The Struggle Within Islam
Terrorists get the headlines, but most Muslims want to reclaim their religion from extremists
- By Robin Wright
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2011, Subscribe
After the cold war ended in 1991, the notion of a “clash of civilizations”—simplistically summarized as a global split between Muslims and the rest of the world—defined debates over the world’s new ideological divide.
“In Eurasia the great historic fault lines between civilizations are once more aflame,” the Harvard political scientist Samuel Huntington wrote in a controversial 1993 essay for Foreign Affairs. “This is particularly true along the boundaries of the crescent-shaped Islamic bloc of nations from the bulge of Africa to central Asia.” Future conflicts, he concluded, “will not be primarily ideological or primarily economic” but “will occur along the cultural fault lines.”
But the idea of a cultural schism ignored a countervailing fact: even as the outside world tried to segregate Muslims as “others,” most Muslims were trying to integrate into a globalizing world. For the West, the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, obscured the Muslim quest for modernization; for Muslims, however, the airliner hijackings accelerated it. “Clearly 9/11 was a turning point for Americans,” Parvez Sharma, an Indian Muslim filmmaker, told me in 2010. “But it was even more so for Muslims,” who, he said, “are now trying to reclaim space denied us by some of our own people.”
This year’s uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Syria, Yemen and beyond have rocked the Islamic world, but the rebellions against geriatric despots reflect only a small part of the story, obscuring a broader trend that has emerged in recent years. For the majority of Muslims today, the central issue is not a clash with other civilizations but rather a struggle to reclaim Islam’s central values from a small but virulent minority. The new confrontation is effectively a jihad against The Jihad—in other words, a counter-jihad.
“We can no longer continuously talk about the most violent minority within Islam and allow them to dictate the tenets of a religion that is 1,400 years old,” Sharma told me after the release of A Jihad for Love, his groundbreaking documentary on homosexuality within Islam.
The past 40 years represent one of the most tumultuous periods in Islam’s history. Since 1973, I’ve traveled most of the world’s 57 predominantly Muslim countries to cover wars, crises, revolutions and terrorism; I sometimes now feel as if I’ve finally reached the climax—though not the end—of an epic that has taken four decades to unfold.
The counter-jihad is the fourth phase in that epic. After the Muslim Brotherhood emerged in Egypt in 1928, politicized Islam slowly gained momentum. It became a mass movement following the stunning Arab loss of the West Bank, Golan Heights, Gaza and Sinai Peninsula in the 1967 war with Israel. The first phase peaked with the 1979 revolution against the Shah of Iran: after his fall, clerics ruled a state for the first (and, still, only) time in Islam’s history. Suddenly, Islam was a political alternative to the dominant modern ideologies of democracy and communism.
The second phase, in the 1980s, was marked by the rise of extremism and mass violence. The shift was epitomized by the truck bombing of a U.S. Marines barracks in Beirut in 1983. With a death toll of 241 Marines, sailors and soldiers, it remains the deadliest single day for the U.S. military since the first day of the Tet Offensive in Vietnam in 1968. Martyrdom had been a central tenet among Shiite Muslims for 14 centuries, but now it has spread to Sunni militants, too. Lebanese, Afghans and Palestinians took up arms to challenge what they viewed as occupation by outside armies or intervention by foreign powers.
In the 1990s, during the third phase, Islamist political parties began running candidates for office, reflecting a shift from bullets to ballots—or a combination of the two. In late 1991, Algeria’s Islamic Salvation Front came close to winning the Arab world’s first fully democratic election, until a military coup aborted the process and ushered in a decade-long civil war. Islamic parties also took part in elections in Lebanon, Jordan and Egypt. From Morocco to Kuwait to Yemen, Islamist parties captured voters’ imagination—and their votes.
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Comments (4)
I just read "The Struggle Within Islam" and I thought it was a very good article. What it looks like from here is that it is the struggle between two belief systems: the descendants of Isaac (Judaeo-Christianity) and the descendants of Ishmael (Islam). Abraham should never have gotten Hagar pregnant.
Here is a very good post that you may want to read:
"the Arab Spring, ancient Egypt, & Jesus"
http://tim-shey.blogspot.com/2011/09/arab-spring-ancient-egypt-jesus.html
Posted by Tim Shey on November 10,2011 | 04:46 PM
How do you all know the Muslim world rejected any terrorist act - they've stayed quiet-- why do you all keep feeding the public this stuff about how the Muslim world rejects these acts - where do you get your info? - do yo make it up as you go? whose benefit is this for?
Posted by ana m groover on October 18,2011 | 12:18 PM
Isn't it interesting that the author delibertly omitted the attact and take over of the US embassy. what about the hostages. This is a mark of Islam rule even if he omits it.
Posted by Archiw C. Bray on September 7,2011 | 05:44 PM
So if I read the policy below this box if I don't agree with what you wrote I can't make a statement. Is what you wrote mostly about your opinion and not the truth. I know and believe that what these people in the two countries that have been at war had no clue what they were fighting for, it was just what they wanted to do .
These wars had nothing to do with being Islamist?
Posted by Melford Smith on September 1,2011 | 12:20 PM