http://www.jamestown.org/publications_details.php?volume_id=400
<http://www.jamestown.org/publications_details.php?volume_id=400&issue_id=29
09&article_id=23538> &issue_id=2909&article_id=23538
 
 
TERRORISM MONITOR 
 
Volume 2 , Issue 3 (February 12, 2004) 
 

THE STRUGGLE WITHIN ISLAM: ALBANIAN MUSLIMS REJECT EXTREMISM 
 

By Stephen Schwartz
 
 
 
I first heard the term "Wahhabi"--referring to the ultrafundamentalist
Islamic sect that is the state dispensation in Saudi Arabia--in a Yugoslav
context, in 1989. Specifically, Wahhabism was compared with Stalinist
Communism, a parallel that seemed immediately appropriate. But little did I
imagine that as a decade and a half went by, and I traveled to and lived in
a Yugoslavia in collapse, I would see an attempt to replace the heritage of
Stalinism with Wahhabi totalitarianism, among the Muslims of the region. 
 
The issue of Wahhabism, as opposed to abstract references to it, became
acute with the outbreak of the Bosnian war, in 1992. Muslims throughout the
world, as well as Christians and Jews of goodwill, rallied to assist the
embattled residents of Sarajevo and other despoiled and besieged cities. But
Bosnian Muslims themselves complained that Saudi/Wahhabi agents, throughout
the global Islamic community, sought to obstruct interfaith activities to
help the victims of an atrocious aggression. 
 
Rather, Wahhabis--from San Francisco to Samarkand and Singapore--tried to
restrict solidarity with Bosnia to a purely Islamic dimension. In addition,
several thousand Arab Wahhabi volunteers sought to transform the defensive
struggle waged by the Bosnians into an aggressive, and even terroristic,
jihad. The majority of Bosnians would have nothing of it. They fought in
regular forces--the Army of the Republic of Bosnia-Hercegovina--that
happened to include Bosnian Serbs, Croats, and Jews, as well as Muslims. 
 
With the end of the Bosnian conflict, and the imposition of the Dayton
accords in 1995, local Saudi/Wahhabi blandishments took new forms. Sarajevo
was flooded with Islamic charities and reconstruction agencies, notably the
Saudi High Commission for Relief of Bosnia-Hercegovina, which used the
tormented land as an operational base for infiltration of terrorists and
money into Europe and the United States. 
 
TURNING POINT 
 
The free ride for the Wahhabis ended with September 11, 2001, after which
the Bosnian authorities commenced assisting the United States in rolling up
terrorist networks that had installed themselves in Sarajevo, Zenica, and
other cities. But the Wahhabis had already turned to a new field of action:
The Albanian-speaking lands, meaning the Republic of Albania itself, Kosovo,
western Macedonia, and various parts of Montenegro. 
 
If anything, the Albanians were even more resistant to the Wahhabi appeal
than the Bosnians had been. This was a predictable outcome, in that
Albanians, with an isolated culture, a language without close relatives, and
a tradition of avoiding religious differences in the interest of national
unity, are generally wary of outsiders. Although the Albanians are 70
percent Muslim, they never warmed to Turkish occupation--as the Bosnians
did. Also unlike the Bosnians, they never saw Titoite socialism as anything
other than a form of Slavic imperialism. 
 
For these reasons, Arab and other mujahidin were unwelcome in Kosovo during
the 1998-99 struggle conducted by the Kosovo Liberation Army, which was
organized on an ethnic and patriotic basis, enlisting Catholics and atheists
no less than Muslims. Reports that Iranians or Arabs had been detected in
Kosovo during the war were pure disinformation and speculation. In addition,
Albanians are probably the most grateful people in the world for the
exercise of American military power, which rescued them from Serbian
repression in Kosovo. 
 
Nevertheless, with the end of the Kosovo intervention in 1999, Wahhabi
missionaries once again poured into the territory, as well as into Albania
and Macedonia, preaching and teaching their jihadist ideology. 
 
I spent much of 2000 in Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro, and Albania. I
returned to Macedonia at the end of 2003, and learned that the struggle
between local Muslims and Wahhabi colonizers had lost none of its immediacy
or relevancy for the struggle between moderate and extremist Islam
worldwide. 
 
ALBANIA TODAY 
 
Ramadan ended with the holiday of Bajram Sherif, as Eid ul-Fitr is known in
the Balkans, on November 25, when I found myself in Skopje. Bajram Sherif
came and went in the Balkans without serious incident. Nevertheless, the
ancient Macedonian capital, war-weary and impoverished after local fighting
between Albanians and Slavs in 2001, buzzed with rumors of terrorist
conspiracies. In a mild, foggy late-autumn, under a skyline dominated by
impressive Ottoman mosques, residents spoke anxiously of the recent suicide
bombings in Istanbul and of "special measures" taken against possible
attacks on U.S. and other foreign personnel in Kosovo, Albania and
Macedonia. 
 
Among the ethnic Albanian Muslims--especially in the western Macedonian
regions where they and their Christian fellow-Albanians continue agitating
for the right to education in the Albanian language--infiltration by
Wahhabis, in their characteristic beards and archaic Arab outfits, turned
out to be the main topic of discussion. 
 
In Tetovo, the center of Albanian agitation during the short Macedonian war,
I interviewed Arben Xhaferi (pronounced Jaferi), a sociologist by profession
and leader of the Albanian Democratic party, known by its Albanian initials
as the PDSh. Xhaferi is considered both the main Albanian leader in
Macedonia and the outstanding local critic of Wahhabi influence. 
 
"We cannot accept the endless agitation presenting democracy as opposed to
Islam," Xhaferi said. "Albanian Islam faces an immense threat from
fundamentalism. We are traditional in our Islam, which for us means
pluralism, respect for the other religions represented among us, and
repudiation of Arabization. Fundamentalist Islamists preach that there is
only one Islam, represented by them, just as Hitler said there could be only
one nation under one FŸhrer. 
 
"It is absurd that Wahhabis should come here and demand, in the name of
Islam, that we live and dress like them," Xhaferi said. "Albanians will not
allow foreigners of any kind to tell us our customs must be abandoned and
our behavior determined by Islamic totalitarians. We have our own history,
our own culture, and our own Albanian model of Islam, based on interfaith
respect and the understanding that religion is private. They will not
destroy us." 
 
He continued, "In the controversy over the future of Islam, we are compelled
to reinforce Albanian values. The Wahhabis say we must only love Allah, not
each other. Why, then, we ask, did Allah create in us the capacity to love
each other? The Albanian project will always be based on interfaith harmony.
We are not like the Bosnian Muslims, for whom Islam was their only defining
characteristic. We refuse to be defined as Muslims first." 
 
Xhaferi's analysis of Islamic history is novel. Islam needs its Augustine,
he avers, that is, a figure who will separate political and religious power.
He described the Islamic world as having leapt from medievalism to fascism.
And he warned that although Wahhabis cannot destroy governments, like that
of Albania, they can undermine religious life. Finally, he stated a paradox:
"Because Albanians do not want to be identified as Muslims, they are
handicapped in fighting against Wahhabism," he declared. The interview ended
on a somber note, with Xhaferi saying, "I am afraid of the economic weakness
of the Albanians. I think about these issues constantly." 
 
WAHHABI TACTICS 
 
Xhaferi has paid for his forthright criticism of Islamist extremism, as have
others who support him, such as the Skopje newspaper publisher Emin Azemi,
whose Albanian-language daily Fakti (The Facts) is among the most
professional in the region. Both have been subjected to numerous threats and
harassment. Azemi took a strong stand in support of the U.S. liberation of
Iraq. Fakti editorialized, "The defeat of Saddam Hussein will be a victory
for all humanity." It has also published Xhaferi's anti-Wahhabi polemics. 
 
Wahhabi propagandists seek to cast every conflict as religious. They lump
together all the grievances of Macedonia's Albanians as a campaign of
self-defense by "the Muslims"--leaving out of the picture the 15 percent of
Macedonian Albanians who are Christian, yet seek recognition of their
linguistic rights with no less enthusiasm than the Muslims. 
 
For example, a polemic on the Wahhabi website Islamonline, titled
"Macedonian Spark Can Incinerate the Region," by Omer bin Abdullah, comments
disingenuously, "The Muslims argue that the Albanian language should be the
second official language in the country." In reality, it is not the Muslims,
but the Albanians who argue this. Non-Albanian Muslims in
Macedonia--Turkish, Bosnian, and Slav--have failed to support the Albanians.
These smaller Muslim minorities have historically felt dependent on the Slav
Macedonian authorities. 
 
REJECTION 
 
The topic of Wahhabism keeps many Albanian young people preoccupied. With
unemployment high, facing an uncertain future and probable discrimination,
Albanians do not want to be saddled with a reputation for Islamic extremism.
And they are clear on where the truth lies. Students at the European- and
U.S.-subsidized Southeast European University of Tetovo expressed disgust
with reactionary Saudism, including its primitive repression of women. 
 
Traveling through Macedonia after Ramadan, I encountered distaste for
Islamism on all sides--from elderly Albanian men sporting fierce mustaches
and speaking of their village laws no less than from fashionably dressed
young women who said Saudi Arabia must cease to be the only country in the
world that forbids women to drive. I came away with renewed understanding
that Muslims who have suffered immensely at the hands of others may still
repudiate terrorism and extremist ideology when they are secure in their
traditions and look hopefully to the future. But above all, these European
Muslims, living in a remote and disregarded country, understand the truth
about the Saudi/Wahhabi threat to the Islamic world, and to the world at
large--even as many in capitals like Washington continue to deny it. 


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