
HIJACKING
ISLAM
By Martin Kramer
September 19, 2001
Islam, the religion of more than a billion believers,
has been hijacked. If the first week's suspicions are confirmed, the suicide
attacks against the World Trade Center and the Pentagon are the capstones of
nearly twenty years of terrorism perpetrated in the name of Islam. As layer upon
layer of violence has accumulated, Islam itself has come to be associated in
many Western minds with terrorism. It is a tragic turn — and one for which the
vast majority of moderate Muslims bears some responsibility.
Islam is no more inclined to terrorism than any other monotheistic faith. Like
its sisters, Christianity and Judaism, it can be both merciful and stern in
practice; like them, it also teaches the love of God and the humanity of all
mankind, believers and unbelievers alike. In times past, Islam has served as the
bedrock of flourishing, tolerant, and peaceful orders.
But sociologists will say that a religion, at any point in time, is whatever its
adherents understand it to be. If that is so, then Islam, as understood by too
many Muslims, is in danger of deteriorating into a manifesto for terror. The
reason: Too many Muslims have been silent in the face of horrific deeds
committed by an extremist minority.
"Islamic terrorism" first entered the lexicon on a Beirut morning in
1983, when two suicide bombers destroyed the barracks of American and French
peacekeepers. The American toll came to 241 dead; the planners, Shiites inspired
by Ayatollah Khomeini, claimed credit in the name of Islamic Jihad. For decades,
modernizing Muslim thinkers had worked to demilitarize the concept of jihad —
struggle waged "in the path of God." Secular revolutionaries had
mothballed the term, employing the vocabulary of "resistance" and
"liberation." But it was an act of jihad that drove America from
Lebanon, with electrifying effect.
A new era had begun — an era in which Muslim extremists interpreted their
faith as a license to kill foreign "enemies of God." Radical Muslim
clerics scoured Islam's sacred texts for justifications of violence, and found
them. In the years to come, the clerics and the terrorists widened their
license. At first, it included only "intruders" in Muslim lands:
foreign forces, embassies, and civilians. Later it was extended to include
"enemy" installations in third countries, and finally, civilians in
the "lands of unbelief." No moral red line could stop the escalation.
In a parallel process, suicide operations became a matter of routine. Suicide is
forbidden in Islam. Back in 1983, only a handful of radical clerics were
prepared to classify kamikaze-type acts as deeds of "self-martyrdom,"
guaranteeing immediate entry to Paradise. After the first operations, an intense
debate ensued over religious law, some clerics ruling in favor of the tactic and
many against.
But as the years passed, "self-martyrs" became popular heroes and the
resolve of the critics waned. When, last April, Saudi Arabia's grand mufti
suggested that such acts were no more than suicide, the head of Egypt's Azhar
University, supposed bastion of moderation, waffled. (It was permissible, he
said, but not against civilians.) In some quarters, the "self-martyr"
is hailed as the most noble of all believers; according to one particularly
respected Sunni cleric, "these operations are the supreme form of
jihad."
In this climate, it is now possible to recruit "self-martyrs" not one
at a time, but by the dozen. And for the first time, terrorist planners can
envision what was once unthinkable: large numbers of simultaneous suicide
operations, carried out by teams of "self-martyrs."
Paradoxically, the Middle East itself is less vulnerable to extremist violence
than it was a few years ago. The regimes in most countries — most notably,
Egypt, Algeria, and Saudi Arabia — have suppressed their own Muslim opponents.
But the regimes have opened a "safety valve" — not against
themselves, but against America. As a result, the region is awash in incitement.
This has combined with a moral timidity among Muslim moderates. They have
condemned and disavowed the atrocities in New York and Washington, and there is
no reason to doubt their sincerity. But these same people were silent in the
face of similar deeds, done on a smaller scale in other places. Each small
outrage undermined those very religious inhibitions that might have prevented
last week's mass murder. And in a globalized world, a red line erased in the
Middle East is erased everywhere.
In recent years, some Western observers of Islam have claimed that it is moving
toward an enlightened reformation. What happened last week was the opposite: a
dangerous slide toward a medieval holy war. To stop the regression, the moderate
majority will have to argue against the mobilization of Islamic religion for
war. Individuals may rely on their faith to inspire them in adversity. Religion
may be invoked at times of loss. But it is impossible to deploy religion to
justify killing and self-immolation, without undermining the foundations of the
religion itself.
In the pained expressions of decent Muslims, there is more than regret at
America's loss. There is a growing realization that the men who brought down the
twin towers put Islam in peril. Only Muslims can redeem it.
This commentary originally appeared in National Review Online on September 19, 2001.