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Posted on August 18,
2005
Introduction and resources by Byron Barlowe,
Editor/Webmaster, Leadership
University
Headlines about suicide bombers killing U.S. and
coalition soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan
proliferate day by day. Attacks on civilians in
non-combat zones, like last month's London subway
bombings, however, cross an ethical line for all
but the most radical jihadist extremists. American
conservative talkshow hosts and others challenge,
Where are the spokesmen for Islam, especially when
civilians are killed? Muslim clerics have long been
accused of hanging back when denunciation and
condemnation should have been the order of the
day.
The London bombings that killed 53 civilians
produced some of the most vocal and public
reactions to date from mullahs and imams, Muslim
teachers who issue fatwas, regarding Islamic law
and practice. Islamic leaders meeting in July in
London after attacks there drew careful distinction
between "the suicide bombing of those who are
trying to defend themselves from occupiers, which
is something different from those who kill
civilians, which is a big crime," according to
Sayed Mohammed Musawi, the head of the World
Islamic League in London" (source: Associated Press
as accessed via www.boston.com).
"It is our understanding that those who carried out
the bombings in London should in no sense be
regarded as martyrs," a joint statement by the
London group stated. The Toronto Star Web
site (www.thestar.com)
reported on on July 22, "For the first time, imams
from across Canada joined together yesterday to
issue a statement denouncing terrorism and calling
upon Canadian Muslims to confront extremism." A
May, 2004 posting on www.fatwa-online
featured denunciations of the attacks in Saudi
Arabia on Western engineers in the city of Yanbu.
The pronouncements stated that such attacks are
prohibited and play into the hands of their
"enemies." (It was unclear just who the enemies
they referred to were.) Other fatwas denouncing
such violence are found on the site: www.fatwa-online.com/worship/jihaad/jih004/index.htm,
providing some answer to critics of supposedly
silent Muslim religious leaders.
The pragmatic issue of protection (and in some
minds, preemption) naturally follows for Western
cultures victimized by other fatwas that explicitly
declare jihad (holy war) against them. This
requires military, law enforcement and political
leaders to "get in the heads" of terrorists. Where
does one begin to understand an event like the
following? A Mogadishu-style mob kills and
mutilates American civilians, dragging them through
the streets. Crowds chant, "Long live Islam!" and
"God is great!" Was this representative of Islam or
an insane riot?
Reactions vary, especially among Western
Europeans and Americans. Spanish voters removed a
pro-Iraq War and pro-U.S. president and catapult
into office an anti-Iraq war Socialist mere hours
after a devastating terrorist attack of their own
on March 11, 2004. This seemed to many to signal a
de facto victory for terror, a capitulation to
extremist genocide that utterly ignored the aims of
radical jihadists. A U.S. commission appointed to
investigate the September 2001 attacks on the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon strenuously probed
for "what could have been done" by the Clinton and
Bush administrations to respond to terrorist
threats, particularly from al Qaeda, the chief
focus of the "war on terror" since 9-11. Very
recently, Britain and France have changed course
and cracked down on terror suspects, even deporting
suspected terrorist-sympathizing imams or
mullahs.
Terror victims from Bali to Turkey to Saudi
Arabia, the very birthplace of al Qaeda
arch-terrorist Osama bin Laden, still grapple with
just what possesses religious zealots to snuff out
life in such a dramatic, calculated way -- all in
the name of Allah and their view of Islamic
ideals.
Understanding Islam
One common pitfall to understanding is
conflating Islam with Islamism, described below.
What one soon sees regarding Islam is a huge array
of complex and sometimes contradictory layers
amidst a religion that permeates all areas of life:
political, social and religious (Islam is a
"socio-cultural and religio-economic political
system" according to Dr. Warren Larson) -- a
concept largely inconceivable to Westerners, even
religious ones. Understanding the terrorists
requires close examination of the root claims made
by the perpetrators of terror: that a purification
of Islam legitimately entails a purging of the
non-Muslim (infidel) cultures, particularly those
of Israel and America but including the entire
West. (And obviously, those inside the Dar
al-Islam, or region of Islam, are not exempt if
considered oppressors.) Nothing new, the doctrine
of conquering and subjugating infidels spawned a
history of brutal occupation by Muslim peoples,
seen as a struggle to purify the earth and
guarantee submission to Allah, the ultimate value.
In fact according to the Qur'an, those in the Dar
al-Harb (non-Muslim world, literally, house of war)
were to submit to Islam (literally submission), by
"choice" of force. Yet, the very latest Qur'anic
verse -- and thus the most authoritative to most
Muslims -- speaks of the closeness shared by
Muslims and Christians. And until recently, such
warfare was always limited in scope and only to
true combatants.
The modern-day orientation of terrorist
minorities -- and they represent a miniscule but
influential and growing fraction of the world's
Muslims -- seems to spring mainly from later
passages in the holiest book of Islam, the Qur'an,
and the life story of Islam's Prophet Muhammad, who
received direct inspiration for the Qur'an from
Allah (the sole deity, it is stressed). However,
it's the definitions that conflict between
terrorist jihad and mainstream Muslim
interpretations of holy war. Rutgers Religion
professor James Turner Johnson writes, "The radical
ideology of jihad...[makes] the use of
violent means, indiscriminately and without
principled limits, a binding obligation for all
Muslims."
Renditions of Muhammad's life and sayings
(sunna) are found in the Hadith, deemed nearly as
sacred by Muslims as the Qur'an. Another telling
biographical source for Muhammad is A. Guillaume's
translation of Muhammad's original biography by Ibn
Ishaq, written in the second century of the Islamic
era and, one century later, edited by Ibn Hisham.
All those sources clearly depict Muhammad as a
powerful demagogue who increasingly leveraged
violence and the growing power that it gave him to
endorse or participate in persecution, robbery,
pillaging, execution, torture and warring on those
outside of Islam -- a philosophy and practice both
enshrined in and mitigated by holy writ, even
alongside texts that emphasize commonalities and
good relations with Jews and Christians. Many later
Islamic schools of thought seek balance by
emphasizing the kinder, gentler writings -- which
are usually, nonetheless, considered to have been
abrogated by the more violent, later texts.
Moderates also interpret relevance of his sayings
to Muhammad's day and situation; however, the
founder of Islam remains a figure who was no
stranger to religiously motivated brutality. The
conquests of Suleyman the Magnificent and other
Muslim rulers were marked by similar treatment of
vanquished foes. From the 11th-13th centuries, The
Assassins, an Islamic sect, were infamous for
murdering as a religious duty.
Christianity Not Above Reproach
Historically
In all fairness, Islam's history of conquering
and holding in religious bondage those outside its
beliefs is not unlike what other cultures commonly
perpetrated from earliest biblical times to recent
centuries. In the time of Muhammad and throughout
the time of the Ottoman Empire, conquest, mass
killing and religious punishment were commonplace
in virtually all cultures. Thus, judging Muhammad
by post-9-11 standards must be kept in perspective.
Moses has controversially been characterized as
bloodier than Muhammad (see: www.beliefnet.com/story/114/story_11460.html
for a Muslim perspective) and Muslims invoke Old
Testament genocide as harsher than Islam's
vanquishments (Old Testament genocide was
nonetheless carried out against specific people for
a specified time, not as a blanket doctrine).
Muslims point out the Crusades, which seem a mirror
image in many ways to the conquests of Christian
Europe's arch-enemy, Islam. Spanish and Portuguese
Catholic invaders forcibly converted Indian natives
across the Americas. The inquisitions of the
Catholic Church mark a time of terror compared with
today's pluralistic standards. And Reformers'
internecine doctrinal struggles resulted in
executions. Thus, Christians have need to pause
before comparing the worst of Islam with their own
history and to repent and make restitution where
necessary. The Western Church also has largely
stood by as American culture pumps out pornography
and other socially caustic cultural debris, which
rightly enrages Muslims.
Extreme Islamism or Jihadism
Today's news media constantly invoke the term
fundamentalism in reference to militant Islam, or
Islamism. However, as Frog and Amy Orr-Ewing write
in Holy Warriors: A Fresh Look at the Face of
Extreme Islam (Authentic Lifestyle, 2002),
"Defining fundamentalism, even within Islam alone,
is notoriously difficult." The authors continue,
"'Islamism' is...seen as the enemy among more
liberal expressions of Islam, for both sides want
to win the battle for legitimacy and orthodoxy in
the public sphere. This is also true of Islamic
discourse within and with the West. Even among
emerging 'fundamentalist' groups there is also
competition for the right to interpret [sacred
texts] afresh, and this can lead to greater
radicalism and extremism." Professor Johnson
writes, "Bin Laden's jihad not only pits Islam
against America, the West as a whole and ultimately
the rest of the non-Islamic world; it also seeks to
overthrow the contemporary Muslim states and
mainstream views of Islamic tradition among the
great majority of contemporary Muslims" (see Jihad
and Just War, below).
Western pundits and think tanks busily
deconstruct the social, economic and educational
struggles of loosely affiliated groups like al
Qaeda and their adherents, but as Middle East
scholar Daniel Pipes points out, "Islamism has few
connections to wealth or poverty; it is not a
response to deprivation." Rather, if the West is to
understand extremist Islam, it must get one simple
fact straight, as World culture commentator Gene
Edward Veith states in Conflict of Religions
(link below): "A jihad has been declared against
Americans. This means that authoritative Muslim
clerics have issued a decree that killing Americans
is not just a religious duty but an act that merits
salvation" based on the single guaranteed method of
salvation espoused in the Qur'an,
martyrdom.
An important caveat: as stated in Islam and
Violence (answering-islam.org.uk/Terrorism/islam_and_violence.html),
"Our point, of course, should not be taken to imply
that all faithful and devout Muslims must become
violent in order to be true to the teachings of
Islam. We will not hesitate to say that the vast
majority of the Muslim world condemns acts of
terror and violence." Still, as the editors of
The Economist wrote in a special survey of
Islam and the West, Sept. 13th-19th, 2003), "...The
problem for those who want to believe that Islam
has nothing to do with Islamic terrorism is not
only that the terrorists themselves say otherwise.
It is also the existence of a whole body of theory
[particularly the writings of Syed Qutb, highly
influential 20th Century Egyptian writer and
revolutionary theorist] that is called upon to
justify this activity, and which has zealous
adherents." Simply put, we resonate with the
writers of Islam and Violence (above) on this
point: Though this has not been common practice for
millions of Muslims the world over for centuries,
given a plain reading, "Muslims who commit acts of
violence and terror in the name of God can find
ample justification for their actions based on the
teachings of the Qur'an and the sayings and
examples of prophet Muhammad himself." This is what
the radical Islamists are doing, to a growing
chorus of approval from Muslims who buy into the
doctrine of jihad against the West.
Thus, in the spirit of open inquiry we seek a
closer, albeit limited, look at Islam:
- What were Muhammad's and his early
followers' motives and modus operandi regarding
those outside the faith?
- How has Islam's doctrine of war and violence
developed since then?
- What effect have various Muslim viewpoints
had on modern-day adherents?
- Which of these convictions drive Islamist
terrorists?
This collection, first published in 2002, seeks
to allow the texts and history of Islam as well as
current practice to speak for themselves as much as
possible and is presented through the lens of a
biblical worldview. Honest, bright people will
disagree, some strenuously, but we trust in a way
that can retain civil dialogue.
Featured Essays:
Islam
and Terrorism: A Closer Look, by Dr. Warren F.
Larson: A renowned Islam scholar and former
missionary to Pakistan, Dr. Larson traces the life
story and global influence of one of Islam's
foremost militant ideologues, Syed Qutb. He then
sets forth Islam's sources for authority, including
the Qur'an and Hadith, Muslim views on peace, war
and other religions, its cultural hegemony and
global agenda. He ends with an appeal to a humble,
hopeful biblical response by Christians.
Terrorism
and Islam, by Professor Otto Helwig: Dr.
Helweg, who studied Islam, classical Arabic, and
the Middle Eastern culture while living in the
Middle East for more than a decade, writes a
straightforward article regarding the mindset of
Muslims, particularly the terrorists among them.
First, he describes the sharp differences in the
worldview and culture of the West and Middle East,
then briefly explains the effect that the Qur'an
and other sacred writings have on radical Muslims.
He disputes the characterization of Islam as a
peaceful religion and concludes that attempts to
stamp out the evil of terrorism are naive.
Jihad
and Just War by James Turner Johnson: Johnson
contrasts the mainstream Islamic doctrine of
limited war with the radically unlimited jihad of
Osama bin Laden, which expands the doctrine of
emergency warfare to include the entire West (along
with Israel) and makes no distinction as to targets
or combatants. Bin Laden's jihad also seeks
overthrow of contemporary Muslim states and their
mainstream views.
Conflict
of Religions, by Professor Gene Edward Veith:
The Iraq War and occupation serve as a litmus test
for an Islamic culture's view of war and terrorism,
albeit one that spent decades under repression of a
Socialist regime. Veith contrasts Islamic culture
and worldview with that of the United States with
its Judeo-Christian moorings, especially as they
relate to the "war on terror." One thing is clear:
jihad, or holy war, has been declared and waged on
America and that is something Westerners do not
readily understand.
Related Articles and Essays:
Lethal
'Gospel', by Professor Gene Edward Veith:
Addicted to sin, Islamic terrorists believe that
killing "infidels" is the only sure way to make it
to heaven. Westerners underestimate the power of
this "gospel"-of-martyrdom motivation.
The
Nature of Islam: (A similar collection of
resources published online here one month after the
events of 9-11.) Since the murderous terrorism of
September 11 and the subsequent wars - seen by many
Muslims as war on their religion - many Westerners
have sought greater knowledge of Islam. Is it, as
claimed, a religion of peace? What do Muslims
believe, in general and in particular regarding war
and violence? How does it compare with
Christianity?
A
Christian Response to Islam in America, by Dr.
Warren F. Larson: Larson, director of Islamic
Studies at Columbia International University,
examines why Americans convert to Islam, Islam's
growing threat to Jews and how Christians can
counteract these by gaining optimism, training and
understanding, especially regarding Muslims'
discovery of real peace through Christ.
Coverage
of Islam, by Professor Marvin Olasky:
Journalism professor Olasky reveals just how
extreme Islamist extremists can be in defining
infidel combatants in their jihad (holy war), which
many other Muslims classify as hirabah (unholy war
against society). The American media, Olasky
charges, is largely negligent in pointing out the
difference, with notable exceptions that portray
philosophical-religious rifts even among those
attending the same mosque. It is unwise not to ask
the hard questions while seeking understanding, he
concludes.
Terrorists
Behind Bars, by Chuck Colson: Imprisoned
himself for crimes under President Nixon and a
veteran jail minister, Chuck Colson can relate to
the anger and bewilderment of those behind bars.
Radical Islamist missionaries have exploited the
anger and resentment, especially of blacks,
converting many to the jaded faith of jihad from
within prison walls. Colson alerts readers to the
global problem and proposes blocking the propaganda
of hate, plus a proven alternative: the
life-changing and recidivism-reducing gospel of
Jesus Christ.
Related Sites:
Answering
Islam (the original, not the counter-site with
similar name): Billed as "a Christian-Muslim
dialogue," this site is chock-full of articles and
other items and is available in ten languages. See
especially, Does Islam Promote Peace?
Al-Injil (New
Testament): Includes the Kalimatullah Web site,
"This a resource centre for open-minded and
inquiring Muslims, containing startling information
regarding the holy Tawrat, Zabur, Injil, and other
prophetic books," Parables for Muslims ("Ramadan
Nights: prophets' stories"), two online books and
several articles.
The above information is courtesy of Leadership
University, part of the Telling the Truth
Project: Telling the Truth at the speed of
life!
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