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October 17, 2001
Who Can
Reform Islam?
by David Yeagley, Ph.D.
Islam has been divided and troubled since its
inception fourteen hundred years ago. Today, its
troubles have become our troubles. Until Islam's
inner turmoil is resolved, we will have no
peace.
In Islam's earliest days, conquest brought great
wealth to Muslim leaders. Competition for political
leadership was intense.
The earliest division arose between Uthman ibn
'Affan and Mohammad's cousin Ali ibn Abi Talib.
Uthman's followers became keepers of the sunna,
(personal sayings and customs of Mohammad himself).
They are the Sunni Muslims.
Ali's followers, the Shi'ites, claim leadership
authority based upon the tradition that Mohammad
declared Ali (his cousin) as his successor, before
120,000 witnesses.
Iran inherited the Shi'ite tradition.
I was in
Iran in 1999, and visited Astan Quds Razavi in
the city of Masshad, the largest Islamic shrine
besides the Ka'aba in Mecca. I made acquaintances
there, and upon my return to the United States,
Razavi's Office of International Relations has
continued to send me books on Islam.
They recently sent Yasin T. al-Jibouri's,
Allah: The Concept of God in Islam (744
pp.), published by Ansariyan, 1997. Al-Jibouri says
he's writing "for open-minded non-Muslims." He says
the religion of Islam is "tolerant," but confesses,
"most leaders of our Islamic world nowadays" are
"hypocritical" (p.5).
Islam is certainly not known for being tolerant,
but fanatically intolerant. Al-Jibouri believes
this is because of wrong doctrinal emphases made by
Islamic leaders. He says they haven't communicated
intelligently to the West the beauty of "Allah." He
believes the attraction of Islam is Allah, not any
cultural identity or "religion" that comes with
Islam.
This might be said of all religions. Their
universal values are often beclouded by the
particular cultural settings in which they are
presented. An American convert to Islam, for
example, thinks he has to dress like an Arab. But
there's no such teaching in the Koran.
Ahmad Kasravi (1890-1946), one of the most
prolific writers of 20th century Iran, spoke
strongly about religious reformation. Focusing on
the Koran itself, he said it had lost its
effectiveness, and was simply used by leaders for
their own ends. (On Islam and Shi'ism,
trans. M. R. Ghanoonparvar, intro. M .A. Jazayery
(Costa Mesa, CA: Mazda, 1990), p.27).
This might be said of any ancient religious
text. It's the fate of inspiration in this world.
The prophet speaks, then the people make a religion
out of the prophet and his words. Therefore,
religion reeks with fundamental human error. Greed,
envy, fear, and vicarious self-idolization through
tradition all run rampant in religion.
Everyone knows it at heart.
So what is different about Islam? It seems to be
the degree to which "church" and "state" are
united.
Religious reform must result from personal
conviction, not government intervention.
Government destroys spirituality, because rules
for group behavior always shortchange the personal
experience.
Government that dictates personal behavior
becomes tyrannical. Religious governments are
dysfunctional when relating to any other kind of
government, such as a democracy. Consider the
limitations of any modern fundamentalist-driven
Islamic regime, like Afghanistan's Taliban, when
relating to the United States. Communication is
impossible with the Taliban.
Moreover, "group relations can never be as
ethical as those which characterize individual
relations," said Reinhold Niebuhr in Moral Man
and Immoral Society (1932; rpt. New York:
Scribner's Sons, 1960). As groups, we're all bound
to greatly err, even more than an individual
is.
When religion depends on culture and government,
disunity is inevitable. The fact that Iran was
Persian and not Arabian, for example, created an
early rift in the unity of Islam.
The Koran does not address such cultural
conflicts. The unity envisioned by Islamic
imperialists is a mirage. Islam is no more unified
than Buddhism or Christianity, and is never likely
to be.
Like all religions, Islam will find its soul
only when it focuses on the spiritual needs of its
adherents.
Paradoxically, it may be those Muslims who live
here, in the land of the free and the home of the
brave, who have the best chance of reforming their
troubled religion.
In a nation where Islam's hunger for political
power is blocked by law, the faith of Mohammed may
be forced at last to reconcile itself to being a
mere religion, like other religions.
Among my friends in the Iranian-American
community, I have noticed signs of just the sort of
special objectivity that is needed.
Perhaps it is here in America that Islam will
find its soul.
Perhaps, paradoxically, Islam's darkest sin --
the murder of 6,000 innocent Americans -- may
become its path to redemption.
Yeagley
Archive
Dr. David A. Yeagley teaches humanities at the
College of Liberal Studies, University of Oklahoma.
His opinions are independent. He holds degrees from
Yale, Emory, Oberlin, University of Arizona and
University of Hartford. He is a member of the
Comanche Tribe, Lawton, OK. E-mail him at badeagle2000@yahoo.com.
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