From: Megawati Mustafa [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: SPIRITUAL AND INTELLECTUAL JIHAD


SPIRITUAL AND INTELLECTUAL JIHAD 
A BEST-CASE SCENARIO 
FOR THE HOLY LAND 
 
by Dr. Robert Dickson Crane 
 
 
 The grand strategy of Islam has always been to address issues of conscience 
in both domestic and foreign policy by focusing on causes rather than merely on 
effects. It focuses on the inner rather than the outer, on the spiritual 
dynamics of change rather than merely on their result in current events. And it 
focuses on the power of ideas in shaping human affairs rather than on the power 
that comes from bombs and ballots.

The challenge of bringing peace through justice in the Holy Land requires the 
transformation of Jewish self-perceived identity. Jews can perfect themselves 
as a people and thereby fulfill their destiny in the Holy Land only if they 
recognize the threats that secular Zionism poses to their future and instead 
embrace the guidance and opportunities of spiritual Zionism so beautifully 
taught by the Chief Rabbi of Palestine from 1919 to 1935, Rebbe Abraham Isaac 
Kook.

Identity transformation is required also for both Christians and Muslims. The 
Holy Land can resume its normal role as the worlds leading center of 
civilization interchange and enrichment only if the Christian civilization of 
the West transforms its drive for stability, and the Muslim civilization of the 
East transforms its drive for survival, into a drive for peace through justice.

The Jewish, Christian, and Muslim peoples can fulfill their destiny as the 
principal catalyst of a new global civilization only by drawing on the best 
from their past in a joint effort of civilization renewal. This process of 
civilization renewal requires Muslims to found dedicated institutes of higher 
learning. A pioneering and cutting-edge venture in civilization renewal has 
been undertaken by a diverse group of progressive Muslim intellectuals, 
scholars, and professionals. They have founded Crescent University as a modern, 
mainstream, and egalitarian seat of higher learning modeled on other successful 
faith-based institutions. Their mission is to develop an American Muslim 
university equal to Oxford and Harvard by the middle of the present century. 
 
 
 Part One 
 
 
 Transformation of Self Identity from Secular to Spiritual Zionism 
 
 
 The current events of April, 2002, are a denouement of the so-called Second 
Intifada, which began in September, 2000, as a reaction to Prime Minister Ariel 
Sharons symbolical assertion of Israeli sovereignty over the Haram al Sharif 
or Temple Mount in the heart of Old Jerusalem. His occupation of the Temple 
Mount by an armed force of a thousand Israelis put an end to the decade-long 
Oslo peace process, which, in the Palestinians perception, had succeeded only 
in gradually and incrementally restricting their rights and hopes in the Holy 
Land.

Increasingly, even supporters of secular Zionism are concluding that present 
trends seem to be leading to an eventual holocaust. Even separation of peoples 
into two sovereign ghettos might accomplish no more than buy time before the 
inevitable. There are alternatives, among which perhaps the most promising is 
the Abraham Federation, explained on the website of the Center for Economic and 
Social Justice, www.cesj.org. Any successful solution, however, must address 
the most fundamental of the root causes of conflict, which is secular Zionism 
itself.

Conflict over the past century in the Holy Land, including the failure of Oslo, 
is an effect of the secularization of Judaism during the 19th century in 
Europe, caused in part by anti-Semitism, and by the devastating blow to the 
faith in the twentieth century by the Holocaust, which produced the phenomenon 
of secular Zionism. Alienated from their own culture, and vulnerable to modern 
nationalist demagoguery, a growing portion of the Jewish nation came to elevate 
control over physical land to an ultimate value and goal. A minor, splinter 
faction before the Holocaust, the secular Zionists by mid-century had become 
the dominant force in a revolution that replaced spiritual Zionism as the 
return to God by a secularized Zionism as the return to a modern secular state. 
The self-identity of Jews world-wide thus was transformed into loyalty to a 
national-security-state based on political and military power in conflict with 
the rest of the world.

The future of Jews in the Holy Land will depend on the extent to which they can 
overcome this secular transformation and re-transform their identity to recover 
and connect with their spiritual roots.

More than four years before the Second Intifada, the Associate Editor of the 
Middle East Affairs Journal, Laura Drake, identified the underlying problem of 
identity transformation in her 54-page article, Reconstructing Identities: The 
Arab-Israeli Conflict in Theoretical Perspective. This profound think-piece, 
published in the Winter/Spring issue of 1997-98, summarized her just-completed 
doctoral dissertation at American University.

Dr. Drake focuses on the identity destabilization and identity deconstruction 
among Israelis who no longer consider themselves Zionists and among Arabs who 
consider Arab identity to be merely a function of geography. She suggests that 
such a post-modern loss of consciousness on one side both causes and results 
from hegemony on the other side.

The beginning of the 21st century revealed how easily this negative process of 
identity loss can be reversed by threats to physical security deliberately 
instigated and aggravated by extremists on both sides. In early 2002, the 
mutual incriminations of a terrorist/anti-terrorist dance of death refurbished 
secular identities. At the same time it made ever more clear the need for the 
spiritual leaders of all the parties in the Holy Land during the rest of the 
21st century to recover their pre-Holocaust and pre-Intifada identities as 
peoples called by God to bring peace through justice to the world.

The flourishing of Jewish civilization in the Holy Land will never come merely 
from the post-modern loss of modernist identities, because such a vacuum is 
unstable. Long-run security will come only from positive and pro-active 
commitment to recover classical identities.

The apostle of such classical identity for Jews was Abraham Isaac Kook, who was 
Chief Rabbi of Palestine from 1919 to 1935. He taught that every religion 
contains the seed of its own perversion, because humans are free to divert 
their worship from God to themselves. The greatest evil is always the 
perversion of the good, and the surest salvation from evil is always the return 
to prophetic origins.

Although the fundamentalist Gush Emunim, who have established fanatical 
settlements deep into the West Bank, invoke Rebbe Kook as their mentor, they 
make the sacrilegious error of turning his spiritual teaching into a call for 
secular nationalism of the most extreme kind. Abraham Isaac Kooks entire life 
bespoke his message that only in the Holy Land of Israel can the genius of 
Hebraic prophecy be revived and the Jewish people bring the creative power of 
Gods love in the form of justice and unity to every person and to all mankind. 
For the basic disposition of the Israelite nation, he asserted, is the 
aspiration that the highest measure of justice, the justice of God, shall 
prevail in the world.

Universally recognized as the leading spokesperson of spiritual Zionism, Rabbi 
Kook went to Jaffa from Poland in 1904 to perfect the people and land of Israel 
by bringing out the holy sparks in every person, group, and ideology in order 
to make way for the advent of the Messiah.

As a Lurianic Cabbalist, committed to the social renewal that both confirms and 
transcends halakha, Rebbe Kook emphasized, first of all, that religious 
experience is certain knowledge of God, from which all other knowledge can be 
at best merely a reflection, and that this common experience of total being 
or unity of all religious people is the only adequate medium for Gods 
message through the Jewish people, who are the microcosm of humanity.

If individuals cannot summon the whole world to God, proclaimed Rebbe Kook, 
then a people must issue the call. He appealed therefore to the Jewish people, 
whose commitment to the oneness of God is a commitment to the vision of 
universality in all its far-reaching implications & and whose vocation is to 
help make the world more receptive to the divine light & by bearing witness to 
the Torah in the world. This, he taught, is the whole purpose of Israel, which 
stands for shir el, the song of God. It is schlomo, which means peace or 
wholeness, Solomans Song of Songs.

But he warned, again prophetically, that, when an idea needs to acquire a 
physical base, it tends to descend from its height. In such an instance it is 
thrust toward the earthly, and brazen ones come and desecrate its holiness. 
Together with this, however, its followers increase, and the physical vitality 
becomes strikingly visible. Each person then suffers: The stubbornness of 
seeking spiritual satisfaction in the outer aspect of things enfeebles ones 
powers, fragments the human spirit, and leads the stormy quest in a direction 
where it will find emptiness and disappointment. In disillusionment, the quest 
will continue in another direction. & When degeneration leads one to embrace an 
outlook on life that negates ones higher vision, then one becomes prey to the 
dark side within. & The spiritual dimension becomes enslaved and darkened in 
the darkness of life.

Rebbe Kook warns that the irruption of spiritual light from its divine source 
on uncultivated ground yields the perverse aspect of idolatry. & It is for this 
reason that we note to our astonishment the decline of religious Judaism in a 
period of national renaissance. The love of the nation, he taught, or more 
broadly, for humanity, is adorned at its source with the purest ideals, which 
reflect humanity and nationhood in their noblest light, & but if a person 
should wish to embrace the nation in its decadent condition, its coarser 
aspects, without inner illumination from its ancient, higher light, he will 
soon take into himself filth and lowliness and elements of evil that will turn 
to bitterness in a short span of history of but a few generations. & This is 
the narrow state to which the community of Israel will descend prior to an 
awakening to the true revival.

By transgressing the limits, Rebbe Kook prophesied, the leaders of Israel may 
bring on a holocaust. But this will merely precede a revival. As smoke fades 
away, so will fade away all the destructive winds that have filled the land, 
the language, the history, and the literature.

Always following his warning was the reminder of Gods covenant. In all of 
this is hiding the presence of the living God. & It is a fundamental error for 
us to retreat from our distinctive excellence, to cease recognizing ourselves 
as chosen for a divine vocation. & We are a great people and we have blundered 
greatly, and, therefore, we suffered great tribulation; but great also is our 
consolation. & Our people will be rebuilt and established & through the divine 
dimension of its life. All the builders of the people will come to recognize 
this profound truth. Then they will call out with a mighty voice to themselves 
and to their people: Let us go and return to the Lord! And this return will be 
a true return.

And at this time, prophesied Rebbe Kook, who always sharply defended the 
validity of both Christianity and Islam as religions in the plan of God, the 
brotherly love of Esau and Jacob [Christians and Jews], and of Isaac and 
Ishmael [Jews and Muslims], will assert itself above all the confusion & [and 
turn] the darkness to light. 
 
 
 Part Two 
 
 
 Civilizational Renewal 
 
 
 If the causes of conflict are fundamentally the loss of spiritual awareness 
and commitment, the cures are their recovery. This is particularly important 
for Muslims in America, because they are called to the spiritual path both by 
their own religion and by their presence in America, whose founders and entire 
purpose are deeply spiritual. The spiritual power both of America and of 
American Muslims can be recovered only by recognizing their common origins in 
reliance on and commitment to their loving Creator.

Muslims are vice-regents of Allah, subhanahu wa taala, born with khilafa. 
Every individual Muslim has a duty, fard ain, and the entire umma here in 
America has a responsibility, fard kifaya, to be Gods servants in weaving 
Allahs grand design. Their role and very existence here in America is part of 
the divine purpose to bring real meaning and substance to the Founders 
conviction that America can and should be a moral leader of the world.

America is perhaps the only country where a truly Islamic culture can flourish 
and therefore may be the only leading Western country that can become 
functionally Islamic. By this I do not mean that the majority will make the 
shahada and formally become Muslims, but rather that the common principles of 
classical America and classical Islam will provide the paradigm of thought that 
guides public life.

The basic paradigm of what we call American traditionalist thought, which 
originated in the Glorious Revolution of 1688 in England and culminated in the 
American Revolution almost a century later, is that order, justice, and freedom 
are interdependent. When freedom is construed to be independent of justice, 
there can be no justice and the result will be anarchy. When order is thought 
to be possible without justice, there can be no order, because injustice is the 
principal cause of disorder. When justice is thought to be possible without 
order and freedom, then the pursuit of order, justice, and freedom are snares 
of the ignorant.

This triune nature of peace through justice is thoroughly Islamic, but Muslim 
scholars have spelled it out in unsurpassed detail. The vision of Islam was 
fully articulated during the Islamic classical period and culminated in the 
writings of Al Shatibi six centuries ago in direct reliance on thematic 
analysis of the Quran and on the diplomacy of the Prophet Muhammad ( ). The 
great scholars of Islam, every one of whom was imprisoned at least once for 
refusing to corrupt Islamic tradition, developed guidelines for developing and 
applying Islamic law (shariah) in the form of a set of Islamic universal 
principles (kulliyat), essentials (dururiyat), or purposes (maqasid). Although 
there are some important fiqi guidelines to observe in this field, al Shatibi 
explained that the number and inner tectonics of these maqasid are flexible 
according to time and place.

The secret to the functional Islamization of America is to articulate vision. 
Vision shapes the public policy agenda, and whoever shapes the agenda controls 
policy.

For purposes of agenda formation, the universal principles of Islamic thought 
are seven responsibilities. When observed, they produce corresponding human 
rights. The first, haqq al din, is the duty to respect and maintain the purity 
of divine revelation, without which human reason is unreliable. The next three, 
which promote human survival, are haqq al haya, the duty to respect human life 
and the human person; haqq al nasl, the duty to respect the human family and 
group rights at every level of human association; and haqq al mal, the duty to 
respect private property and the universal human right to individual ownership 
of the means of production.

The second set of three maqasid promotes quality of life. These are haqq al 
hurriya, the duty to respect group self-determination through political 
freedom, including the second-order principles of governmental responsiveness 
(shura), representative government (ijma), and an independent judiciary; haqq 
al karama, the duty to respect human dignity, including freedom of religion and 
gender equity; and haqq al ilm, which is the duty to respect knowledge, 
including freedom of thought, speech, and association, subject to the other six 
universal principles. These universal principles of Islamic law constitute a 
definition of justice, which, in turn, is the Islamic definition of human 
rights.

In order to clarify the picture of the real Islam in Western societies, the 
principal requirement is for Muslims to reflect the wisdom and beauty of Islam 
in their daily lives, because this is the best form of dawa. Their 
responsibilities, however, go beyond this, particularly now that Islam has 
become well established in America during a century when its future and the 
future of civilization hang in the balance. They must introduce Islam into the 
public discourse on all issues of conscience. For this they need concerted 
effort by Muslim think-tanks or policy centers, and behind the think-tanks as 
essential intellectual support must be the institutionalization of higher 
education in the Muslim equivalent of Harvard or Oxford.

Some of the opinion leaders in the Muslim umma talk glibly about founding 
think-tanks, but without any idea of why, what, or how, other than to vent 
their frustration with American foreign policies. They are narcissistic to the 
extent of conceiving that a Muslim think-tank should address only issues that 
directly concern Muslims. They treat Islam as a special-interest group rather 
than as a universal religion divinely revealed to bring balance in our 
stewardship of the earth, mercy to the poor, wisdom to the powerful, and 
justice to all.

The function of a Muslim think-tank is to provide vision for a network of 
like-minded think-tanks in the non-Muslim policy community. It also should 
explore and evaluate different options for action.

In Islam, commitment to action is known as jihad. There are three kinds of 
jihad. The first two are found in the hadith or history of the sayings and 
actions of the Prophet Muhammad ( ). These are the jihad al akbar or greatest 
jihad, which is the struggle to overcome ones unruly self. The second is the 
lesser jihad, the jihad al saghrir or asghrar, which is the armed battle to 
defend the human rights of ones own people and of people everywhere. The third 
jihad, mentioned only by the word of God in the Quran, Surah al Furqan 25:52, 
is the jihad al kabir or great jihad. This jihad is called for in the 
exhortation wa jihidhum bihi jihadan kabiran, which means struggle with it 
[divine revelation] in a great struggle. This is the intellectual jihad, which 
normally follows the first two.

In the modern era, when the instinct to defend oneself with armed force can be 
self-defeating, the call to a great jihad requires Muslim intellectuals to 
counter the impending clash of civilizations by providing the intellectual 
basis for cooperation among civilizations in the articulation of common 
principles and the pursuit of common goals.

The scholars and political activists of Islam have a four-fold task, which is 
to: 1) develop a framework of thought consistent with the universal principles 
of classical Americas founders and of the classical scholars of Islam; 2) 
address the major issues of conscience in the world within the framework of 
these principles, known to Muslims as the maqasid al shariah; 3) enlist the 
leaders of interfaith dialogue, without which there can be no real 
civilizational cooperation and renewal; and 4) from this position of strength, 
engage the deep but destructive thinkers, who otherwise will develop a 
counter-culture on their own, cut off from the perennial wisdom that produces 
civilization. The challenge to the Muslim umma or community worldwide is 
nothing less than to mount a movement of global civilizational renewal at a 
time when the barbarians are not only at the gates of civilization but 
entrenching themselves inside. 
 
 
 Part Three 
 
 
 New Frontiers in Erudition and Enlightenment 
 
 
 After the calamity of Americas Black September, 2002, it became obvious to 
both Muslims and non-Muslims that enlightened Muslims need a reputable 
institutional voice in the mainstream of intellectual and political life. Only 
by cooperating with the intellectuals and opinion leaders of all faiths can 
Muslims help strengthen Americas original vision and values and shape a 
corresponding agenda for addressing the issues of conscience and concern both 
in America and around the world. The alternative is continuing confrontation by 
Muslim radicals steeped in ignorance, extremism, paranoia, hatred, and global 
terrorism.

The younger generation of the ten-million-strong Muslim population in America, 
which now produces 100,000 high school graduates a year, can play a critical 
role in reviving the classical, revolutionary thought of Americas 
revolutionary founders as well as of the enlightened scholars of Islam. This 
task of renewing the wisdom of the past in an ecumenical, classical education 
is necessary to build a world civilization that recognizes the legitimacy of 
all the world religions within the common paradigm that we might call 
functional Islam.

In response to the need, concerned Muslims formed Crescent University to serve 
both the national and global needs of Muslims by providing a ground-breaking 
seat of higher learning to produce new generations of thinking Muslims from all 
walks of life committed to help shape Americas global role and to promote 
Islamic ecumenism and the resulting global Islamic unity. Muslims must become 
creators rather than consumers of knowledge and technology so that they can 
become opinion leaders in the broader society.

The Muslim community in America has now come of age with a critical mass of top 
scholars and scientists, as well as prosperous professionals and entrepreneurs, 
to fill the distinctive marketing niche revealed in a Crescent Steering Group 
poll, which found a strong communal desire for a prestigious Muslim university 
to rank with the best universities in America. In order to keep it highly 
selective, skilled headhunters will recruit the finest faculty, both Muslim and 
non-Muslim, and professional marketers will attract the best students. The 
objective is not to replicate any inward-looking madrassah-style or seminary 
training but to incubate leaders of forward-looking Muslim generations residing 
and working in the West.

Crescent is a true university in the sense of its universal scope and its 
commitment to exploring new frontiers of knowledge together with its peers, 
such as Harvard and Yale, in the Ivy League. Crescent becomes a bridgehead to 
the future by stimulating critical Muslim thinking in an atmosphere of 
scholarly ingenuity, innovative investigation, philosophical diversity, and 
exploratory erudition.

Visionary in outlook and futuristic in orientation, Crescent exists to 
revitalize Islamic thought and theology and catalyze an authentic spiritual 
renaissance. Its purpose is to renew in the modern world the enlightenment of 
early Islam, when scholars and students from across frontiers and faiths 
pioneered the peerless intellectual freedom and dynamism renowned at Cordoba 
University in Andalusia and Sankore University in Timbuktu, as well as in Al 
Azhar in North Africa, Baghdad, and similar centers in Southwest Asia. These 
educational Meccas pioneered the scientific method in their search primarily 
for truth. They were copied by Europeans in their search primarily for power. 
Both East and West now recognize the need for a reinforcing balance.

Crescent, as the first fully-fledged American Muslim university, will 
encapsulate Islams twin focus on reason and revelation, scholarship and the 
sublime, science and religion. In its cutting-edge under-graduate and 
professional schools, Crescent will be the principal platform from which a new 
generation of informed, forward-looking Islamic leadership will emerge to help 
America meet the challenges of the modern world. By emphasizing the unique 
epistemological synthesis of scientific exploration and human wisdom, of 
secular knowledge and sacred understanding, of professional development and 
moral rearmament, Crescent can revive the Islamic genius in intellectual 
originality, scientific inquisitiveness, and technological leadership that 
spawns vibrant civilization.

The entire curriculum of Crescent is infused with the total spectrum of secular 
knowledge and spiritual learning, the timely and the timeless. Its graduate 
schools in the humanities will excel in everything needed to produce a global 
ethic by focusing on both personal and community responsibilities and on human 
rights (collectively known as the maqasid al shariah) inherent in the 
overarching Islamic paradigm of individual morality and economic and social 
justice. This will lead to new frontiers in normative economics, political 
governance, civic responsibility, and communal altruism, as well as personal 
ethics. These, in turn, will produce an Islamic ethics and an Islamic ethos as 
a model for the ongoing search in all the world religions.

Crescents bed-rock and all-embracing pluralism provides a haven for all 
open-minded seekers of truth, both Muslims and non-Muslims, to engage in an 
on-going process of interfaith dialogue, religio-cultural interaction, and 
spiritual affirmation, in order to strengthen the pillars of all civilizations 
in the structure of a global unity incorporating diversity, which is possible 
today for the first time in human history

All the religions and denominations in America recognize that their faith and 
future depend on faith-based education and they all have founded and are 
maintaining universities that bring to bear their contributions to the mosaic 
that is America and to the solution of its problems of conscience. Muslims can 
do no less, particularly because Islam by its very nature is universal and 
ecumenical and therefore is well-suited for leadership in bringing 
non-sectarian faith-based wisdom into the public square. Islam, as developed 
and applied in America, can and should be a principal force in completing the 
American Revolution, or, as President Ronald Reagan put it, in launching the 
Second American Revolution as a non-hegemonic model for the entire world. The 
Muslim contribution to this task of civilizational renewal can best begin with 
the founding of Crescent as a world-class American Muslim university dedicated 
to this goal.

The teaching method or pedagogy of Crescent University customizes the 
world-famous Oxford and Cambridge (Oxbridge) collegiate and tutorial system in 
a residential community of scholars and students, with class sizes limited to 
20 students. Crescent follows the Continental system of comprehensive 
examinations at the end of the first two years and upon graduation, as well as 
the system of external examiners to avoid the debilitating grade inflation that 
is contaminating American academia.

The core curriculum is based on the great books of Western and Eastern 
civilizations, building upon and enhancing the successful experiments at the 
two St. Johns campuses and at Sarah Lawrence College. The great books at 
Crescent include those of the Islamic civilization as part of the broader 
Islamic, Christian, Jewish civilization, which can become the basis of a 
pluralist and open world civilization of the future. For this purpose, student 
body and faculty will include both Muslims and non-Muslims.

Study abroad, particularly in the professional schools, and mastery of at least 
two Muslim languages, is encouraged. The Crescent law school, once activated by 
the year 2010, will offer degrees in both American law and Islamic 
jurisprudence and a unique advanced degree in comparative legal systems 
designed to include both. This latter degree would require intensive study in 
major Islamic universities of the Muslim world.

Crescent University is egalitarian, enlightened, and co-educational. Women will 
play crucial roles not only in the student body but in the faculty and in the 
administration of the university. Crescent restores the Islamic ordinances of 
gender equity, while respecting, for example, the wisdom of single sex 
dormitories.

Down-stream projects include a university academic press, convention center, 
teaching hospital, think-tanks, and an adjacent research complex and business 
park.

The first of Crescents family of associated research associations is the 
Center for Understanding Islam, which was founded in the Fall of 2001 as a 
clearing house for both popular and scholarly answers to key current questions 
about the teachings of Islam. Its website is www.cuii.org. The Centers purpose 
is to help Muslims offer a common framework for explaining the wisdom of Islam 
in the contemporary world. The larger purpose, as given in its publication, 
Islam: Short Answers to Key Current Questions, March 2002, 23 pages, is to 
cooperate with concerned persons of all faiths in developing a global ethic as 
guidance for addressing all issues of conscience in both domestic and foreign 
policy. This Center for Understanding Islam is not a think-tank in the common 
sense of the term, because it carefully does not address specific policies of 
any government or even recommend a specific agenda for public policy.

Crescent University and its associated organizations are committed to its twin 
focus on reason and revelation, science and religion, scholarship and the 
sublime. Its five operating principles are: 1) erudition and excellence; 2) 
ecumenism; 3) egalitarianism; 4) environment; and 5) enlightenment. Together 
these are the keys to success for a modern world-class university. 
 
 
 Conclusion 
 
 
 The best-case scenario for the future of the Holy Land envisages the revival 
of both spiritual and intellectual jihad, designed to address issues of 
conscience in both domestic and foreign policy by focusing on causes rather 
than merely on effects. It focuses on the inner rather than the outer, on the 
spiritual dynamics of change rather than merely on their result in current 
events. The grand strategy of Islam therefore relies on spiritual and 
intellectual jihad, the jihad al akbar and the jihad al kabir, rather than on 
the jihad al saghrir or lesser jihad of employing physical force. It focuses on 
the power of paradigms and ideas in shaping human affairs in the hope and 
prayer that peace through justice and global unity is a paradigm whose time has 
come. 
 
 
 




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