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State of Islamic Reform in the West


By Ali Eteraz
Posted on Fri Feb 16, 2007 at 11:17:33 PM EST
Tags: islam, reform, ramadan, el fadl, manji, nomani (all tags)

Consider, then, the irony: reformers which did not alienate the Muslim community were alienated by the media; reformers which did alienate the Muslim community were embraced by the media.


In a world of perfect homogeneity, where there is no migration, no immigration, no refugees, no cross-border terror, and no transnational media, non-Muslims would mind their own business about Islam and Muslims would mind their own business about postmodernism, and the never the twain would meet. However, the world is plural, and with each breath, increasingly interconnected. There are irritating Islamists studying at American Universities; there are rich Europenan businessmen running the male sex trade in Tunisia. America is leveling bombs on Iraq; Jihadists are leveling their bodies at American interests. The multifarious is normative.

In this morass, the Muslim reformer must speak to her community (Muslims) and patiently, slowly, meticulously, extol them to shake their errors (violence, inability to integrate converts, utopian dreams of a perfect Islamic State, unfair family laws), all the while communicating with the larger world community (mostly non-Muslim) which is not interested in the nuances of how Muslim reform, just that we do it, and soon. There is a tension here: Muslims communities, like all communities, react slowly to change; non-Muslims want results now.

Tariq Ramadan and Khaled Abu el Fadl were the first reformers who ran into this tension. I am not sure they were able to deal with it effectively.

In a recent piece in the New York Times, entitled "Tariq Ramadan Has An Identity Issue" Ian Buruma inquired why Dr. Ramadan is so often accused of having "two faces." During the course of the article Ian Buruma argued Ramadan often seemed to say one thing to a non-Muslim audience and another to a Muslim audience.

A perfect example of it is the discussion of Islamic Capital Punishments. A couple of years ago Dr. Ramadan suggested that Muslim countries put a "moratorium" on Islamic Capital Punishments until better procedural safeguards could be afforded to the accused. This caused a huge uproar in the world's Muslim population who thought that Ramadan was selling Islam out to Western human rights norms. Yet -- and this is the most intriguing part -- Ramadan took an immense amount of criticism in European Press for arguing for a mere moratorium, and not a total elimination of Islamic Capital Punishments!

European media inquired if Ramadan really was a reformist then he would try to shut down the Capital Punishments in toto; the more cynical took Ramadan’s failure to go all the way as a means to accuse him of being a “stealth Islamist.” This skepticism of Ramadan’s efforts by mainstream media impacted Muslims who might have warmed up to Ramadan’s ideas. They looked to Ramadan and thought that if someone with a degree in Western Philosophy, a thesis on Nietzsche, and heavily engaged in Muslim reform was going to be met with accusations of “Islamism” then what was the point in jumping on Ramadan’s bandwagon? Better not do anything at all.

Khaled Abu el Fadl has also suffered under this tension. In his book “Search for Beauty in Islam” he discusses a hadith about the status of women in which a married woman is extolled to eat her husband’s pus if she is told to. He argues that the hadith flies in the face of the spirit of equality engendered by the Quran. However, instead of concluding that, therefore, the hadith is invalid, he says that he is going to turn agnostic on the hadith, and file a mental complaint against it. To a non-Muslim, this looks like “stealth Islamism” or being “two faced.” A non-Muslim thinks that el Fadl’s failure to completely excise the hadith from the legal corpus is a sign that he is not really serious about reform. Meanwhile, Muslims who were ready to warm up to el Fadl’s ideas wondered, if a man with a degree from Yale Law School and an almost rabid anti-Saudi ideology is a stealth Islamist, then what is the point in jumping on his bandwagon? Better not do anything at all.

Not only that, but despite the enormous sacrifices made by both men, it was rare for them to be accepted by mainstream media. They were certainly welcome at all specialists conferences on faith, but not in CNN studios.

After 9/11, a new breed of Muslim reformers recognized the tension faced by Ramadan and el Fadl, and concluded that rather than try to work slowly and convince the Muslim communities bit by bit, they were just going to go all out and demand in one fell swoop all the changes they had on their mind. This way no one would call them stealth Islamists. (Also, some of these reformers were driven by 9/11 guilt. Not that they were responsible for 9/11, but that they needed to do something immediately to fight against the conditions that created 9/11). Either way, they became obsessed with making laundry lists of what was wrong with Muslims and gave up on being patient.

It is here that we got the early Asra Nomani, the early Irshad Manji, PMUNA and the Muslim WakeUp group.  This go-all-out plan was a considerable failure because the impulsiveness of this new breed reformer made the average Muslim distrust them as revolutionaries and anarchists. However, this new breed reformer was successful where Ramadan and el Fadl had failed: getting positive media attention. Mainstream media, from Slate to New York Times, rapidly embraced these individuals (far more rapidly than they had ever embraced Ramadan or el Fadl). Is it not surprising that despite all his work, Ramadan appeared in a New York Times in sigifnicant details far later than Irshad Manji?

Consider, then, the irony: reformers which did not alienate the Muslim community were alienated by the media; reformers which did alienate the Muslim community were embraced by the media.

Muslim WakeUp! and Progressive Muslims did not know how to gulf this gap, and became irrelevant.

However, I believe that both Irshad Manji and Asra Nomani realized that there was a gap and worked to bridge it. It was easier for them to do so because they were individuals and not institutions. Certainly, I do not necessarily agree with their vision, or even their methods, or even their affiliations. However, I am heartened by the fact that there are Muslims who are embraced by the media while also trying their hardest to speak to Muslim communities without alienating them.

Evidence of their desire not to alienate was scant when they first started out. However, it is more available now. Irshad Manji, over the objections of her non-Muslim editors, changed the title of her book from “The Trouble with Islam” to “The Trouble With Islam, Today.” She has further gone on record to state that the religion of Islam is beautiful and that problems are caused by criminals and extremists in the faith. Not only that, but her recent documentary contains a very positive homage to the Prophet Muhammad, which even negative Muslim reviews of the film have acknowledged as being “moving.” Manji has in fact made plans to meet with traditional ‘ulama in Egypt and take leadership training from them; the same training that many al-Azhar graduates receive. Most “conservative” North American Muslim leaders do not go this far.

Similarly Asra Nomani opened herself up to criticism from the traditionalist Muslim magazine Q-News willlingly, having Haroon Moghul – with a Salafi bent – review her book. She then went to live with a Muslim community in India and reported positive news about them; which in turn casts Islam in a positive light while simultaneously addressing the problems we Muslims face. Not only that, but she got the South Asian Journalists Association to recognize that working for the improvement of the lives of Muslims was beneficial. In reality, both women have recently taken a page out of the Ramadan and el Fadl book: to be effective reformists you have to be inside the community.

While both women have easy access to media, which Ramadan and el Fadl did not have, they lack one thing that Ramadan and el Fadl possessed: freedom from scandal. No matter how much anyone disagreed with Ramadan or el Fadl, there wasn’t an ounce of dirt available against their character. The “worst” thing Ramadan ever did was look too handsome; while el Fadl kept a couple of dogs. Manji, meanwhile, disclosed the fact that she was lesbian, and Nomani disclosed the fact that she had an illegitimate child. Further, both men benefitted from the fact that they were distinguished Muslim men talking to Muslim men. Manji and Nomani are both younger Muslim women talking to first generation immigrants.

The current situation leaves Western Muslim reformers in a difficult bind. Does she lean towards Ramadan and el Fadl, sacrificing exposure to the non-Muslim world while doing the hard work of reform in relative isolation? Or does she lean towards Manji and Nomani, sacrifice influence in the Muslim community but make a positive impression about Islam to the non-Muslim world?

It is time for the media savvy reformists to work with the community savvy ones. There was a moment in Toronto in the winter of 2006 when Manji and Ramadan were both in the same place, and almost met. I’m afraid almost is not good enough.

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Tags: islam, reform, ramadan, el fadl, manji, nomani (all tags)
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A brilliant analysis, once again(none / 0) (#1)
by zahed on Sat Feb 17, 2007 at 06:59:18 AM EST

I've always thought there was a fine line in coaxing Muslims from within and influencing non-Muslims on the outside that virtually nobody who spoke as a Muslim representative or reformist understood. CAIR will never be self-critical, Kamal Nawash will never engage larger Muslim communities, and so forth.

Like you, I'm encouraged by the direction Manji is heading in and am sensing enormous resistance to people like us who are open minded enough to see if there's common ground to be had (I believe there is).

Yet, for many of us, it feels good to be polarising. It allows us to make sense of our situations when they don't make sense to anyone else around us, Muslim or not.





there are a couple of things...(none / 0) (#2)
by Maleeha on Sat Feb 17, 2007 at 09:36:24 AM EST

...in here that i disagree with. first, your judgment is that Muslims ready to warm up to Dr. Ramadan's or Dr. El-Fadl's ideas wont get on their respective bandwagons simply because they are labelled "islamists" by the media. (what's an "islamist" anyway? these cute terms - islamist, islamofascist, islamophobia - are getting outta control). I think it has precisely the opposite effect. The disapproval (and my impression is that its not significant) of their ideas from the non-Muslim community gives them an air of authenticity among the Muslims. If their ideas were whole-heartedly embraced by the media, you can be sure a lot of Muslims would jump ship. As it is, Dr. El-Fadl's reform ideas are conisdered "fringe" by the traditionalists (yes I'm using labels for conveniance, sue me), but whatever following both of them have is strengthened by the "controversy" surrounding their views from the non-muslims.

second, yea ppl like Manji and Nomani know how to get the media's attention, and you said you are "heartened by the fact that there are Muslims who are embraced by the media while also trying their hardest to speak to Muslim communities without alienating them." really? you think these women dont alienate the Muslim community (despite their intentions not to, i suppose)? i guess we must run in completely different circles. i wasnt aware of their new approaches of trying to get closer to the community, but its going to take a lot more than saying "the religion of Islam is beautiful," paying homage to the Prophet (pbuh), and getting SAJA to agree that working to benefit Muslims is a worthy cause for me to take them seriously. none of what they are now trying is new to the muslim community - yea we know Islam is beautiful, we know about the greatness ofthe Prophet, and we know working for Mulsims is beneficial  - thanks for stating the obvious and joining the party. having a moratorium on capital punishment and polygamy, giving women the unilateral right to divorce, equalizing inheritance laws, and doing it all with justification from our tradition - THATS interesting, thats something i'll pay attention to.

you also created a dichotomy that i dont agree with - "Does she lean towards Ramadan and el Fadl, sacrificing exposure to the non-Muslim world while doing the hard work of reform in relative isolation? Or does she lean towards Manji and Nomani, sacrifice influence in the Muslim community but make a positive impression about Islam to the non-Muslim world?" Why does leaning towards Ramadan and el Fadl necessarily mean one has to reform in isolation? By participating in Muslim-based community programs like this and this, one can be exposed to the immediate community (and hire a kick ass pr person to get exposure to the national media) AND do the kind of real reform work that matters - changing the condition of a people, no matter whether they are Muslim or non-Muslims. The reformation of thought would follow naturally.

 





Leadership, not consensus is needed.(none / 0) (#3)
by dmz on Sat Feb 17, 2007 at 12:26:56 PM EST

Islam has a similar problem to what the United States suffers from:

Corrupt leaders

Misrepresentation of the people/ummah

A total loss of the foundational and essential qualities

Both require the same remedy:

Grassroots leaders who are not concerned about solving everyone's appendage problems and building a consensus of compromise on values and ideals.

This is a time that needs visionaries and idealists who will restore the credibility of the movement by personal example and will inspire people to return to the ideal and not sell out the ideal to the people.

Strong individuals make a movement. One or two people are enough. 






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