By Abdal Hakim Murad 
  Wahhabism, the hardline ideology at the core of current terrorism, has cut 
deep wounds in Islam, and helped alienate young UK Muslims. Can a British 
version of Islam break free of its influence? 
  REACTION in Britain’s Muslim community to the 7 July bombings was swift and 
seemingly unanimous. “These killings had absolutely no sanction in Islam,” said 
a conference of imams convened at the London Central Mosque, while the British 
Muslim Forum delivered a fatwa that classified the London bombings as hiraba, 
an Islamic legal term denoting aggravated violence against the innocent. All 
implicated in the crimes were to be “excluded from the Muslim community and 
places of worship until their repentance has become manifest”. 
  The loud unanimity of the leadership has done much to assuage the fears of 
other communities. Yet the arguments are not at an end. The leadership has 
issued decree that is the nearest thing Islam has to excommunication. Yet it 
has not so clearly given an answer to a pressing question: why should some 
apparently devout young men regard their terroristic acts as sanctioned by 
religion? 
  One explanation is that Western crimes against Muslims, such as the Iraq 
sanctions and the subsequent invasion, have been so provocative that a Muslim 
radical backlash was entirely predictable. This makes some sense; but only as 
psychology, not theology. 
  Another theme prominent in the Muslim reaction is that Islam is not the only 
world religion currently afflicted by lunatic fringes. The London bombers 
simply represented a Muslim version of this tragic, omnipresent distortion.

Again, such observations are not unhelpful. Yet as a serious religious 
explanation they do not satisfy. They resemble a self-exoneration through 
finding like faults in others, a moral vice stoutly condemned in Islamic 
ethics. Muslims still need to offer to the outside world a clear diagnosis that 
explains how such an aberration could emerge. Given that the use of terrorism 
for “Islamic” political ends has been steadily increasing since its emergence a 
quarter of a century ago, it is time that more Muslims question themselves. 
After all, the saints and the prophets, despite their perfection, are endlessly 
self-critical; as the founder of Islam said: “I seek God’s forgiveness 70 times 
each day.” 
  Fortunately, this picture of a Muslim community enmeshed in a mentality of 
hurt innocence is not quite accurate. While Muslim leaders may often reach for 
a language of self-exoneration in public, behind the scenes, and in 
publications and conferences intended for insiders alone, there is a growing 
disquiet and a passionate debate. 
  This debate juggles two intimately related themes. First, the established 
leaders of the religion are aware that the radicals are not listening to them. 
Each Muslim country has its authoritative scholars, often led by a mufti, who 
will rule on controversial issues. To become a mufti, a scholar must have 
received an ijaza, an elaborate certification of teaching competence, from a 
comparably certified figure. The radicals, like the London bombers, and Osama 
bin Laden, have no such qualifications. According to the traditional system 
they should be bound by the rulings of the muftis; yet they refuse to submit. 
  The classically authorised scholars denounce terrorist acts, which they 
generally stigmatise as hiraba. However over the past decade, these men have 
been increasingly denounced by the radicals as weaklings and stooges. From 
al-Qaida’s perspective, the religion’s leaders have failed to realise that 
America’s “evil empire” can only be halted when Western civilians, terrified by 
urban mayhem, vote against their governments’ expansionist policies. 
  There is a second crisis that is now distressing the traditional leadership. 
This takes the form of a profound doctrinal disjuncture. Al-Qaida sympathisers 
regard the traditional Sunni muftis and imams, not only as politically 
spineless, but as heretical. Mainstream imams, including those trained in the 
UK’s 16 Muslim seminaries, follow traditional Sunnism, while al-Qaida is rooted 
in Wahhabism, the eighteenth-century reform movement of central Arabia. Strict 
Wahhabis consider the theology and piety of mainline Sunnism to be kufr 
(disbelief). Hence Wahhabi radicals have not hesitated to kill Muslims, 
including senior scholars; indeed, Muslims have always been al-Qaida’s 
principal victims. 
  Wahhabism represents a sort of Islamic Reformation: scripturalist, 
literal-minded, hostile to the veneration of saints and to philosophical 
theology. Hence Wahhabi zealots are no more likely to heed the voice of the 
muftis than, say, Cromwell would have been responsive to the entreaties of the 
Pope as his Puritan armies laid waste to Ireland. 
  A revealing example of this dysfunctional Islam is supplied by Osama bin 
Laden’s 1998 fatwa, where he urges Muslims to “kill the Americans and their 
allies, military and civilians, in any country where this is possible”. The 
fatwa lacks any reference to the classical methods of Islamic law, and simply 
takes its cue from a Quranic verse that runs “slay the idolators wherever you 
find them”. Classically this passage is taken to refer to Arab 
idol-worshippers, a category now extinct; but the Wahhabi method allows bin 
Laden to disregard the views of the classical schools, and impose his own 
meaning on the text. The sanctity of civilian life, affirmed by orthodox 
jurists, is not even mentioned. The fatwa stands in flagrant violation of the 
orthodox consensus (ijma). But from his drastically reformed perspective, his 
followers alone are the true believers, and the consensus may simply be 
disregarded. 
  Muslim leaders have often been coy about publicly acknowledging the role of 
this schism in the current crisis. Sometimes this is because of physical 
threats: in Pakistan or Iraq, it is now possible to be murdered for criticising 
Wahhabism. Sometimes, more innocently, it is because of squeamishness about 
recognising that the seamless garment of Islam has been so disastrously torn. 
On other occasions, institutions and states may be nervous of publicly venting 
their anger at Wahhabism for fear that the cornucopia of Saudi donations might 
suddenly end. 
  Wahhabism was generally loathed in the Islamic world when it made its first 
appearance in the eighteenth century. The collapse of Ottoman power during the 
First World War allowed it to assert itself and, amid scenes of shocking 
massacre, the Holy Cities were annexed. In the late twentieth century, the 
explosion of oil wealth allowed Saudi Arabia to export this same puritanism to 
the outside world. 
  It is in the context of Wahhabi theology that Osama bin Laden and his 
admirers operate. Saudi Arabia thus finds itself in the difficult position of 
maintaining a moderate, pro-Western international profile, while simultaneously 
supporting a doctrinal system that is easily seized upon by the angry and 
disaffected as a justification for mass murder. After the 11 September attacks, 
the Saudi authorities worked hard to rein in and monitor their missionary 
infrastructure, even banning Saudi charities from operating abroad. 
  Saudi Arabia is struggling to temper its Wahhabi inheritance; but it is still 
quietly regarded by the Muslim leaders of my acquaintance as the heart of 
darkness in the current crisis. On a recent visit to Bosnia I learned how the 
impoverished Muslim community is working hard to establish colleges from which 
Wahhabism is excluded, as part of a reaction against the often-fierce 
intolerance of Bosnian Muslims who have benefited from Saudi largesse by 
training in Wahhabi schools. 
  Even more revealing is the case of Indonesia. This large Muslim democracy 
offers little comfort to theorists of fundamentalism. Yet a recent conference 
at the Islamic University in Jakarta heard detailed accounts of how 
Saudi-backed groups were crucial in shaping the ideology of the terrorists 
charged with the Bali bombing of October 2002. 
  Among alienated and confused young Muslims in the United Kingdom, there is 
also a Wahhabi influence. One Muslim bookseller tells me that mainstream 
Islamic bookshops cannot compete with the radical alternative, since Saudi 
organisations supply the radical shops with books free of charge. No less 
troubling to established mosque leaders is the tendency of some young British 
Muslims to study in new Wahhabi colleges in Pakistan and elsewhere. 
  The picture is complex, but it does suggest that the medicine for terrorism 
must be supplied from within the Muslim community, and within the theological 
resources of Islam. Sociological explanations outline circumstances, but cannot 
disclose the religious underpinnings of these aberrations, or offer a 
counter-argument. Legislation, and any other form of government interference, 
are unlikely to put an end to the problem; and may make it worse. It is clear 
that only Muslims can heal this wound. 
  Fortunately, serious moves are under way to challenge the extremists on 
religious grounds. The most recent was an ecumenical conference in Jordan, held 
between 4 and 6 of July, at which the assembled leaders of Sunni and Shia Islam 
issued a joint statement banning the key Wahhabi practice of considering other 
Muslims to be unbelievers. The immediate context for the conference was Wahhabi 
violence against Shia and other non-Wahhabi communities in Iraq; but the 
problem was acknowledged to be global. 
  In the United Kingdom, an increasingly educated Muslim community is now 
developing a religious identity that has little time for zealotry. The 
unanimity and temper of the community’s response to the recent outrages point 
to the progress that has been made in the 15 years since the Salman Rushdie 
debacle. The community is discussing itself in increasingly mature novels, 
plays, films, and poems. Perhaps this maturation will be accelerated by the 
recent horrors, and in our lifetime we will see orthodox British Muslims 
travelling to Saudi Arabia and other troubled lands, offering not only formal 
theological advice, but an alternative and more convivial style of engaging 
with modernity. 
  al Hakim Murad teaches Islamic Studies in the Faculty of Divinity, University 
of Cambridge, is imam of the Cambridge Mosque, and chair of the Muslim Academic 
Trust. 



saiyed shahbazi
  www.shahbazcenter.org

Reply via email to