"Allah Will Not Change the Condition of a People"


by Salim Mansur
Middle East Quarterly 
Winter 2005
http://www.meforum.org/article/693

Culture, Civilization and Humanity. By Tarek Heggy. London and Portland,
Ore.: Frank Cass, 2003. 391 pp. $64.50 ($26.50, paper).

Western Muslims and the Future of Islam. By Tariq Ramadan. New York: Oxford
University Press, 2004. 272 pp. $29.95.

Islam under Siege: Living Dangerously in a Post-Honor World. By Akbar S.
Ahmed. Cambridge, U.K.: Polity Press, 2003. 213 pp. $19.95, paper.

In the wake of the September 11, 2001 terror attacks, historian Bernard
Lewis crystallized the key question about Muslims by asking "What went
wrong?"[1] <>  Nor was Lewis alone, for a number of Muslim writers have
authored books in response to it. Among the most prominent are Tarek Heggy
and Tariq Ramadan, the former an Egyptian and the latter of Egyptian
descent, and Akbar Ahmed, a Pakistani living in the United States. Heggy and
Ramadan publish not only in English but also in Arabic and so transcend
audiences. Ahmed's books, too, are widely translated, even appearing in
Indonesian and Chinese. Significantly, all three live in the West. Such
important and active debates are simply not possible in countries that still
punish dissent and open intellectual discussion. By choice and circumstance,
they find themselves dragomen and diplomats between two worlds. Their
writings reflect the Muslim dilemma of how to separate Islam as a
transcendent faith of universal appeal from the immediate history of Muslim
societies. All three are well regarded in their home communities. Their
works are widely read and followed, and their commentaries on the state of
Muslim politics and society earnestly sought by a diverse global audience
interested in Muslim affairs.


Individual Vs Society in the Islamic World


Tarek Heggy's Culture, Civilization, and Humanity is a collection of his
essays providing insight into contemporary politics in the Arabic-speaking
countries of the Middle East with emphasis on his native Egypt. Partly
polemical and partly analytical, Heggy seeks to awaken Arabs to how
extensive is their collective responsibility for derailing themselves from
progressing as a civilization. Heggy does not offer any striking new
perspective to explain how and why the Arab world has fallen so far behind
the West. The United Nations Development Program's Arab Human Development
Report for both 2002[2] <>  and 2003 have provided a catalogue of reasons as
to why Arab countries have shown such poor socioeconomic development
compared to other late-modernizing societies such as South Korea, Malaysia,
and even India. But what Heggy's essays lack in originality, they make up
for in the frankness with which the author discusses the historical and
cultural failings of Egypt and the Arab world which retards the human
potential of nearly 300 million people in a region stretching from the
Atlantic Ocean to the Persian Gulf.

In a culture preoccupied with form over content, and where collective honor
trumps collective self-examination of the gap between rhetoric and reality,
Heggy explains his purpose:

I write to urge Egyptians to accept criticism and to engage in
self-criticism because, unless they are willing to do so, they will not
discover the root causes of the ills they complain of today . I write in
defense of freedom of belief but not in the context of a theocratic culture
that places our destinies in the hands of men of religion. No society should
allow its affairs to be run by clerics who are, by their nature and
regardless of the religion to which they belong, opposed to progress . I
write to call for an end to the Goebbels-style propaganda machines operating
in Egypt and the Arab world and their dangerous manipulation of public
opinion.[3] <> 

Heggy thus highlights the tensions between the individual and the community.
Egypt remains caught in a vortex of contradictory pressures in respect to
individual rights, rationality, and democracy in a clash with tradition that
venerates the past while holding the future at ransom. While important to
voice, there is nothing new about such discussions within the Arab world.
The late Oxford historian Albert Hourani chronicled this intellectual
ferment in the Arab world in his important study, Arabic Thought in the
Liberal Age, 1798-1939.[4] <> 

Heggy does not limit himself to repeating the ideas of intellectuals of the
past and is not afraid to critique socialism and Marxism, a subject to which
he has devoted some of his writings. This is important because both Marxist
ideology and the patron-client relationship between the Soviet Union and
Arab states influenced the late Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser and
the politics of Arab nationalism. Nasser borrowed not only his
state-centered economic planning but also his political vision of a single
party state from his Soviet patrons.

Heggy's most important contribution is to shed light on the mind set of a
culture responsible for the attacks of 9/11. He describes a society in part
held hostage to the "Big Talk" syndrome, a situation in which a society is
beholden to exaggeration, inflated rhetorical flourishes and bragging as
individuals and groups strive to outdo each other in verbal displays of
superiority. While in the modern age, "there is no room for big talk, only
for moderate language that tries as far as possible to reflect the
unembellished realities of science and culture,"[5] <>  Heggy observes that
in the Arab world, "our culture . has a long tradition of declamatory
rhetoric that places more value on the beauty of the words used than on
their accurate reflection of reality."[6] <>  Such a cultural trait hampers
critical assessments and contributes to a failure to understand lack of
progress and defeats such as those suffered in the June 1967 Arab-Israeli
war. Instead, the "Big Talk" syndrome promotes an indulgence in nostalgia to
escape from the demands of the present and punishes individuals who break
the collective code of honor. Heggy explains,

Of all the nations of the world, we sing more loudly and frequently of our
history, our past glories, and our superiority to others . This leads to the
prevalence of subjectivity rather than objectivity and ultimately to the
formation of judgments from a purely personal perspective.[7] <> 

Politics under these conditions encourage demagoguery and extremism and
repress moderation. Conspiracy theories thrive. Realists live in fear of the
radicalism of those who view subjects in absolute terms. This makes for a
society of despots and demagogues. In shedding light on the sensitive
aspects of a people's culture, Heggy's book illuminates how problems of a
stalled society in the Muslim world have contributed to politics uninhibited
in the use of terror.


The Islamic Community in New Domains


Tariq Ramadan is a controversial Geneva-based academic and public
intellectual, listed by Time magazine as one of the world's 100 most
prominent thinkers for his efforts to interpret Islam in the West.[8] <>
Since 9/11, Ramadan's views and writings have come under increased scrutiny.
In July 2004, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security decided to revoke his
visa to the United States, preventing him from teaching at the University of
Notre Dame during the current academic year. In December 2004, Ramadan
withdrew his visa application. Ramadan's recent book is important, if only
to see how an individual who describes himself as a bridge between cultures
retains Islamist ties that remain suspect in the West.[9] <> 

The intellectual work of any individual is inseparable from his biography.
Tariq Ramadan is not an ordinary academic. In the words of Fouad Ajami,
professor of Middle Eastern studies at Johns Hopkins, "In the world of new
Islamism, Mr. Ramadan was pure nobility."[10] <>  Ramadan is the grandson of
Hassan al-Banna, the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood. Beginning in 1928
and lasting until his 1949 assassination, Banna preached a dangerous mix of
religion and violence. Though Banna's life was short, his influence cut
across a wide swathe of Egyptian society and the Arab world. He is not just
the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, but he is also the source of modern
fundamentalist politics in the Arab-Muslim world. His teachings evolved and
mutated into the politics and terrorism of Osama bin Laden's Al-Qaeda and
similar organizations. Ajami explains why Ramadan's lineage is so important:

The genealogy of Tariq Ramadan was fundamental to his ascendancy to power
and prominence: Nasab (acquired merit through one's ancestors) is one of the
pillars of Arab-Islamic society. Cunning in his use of his grandfather's
legacy, Mr. Ramadan could embrace his grandfather while maintaining, when
needed, that the sins of his ancestors cannot be visited on descendants. But
. pride in his grandfather suffuses his work. In a piece of writing in
November 2000, the reverence for Banna was astounding. No, he would not, he
said, disown his descent from a man who "resisted British and Zionist
colonialisms, who founded 2,000 schools, 500 social centers, and as many
developmental cooperatives," and who never ordered or sanctioned terrorist
attacks.[11] <> 

As Ajami rightly points out, such assertions stand in sharp contrast to
reality. This was a period when Banna provided the potent mix of religion
and politics to the rising tide of Arab nationalism eventually putting an
end to Egypt's brief inter-war flirtation with liberal politics.

Nasser forced Ramadan's father to leave Egypt in 1954. He found refuge in
Geneva where he established an Islamic center. Tariq Ramadan grew up in
Geneva and in his adult years began to see himself as a bridge between his
adopted home and the Egypt of his grandfather. He expressed this
self-identity recently while responding to his critics: "Those so focused on
my genealogy should examine my intellectual pedigree, which along with my
grandfather and father includes Descartes, Kant and Nietzsche."[12] <> 

Ramadan's Western Muslims and the Future of Islam is a sequel to an earlier
book, To Be a European Muslim.[13] <>  These books are Ramadan's response to
the reality for Muslims in a globalized world where increasing numbers live
outside of lands traditionally demarcated as dar al-Islam (abode of Islam).
He writes,

More and more young people and intellectuals are actively looking for a way
to live in harmony with their faith while participating in the societies
that are their societies, whether they like it or not. French, English,
German, Canadian, and American Muslims, women as well as men, are
constructing a "Muslim personality" that will soon surprise many of their
fellow citizens. Far from media attention . they are drawing the shape of
European and American Islam: faithful to the principles of Islam, dressed in
European and American cultures, and definitely rooted in Western societies.
This grassroots movement will soon exert considerable influence over
worldwide Islam: in view of globalization and the Westernization of the
world, these are the same questions as those already being raised from
Morocco to Indonesia.[14] <> 

In this world of flux for Muslims, Ramadan recognizes that traditional
categories of Islamic thinking and practice require re-conceptualization for
the modern age. For such an effort to succeed, he sees the need first to
rediscover the essential timeless principles of Islam as a transcendent
faith, and then to situate them within the boundaries of Islam but beyond
the limiting context of customs and traditions.

In the traditional world of Islam, there was harmony between faith and
customs for Muslims. North Africa and the Middle East were dar al-Islam.
Beyond their boundaries lay the dar al-harb, or abode of war, a land of
infidels and those who had not seen the revelation. But such terms, which
are keys to both Arabic and European explanations of Islam through the
twentieth century, have increasingly diminished in importance as pluralism
has spread and as Muslim communities have established themselves throughout
the world. As an example of re-conceptualization, Ramadan offers the phrase
dar ash-shahada (abode of testimony) as a substitute for dar al-harb to
designate lands beyond dar al-Islam. But the effectiveness of
re-conceptualization is questionable if it means changing labels for terms
and phrases without repudiating the thinking and politics of that stream of
traditional Islam that mutated into an ideology that motivated the 9/11
attacks.

Ramadan is acutely aware that the central issue confronting Muslims in the
West is one of loyalty. While the terrorist attacks of 9/11 and their
aftermath accentuated this issue, its tension predates the destruction of
the World Trade Center. For traditional Muslims, religion and politics are
inseparable. In the religion's early years, an imam or caliph ruled over the
umma, or community of believers. But history made the reality of umma
redundant a very long time ago. Long before the age of colonialism, the
Islamic world fragmented. The concept of the umma, nevertheless, remains
important among some Islamic thinkers who see it as an ideal point of
reference for those who believe that reconstructing such an arrangement is a
religious duty for the believers in the message of Muhammad. Ramadan's
counsel to Muslims living in the West is to embrace the West's pluralist
democracy in order to eliminate suspicions about Muslim loyalty. Indeed, the
West can be a useful refuge, if only to protect the essential principles of
Islam since "the West still appears to be a place where Muslims can live
securely with certain fundamental rights granted and protected."[15] <> 

But Ramadan cannot entirely shield himself from critics who charge him with
relativism, arguing that in the attempt to find a common ground between
Islam and the West, he descends a slippery slope of diluting Islam to the
point of compromising its authenticity. Muslim reformers have invariably
found themselves trapped in this conundrum and have consistently been undone
by the logic of traditionalists.

What Ramadan does not do is to break the intellectual straightjacket that
disallows any challenge to the traditionalists' definition of Islam, faith,
and history. Traditionalists maintain any dissent from their collective
judgment is misleading and an opening for error. The probable reason for his
inability to make the break and engage in real reform is biography. Ramadan
is bound by his own loyalties and shies away from the more demanding
post-9/11 task of explaining how Islamists have gotten away with defiling
Islam without generating apposite outrage among Muslims. To engage in such
an accounting would require placing responsibility first on the practices of
traditional Islam that laid the ground upon which Islamists nurtured, and
second, on mainstream Muslims who have reacted with silence and refusal to
banish Islamists from their midst, thus making them accomplices. The reality
of the post-9/11 world is mutual suspicion between the West and Islam.
Western Muslims, whom Ramadan addresses, will have to decide where their
loyalty rests. Ramadan's experience in being denied entry to the United
States should demonstrate to him that space for accommodating Muslims who
are not unambiguous about their loyalty to the country where they wish to
reside has greatly shriveled in the West.


Islam under Siege 


Akbar Ahmed's writings are fine examples of an attempt to reconcile
conflicting beliefs as an aid in understanding and explaining the turmoil of
the Muslim world. An anthropologist by training, Ahmed does not hesitate to
reflect on his own experience in order to examine the internal disorder of
Muslim society. In Islam under Siege, he weaves a tapestry of explanations
to unmask how and why a civilization that once shone a beacon of light on
the world became a seedbed of terrorism, bigotry, and war.

Ahmed's origin is in South Asia, a region that, beginning in the sixteenth
century, was the seat of one of the great empires of Islam. Born in India,
as a child he moved with his family to the newly established Islamic state
of Pakistan. He joined Pakistan's elite civil service corps in 1966, working
as a civilian administrator in the tribal areas of Pakistan bordering on
Afghanistan, and eventually became his country's high commissioner in
Britain. After resigning from the diplomatic service, he began a second
career as an academic in the United States.

His personal story sheds light on the trajectory of the "decay of
development" of Muslim societies in the post-colonial period. At the time
when Ahmed began as a civil servant, many in the United States saw Pakistan
as a successful model of a rapidly modernizing economy in the developing
world.[16] <>  But that promise turned sour when Pakistan fell apart as a
result of a violent and costly civil strife in 1971. When Bangladesh
succeeded, it shook Pakistan's self-image as a nation where religion
transcended ethnic identity. Pakistan never fully recovered and increasingly
turned towards a form of militantly fundamentalist Islam to renew its
identity.

Islam under Siege attempts to explain the 9/11 attacks as a product of the
decaying political reality of the Muslim world. The siege, Ahmed argues, is
primarily internal to the society. On one hand, there is a widening gap
between Muslim societies and the rest of the world. On the other hand, there
are rising expectations within Muslim societies, which have simultaneously
experienced a demographic explosion and the declining effectiveness of
governing institutions. The effects of accelerating global change and
internal population pressures have undermined the traditional social and
cultural cohesion of Muslim societies, setting them adrift in the modern
world.

Ahmed, who holds the Ibn Khaldun Chair of Islamic Studies at American
University, in fact leans heavily on Ibn Khaldun, the great North African
scholar of the fourteenth century, to explain the breakdown of the Muslim
world's social and moral order.[17] <>  Using Ibn Khaldun's notion of
'asabiya-"group loyalty, social cohesion, or solidarity"-he describes the
making and breaking of a closed circle of authoritarian politics in the
Muslim world. Ahmed, also, cites Ibn Khaldun's belief that "social
organization is necessary to the human species." Without organization, Ibn
Khaldun argues, "the existence of human beings would be incomplete. God's
desire to settle the world with human beings and to leave them as His
representatives on earth would not materialize." Ahmed elaborates: "Social
order thus reflects the moral order; the former cannot be in a state of
collapse without suggesting a moral crisis."[18] <> 

When 'asabiya weakens, relationships binding individuals together also
weaken. Unless these are replaced and strengthened by a new set of
relationships, individuals are driven to abnormal behavior. Ibn Khaldun
theorized that there was a four-generation cycle where existing orders would
rise, peak, and then collapse, only to be replaced by a new order. But in
the modern world, Ahmed argues, loss of social cohesion is brought about by
the speed and impact of a fast-paced globalization. This leads to
bewilderment compounded by an inchoate desire of victims to punish those
they view as responsible for their misery.

Traditional societies are bound by a sense of honor to some higher authority
providing norms for behavior. Ahmed dwells on how traditional societies
construct honor and conduct themselves accordingly. He suggests that in the
process of globalization, when speed of communications shrinks the world and
compresses the boundaries of traditional societies, the old meaning of honor
disintegrates, and "people respond by an excessive emphasis on group
loyalty-or hyper-'asabiya-and create conditions for our post-honor
society."[19] <> 

Ahmed seeks to explain elements that produced bin Laden's mentality,
something neither Heggy nor Ramadan address. His approach, combining
cultural anthropology and political history, is somewhat persuasive. He
argues that the mentality of bin Laden and like-minded individuals is
reflective of a traditional society and culture mostly in ruin as a result
of its collision with the fast-paced, scientific, and technologically-minded
modern world. But it remains a frustrating exercise because the description
of the Muslim world caught in a vortex of "anger, incomprehension, and
violent hatred"[20] <>  does little to explain how it can break the cycle of
decay in which it appears stuck.


Conclusion


After 9/11 and the unremitting series of Islamist atrocities from Bali to
Beslan, Muslims have reached a cul-de-sac of their own making. They have
nurtured their demons from the first generation of Islam, from the killers
of Muhammad's companions and rightly-guided caliphs Uthman and Ali, whose
brief leadership of the Muslim community after Muhammad's death ended with
assassins' knives, to those who have made suicide-bombing a religiously
sanctioned method of warfare. The demons are internal, and how Muslims deal
with them will speak much more compellingly about who they are than their
protestations about being victims of history or the nobility of their faith.
Moreover, their effectiveness, or the lack of it, in confronting their
demons and eliminating the conditions that nurture them is now a global
concern.

The core issue most Muslim intellectuals leave unaddressed, or address with
diffidence, is what happens when religion becomes a handmaiden of politics.
Islam became a tool of men in power, and men in power bent Islam to their
purpose and interests. In the process, politics squeezed religion of its
spiritual content and made examples of those individuals, such as Mansur ibn
Hallaj, an Islamic mystic who was nailed to a gibbet in tenth century
Baghdad, who insisted on holding to Islam as faith and not bending to the
demands of politics in its name.

The Muslim world is not alone in the whirlwind of globalization. People of
other cultures, also, contend with the same forces of economics and
technology as do Muslims. This is why it might be said that the words of the
Qur'an, "Allah will not change the condition of a people until they change
what is in their hearts," applies to Muslims and non-Muslims alike.

Salim Mansur is associate professor, department of political science,
University of Western Ontario.

[1] Bernard Lewis, What Went Wrong? Western Impact and Middle Eastern
Response (New York: Oxford University Press, 2002).
[2] <>  Arab Human Development Report 2002 (New York: United Nations
Development Program, July 2, 2002); see "How the Arabs Compare: Arab Human
<http://www.meforum.org/article/513>  Development Report 2002," Middle East
Quarterly, Fall 2002, pp. 59-67.
[3] <>  Tarek Heggy, Culture, Civilization and Humanity (London and
Portland: Frank Cass, 2003), pp. 54-5.
[4] <>  London and New York: Oxford University Press, 1962.
[5] <>  Heggy, Culture, Civilization and Humanity, p. 59.
[6] <>  Ibid.
[7] <>  Ibid., p. 64.
[8] <>  Time, Dec. 11, 2000.
[9] <>  Daniel Pipes, "Why Revoke Tariq Ramadan's U.S. Visa?" The New York
Sun, Aug. 27, 2004; The Washington Post, Aug. 28, 2004; Tariq Ramadan,
"Scholar under Siege Defends his Record," The Chicago Tribune, Aug. 31,
2004; Tariq Ramadan, "Too Scary for the Classroom?" The New York Times,
Sept. 1, 2004.
[10] <>  Fouad Ajami, "Tariq Ramadan," The Wall Street Journal, Sept. 7,
2004.
[11] <>  Ibid.
[12] <>  Tariq Ramadan, "What You Fear Is Not Who I Am," The Globe and Mail
(Toronto), Aug. 30, 2004.
[13] <>  Leicester, U.K.: The Islamic Foundation, 1998.
[14] <>  Tariq Ramadan, Western Muslims and the Future of Islam (New York:
Oxford University Press, 2004), p. 4.
[15] <>  Ibid., p. 71.
[16] <>  Gustav F. Papanek, Pakistan's Development: Social Goals and Private
Incentives (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1967), pp. 1-26.
[17] <>  Ibn Khaldun, The Muqaddimah: An Introduction to History, N.J.
Dawood, ed., Franz Rosenthal, trans. (Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1969), pp. 98-115.
[18] <>  Akbar S. Ahmed, Islam under Siege (Cambridge, U.K.: Polity Press,
2003), p. 77.
[19] <>  Ibid., p. 57.
[20] <>  Ibid., p. 46.

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