terrorism &
democratic
virtues
"After
the WTC Disaster: The Sacred, the Profane, and Social Solidarity"
Janet Abu-Lughod, Sociology, New School University
"The
Shifting Grounds for Transnational Civic Activity"
Jeffrey Ayres, Political Science, St. Michael's College;
and Sidney Tarrow, Sociology, Cornell University
"Unholy
Politics"
Seyla Benhabib, Political Science, Yale University
"To Reassure,
and Protect, After September 11"
Didier Bigo, Institut d'Etudes Politiques, Paris
"Negotiating
Identity and Community After September 11"
Kay Deaux, Psychology, City University of New York
"The
Return of the State"
John A. Hall, Sociology, McGill University
"What's
New After September 11th?"
Dick Howard, Philosophy, SUNY at Stonybrook
"9/11
and the New 'Anti-politics' of 'Security'"
Kanishka Jayasuriya, Political Science, City University
of Hong Kong
"Defend
Politics Against Terrorism"
Peter Alexander Meyers, Sociology, Université de Lille
"A
Human Rights Approach to Sept. 11"
Kathryn Sikkink, Political Science, University of Minnesota
"Guarding
the Gates"
Aristide Zolberg, Political Science, New School University
other
topics ...
Globalization
Fundamentalism(s)
Competing
Narratives
New
War?
New
World Order?
Building
Peace
Recovery
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Unholy
Politics
Seyla
Benhabib, Eugene Meyer Professor of Political Science and
Philosophy, Yale University
It has become
clear since September 11 that we are faced with a new form
of struggle that threatens to dissolve the boundaries of the
political in liberal democracies. The terror network of Osama
bin Laden, and its various branches in Egypt, Pakistan, Malaysia,
Indonesia, Algeria and among Islamist groups in western Europe,
is wider, more entrenched and sophisticated than it was believed
to be. The attacks unleashed by these groups, (and their potential
sympathizers in the USA and Europe among Neo-Nazis and white
Supremacists), especially the use of the biological weapon
anthrax to contaminate the civilian population via the mail,
indicate a new political and military phenomenon which challenges
the framework of state-centric politics.
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View/print
essay only
See also the essay
by John Hall on the "Return of the
State."
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Historians always
warn us that the unprecedented will turn out to have some forerunners
somewhere and that what seems new today will appear old when
considered against the background of some longer time span.
Nevertheless to "think the new" in politics is the vocation
of the intellectual. This is a task at which luminaries like
Susan Sontag, Fred Jameson, Slavoj Zizeck, who have seized this
opportunity to recycle well-worn out 1960’s clichés about western
imperialism and hegemony, have failed us by interpreting these
events along the tired paradigm of an anti-imperialist struggle
by the "wretched of the earth."1 Neglecting the internal
dynamics and struggles within the Islamic world, and the history
of regional conflicts in Afghanistan, Pakistan, India and Kashmir,
these analyses assure us that we can continue to grasp the world
through our usual categories, and that by blaming the policies
and actions of western governments, one can purge oneself of
the enmity and hatred which is directed toward one as a member
of such western societies. These analyses help us neither to
grasp the unprecedented nature of the events unfolding since
September 11, 2001 nor to appreciate the internal dynamics within
the Arab Muslim world which have given rise to them.
The line between military and civilian targets, between
military and civilian populations, had already been erased during
the aerial bombings of World War II. This is not what is new
since September 11. Faced with the total mobilization of society,
initiated by fascism and National Socialism, it was the democracies
of the world, and not some marginal terrorist group hiding in
the mountains of Afghanistan, that first crossed that line and
initiated "total war." The civilian population at large became
the hostage of the enemy, as during the bombing of London by
the Nazis and then of Dresden, Hiroshima and Nagasaki by the
Allies.
In the 1950’s, the Algerian War marked a new variation in this
process of the erasure of the line between the front and the
home, the soldier and the civilian. The Algerian Resistance
against the French aimed at destroying the normalcy of everyday
life for the civilians of the occupying population. By blowing
up the French residents of Algeria in cafes, markets and stations,
the Resistance not only reminded them that they were the enemy
but that there could be no "normal life" under conditions of
colonial occupation. Since that time, this kind of terror –
which fights against the superior military and technical weapons
of a mightier enemy by tearing apart the fabric of everyday
life through interrupting the normal routines of everyday and
by rendering every bus or railroad station, each street corner
or gathering place a potential target – has become one of the
favorite "weapons of the weak." The strategy of this kind of
struggle is to make life so unlivable for the enemy civilians
that they concede defeat even if they enjoy superior military
power. The Palestinian Intifada at least in part follows the
Algerian model: By creating conditions of continuous fear, insecurity
and violence in the land of Palestine, it aims at destroying
the resolve of the Israeli civilian population to continue a
normal life.2 In recent years, however, infiltrators
from Islamist groups like the Hamas and the Hizbollah into the
ranks of the Palestinians, and the widespread practice of "suicide
bombings," are changing the nature of the Intifada as well.
The bombing of the World Trade Center and of the Pentagon is
unlike both the total war waged in the struggle against fascism
and the terrorism against the occupier initiated by the Algerians.
These attacks, perpetrated against a civilian population in
its own land, and against a country in no state of declared
hostility with the attackers, not only defy all categories of
international law but reduce politics to apocalyptic symbols.
Until Osama bin Laden released his terse video celebrating September
11, his deed had no political name: In whose name or
for whom were they acting? What political demands were they
voicing? The brief references to the stationing of US troops
in Saudi Arabia, to US sanctions against Iraq, and to the US
support of Israel were shrouded in the language of "jihad" (holy
war) and obfuscated by allusions to the lost glory of Islam
in the thirteenth century through the loss of "al Andalus" –
of Spain – to the Christians. While it is conceivable that Palestinian
terror could end one day if Israel withdrew from the occupied
West Bank, released Palestinian prisoners of war, found a settlement
for the refugees and somehow resolved the question of Jerusalem,
it is unclear, what if anything, could end the "Jihad" of the
Osama bin Laden network against the USA and its allies. Theirs
is a war of "holy" vengeance, a war designed to humiliate the
mighty "Satan" in New York and Washington by turning the weapons
of the most developed technology against the society which created
them.
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The result is
a sublime combination of high tech wizardry and moral and political
atavism, which some have named "jihad-on-line." But this unholy
politics threatens to undo the moral and political distinctions
that ought to govern our lives, distinctions as between enemy,
friend and bystander; guilt, complicity, and responsibility;
conflict, combat and war. We have to live by them even if others
do not.
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See
also the essay by Dorothy Denning on
cyber warfare. |
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One of the most
commonly heard contentions in the aftermath of September 11
was that even if the terrorist attacks upon the World Trade
Center and Washington equaled war in the civilian and property
damages they inflicted, the deliberateness and precision with
which they were executed, and the brazenness with which they
violated customary moral, legal, and international norms, the
US Congress could not actually declare "war," not because the
enemy was as yet unknown, but because a state can declare war
only against another state. The idea that a democratic nation-state
would declare war upon a global network of loosely organized
sympathizers of a religious cum civilizational cause, strained
all categories of international law with which the world has
lived since 1945, and in which nation-states are the principal
recognized actors. For this reason, the current military action
in Afghanistan has not been preceded by a declaration of war,
rather the Congress has authorized the President to do whatever
is necessary to fight the global terror network and to bring
the perpetrators to justice, but Congress has declared war neither
upon the Taliban (whom most nations do not recognize as a legitimate
regime) nor upon the Afghani people. It is as if the territory,
the terrain of Afghanistan, is our enemy, in that this terrain
offers a sanctuary and an operational base for one of the great
fugitives of our time – Osama bin Laden. Ironically, the people
of Afghanistan have themselves fallen "captive" or "prisoner"
to one who operates on their territory, and to whom the Taliban
had granted refuge. Afghanistan is a decaying or failed nation-state,
and this very condition of decay permits us to understand all
the more vividly the principles of national sovereignty which
have governed international relations since the Second World
War.
Recall here Max Weber’s classically modernist definition of
the state as "the legitimate monopoly over the use of violence
within a recognized and bounded territory."3
Modern statehood is based upon the coupling together of the
principles of territoriality, administrative and military
monopoly, including the use of violence, and the legitimacy
to do so. When states decay, dissolve, or secede these three
principles fall asunder. Their territory can become a staging
ground for operations not only of guerilla warfare, but of drug
smuggling, weapons production, contraband and other illegal
activities; administrative and military competence is overtaken
by units at the sub-state level such as warlords, commandos,
traditional chieftains or religious leaders; and legitimacy
loses its representational quality in that there is no longer
a unified people to whose will it either refers or defers –
legitimacy either flows from the barrel of a gun or from other
sources of supra- and sub-national ideological worldviews, be
these race, religion or civilization-based.
The decaying and weak nation-states of the contemporary world
bear similarities as well as differences to the totalitarian
regimes of the mid-twentieth century. The breakdown of the rule
of law; the destruction of representative and democratic institutions;
the pervasiveness of violence and the universalization of fear
are features of both state-forms. The totalitarian regimes of
the mid-twentieth century, however, although at times they mobilized
"the movement" against the state bureaucracy, by and large strengthened
and rebuilt the state by rendering it subservient to their ideologies.
But the postmodern/quasi-feudal states of the present, like
Afghanistan, Chechnya, Bosnia, and Rwanda, emerge as a result
not of the strengthening but of the destruction of the territorial
and administrative unity of the state in the name of subunities,
which are then globally networked. As Hannah Arendt has shown
us, totalitarian movements also had globalizing ambitions in
that they touted supranational ideologies like pan-Germanism
and pan-Slavism.4 Yet the global ideologies of today’s
terror movements are both larger and smaller in range instead
of the ideology of linguistic or cultural unity among the Slavic
or Germanic nations, for example, today we are dealing with
ideologies aimed at tribes, ethnicities or at a vision of a
community of believers that transcends them all namely the
Islamis umma of the faithful. The new unit of totalitarianism
is the terrorist cell, not the party or the movement; the goal
of this new form of war is not just the destruction of the enemy
but the extinction of a way of life. The emergence of non-state
agents capable of waging destruction at a level hitherto thought
to be only the province of states and the emergence of a supranational
ideological vision with an undefinable moral and political content,
which can hardly be satisfied by ordinary political tactics
and negotiations, are the unprecedented aspects of our current
condition.
This remark should not be taken to suggest that I attribute
an overarching rationality or normativity to the state use of
violence. State terrorism can also be brutal, unjust and merciless
– recall the war of the Yugoslav state against the Bosnians
and the Kosovar Albanians! The point I am emphasizing, however,
is that in liberal democracies the monopoly which the state
claims over the use of the means of violence is always in principle,
if not in fact, subject to the rule of law and to democratic
legitimation by the citizenry. These internal constraints upon
the legitimate use of violence are then carried unto the international
arena, where sovereign states bind themselves to limit their
use of violence through entering into pacts and associations,
signing treaties, etc.
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The end of the
bipolar world of the Cold War brought with it not just multiplurality
but a global society in which non-state actors have emerged
as players possessing means of violence but who are not subject
to usual constraints of international law and treaties. All
treaties which have hitherto governed the non-use and proliferation
of biological, chemical and nuclear weapons have been rendered
irrelevant: those who will deploy them have never been their
signatories. Furthermore, not being recognized as legitimate
political entities, these groups have no responsibility and
accountability toward the populations in whose midst they act
and which harbor them. Suppose Osama bin Laden and his group
possess scud missiles with nuclear warheads, which they may
have obtained either from Iraq or from the Russian Mafia or
other weapons smugglers. Suppose they start losing ground in
the current war. What would prevent them from firing these missiles
against population centers in Afghanistan, Pakistan, India or
Israel if this would serve some purpose? Since they are accountable
to no one, the collateral damage which they may cause even to
their own allies and sympathizers is of no concern to them.
Whereas terrorist groups like the Basque ETA and the IRA still
have to be governed by some sense of proportion in the damage
they inflict and the violence they engage in, in order not to
lose all sympathy for their cause in world public opinion, these
new terror networks are not motivated by foreseeable political
goals analogous to the independence of the Basque land from
Spain and France, the removal of the Irish Catholic population
and unity with UK Protestants, and the like. Nor are these groups
fighting for hearts and minds in the West by seeking the conversion
of the population to Islam and to Islamic ways of life. "Jihad,"
which can also mean the struggle of the soul with itself to
lead the virtuous life as dictated by the Koran,5
when it was practiced by Islamic armies in the centuries after
the death of Mohammad (632 AD), aimed at the conquest of the
land of the ‘infidels’ in order to force their conversion to
Islam. People of all races, colors, ethnicities and tongues
could convert to Islam and become "good Muslims." It is this
option of conversion which has made Islam into the biggest Abrahamanic
religion of the world, and ironically, it is the very absence
of this conversion mission that is striking in the new jihad.
|
See
also the essay by Steve Smith on the end
of the unipolar moment.
See also the essay by Farish Noor on the
meanings of the term Jihad. |
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The new jihad is
not only apocalyptic; it is nihilistic. Osama bin Laden’s statement
that his men love death as much as the Americans love life is
an expression of superb nihilism. The eroticization of death,
as evidenced on the one hand by the frequently heard vulgarisms
about huris, the dark-eyed virgins who are to meet the
warriors in the afterlife, but on the other hand and more importantly,
by the destruction of one’s own body in an act of supreme violence
which dismembers and pulverizes it, is remarkable. Human beings
have died throughout the centuries for causes they believed
in, to save their loved ones, to protect their country or their
principles, to save the faith, to exercise solidarity and the
like. But the emergence of "suicide bombings" among Islamist
groups on a mass scale is astonishing. As many Koranic scholars
have pointed out, there is no theological justification for
this: it is one thing to die in war and yet another to make
the destruction of one’s body along with those of others the
supreme weapon. In order to quell such waves of suicide bombings,
the Israeli authorities resorted to an atavistic practice: they
made it publicly known that they would bury the remains of suicide
bombers in shrouds of pigs’ skin (an animal that is considered
"haram" - taboo – by Jews and Moslems alike) in order to prevent
their ascent into heaven in accordance with Islamic faith. It
is of course hard to know whether men of the sophistication
and worldliness of Muhammad Atta and others who have lived in
the capitals of Europe and the West and who have attended universities
as well as bars, movie houses as well as brothels, believe in
the afterlife. I personally doubt it. Not only is it clear that
the very strict version of Islam – Wahabism – which Osama bin
Laden follows, is not shared by all even within his own group,
but the Egyptian Brotherhood which was the original organization
for many Islamist philosophies in the nineteen-fifties had its
own version of things, as do members of the Algerian terror
network. These networks of young militants who trot the globe
from Bosnia to Afghanistan, from Paris to Indonesia and back
to Baghdad, Hamburg or New York, are like Islamic soldiers of
fortune, not in search of riches, but in search of an elusive
and decisive encounter with death. In this regard they bear
more resemblance to chiliastic sects among all world religions
than to the Moslem armies of the Umayyad, the Abassids or the
Ottomans. While using friendly Moslem governments and their
hospitality for their own purposes, these groups pose a clear
threat to any established form of authority – which may have
been one reason why the Saudis renounced Osama bin Laden’s citizenship
and rendered him an international fugitive.
As in the past century, faced with a novel form of totalitarianism,
democracies confront unique challenges. The presence of an enemy
who is neither a military adversary nor a representative agent
of a known state creates confusion as to whether it is the police
and other law enforcement agencies or the military who should
take the lead in the investigation and the struggle – the lines
between acts of crime and acts of war get blurred. The concept
of an "internal enemy," which is now being promoted against
"suspect groups" through surveillance, wiretapping and stricter
immigration controls, is not one that democracies can live with.
The category of the terrorist as an "internal enemy," as one
who is among us, even if not one of us, strains the democratic
community by revealing that the rule of law is not all-inclusive
and that violence lurks at the edges of everyday normalcy. Our
thinking about foreigners, refugees, and asylees becomes colored
by the image of others as potential enemies; the "other" becomes
the criminal. We may be at a point in history when indeed the
state-centric system is waning: global terrorism and the formation
of a global economy and civil society are part of the same maelstrom.
Yet our laws as well as institutions, practices as well as alliances,
are governed by state-centric terms which presuppose the unity
of territoriality, the monopoly over the use of the means of
violence, and the attainment of legitimacy through representative
institutions. It is of course supremely ironic that President
Bush, who advocated a new version of American unilateralism
and isolationism and who denounced "nation building," now finds
himself supporting multilateral actions with allies like Pakistan,
Saudi Arabia and Syria, whose democratic legitimacy is highly
questionable, and also reconstructing a post-Taliban government
in Afghanistan. Can we find responses to this new challenge
that will break the vicious cycles of violence, incomprehension,
repression at home and war abroad?
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Although the attacks
have so far been directed against the US, and although the USA
is justified under international law in invoking the right of
self-defense to justify the current war,6 the US
and its NATO Allies have resorted to the clause of collective
security and article 5 of NATO which guarantees the security
of each member of the alliance. I support this course of action,
and I would further endorse the call by the United Nations President
Kofi Annan to declare terrorism a "crime against humanity,"
and to try the terrorists, if and when they are captured, before
an international tribunal. Furthermore, the UN General Assembly
should condemn the Taliban regime of committing crimes against
humanity not only for harboring Osama bin Laden and his men,
but for the way the Taliban have trampled upon the human rights
of their own women. There is no reason why the human rights
of women to work, to be educated, to walk on the street, to
dress as they wish, etc. should be considered any less sacred
and any less in need of defense than the rights of ethnic minorities.
In response to the events of September 11 and to future threats,
multilateral responses that enjoy cross cultural legitimacy
and that reflect some of the new norms of international law
– like crimes against humanity or genocide, as defined under
the statute of Rome of the international criminal court – should
be invoked.
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Click here
for the full text of the NATO treaty. |
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Of course, (and
this cannot be said clearly enough by the citizens of western
democracies), a radical revision of US and Nato policy vis a
vis the Arab world and south central Asia is needed. The US
and its Allies have to stop propping up military dictatorships
and religious conservatives in these areas in order simply to
secure oil supplies. Democratic movements within the burgeoning
civil societies of countries like Egypt, Turkey, Jordan, and
the new Iran must be supported. A general UN conference must
be convened to deal with the rights of nations, ethnicities,
and other minorities without states in this region, like the
Kurds in Turkey, Iraq and Iran; the Shi’ites in Iraq and the
Baha’is as well as the Azeris in Iran. Efforts analogous to
the Marshall Plan in post-war Europe or the Soros Foundation
in Eastern Europe must be developed and furthered for entire
regions. But even if all these things are assumed, I believe
that a more daunting cultural struggle and civilizational malaise
is unfolding before our eyes.
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Click here
for the Columbia Encyclopedia entry on the Marshall Plan, and
here for the Soros Foundation.
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2
As many have noted
(including former Prime Minister of Pakistan Benazir Bhutto),
the events of September 11 at first seemed to offer a belated
confirmation of Samuel Huntington’s famous thesis of the clash
of civilizations. Huntington wrote: "It is my hypothesis that
the fundamental source of conflict in this new world will not
be primarily ideological or primarily economic. The great divisions
among humankind and the dominating source of conflict will be
cultural. Nation states will remain the most powerful actors
in world affairs, but the principal conflicts of global politics
will occur between nations and groups of different civilizations.
The fault lines between civilizations will be the battle lines
of the future."7 Proceeding from a holistic understanding
of cultures and civilizations – terms which he at times conflated
and others distinguished – Huntington was unable to differentiate
one "civilization" from another, with the consequence that,
apart from "the west and the rest," he could not specify how
many civilizations there were and how they were to be differentiated.8
Edward Said pointed out that Huntington made civilizations and
identities into "shut-down, sealed-off entities that have been
purged of the myriad currents and counter-currents that animate
human history, and over centuries have made it possible for
that history not only to contain wars of religion and imperial
conquest but also to be one of exchange, cross-fertilization,
and sharing."9
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It is precisely
this history of cross-fertilization – exchange as well as confrontation
– between Islamic culture and the West that we must pay increasing
attention to. One of the principal thinkers of the Islamist10
movement, Sayyid Qutb, an Egyptian who studied philosophy in
France and briefly visited the United States, developed a civilizational
critique of the West for its corruption, coldness, heartlessness
and individualism. His critique resonates with themes from the
works of Nietzsche as well as Heidegger, from Adorno and Horkheimer
as well as contemporary communitarians.11 Describing
the current condition of the west as one of "jahiliyya," a lack
of knowledge and a condition of ignorance, the Islamists advocate
a return to Koranic law – the shari’a – and Muslim precepts
to combat the corruption of the western way of life. To combat
the condition of jahiliyya, it is necessary to rebel
and establish a counter-community (jama’a) and spread
it through jihad.12 Very often, the Islamists’
struggle against jahiliyya took the form of a struggle
against established authorities in their own countries and their
‘corrupt,’ westernizing policies.
This clash within Islamic countries between Islamist religious
forces and modernizers like Kemal Atatuerk in Turkey, Habib
Burgiba in Tunisia, Gemal Abdel Nasser, Anwar Sadat and Hosni
Mubarek in Egypt, the deposed Reza Shah Pahlavi in Iran, and
even Saddam Hussein in Iraq, and Islamist religious forces is
long, deep and powerful. The modernizers in these countries
have usually come from military rather than civilian backgrounds,
and by transforming one of the few intact institutions of the
old regime – namely the military bureaucracy – into an instrument
of political power and hegemony, they have consolidated their
authority, often with limited popular support and democratic
institutions. All over the Islamic Arab world this military
modernization paradigm, in which Syria and Iraq had participated
through the Ba’ath regimes in the nineteen-seventies, has lost
ground. The defeat of the Egyptian armies in the hands of Israel
during the Six Day War, the Israeli occupation of the Golan
Heights and the west Bank, are reminders to the military elite
of these countries, less of the plight of the Palestinians,
whom they have massacred and oppressed when it suited their
interests (remember Black September in Jordan in 1970, in which
Palestinians were killed by the thousands; or the persecution
of the Palestinians by the Saudis because of their support for
Saddam Hussein during the Gulf War), but of the failure of their
own truncated projects of modernization. Israel is a thorn on
the side of these regimes, whose very presence is a bleeding
reminder of their own failure to modernize in military, technological
and economic terms.
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The revival of
Islamist movements is best understood in the light of the failure
of most of these societies to succeed in combining a prosperous
economy, with political democracy, and a Moslem identity.13
Islamism emerges as a plausible civilizational project, not
just against the West, but against the failure of westernizing
elites who have only managed to import a truncated modernity
into their own societies. Some of these modernizing elites had
considered themselves "socialists" of sorts. The Ba’ath regime
in Syria and Iraq, and even the kind of pan-Arabism envisaged
by Nasser in the early nineteen-sixties, advocated strong redistributionist
economic measures, built up huge public sectors (in state-owned
utilities, for example), and practiced what could be called
"statist modernization" from above. The demise of the Soviet
Union has left these states with no patrons. Need we remind
ourselves that the mobilization of the Islamist mujahideen
in Afghanistan began against the Soviet invasion of the country
in 1973 – an invasion the Soviets engaged in to support their
own backers, the leftist fedayyeen?
The collapse of really existing socialisms, and the failure
of state-guided modernization from above have created an enormous
vacuum in the ideological life of these societies. And into
this vacuum have rushed Islamist fundamentalists. Osama bin
Laden is the most spectacular member of a long chain of critics
in the Islamic world, who, more often than not, have transformed
their local struggles against their own corrupt and authoritarian
regimes (Nasser banned the Islamist Moslem Brotherhood and hung
some of their leaders) toward the outside, toward the external
enemy.
3
I want to end
with Max Weber’s question: which directions do religious rejections
of the world take and why?14 There is a fundamental
conflict between secular, capitalist modernity, driven by profit,
self-interest, individualism, and the ethical world views of
the world’s religions. The religious world views preach various
forms of abstinence, renunciation of riches, the pursuit of
virtue in the path of God, the exercise of solidarity among
members of the faith, and the disciplining of everyday life
to do the work of the Lord. What is it, Weber asked, that enables
some religious interpretations of the world to make their peace
with the new world of modernity? For Weber the Protestant ethic
exhibited its "elective affinity" to capitalism by transforming
the abstinent and methodical pursuit of one’s vocation in the
service of God into the methodical, predictable, disciplined
pursuit of work and profit in this world. This process took
several centuries and not all early modern Christians accepted
its logic: millenarian movements which rejected the capitalist
control of everyday life for the sake of disciplined labor and
profit accompanied the rise of western modernity.
|
See
also the essay on this site by Timur Kuran
addressing Islamist economics. |
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The Protestant
– and more narrowly Calvinist – transformation of religious
salvation into an earthly vocation of hard work in the service
of an unpredictable God, is one among the many paths that the
religious accommodation with the world can take. It is also
possible to split the religious and mundane spheres in such
a way that one altogether withdraws from engagement with the
world; the religious abnegation of the world remains an option.
A third option – besides engagement or withdrawal – is to compartmentalize
by separating the spheres of life which come under the ethical
dictates of religion from those like the public spheres of the
economy which do not. Throughout the Islamic world, such a strict
separation of religious observance (in the domain of family
life and everyday practices of prayer, cleanliness, food and
sexuality) from the sphere of the economy in the "bazaar" (the
marketplace) was practiced. This separation of the home from
the market was made possible by the practice of Islamic tolerance
toward the other Abrahamanic religions, like Judaism and Christianity.
The Ottomans adopted this "separate spheres" model, and permitted
the wide array of ethnic groups and peoples whom they dominated
to govern themselves in their own communal affairs according
to their own religious and customary traditions (the so-called
millet system.) Global modernization is destroying the
fragile balance between these separate spheres; this may explain
in turn the obsessive preoccupation with controlling female
sexuality which all Islamist groups exhibit.
Technical modernization, which brings along with it the gadgets
of modernity like computers, videos, DVD’s, cell phones, satellite
dishes, is no threat to the Islamists.15 In fact,
there is a ruthless exploitation of this new media to convey
one’s message to one’s believers. Neither is finance capitalism
as such problematic from an Islamic perspective. Attempts exist
all over the Muslim world to reconcile the shari’a with
modern financial institutions. Whether it is the hawale
method of money transfers which bypass modern banks and rely
on personalized contacts among money lenders, or the practice
of the obligation of the rich to the poor by sharing 5% of one’s
wealth, as dictated in the Koran (a practice that is
partially behind the founding of the Madrassas – institutions
of religious learning – for the orphan children of war in Afghanistan
by wealthy individuals all over the Islamic world), institutional
innovations such as to make Islam compatible with global capitalism
are taking place. The threat to the separate spheres model is
primarily a threat to family and personal life.
Global capitalism is bringing images of sexual freedom and decadence,
female emancipation and equality among the sexes into the homes
of patriarchal and authoritarian Moslem communities. It is Hollywood
which is identified as America, and not the Constitution or
the Supreme Court, or the legacy of Puritianism and town meetings.
These fast circulating images of sexual liberty and decadence,
physical destruction and violence sell very well globally because
their message is blunt and can be extricated from local cultural
nuance.
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See also the essay on this site by Wang Gungwu
on secularism.
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In a global world,
it is not only images that travel; individuals all over the
Islamic world are part of a large diaspora of migration to the
West. Sizeable Muslim communities exist in every large European
and North American capital. These migrant communities attempt
to practice the separate life spheres model in their new homes.
But the children of Moslem migrants are caught between worlds,
be it through educational institutions or the influence of mass
culture, if not the parents, between the authoritarian and patriarchal
family structures from which they emerge and the new world of
freedom into which they enter. There is a continuous renegotiation
of clashing moral codes and value orientations in the minds
of this younger generation, and particularly of women. If we
want to understand why so many educated, relatively well-off
Muslim males from Hamburg and Paris would participate in the
actions of September 11, we have to understand the psychology
of Muslim immigrants in their encounters with secular liberal
democracies of the west. Given the failure of their own home-grown
versions of modernity like Nasserism and the Ba’ath movement,
given the profound assault on their identity as Muslims which
the global entertainment industry brings, and given the profound
discrimination and contempt which they experience in their host
societies as new immigrants who are perceived to have "backward"
morals and ways of life, many young Muslims today turn to Islamism
and fundamentalism. Commenting on "l’affaire de foulard," (the
veil affair) in France, in which some female students took to
wearing traditional veils less as a sign of submission to religious
patriarchy than as an emblem of difference and defiance of homogenizing
French republican traditions, the French sociologists Gaspard
and Khosrokhavar capture these set of complex symbolic negotiations
as follows: "[The veil] mirrors in the eyes of the parents and
the grandparents the illusions of continuity whereas it is a
factor of discontinuity; it makes possible the transition to
otherness (modernity), under the pretext of identity (tradition);
it creates the sentiment of identity with the society of origin
whereas its meaning is inscribed within the dynamic of relations
with the receiving society…it is the vehicle of the passage
to modernity within a promiscuity which confounds traditional
distinctions, of an access to the public sphere which was forbidden
to traditional women as a space of action and the constitution
of individual autonomy…"16
We can intervene
in this process of complex cultural negotiations as dialogue
partners in a global civilization only insofar as we make an
effort to understand the struggles of others whose idioms and
terms may be unfamiliar to us but which, by the same token,
are also not so different from similar struggles at other times
in our own cultures; through acts of strong hermeneutical generosity,
we can still extend our moral imagination to view the world
through the others’ eyes.17 While I believe that
at this stage of the conflict the use of force against the Osama
bin Laden network is inevitable and justified, the real political
task ahead is to engage in a dialogue with the hearts and minds
of millions of Moslems around this globe – beyond vengeance
and without apocalyptic expectations. Democracies cannot fight
holy wars. Reason, compassion, respect for the dignity of human
life, the search for justice and the desire for reconciliation
are the democratic virtues which are now pitted against acts
of apocalyptic hatred and vengeance.
November 2001
This essay is forthcoming in Constellations: An International
Journal of Critical and Democratic Theory, March 2002.
Footnotes
1 See Susan
Sontag, The New Yorker; Fred Jameson, The London Review
and Slavoj Zizek, "The Desert of the Real. Is this the End of
Fantasy?" In These Times, October 29, 2001.
2 Only, the analogy is not quite accurate, for the
French who were colonizers, eventually left Algeria. But despite
all theories to the contrary, the Jewish population of Palestine
are not colonizers in the traditional sense of the term. They
are not there to exploit the indigenous population or their
resources, but to establish a "Jewish homeland"- however problematic
and tragic this vision may be. The refusal of much of the Arab
world to understand the uniqueness of the dream which motivated
the Zionist enterprise, makes it easy for them to assimilate
Israel to the model of the western oppressor while presenting
themselves as the colonized and the oppressed. Israel was not
established to be a colonizing force; it has become so increasingly
since the occupation of the West Bank, and since its growing
dependence on Palestinian labor to run its expanding economy.
3 "However, the monopolization of legitimate violence
by the political-territorial association and its rational consociations
into an institutional order is nothing primordial, but a product
of evolution." Max Weber, Economy and Society, vol. 2,
ed. by Guenther Roth and Claus Wittich (University of California
Press: Berkeley 1978), 904-905.
4 Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism
(Harcourt, Brace and Jovanovich, New York, 1979[1951]), Part
Three.
5 Roxanne Euben, "Killing (for) Politics: Jihad,
Martyrdom and Political Action," lecture given in the Political
Theory Colloquium, Yale University, October 16, 2001. Forthcoming,
Political Theory (February 2002).
6 For a lucid elucidation of the current situation
from the standpoint of international law, see Richard Falk,"A
Just Response, " The Nation, October 8, 2001.
7 Samuel Huntington, The Clash of Civilizations
and the Remaking of World Order (Simon and Shuster: New
York, 1996), 2.
8 See my forthcoming, Democratic Equality and
Cultural Diversity. Political identities in the Global Era.
Princeton University Press 2002. I discuss the conceptual and
explanatory difficulties of Huntington’s theses in the Introduction.
9 Edward Said on Samuel Huntington, in Al-Ahram
Weekly On-Line, 11-17 October 2001. No. 555.
10 Roxanne Euben observes that " ‘Islamism’ is another,
slightly less controversial way of referring to Islamic fundamentalism."
In "Killing (for) Politics: Jihad, Martyrdom and Political Action."
Paper read at Yale Political Science Colloquium, October 16,
2001. Forthcoming, Political Theory (February 2002)
11 See Roxanne Euben’s excellent book, Enemy in
the Mirror: Islamist Fundamentalism and the Limits of Modern
Rationalism. (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press,
1999).
12 Euben, "Killing (for) Politics," 8.
13 See Sayres S. Rudy for an in-depth social theoretical
analyses of some of these issues, "Globalization, Islamism and
Modernity." Forthcoming.
14 Max Weber, "Religious Rejections of the World
and their Directions," Economy and Society, vol 1. 15
At the end of the nineteen-eighties, when I first visited Germany
as an Alexander von Humboldt fellow in Munich, I was taken aback
by the sale of cassettes and videotaped versions of chants from
the Koran in big shopping centers. Recorded by well-known Muezzins
(cantors), these tapes permitted the faithful to utilize the
technology of the society around them, while remaining true
to themselves. The irony is that the chanting of the Koran,
like the reading of the Talmud, the Old Testament, and unlike
the reading of the Bible, is supposed to be a communal and collective
act of chanting, telling and recalling. The medium of western
technology threatens this communal fabric. The result may be
"religion a la carte," as this phenomenon has been called, for
many Muslims as well.
16 Francoise Gaspard and Farhad Khosrokhar, Le
Foulard et la Republique (Decouverte: Paris, 1995), 44-45.
My translation.
17 I deal with the ethics of communication and multiculturalism
in Democratic Equality and Cultural Diversity. Political
identities in the Global World. Ch. 5 (Forthcoming)
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See also the essay on this site by Tariq
Modood on Muslims in the West. |
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