| #09
- Islam As Other What
is it about Islam that motivates such fervent enthusiasm
among some adherents? Most media are primed to present
Islam as a problem; I've been curious about Islam
as a solution.
As the Middle East dilemma
continues to worsen, the pressures increase to choose
sides and resort to sweeping generalizations and stereotypes.
Indeed, members of the domestic foreign policy academy
like Amos Perlmutter, editor of the Journal of Strategic
Studies, are busy promulgating the view that the U.S.
is in the midst of a "general Islamic war waged
against the West, Christianity, modern capitalism,
Zionism and communism all at once." Perlmutter
cast Iran and Libya in the same conspiratorial political
roles as the Soviet Union and Cuba, and advocates
that the U.S. "wage limited war against Iran's
surrogates, clients and allies in much the same way
we can battle the surrogates of the USSR and Cuba."
("Containment Strategy for the Islamic Holy War",
Wall Street Journal, Oct. 4, 1984)
Islam, like communism, is thus
being cast as a hostile, amorphous Other with which
we have little in common and to which our best response
is war. No matter that it is hardly clear whether
what we are defending is something vague like "the
American Way of Life" or more specific, like
the U.S. government or U.S.-based multinationals.
All that seems certain is that "They" (vaguely
defined) are out to get "Us" (vaguely defined).
With the administration in
Washington already inclined to present complex phenomena
in black and white terms, and its national constituency
ever sensitive to humiliation, it is high time to
examine whether Islam is indeed the Enemy, or perhaps
a kind of mirror with which the West can evaluate
its own fears and values.
To presume to speak of Islam
or any other religion or ideology with millions of
adherents is, at best, to risk incoherence. As Edward
Said underscores in Covering Islam, Islam is not a
monolithic entity for which a few pat generalizations
are a sufficient description. Rather, there are a
multitude of Islams: Muslims in Saudi Arabia, Malaysia,
Pakistan, and the U.S.; Sunni Muslims, Shi'ite Muslims,
radical Muslims, conservative Muslims, Muslims now
and Muslims 1,000 years ago.
All Muslims "submit to
Allah" (which is the meaning of the Arabic word
'Islam'), and are members of the Ummah, the universal
body of believers. But they are also variously affected
by local customs, different schools of Islamic law,
competing leaders and political crises. Once this
fact sinks in, the prospect of providing a meaningful
overview of Islam seems difficult indeed. Yet, despite
their differences, 800 million Muslims do hold enough
in common that a general discussion of Islam is not
totally pointless.
The first step toward understanding
something alien is the discovery of some common element
shared by both you and the Other. In my own case,
there were at least two instances of stumbling upon
aspects of Islam that made me stop in my tracks and
take a second look. The first of these was my reading
of some of the writings of Sufism, the mystical current
within Islam. These documents – stories, biographies,
poetry, and sermons – had a universal quality
which leapt across the centuries and oceans separating
them from me. They provided a hint that there was
more to Islam than I had originally thought.
The second instance was more
recent and not connected to spiritual matters at all.
This was my coming upon an issue of Inquiry, a British
magazine published by and for Muslims. Once I got
past the occasional slips in grammar and proofing
which reminded me that English was not the first language
of most of the journal's writers, I found an intriguing
window into the heated discussions going on in Islamic
intellectual circles.
Much to my surprise, as I explored
back issues of the magazine, I discovered articles
on Nuclear Winter, appropriate technology, the New
Alchemy Institute, and the Club of Rome amidst more
likely articles on subjects like Iran's revolution,
Lebanon, Islamic calligraphy, and Pakistani banking.
Though Inquiry, like Sufism,
should not be taken as representative of everyday,
mainstream Islam, it was apparent to me that there
are currents within that ocean of believers that run
close to our shores. This is particularly difficult
to keep in mind when kidnappings, car bombs, and civil
wars shape our usual news of matters Islamic. That
the Ayotollah Khomeini has cast the U.S. in the role
of the "Great Satan" is not to be ignored,
but neither is the whole picture.
We would do well to remember
that attacks on 'the West' or the U.S. are not attacks
on us personally – and are not necessarily attacks
on everything Western. Upon further investigation,
it turns out that much of what is most objectionable
to traditional Islamic cultures are those aspects
of modern life which many American readers are also
likely to criticize: rampant materialism, the whirlwinds
of fashion, hedonism, the economic exploitation of
the Third World, and the intervention of the Superpowers
in local political disputes.
This is not to say that if
you scratch a mullah you'll find an unreconstructed
granola-head underneath. Nor is it to condone desperate
measures like plane hijackings or suicide attacks
which grow out of local politics. Still, I can't help
thinking (to turn Amos Perlmutter's quote on its head)
that a worldview that is accused of waging war on
"the West, Christianity, modern capitalism, Zionism
and communism all at once" must have something
worth listening to.
If a vital mystical tradition
and a wariness of rampant modernization are the aspects
of Islam that are most immediately appealing, what
of other aspects that are more threatening?
In confronting Islam, the West
is, above all, brought face to face with its own past
– echoes of earlier centuries when the eternal
took precedence over the temporal, and religion was
central to social existence, interpenetrating the
rhythms and gestures of daily life. Such immersion
in the humble satisfactions of religion is reminiscent
of both the Church-dominated Middle Ages and the colonial
days of Puritans and Quakers, neither of which is
likely to produce much nostalgic enthusiasm these
days.
Islam, which eschews monasticism,
nevertheless instructs its followers to pray five
times daily at prescribed times, a schedule of devotion
paralleled in the West, these days, only at monasteries
and convents. The average Westerner, witnessing the
ordinary spectacle of a crowd on the street stopping
on schedule to kneel and pray, is brought up short
– as if having wandered by mistake into a convention
of monks. The unselfconscious faith of the crowd contrasts
with our own sophisticated faithlessness, making us
ill at ease.
Or again, in our meeting with
Qur'anic morality, where specific acts are forbidden
in no uncertain terms and strict punishments spelled
out, we're flung up against the very foundations of
the modern, mobile West where freedom consists of
keeping as many constraints as possible at arm's length.
No alcohol? No pork chops? No bikinis? One can feel
the shudders reverberating off the walls of shopping
malls across the nation.
Yet here, too, the popular
cliché is not always accurate. The Chador (full-body
veil) worn by women in Iran is not a universal Muslim
custom, for instance, and both the Qur'an and the
Sharia (Islamic Law) turn out to have sufficient room
for a variety of interpretations on numerous points.
Nevertheless, the situation of women in Islam is perhaps
the main sticking point for most non-Muslims.
While anti-Zionist or anti-Israeli
sentiment is not inherently Islamic, it is nearly
universal as a component of foreign policy for most
Islamic countries and is echoed in most Muslim publications
that touch on political issues. This can be another
sticking point for Americans who have grown accustomed
to supporting Israel in any and every conflict.
If Islam were solely a foreign
phenomenon thousands of miles away, it might be possible
to not in abstract appreciation (or hostility) and
let it go at that. However, in recent years, Islam
has seen significant growth in North America itself.
A small portion of the growth could be attributed
to domestic interest in Sufism, and a larger portion
to the immigration of Muslims from abroad. But the
most significant home-grown brand of Islam has been
what began as the Black Muslim movement.
Originally founded by Elijah
Muhammad as an organization espousing an unorthodox
blend of black separatism, radical politics, entrepreneurship,
and Islam, the Nation of Islam proved puzzling to
orthodox Muslims abroad. Malcolm X, the most famous
leader in the movement, eventually abandoned the Nation
of Islam for a more traditional Islam after traveling
to Makkah and being impressed by the unity of Muslims
irrespective of race. When Elijah Muhammad died and
the movement's leadership fell to W. Deen Muhammad,
the latter began to slowly make changes to the group
along more orthodox lines. Meanwhile, a section of
the followers of Elijah Muhammad organized themselves
behind Louis Farrakhan, who continues to follow the
teachings of his mentor.
In 1985, when W. Deen Muhammad
disbanded the American Muslim Mission (formerly the
Nation of Islam) and instructed his followers to consider
themselves members of the world Islamic Ummah (body
of believers), he put the finishing touches on this
process – taking the Black Muslim movement away
from separatism and away from defining itself according
to race. The new decentralized mosques across the
U.S. may still look to W. Deen Muhammad for guidance,
but they are financially and organizationally on their
own. This marks a new stage for a movement which has
succeeded in bringing Islam to inner cities and prisons
where other religions were encountering stiff resistance.
With the barriers now down
between the followers of W. Deen Muhammad and other
American Muslims, it is likely that Islam will continue
to grow here at home. I hope that our understanding
of it keeps pace with that growth.
- Jay Kinney
Key Terms and Names
In order to understand Islam
it is necessary to know the meaning of certain key
terms and the identity of some proper names. Most
of them are in the Arabic language, and there is often
no equivalent in English or in other tongues.
Islam means submission, that
is, submission to the will of God, the characteristic
attitude of members of the Islamic faith.
Muslim (often misspelled Moslem)
is based on the same Arabic root as Islam (s-l-m)
and means 'one who submits to God', that is, a believer
in Islam. It is incorrect and objectionable to call
members of this religion Muhammadans, as they do not
worship Muhammad in the way Christians worship Christ.
Allah is the Supreme Being,
the one and only God. According to Islam, Allah is
the same God as that is worshipped by the Jews and
Christians, and Arabic-speaking Christians also use
this name when referring to God.
Muhammad is the prophet or
apostle of God to the Arabs of the 7th century (According
to the Qur'an Muhammad is the Prophet and Messenger
of Allah to all mankind not only to the Arabs. [III&E]).
He was born in Arabia about 570 and died in 632. According
to Islam, he was the last of a line of prophets, including
many of those of the Old Testament and Jesus.
The Qur'an (also spelled Koran,
Coran, Alkoran, etc.) is the holy scripture of Islam,
revealed by Allah to Muhammad. The word "Qur'an"
means "readings" or "recitations."
Makkah (often misspelled Mecca)
is the caravan town where Muhammad was born and raised.
It is near the west coast of Arabia, about 45 miles
(72 kilometers) from the seaport of Jeddah, and about
midway between the northern and southern ends of the
Red Sea.
The Ka'ba, meaning "cube"
in Arabic, is the principal shrine of Islam, located
in Makkah. It is the center of the Muslim pilgrimage
and the point towards which all Muslims the world
over face in prayer.
Sunna means "tradition"
and is the sum of the sayings and actions of Muhammad
as recalled by his companions and followers. As such
it is second only to the Qur'an as a source of Islamic
belief and practices. Sunna (adjective "sunni"
or "sunnite") also denotes the mainstream
or "orthodox" body of Muslims as opposed
to "Shi'a."
Shi'a (adjective "Shi'i"
or "Shi'ite.") is the minority division
(10-15 percent ) of Islam, consisting of scores of
dissident sects opposed to Sunni Islam and to one
another. The name means "party" in the political
sense and comes from Shi'at Ali, the party of Ali.
Ali was a cousin of Muhammad
and was married to the Prophet's daughter, Fatima.
He was elected fourth caliph of Islam – conflict
between the followers of Ali and the Umayyads split
Islam into the sects that exist today. His followers
are called Alids.
Hadith, meaning communication
or narrative, is the record of an individual saying
or action or approvals of Muhammad taken as a model
of behavior by Muslim.
Caliph, from the Arabic "Khalifa",
means deputy or successor and is the title of the
theoretical leader of Islam. The caliphate is now
vacant in Sunni Islam. The Shi'ite sects have complicated
beliefs concerning it.
- from "Islam: A Primer",
by John Sabini
Mr. Jay Kinney is the editor
of "Gnosis Magazine"
"Islam Beyond Stereotypes",
published in Whole Earth Review in Winter, 1985. This
article, "Islam as Other" is reprinted with
slight revision by Jay Kinney himself.
Published with permission of
Mr. Jay Kinney, and Whole Earth Review |