Finally: Muslims Speak Out Against Jihad
Author: Walid Phares
Source: The Family Security Foundation, Inc.
Date: March 7, 2007
We can have hope for the future now that, for the first time, moderate Muslims
collectively are speaking out against Jihad. FSM Contributing Editor Walid
Phares explains why the recent Secular Islam Summit could be key to the success
of this effort.
A unusual conference, taking place on the West coast of Florida, drew the
attention of many observers of the War of Ideas: The first Secular Islam Summit.
Organized by the Center for Inquiry Transnational and various activists, the
meeting included two dozen speakers and about two hundred participants from
various backgrounds and nationalities. It took place at the Hilton, St.
Petersburg, just before and in conjunction with the Intelligence Summit which
took place in the same location.
But this meeting, unlike many other Muslim intellectual conferences in the West
or even worldwide, was aimed against Jihadism and for a secular and liberal
expression within Islam. It wasn’t the first time Muslim authors and critics of
the dominant religious and cultural order within their own community spoke out,
wrote about or debated the issues.
The history of dissidence within the Muslim world, particularly in modern times,
is rich and diverse. It is also full of drama and violence, particularly against
the dissidents themselves. Since the mid 1920s, after the collapse of the
Ottoman Empire and the last Caliphate, and with the rise of Salafism, joined in
the 1970s by Khomeinism, dozens of intellectuals experienced harsh conditions
and met tragic destinies as they rose to oppose fundamentalism and press for
reforms. That history has yet to be written thoroughly and taught in the
mainstream educational systems. High profile authors and intellectuals have
spoken out against authoritarianism and Islamism from the sub Indian continent
to the sub Saharian desert. Dozens of journalists and academics have called for
a global debate on the developments of politics and ideologies within Muslim
countries. And with the post 9/11 era, more questions have fused worldwide from
Western and non-Western quarters. “What went wrong in the Muslim world?” wrote
Bernard Lewis? “Why do they hate us?” titled the press after the 2001 attacks.
And since then, many among the public asked, without hearing convincing answers,
“But where are the moderates (within the Muslim world)?”
The St. Petersburg meeting is not the first meeting where Muslim intellectuals
(and non-Muslims) met and attempted to answer these difficult questions. Back in
1994, a Coalition for the Defense of Human Rights met in New Jersey to address
similar concerns. Dissidents have been meeting in many countries and cities in
the last decades and have produced high profile cases of theological and
literary rebellion have illustrated the cultural conflict within Islam.
In the 1980s, Salman Rushdie of India got his fatwa for the publication of the
Satanic Verses. Since then, the dissident author lives in the underground. In
the early 1990s, author Mustafa Jeha was assassinated in Beirut for publishing
the Crisis of Mind in Islam (Mihnat al Aql fil Islam). Across the Mediterranean
and on two continents, other Muslim “revolutionaries” (described as apostates by
their Jihadi enemies) have challenged the dominant ideological paradigm. But
until recently, they never decided to act collectively, and until the meeting in
St. Petersburg in Florida, they hadn’t decided to meet. Hence when a few among
them (with well-known names in the field of dissidence) decided finally to get
together and face the world, they have knowingly or not, begun to change the
world. This was, as I saw it, a first small step in the right direction.
The opening remarks were given by two famous Western-based Muslim dissidents.
The first to speak was Ibn Warraq, the author of several volumes on Secular
Islam. Elaborating on a long and sophisticated introduction to the “intellectual
movement”, he laid out the philosophical basis of full separation between
religion and state in the Muslim world. But Ibn Warraq said he already “left”
Islam and his call was to reform the “relationship” between Muslim societies and
religious laws. He advocated universal values and a global reform of education.
On political grounds, he called for a regime change in many countries, including
in Iran, the formation of Human Rights centers, and in an interesting and new
twist, he asked to “take Mullahs to courts for issuing fatwas.” His conclusion
was simple: “they hate us because they were taught to do so.”
The second to address the summit was the “refuznik” Irshad Manji. Born in Africa
and raised in Canada, the best-selling female author told the audience that the
response to Jihad is Ijtihad. In short, reinterpretation of the religious texts
(and the Koran), according to Manji would defy the Fundamentalists. Unlike Ibn
Warraq, Irshad said she is still a Muslim and she will fight for her “Islam.”
She argued that there are many verses in the texts that can help a new
interpretation defeat the tight reading by the Islamists. In conclusion, Manji
invited non-Muslims to take part in the debate along side with reformist
Muslims: “If they tell you they have no business in Muslim affairs, tell them
they have no business meddling in non-Muslim affairs.”
The first panel included Tawfiq Hakim from Egypt who underlined that the roots
of Terrorism are found in the ideology that pretends being a religious doctrine.
Nibras Kazimi from Iraq elaborated on the “mind of the Jihadi generals.” Other
intellectuals, such as Shahriar Kabir from Bengla Desh, Dr Shaker al Nabusli
from Jordan and Dr Afshin Ellian a Dutch-based Iranian, addressed the
relationship between traditions and Sharia laws. At the end of the first day the
last panel, with Salamat Neemat from Jordan, Hasan Mahmoud from Bengla Desh and
I discussed international law and politics and the Islamist movement. The
following day, Nonie Darwish from Palestine, Wafa Sultan from Syria, Zeino Baran
a Turkish American scholar, and Manda Zand Ervin from Iran addressed secularism,
women terrorists and Islamism.
Interestingly enough, and before the summit took place, internet-based attacks
were unleashed against the conference by pro-Wahhabi, Salafi and Khomeinist web
sites and bloggers. Al Jazeera sent a crew to interview the participants and
also air “opposing views” from leaders of the local community in the area. In
its afternoon shows, the network had a local representative of the advocacy
group CAIR and Dr. Nabulsi from the conference “cross fire” about the
conference.
In my presentation, I focused on the multiple areas of international relations
where Jihadi concepts have to be addressed, not only by the dissidents, but also
by so-called mainstream countries. The concepts are: Jihad, infidels, Caliphate
and dar el Harb. These terms from early Islamic history may have been part of
the norms of world politics and religious wars at the time, i.e., 1300 years
ago, but under the current international system there is no place for Jihadism
and its derivatives which would cause international law to disintegrate. In this
conference, I argued, even though the global reform movement may not agree on
all aspects of the crisis, it could constitute a broad Muslim resistance to
Jihad. I termed the latter concept so that Muslims who can make the distinction
between religious identity and a specific militant ideology can initiate a
debate and liberate themselves from Jihadism. I also argued that the West has
abandoned the anti-Jihadist Muslims for decades, and I deplored the fact that
Western Government, the U.S. included, have been advised by Jihadi apologists
instead of liberal Muslims for decades.
In a sum, the Secular Islam Summit may have not been as large as the Wahhabi- or
Khomeinist-funded and -supported conferences around the world but it certainly
gave an example of what could occur if the United States, Europe and the
international community would seriously consider supporting the Muslim
intellectuals who seek Pluralism, human rights and democracy: a surge in the War
of Ideas that could push the War on Terror to conclude faster, and with much
better results.
***FamilySecurityMatters.org Contributing Editor Dr. Walid Phares is a Senior
Fellow with the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies and the author of
Future Jihad: Terrorist Strategies against America and the forthcoming War of
Ideas. Phares@walidphares.com. He is now a Fox News Contributor.