our personal conscience by "these fundos."

After a couple of years, a number of Muslim students enrolled at the school. They were also upset with the endless Christian proselytising. Since many of them were family friends, they took me aside and urged me to help them set up an Islamic society. Its primary purpose would be to hold Quran study circles, correct anti-Muslim propaganda in textbooks, and - "just like the Christians do" - invite students to learn about their religion. All on school property. Their goal, just like the Christians, was evangelism (the Arabic term is da'wa). They presented two white boys with new Muslim names as proof of their success. As I left, my acquaintances couldn't understand why I wouldn't help them. "It's just da'wa!" they said. "It's a free country!"

There it was, in the microcosmic world of high school, staring at me in the face: the Muslim right. Or, as my brother pejoratively called them: "Falwell Muslims."

Today, it is undeniable that traditionalist clerical Islam - which is quietist, meek, and oriented towards the status quo - has lost its monopoly over Muslims. This is the result of multiple instances of internal dissent over a millenia (as well as colonialism). Led by a mixture of cleric-minded Muslims in the US, UK, and Jordan, traditionalist clerical Islam is trying to make a comeback and become more relevant - like by writing a letter of peace to the Pope. Though such efforts are good, it is a case of too little too late.

Instead, Islam is well on its way towards an individualist revolution; one that no amount of clerical effort can contain.

The most attention-grabbing child of this revolution has been jihadism. However, it is not the most successful. That (dis)honour lies, in my mind, with the Muslim evangelicals - also known as Islamism, the Muslim right, or political Islam. It is a great fallacy to think that jihadists and Islamists are one and the same.

The Muslim right is an ideological movement. Why not? When rationalism is rampant and clerics can't bind Muslims together, ideology is the best thing to obtain mass obedience.

Islamism's ideological aim is secular, ie political power. Yet, despite its secular ends, it makes its political base among a large swath of religious Muslims. With their religious supremacism - which convinces them that everyone else's life would be better off if they adopted the same values as them - these Muslims leave themselves wide open to be preyed upon by savvy propagandists. Thus, hateful tricks like invoking the dangers of homosexuality, attacking sexual liberation, demonising religious minorities and foreign cultures, and censoring anything that smacks of critical thinking, are all used to keep the ideological base stirring.


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Ali Eteraz is an international finance and human rights lawyer.

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hmm
Posted by: daniel1982 on Oct 16, 2007 10:17 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
>Islamism's ideological aim is secular, ie political power.

That is one odd statement. By definition, it is ridiculous.

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» RE: hmm Posted by: Camilla Cracchiolo
» RE: hmm Posted by: Siciliana
» RE: hmm Posted by: johng
Best Wishes...
Posted by: Marshalldoc on Oct 18, 2007 8:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sincere best wishes on your endeavor.

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The idea of a religious left
Posted by: mirimac on Oct 18, 2007 10:06 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
encompasses the ideas of individualism, tolerance, and reason.

We do not live in a time where these three can exist. The scales have tipped to the side of religious extremism, violence, and general disregard for humanity.

How can we even hope to stem the tide of Global Warming, which would take an unprecedented cooperation of World Nations, when the Religious Right, be it Christian, Muslim, or otherwise has such casual disregard for an individual's right for life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Why worry for the survival of the rainforest, when there are people to kill?

The movers and shakers of the world care only for money and power and will stop at nothing to get them. This includes the gun-toting fundamentalist Christian and Muslim Right.

The war between Muslims and Christians (thinly disguised as the War on Terror) reflects the world's turn toward the right. It will eventually swing back toward the center then over to the left - that is if there's anyone remaining by then.

WWIII? Why it's a certainty.

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» Individualism Posted by: Jbuuty
its very nice to know you'r not alone.
Posted by: the.real.gipsy on Oct 18, 2007 10:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I thought the article was fair minded and reflecting the view of many many muslims. I agree hapily with the article. However let us be prudent and carefully avoid thinking that we are the right way and so on. The interpretation of The Koran is multifaceted and therefore the behaviour of people following this or that interpretation will also be varied. Before judging let us think twice.

The clerics in each religion are usually the ones who knowingly or unknowingly create this situations. It is ironical though to find out that "ALL" prophets at all times found amongst his/her worst enemies the clerics of the time.

Beware of clerics. We have the Book. The Book should be, for people who are able to read, the Real Teacher.

Take care.

Peace or Salam or Shalom (the salutation of paradise according to The Koran)

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Well here we have the compelling issue of creating a "Muslim left" and were are the usual suspects?
Posted by: yellow on Oct 18, 2007 11:35 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No where to be found, of course. That is propably because OPELUBOY, PAKIBOY, and the other brave souls are NOT in the least bit interested in progressive thought. They are right wing populist pogromchikim who only wish to heap opprobrium on da Jooooz. I hope I haven't offended anyone. Others are just as confrontational. If Opeluboy and the gang have even one progressive thought to share with the readers of Alternet I would certainly like to hear it.

I will now say of our dear friend Ummrayya just as was said of Strelnikov by a Russian Anarchist chained up for forced labor inside a troop transport train siezed by the Red Army, "Now there's a man!! Support him!!

From Boris Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago

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Well here we have the compelling issue of creating a "Muslim left" and were are the usual suspects?
Posted by: yellow on Oct 18, 2007 11:35 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No where to be found, of course. That is propably because OPELUBOY, PAKIBOY, and the other brave souls are NOT in the least bit interested in progressive thought. They are right wing populist pogromchikim who only wish to heap opprobrium on da Jooooz. I hope I haven't offended anyone. Others are just as confrontational. If Opeluboy and the gang have even one progressive thought to share with the readers of Alternet I would certainly like to hear it.

I will now say of our dear friend Ummrayya just as was said of Strelnikov by a Russian Anarchist chained up for forced labor inside a troop transport train siezed by the Red Army, "Now there's a man!! Support him!!

From Boris Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago

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the hats are the thing
Posted by: mwildfire on Oct 29, 2007 6:51 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The striking thing about this piece is that you could substitute Christian terms throughout the piece--in fact, I've long thought that fundamentalists are indistinguishable, whether Christian, Jewish or Muslim. They all insist on everyone bowing to the One True Way, they all want women covered up and under subjugation, they all want their intolerant brand of religiosity in political control. They do each use a different name for God, pick a different day of the week for their holy day, and wear different hats.
Truth is, market fundamentalists--whether Free Marketeers or Communists--are much the same.
Meanwhile, mainstream Jews, Christians and Muslims have more in common with each other than with the fundies of their own religion. They generally want to coexist peacefully--and they are in the overwhelming majority but are regularly intimidated, silenced and brainwashed by the extremists. Unfortunately, when the fundies of one group--for example, the ones who got Bush into the White House--have power, their acts increase fundamentalism elsewhere. Bin Ladin and Bush are in cohoots, perhaps literally.

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» RE: the hats are the thing Posted by: sausage
Long, long ago in a land far, far away
Posted by: sausage on Oct 29, 2007 6:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There was a Muslim left at one time, and actually not that long ago and its founding was facilitated by Egyptian leader Gamel Abdul Nasser. Nasser was also one of the founders of the Non-Aligned Movement, a loose organization of Southern Hemisphere nations that, for the most part, were former European colonies.

Nasser's greatest crime, in Western, primarily American, eyes, was that as a nationalist he fully endosed a developmentalist view of economic growth for Egypt and the Third World. His government encouraged the growth of state owned industries, keeping international corporations under tight regulatory control, or out of Egypt all together, all the while rejecting the tender mercies of the IMF and the World Bank. Therefore, when Egypt's economy would not let the Nasser government afford should massive developmental projects as the Aswan High Dam on its own, the only recourse was to turn to the old Soviet Union for foreign aid.

Naturally American administrations labeled Nasser and his Non-Aligned allies Communist-sympathizers.

So in Washington's infinite wisdom, the CIA, and its antiCommunist ally the Mossad of the then leftist Labor Party government of Israel, surreptitously funded the activities of whacko Muslim fundamentalist theologian Sayyid Qutb and his creation the Muslim Brotherhood. Qutb and the Muslim Brotherhood, like all good authoritarian religious cults, hated Communism because it was atheistic. Therefore, in the eyes of the Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon administration, the Muslim Brotherhood must be amenable to capitalist corrpution, and therefore good.

What the good shepards of Washington didn't understand that the Muslims findamentalist whack jobs had been so brutalized by colonialism, especially between the two world wars, that they had no particular love for capitalism either. Unlike Christian fundy whackos, like Billy Graham, Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell, Qutb and gang couldn't be corrupted by Coke, Cadillacs and cash.

Like so many other US State Department and CIA monsters created to combat world Communism, the US leaves it to others to clean up its mess. The world would be a better place if the American government had not seen nationalist leaders like Gamel Abdul Nasser as a threat. Certainly it would be a better world if American administrations had made Nasser a friend of the United States.

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thekidde
Posted by: thekidde on Oct 29, 2007 8:27 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Religions are power and control crap. Anyone who thinks otherwise is historically and religiously ignorant. Duh!

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» RE: thekidde Posted by: Jbuuty
Muslim Left
Posted by: Jbuuty on Oct 29, 2007 10:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I appreciate this article very much. It does a decent job of looking at Muslim people as they really are rather than through the lens of stereotypes. The right wing Islamism (what is often called Islamic fundamentalism) is an historical development within Islam, and as the author points out, it is of relatively recent origin. European colonialism, and Euro-American economic imperialism have had a lot to do with this.

Similarly to Christian fundamentalism in the USA, most followers of the Islamists have not subscribed whole-heartedly to the secular ideological aims of its leaders. One, these leaders know how to use the symbols important to people. Two, their world has been changing rapidly, and people feel that the world is out of control. And especially for many Muslims, relative poverty is another factor in the support that Islamists find.

And I don't believe that clerical Islam is quite as dead as the author says. It's still there in many places, especially in Africa and some countries of eastern Asia, though it is being challenged by Islamism.

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the making of the muslim reformation movement
Posted by: moona on Oct 29, 2007 1:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bravo! an open mind! a true seeker! Removing the strictures against heresy will permit true seekers to investigate the Bahai Faith and so lead to the Great Teacher prophesied in all the great religions of the world. And eventually to the world of Peace and justice which we are all seeking.

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» baha'i faith? Posted by: xerxes
An impossible reconciliation?
Posted by: justAnEgg on Oct 29, 2007 2:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The following two points from Mr. Ali Eteraz's program are mutually exclusive: a) opposition to economic protectionism, and b) opposition to all imperial western behavior. Western powers (mostly USA) had toppled many a third country's government in quest for the balance of the two. Even some form of mild Islamic social democracy assumes exposing the society to global powers-that-be. How, then, could you explain to the population that it's about integration into the global community, and not about being dominated by an alien culture?

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Becoming Too Rule Oriented In Order To Define
Posted by: Turkiye on Oct 29, 2007 6:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
exactly what you expect and what the right expects indeed becomes a quagmire.
Ali just needs to move to Turkey, the West, in the European side. Although Abdullah Gul was voted in as President and leans to the right, he is just a notch above a figurehead. The Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, of the AK party makes all governmental decisions.
Due to Kemal Ataturk and his 'New World Order', there is separation of church and state. Pres. Gul's wife may not enter any governmental building, because she wears a head scarf.
In Istanbul, the European side, Izmir, Bursa, Antalya and many cities the women there dress as they wish, work at whatever professional position they care to, college education is a norm for women. All religion's have a right to worship in Turkey, although only a small percentage of the Turkish population are not Muslim they are respected no matter what their belief system is.
Turkey isn't rigid about Muslim's strictly adhereing to prayers 5 times a day, they drink alcohol and clubs all over.

sausage, burqa is worn by Afghani women, Arabs wear niqab and abaya. Iran, women wear hijab, Islamic dress
code, how strict depends on degree of piety.

Someone earlier spoke of Baha'i which is okay if you don't live in Iran, due to persecution, although it is Persian.

Allahaismarladik

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And above ALL…..
Posted by: etisoppa on Oct 29, 2007 6:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And above ALL…..hold as the central umbrella for your effort, the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights, entry into force on 23 March 1976, the day that we can say, we officially became a “civilized” civilization. (I am onto them. So they are not leading away from this).

In our modern world of human rights and individual rights, religion and all other forms of human activities should take place completely within this context of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights entry into force 23 March 1976

http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/a_ccpr.htm


Make sure everyone, understands, appreciates and adheres to The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights entry into force 23 March 1976


What I cannot understand is WHY, WHY is not the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights entry into force 23 March 1976, more central to everyone’s thinking. Can someone offer a plausible explanation ?

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The True Fault Line
Posted by: AlexLawyer on Oct 29, 2007 6:54 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Radical Islam and radical Christianity are mirror images: authoritarian, power-seeking, exclusive, intolerant, homophobic, misogynistic, militant, paranoid and dangerous. It is the collision of the two that is tearing the world apart. So it's not Muslims vs. Christians, Jews and Hindus. It's the moderate, secular majority of all communities against the extremists, who have been allowed to hijack governments and media with their shrill, irrational, impassioned agenda that panders to the worst in human nature. All of the world's moderates need to join forces, across religious, cultural, linguistic and geographical borders, to marginalize and discredit these hatemongering warmongers.

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fdgsr
Posted by: fdgsr on Oct 29, 2007 7:35 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To reform is to reshape and create a new image. Islam itself cannot be reformed or reshaped. The essence of Islam is that there is one God, who is not a human being or a human form. The God of the Musliim allows all that happens in nature. Man alone has a built in faculty, ijtehad, lacking in all other creatures. Instinctive behavior is dictated by built in genetics. Man, with the ability to reason and to form ideas beyond his sensory perceptive powers, represents God's favorite creature with whom God can speak through his 'Archangel', Gabriel.

Yet, man is with original sin of deception. Passive deception in the sin of contamination or self-deception, and active deception in the sin of deceiving others. Belief is a process of deception in which a public show is made to justify the self-deception. The external exhibition of deception is ritual and dogma with a solidifying creedal adherence to the group deception.

Liberal Islam promotes ijtehad in its total form. Where fundamentalists wallow in ritual and dogma, liberalists bath in the freedom of ijtehad. But ijtehad is not free in the common sense of the term, that anything goes. Allah allows no wrong against Truth, but forgives humans for honest error by imperfect minds. No mistake or deception is forgiven. With ijtehad error and mistake can be recognized and rectified. There is room for recognition of error in Islam. After all, the Prophet, PBUH, was a man, not God. The Prophet never claimed power of God or to be a helper of God. Only one essential message was delivered through the Prophet, the Messenger.

When Muslims can recognize the God proclaimed status of the Prophet, PBUH, a man subject to error and mistake who will undergo final judgement by God, they can move on to liberal Islam and perhaps union with liberals in other faiths.

Of the five pillars of the faith, only one is unforgiving with no exception, the Shahada. The Shahada is the pedistal of faith, all the others are pillars to support the peripheral issues. Each of the others have exceptions in circumstantial fact. Only the Shahada is rooted in ijtehad and intellectual honesty. Only the Shahada comes from the reasoning capacity of the mind. All else is ritual, dogma and creed. There are idols of the mind as well as material objects idolized in ritual and dogma. Liberal Islam would have no such idols to restrict the power and glory of Allah and the true freedom of the mind of man, subject only to Truth, who is God, Al Haq. There is no other god but Allah.

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