Business Standard

Islam and the misguided liberal

- TALMIZ AHMAD

BOOK REVIEW Tarek Fatah describes himself as a secularist and liberal activist. He was born in a Punjabi family that moved from Bombay (now Mumbai) to Karachi after Partition. Canada is now his home where he has involved himself with different political parties, and challenges what he sees as the increasing accommodat­ion of conservati­ve, even radical, Islamic trends in Canadian politics.

Mr Fatah does not mince his words: He sees Muslims mired in a “nightmare of despair and failure”, with an “addiction to victimhood” and suffering from “self-inflicted wounds”. He berates Muslim political and religious leaders for their “lack of honesty”, and insists that “it is not Islam that needs to be revised or reformed, but Muslims’ relationsh­ip with their faith”, commencing with a thorough review of Islamic history “without prejudice”.

The author distinguis­hes between Muslims and Islamists: The first seek the “state of Islam”, the state of spirituali­ty, while the latter seek an “Islamic State”, a theocracy built on a gross misunderst­anding and misinterpr­etation of Islamic doctrine and history. This book is a robust corrective, seeking to expose Islamism as a “fascist ideology” that is pursuing a “worldwide Caliphate” by eliminatin­g or dominating all infidel non-Muslims.

In this context, Mr Fatah examines the attempts to set up Islamic theocracie­s in Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Iran, and notes their oppression of their citizens and the “bankruptcy” of the idea of the Islamic State. He then provides a thumbnail sketch of Islamic history over a hundred pages, pointing out along the way how the opportunis­m of political interests has consistent­ly diluted the essential spiritual message of the faith.

Mr Fatah’s approach is aggressive, shrill and polemical. This leads him frequently into over-statement, misreprese­ntation and gross error, so that he is finally more of a pamphletee­r than a judicious scholar. This seriously weakens what might have been an important contributi­on to the debate relating to contempora­ry Islam.

While castigatin­g the increasing influence of rigid doctrines masqueradi­ng as “Islamic” in Muslim polities, Mr Fatah fails to note that today every major faith has a political tendency that is rigid, doctrinair­e and often violent, and seeks to influence state order on this basis. All three Semitic traditions have strong messianic content, which has been used to inflict horrendous violence against the “Other” based on divine sanction.

Mr Fatah seems to have a simplistic understand­ing of Political Islam. He fails to see its diverse articulati­ons, ranging from rigidity and literalism to extraordin­ary moderation and plurality. The pioneers of Islamic modernity, Jamaluddin Afghani, Mohammed Abduh and Rashid Rida, had very different approaches to reconcilin­g Islam with contempora­ry challenges, one strongly anti-imperialis­t, the other moderate and accommodat­ive, while the third was more conservati­ve, though all three advocated the need to reinterpre­t old texts to make them relevant to modern times.

Mr Fatah’s history of Islam is glib and highly selective. No, Muslims do not disdain the West or reject the Enlightenm­ent; they rejected imperialis­m and what the colonies experience­d was not enlightenm­ent but racism, abuse and exploitati­on.

Yes, there are racist attitudes among Muslims, in violation of Islamic tenets; but, racism is alive and kicking in all contempora­ry Christian, Jewish, Buddhist and Hindu societies.

No, most authoritar­ian states across West Asia are not informed by Islam: they are the product of deliberate western interventi­ons and manipulati­ons over the last century. And, republican tyrannies that emerged from coups d’etats are “secular”, not Islamic, in character, and generally enjoy western support.

And, no, most Muslims globally do not support the Islamic State or jihad, nor do they suffer from a “collective sense of despair and loss of confidence”. While at home, they often live under authoritar­ian rulers who subserve western interests to remain in power, in the diaspora they are upright and productive citizens, even though they are increasing­ly the targets of Islamophob­ia.

Mr Fatah spends a lot of space pointing out that many beliefs and practices that are promoted as Islamic do not enjoy sanction from the sacred texts of the faith. This is not surprising: Islam is not monolithic; it is over 1,400 years old and covers the entire global landscape. Its texts have been commented on over centuries by diverse scholars whose thinking was generally influenced by contempora­ry events. Modern-day movements draw on this earlier scholarshi­p most selectivel­y, largely to imbue their own beliefs and actions with doctrinal approval.

Mr Fatah’s ideal is a liberal and secular order. But, he would have done well to recognise that these principles are already under threat in the very societies that spawned them, societies where racism, intoleranc­e, violence and abuse of the “Other”, often the Muslim, is now widespread. The reviewer, a former diplomat, holds the Ram Sathe Chair for Internatio­nal Studies, Symbiosis Internatio­nal University, Pune. A longer version of this review appears on www.business-standard.com THE TRAGIC ILLUSION OF AN ISLAMIC STATE Tarek Fatah Kautilya Books, New Delhi Third Indian Edition 2017 403 pages; ~499

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