Why
Islam doesn’t need a reformation/Mehdi Hasan is the presenter of Al-Jazeera English’s Head to Head. He was a senior editor at the New Statesman and a news and current affairs editor at Channel 4. He is co-author of Ed: the Milibands and the Making of a Labour Leader.
The
Guardian |17/05/2015
In
recent months, cliched calls for reform of Islam, a 1,400-year-old faith, have
intensified. “We need a Muslim reformation,” announced Newsweek. “Islam needs
reformation from within,” said the Huffington Post. Following January’s
massacre in Paris, the Financial Times nodded to those in the west who believe
the secular Egyptian president, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, “could emerge as the
Martin Luther of the Muslim world”. (That might be difficult, given Sisi, in
the words of Human Rights Watch, approved “premeditated lethal attacks” on
largely unarmed protesters which could amount to “crimes against humanity”.)
Then
there is Ayaan Hirsi Ali. The Somali-born author, atheist and ex-Muslim has a
new book called Heretic: Why Islam Needs a Reformation Now. She’s been popping
up in TV studios and on op-ed pages to urge Muslims, both liberal and
conservative, to abandon some of their core religious beliefs while uniting
behind a Muslim Luther. Whether or not mainstream Muslims will respond
positively to a call for reform from a woman who has described their faith as a
“destructive, nihilistic cult of death” that should be “crushed”, and suggested
Benjamin Netanyahu be given the Nobel peace prize, is another matter.
This
narrative isn’t new. The New York Times’s celebrity columnist Thomas Friedman
called for an Islamic reformation back in 2002; US academics Charles Kurzer and
Michaelle Browers traced the origins of this “Reformation analogy” to the early
20th century, noting that “conservative journalists have been as eager as
liberal academics to search for Muslim Luthers”.
Apparently
anyone who wants to win the war against violent extremism and save the soul of
Islam, not to mention transform a stagnant Middle East, should be in favour of
this process. After all, Christianity had the Reformation, so goes the
argument, which was followed by the Enlightenment; by secularism, liberalism
and modern European democracy. So why can’t Islam do the same? And shouldn’t
the west be offering to help?
Yet
the reality is that talk of a Christian-style reformation for Islam is so much
cant. Let’s consider this idea of a “Muslim Luther”. Luther did not merely nail
95 theses to the door of the Castle church in Wittenberg in 1517, denouncing
clerical abuses within the Catholic church. He also demanded that German
peasants revolting against their feudal overlords be “struck dead”, comparing
them to “mad dogs”, and authored On the Jews and Their Lies in 1543, in which
he referred to Jews as “the devil’s people” and called for the destruction of
Jewish homes and synagogues. As the US sociologist and Holocaust scholar Ronald
Berger has observed, Luther helped establish antisemitism as “a key element of
German culture and national identity”. Hardly a poster boy for reform and
modernity for Muslims in 2015.
The
Protestant Reformation also opened the door to blood-letting on an
unprecedented, continent-wide scale. Have we forgotten the French wars of
religion? Or the English civil war? Tens of millions of innocents died in
Europe; up to 40% of Germany’s population is believed to have been killed in
the thirty years’ war. Is this what we want a Muslim-majority world already
plagued by sectarian conflicts, foreign occupations and the bitter legacy of
colonialism to now endure, all in the name of reform, progress and even
liberalism?
Islam
isn’t Christianity. The two faiths aren’t analogous, and it is deeply ignorant,
not to mention patronising, to pretend otherwise – or to try and impose a
neatly linear, Eurocentric view of history on diverse Muslim-majority countries
in Asia or Africa. Each religion has its own traditions and texts; each
religion’s followers have been affected by geopolitics and socio-economic
processes in a myriad of ways. The theologies of Islam and Christianity, in
particular, are worlds apart: the former, for instance, has never had a
Catholic-style clerical class answering to a divinely appointed pope. So
against whom will the “Islamic reformation” be targeted? To whose door will the
95 fatwas be nailed?
The
truth is that Islam has already had its own reformation of sorts, in the sense
of a stripping of cultural accretions and a process of supposed “purification”.
And it didn’t produce a tolerant, pluralistic, multifaith utopia, a
Scandinavia-on-the-Euphrates. Instead, it produced … the kingdom of Saudi
Arabia.
Wasn’t
reform exactly what was offered to the masses of the Hijaz by Muhammad Ibn Abdul
Wahhab, the mid-18th century itinerant preacher who allied with the House of
Saud? He offered an austere Islam cleansed of what he believed to be
innovations, which eschewed centuries of mainstream scholarship and commentary,
and rejected the authority of the traditional ulema, or religious authorities.
Some
might argue that if anyone deserves the title of a Muslim Luther, it is Ibn
Abdul Wahhab who, in the eyes of his critics, combined Luther’s puritanism with
the German monk’s antipathy towards the Jews. Ibn Abdul Wahhab’s controversial
stance on Muslim theology, writes his biographer Michael Crawford, “made him
condemn much of the Islam of his own time” and led to him being dismissed as a
heretic by his own family.
Don’t
get me wrong. Reforms are of course needed across the crisis-ridden
Muslim-majority world: political, socio-economic and, yes, religious too.
Muslims need to rediscover their own heritage of pluralism, tolerance and
mutual respect – embodied in, say, the Prophet’s letter to the monks of St
Catherine’s monastery, or the “convivencia” (or co-existence) of medieval
Muslim Spain.
What
they don’t need are lazy calls for an Islamic reformation from non-Muslims and
ex-Muslims, the repetition of which merely illustrates how shallow and
simplistic, how ahistorical and even anti-historical, some of the west’s
leading commentators are on this issue. It is much easier for them, it seems,
to reduce the complex debate over violent extremism to a series of cliches,
slogans and soundbites, rather than examining root causes or historical trends;
easier still to champion the most extreme and bigoted critics of Islam while
ignoring the voices of mainstream Muslim scholars, academics and activists.
Hirsi
Ali, for instance, was treated to a series of encomiums and softball questions
in her blizzard of US media interviews, from the New York Times to Fox News.
(“A hero of our time,” read one gushing headline on Politico.) Frustratingly,
only comedian Jon Stewart, on The Daily Show, was willing to point out to Hirsi
Ali that her reformist hero wanted a “purer form of Christianity” and helped
create “a hundred years of violence and mayhem”.
With
apologies to Luther, if anyone wants to do the same to the religion of Islam
today, it is Isis leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who claims to rape and pillage
in the name of a “purer form” of Islam – and who isn’t, incidentally, a fan of
the Jews either. Those who cry so simplistically, and not a little inanely, for
an Islamic reformation, should be careful what they wish for.
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