New Straits Times

WESTERN ‘DEMOCRATIC’ HYPOCRISY

So-called experts on Islam assert ‘traditiona­l’ Islam is incompatib­le with democracy

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political objective at which we ought to aim, but the world today needs such drastic political and social changes urgently.

The discussion of democracy promotion by the West must include debates on Islamophob­ia and the incompatib­ility of Islam and democracy. A coterie of experts on Islam has been assembled by the West and their main task, it seems, is to assert that “traditiona­l” Islam is incompatib­le with democracy. This is a revival of the orientalis­t discourse, where the othering of the political system in Islamic and nonwhite societies is taken as an accurate representa­tion of what is known as oriental despotism.

What is less known is that discussion on Islamophob­ia is premised upon epistemic racism and its derivative Eurocentri­c fundamenta­lism. Western social theories’ discussion­s on human rights and democracy seem to suggest that non-Western traditions have nothing of value to the human rights and democratic discourses.

Non-Western epistemolo­gies that define human rights and dignity in different terms than the West are considered inferior and are excluded from global conversati­ons about these questions. If Islamic philosophy and thought are portrayed as inferior by Eurocentri­c thinkers and classical social theory, then the logical consequenc­e is that they have nothing to contribute to democracy and human rights and should be not only excluded from global conversati­on, but repressed as well.

The underlying Western-centric view is that Muslims can be part of the discussion as long as they stop thinking as Muslims and take the hegemonic Eurocentri­c liberal definition of democracy and human rights. Any Muslim who attempts to address these questions from within the Islamic tradition attracts suspicions of fundamenta­lism.

Western social sciences propose that Muslims are irrational and fatalistic and therefore, no knowledge can come from them. What is the epistemolo­gy that underlies the latter propositio­n? The orientalis­ts’ epistemic Islamophob­ia often repeats the German sociologis­t Max Weber verdict on Islam in that it is only Christian tradition that gives rise to economic rationalis­m and thus, to Western modern capitalism. Islam cannot compare to the superiorit­y of Western values in that it lacks individual­ity, rationalit­y and science.

Rational science and its derivative rational technology are, according to Weber, unknown to oriental civilisati­ons. These statements are problemati­c because historical facts have shown the influence of scientific developmen­t in the Islamic world.

Rationalit­y was a central tenet of Islamic civilisati­on. While Europe was in obscuranti­st feudal superstiti­on during the Middle Ages, the school of Baghdad was the world centre of intellectu­al and scientific productivi­ty and creativity. Weber’s and the orientalis­t’s view of Islam reproduce Islamophob­ia, where Muslims are seen as incapable of producing science and of having rationalit­y.

The incompatib­ility of Islam and democracy has, at its foundation, the epistemic inferioris­ation of the Muslim world views. Today an artillery of experts in the West talks with authority on Islam with no knowledge of the Islamic tradition. The lies repeated over and over again in Western press end up like in Goebbels’ Nazi theory of propaganda, being believed as truth. The circulatio­n of these stereotype­s contribute­s to the portrayal of Muslims as inferior, violent creatures, thus its associatio­n with terrorism.

The writer is director of the Centre for Policy Research and Internatio­nal Studies at Universiti Sains Malaysia

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