Weak Points In The Ideology Of Jihad
Weak
Points in the Ideology of Jihad
The
Resilience of the Ideology
Whether
you like it or not, whether you consider it something too obscure to
be bothered with, the ideology is the jihad’s most effective and
most enduring weapon. Ideology is the most important arm because it
is the most resilient. It is going to remain long after Bin Laden is
gone, long after the individual groups have vanished. If, and when,
all the strategies and tactics of these cells have been wound up, the
jihad as an ideology will stay and will go on to generate the next
group, and the next.
So
how does the ideology provide this resilience?
It
frames the conflict, and justifies it. It gives the Mujahideen a
grand mission: the salvation, no less, of humanity. This is something
that is not sufficiently understood. There is a common perception
that these people must be nihilists, that they are just
negatively‐minded people. They cannot be religious, because a
religious person who reads books would not be acting the way that
these do. If they are religious then they certainly cannot be doing
any reading.1 Unfortunately, the opposite is the case. Because by
looking at the ideological materials put out, you realize that it is
very important to them to feel that they are engaged in a very
important and noble cause for humanity. They are rescuing us from
ourselves. As they see it, we are all sunk in the mire of jāhiliyya
(a renewed ‘era of pagan ignorance’). We are diverted from the
true course of how knowledge should be expounded, from the true
course of the Faith. And the Mujahideen are given this role in their
literature – that they alone are responsible for the salvation of
humanity. That means, of course, that they can tolerate any amount of
criticism because the criticism is coming from the damned.
It
gives them a cause with a pedigree, and the pedigree is very
important, because although we like to think of them as a
revolutionary cause—that is the effect of what they are doing—they
do not like to think of themselves as revolutionaries. They see
themselves as very traditionally‐minded people, as the true,
authentic Muslims. All other Muslims have been ‘got at’ by an
epistemology which has been constructed by the Jews and the
Christians. And they do not buy into that epistemology, and as for
those Muslims who do, well, woe to them. The Mujahideen are the true
authentic people, in their eyes. So that gives them a sense of
authenticity. They are not coming up with something new, something
revolutionary. They are re‐centralizing something which has been
marginalized.
Under
this system it turns death into constant victory. So you cannot even
say in that sense that we are winning. Because with every death, with
every martyrdom, it is yet further evidence that they are winning.
The strategists who are measuring our progress against the terrorists
fail to understand this. The Mujahideen are not fatally influenced by
their performance on the field, because as far as they are concerned,
this is a personal sacrifice, and this sacrifice is itself part of
the victory. The more who fall on the field, the more suicide
bombers, the greater the evidence that God is on their side. So it
does not work the way it worked at the end of the Crusades, when you
had Provencal poets saying it looks as though something is not right.
These had set out for Outremer in the belief that Deus le volt (“God
wills it”) would justify their cause. But then they started losing.
So at the end of the Crusades there was a reconsideration of the
relationship that had been constructed between faith and power, with
the consequent decline in temporal ecclesiastical power. This,
however, will not happen with the jihadis, since they can only see
before them a constant array of victories. This means that without a
serious effort to address the ideology, we will always have to
respond retroactively to a mindset that is constantly outwitting us
because we fail to get to their starting point.
Let
us first of all understand them for the way they understand
themselves. Let us remove this reticence to use the vocabulary of
Islamic faith – something which strategists are loath to do – and
get straight to the starting points. When you understand these points
of departure, you understand the way they view the world. Once this
is achieved, then we can talk about working out a method of
undermining it, and the extent to which we can contribute to
undermining this process.
The
Fear of Intellectual defeat
The
threat of being defeated intellectually is the most dangerous threat
there is for them. Former jihadist members continually flag this up.
Dr. Tawfik Hamid, once a member of the Egyptian al‐Gamā‘a
al‐Islāmiyya, put it very well when he said:
“If
they hear Westerners saying: ‘it is culture, Islamism is not
wrong’, they gain confidence and justification. Because they are
convinced that therefore they are not defeated. We therefore need to
heavily defeat them mentally too, and encourage this self‐doubt and
criticism.” 2
As
to how to defeat the ideology intellectually, we can get a clue to
this, as in many areas, by simply listening to what they say and
reading what they write. This may seem an obvious point to make, but
it is surprising how little appreciation there is in media discourse
of the ideological underpinning. Part of the problem, of course, is
the limited quantity of material available to the general public.
This point was highlighted by the jihadist Shaykh at the centre of
media interest over the Fort Hood killings, Anwar Al‐Awlaki. In his
44 Ways of Supporting Jihad he wrote about the centrality of Arabic
to the jihad, saying that:
Arabic
is the international language of Jihad. Most of the Jihad literature
is available only in Arabic and publishers are not willing to take
the risk of translating it. The only ones who are spending the money
and time translating Jihad literature are the Western intelligence
services…and too bad, they would not be willing to share it with
you.3
The
majority of the material communicated to the general public by the
media consists of summarized treatments of the latest al‐Qaeda
statement (often with the religious content filtered out). For
example, a report in April 2008 on al‐Zawahiri’s response to an
‘Ask al‐Qaeda’ questionnaire posted on the chat forums
highlighted only those elements of interest to the western reader:
questions on the killing of innocents and the lack of attacks against
Israel. The author of the report then commented that:
The
questions and answers were otherwise relatively uninteresting and
aimed at Islamic insiders.4
The importance of the ‘relatively
uninteresting’ materials—doctrinal propaganda in a religiously
conceived conflict, and the fact that the ‘Islamic insiders’ are
actually those who constitute the entirety of the intended audience
(and not the Westerner)—clearly was not fully understood.
It
is important that we make ourselves fully familiar with this
material, rather than contenting ourselves with the idea that the
material belongs to ‘Islamic insiders’ and that the task of
refuting the ideology is in hand and being carried out by others in
the know. For instance, a while back many commentators in the West
waxed lyrical about the ‘beginning of the end for al‐Qaeda’
with the refutations of Bin Laden by leading Salafist scholars with
jihadist sympathies, such as Shaykh Salmān al‐‘Awda and Sayyid
Imām (‘Dr. Fadl’). But those who took the trouble to look at
these refutations up close realized that the debate was no more than
a matter of technicalities. There is no refutation of any substance
occurring, they do not go to the point of saying that jihad as
such—the idea of waging war for supremacy—is itself wrong.
Instead, all the ‘criticism’ amounts to is that al‐Qaeda’s
violence is mistimed, the Muslim world is not ready for it yet, and
the losses are outweighing the gains. When they will be ready, the
argument runs, then it will be a right and proper thing to do. The
authenticity preoccupation prevents the argument from being
otherwise.
Textualism
vs. Reason
And
that is an interesting first pointer to where we have to focus our
attention. Because, essentially, it is the dilemma between textualism
– the recourse to the authority of a written text – and
independent moral judgment. Since the Enlightenment, we have been
quite happy to understand that independent moral judgement, whatever
religious tradition you are in, somehow enriches that religious
tradition. This debate has not yet been won in Islam. Textualism, in
this case the dependence on the Qur’ān and the Hadīth, still
trumps independent ethical thought. You may think something is right
or wrong, but you have first to get the chapter‐and‐verse for
confirmation. And this is an important starting point: the argument
for that is quite simple for a jihadi, or a Salafist. It is that God
communicated these texts to the Prophet via the angel Gabriel, so
there can be no doubt about the rightness or wrongness of these.5 On
the other hand, your independent moral judgement is a product of your
imperfect human brain. So the exercise of making a decision based on
the moral case is a priori flawed, and is not actually going to be
worth all that much. You may indeed have a personal opinion on this
or that, but you need the text to justify what you do or do not do.
That is the nub of the problem.
So
first we must isolate out of this equation the idea that we can go
straight to appealing to the jihadis on the basis of Reason. Or, that
we can present them with our greater, more enlightened pluralistic
counter‐arguments on the grounds that these obviously must be
better than their arguments, so therefore they will see the strength
of them. But remember, they have their own filter. They have the
filter of the only true authenticity for moral evaluation that exists
for them, which is textual authenticity. No matter how beguiling the
logic of the Westerner or the non‐jihadist Muslim, it counts for
nothing. This general suspicion of rationalism and logic is a
characteristic feature of the jihadist. It goes back deep into
history, and is coloured heavily by the position taken by Ibn
Taymiyya:
“As
for the books of logic, they do not contain knowledge that is
commanded in the Sacred Law − even if the independent reasoning of
some people have led them to the view that learning logic is
communally obligatory. Some people have stated that the sciences are
not established save with it − this is a gross error both
rationally and legally.” 6
The
effect of this is to ring‐fence areas where the enquiring mind may
not go. It acts to outlaw the possibility of neutral ground or common
intellectual space in which a debate may take place. This spells bad
news for the prospects of a ‘debate’ with jihadism.
The
Arab frame of the debate
First
let me provide some of context. It has often been said that the
mental universe of the jihadis responds to the problem of the
globalization of ideas. You have an insecurity about your own status
and your own role in the world, and your own historical world. You
therefore seek a solution to this problem, a quest which is not
actually the problem of yesterday, or of 9/11 or even of the 60s. In
its modern form it extends back to the 19th century and the Muslim
world’s confrontation with modernity. The solution to this
confrontation was sought not through the indigenization of modernity,
but by avoiding it and appealing to something even earlier. This is
the solution espoused by Salafism, the intransigent school of thought
which is the most textual of all in the spectrum of Islamic schools
of thought. Throughout history, like any other civilization, Islam
exhibits the whole range of approaches to knowledge. These range from
the ‘Arab sciences’ – the textual sciences of Qur’ānic
tafsīr (commentaries), Hadīth and the edifice of Islamic
jurisprudence – to the ‘foreign (mainly Greek) sciences’ of a
more rationalist stamp. There was an acrimonious dispute in the
Middle Ages in the later years of the Caliphate of Baghdad between
this Greek wing and the Arab wing of scholarship and learning. This
was not a racial divide; they were all Arabs who were doing it, but a
divide between those who brought themselves up on Hellenistic
learning, which is at home with the concept of rationality, debate,
and the principle evaluating something according to the internal
authority of the argument, and those who prioritized the more truly
Arab learning, as they considered it, which was the science of
Hadīth—where the focus was on evaluating the lineage of authority.
There
is an interesting study by Laurent Murawiec called The Mind of
Jihad,7 where he underlines that this ‘Arab learning’ is probably
an inheritance of the tribal conception of authority. Under this
cultural template, genealogy is everything: lineage, pure blood, the
time‐worn tradition of the group—not an individual element of
what a human can or cannot do but who he is related to, how his
actions conform to established practice, how far it is authentic to
the tribe’s traditions. So the ‘tribal matrix’ as Murawiec puts
it, and its fundamental preoccupation with lineage, seems to have fed
in at a very early point into the development of Islamic thought as
to what it was that constituted authority. That is to say that the
edifice of Islamic Law has been built up under the influence of a
post‐tribal shadow matrix, in which people evaluated authority on
the basis of lineage. “There is a tradition that Muhammad said this
… We know this because Aisha said it…and this was reported on the
authority of so and so, renowned for his veracity and piety…”and
on it goes down, sometimes into elaborate page‐long genealogies.
This genealogy constitutes the ultimate authority of the argument,
not the quality of the argument itself.
And this is the arena
where modern progressive Muslims are having to take on the radicals.
Historically, this major debate between rationalism and textual
authority was unfortunately resolved the wrong way in the Middle
Ages, when the ‘Arab sciences’ were granted precedence over the
‘foreign’ or Hellenistic sciences. The result was the triumph of
a ‘Salafist’ epistemology, a Salafist view of knowledge and
authority.
The
Salafist frame of the debate
What
does this mean? The term ‘Salafist’ comes from the phrase
al‐salaf al‐sālih—the ‘righteous predecessors.’ And that
is the key word. They represent the correct doctrinal lineage. They
have authenticity on their side. That is the strength of the
Salafists’ argument—that whatever they do equates to the template
of the earliest community. The advantage of the earliest community is
that it is uncontaminated by historical and philosophical
developments that have come since. So there you have an authenticity.
Whatever we do as Salafist Muslims (of which the jihadists are a
part) equates to a perfect model under the Prophet and the first
generations of Muslims.
After
that, all is fatally tainted. And that is the key to understanding
what they are doing and why they consider themselves authentic. The
example of the Salaf is the perfect and permanent model for the
future. A whole body of literature, of legal thought, developed over
the centuries. One wing of it was the wing represented by people
whose names are familiar, people such as Ibn Taymiyya (1263‐1328),
who is a favourite source of reference for the jihadis because he was
confronted with what they think is a problem similar to today’s. He
was faced with the cataclysmic Mongol onslaught, which laid waste
vast areas of the Islamic world. He had to rationalize why this was
happening to the true believers, and of course his rationalization
was that Muslims were sinning, they were not holding true to the real
doctrine. No wonder God had withdrawn his patronage to them. They
were no longer like the Salaf, they were no longer like the
predecessors. If they could just go back to the method of the
predecessors and their starting points, all this contradiction – of
God’s favoured community laid low by infidels – would be
resolved.
The
second element Ibn Taymiyya established was the legitimacy of
opposing authority, and that is where the jihad comes in. Are you
allowed to oppose authority? You could not normally do so under
traditional legal statutes. But in this case the ‘true Muslims’
are allowed to do so because these others – the regimes and their
supporters – may call themselves Muslims, but in truth they are
nothing of the kind. How can they determine that? There is a simple
litmus test: are these so‐called Muslims applying Sharī‘a law
100 per cent? And if they are not, then rebellion is allowed.
So
that is the cultural context of where the jihadis are coming from.
Many place their hope in the fact that the Salafis and the
jihadi‐Salafis are at loggerheads because most Salafis are
pietistic and not interested in politics. But the jihadis will always
win the argument of who is the true Salafist, who is following
closest to the way of the predecessors, because if you follow the
logic, if you invest all your authority in the pristine template of
these predecessors, as the Salafists say they do, then why stop at
the paper door that says “do not commit acts of violence?” The
Jihadi‐Salafists can simply say, “Well, it says here that the
Prophet Muhammad was a mujahid and spent most of his life waging war;
so we rest our case.” The tragedy now of the Middle East, which is
progressively salafizing, is that it does not matter how
well‐intentioned the imams are, if they are brought up and operate
in a Salafist universe, they are unable to face down that argument.
I
attended a seminar some weeks ago where some excellent scholars had
analyzed the molecular debates going on in the Gulf in what
essentially amounted to Hadīth‐wars, using texts to fight each
other to prove that “this is legitimate, no it is not, yes it is.”
What the analysts had to concede is that it does not amount to much
because, first of all, for anyone who is outside that Salafist
system—all non‐Salafist Muslims, plus the Shi‘a, plus the
Infidel—it does not count for anything. Inside, you will never win
that war because there is such a mass of Hadīth available that you
will never lack for supporting arguments for whatever insanity you
wish to commit. And the reason you will never lose the argument is
that there is no further recourse, no decider argument. This is
because inside the textual universe you cannot argue on the basis of
saying: “It is not reasonable, it is not ethical.” For to this
they will simply reply: “But I do not care because I have 20 Hadīth
that say I should do this. And that counts for a lot more than my
personal conscience.” The solution of the jihadists, following the
method of the Salafists, is to turn any ethical argument on its head
by abdicating judgement on this basis to one founded upon textual
authority. A member of the Hizb al‐Tahrir lays down the rules of
engagement in this struggle:
If, while you live under the
Infidel’s rules, you try to practice or teach your children or
others the doctrine of ‘Loyalty and Renunciation’ you will be
prosecuted for committing “hate crimes”. ‘Loyalty and
Renunciation’ is what Islam is all about; no faith is complete
without it. So if you go along with the Infidel and keep your mouth
shut, you will end up committing the crime of not hating for sake of
Allah. Which crime is easier to handle, a crime against Infidel
people or a crime against Allah? 8
The
Points of Weakness
Where,
then, are the vulnerabilities? There are weaknesses in the ideology,
and as long as we look for the weaknesses within the system, within
the way they look on things, we just might succeed. These weaknesses
may be grouped under the broad categories of authenticity, doctrine,
ethical practice, and rational consistency. Note carefully the order
in which I am saying this. The order of these is important. If you go
straight to the rational consistency argument, they are neither
interested nor challenged, since it just bounces off the wall of
textualism. If you go into ethical practice, they will say it does
not matter whether you or I think it is a sad thing to kill people,
the text justifies it.9 Radical thinkers strenuously oppose what they
see as the progressive ‘ethicization’ of Islam since it is
distracting Muslims from the dynamic of a larger war against Western
liberalism. So therefore go after ethical practice only after you
have broken down the citadel of authenticity, and started to chisel
at the doctrine. Finally, when the first three categories are engaged
and worked through, the way is open for the challenge on the basis of
rationality.
Performance
First,
let us look at the issue of performance. If their claim to acting
along the true path is true, up to a certain point there should be
evidence that they are winning on this. Of course, a jihadi shaykh
like al‐‘Uyyayrī will simply say they are winning every time
they lose a battle.10 So there is a bit of chicanery there that they
can use to get around that. But it is a pretty slippery argument to a
public that is not already Salafized. It still counts that God does
not seem to be on their side. If, on the other hand, his audience is
already in the Salafist fold, al‐‘Uyyayrī makes perfect sense.
One
can also look at areas such as the behavior of jihadis in the field.
There have been numerous propaganda disasters. In Saudi Arabia in
2004 there were some appalling cases of civilians caught in the
crossfire. Obviously, to the jihadis it is only Muslim civilians who
count – if you are not a Muslim, it is not an ethical issue. The
recent case (December 11 2009) of al‐Qaeda offering ‘condolences’
for victims caught in the crossfire is indicative both of the
pressure on the group emanating from the embarrassment caused by
these casualties and of the ethical peculiarity of their
self‐exoneration. The defence put up by Adam Gadahn (aka ‘Azzam
the American’) ran as follows:
“We
express our condolences to the families of the Muslim men, women and
children killed in these criminal acts and we ask Allah to have mercy
on those killed and accept them as martyrs … We also express the
same in regard to the unintended Muslim victims of the Mujahideen’s
operations against the Crusaders and their allies and puppets.”11
The
ethical peculiarity, predictably, takes its support from precedent.
Sayyid Qutb argued for the culpability of Muslims that associate
themselves, even peripherally, with a jāhilī institution – thus
laying the groundwork for collateral Muslim casualties. For Qutb, a
jāhilī institution was not just an obvious wing of regime power, or
even an organ of government, but apparently included all institutions
that affect the social order, that is, all public organizations and
facilities. Anything, that is, that possessed influence over jāhilī
society, and allows society to run without reference to Islamic
conditions as the radicals see them. The argument goes back to Ibn
Taymiyya: that it is the responsibility of ‘true Muslims’ to
prove themselves such. Anyone who is not making this effort is
probably a false Muslim. So the radicals are given freedom to fight
and kill these ‘nominal Muslims’ with the excuse that they should
know better than to support the apostate regime. This gives the
jihadists considerable latitude on what constitutes a legitimate
target.12
Muslims
caught in the crossfire, however, do present the Mujahideen with
their severest public relations test. A particular example of this
was in the November 2005 Amman hotel bombings. There followed a
furious pamphlet war on the web and they were on the run for a while,
as they tried to reinstate their authority. It was a difficult task.
But it demonstrates they are investing in the war of ideas in a way
that we are not.
One
can always point to the military and organizational failures. But it
does not cut much ice because you can place it against the grand
scheme of things. Over hundreds of years there are going to be
setbacks,13 but they are not really setbacks because all the
Mujahideen are all going to Heaven. So it is a victory in each case.
Even so, attaining power in God’s unfolding plan for humanity, and
then losing it, strikes a bad image. To the non‐Salafist audience
it counts, and it is therefore worth examining this phenomenon.
There
have been a number of very well focused analyses of failure by the
jihadis themselves. So we do not even have to do a lot of work,
amassing materials to find out what are the effects of failure or how
do they respond to failure, because they have done it for us. One
notable author in this field is Abu Baseer al‐Tartousi, a jihadi
shaykh happily resident in London, who has written works such as
Reasons for the Failure of Some Jihadist Movements in Transformation
Operations (which is quite a detailed study); This Is a Type of Jihad
We Do Not Want; other treatises of his include: Jihad Groups: Between
Recognition of Errors and Reconsideration of Principles and When
Jihad veers off course.14 This material provides nicely advanced
research for us to work on. It provides unique insights into the
ideological processes that are operating. And of course there is Abū
Mus’ab Al‐Sūrī, the famous author of the 1600‐page tome
entitled The Call for Global Islamic Resistance. He has made a
specialty of this kind of analysis. His works include Observations on
the Jihadi Experience in Syria, and What I Witnessed on the Jihad in
Algeria.15 In particular al‐Suri reserves his wrath for the
destructive effect wrought by Salafist hardliners on the unity of the
jihadist ranks, above all in their intolerance of any non‐Salafist
influence in the jihad, and their “narrowing of the margin between
the jihadists and the takfirist trend,” which only served to bring
upon them a storm of criticism.16 These are very fruitful works. The
paper I wrote on the Syrian suppression of the jihad in Syria, is
available on the West Point website17, and it gives a summary of
where the argumentation on the jihad was going, what the points of
sensitivity are and what went wrong. What this paper does is describe
a failure of a jihadi attempt. The Mujahideen in Syria have not gone
away, of course, but there was a time when the Muslim Brotherhood in
Syria was poised to gain considerable influence and cause a lot of
trouble. The study goes into these ideas explored by al‐Suri,
examining what went wrong, and also features the works by
al‐Tartousi. This area of jihadist endeavor is good source
material. Statistically – and this too is important for the war of
ideas – most of the above works focus on the failure of the
Mujahideen to get the scholars and preachers on board, or to
communicate their ideological message to them. That, they thought,
was their real failure. The military failure itself did not count so
much.
The
performance of Islamists in positions of power will never really work
as a tactic for deconstruction because they will simply say they were
never given free rein, they never got a good chance, the powers of
the devil are undermining them everywhere, so what do you expect? So
that is not a useful area to try. But the idea of ideological purity
is important, as we saw with Hamas. Recently, they were
out‐radicalized by a new splinter group forming in Gaza, Jund Ansār
Allāh (‘The Army of God’s Auxiliaries’) who adopt the position
that Hamas is going soft on Islam and are calling for “a new birth,
the birth of the Islamic emirate.” Here is part of the dilemma. In
the unlikely event that you were to succeed in de‐radicalizing a
particular group, you would simply get another one stepping in saying
that they have abandoned the cause. This is what happened in Egypt in
the late 1970s with the Muslim Brotherhood. By then, under pressure
from the regime, they had progressively dampened their violent
activism to the point that they began to lose credibility, and that
is exactly when al‐Zawahiri’s group, al‐Gamā‘a al‐Islāmiyya,
picked up the banner, restored the violence and recentralized
al‐farīda al‐ghā’iba, the ‘missing obligation’ of jihad.
If one group gives up the obligation of jihad, many of its supporters
will simply migrate to another group.
There
is evidence of another area of fallout from the behavior of
jihadists, which has been highlighted by the Muslim Chaplin of
Cambridge University, Abd al‐Hakim Murad. He pointed out that the
Mujahideen are having the opposite effect of the one intended on a
non‐Salafist community. He says:
“Extremism can drive people
right out of Islam. In 1999 the Conference of French Catholic bishops
announced that 300 Algerians were among the year’s Easter baptisms.
Noting that ten years earlier Muslims never converted at all, they
reported that the change was the result of the spread of extreme
forms of Islam in Algeria. In Afghanistan, too, there are now
Christians for the first time ever, and I have heard from one
ex‐Taliban member that this is because of the extremism with which
Islam is imposed on the people.” 18
So
there is another possible angle. I do not think statistically it is
amounting to much yet, but there is the possibility that the behavior
of jihadis and Salafists and extremists in the field will accelerate
a negative effect, provided the audience has not already passed into
the Salafist orbit – a point I will come to in a minute.
Doctrine
I
mentioned that the doctrinal issue is severely circumscribed due to
the predominance of textualism, which favours the letter over the
contextual interpretation. Since this is an issue which will take
longer time than we have, we should just sum up the issue here. The
Moroccan scholar Abdou Filali‐Ansary put the problem in a nutshell.
He felt that it was clear that the fundamentalists and their
supporters
are completely closed off to even the most elaborate
theological refutation of their views, even when produced by
distinguished religious authorities. The first reflex of the
fundamentalists is to withdraw from the mainstream, to build around
themselves a shell that is impervious to any logic other than their
own.
The
conclusion he draws is somewhat gloomy:
Why,
then, do we follow the fundamentalists to the very heart of their
madness? Allowing them to frame these problems in religious terms
legitimizes the perspective that they are attempting to impose,
particularly in their own societies.19
Nevertheless,
it is worth looking at how it is that the Mujahideen feel able to
raise the drawbridge like this, so that we can understand the nature
of the battle. Their method is best illustrated by an interesting
document circulating on the web: The Questions and Uncertainties
Concerning the Mujahideen and their Operations.” It appeals to the
reader:
“not
to be led astray by the scholars of evil and the preachers of error,
read the books of the mujāhidīn, and weigh the mujāhidīn’s
actions in the scales of the Qur’ān and the Sunna before you turn
away, and cause others to turn away, from the path of tawhīd and
jihad.” 20
It
is an Arabic e‐book. It is huge, and it is expanding all the time.
It sets itself the task of providing an ideological defense for the
entire gamut of their activity. Every conceivable topic seems to have
been covered. Not only every single thing that they have done, but
even what they might be likely to do. They are even projecting future
possible objections. We ought to take a leaf out of their book in
terms of the preparation of the War of Ideas. There exists a whole
library of doctrinal defence. It is huge. The library consist of
entire treatises defending the legitimacy of things such as
kidnapping, taking of hostages and the treatment of prisoners,21
mutilation of dead bodies,22 the killing of non‐combatants, and the
use of human shields.23 In other words, they have taken the trouble
to write what are impressive academic‐standard treatises with
apparatus criticus at the bottom, defending why those actions are
permissible. How do they defend it? You find there Prophetic
precedent, and textual justification, but almost absent is the
ethical argument, whether this is a good or bad thing to do as such.
The
most thorny issue for them is the issue of killing oneself. Is it
martyrdom – istishhād, or is it intihār – suicide? Intihār is
a word with very negative connotations and implications,24 as it is
in Christianity. Istishhād, on the other hand, has a noble glow to
it. The issue is important enough to affect tactical operations. Let
us take the example of Algeria. The merger of the GSPC with al‐Qaeda
in 2008 was not universally accepted by the rank and file of the
Mujahideen, and this was entirely due to issues of doctrinal
propriety, particularly over the issue of whether suicide bombings
were Islamically legitimate. An Algerian writer at the time observed
that:
a
large number of the terrorist network leaders have decided to suspend
their activities and wait for a guidance, or fatwas, from ulemas in
the Salafist movement. This is why highly‐regarded Salafist imams
have been pressed to provide religious legitimacy for such
actions….Members have demanded that the leader…justify his
suicide attack strategy with religious arguments. 25
Without
this justification, Al‐Qaeda in the Maghreb (AQIM) found itself
greatly prejudiced by the silence or active criticism of the
religious elite. By October 2008 the leader of AQIM, Abd al‐Malik
Droukdel, found himself having to sack the ‘al‐Qaeda mufti’ in
Algeria, Rashid Zerami (Abu al‐Hasan al‐Rashid), the head of
AQIM’s religious committee in charge of armed combat, after he had
voiced doubts as to the propriety of suicide bombings and kidnappings
of Algerian businessmen and their relatives in order to obtain ransom
payments. In September 2009 Droukdel felt sufficiently troubled by
the issue to write to the jihadist ideologue Abu Muhammad al‐Maqdisi
(who had declared his opposition to suicide attacks) to ask for
‘clarification.’26
The
ex‐jihadi
On
the phenomenon of the ex‐jihadi: I mentioned Tawfik Hamid, as an
example. I do not think there is much potential for a public
relations victory for us there because throughout history there have
always been those who gave up and turned traitors to the cause. But
where the ex‐jihadi can come into use for us is if they can
re‐trace the process of their enlightenment. How did the lights go
on for them? That is the important element for us, not the fact that
there is someone who has repudiated jihad. One of these former
radicals, a man called Mansour al‐Nogaidan, a Saudi, gave an
interesting illustration of how this works and why this links him
with Tawfik:
“When
I was working as an imam in a Riyadh mosque I happened upon two books
that had a profound influence on me. One, written by a Palestinian
scholar, was about the struggle between those who deal pragmatically
with the Qur’ān, and those who take it and the Hadīth literally.
The other was a book by a Moroccan philosopher about the formation of
the Arab‐Muslim way of thinking.”27
This
is what I was referring to earlier. He has focused on the contest of
textualism with historicism. Why historicism? The official Muslim
position is that the Qur’ān is not a ‘product’ of any context,
be it geographical, historical or cultural. However, as I said
earlier, right at the beginning of the creation of Islamic law there
was a heavy Arab‐tribal mental matrix in which they were naturally
inclined to formulate their thoughts. Even though the Prophet
Muhammad is always credited as seeking to de‐tribalize the Arabs,
effectively he failed, because these mental processes persisted. So
al‐Nogaidan has pointed out from his own experience the crucial
dynamic of these two issues: the Arab‐tribal mindset and the issue
of dealing pragmatically with the Qur’ān, as elements that call
textualism to account.
Advanced
deconstruction
From
the constant recourse to demonstrations of doctrinal propriety and
the long intellectual tradition on which the radicals draw for their
authentication, it is clear that, whether we like it or not, the
counter‐ideology endeavor has to go in deeper than merely the
world‐view of the jihadists. It has to focus on the wider Salafist
community. If you can get people out of the Salafist echo‐chamber,
then the chink of light appears, and the voice of Reason can be given
space to work its magic. So the real borderline between extremism and
non‐extremism is between the traditionally educated average Muslim
who is still – just – a majority, and the Salafist. That is the
real borderline in the War of Ideas. I will not call it the War on
Terror because the Salafists themselves are not primarily interested
or involved in violence. But the ghost of violence nonetheless hovers
in the background; once the Muslim falls into the Salafist mindset,
it is like a violin instead of a guitar. There are no frets to break
the notes one by one. The unwitting believer can slip all the way
down the scale and there is no way he can stop himself sliding, until
he reaches the paper door.
To
approach the citadel of textualism, I will just mention briefly that
there is an advanced form of challenge taking shape. The Higher
Criticism scholarship of Christianity and Judaism of the late 19th
century was also applied to Islam and has slowly been gathering
momentum ever since. It has added to the historically documented
editorial revisions of the Qur’ānic text,28 the problem of extant
manuscripts demonstrating variant readings, such as the Yemeni
fragments29 and the Munich photographic archive.30 Importantly, for
counter‐ideology, it has also been taken up by liberal Arab and
Muslim scholars, whose linguistic facility and expertise in fiqh will
present a more substantial problem for the Salafists and their
traditional conception of textual authority.
Why
will they present a problem? Muslims have always considered their
scripture to be more than just ‘divinely inspired’ text. Rather,
it is a perfect revelation, delivered by the Angel Gabriel as a
direct communication from the divinity. As such, it is a very part of
the divine essence itself, down to its smallest Arabic phoneme, to
the very fabric and sound patterns of the nouns and verbs juxtaposed
with each other. As the progressive Indonesian scholar Ulil
Abshar‐Abdalla underlined:
“Islamic
civilisation is a civilisation which has as its fundamental base the
‘word’ or ‘lafaz’, and not merely the text.”31
There
are several implications resulting from this tendency. The first is
that the respect for the Arabic text of the Qur’ānic revelation
becomes not a matter of historical interest, but part of the very
fabric of belief. There is no ‘variant’ of the divine text. There
cannot be. This last communication from the divine to humanity,
granted to the final Seal of all the Prophets Muhammad, is immunized
from human corruption by the incorruptibility of the lafz. It is this
feature of the lafz (‘expression’) – as opposed to ma‘nā
(‘meaning’) – as a physical monument of the divine, that more
than any ethical ingredient marks out the separation of this Islamic
Scripture from its forerunners. The Salafist operational logic here
is quite easy to grasp: the more textually they comprehend God’s
word, in its very perfect Arabic fabric, the closer they must get to
His true will. Textual variance, on the other hand, would wreck this
logic. In fact, their textual variance has become for Muslims a point
of proof of the corrupted state of the non‐Islamic scriptures. For
with all these variant readings how could the purity of God’s
message be expected to survive all that human intervention?
The
logic of the argument does not apply to Christian believers with
respect to their scriptures. For Christians, there is no divine
phonemic fabric to match the divine inspiration, and therefore the
plethora of apparatus criticus at the bottom of the page holds no
terrors for them. There is no Aramaic Gospel to present the ‘original
words’ of Jesus. The first written evidence of the words of Jesus
is in Greek translation. This means that Christianity has never had a
problem with the variant readings and the issue of human transmission
of the divine revelation. When I was studying Aramaic and Hebrew at
Cambridge University, we used to glorify in all the apparatus at the
bottom. We used to show off by knowing that the word or phrase had a
possible variant reading, a word missing or added and that the
Septuagint (the Greek translation of the Old Testament texts) said
something else. That throws the interest and the emphasis of the
Christian reader onto the question of what did God mean by this? Not
what did God say? – physically in nouns, verbs, adjectives, and
phonemes. And that accounts for a slightly different trajectory in
Islamic thought. A progressive Muslim would say that it is the same
in Islam. Muslim scholars always try to work out what God means and
meant. But the anti‐historical, anti‐contextual Salafist
community, which is growing in size, is far more focused, if not
obsessed, with the sounds of this holy text.
The
argument on textual infallibility has direct implications for the
authority of the hyper‐textualists, the Salafists. Making the
infallibility of the text a core point of belief will likely prove to
have been a high‐risk strategy for them, as the evidence of
divergent Qur’ān texts brings into play the issue, over the 20
years of its revelation, of the all‐too‐human transmission of
this revelation, and therefore of the potential corruptibility of the
text.
What
is the focus of Christianity? It is the person of Christ. What is the
focus of Islam? It is the text of the Qur’ān. That is the true
equivalent, not the person of Muhammad. In late antique and medieval
history, Christendom was rent with this all‐consuming problem, the
‘Christological controversy’: what is the nature of Christ? Is it
homoiousia ‐ the belief that Jesus’s divinity is similar to that
of God the Father? Or homoousia ‐ the belief that Jesus’s
divinity is the same as that of God the Father? The iota subscript,
that one letter, made a huge difference. Is Christ of a similar
substance or the same substance as God? It is a very complex issue,
and it split the Christian world at one point.
The
equivalent split in the Islamic world was over the question: is the
Qur’ān created or is it eternal? The problem with the Qur’ān is
that if it is divine – and God is eternal – then the Qur’ān
itself must be eternal, because that which is a part of God cannot be
at the same time divine and yet not eternal. So therefore the Qur’ān
is outside history; every single element of the Qur’ān is
independently valid without reference to a context. There is no
historical context to the Qur’ān. Every syllable, every half‐verse
can be quoted and remains as true as a full verse. That is part of
the fault line in the growth of Muslim law. You have the rationalist
scholars asking what did the Qur’ān mean by that, and the others
who say I do not care what you think the Qur’ān means, it says
that. When you do this, if you go down the Salafist “it says that”
route, you isolate context out of the discussion. Therefore
everything that happened in 7th century Arabia, where the Qur’ān
was revealed, must apply to 21st century Baltimore. When you get into
that situation, you now have a huge headache, because the only way
you can make that work is if you completely shut yourself off from
your cultural environment, from your intellectual environment, and
from your neighbor.
Al‐walā’
wal‐barā’
That
self‐insulation is a fundamental requirement of the Salafists and
it is called al‐walā’ wal‐barā’ — ‘Loyalty and
Renunciation’. If you are a proper Salafist, you must make sure
that you keep your contacts with non‐Salafists, and certainly with
Christians, to a minimum. Do not say ‘hello’ to them, do not say
‘Merry Christmas.’ Do not visit them if they are sick in
hospital, avoid placing yourself under any obligation to them. All
these things are offences against Islamic Law under their system.
Above all, do not allow your children to fraternize, because they
will be corrupted by this tainted evil faith, or lack of faith. You
might think this is just for extremists. But no, this is standard
Salafist doctrine. Abu Mus‘ab al‐Suri is constantly—even in his
strategic works—harping on the necessity to make sure that they do
not compromise on that issue for fear of:
“the
turmoil that will ensue to their faith and [the fact that they will]
absorb the habits of the polytheists’ and [develop] familiarity
with them which will lead in time to [ties of] affection, which God
forbids. And their children will grow up associating with their
children and pick up their many corrupt and disgusting habits.”32
Keep,
therefore, what Margaret Thatcher used to call ‘clear blue water’
between yourself and anybody else in a different mental universe who
will contaminate you.
And
that brings us to another area, the fear of contamination. This is
where we can find another weak point. If you call into question the
Salafists’ citadel you find some very interesting results, because
they cannot engage in a rational argument. This is why rational
deconstruction has to come towards the end of the counter‐ideological
endeavor. Radical Salafists cannot engage in a rational argument, as
any non‐Salafist Muslim debating them in the media will show, since
they cannot understand the process of discussion, and the concept of
a neutral debating arena, having abdicated moral and intellectual
authority to the Text. They therefore do not understand the starting
points and simply retire into the recitation of texts. As one
progressive Arab thinker put it:
All
they have is a recollection, and they are drowning in it. Each one of
them has amassed textual knowledge, but textual knowledge and
traditions do not constitute thought. They are nothing but a
collection of data.33
Since
they are not able to sustain an argument based on Reason, they take
refuge in the authority that comes from their perception of Islamic
authenticity. But there is considerable risk involved in this
high‐stakes claim to authenticity, and you could argue that it has
within it the seeds of its own destruction. For instance, a central
part of the Salafist claim is that it is reproducing the template
unchanged. But that flies in the face of itself, because if they
argue everything must be unchanged the basic argument must be that
the consensus (ijmā‘) of the Nation should also be considered
unchangeable, on the textual grounds that
You
have to follow the congregation for verily Allah will not make the
largest group of Muhammad’s community agree on error. 34
So
there is a flaw right there: the Nation comprises all Muslims, and
they seem to have different views from you. So are they agreeing on a
misguidance or not? If they are the majority view, then you are the
ones who are outside, you are the ones who are in the wrong. The
Salafists have trouble with this, since their weapons are turned on
themselves, and have to resort to questioning the meanings of terms
used (you can always tell when people are losing the argument when
they resort to philology). There is also the question of the template
of the pristine ‘Muslim state’. Did it really occur? –
progressive Muslims will ask – or was it a temporary affair, its
purpose merely to launch a system to create momentum for the Islamic
faith to flourish and then, after the death of the Prophet, it
vanished? That too is a very cogent argument, since it forces
Salafists to confront the sizeable edifice of Muslim historiography.
These are just a few of the current points of contention within
Muslim scholarship that are worth familiarizing ourselves with.
A
point of entry
But
with all these issues you are probably thinking: this is all very
technical and it is all a matter of Islamic Law; what does it have to
do with us? Surely we cannot engage in this argument. Well, that is
largely, but not entirely true. You could argue that the al‐walā’
wal‐barā’ argument does involve us, but the real issue is that
we need to find a way to start the ball rolling. It is of course true
that the champions of the task are progressive Muslim scholars, but
in comparison to the stream of jihadist propaganda, the counter‐flow
is overwhelmed. Media discourse in the Middle East is still dominated
by the Salafist viewpoint, and a disconcerting number of progressive
scholars are having to operate outside the region for professional,
and at times, personal survival.
The
area that we can and do get critical mass on, I would argue, is in
one specific arena and you will perhaps be a little surprised where
it is, since it is a subject which has by now almost been banned from
discussion – and therefore where we have to fight back. The
argument is this: if the jihadist and Islamist political program is a
divinely sanctioned endeavour, it should be fairly well Islamic from
A to Z. After all, the true faith is Islam. Therefore, if there is
anything about this endeavor that smacks of something else, it ought
to spell trouble. We are quite used to hearing about totalitarian
features in the works of Sayyid Qutb and Mawdudi, but if we think
that through, if God is held to be the author of this new religious
order, how is it that this ideology looks remarkably similar to some
tawdry mid‐20th century Fascisms or to Marxism/Leninism,
totalitarian collective ideologies? Surely the Creator of the
Universe should be able to bring something new to the table? So if
these Islamists are constructing an almost identical intellectual
system, it does call into question their claim that this is a
divinely ordained program.
I
will quickly run through a list of parallels as to why this is worth
looking at and revisiting, and why we have to rehabilitate this
argument.
Under
the Islamist system and under the fascist systems you have the same
focus on authenticity. In either case one finds the emphasis on a
crisis in the contemporary world, where the solution is sought in a
culture of tradition stripped of the unsettling challenges of
pluralism and diversity. In this emphasis, truth has been spelled out
forever, and there can be no further advance. What is required is a
purifying, cathartic national palingenesis, a rebirth on a pristine
model. This is a constant feature of fascist ideology, whether it
goes back to an Ur‐Deutschland, or, as with Mussolini and the
Italians, to the ancient, triumphant Roman spirit. In each case you
are going back to an earlier idea of an age of pristine values and
virtues, the loss or subversion of which has spelled failure for
their modern successors.
A
fundamental characteristic of this mindset is a rejection of
modernism coupled with a distrust of rationalism, or analytical
criticism. Fascists deplored Reason, since it undermined Will.
Proponents of Reason and pluralism, it follows, are subversive, and
are constantly engaged in conspiratorial activity to undermine the
unity and unanimity of the Nation. The discourse of the jihadists is
peppered with obsessive references to the plot hatched by the forces
of the surrounding jāhiliyya. The conspiracy theory requires the
existence of a constant enemy; if for Nazi Germany the role was
filled by the Jews, in the case of the jihadists it is the ewige
Kāfir, the eternal infidel. The fear of contamination was the same,
the true reborn member of community must strive to keep it pure of
the infidel.
The
corollary of the contamination fear – institutionalised among the
Salafists in al‐walā’ wal‐barā’ – is eternal enmity
against those who practice devilish machinations against you, and
against this enmity life takes on the guise of a permanent struggle.
Indeed, for the jihadists, faith is action, and faith without action
is voided.35 The values aspired to are those of the hero,
particularly the self‐sacrificing hero who embraces the cult of
death. Part and parcel of this culture is the conspicuous machismo.
It is fascinating to read the jihadis’ opinions on women and the
role of women, even their abhorrence of them. One of the 9/11
bombers, Muhammad Atta, actually stipulated in his will that he
didn’t want any woman “to go to my grave at all during my funeral
or on any occasion thereafter.”
There
are just as many parallels with Marxism‐Leninism, which brings in
the idea of a universal struggle or cause.36 It also brings in
interesting things such as subversion. That should raise a few
hackles here—the idea that sympathisers are subverting the host
community by using its own features against it, such as totalitarians
demanding their democratic rights. The Islamists who call for
cultural exceptionalism are similarly using the components of
democracy against itself. That is very Marxist‐Leninist. There is a
similar focus on the methodology of empowerment – the vanguard of
the elite, who alone can think for the unenlightened masses, save
them from themselves and guide them – top down – once they have
achieved dominion.37 Part of the palingenesis is a new language, a
Newspeak, that seizes control of the conceptual framework of the
masses and locks them in to the paradigm. From the Jihadists, we hear
a new vocabulary permeating their discourse: jāhiliyya, Fir‘awn
(‘Pharaoh’),38 Āl Salūl,39 Tāghūt40, Rūm (‘Byzantines’)
and Crusaders, and the Orwellian language of ‘freedom as perfect
slavery’; that is, “freedom from the slavery of man‐made
structures and authorities, so man may live in perfect slavery to
God.”
But
perhaps what is most cogent is the commonality between all three
systems as forms of totalitarianism, where the individual is
subordinated to the collective, be it the collective of the race, the
class or the faith. There is ample evidence of influence. Abu al‐A‘la
Maududi (1903‐79), for instance, studied deeply the works of the
totalitarians in Europe. In one of his books, he noted the
commonality between totalitarianism and Islamism, when he wrote that
the Sharī‘a‐ruled state:
“seeks
to mould every aspect of life and activity…In such a state no one
can regard any field of his affairs as personal and private.
Considered from this aspect, the Islamic State bears a kind of
resemblance to the Fascist and Communist states.”41
Maududi
put his finger on something important—that in his system there is
no difference between the personal and the private. Such things are
very familiar to all of us who have studied totalitarianism in our
own history. But it should be said that the similarities are
compelling, so much so that the parallels can stand on their own
merit. One does not have to seek out these direct influences to
understand the strength of the parallel trajectory of thought.
The
reason this is our entry point—the first entry point for
deconstructing the ideology—is that when you engage in a
comparison, you have to have a neutral ground. Up to now, Jihadists
and Islamists have managed to avoid this neutral ground. One
fundamental premise of al‐walā’ wal‐barā’ is that you do
not engage in discussions with the infidel. But if we say “OK, do
not discuss it with us, however, with our knowledge of totalitarian
ideologies, we do think it looks rather similar. So tell us how it is
different” – they then have to come outside their comfort zone.
They have to leave that textually defended, ramparted citadel and say
“no, it is different, because…” And once they come outside, we
have the advantage, since now we are the authority. This is the only
area in counter‐ideology against Islamism where we are able to cite
authority and they must answer to it. This is because we are talking
about ourselves and are saying: “I would like you tell me why that
is different.” If they cannot tell us why that is different, it
cannot continue to claim any divine sanction at all, because, as we
said, the Creator of the Universe should be able to bring something
new to the table.
Now,
I think that argument is fairly easy to grasp. I am afraid to say,
however, that it is not yet fully accepted. In a seminar that I
recently attended, where I presented a paper with that argument, I
was opposed because I was using radioactive terms in uncomfortable
proximity, sometimes in the same paragraph: ‘Islam’ and
‘fascism’, or ‘Islam’ and ‘Marxism‐Leninism’ or even,
dare I say it, ‘Islamo‐fascism.’ It should be plainly obvious
that nobody is saying by this that Islam as a faith and as a
civilization is fascistic. But what we have to do is rehabilitate the
argument that Islam‐ism is a mental process which is shared by
European totalitarians of the 20th century. We have to work out the
argument as to why that is the case, for by doing so, the pedigree
and the authenticity of Islamism are damaged severely. Unfortunately,
because of the fallout from these radioactive terms, this argument
has almost been censored out of existence, so that we cannot broach
it without strong nerves.
What
I am calling for now is the rehabilitation of this argument, defined
very carefully, as it should be. For I believe that any attempt to
understand the motivation of jihadists without addressing this
totalitarian dimension of their thought constitutes an unwarranted
omission. If we continue to shun the study and the demonstration of
the parallels, we will be left with few other points of entry into a
counter‐ideological endeavor that has any real hope of success.
Notes
1
The argument that the foot soldiers are not reading texts, so
therefore the ideology is not a significant motivating factor is a
severely flawed argument. As Robert Reilly observes: “that is no
more relevant than saying that the rank and file of the Nazi party
had not read Alfred Rosenberg or Nietzsche. It did not matter if they
had not. They were nonetheless under the control of a regime animated
by the ideology based on the ideas of such thinkers.” Robert R.
Reilly, ‘Thinking Like a Terrorist’ Claremont Review of Books,
Spring 2009, p.32.
2
Tawfiq Hamid, speaking at the Secular Islam Summit held at St.
Petersburg, Florida, March 4‐5 2007.
3
Anwar al‐Awlaki, 44 Ways of Supporting Jihad, No 42: ‘Learning
Arabic.’ In his advice to the would be mujāhid , he goes on to say
that “Arabic also happens to be the predominant language of the
foreign mujahideen in every land of Jihad, so without it you might
end up talking to yourself.”
4
Alfred Hackensberger, ‘Al‐Qaeda’s PR strategy on the internet:
Free propaganda.’
5
The famous encapsulation of this argument was by al‐Ash‘arī, who
argued that lying is evil only because God has declared it to be
evil, “if He declared it to be good, it would be good; and if He
commanded it, no one could gainsay Him.” Al‐AsharI: آتاب
الإبانة عن أصول الديانة (‘Book
of
Clarification on the Principles of Faith’).
6
Shaykh Sa‘īd Foudah, قطنملتدعيم
ا ,
Dār al‐Rāzī, 47.
7
L. Murawiec, The Mind of Jihad, Cambridge 2008.
8
Abu Haithem Al‐Hijazee, Setting The Record Straight: Was Islam
Really Spread By The Sword?, January 2007 (the author argues that it
was).
9
Jihadists commonly make use for this purpose of a Qur’ānic verse
that appears to command overriding the sentiment of pity: “And let
not pity for the twain withhold you from obedience to Allah, if ye
believe in Allah and the Last Day. And let a party of believers
witness their punishment.” [Qur’ān, XXIV,2].
10
See Yusuf al‐‘Uyyayrī, ثوابت
على درب الجهاد (‘Fixed
points on the Road to Jihad’), and in particular, Point Five:
‘Victory does not only consist
in military triumph.’
11
The italics are mine. The context for this statement can be viewed
at:
http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapcf/12/12/afghanistan.alqaeda/index.html
12
The concern about how to explain Muslim casualties is illustrated by
one of the Algerian GSPC’s scholars, Abu Al Hassan Rachid, who in
June 2007 issued a 23‐page statement arguing that suicide bombings
are “licit and based on examples taking place at the time of Ibn
Taymiyya. Using suicide bombers is indeed justified, as also the fact
of picking sites full of civilians in order to strike the apostates.”
Those civilians “who die in terror attacks against apostates will
go to heaven” and therefore to avoid being killed, civilians are
advised to avoid going to sites near public buildings.
13
Sayyid Qutb’s comments on the timescale are revealing: “The
Muslim community today is neither capable of, nor required, to
present before mankind great genius in material inventions, which
will make the world bow its head to it, and re‐impose its world
leadership in this respect. Europe’s creative mind is far ahead in
this domain, and at least for a few centuries to come we cannot
expect to compete with Europe and attain supremacy over it in these
fields.” Sayyid Qutb, قيرطمعالم
في ال (‘Milestones
on the Way’) Minbar al‐Tawhīd wal‐
Jihād: Section .
ةمدقم
14
Abu Basir al‐Tartousi: رييغتلأسباب
فشل بعض الحرآات الجهادية في عملية ا
(‘Reasons
for the failure of some jihadist movements in
transformation
operations’)
http://www.abubaseer.bizland.com/articles/read/a45.doc; عندما
ينزل البلاء بالمجاهدين (‘When
calamity befalls the
Mujahideen’)
http://www.abubaseer.bizland.com/articles/read/a74.doc
; هؤلاء
أخافهم على الجهاد والمجاهدين (‘These
things I fear for the Jihad and the
Mujāhidīn’)
http://www.abubaseer.bizland.com/articles/read/a77.doc ; الجماعات
الجهادية بين الاعتراف بالخطأ والتراجع
عن الثوابت (‘Jihadi
groups,
between recognizing error and abandoning fundamental
beliefs’) http://www.abubaseer.bizland.com/articles/read/a37.doc ;
عندما
تَنحرفُ
مسيرةُ
الجهادِ عن المسَار (‘When
Jihad veers off course’)
http://www.abubaseer.bizland.com/articles/read/a%20107.doc .
15
Abu Mus’ab al‐Sūrī: ايملاحظات
حول التجربة الجهادية في سور (‘Observations
on the Jihadi Experiment in Syria’), Minbar al‐Tawhid
wal‐Jihad,
http://tawhed.ws/r?i=5vyty2zp which is part of a
larger work entitled: الثورة
الإسلامية الجهادية في سوريا (‘The
Islamic Jihadi Revolution in
Syria’) – for the text, search
under http://tawhed.ws/a?a=hqkfgsb2 .
16
For a good treatment of al‐Suri’s position on the role of the
Salafists see: Brynjar Lia, ‘Abu Mus`ab al‐Suri’s Critique of
Hard Line Salafists in the Jihadist Current,’ CTC Sentinel, Vol 1.
Issue 1, December 2007.
17S.
S. Ulph, Jihadi After Action Report, Syria, The Combating Terrorism
Center, United States Military Academy West Point, NY
http://ctc.usma.edu/publications/pdf/CTC‐JAAR‐Syria.pdf .
18
Abd al‐Hakim Murad, Addendum to Recapturing Islam from the
Terrorists.
19
Abdou FIlali‐Ansary, Jihad or Murder? Project Syndicate, 2005.
http://www.project‐syndicate.org/commentary/filali_ansary2
Weak
Points in the Ideology of Jihad 16
20
مهتايلمعتساؤلات
وشبهات حول المجاهدين و published
by ‘A Group of Those Strongly Attached to the Mujahideen
(al‐Qā‘idūn)’. Taqdīm. لا
تغتروا
بتلبيس
علماء السوء… ودعاة الضلالة… واقرأوا
آتب المجاهدين… وزنوها بميزان الكتاب
والسنة… وقبل أن تَنْفِرُوا وتُنَفِّرُوا
الناس عن طريق التوحيد والجهاد
21
Abu Muhammad Yusuf bin Salih Al‐Uyyairi: هداية
الحيارى في جواز قتل الاسارى (‘Guide
for the Perplexed on the Permissibility of Killing
Prisoners’),
Center for Islamic Studies and Research.
22
Umar Abdallah Hasan Al‐Shihabi: ىلتقلاب
ليثمتلا (‘On
Abusing Dead Bodies’), Minbar al‐Tawhid wal‐Jihad, May 2004.
23
Dr. Umar Ghani Sa’ud: نيدلالقول
المبين في مفهوم التترس واحكامه في ا (‘A
Clarifying Voice on the Concept of [Using Humans as] Shields and
its
Religious Verdicts’), Al‐Ramadi.
24
The prohibition is Qur’ānic: “Do not kill yourselves. Indeed,
God is to you ever Merciful” (Qur’ān IV:29). Shaykh al‐‘Uyyayrī
has defended the tactic in his work: العمليات
الفدائة، انتحار أم شهادة؟ (‘Sacrificial
Operations, is it Suicide or Bearing Witness [Martyrdom]?’). It
has
been translated by at‐Tibyan Publications as The Islamic
Ruling on the Permissibility of Self‐Sacrificial Operations, n.d.
25
Nazim Fethi for Magharebia in Algiers – 18/04/08.
26
Nazim Fethi, ‘Al‐Qaeda’s Droukdel seeks religions support for
terrorism’, Magharebia 24th September 2009.
27
Mansour al‐Nogaidan, ‘Losing my Jihadism,’ The Washington Post,
July 22, 2007. His high‐profile repudiation of the jihadi cause
provoked enough concern as to call forth a character assassination by
Shaykh ‘Abd al‐‘Azīz al‐Jarbū‘: منصور
النقيدان، من بيت الطين وتحريم الكهرباء
إلى
الأستاذية في أحدية راشد المبارك (‘Mansour
al‐Nogaidan, From a Mud House and the Proscription of Electricity,
to a Professorship in the Shoes
of Rāshid al‐Mubārak’),
Minbar al‐Tawhīd wal‐Jihād, n.d.
28
The medieval bibliographer Ibn al‐Nadim lists several versions of
the Qur’ān which were not recognized by the Caliphs. Under the
Caliph ‘Uthman one version became the standard, after which all
other versions were ordered burnt. Some of the Companions expressed
their disapproval of his editing and variant readings continued to be
circulated. Several ahādīth refer to the then current text of the
Qur’ān as ‘incomplete,’ or bearing spurious verses, or cite
verses which are not extant in the text in circulation today.
29
In 1972, during the restoration of the Great Mosque of San‘ā, 7th
and 8th century parchment pages bearing variant readings of the
Qur’ān were discovered. These are some of the oldest Qur’ān
texts in existence. Some of them are also palimpsests where the text
is written over even earlier, washed‐off versions. In several cases
the organization of the text is different, the suras are sometimes in
a different order, and there are differences in the text itself. They
indicate an evolving text rather than give support to the orthodox
belief in a single Revelation to the Prophet. Aware of the potential
for controversy, Yemeni authorities are reticent about the work being
carried out on these texts by German scholars and have restricted
further access to them.
30
The archive is the work of German Orientalist scholars Gotthelf
Bergsträsser and Otto Pretzl, who searched out and photographed old
copies of the Qur’ān in the Middle East, North Africa and Europe
in the 1930s. The Berlin University Corpus Coranicum project, which
aims to provide the ultimate apparatus criticus for the Qur’ān
text, has incorporated these fragments into its research.
31
Ulil Abshar-Abdalla; Avoiding Bibliolatry, the Importance of
Revitalizing the Understanding of Islam, February 2003 on
islamlib.com.
32
Al‐Suri, The Call for Global Islamic Resistance, Section (12) ح
كم السكن في ديار المشرآين p.
من
الفتنة في الدين ,
وتشرب
عادات المشرآين ,
والإلفة
.
1160
معهم
التي تؤدي مع الوقت للود الذي حرمه الله
معهم ,
واختلاط
الذرية الناشئة بينهم بأطفالهم وتعلم
عوائدهم الخبيثة الفاسدة الكثيرة
33
Muhammad Al‐Mahmoud: ‘The Real Living Culture Is Western
Culture’, interview for al‐Arabiya TV, March 23, 2007.
34
Hadīth from Abu Mas‘ūd al‐Badrī: ةللاض
ىلع ةموعليكم بالجماعة فإن الله لا يجمع
هذه الأ considered
to be ‘sound.’ Other Ahādīth in support of this
are: “My
Community shall not agree upon misguidance. Therefore, you must stay
with the congregation, and Allah’s hand is over the
congregation”;
“Whoever leaves the community or separates himself from it by the
length of a span, dies the death of the Jāhiliyya.” The
commonest
Qur’ānic authorities adduced in support of consensus are: Qur’ān
III,103: “Hold fast to the rope of Allah, all of you, and do
not
split into factions”; Qur’ān IV,59: “O you who
believe, obey Allah and obey the Prophet and those of authority among
you.”
35
That action is superior to faith was a feature that appealed to
Muhammad Farag, author of ةبئاغلالفريضة
ا (‘The
Missing Obligation’), who
saw jihad as a panacea for the
Muslim world, and its abandonment as the principal reason for “the
lowness, humiliation, division and
fragmentation in which the
Muslims live today.” Jihadists highlight the following Qur’ānic
verse to make their case: “Those of the believers
who remain
passive, other than the disabled, are not equal to those who strive
hard in God’s cause with their possessions and lives. God
has
exalted those who strive hard with their possessions and their lives
far above the ones who remain passive” [Qur’ān, IV, 95]. For
Sayyid
Qutb the Qur’ān is not a ‘holy book’ like the
Christian Bible, but rather a manual for action, approached “as a
soldier on the battlefield
reads ‘Today’s Bulletin’”
(See Sayyid Qutb, Milestones, p.13, Indianapolis: American Trust
Publications, 1990).
36
Jihadism combines the supremacist sentiment of the Nazi German
slogan: Heute da hört [or gehört] uns Deutschland und morgen die
ganze Welt, with the more ‘universalist’ Marxist‐Leninist call
for world communism as a form of global emancipation. It is best
illustrated by Sayyid Qutb’s call for the fulfilment of “a
mission that, whether the distance be near or far, will accede to the
leadership of humanity” (Sayyid Qutb, قيرطمعالم
في ال (‘Milestones
on the Way’) Minbar al‐Tawhīd wal‐Jihād, 5).
37
Sayyid Qutb was explicit on this role: “It is necessary that there
should be a vanguard, which sets out with this determination and then
keeps upon the path, passing through the vast ocean of Jāhiliyya
striking its roots over the entire world.” Sayyid Qutb, قيرطل
معالم في ا
(‘Milestones
on the Way’), Minbar al‐Tawhīd wal‐Jihād, 5 , مقدمة
.
38
Pharaoh, conceived as a competing deity to Allah in that he claimed
sovereignty without reference to the Divine Law; see Qur’ān
XXVIII,38. Note Shaykh Anwar al‐Awlaki’s use of the term in his
work 44 Ways of Supporting Jihad, No. 39: (‘Exposing Pharaoh and
his magicians’): “The current governments of the Muslim world are
playing the role of Pharaoh with Musa and the court scholars are
playing the role of the magicians of Pharaoh in deceiving the masses.
The governments and their court scholars are the third side of the
triangle of enemies of the ummah alongside the Crusaders and the
Zionists.”
39
The Āl Salūl were the family that supervised the Ka‘ba in Mecca
during pagan times.
40
Originally a pre‐Islamic idol, but now adopted to represent
whatever constitutes an obstruction to Truth, therefore ‘an
oppressor.’
41
Sheikh Abul Ala Maududi, “Islamic Law and Constitution,” Chapter:
The Political Theory of Islam, 9th edition, Lahore 1986, p146‐147).
The use of this citation has aroused the ire of Islamist activists
and media watchers, who see such internal parallelism of Islamism
with totalitarianism as highly compromising. See, for instance, the
objections by the Muslim Council of Britain
(http://www.mcb.org.uk/media/responsetobbc.pdf) and the ‘Islamic
Human Rights Commission’ (http://www.ihrc.org.uk/show.php?id=1497)
to a BBC Panorama documentary aired in August 2005.
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