http://www.raymondibrahim.com/2016/05/16/islam-reform-and-other-options/


Islam: Reform and Other Options

May 16, 2016 *by Raymond Ibrahim* 0 Comments
<http://www.raymondibrahim.com/2016/05/16/islam-reform-and-other-options/#disqus_thread>

*By Matthew Hanley, The Catholic Thing
<https://www.thecatholicthing.org/2016/05/14/islam-reform-other-options/>,
May 14*

I know gossip is officially *verboten*, but I’m only passing along a news
item that has people talking. Did you hear about that guy in Arkansas –
Billy Bob Something – who married the wife of his adopted son, after he
rather sternly prevailed upon him to divorce her?

No joke. This actually happened – except not the other day in Arkansas, but
about 1400 years ago in Saudi Arabia. So it’s history, not idle gossip.
Mohammed wanted this married woman as his own, and so retroactively deemed
his original adoption of her husband to be illegitimate, thereby clearing
the way for a “licit” marital arrangement. This is why legal adoption
thenceforth became *haram* (off limits) according to *sharia* law.

Might the fact that this wasn’t the behavioral norm at the time – even in
that “dark” 7th century, even in pagan Arabia – suggest the possibility
that Islam ushered in regressive tenets, hard-wired to resist modification?

This is but one of many disquieting incidents – among the assorted
depredations, licentiousness, and violence attributed to Islam’s prophet
with which many Muslims themselves are not well (or comfortably) acquainted
– that might help us frame the prospect for “reform” within Islam.

Take, for example, the Somali-born-turned-Dutch politician Ayaan Hirsi Ali
(now an American citizen) – maligned by the multiculturalists and mullahs
alike for having left Islam. She has proposed five particular aspects of
Islam that need to be altered. First, she insists that Islam drop its
simplistic obeisance to Mohammed and the Quran; the other things that she
says need reworking, including *jihad* and *sharia*, flow from this.

Therein lies the intractable heart of the matter. However you slice it,
there is no getting around the fact that reprehensible acts (including the
kinds making headlines today) have been perpetually sanctioned *because
they were committed and championed by the person deemed to be the paragon
of all human behavior*. If the deeds of Mohammed simply cannot be
scrutinized because they are irreproachable, then emulation and no little
turmoil will persist.

Reform is no reform at all if it evades this central consideration – the
ounce of water that would not just dilute the faith, but dissolve it.
Ultimately, there is only acquiescence, or what Ali herself chose:
disavowal.

The French political philosopher Pierre Manent, recognizing that “reform”
isn’t really a viable option, has labored conscientiously to come up with a
proposal to deal with the sizeable Islamic presence now lodged within
France. His hope is for mutual respect, which would necessarily have to be
grounded in a return to *authentic* *French* identity; postmodern France is
in no position to take on a radical challenge, having severed itself from
its nourishing roots.

Manent proposes
<http://www.city-journal.org/html/political-action-and-primacy-good-14167.html>
a kind of “social contract” in which Muslims would be free to live with
their particular customs and practices as full French citizens, with two
exceptions: that only monogamy be recognized, and that the burqa be banned.
In return, they would have to accept the range of liberties protected by
French tradition, and to abandon external allegiances.

Manent’s comprehensive diagnosis could not be more valuable, and the
thoughtfulness of his proposals – arguably the best currently on offer – is
not to be dismissed. The fact remains, however, that for it to work, both
sides would have to recognize the need for a two-way street, that is to
say, for a sincerely mutual respect for the other. But that would seem to
require a serious *reform* of praxis within Islam. Not promising, to say
the least.

Betting men calculate the odds. The smart money would seem to be on
absorbing the straightforward implications of what the scholar Raymond
Ibrahim calls the “rule of numbers
<http://www.raymondibrahim.com/2013/05/28/islams-rule-of-numbers-and-the-london-beheading/>.”
Wherever and whenever the proportion of Muslims increases, violence against
the infidel becomes more common and overt. (France is presently at 7.5
percent.) No proposal or arrangement has seemed able to change that fact.

Manent’s proposal will likely be ignored for the same reason as the “rule
of numbers” has, with grave consequences, been disregarded by the
politicians and clerics alike. But it is not an act of mercy – nor is it
just – to dismiss the consequences of this theologically grounded
observation.

Bishops in the Middle East have been supplying abundant mercy – by
respecting the truth from which mercy is inseparable. Truth in the form of
plain warnings to their brother bishops that the West, too, will fall
victim to enemies they’ve welcomed into their home
<http://www.catholic.org/news/international/middle_east/story.php?id=56605>.

A scenario not particularly difficult to credit.

Yet these *merciful* admonitions seem insufficient to override what some
Western Churchmen and politicians prefer to regard as their own
magnanimity. For them, it would seem churlish to task Pope Francis for
taking a couple Syrian Muslim families in Lesbos back to Rome. I myself
don’t, although there’s plenty of complacency regarding the broader context
of ongoing Islamic savagery, both near and far.

St. Francis, whose love of the poor inspires Pope Francis, also wanted to
engage the Muslim world directly over competing theological matters of
truth and goodness. So much so that he endured a difficult voyage to Egypt.
He ultimately failed, but that does not mean his intent was misguided and
should not be imitated.

Benedict XVI’s unassailably reasonable and charitable outreach in the same
vein (at Regensburg) was rebuffed by the anti-Logos forces in the Islamic
and Western worlds. But that does not eliminate the need for such boldness.

Today, we can’t much be bothered to take religion seriously, so to expect
boldness of the kind needed seem “unrealistic” as well. One of our
presidential candidates actually asked in blissful ignorance: who painted
the *tilma* of Our Lady of Guadeloupe
<http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/hillary_clinton_leaves_flowers_for_our_lady_of_guadalupe_asks_who_painted_it/>?
Hers is the same lack of curiosity many of us display about Islam’s origins
and beliefs.

Indeed, boldness – nothing short of the exposition of religious truth in
charity – seems*the* single most urgent need today. But do we possess such
boldness?




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