UNDERSTANDING
ISLAM
WHAT IS ISLAM?
Islam is one of three great monotheistic faiths that sprung from
the harsh land of the Middle East. It
is the world’s second-largest religion, accounting for one-sixth of the
human race or approximately one billion people.
Like Judaism and Christianity, the followers of Islam or Muslims,
are taught to believe in a cosmos in which God rewards good, punishes evil
and is merciful to human appeals.
Muslims are the dominant population in
thirty-six countries from Morocco to Indonesia and they are divided into
two branches: The largest is the Sunnis who constitute 85% to 90% and deem
that the Caliphs (successors) who followed Muhammad were the rightful
heirs. Then there are the
Shias, mostly found in Iran and Iraq who trace their lineage to Ali and
Fatima (the son-in-law and daughter of the Prophet) and their sons Hasan
and Hussein, who believe that only a true descendent should be on the
throne of a united Islamic Empire.
THE
BIRTH OF ISLAM
The
Prophet Muhammad was born 570 CE in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, an important
center of commerce on the Arabian Peninsula.
His father ABDULLAH, a businessman of the Hashim clan of the
Quraish tribe, died before he was born. Then when he was only six years
old, his mother AMINA also died leaving him an orphan.
As a result his grandfather, ABD al-MUTTALIB, a merchant, who
taught him his trade, reared him.
Muhammad
was spiritually curious, having learned a great deal about different
religions on his travels, and he made frequent retreats to a cave above
Mecca in search of enlightenment. It
was there at the age of 42, that he had his initial visit from the
archangel Gabriel, who told him he was to be the definitive prophet of
Allah, the one true God.
Aghast
and frightened by this experience Muhammad fled back to his wife, KHADIJAH,
who reassured him and later became the first convert to Islam.
After her death 619 CE, Muhammad married twelve times and all his
wives were instrumental in spreading his teachings.
From
this moment of calling, the Prophet had no further revelations for two
years, during which time he went through a period of trial and testing.
Then the messages began again and continued for the rest of his life, a
period of twenty-three years from the first revelation to his death at the
age of about 63.
It
was also in 619 CE that Muhammad’s uncle ABU TALIB an early convert, who
had protected him from the worst persecution of the Arabian tribes, died. In this, THE YEAR OF SORROW, the grief-sticken
Prophet left Mecca and tried to make a fresh start in the town of Taif,
but he was rejected there also. About
that time the Prophet experienced the second most important event of his
life, THE NIGHT OF ASCENT.
Although it is not clear whether he had a vision or dream, the
Prophet woke from his sleep and he and archangel Gabriel were transported
by a miraculous beast to Jerusalem; from the site of the old Jewish Temple
on Mount Moriah, a way was opened for him through the heavens until he
approached the throne of God. He
also is said to have seen and spoken to other prophets from the past,
including Abraham, Moses and Jesus.
During
this night, the rules for Muslim prayer were revealed to him. They became
the central part of the faith and have formed the keystone for Muslim life
ever since.
MUSLIM
BELIEFS
Islam means submission in Arabic and a
believer is one who submits to the will of Allah, The QUR’AN or Koran,
which is the most memorized book on earth, is believed to be the word of
God as told to Muhammad and recorded by scribes.
There are five key practices or “pillars” that bind the Muslim
community together: the first is the claim of monotheism or SHAHADAH,
“There is no God but Allah and Muhammad is his messenger”.
The others are SALAH, to pray five times daily, ZAKAT,
the giving of charity to the poor, SAWN, daytime fasting during the
month of Ramadan and HAJJ, the pilgrimage to Mecca that should be
undertaken at least once in a lifetime.
Obviously Islam has much in common with Judaism and Christianity,
as all three faiths believe in a day of judgment and venerate the
prophets. The Koran itself
recounts stories from the Old Testament and tells of Christ’s birth to
the Virgin Mary.
THE
RISE OF ISLAM
During the course of his life as Muhammad received his revelations
they were recorded and then compiled into 114 surahs (chapters) which
became The Koran. At the same
time, the Prophet’s mission was still fraught with difficulty as the
ruling Quraish tribes of Mecca who attacked his followers and offered him
bribes to abandon his teachings demonized him. However the word of Islam
spread rapidly, helped by armed religious envoys that were dispatched
across the Arab countries.
Eventually
with his life in jeopardy, the Prophet fled to Yathrib (the Hijra), where
he was embarrassed by the warm welcome he received. Unable or
unwilling to select among this surprising hospitality he followed his
camel, which stopped at a place where dates were spread out to dry.
His grateful followers gave him this land upon which to build his new home
and the town took a new name – MADINAT al-NABI, “the town of the
Prophet”, which later was shortened to MEDINA.
The
Prophet then set about creating a charter, which would enable all the
disputing tribes and factions in Medina to accept him as head of state and
abide by his decisions. He ruled that all the citizens should be
free to practice their own religion in peaceful co-existence, without fear
of intimidation or ill favor. He asked only that if there was any
aggression or tyranny, they should join together and cooperate in the face
of the enemy.
Although
he was now ruler of a city-state and in receipt of increasing wealth and
influence, MUHAMMAD lived a humble and charitable existence. In fact, his
recorded deeds and sayings (THE HADITH) reveal him to be a man of great
kindness, good humor, modesty and excellent common sense, who had a great
love for all people, especially his family. Although by contemporary
standards he married often, most of his spouses were mature widows who had
suffered the loss of their original loved ones. In fact, among his
wives two were Jewish and one was Christian.
The
Prophet was a man of peace and reconciliation and would have remained so
had he been left alone, but the opposition from the Quraish tribes
continued and he was obliged to take part in warfare for the rest of his
life.
Jihad
was never to be a military activity for the sake of nationalism, conquest
or conversion, but only for defensive purposes, and only until the enemy
could be brought to peace. Actually, during the Prophet’s battles many
of his opposition switched to his side, impressed by Muslim chivalry,
courage and faith in God.
In
627 CE, his enemy ABU SUFYAN, raised a force of 10,000 men and advanced on
Medina, buoyed by support from a Jewish tribe that had decided to oust the
Prophet. After a two-week siege, the opposition withdrew, giving the
Prophet a moral victory, for he had shown that this vast army could not
defeat him.
In
the aftermath, the renegade Jewish tribe was dealt with severely.
Ordinarily the Prophet had always counseled mercy but on this occasion it
was a serious matter since the Jewish tribespeople were citizens of Medina
who under his leadership had previously signed a pledge of loyalty.
Ultimately
in 629CE after being provoked by a Meccan attack on one of the tribes
allied with the Muslims, the Prophet marched on the city with a sizable
army. After being offered a general amnesty, the Meccans submitted
and Muhammad entered the city in triumph. Going straight for the KA’ABA
he performed the ritual of circumambulation seven times and then destroyed
all the idols.
It
should be noted that the cube-shaped KA’ABA temple claimed a very
ancient history; it was said to have been first built by Adam, God’s
first creation, and then rebuilt by Abraham the Prophet and his son
Ishmail. Originally it was a shrine dedicated to the “One
True God”, but over the centuries the Baal cults had converted it to the
worship of hundreds of minor deities and their replicas.
Once
this most holy city had been taken over the Prophet asked his followers
not to reclaim the property that they had abandoned years earlier when
they fled to Medinah. Consequently, Muhammad and his followers
returned to Medina where they were attacked by tribes that had been
shocked by the desecration of their idols.
During
March 632 CE the Prophet set out, accompanied by 120,000 men and women,
for his one and only true pilgrimage to the Ka’aba shrine, known as THE
FINAL PILGRIMAGE. During this journey the revelations about the
rules of the HAJJ were given to him along with the edict that only Muslims
would henceforth be permitted to enter the city. Two months later,
after returning to Medina, he became ill and ultimately died at 63 years
of age in the arms of his wife AISHA. He was buried on that very
spot and his grave is now a shrine, which is part of the modern mosque
complex in Medina.
THE
GROWTH OF ISLAM
After
the death of Muhammad, his successor or Caliph was to be someone who had
been with him in both Mecca and Medina, was qualified to pass on correct HADITH
and whose life was similar to the Prophet’s in that it epitomized
his example (THE SUNNAH). Although
there are some indications that Muhammad favored his cousin and son-in-law
Ali as his heir he had asked ABU BAKR to lead the prayers when he
was ill and this factor proved significant in his selection.
During
the short reign of ABU BAKR and the three Caliphs that followed (The
“Rightly Guided Successors”), the Arabs who were previously a
squabbling, fractious, corrupt group of tribes used as pawns by outsiders,
united around the ideas of Islam. Hence, the religion spread from
Arabia into the Middle East, followed by the Muslim Moors triumph in North
Africa, the invasion and virtual conquest of Spain and a thrust into
France that carried the crescent to almost the gates of Paris. It
took five hundred years to finally expel the Muslims from Western Europe.
The
Crusades were just one episode in the continuing struggle as the
Christians attempted to regain the “occupied territories” of the Holy
Land. As it happened, this endeavor fatally weakened the Greek
Orthodox Byzantine Empire, the main barrier to the spread of Islam into
southeast and central Europe. Thus with the fall of Constantinople
to the Ottoman Sultans, Islam was extended from the Balkans and the Crimea
in southeastern Europe to the heart of the Middle East: the Holy Land, the
cities of Mecca and Medina, and the Nile Basin. Ottoman armies
plunged deep into the heart of Europe threatening to take Vienna until
they were finally repulsed.
Unlike
the West, which was shaped in its development by the Renaissance,
Enlightenment and Industrial Revolution these pivotal events barely
penetrated the land of Islam. Moreover, unlike Christianity that since the
Reformation has continually updated itself and adapted to changing
conditions, Islam remained a religion of the Dark Ages. For the most
part, the 7th century Koran was still taught as immutable, since it is the
Word of Allah exactly as the Prophet received it. In this sense it
is different from any of the world’s other holy books that were created
by human authors many years after the deaths of the prophets involved and
then were edited, revised and added to by disciples.
Today,
Islam’s struggle with the West is primarily demographic. Muslims
from North Africa and the Balkans are surging over established frontiers
on a huge scale. Since most of them are illegals, their number
settling in Europe cannot be accurately calculated. But they are
arriving in Italy, France and Spain in such numbers and considering their
high birthrate; these traditionally Catholic countries may well have
majority Muslim populations in this century.
ISLAM’S
RELATIONSHIP TO JEWS AND CHRISTIANS
During the early years, Muhammad related well to the Jews of Arabia and
their religious practices and ideas deeply influenced him. In fact,
he himself emphasized that the concept of the belief in one God, the
creator of the Universe, the God of justice and mercy, before whom
everyone high and low bears personal responsibility, came to him from
Israel.
Jewish law
also deeply influenced Muhammad. In the early days of Islam, Muslims
prayed in the direction of the Jews’ holy city, Jerusalem and observed
the most solemn Jewish holiday, Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement.
Only later, when Muhammad reluctantly concluded that the Jews would not
embrace him as the Seal or Final Prophet and convert to Islam, did he
substitute Mecca for Jerusalem and the fast of Ramadan for Yom Kippur.
Similarly, the Muslim dietary restrictions are based upon Judaism’s law
of Kashrut and their five daily prayers are likewise modeled on the
thrice-daily service of Orthodox Jews.
Believing
himself to be the final and greatest Prophet of Mosaic monotheism, and
having adopted so much of Jewish thought and practice, Muhammad appealed
to the Jews of Arabia to recognize his role and to adopt Islam as the
culmination of Judaism. But the Jews rejected him, believing that
his message may have served as a religious advance for the pagans, but for
them it was merely another offshoot of their own religion.
One major
factor that rendered Muhammad’s prophetic claims untenable for them was
his ignorance of Biblical details. In large part because he had
never read it, but only heard Bible stories, many of his references were
often erroneous. In Sura 28:38 for instance, he has Pharaoh ( the
Book of Exodus) ask Haman (the Book of Esther) to erect the Tower of Babel
(the Book of Genesis).
Another
obstacle to his acceptance by the Jews and the Christians as well, was the
moral quality of some of his teachings. They were not deemed to be
equal to, let alone better than, the prophetic teachings of Moses and
Jesus. In Sura 33:50 for example, Muhammad exempts himself from
Allah’s law limiting a man to four wives and in Sura 4:34 he instructs
men to beat disobedient wives.
So, when the
followers of the two other monotheistic religions at the time, rejected
the Prophet it constituted a living refutation and provocation, at least
in the eyes of his followers. Thereafter when Islam expanded on the
Arabian Peninsula and beyond, virtually all the pre-Islamic Christian
communities were converted (the Copts of Egypt constituting the most
notable exception) but the Jews remained steadfast.
Living under
Muslim rule after the death of the Prophet both the Jewish and the
remaining Christian communities did not fare well. Under the yoke of
Islamic persecution the “dhimmis” (non-Muslim monotheists) were
allowed to exist but in a subservient or degraded status. Much worse
off were the non-monotheists who were given the choice of conversion to
Islam or death.
The Muslim legal code which prescribed the treatment of Jews and
Christians, or “dhimmis”” as they both are referred to in Islam, was
the Pact of Umar, attributed to Mohammad’s second successor, dated from
about 720 CE. It’s key characteristic was the requirement that
“dhimmis” always acknowledge their inferior position to Muslims.
Jews and Christians had to pledge, for example, “We shall not manifest
our religion publicly nor convert anyone to it. We shall not prevent
any of our kin from entering Islam if they wish it”.
Another law designed to humiliate “dhimmis” required them to wear
different clothing. The purposes of this law, which was resurrected
by the Taliban, were to enable Muslims to recognize non-believers at all
times and to make them appear foolish.
For the most part in the history of Islam, the existence of Jews could be
tolerated as long as they were subordinate or degraded. The creation
of a Jewish state in 1948 amidst Arabdom was incompatible with the view of
Jews as humiliated or wretched. Hence when Islamic militants call
for a Palestinian Arab state in place of Israel it’s for a state in
which once again “Islam dominates and is not dominated”.
Obviously, only through an understanding of the deep theological and
historical roots of fundamentalist Muslim attitudes can some of their
present day hatred be understood. Only then does one recognize how
false the claims are of Israel’s enemies that prior to Zionism, Jews and
Muslims lived in harmony. In reality, once the Jews decided to
reject their inferior status, to become sovereign after centuries of
servitude, and worst of all, to now govern some Muslims where they had so
long been governed, the Jews existence was no longer tolerable.
Accordingly, some radical Muslims call not for an adjustment of Israel’s
geography but for its annihilation. For them it is the Jewish
nations existence that so arouses their hatred that it needs to be ended.
Consequently when radical Islamic groups viscerally reacted to the
Egyptian-Israeli Peace Treaty of 1979 it was because they objected to the
Jewish state’s existence, not its policies, the treatment of
Palestinians nor even its borders.
ISLAM’S PARADISE
Passages from the Koran and the Hadith describe a paradise filled with
rivers, trees and cool breezes. In short, perfect for a religion
originating in the desert. Only Arabic is spoken and those admitted
will consume one hundred times more food (fruits, dates and pomegranates)
and non-intoxicating wine than while on earth.
Unlike the Christian heaven, in Islam’s afterlife a person retains his
human body and can have all the carnal delights he wants. In
particular, a Muslim Martyr is given 70 black-eyed, buxom virgins (houris)
who do not sleep, get pregnant, menstruate, spit, blow their noses or even
defecate. In addition, if he so chooses his earthly wives can join
him and also vouch for 70 of his family members to be admitted to
paradise.
The
KORAN, which prohibits suicide, states that paradise automatically, awaits
a MARTYR, who is someone that dies in Jihad or the struggle to defend
Islam.
WAHHABISM
As we enter a war whose contours are yet unknown, we must try to take the
measure of our opponent. Our enemy inhabits a well-defined sect
within Islam. This movement can be described in theological terms as
evolving in part out of Wahhabism.
The Wahhabi sect was founded in the 18th century by Muhammad ibn Abd al
Wahhab (1703-1787), who preached a particularly austere and conservative
brand of Islam. His followers were banned from enjoying any music
except the drum; drinking and sexual transgressions were punishable by
death; mosques were stripped of all decoration and tombstones were toppled
on the grounds that they inspired idolatry. Throughout the sect’s
history, the Wahhabis have fiercely opposed anything they viewed as “bida”,
an Arabic word usually muttered as a curse for any change or modernization
that deviates from the literal teachings of the Koran.
Driven from Medina where his teachings were viewed as extreme and
puritanical, Wahhab went to the northeast Nejd region where he converted
the Saudi tribe. For more than a century, Saudi sheiks had waged a
bloody religious and territorial war against their Muslim neighbors, until
the establishment of Saudi Arabia in 1932. These battles and the
ultimate victory which installed Abdul Aziz as King, was done with the
support of Wahhabi fighters and since then there has been considerable
intermarriage between the descendents of these groups.
Since that time the Saudi royal family have used the Wahhabis to give them
a basis for legitimacy. The Wahhabis believe that Islam is a total
system with an answer to all life’s questions. Of course, they
have all the answers. For example, in 1925, with the help of
Ibn Saud, founder of the Saudi dynasty they engaged in the wholesale
destruction of the sacred tombs, graveyards and mosques in Mecca and
Medina. This included the graves of Muhammad’s early associates,
followers and even Caliph Abu Bakr. In addition, they demolished the
cemetery in Mecca where the Prophet’s mother and father and first wife,
Khadijah were buried. Only the tomb of Muhammad in Medina was spared
after an outcry from traditional Muslims.
Wahhabi Islam in its ascetic form is the religion currently practiced in
Saudi Arabia – a joyless interpretation of the faith. This means
no public holidays, only religious holidays and not even the Prophet
Muhammad’s birthday is celebrated.
Originally, the telephone, radio, and public education for women were
condemned as innovations wrought by the Devil and were the cause of riots.
Today in Saudi Arabia there are no public movie theaters, women are banned
from driving and the musical tune played, when a cellular phone rings, is
outlawed.
The only justification for change is usually with the argument that it
would help propagate the Koran. But above all, the WAHHABI‘s
believe that their faith must spread, not giving ground in any place
previously occupied by Muslims (i.e., Afghanistan, Kashmir and Israel).
Moreover, Wahhabi fighters have even gone to Bosnia, Chechnya and the
Philippines to extend their sect. Thus to the WAHHABIS the Taliban
State was a proper extension of true Islam.
So in trying to balance American demands to join the coalition against
terrorism and the demand of the Wahhabis (who covertly support Osama bin
Laden) the Saudis are walking a tightrope. After all they were
instrumental in creating the Saudi monarchy and presumably if sufficiently
alienated, could tear it down.
THE ISLAMIC RADICALS
In this first war of the 21st Century, our nation can no longer afford the
naïve illusions that have given many Americans comfort in peacetime.
Chief among them is the notion, presented all too often by our leaders and
the media, that Islam means peace. Clearly this statement is an
over-simplification.
A key to understanding Islam is knowing that it operates one way in
countries that recognize a separation of church and state but in another
fashion where mosque and state are one. While there are over 1200 mosques
in the United States there are no churches in Saudi Arabia or the Gulf
States.
In countries where the culture is an expression of Islam, religion and
society have merged. For another religion to exist in a strict
Islamic society or for someone to change his or her religion is considered
apostasy, an abandonment of one’s heritage. Thus in classical
Islamic law (the 9th century SHARIAH) the apostate loses all his civil
liberties, his children are taken away and his marriage is dissolved.
There is a saying in the Hadith, “Any person that changes his religion,
kill him”.
Of all contemporary cultural systems, the Islamic world has the fewest
democracies (only Turkey might qualify). Moreover, the Islamic world
contains no countries that have made the transition from third to first
world status in the manner of South Korea and Singapore. Ergo, if
Islam is the Seal or monotheism perfected then some fundamentalist hatred
may be born out of Western success and Muslim failure.
Many Arabs and Muslims deem that they had ten centuries of great cultural
achievement that ended with European colonialism. Now they feel
impotent. The West they assume looks at them as backward and is only
interested in their oil.
So if Islam is religion
perfected and its kingdom in retreat, it must be that its present
practitioners have strayed from the fundamentals of the faith.
Iran’s Khomeni appealed to them because he promised a new world which
would re-establish continuity with the glorious past.
However, the Sunni Wahhabis are far more dangerous than the Ayatollah.
With funding from the Saudi government they have established at least
8,000 Madrassas in Pakistan which are “throwbacks” to the feudal age.
In these boys schools what is produced is a fear and loathing of
modernity, a stoking of historic rage against the West and its primary
cultural engine – America, and an ancient puritanical mindset. All
this converges into a turbo-charged potential revolutionary force.
Likewise, while disclaiming any responsibility for terrorism, the Wahhabi-Saudi
establishment seeks to control Muslim religious institutions and
activities around the world. In 1999 they were on the scene in
Kosovo within a month of the NATO intervention, spending money on Wahhabi
religious indoctrination. They were so aggressive and extreme that
the Kosovo Liberation Army and the Kosovar Albanian Muslims asked them to
desist. Closer to home, Wahhabi Imans in American mosques until
recently received salaries of between $2,000-$4,000 a month from the Gulf
States. It’s no wonder the Muslim critics of their activities in
the United States have often been intimidated into silence by the threat of
withdrawing religious funding, removing subsidies for the HAJJ or even the
fear of violence.
Although Islam is incredibly diverse and complex and Muhammad is said to
have declared the, “the scholars are the heirs of the prophets”,
it’s not surprising that sacralization not secularization is the current
trend worldwide. Riding this wave are the Muslim religious leaders who are
in most cases the anti-western, anti-liberal theorists or ideologues of
today’s militant Islamic movements.
How can we defeat these Islamic radicals – an insurgency within another
civilization? We can and must defeat it on the battlefield, of
course. The enemy measures its strength in battle and, indeed, finds
in battle personal apotheosis. We must rob them of this realization.
More difficult still will be the task of draining its religious authority.
Supporting or ignoring the behavior of weak and corrupt regimes (called
“moderates” or “coalition partners”) that by word or deed aid,
maintain and even encourage these Islamic militants is certainly not in
our own interest – not if we want to win this protracted struggle.
If as President Bush said, “the war on terrorism will be fought on many
fronts”, then one of them should be sustained political pressure on our
so-called allies to change their ways. For in reality the roots of
international terrorism may not be in Islam or even the clash of
civilizations, but in our association with dysfunctional Arab regimes who
have spawned violent internal opposition. Instead of dealing with
this resentment and rage themselves, they have conveniently deflected this
frustration and fury against the United States. |