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SOCIAL
SCIENCE RESEARCH COUNCIL / AFTER SEPT. 11
Good
Muslim, Bad Muslim – An African Perspective
Mahmood
Mamdani, Herbert
Lehman Professor of Government and Anthropology, Columbia
University
Ever
since September 11, there has been a growing media
interest in Islam. What is the link, many seem to ask, between Islam and
terrorism?The Spectator, a British weekly, carried a lead article a few weeks
ago that argued that the link was not with all of Islam,
but with a very literal interpretation of it. This
version, Wahhabi Islam, it warned, was dominant in Saudi
Arabia, from where it had been exported both to
Afghanistan and the US. This argument was echoed widely in many circles,
more recently in the New
York Times. This article is born of dissatisfaction
with the new wisdom that we must tell apart the Good
Muslim from the Bad Muslim.
Culture
Talk
Is
our world really divided into two, so that one part makes
culture and the other is a prisoner of culture? Are there really two meanings of culture?
Does culture stand for creativity, for what being
human is all about, in one part of the world?
But in the other part of the world, it stands for
habit, for some kind of instinctive activity, whose rules
are inscribed in early founding texts, usually religious,
and museumized in early artifacts?
When I read of Islam in the papers these days, I often
feel I am reading of museumized peoples.
I feel I am reading of people who are said not to
make culture, except at the beginning of creation, as some
extraordinary, prophetic, act.
After that, it seems they just conform to culture.
Their culture seems to have no history, no
politics, and no debates.
It seems just to have petrified into a lifeless
custom.
Even more, these people seem incapable of transforming
their culture, the way they seem incapable of growing
their own food. The
implication is that their only salvation lies, as always,
in philanthropy, in being saved from the outside.
When I read this, or something like this, I wonder if this
world of ours is after all divided into two: on the one
hand, savages who must be saved before they destroy us all
and, on the other, the civilized whose burden it is to
save all?
We are now told to give serious attention to culture.
It is said that culture is now a matter of life and
death.
But is it really true that people’s public behavior,
specifically their political behavior, can be read from
their religion? Could
it be that a person who takes his or her religion
literally is a potential terrorist?
And only someone who thinks of the text as not
literal, but as metaphorical or figurative, is better
suited to civic life and the tolerance it calls for?
How, one may ask, does the literal reading of religious
texts translate into hijacking, murder, and terrorism?
Some
may object that I am presenting a caricature of what we
read in the press. After
all, is there not less and less talk of the clash of
civilizations, and more and more talk of the clash inside
civilizations? Is
that not the point of the articles I referred to earlier,
those in The
Spectator and The
New York Times? After
all, we are now told to distinguish between good
Muslims and bad
Muslims. Mind you, not between good and bad persons, nor between
criminals and civic citizens, who both happen to be
Muslims, but between good Muslims and bad Muslims.
We are told that there is a fault line running through
Islam, a line that divides moderate Islam, called genuine
Islam, and extremist political Islam.
The terrorists of September 11, we are told, did
not just hijack planes; it is said that they also hijacked
Islam, meaning genuine Islam!
Here is one version of the argument that the clash is
inside – and not between – civilizations.
It is my own construction, but it is not a
fabrication. I
think of it as an enlightened version, because it does not
just speak of the other, but also of self.
It has little trace of ethnocentrism.
This is how it goes.
Islam and Christianity have one thing in common.
Both share a deeply messianic orientation.
Each has a conviction that it possesses the truth.
Both have a sense of mission to civilize the world.
Both consider the world beyond a sea of ignorance,
one that needs to be redeemed.
Think, for example, of the Arabic word al-Jahaliya, which I have always known to mean the domain of
ignorance.
This conviction is so deep-seated that it is even found in
its secular version, as in the old colonial notion of “a
civilizing mission,” or in its more racialized version,
“the White Man’s Burden.”
Or simply, in the 19th century American
conviction of a “manifest destiny.”
In both cultures, Christian and Muslim, these notions have
been the subject of prolonged debates.
Even if you should claim to know what is good for
humanity, how do you proceed?
By persuasion or force?
Do you convince others of the validity of your
truth or do you proceed by imposing it on them?
The first alternative gives you reason and
evangelism; the second gives you the Crusades.
Take the example of Islam, and the notion of Jihad,
which roughly translated means struggle.
A student of mine gave me a series of articles
written by the Pakistani academic and journalist, Eqbal
Ahmed, in the Karachi-based newspaper, Dawn.
In one of these articles, Eqbal distinguished
between two broad traditions in the understanding of Jihad.
The first, called “little Jihad,”
thinks of Jihad
as a struggle against external enemies of Islam.
It is an Islamic version of the Christian notion of
“just war”. The
second, called “big Jihad,” thinks of Jihad
as more of a spiritual struggle against the self in a
contaminated world.
All of this is true, but I don’t think it
explains terrorism. I
remain deeply skeptical that we can read people’s
political behavior from their religion, or from their
culture. Remember,
it was not so long ago that some claimed that the behavior
of others could be read from their genes.
Could it be true that an orthodox Muslim is a
potential terrorist?
Or, the same thing, that an Orthodox Jew is a
potential terrorist and only a Reform Jew is capable of
being tolerant of those who do not share his convictions?
I am aware that this does not exhaust the question of
culture and politics.
How do you make sense of politics that consciously
wears the mantle of religion?
Take, for example the politics of Osama bin Laden
and al-Qaida, both of whom claim to be waging a Jihad,
a just war against the enemies of Islam?
How do we make sense of this?
I want to suggest that we turn the cultural theory of
politics on its head.
Rather than see this politics as the outcome of an
archaic culture, I suggest we see neither the culture not
the politics as archaic, but both as very contemporary
outcomes of equally contemporary conditions, relations and
conflicts. Instead
of dismissing history and politics as does culture talk, I
suggest we place cultural debates in historical and
political contexts. Terrorism
is not a cultural residue in modern politics.
Rather, terrorism is a modern construction.
Even when it tries to harness one or another aspect
of tradition and culture, it puts this at the service of a
modern project.
In what follows, I would like to offer you a perspective
on contemporary terrorism from an African vantage point.
An African Perspective on Contemporary Terrorism
Eqbal Ahmed writes of a
television image from 1985, of Ronald Reagan meeting a
group of turbaned men, all Afghani, all leaders of the Mujaheddin.
After the meeting, Reagan brought them out into the
White House lawn, and introduced them to the media in
these words: “These gentlemen are the moral equivalents
of America’s founding fathers.”
This was the moment when official America tried to
harness one version of Islam in a struggle against the
Soviet Union. Before
exploring the politics of it, let me clarify the
historical moment.
1975 was the year of American defeat in Indochina.
1975 was also the year the Portuguese empire
collapsed in Africa.
It was the year the center of gravity of the Cold
War shifted from Southeast Asia to Southern Africa.
The question was: who would pick up the pieces of
the Portuguese empire, the US or the Soviet Union?
As the center of gravity of the Cold War shifted, from
Southeast Asia to Southern Africa, there was also a shift
in US strategy. The
Nixon Doctrine had been forged towards the closing years
of the Vietnam War but could not be implemented at that
late stage – the doctrine that “Asian boys must fight
Asian wars” – was really put into practice in Southern
Africa. In
practice, it translated into a US decision to harness, or
even to cultivate, terrorism in the struggle against
regimes it considered pro-Soviet.
In Southern Africa, the immediate result was a
partnership between the US and apartheid South Africa,
accused by the UN of perpetrating “a crime against
humanity.” Reagan
termed this new partnership “constructive engagement.”
South Africa became both conduit and partner of the US in
the hot war against those governments in the region
considered pro-Soviet.
This partnership bolstered a number of terrorist
movements: Renamo in Mozambique, and Unita in Angola.
Their terrorism was of a type Africa had never seen
before. It
was not simply that they were willing to tolerate a higher
level of civilian casualties in military confrontations
– what official America nowadays calls collateral
damage. The
new thing was that these terrorist movements specifically
targeted civilians. It
sought specifically to kill and maim civilians, but not
all of them. Always,
the idea was to leave a few to go and tell the story, to
spread fear. The
object of spreading fear was to paralyze government.
In another decade, the center of gravity of the Cold War
shifted to Central America, to Nicaragua and El Salvador.
And so did the center of gravity of US-sponsored
terrorism. The
Contras were not only tolerated and shielded by official
America; they were actively nurtured and directly
assisted, as in the mining of harbors.
The shifting center of gravity of the Cold War was the
major context in which Afghanistan policy was framed.
But it was not the only context.
The minor context was the Iranian Revolution of
1979. Ayatullah
Khomeini anointed official America as the “Great
Satan,” and official Islam as “American Islam.”
But instead of also addressing the issues – the
sources of resentment against official America – the
Reagan administration hoped to create a pro-American
Islamic lobby.
The grand plan of the Reagan administration was
two-pronged. First,
it drooled at the prospect of uniting a billion Muslims
around a holy war, a Crusade, against the evil empire.
I use the word Crusade, not Jihad,
because only the notion of Crusade can accurately convey
the frame of mind in which this initiative was taken.
Second, the Reagan administration hoped to turn a
religious schism inside Islam, between minority Shia and
majority Sunni, into a political schism. Thereby, it hoped
to contain the influence of the Iranian Revolution as a
minority Shia affair.
This is the context in which an American/Saudi/Pakistani
alliance was forged, and religious madresas
turned into political schools for training cadres.
The Islamic world had not seen an armed Jihad
for centuries. But
now the CIA was determined to create one.
It was determined to put a version of tradition at
the service of politics.
We are told that the CIA looked for a Saudi Prince
to lead this Crusade.
It could not find a Prince.
But it settled for the next best, the son of an
illustrious family closely connected to the royal family.
This was not a backwater family steeped in
pre-modernity, but a cosmopolitan family.
The Bin Laden family is a patron of scholarship.
It endows programs at universities like Harvard and
Yale.
The CIA created the Mujaheddin
and Bin Laden as alternatives to secular nationalism.
Just as, in another context, the Israeli
intelligence created Hamas as an alternative to the secular PLO.
Contemporary “fundamentalism” is a modern project, not
a traditional leftover.
When the Soviet Union was defeated in Afghanistan,
this terror was unleashed on Afghanistan in the name of
liberation. As
different factions fought over the liberated country –
the Northern Alliance against the Taliban
– they shelled and destroyed their own
cities with artillery.
The Question of Responsibility
To
understand the question of who bears responsibility for
the present situation, it will help to contrast two
situations, that after the Second World War and that after
the Cold War, and compare how the question of
responsibility was understood and addressed in two
different contexts.
In spite of Pearl Harbor, World War Two was fought in
Europe and Asia, not in the US.
It was not the US which faced physical
and civic destruction at the end of the war.
The question of responsibility for postwar reconstruction did
not just arise as a moral question; it arose as a
political question. In Europe, its
urgency was underlined by the changing political situation
in Yugoslavia, Albania, and particularly, Greece.
This is the context in which the US accepted
responsibility for restoring conditions for decent life in
noncommunist Europe.
That initiative was called the Marshall Plan.
The Cold War was not fought in Europe, but in Southeast
Asia, in Southern Africa, and in Central America.
Should we, ordinary humanity, hold official America
responsible for its actions during the Cold War?
Should official America be held responsible for
napalm bombing and spraying Agent Orange in Vietnam?
Should it be held responsible for cultivating
terrorist movements in Southern Africa and Central
America?
Perhaps no other society paid a higher price for the
defeat of the Soviet Union than did Afghanistan.
Out of a population of roughly 15 million, a
million died, another million and a half were maimed, and
another five million became refugees.
Afghanistan was a brutalized society even before
the present war began.
After the Cold War and right up to September 10 of this
year, the US and Britain compelled African countries to
reconcile with terrorist movements.
The demand was that governments must share power with
terrorist organizations in the name of reconciliation
– as in Mozambique, in Sierra Leone, and in Angola.
If terrorism was an official American Cold War brew, it
was turned into a local Sierra Leonean or Angolan or
Mozambican or Afghani brew after the Cold War.
Whose responsibility is it?
Like Afghanistan, are these countries hosting
terrorism, or are they also hostage to terrorism?
I think both.
Official America has a habit of not taking responsibility
for its own actions.
Instead, it habitually looks for a high moral
pretext for inaction.
I was in Durban at the World Congress Against
Racism (WCAR) when the US walked out of it. The Durban conference was about major crimes of the
past, about racism, and xenophobia, and related crimes.
I returned from Durban to listen to Condoleeza Rice
talk about the need to forget slavery because, she said,
the pursuit of civilized life requires that we forget the
past.
It is true that, unless we learn to forget, life will turn
into revenge-seeking.
Each of us will have nothing but a catalogue of
wrongs done to a long line of ancestors.
But civilization cannot be built on just
forgetting. We
must not only learn to forget, we must also not forget to
learn. We
must also memorialize, particularly monumental crimes.
America was built on two monumental crimes: the
genocide of the Native American and the enslavement of the
African American.
The tendency of official America is to memorialize other
peoples’ crimes and to forget its own – to seek a high
moral ground as a pretext to ignore real issues.
Conclusion
I
would like to conclude with the question of
responsibility. It
is a human tendency to look for others in times of
adversity. We
seek friends and allies in times of danger.
But in times of prosperity, the short-sighted tend
to walk away from others.
This is why prosperity, and not adversity, is the
real litmus test of how we define community.
The contemporary history of Southern Africa,
Central America, and Afghanistan testifies to this
tendency.
Modernity in politics is about moving from exclusion to
inclusion, from repression to incorporation.
By including those previously excluded, we give
those previously alienated a stake in things.
By doing so, we broaden the bounds of lived
community, and of lived humanity.
That perhaps is the real challenge today.
It is the recognition that the good life cannot be
lived in isolation.
I think of civilization as a constant creation whereby we
gradually expand the boundaries of community, the
boundaries of those with whom we share the world – this
is why it is so grotesque to see bombs and food parcels
raining on the defenseless people of Afghanistan from the
same source.
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