
"Lebanese
children receiving the 'gift'."
The West
has never had an easy time coming to terms with Islam or Islamicate
societies. There was a long period, lasting more than a millennium,
when the two were seen as existential threats. In order to mobilize
the energy to contain and then roll back these threats - first
from the 'Holy Lands' and Southwestern Europe and later from Southeastern
Europe - European writers presented Islam as a Christian heresy,
a devil-worshipping religion, Mahomet's trickery, a militant and
militarist cult crafted for Bedouin conquests.
To this list of dark qualities the thinkers of the Renaissance
and the Enlightenment added a few more. Now Islamicate societies
were also seen as despotic, fatalistic, fanatical, irrational,
uncurious, opposed to science, and inimical to progress. When
Europe gained the upper hand militarily in the 19th Century, this
complex of Orientalist ideas would be used to justify the conquest
and colonization of Islamic lands.
Starting
in the 19th Century, a small minority of European thinkers began
to reject the standard Orientalist constructs of Islam and Islamicate
societies. They began to look at Islam and Islamicate societies
as they were described in Muslim sources; they wrote of Islamic
achievements in philosophy, the sciences, arts and architecture;
they emphasized Islam's egalitarian spirit, the absence of racial
prejudice, and their greater tolerance of other religious communities.
Many of these Europeans who had chosen to give Islam its due were
Jews who had only recently escaped from the ghettoes to enter
into Europe's academies. In part, these Jews were appropriating
for themselves the achievements of another Semitic people. In
calling attention to the tolerance of Islamic societies, they
were also gently reminding the Europeans that they had far to
go towards creating a bourgeois civilization based on humane values.
Less charitably, one might say that the Jewish dissenters were
undermining the Christian West by elevating its opposite, the
Islamic East.
Starting
in the 19th Century, a small
minority of European thinkers began to
reject the standard Orientalist constructs
of Islam and Islamicate societies...
they wrote of Islamic achievements
in philosophy, the sciences, arts and
architecture; they emphasized Islam's
egalitarian spirit, the absence of racial
prejudice, and their greater tolerance of
other religious communities. Many of
these Europeans who had chosen to give
Islam its due were Jews who had only
recently escaped from the ghettoes to
enter into Europe's academies.
A second
shift in the temper of Orientalism that began in the 1950s would
become more pervasive. From now on, a growing number of mainstream
scholars of Islam and Islamic societies would try to escape the
essentializing mental habits of earlier Orientalists. This shift
was the work of at least three forces.
The most powerful of these forces was the struggle of the colonized
peoples in the post-War period to free themselves from the yoke
of colonialism. In the context of the Cold War, the political
and economic interests of Western powers now demanded greater
sensitivity to the culture, religion and history of the peoples
they had denigrated over the previous four centuries. A show of
respect for their subjects had now become a virtue in the writings
of Orientalists.
The Orientalists
were also being put on notice by the entry into Western academia
of scholars of Middle Eastern and South Asian origins - including
Phillip K. Hitti, Albert Hourani, George Makdisi, Muhsin Mahdi,
Syed Hussein Nasr and Fazlur Rahman - who brought greater empathy
and understanding to their studies on Islamicate societies.
Edward Said too was a member of this group; his distinctive contribution
consisted of his erudite and sustained critique of the methods
of Orientalism. Said's critique belongs also to a broader intellectual
movement - fueled in part by scholars from the non-Western world
- that not only debunked the distortions of Orientalists but also
sought to remedy their errors by writing a more sympathetic history
of Asian and African societies. In other words, during this period
some sections of the West began to acknowledge with some consternation
the racism and bigotry that permeated much of the social sciences
and humanities.
The
Orientalists were also being put on
notice by the entry into Western
academia of scholars of Middle Eastern
and South Asian origins - including
Phillip K. Hitti, Albert Hourani,
George Makdisi, Muhsin Mahdi,
Syed Hussein Nasr and Fazlur Rahman...
during this period some sections of the
West began to acknowledge with some
consternation the racism and bigotry
that permeated much of the
social sciences and humanities.
Starting
in the 1950s, Islam also attracted the attention of several spiritual
explorers from the West who were led hither by their disappointment
with the poverty of living spiritual traditions in their own societies.
The deep understanding of Islam they acquired through association
with authentic Sufis - Muslims who cultivated, in addition to
their meticulous observance of the Shariah, the inner dimensions
of Islam - allowed them to write several outstanding books on
the metaphysical and spiritual perspectives of Islam, both as
they are practiced by its living exponents and as they are reflected
in the calligraphy, architecture and the still surviving traditional
crafts of the Islamic world.
The writings of Rene Guenon, Titus Burckhardt, Frithjof Schuon,
Martin Lings, Charles Le Gai Eaton, among others, demonstrate
conclusively that Islam offers an original spiritual perspective
that is fully capable of supporting a deeply religious life.
Yet, running
counter to these developments, a new Orientalism was also taking
shape in the post-War era. It was not based on any strikingly
new thesis about Islam. Instead, it was mostly a repackaging of
the old Orientalism designed to renew a more intrusive dual US-Israeli
control over the Middle East.
Led by Bernard Lewis, the new Orientalists claim that the Islamicate
world is a failed civilization. Among other things, they argue
that Islamicate societies have failed to modernize because Islam's
mixing of religion and politics makes it incompatible with democracy;
Islam does not support equal rights for women and minorities;
and Islam commands Muslims to wage war until the whole world is
brought under the sway of Islamic law. In short, because of its
intransigence and failure to adapt to the challenges of modernity,
Islam has become the greatest present threat to civilization,
that is, to Western interests.
Led
by Bernard Lewis, the new
Orientalists claim that the Islamicate
world is a failed civilization...
In short, because of its intransigence
and failure to adapt to the challenges
of modernity, Islam has become the
greatest present threat to civilization,
that is, to Western interests.
What makes
this repackaged Orientalism new are its intentions, its proponents,
and the enemy it has targeted for destruction. Its intention is
to mobilize the United States behind a scheme to balkanize the
Middle East into ethnic, sectarian and religious micro states,
a new system of client states that would facilitate Israel's long-term
hegemony over the region. Ironically, the scholars who have dominated
this repackaging of the old Orientalism are mostly Jewish, a reversal
of roles that flows directly from the creation of a Jewish colonial-settler
state in the heart of the Middle East.
Once they had succeeded in creating Israel, the Zionists knew
that its long-term survival depended on fomenting wars between
the West and Islam. Zionism has pursued this goal by its own wars
against Arabs and, since 1967, a brutal occupation of the West
Bank and Gaza; but equally, it has pulled out all the stops to
convince the United States to support unconditionally Israel's
depredations against Arabs.
The target
of the war that the new Orientalists want to wage are what they
variously call Islamists, Islamic fundamentalists, Islamic militants,
Islamo-fascists, or Islamic terrorists. Whatever the term, it
embraces all Islamicate movements - no matter what their positions
on the political uses of violence - that appeal to Islamic symbols
to mobilize local, national, and pan-Islamic resistance against
the wars that the United States and Israel have jointly waged
against the Middle East since 1945.
These Islamicate resistance movements, which are both national
and transcend national boundaries, have replaced the secular nationalists
who, after failing to achieve their objectives, were co-opted
by the United States and Israel to destroy the Islamicate resistance.
Once
they had succeeded in creating
Israel, the Zionists knew that its
long-term survival depended on
fomenting wars between the West and Islam. Zionism has pursued
this goal
by its own wars against Arabs and,
since 1967, a brutal occupation of the West Bank and Gaza.
The events
that have unfolded over the past few decades - the rise of the
Islamicate resistance, the strategic cooperation between the United
States and Israel, the new Orientalism, and the war that is now
being waged against the Islamicate world - could have been foreseen,
and indeed were foreseen, when the British first made a commitment
to create a Jewish state in Palestine.
An American writer on international affairs, Herbert Adams Gibbons,
showed more acuity on the long-term fallout of Britain's Zionist
plans than the leading Western statesmen of the times. In January
1919, he wrote: "If the peace conference decides to restore the
Jews to Palestine, immigration into and development of the country
can be assured only by the presence of a considerable army for
an indefinite period. Not only the half million Moslems
living in Palestine, but the millions in surrounding countries,
will have to be cowed into submission by the constant show and
occasional use of force (italics added)."[1]
Even more prophetically, Anstruther MacKay, military governor
of part of Palestine during World War I, wrote that the Zionist
project would "arouse fierce Moslem hostility and fanaticism against
the Western powers that permitted it. The effect of this hostility
would be felt through the Middle East, and would cause trouble
in Syria, Mesopotamia, Egypt, and India. To this might be ascribed
by future historians the outbreak of a great war between the white
and the brown races, a war into which America would without
doubt be drawn (italics added)." [2]
We are now living in the future predicted by Gibbons and MacKay.
The Islamicate resistance has been slow in developing but now
it has spread in one form or another beyond Syria, Mesopotamia,
Egypt and India to the farthest corners of the Islamic world -
and even into the Islamic diaspora in the West.
The
challenge of scholarship is to
define, locate, contextualize and
debunk the New Orientalism.
We constantly need to remind the world,
especially the Western world...
that there is a long history of Western
depredations - wars, colonization,
slavery, exterminations, expropriations,
treachery and hypocrisy - behind the
images that disturb their hopes of peace
founded on grave injustices.
The challenge
of scholarship is to define, locate, contextualize and debunk
the New Orientalism. We constantly need to remind the world, especially
the Western world, so mesmerized by the images flashing on the
TV screens, that there is a long history of Western depredations
- wars, colonization, slavery, exterminations, expropriations,
treachery and hypocrisy - behind the images that disturb their
hopes of peace founded on grave injustices.
History is
the ally of tormented peoples; they can tell it as it was. It
is the tormentors who deny their history; they have to make it
up to deny the torments they have inflicted. They must speak constantly,
unremittingly of the need to put down insurgencies, terrorist
attacks, threats to world peace, and violence against the civilized
order.
We too must constantly revisit the history of Western depredations
over the past four centuries to connect the world's present miseries
to this infamous history. Only a deepening consciousness of this
history, constantly renewed, carries hope that the powers that
use stealth to manufacture terror can be stopped.
References:
1.Herbert
Adams Gibbons, "Zionism and the world peace," in: Richard P. Stevens,
ed., Zionism and Palestine before the Mandate: A phase
of Western imperialism (Beirut: The Institute of Palestine
Studies, 1972): 63, reprinted from: Century 97, 3 (January
1919).
2.Richard
P. Stevens, ed., Zionism and Palestine before the Mandate:
47-48, reprinted from: Anstruther MacKay, "Zionist aspirations
in Palestine," Atlantic 216 (July 1920): 123-25.
+ + + + +
Note: Those
with strong stomachs who want to see uncensored pictures of the
Israeli onslaught on Lebanon, click
here.
+ + + + +
Click here for other
articles by M. Shahid Alam:
The Muslims America Loves
Real Men Go To Tehran
Did Thomas Friedman Flunk History
 |
M.
Shahid Alam, professor of economics at a university in Boston,
is also a regular contributor to CounterPunch.org. Some of
his CounterPunch essays are now available
in the book, Is There An Islamic Problem? (Kuala Lumpur: The
Other Press, 2004). He may be reached at alqalam02760@yahoo.com.
Overseas readers can click
here to order a copy of the book.
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here to order a copy of the book. |