http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2009\07\11\story_11-7-2009_pg3_5

Saturday, July 11, 2009

VIEW: Repackaging Islamism -Rafia Zakaria 



 Couched in a corporate structure that relies on savvy marketing, attractive 
rhetoric and smart, modern packaging, projects like IslamOnline represent the 
effort to change in appearance and language what remains the same in substance

The headquarters of IslamOnline.net is palatial building located on the 
outskirts of Cairo. Away from the dirt and unrelenting traffic of the bustling 
Egyptian capital, its shiny and brand new campus is located across the street 
from an equally palatial mosque. If you've spent any time in Cairo, the glass 
ensconced air-conditioned office of this Qatari-funded online empire can be a 
welcome respite from the desert heat, undoubtedly for both the casual visitor 
as well as the nearly one hundred Egyptian men and women who work here.

According to its publicity materials, IslamOnline strives for "an Islamic 
renaissance" and envisions itself as becoming the largest and most "credible 
reference on Islam and its peoples". The website hosts a number of features 
from "news" to "politics in depth" to "family" and "art and culture". A whole 
section is devoted to "Euro-Muslims", even though the website is based in the 
Middle East; assumedly perhaps because much of traffic for the website comes 
not from Egypt itself but from Muslims living in Europe.

The technology is slick, the graphics trendy and the young, energetic staff 
quite committed to the avowed project of rebranding Islam. Words like 
"moderate" "diverse" and "plural" are recurrent in the vocabulary of the 
editors, used repeatedly to describe both their mission and their purpose. 

These two facets of IslamOnline, its Egyptian staff and Western consumers and 
the conscious rebranding of Islam are worthy of attention.

Take first the savvy rhetorical repackaging that is insistent on the fact that 
the "Islam" it is peddling is both "moderate" and "diverse". When questioned 
regarding what constitutes "moderate" Islam, however, the editors are resolute 
in providing synonyms instead of concrete responses. Ignored thus is the idea 
that diversity, in essence, stands for the representation of a variety of views 
that include the extremes, while moderation stands for a particular selection 
which avoids the extremes.

Also ignored is the reality that selecting what is moderate therefore 
inherently invokes a judgement and an interpretation regarding what is 
considered to be so. For instance, on the issue of hijab, the editors of 
IslamOnline state that the moderate position is that all Muslim women are 
required to wear the hijab; this is also, they insist, the "majority" position 
but the process of enumerating what a "majority" means, or why conflicting 
interpretations are ignored is again left unexplained. The same women who 
denounce the intolerance of Europeans toward women who wear the headscarf are 
thus unwilling to tolerate that a Muslim woman can refuse to wear one and still 
practice her faith. 

This lack of self-awareness among the editors of IslamOnline and the 
self-described promoters of the "correct" and "moderate" Islam is disturbing 
given the stated aims of the organisation. It is difficult indeed to discern 
whether the editors and staff of this web-based dawa organisation are being 
deliberately evasive regarding their project of proffering a particular 
definition of "moderate" Islam or truly ignorant of their own role in advancing 
a project whose strings are being pulled by their financiers.

The geographical dynamics of both the headquarters of IslamOnline as well as 
the constituents of its staff add further complications to the question. 180 
Egyptians, men and women, some commuting up to two hours each way, brave the 
heat and dust of Cairo to work in this air-conditioned glass building reeking 
of Gulf money. Sitting in neat cubicles, they collect news articles and fatwas 
for Muslims around the world, most notably in the West.

Their writings say little or nothing at all about the rising unemployment in 
Cairo, the blatant poverty visible on every city street, or the lack of 
political process in their country. In fact, these proximate realities, 
experienced undoubtedly by editors and staff, are all not represented in the 
conversation and largely the content of IslamOnline. In the deliberate divorce 
of these two realities then, IslamOnline, in the real and not virtual sense, 
represents outsourcing at its best: the relegation of dawa to Egyptian Muslims 
propagating an Islam envisioned by their Gulf financiers.

The disjunction is obvious not simply in the economic disparity between the 
largely Egyptian producers of IslamOnline, its Qatari backers and its largely 
Western consumers, but also in the avowed rhetoric of diversity versus its 
project of propagating the "correct" Islam. The Sharia section, which according 
to their own statistics is the most popular section of the website, is run by a 
doctoral student from Al-Azhar University. In his words, the process of 
compiling the "diverse" and "moderate" views espoused by IslamOnline stands for 
the effort to combine "authentic" opinions on various subjects from all four 
Sunni mazhabs. Shiite schools of thought fail to make this authenticity cut and 
hence are not represented.

A similar conclusion could be reached about the propagators of "authentic" 
Islam of IslamOnline; a document retrieved from IslamOnline reveals that nearly 
ninety percent of the sheikhs recruited to provide fatwas are Arab sheikhs with 
little or no representation for Southeast Asians, South Asians and Muslims from 
other non-Arab ethnicities.

In conclusion then, the Islam of IslamOnline stands for Islam as understood 
largely by Sunni Arabs. There is indeed nothing wrong with such a project; 
Sunni Arabs just like Iranian Shiites or South Asian Sufis have the right to 
propagate and disseminate information about their particular take on the 
Islamic faith. Indeed, there is something laudable and commendable also about 
providing Egyptian Muslim youth with a well funded and inviting workplace where 
they can interact and earn good livelihoods while living their faith.

The pernicious aspects of projects like IslamOnline lie in the unsaid agendas 
that undergird their stated goals. Calling a website "IslamOnline" instead of 
"MuslimsOnline" makes a very particular claim about representing a single and 
correct doctrinal position whose truth is substantiated by a particular 
interpretation of religious text. Disguising such a claim in the glib rhetoric 
of "diversity" and "plurality" while simultaneously excluding entire swathes of 
Muslim practice such as Shiite theology suggests a deceptive condescension 
toward both Muslims and non-Muslims consumers of the website.

In larger terms, projects like IslamOnline represent a novel new turn taken by 
the Islamist project that consciously seeks to redefine itself as "moderate". 
Couched in a corporate structure that relies on savvy marketing, attractive 
rhetoric and smart, modern packaging, it represents the effort to change in 
appearance and language what remains the same in substance. This new and 
repackaged Islamism thus continues to privilege Sunni and Arab interpretations 
of Islam as ultimately authentic and correct but under the glib pretence of 
being committed to both moderation and diversity.

Rafia Zakaria is an attorney living in the United States where she teaches 
courses on Constitutional Law and Political Philosophy. She can be contacted at 
rafia.zaka...@gmail.com




[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke