http://www.co-jet.org/cjet/2files/philisopherof.htm
March 23, 2003
The Philosopher of Islamic Terror
                                      
The roots of Al Qaeda are not in poverty or in anti-Americanism but in
Sayyid Qutb's ideas about how Chritianity went wrong and how martyrdom
could change the world.
___________________
                             
By PAUL BERMAN
I. In the days after Sept. 11, 2001, many people anticipated a quick
and satisfying American victory over Al Qaeda. The terrorist army was
thought to be no bigger than a pirate ship, and the newly vigilant
police forces of the entire world were going to sink the ship with
swift arrests and dark maneuvers. Al Qaeda was driven from its bases
in Afghanistan. Arrests and maneuvers duly occurred and are still
occurring. Just this month, one of Osama bin Laden's top lieutenants
was nabbed in Pakistan. Police agents, as I write, seem to be hot on
the trail of bin Laden himself, or so reports suggest. 
   
 
The roots of Al Qaeda are not in poverty or anti- Americanism but in
Sayyid Qutb's ideas about how Christianity went wrong and how
martyrdom could change the world. Qutb gave the sept. 11 warriors and
their comrades a reason to yearn for death. In his vision of the
world, death, wisdom, piety and immorality are the same. The truly
dangerous element in American life for Qutb wasn't capitalism or
foreign policy or women's independence. It was America's separation of
church and state. 
 
Yet Al Qaeda has seemed unfazed. Its popularity, which was hard to
imagine at first, has turned out to be large and genuine in more than
a few countries. Al Qaeda upholds a paranoid and apocalyptic
worldview, according to which ''Crusaders and Zionists'' have been
conspiring for centuries to destroy Islam. And this worldview turns
out to be widely accepted in many places -- a worldview that allowed
many millions of people to regard the Sept. 11 attacks as an Israeli
conspiracy, or perhaps a C.I.A. conspiracy, to undo Islam. Bin Laden's
soulful, bearded face peers out from T-shirts and posters in a number
of countries, quite as if he were the new Che Guevara, the mythic
righter of cosmic wrongs. 
 
The vigilant police in many countries, applying themselves at last,
have raided a number of Muslim charities and Islamic banks, which
stand accused of subsidizing the terrorists. These raids have advanced
the war on still another front, which has been good to see. But the
raids have also shown that Al Qaeda is not only popular; it is also
institutionally solid, with a worldwide network of clandestine
resources. This is not the Symbionese Liberation Army. This is an
organization with ties to the ruling elites in a number of countries;
an organization that, were it given the chance to strike up an
alliance with Saddam Hussein's Baath movement, would be doubly
terrifying; an organization that, in any case, will surely survive the
outcome in Iraq. 
 
To anyone who has looked closely enough, Al Qaeda and its sister
organizations plainly enjoy yet another strength, arguably the
greatest strength of all, something truly imposing -- though in the
Western press this final strength has received very little attention.
Bin Laden is a Saudi plutocrat with Yemeni ancestors, and most of the
suicide warriors of Sept. 11 were likewise Saudis, and the provenance
of those people has focused everyone's attention on the Arabian
peninsula. But Al Qaeda has broader roots. The organization was
created in the late 1980's by an affiliation of three armed factions
-- bin Laden's circle of ''Afghan'' Arabs, together with two factions
from Egypt, the Islamic Group and Egyptian Islamic Jihad, the latter
led by Dr. Ayman al-Zawahiri, Al Qaeda's top theoretician. The
Egyptian factions emerged from an older current, a school of thought
from within Egypt's fundamentalist movement, the Muslim Brotherhood,
in the 1950's and 60's. And at the heart of that single school of
thought stood, until his execution in 1966, a philosopher named Sayyid
Qutb -- the intellectual hero of every one of the groups that
eventually went into Al Qaeda, their Karl Marx (to put it that way),
their guide. 
 
Qutb (pronounced KUH-tahb) wrote a book called ''Milestones,'' and
that book was cited at his trial, which gave it immense publicity,
especially after its author was hanged. ''Milestones'' became a
classic manifesto of the terrorist wing of Islamic fundamentalism. A
number of journalists have dutifully turned the pages of
''Milestones,'' trying to decipher the otherwise inscrutable terrorist
point of view. 
 
I have been reading some of Qutb's other books, and I think that
''Milestones'' may have misled the journalists. ''Milestones'' is a
fairly shallow book, judged in isolation. But ''Milestones'' was drawn
from his vast commentary on the Koran called ''In the Shade of the
Qur'an.'' One of the many volumes of this giant work was translated
into English in the 1970's and published by the World Assembly of
Muslim Youth, an organization later widely suspected of participation
in terrorist attacks -- and an organization whose Washington office
was run by a brother of bin Laden's. In the last four years a big
effort has been mounted by another organization, the Islamic
Foundation in England, to bring out the rest, in what will eventually
be an edition of 15 fat English-language volumes, handsomely
ornamented with Arabic script from the Koran. Just in these past few
weeks a number of new volumes in this edition have made their way into
the Arab bookshops of Brooklyn, and I have gobbled them up. By now I
have made my way through a little less than half of ''In the Shade of
the Qur'an,'' which I think is all that exists so far in English,
together with three other books by Qutb. And I have something to report. 
 
Qutb is not shallow. Qutb is deep. ''In the Shade of the Qur'an'' is,
in its fashion, a masterwork. Al Qaeda and its sister organizations
are not merely popular, wealthy, global, well connected and
institutionally sophisticated. These groups stand on a set of ideas
too, and some of those ideas may be pathological, which is an old
story in modern politics; yet even so, the ideas are powerful. We
should have known that, of course. But we should have known many things. 
 
II. Qutb's special ability as a writer came from the fact that, as a
young boy, he received a traditional Muslim education -- he committed
the Koran to memory by the age of 10 -- yet he went on, at a college
in Cairo, to receive a modern, secular education. He was born in 1906,
and in the 1920's and 30's he took up socialism and literature. He
wrote novels, poems and a book that is still said to be well regarded
called ''Literary Criticism: Its Principles and Methodology.'' His
writings reflected -- here I quote one of his admirers and
translators, Hamid Algar of the University of California at Berkeley
-- a ''Western-tinged outlook on cultural and literary questions.''
Qutb displayed ''traces of individualism and existentialism.'' He even
traveled to the United States in the late 1940's, enrolled at the
Colorado State College of Education and earned a master's degree. In
some of the accounts of Qutb's life, this trip to America is pictured
as a ghastly trauma, mostly because of America's sexual freedoms,
which sent him reeling back to Egypt in a mood of hatred and fear. 
Qutb gave the Sept. 11 warriors and their comrades a reason to yearn
for death. In his vision of the world, death, wisdom, piety and
immortality are the same.
 
I am skeptical of that interpretation, though. His book from the
1940's, ''Social Justice and Islam,'' shows that, even before his
voyage to America, he was pretty well set in his Islamic
fundamentalism. It is true that, after his return to Egypt, he veered
into ever more radical directions. But in the early 1950's, everyone
in Egypt was veering in radical directions. Gamal Abdel Nasser and a
group of nationalist army officers overthrew the old king in 1952 and
launched a nationalist revolution on Pan-Arabist grounds. And, as the
Pan-Arabists went about promoting their revolution, Sayyid Qutb went
about promoting his own, somewhat different revolution. His idea was
''Islamist.'' He wanted to turn Islam into a political movement to
create a new society, to be based on ancient Koranic principles. Qutb
joined the Muslim Brotherhood, became the editor of its journal and
established himself right away as Islamism's principal theoretician in
the Arab world. 
 
The Islamists and the Pan-Arabists tried to cooperate with one another
in Egypt in those days, and there was some basis for doing so. Both
movements dreamed of rescuing the Arab world from the legacies of
European imperialism. Both groups dreamed of crushing Zionism and the
brand-new Jewish state. Both groups dreamed of fashioning a new kind
of modernity, which was not going to be liberal and freethinking in
the Western style but, even so, was going to be up-to-date on economic
and scientific issues. And both movements dreamed of doing all this by
returning in some fashion to the glories of the Arab past. Both
movements wanted to resurrect, in a modern version, the ancient
Islamic caliphate of the seventh century, when the Arabs were
conquering the world. 
 
The Islamists and the Pan-Arabists could be compared, in these
ambitions, with the Italian Fascists of Mussolini's time, who wanted
to resurrect the Roman Empire, and to the Nazis, who likewise wanted
to resurrect ancient Rome, except in a German version. The most
radical of the Pan-Arabists openly admired the Nazis and pictured
their proposed new caliphate as a racial victory of the Arabs over all
other ethnic groups. Qutb and the Islamists, by way of contrast,
pictured the resurrected caliphate as a theocracy, strictly enforcing
shariah, the legal code of the Koran. The Islamists and the
Pan-Arabists had their similarities then, and their differences. (And
today those two movements still have their similarities and
differences -- as shown by bin Laden's Qaeda, which represents the
most violent wing of Islamism, and Saddam Hussein's Baath Party, which
represents the most violent wing of Pan-Arabism.) 
 
In 1952, in the days before staging his coup d'etat, Colonel Nasser is
said to have paid a visit to Qutb at his home, presumably to get his
backing. Some people expected that, after taking power, Nasser would
appoint Qutb to be the new revolutionary minister of education. But
once the Pan-Arabists had thrown out the old king, the differences
between the two movements began to overwhelm the similarities, and
Qutb was not appointed. Instead, Nasser cracked down on the Muslim
Brotherhood, and after someone tried to assassinate him, he blamed the
Brotherhood and cracked down even harder. Some of the Muslim
Brotherhood's most distinguished intellectuals and theologians escaped
into exile. Sayyid Qutb's brother, Muhammad Qutb, was one of those
people. He fled to Saudi Arabia and ended up as a distinguished Saudi
professor of Islamic Studies. Many years later, Osama bin Laden would
be one of Muhammad Qutb's students. 
 
But Sayyid Qutb stayed put and paid dearly for his stubbornness.
Nasser jailed him in 1954, briefly released him, jailed him again for
10 years, released him for a few months and finally hanged him in
1966. Conditions during the first years of prison were especially bad.
Qutb was tortured. Even in better times, according to his followers,
he was locked in a ward with 40 people, most of them criminals, with a
tape recorder broadcasting the speeches of Nasser 20 hours a day.
Still, by smuggling papers in and out of jail, he managed to continue
with his writings, no longer in the ''Western tinged'' vein of his
early, literary days but now as a full-fledged Islamist revolutionary.
And somehow, he produced his ''In the Shade of the Qur'an,'' this
gigantic study, which must surely count as one of the most remarkable
works of prison literature ever produced.
 
Readers without a Muslim education who try to make their way unaided
through the Koran tend to find it, as I have, a little dry and
forbidding. But Qutb's commentaries are not at all like that. He
quotes passages from the chapters, or suras, of the Koran, and he
pores over the quoted passages, observing the prosodic qualities of
the text, the rhythm, tone and musicality of the words, sometimes the
images. The suras lead him to discuss dietary regulations, the proper
direction to pray, the rules of divorce, the question of when a man
may propose marriage to a widow (four months and 10 days after the
death of her husband, unless she is pregnant, in which case after
delivery), the rules concerning a Muslim man who wishes to marry a
Christian or a Jew (very complicated), the obligations of charity, the
punishment for crimes and for breaking your word, the prohibition on
liquor and intoxicants, the proper clothing to wear, the rules on
usury, moneylending and a thousand other themes. 
 
The Koran tells stories, and Qutb recounts some of these and remarks
on their wisdom and significance. His tone is always lucid and plain.
Yet the total effect of his writing is almost sensual in its measured
pace. The very title ''In the Shade of the Qur'an'' conveys a vivid
desert image, as if the Koran were a leafy palm tree, and we have only
to open Qutb's pages to escape the hot sun and refresh ourselves in
the shade. As he makes his way through the suras and proposes his
other commentaries, he slowly constructs an enormous theological
criticism of modern life, and not just in Egypt. 
 
III. Qutb wrote that, all over the world, humans had reached a moment
of unbearable crisis. The human race had lost touch with human nature.
Man's inspiration, intelligence and morality were degenerating. Sexual
relations were deteriorating ''to a level lower than the beasts.'' Man
was miserable, anxious and skeptical, sinking into idiocy, insanity
and crime. People were turning, in their unhappiness, to drugs,
alcohol and existentialism. Qutb admired economic productivity and
scientific knowledge. But he did not think that wealth and science
were rescuing the human race. He figured that, on the contrary, the
richest countries were the unhappiest of all. And what was the cause
of this unhappiness -- this wretched split between man's truest nature
and modern life? 
 
A great many cultural critics in Europe and America asked this
question in the middle years of the 20th century, and a great many of
them, following Nietzsche and other philosophers, pointed to the
origins of Western civilization in ancient Greece, where man was said
to have made his fatal error. This error was philosophical. It
consisted of placing an arrogant and deluded faith in the power of
human reason -- an arrogant faith that, after many centuries, had
created in modern times a tyranny of technology over life. 
The truly dangerous element in American life for Qutb wasn't
capitalism or foreign policy or women's independence. It was America's
separation of church and state.
 
Qutb shared that analysis, somewhat. Only instead of locating the
error in ancient Greece, he located it in ancient Jerusalem. In the
Muslim fashion, Qutb looked on the teachings of Judaism as being
divinely revealed by God to Moses and the other prophets. Judaism
instructed man to worship one God and to forswear all others. Judaism
instructed man on how to behave in every sphere of life -- how to live
a worldly existence that was also a life at one with God. This could
be done by obeying a system of divinely mandated laws, the code of
Moses. In Qutb's view, however, Judaism withered into what he called
''a system of rigid and lifeless ritual.'' 
 
God sent another prophet, though. That prophet, in Qutb's Muslim way
of thinking, was Jesus, who proposed a few useful reforms -- lifting
some no-longer necessary restrictions in the Jewish dietary code, for
example -- and also an admirable new spirituality. But something
terrible occurred. The relation between Jesus' followers and the Jews
took, in Qutb's view, ''a deplorable course.'' Jesus' followers
squabbled with the old-line Jews, and amid the mutual recriminations,
Jesus' message ended up being diluted and even perverted. Jesus'
disciples and followers were persecuted, which meant that, in their
sufferings, the disciples were never able to provide an adequate or
systematic exposition of Jesus' message.
 
Who but Sayyid Qutb, from his miserable prison in Nasser's Egypt,
could have zeroed in so plausibly on the difficulties encountered by
Jesus' disciples in getting out the word? Qutb figured that, as a
result, the Christian Gospels were badly garbled, and should not be
regarded as accurate or reliable. The Gospels declared Jesus to be
divine, but in Qutb's Muslim account, Jesus was a mere human -- a
prophet of God, not a messiah. The larger catastrophe, however, was
this: Jesus' disciples, owing to what Qutb called ''this unpleasant
separation of the two parties,'' went too far in rejecting the Jewish
teachings. 
 
Jesus' disciples and followers, the Christians, emphasized Jesus'
divine message of spirituality and love. But they rejected Judaism's
legal system, the code of Moses, which regulated every jot and tittle
of daily life. Instead, the early Christians imported into
Christianity the philosophy of the Greeks -- the belief in a spiritual
existence completely separate from physical life, a zone of pure spirit. 
 
In the fourth century of the Christian era, Emperor Constantine
converted the Roman Empire to Christianity. But Constantine, in Qutb's
interpretation, did this in a spirit of pagan hypocrisy, dominated by
scenes of wantonness, half-naked girls, gems and precious metals.
Christianity, having abandoned the Mosaic code, could put up no
defense. And so, in their horror at Roman morals, the Christians did
as best they could and countered the imperial debaucheries with a cult
of monastic asceticism. But this was no good at all. Monastic
asceticism stands at odds with the physical quality of human nature.
In this manner, in Qutb's view, Christianity lost touch with the
physical world. The old code of Moses, with its laws for diet, dress,
marriage, sex and everything else, had enfolded the divine and the
worldly into a single concept, which was the worship of God. But
Christianity divided these things into two, the sacred and the
secular. Christianity said, ''Render unto Caesar what is Caesar's and
unto God what is God's.'' Christianity put the physical world in one
corner and the spiritual world in another corner: Constantine's
debauches over here, monastic renunciation over there. In Qutb's view
there was a ''hideous schizophrenia'' in this approach to life. And
things got worse. 
 
A series of Christian religious councils adopted what Qutb thought to
be irrational principles on Christianity's behalf -- principles
regarding the nature of Jesus, the Eucharist, transubstantiation and
other questions, all of which were, in Qutb's view, ''absolutely
incomprehensible, inconceivable and incredible.'' Church teachings
froze the irrational principles into dogma. And then the ultimate
crisis struck. 
 
IV. Qutb's story now shifts to Arabia. In the seventh century, God
delivered a new revelation to his prophet Muhammad, who established
the correct, nondistorted relation to human nature that had always
eluded the Christians. Muhammad dictated a strict new legal code,
which put religion once more at ease in the physical world, except in
a better way than ever before. Muhammad's prophecies, in the Koran,
instructed man to be God's ''vice regent'' on earth -- to take charge
of the physical world, and not simply to see it as something alien to
spirituality or as a way station on the road to a Christian afterlife.
Muslim scientists in the Middle Ages took this instruction seriously
and went about inquiring into the nature of physical reality. And, in
the Islamic universities of Andalusia and the East, the Muslim
scientists, deepening their inquiry, hit upon the inductive or
scientific method -- which opened the door to all further scientific
and technological progress. In this and many other ways, Islam seized
the leadership of mankind. Unfortunately, the Muslims came under
attack from Crusaders, Mongols and other enemies. And, because the
Muslims proved not faithful enough to Muhammad's revelations, they
were unable to fend off these attacks. They were unable to capitalize
on their brilliant discovery of the scientific method. 
 
The Muslim discoveries were exported instead into Christian Europe.
And there, in Europe in the 16th century, Islam's scientific method
began to generate results, and modern science emerged. But
Christianity, with its insistence on putting the physical world and
the spiritual world in different corners, could not cope with
scientific progress. And so Christianity's inability to acknowledge or
respect the physical quality of daily life spread into the realm of
culture and shaped society's attitude toward science. 
 
As Qutb saw it, Europeans, under Christianity's influence, began to
picture God on one side and science on the other. Religion over here;
intellectual inquiry over there. On one side, the natural human
yearning for God and for a divinely ordered life; on the other side,
the natural human desire for knowledge of the physical universe. The
church against science; the scientists against the church. Everything
that Islam knew to be one, the Christian Church divided into two. And,
under these terrible pressures, the European mind split finally
asunder. The break became total. Christianity, over here; atheism,
over there. It was the fateful divorce between the sacred and the
secular. 
 
Europe's scientific and technical achievements allowed the Europeans
to dominate the world. And the Europeans inflicted their ''hideous
schizophrenia'' on peoples and cultures in every corner of the globe.
That was the origin of modern misery -- the anxiety in contemporary
society, the sense of drift, the purposelessness, the craving for
false pleasures. The crisis of modern life was felt by every thinking
person in the Christian West. But then again, Europe's leadership of
mankind inflicted that crisis on every thinking person in the Muslim
world as well. Here Qutb was on to something original. The Christians
of the West underwent the crisis of modern life as a consequence, he
thought, of their own theological tradition -- a result of nearly
2,000 years of ecclesiastical error. But in Qutb's account, the
Muslims had to undergo that same experience because it had been
imposed on them by Christians from abroad, which could only make the
experience doubly painful -- an alienation that was also a humiliation. 
 
That was Qutb's analysis. In writing about modern life, he put his
finger on something that every thinking person can recognize, if only
vaguely -- the feeling that human nature and modern life are somehow
at odds. But Qutb evoked this feeling in a specifically Muslim
fashion. It is easy to imagine that, in expounding on these themes
back in the 1950's and 60's, Qutb had already identified the kind of
personal agony that Mohamed Atta and the suicide warriors of Sept. 11
must have experienced in our own time. It was the agony of inhabiting
a modern world of liberal ideas and achievements while feeling that
true life exists somewhere else. It was the agony of walking down a
modern sidewalk while dreaming of a different universe altogether,
located in the Koranic past -- the agony of being pulled this way and
that. The present, the past. The secular, the sacred. The freely
chosen, the religiously mandated -- a life of confusion unto madness
brought on, Qutb ventured, by Christian error. 
 
Sitting in a wretched Egyptian prison, surrounded by criminals and
composing his Koranic commentaries with Nasser's speeches blaring in
the background on the infuriating tape recorder, Qutb knew whom to
blame. He blamed the early Christians. He blamed Christianity's modern
legacy, which was the liberal idea that religion should stay in one
corner and secular life in another corner. He blamed the Jews. In his
interpretation, the Jews had shown themselves to be eternally
ungrateful to God. Early in their history, during their Egyptian
captivity (Qutb thought he knew a thing or two about Egyptian
captivity), the Jews acquired a slavish character, he believed. As a
result they became craven and unprincipled when powerless, and vicious
and arrogant when powerful. And these traits were eternal. The Jews
occupy huge portions of Qutb's Koranic commentary -- their perfidy,
greed, hatefulness, diabolical impulses, never-ending conspiracies and
plots against Muhammad and Islam. Qutb was relentless on these themes.
He looked on Zionism as part of the eternal campaign by the Jews to
destroy Islam. 
 
And Qutb blamed one other party. He blamed the Muslims who had gone
along with Christianity's errors -- the treacherous Muslims who had
inflicted Christianity's ''schizophrenia'' on the world of Islam. And,
because he was willing to blame, Qutb was able to recommend a course
of action too -- a revolutionary program that was going to relieve the
psychological pressure of modern life and was going to put man at ease
with the natural world and with God. 
 
V. Qutb's analysis was soulful and heartfelt. It was a theological
analysis, but in its cultural emphases, it reflected the style of
20th-century philosophy. The analysis asked some genuinely perplexing
questions -- about the division between mind and body in Western
thought; about the difficulties in striking a balance between sensual
experience and spiritual elevation; about the steely impersonality of
modern power and technological innovation; about social injustice.
But, though Qutb plainly followed some main trends of 20th-century
Western social criticism and philosophy, he poured his ideas through a
filter of Koranic commentary, and the filter gave his commentary a
grainy new texture, authentically Muslim, which allowed him to make a
series of points that no Western thinker was likely to propose. 
 
One of those points had to do with women's role in society -- and
these passages in his writings have been misinterpreted, I think, in
some of the Western commentaries on Qutb. His attitude was prudish in
the extreme, judged from a Western perspective of today. But
prudishness was not his motivation. He understood quite clearly that,
in a liberal society, women were free to consult their own hearts and
to pursue careers in quest of material wealth. But from his point of
view, this could only mean that women had shucked their responsibility
to shape the human character, through child-rearing. The Western
notion of women's freedom could only mean that God and the natural
order of life had been set aside in favor of a belief in other sources
of authority, like one's own heart.
 
But what did it mean to recognize the existence of more than one
source of authority? It meant paganism -- a backward step, into the
heathen primitivism of the past. It meant life without reference to
God -- a life with no prospect of being satisfactory or fulfilling.
And why had the liberal societies of the West lost sight of the
natural harmony of gender roles and of women's place in the family and
the home? This was because of the ''hideous schizophrenia'' of modern
life -- the Western outlook that led people to picture God's domain in
one place and the ordinary business of daily life in some other place. 
 
Qutb wrote bitterly about European imperialism, which he regarded as
nothing more than a continuation of the medieval Crusades against
Islam. He denounced American foreign policy. He complained about
America's decision in the time of Harry Truman to support the
Zionists, a strange decision that he attributed, in part, to America's
loss of moral values. But I must point out that, in Qutb's writings,
at least in the many volumes that I have read, the complaints about
American policy are relatively few and fleeting. International
politics was simply not his main concern. Sometimes he complained
about the hypocrisy in America's endless boasts about freedom and
democracy. He mentioned America's extermination of its Indian
population. He noted the racial prejudice against blacks. But those
were not Qutb's themes, finally. American hypocrisy exercised him, but
only slightly. His deepest quarrel was not with America's failure to
uphold its principles. His quarrel was with the principles. He opposed
the United States because it was a liberal society, not because the
United States failed to be a liberal society. 
 
The truly dangerous element in American life, in his estimation, was
not capitalism or foreign policy or racism or the unfortunate cult of
women's independence. The truly dangerous element lay in America's
separation of church and state -- the modern political legacy of
Christianity's ancient division between the sacred and the secular.
This was not a political criticism. This was theological -- though
Qutb, or perhaps his translators, preferred the word ''ideological.'' 
 
The conflict between the Western liberal countries and the world of
Islam, he explained, ''remains in essence one of ideology, although
over the years it has appeared in various guises and has grown more
sophisticated and, at times, more insidious.'' The sophisticated and
insidious disguises tended to be worldly -- a camouflage that was
intended to make the conflict appear to be economic, political or
military, and that was intended to make Muslims like himself who
insisted on speaking about religion appear to be, in his words,
''fanatics'' and ''backward people.'' 
 
''But in reality,'' he explained, ''the confrontation is not over
control of territory or economic resources, or for military
domination. If we believed that, we would play into our enemies' hands
and would have no one but ourselves to blame for the consequences.'' 
 
The true confrontation, the deepest confrontation of all, was over
Islam and nothing but Islam. Religion was the issue. Qutb could hardly
be clearer on this topic. The confrontation arose from the effort by
Crusaders and world Zionism to annihilate Islam. The Crusaders and
Zionists knew that Christianity and Judaism were inferior to Islam and
had led to lives of misery. They needed to annihilate Islam in order
to rescue their own doctrines from extinction. And so the Crusaders
and Zionists went on the attack. 
 
But this attack was not, at bottom, military. At least Qutb did not
devote his energies to warning against such a danger. Nor did he spend
much time worrying about the ins and outs of Israel's struggle with
the Palestinians. Border disputes did not concern him. He was focused
on something cosmically larger. He worried, instead, that people with
liberal ideas were mounting a gigantic campaign against Islam -- ''an
effort to confine Islam to the emotional and ritual circles, and to
bar it from participating in the activity of life, and to check its
complete predominance over every human secular activity, a
pre-eminence it earns by virtue of its nature and function.'' 
 
He trembled with rage at that effort. And he cited good historical
evidence for his trembling rage. Turkey, an authentic Muslim country,
had embraced secular ideas back in 1924. Turkey's revolutionary leader
at that time, Kemal Ataturk, abolished the institutional remnants of
the ancient caliphate -- the caliphate that Qutb so fervently wanted
to resurrect. The Turks in this fashion had tried to abolish the very
idea and memory of an Islamic state. Qutb worried that, if secular
reformers in other Muslim countries had any success, Islam was going
to be pushed into a corner, separate from the state. True Islam was
going to end up as partial Islam. But partial Islam, in his view, did
not exist. 
 
The secular reformers were already at work, throughout the Muslim
world. They were mounting their offensive -- ''a final offensive which
is actually taking place now in all the Muslim countries. . . . It is
an effort to exterminate this religion as even a basic creed and to
replace it with secular conceptions having their own implications,
values, institutions and organizations.'' 
 
''To exterminate'' -- that was Qutb's phrase. Hysteria cried out from
every syllable. But he did not want to be hysterical. He wanted to
respond. How? 
 
VI. That one question dominated Qutb's life. It was a theological
question, and he answered it with his volumes on the Koran. But he
intended his theology to be practical too -- to offer a revolutionary
program to save mankind. The first step was to open people's eyes. He
wanted Muslims to recognize the nature of the danger -- to recognize
that Islam had come under assault from outside the Muslim world and
also from inside the Muslim world. The assault from outside was led by
Crusaders and world Zionism (though sometimes he also mentioned
Communism). 
 
But the assault from inside was conducted by Muslims themselves --
that is, by people who called themselves Muslims but who polluted the
Muslim world with incompatible ideas derived from elsewhere. These
several enemies, internal and external, the false Muslims together
with the Crusaders and Zionists, ruled the earth. But Qutb considered
that Islam's strength was, even so, huger yet. ''We are certain,'' he
wrote, ''that this religion of Islam is so intrinsically genuine, so
colossal and deeply rooted that all such efforts and brutal
concussions will avail nothing.'' 
 
Islam's apparent weakness was mere appearance. Islam's true champions
seemed to be few, but numbers meant nothing. The few had to gather
themselves together into what Qutb in ''Milestones'' called a vanguard
-- a term that he must have borrowed from Lenin, though Qutb had in
mind a tiny group animated by the spirit of Muhammad and his
Companions from the dawn of Islam. This vanguard of true Muslims was
going to undertake the renovation of Islam and of civilization all
over the world. The vanguard was going to turn against the false
Muslims and ''hypocrites'' and do as Muhammad had done, which was to
found a new state, based on the Koran. And from there, the vanguard
was going to resurrect the caliphate and take Islam to all the world,
just as Muhammad had done. 
 
Qutb's vanguard was going to reinstate shariah, the Muslim code, as
the legal code for all of society. Shariah implied some fairly severe
rules. Qutb cited the Koran on the punishments for killing or
wounding: ''a life for a life, an eye for an eye, a nose for a nose,
an ear for an ear.'' Fornication, too, was a serious crime because, in
his words, ''it involves an attack on honor and a contempt for
sanctity and an encouragement ofprofligacy in society.'' Shariah
specified the punishments here as well. ''The penalty for this must be
severe; for married men and women it is stoning to death; for
unmarried men and women it is flogging, a hundred lashes, which in
cases is fatal.'' False accusations were likewise serious. ''A
punishment of 80 lashes is fixed for those who falsely accuse chaste
women.'' As for those who threaten the general security of society,
their punishment is to be put to death, to be crucified, to have their
hands and feet cut off, or to be banished from the country.'' 
 
But Qutb refused to regard these punishments as barbarous or
primitive. Shariah, in his view, meant liberation. Other societies,
drawing on non-Koranic principles, forced people to obey haughty
masters and man-made law. Those other societies forced people to
worship their own rulers and to do as the rulers said -- even if the
rulers were democratically chosen. Under shariah, no one was going to
be forced to obey mere humans. Shariah, in Qutb's view, meant ''the
abolition of man-made laws.'' In the resurrected caliphate, every
person was going to be ''free from servitude to others.'' The true
Islamic system meant ''the complete and true freedom of every person
and the full dignity of every individual of the society. On the other
hand, in a society in which some people are lords who legislate and
some others are slaves who obey, then there is no freedom in the real
sense, nor dignity for each and every individual.''
 
He insisted that shariah meant freedom of conscience -- though freedom
of conscience, in his interpretation, meant freedom from false
doctrines that failed to recognize God, freedom from the modern
schizophrenia. Shariah, in a word, was utopia for Sayyid Qutb. It was
perfection. It was the natural order in the universal. It was freedom,
justice, humanity and divinity in a single system. It was a vision as
grand or grander than Communism or any of the other totalitarian
doctrines of the 20th century. It was, in his words, ''the total
liberation of man from enslavement by others.'' It was an impossible
vision -- a vision that was plainly going to require a total
dictatorship in order to enforce: a vision that, by claiming not to
rely on man-made laws, was going to have to rely, instead, on
theocrats, who would interpret God's laws to the masses. The most
extreme despotism was all too visible in Qutb's revolutionary program.
That much should have been obvious to anyone who knew the history of
the other grand totalitarian revolutionary projects of the 20th
century, the projects of the Nazis, the Fascists and the Communists. 
 
Still, for Qutb, utopia was not the main thing. Utopia was for the
future, and Qutb was not a dreamer. Islam, in his interpretation, was
a way of life. He wanted his Muslim vanguard to live according to
pious Islamic principles in the here and now. He wanted the vanguard
to observe the rules of Muslim charity and all the other rules of
daily life. He wanted the true Muslims to engage in a lifelong study
of the Koran -- the lifelong study that his own gigantic commentary
was designed to enhance. But most of all, he wanted his vanguard to
accept the obligations of ''jihad,'' which is to say, the struggle for
Islam. And what would that mean, to engage in jihad in the present and
not just in the sci-fi utopian future? 
 
Qutb began Volume 1 of ''In the Shade of the Qur'an'' by saying: ''To
live 'in the shade of the Qur'an' is a great blessing which can only
be fully appreciated by those who experience it. It is a rich
experience that gives meaning to life and makes it worth living. I am
deeply thankful to God Almighty for blessing me with this uplifting
experience for a considerable time, which was the happiest and most
fruitful period of my life -- a privilege for which I am eternally
grateful.'' 
 
He does not identify that happy and fruitful period of his life -- a
period that lasted, as he says, a considerable time. Perhaps his
brother and other intimates would have known exactly what he had in
mind -- some very pleasant period, conceivably the childhood years
when he was memorizing the Koran. But an ordinary reader who picks up
Qutb's books can only imagine that he was writing about his years of
torture and prison. 
 
One of his Indian publishers has highlighted this point in a
remarkably gruesome manner by attaching an unsigned preface to a 1998
edition of ''Milestones.'' The preface declares: ''The ultimate price
for working to please God Almighty and to propagate his ways in this
world is often one's own life. The author'' -- Qutb, that is --
''tried to do it; he paid for it with his life. If you and I try to do
it, there is every likelihood we will be called upon to do the same.
But for those who truly believe in God, what other choice is there?'' 
 
You are meant to suppose that a true reader of Sayyid Qutb is someone
who, in the degree that he properly digests Qutb's message, will act
on what has been digested. And action may well bring on a martyr's
death. To read is to glide forward toward death; and gliding toward
death means you have understood what you are reading. Qutb's writings
do vibrate to that morbid tone -- not always, but sometimes. The work
that he left behind, his Koranic commentary, is vast, vividly written,
wise, broad, indignant, sometimes demented, bristly with hatred,
medieval, modern, tolerant, intolerant, paranoid, cruel, urgent,
cranky, tranquil, grave, poetic, learned and analytic. Sometimes it is
moving. It is a work large and solid enough to create its own shade,
where Qutb's vanguard and other readers could repose and turn his
pages, as he advised the students of the Koran to do, in the earnest
spirit of loyal soldiers reading their daily bulletin. But there is,
in this commentary, something otherworldly too -- an atmosphere of
death. At the very least, it is impossible to read the work without
remembering that, in 1966, Qutb, in the phrase of one of his
biographers, ''kissed the gallows.'' 
 
Martyrdom was among his themes. He discusses passages in the Koran's
sura ''The Cow,'' and he explains that death as a martyr is nothing to
fear. Yes, some people will have to be sacrificed. ''Those who risk
their lives and go out to fight, and who are prepared to lay down
their lives for the cause of God are honorable people, pure of heart
and blessed of soul. But the great surprise is that those among them
who are killed in the struggle must not be considered or described as
dead. They continue to live, as God Himself clearly states.'' 
 
Qutb wrote: ''To all intents and purposes, those people may very well
appear lifeless, but life and death are not judged by superficial
physical means alone. Life is chiefly characterized by activity,
growth and persistence, while death is a state of total loss of
function, of complete inertia and lifelessness. But the death of those
who are killed for the cause of God gives more impetus to the cause,
which continues to thrive on their blood. Their influence on those
they leave behind also grows and spreads. Thus after their death they
remain an active force in shaping the life of their community and
giving it direction. It is in this sense that such people, having
sacrificed their lives for the sake of God, retain their active
existence in everyday life. . . . 
 
''There is no real sense of loss in their death, since they continue
to live.'' 
 
And so it was with Sayyid Qutb. In the period before his final arrest
and execution, diplomats from Iraq and Libya offered him the chance to
flee to safety in their countries. But he declined to go, on the
ground that 3,000 young men and women in Egypt were his followers, and
he did not want to undo a lifetime of teaching by refusing to give
those 3,000 people an example of true martyrdom. And, in fact, some of
those followers went on to form the Egyptian terrorist movement in the
next decade, the 1970's -- the groups that massacred tourists and
Coptic Christians and that assassinated Egypt's president, Anwar
Sadat, after he made peace with Israel; the groups that, in still
later years, ended up merging with bin Laden's group and supplying Al
Qaeda with its fundamental doctrines. The people in those groups were
not stupid or lacking in education. 
 
On the contrary, we keep learning how well educated these people are,
how many of them come from the upper class, how wealthy they are. And
there is no reason for us to be surprised. These people are in
possession of a powerful philosophy, which is Sayyid Qutb's. They are
in possession of a gigantic work of literature, which is his ''In the
Shade of the Qur'an.'' These people feel that, by consulting their own
doctrines, they can explain the unhappiness of the world. They feel
that, with an intense study of the Koran, as directed by Qutb and his
fellow thinkers, they can make sense of thousands of years of
theological error. They feel that, in Qutb's notion of shariah, they
command the principles of a perfect society. 
 
These people believe that, in the entire world, they alone are
preserving Islam from extinction. They feel they are benefiting the
world, even if they are committing random massacres. They are
certainly not worried about death. Qutb gave these people a reason to
yearn for death. Wisdom, piety, death and immortality are, in his
vision of the world, the same. For a pious life is a life of struggle
or jihad for Islam, and struggle means martyrdom. We may think: those
are creepy ideas. And yes, the ideas are creepy. But there is, in
Qutb's presentation, a weird allure in those ideas. 
 
VII. It would be nice to think that, in the war against terror, our
side, too, speaks of deep philosophical ideas -- it would be nice to
think that someone is arguing with the terrorists and with the readers
of Sayyid Qutb. But here I have my worries. The followers of Qutb
speak, in their wild fashion, of enormous human problems, and they
urge one another to death and to murder. But the enemies of these
people speak of what? The political leaders speak of United Nations
resolutions, of unilateralism, of multilateralism, of weapons
inspectors, of coercion and noncoercion. This is no answer to the
terrorists. The terrorists speak insanely of deep things. The
antiterrorists had better speak sanely of equally deep things.
Presidents will not do this. Presidents will dispatch armies, or
decline to dispatch armies, for better and for worse. 
 
But who will speak of the sacred and the secular, of the physical
world and the spiritual world? Who will defend liberal ideas against
the enemies of liberal ideas? Who will defend liberal principles in
spite of liberal society's every failure? President George W. Bush, in
his speech to Congress a few days after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks,
announced that he was going to wage a war of ideas. He has done no
such thing. He is not the man for that. 
 
Philosophers and religious leaders will have to do this on their own.
Are they doing so? Armies are in motion, but are the philosophers and
religious leaders, the liberal thinkers, likewise in motion? There is
something to worry about here, an aspect of the war that liberal
society seems to have trouble understanding -- one more worry, on top
of all the others, and possibly the greatest worry of all. 
 
Paul Berman has written for the magazine about Vaclav Havel, Vicente
Fox and other subjects. He is the author of the coming ''Terror and
Liberalism'' (W.W. Norton), from which this essay is adapt.          
                                                                     
                                                                     
                                 Copyright The New York Times Company.
Reprinted from The New York Times Sunday Magazine of March 23, 2003.








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