Ulasan Irshad Manji sangat mengena untuk sikon di Indonesia terutama menilik 
sikap Islam Moderat yang tidak bisa atau tidak berani secara aktip menolak 
sikap para isfun yang menggunakan kaidah agama dan jihad untuk melempengkan 
tindakan teror-nya.
   
  Baca mulai bait(paragrap) yang diawali dengan......Moderate Muslim denounce 
violence in the name of Islam.........
   
  Jadi kita tahu kenapa para muslim moderat tidak bisa berbuat 
banyak...misalnya mengutuk dengan keras soal jihad2an itu, karena untuk 
menunjukan hal miring ini mereka akan melangkah memasuki aspek agama yang 
nantinya akan merepotkan diri para islam moderat sendiri. Suatu dilemma. Inilah 
eranya dimana agama pegang peranan penting dan semua orang yang memberikan 
argumentasi betapapun realistisnya memberikan tangkisan betapun riilnya,akan di 
cap sebagai anti agama  dan patut di eliminir ujung2nya.
   
  Harry Adinegara

  

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Irshad Manji: Religion is the root cause of terrorist threat
Why are most of the terror suspects (so far) well-educated medical 
professionals, not poor and dispossessed types?   
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05jul07

THIS week's arrest of Mohamed Haneef in Brisbane may be more curious for the 
fact he's a professional lifesaver than for the possibility that he's a 
terrorist. So far, most of those being investigated in the latest British car 
bomb plots are, as is Haneef, doctors. The seeming paradox of the privileged 
seeking to avenge humiliation has many scratching their heads. Aren't Muslim 
martyrs supposed to be poor, dispossessed and resentful?

  September 11 should have stripped us of that breezy simplification. The 19 
hijackers came from means. Mohammed Atta, their ringleader, earned an 
engineering degree. He then moved to the West, opting for postgraduate studies 
in Germany. No aggrieved goatherder, that one. 
  In 2003, I interviewed Mohammad al-Hindi, the political leader of Islamic 
Jihad in Gaza. 
  A physician himself, al-Hindi explained the difference between suicide and 
martyrdom. "Suicide is done out of despair," the good doctor diagnosed. "But 
most of our martyrs today were very successful in their earthly lives." 
  In short, it's not what the material world fails to deliver that drives 
suicide bombers. It's something else. Time and again, that something else has 
been articulated by the people committing these acts: their religion. 
  Consider Mohammad Sidique Khan, the teaching assistant who masterminded the 
July 7, 2005, transport bombings in London. In a taped testimony, Khan railed 
against British foreign policy. But before bringing up Tony Blair, he 
emphasised that "Islam is our religion" and "the prophet is our role model". In 
short, Khan gave priority to God. 
  Now take Mohammed Bouyeri, the Dutch-born Moroccan Muslim who murdered 
Amsterdam filmmaker Theo van Gogh. Bouyeri pumped several bullets into van 
Gogh's body. Knowing that multiple shots would finish off his victim, why 
didn't Bouyeri stop there? Why did he pull out a blade to decapitate van Gogh? 
  Again, we must confront religious symbolism. The blade is an implement 
associated with 7th-century tribal conflict. Wielding it as a sword becomes a 
tribute to the founding moment of Islam. Even the note stabbed into van Gogh's 
corpse, although written in Dutch, had the unmistakable rhythms of Arabic 
poetry. Let's credit Bouyeri with honesty: at his trial he proudly acknowledged 
acting from religious conviction. 
  Despite integrating Muslims far more adroitly than most of Europe, North 
America isn't immune. Last year in Toronto, police nabbed 17 young Muslim men 
allegedly plotting to blow up Canada's parliament buildings and behead the 
Prime Minister. 
  They called their campaign Operation Badr, a reference to prophet Mohammed's 
first decisive military triumph, the Battle of Badr. Clearly the Toronto 17 
drew inspiration from religious history. 
  U
  For people with big hearts and goodwill, this must be uncomfortable to hear. 
But they can take solace that the law-and-order types have a hard time with it, 
too. After rounding up the Toronto suspects, police held a press conference and 
didn't once mention Islam or Muslims. At their second press conference, police 
boasted about avoiding those words. If the guardians of public safety intended 
their silence to be a form of sensitivity, they instead accomplished a form of 
artistry, airbrushing the role that religion plays in the violence carried out 
under its banner. 
  They're in fine company: moderate Muslims do the same. Although the vast 
majority of Muslims aren't extremists, it is important to start making a more 
important distinction: between moderate Muslims and reform-minded ones.
   
  Moderate Muslims denounce violence in the name of Islam but deny that Islam 
has anything to do with it. By their denial, moderates abandon the ground of 
theological interpretation to those with malignant intentions, effectively 
telling would-be terrorists that they can get away with abuses of power because 
mainstream Muslims won't challenge the fanatics with bold, competing 
interpretations. To do so would be admit that religion is a factor. Moderate 
Muslims can't go there. 
   
  Reform-minded Muslims say it's time to admit that Islam's scripture and 
history are being exploited. They argue for reinterpretation precisely to put 
the would-be terrorists on notice that their monopoly is over. 
  Reinterpreting doesn't mean rewriting. It means rethinking words and 
practices that already exist, removing them from a 7th-century tribal time warp 
and introducing them to a 21st-century pluralistic context. Un-Islamic? God, 
no. The Koran contains three times as many verses calling on Muslims to think, 
analyse and reflect than passages that dictate what's absolutely right or 
wrong. In that sense, reform-minded Muslims are as authentic as moderates and 
quite possibly more constructive. 
  This week a former jihadist wrote in a British newspaper that the "real 
engine of our violence" is "Islamic theology". Months ago, he told me that as a 
militant he raised most of his war chest from dentists. Islamist violence: it's 
not just for doctors any more. Tackling Islamist violence: it can't be left to 
moderates any more. 
  Irshad Manji is a senior fellow with the European Foundation for Democracy. 
She is creator of the documentary Faith Without Fear and author of The Trouble 
with Islam Today: A Muslim's Call for Reform in her Faith (Random House, 
Australia).

  
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