Wednesday, September 14, 2005

Article by Salman Rushdie

Article by Salman Rushdie.
I reprint here an article I read in The Times a few days ago. It is by a man who has more of an axe to grind with religious fanatics than most of us. When I first read it, it occurred to me that this approach should be made to all religions and indeed all political movements around the world. This is a great man writing!
The article starts with a quote from a respondent to an earlier article by the same author.
Dr Shaaz Mahboob, of Hillingdon, Middlesex, pointed out that: “There are hundreds of thousands of Muslims in Britain who do not follow their religion as strictly as do the older generations . . . We are the mainstream Muslims who are keen to live in peace and harmony with other faith groups, feel proud of being British and are patriotic . . . I know of no organisation that represents the secular and liberal Islam that the vast majority of Muslims follow.”
Several writers challenged me to take the next step and hypothesise the content of such a reform movement. The nine thoughts that follow form an initial response to that challenge, and focus primarily on Britain.
It may well be that reform will be born in the Muslim diaspora where contact (and friction) between communities is greatest, and then exported to the Muslim majority countries. It would not be the first time such a thing has happened. The idea of Pakistan was shaped in England, too. So were the history-changing characters of Mahatma Gandhi, Pakistan’s founder Muhammad Ali Jinnah and the pro-British Indian Muslim leader Sir Syed Ahmad Khan.
British Muslims, who are mainly of South Asian origin, should remember their own histories. In India, Muslims have always been secularists, knowing that India’s secular constitution is what protects them from the dictatorship of the (Hindu) majority. British Muslims should take a leaf out of their counterparts’ book and separate religion from politics.
Remembering history, part 2. Within living memory, Muslim cities such as Beirut and Tehran were cosmopolitan, tolerant, modern metropolises. That lost culture must be saved from the radicals, celebrated, and rebuilt.
The idea that all Muslims are kin to all others should be re-examined. The truth is that, as the bitter divisions between Iraqi Sunnis and Shias demonstrate, it is a fiction, and when it deludes young men such as the British 7/7 bombers into blowing up their own country in the name of an essentially fantastical idea of Islamic brotherhood (few British Muslims would find life in conservative Muslim countries tolerable), it is a dangerous fiction.
Pan-Islamism, part 2: the people most directly injured by radical Islam are other Muslims: Afghan Muslims by the Taleban, Iranian Muslims by the rule of the ayatollahs; in Iraq, most people killed by the insurgency are Muslims, too. Yet Muslim rhetoric concentrates on the crimes of “the West”. It may be that Muslims need to re-direct their rage against the people who are really oppressing and killing them.
In the 1970s and 1980s the politics of British peoples of South Asian origin were largely organised around secular groups, mostly run by activists of Left-Marxist persuasion. The Black/Asian unity of that period was broken, and then replaced, by the mosque-based, faith-determined radical Islam that grew in part out of the protests against The Satanic Verses. That ground needs to be reclaimed (not necessarily by Left-Marxists) by creating truly representative bodies. Then the increasingly discredited “leaders” of the Muslim Council of Britain can be relegated to the fringes where they belong.
Reformed Islam would reject conservative dogmatism and accept that, among other things, women are fully equal to men; that people of other religions, and of no religion, are not inferior to Muslims; that differences in sexual orientation are not to be condemned, but accepted as aspects of human nature; that anti-Semitism is not OK; and that the repression of free speech by the thin-skinned ideology of easily-taken “offence” must be replaced by genuine, robust, anything-goes debate in which there are no forbidden ideas or no-go areas.
Reformed Islam would encourage diaspora Muslims to emerge from their self-imposed ghettoes and stop worrying so much about locking up their daughters. It would emerge from the intellectual ghetto of literalism and subservience to mullahs and ulema, allowing open, historically based scholarship to emerge from the shadows to which the madrassas and seminaries have condemned it.
There must be an end to the defensive paranoia that led some Muslims to claim that Jews were behind the 9/11 attacks and, more recently, that Muslims may not have been behind the 7/7 bombings either (a crackpot theory exploded, if one may use the verb, by the recent al-Jazeera video).
Not so much a reformation, as several people said in response to my first piece, as an Enlightenment. Very well then: let there be light.
Again it occurs to me (paul that is!) that there is real intellect oozing from this article. In Britain today it is actually frowned up on to be an Intellectual. Popular culture tries to pigeon hole people who think deeply and study as ‘geeks’ many join in for fear of being similarly labelled. Pol Pot would love it. His idea of an intellectual was anyone wearing glasses!! (Remember the film ‘the Killing Fields’)
For the sake of our children we must stop this. Encourage people to think. Allow people to change their minds without seeing it as a weakness. Accept that no one has a monopoly on what is right and what is the truth!

2 comments:

Paul Richardson said...

Richard, I agree that the signs from many muslims we see in the media (these are the only ones I see as I dont have any as friends) are that there is a high level of anyi western attitude. However I do think that stangely most people who live in this country do so because (fundimentaly) they like the way of life here, including the majority of muslims.

There are many muslim majority secular states as well as Islamic states that people could move to if they couldnt stand it here. Strangely they seem to quite like the decadent ways of the evil, secular, infidel west!!

Ps Last year the French (who have a sizeable muslim community mostly of North African origin, banned the wearing of headscarfs and other religious outfits in schools. So far no mass flight of muslims to Algeria or Turkey etc has been detected.

Paul Richardson said...

The Problem I find is that when you have the discussion Phil is descibing. It turns vey quickly in to a chance for some people to have a rascist rant. Over the years this has led to many liberally minded (with a small l) people avioding the debate altogether.

There is a diffence between the afro-carribean ghettoes of the 50's which were largely formed by economic and social exclusion and some of the asian (in fairness largely muslim) ghettoes now. Some, but not all, of these are formed as away of excluding Infidels, western culture and as a way of protecting young people from outside (evil) influence.

I used to think that my ignorance of islam was something to be ashamed about. Now i sometimes long for the bliss of not having the challenge that finding out more has led to. I firmly believe, perhaps nievely(sp?) that most muslims are just trying to make sense of life like me and have no ill will towards non-muslims. However evidence is growing that there is a sizable minority whose opinions (like those of fundimentalist christians) are a real challenge for people like me to stomach.