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Wednesday, January 21, 2015

The wrong questions..



If there’s one lesson I’ve taken to heart in my time at University it’s to not only become content with giving a satisfying answer to a difficult question but to discern whether the question being asked is itself entirely legitimate. This was sometimes a jarring idea for newcomers to grasp and runs contrary to the conventional notions of “learning” whereby a student is simply seeking out some ethereal “knowledge”, untainted by context or interpretation. This is of course now the basis and an essential component of modern social sciences, to challenge the basis in which assumed “knowledge” is founded. This principle, however, is rarely applied to a larger context, and it was around a few years ago that I began to notice that in popular discourses surrounding the ever pertinent topic of the Middle East and Islam, its bad questions, not bad answers which tend to perpetuate a stale, reductionist rhetoric based more on established narratives rather than insightful observation on whatever issue happens to be in the spotlight. In light of the recent fiasco with Sam Harris and Ben Afleq on Islam as a uniquely oppressive religious tendency, I’d like to draw attention to some of the ever prevalent notions surrounding such discussions which are neither substantiated by evidence nor contribute to our understanding of what is no doubt a cardinal issue.  

Whenever popular commentators speak of Islam, whether from an antagonistic or sympathetic perspective, the question that inevitably arises is how best to reform the religion itself or the context (i.e. “Islamic world”) in which it is contained. The assumption being that the current Islamic mentality is somewhat displaced from modernity, stagnant in the face of changing values and the rapid erosion of traditional social institutions. From the new atheist’s perspective; Islam and more specifically its fundamentalist tendency is a relic of a bygone era, the past haunting the present, a bizarre reactionary movement characterised by its total rejection of Western liberal values. Sam Harris refers to the explosion of Islamic fundamentalism as a portal to a medieval mentality. The reformists, perhaps best represented in the west by figures like Tariq Ramadan whose ideology often coincides with that of progressive liberalism as well as identity politics, similarly lament traditional Islamic institutions which supposedly hinder the religion from harmonising effectively with modern society. This liberal reformist movement often co-opts existing progressive paradigms (LGBT, Feminism, and Scientism), arguing cases for Islamic reform in light of said values.

An unfortunate outcome of this thinking is that it unwittingly legitimises claims by Islamic fundamentalists as champions of Islamic orthodoxy while overlooking nuances in the history of modern Islamic thought which have created our current predicament. The undeniable fact that tends to be ignored in popular discourses is that the Islam that proposed by the fundamentalists is itself a product of modernist reformism, not traditional orthodoxy. Much like evangelical Christianity, what can broadly be defined as modernist Islam is barely a hundred years old. While the new atheists and liberal reforms may attack the established clergy for being out of tune with modern thinking, the fundamentalists are attacking the same clergy on the very same basis. This is the tragic irony that places both critics of Islam, proponents of liberal reformism and fundamentalists on the same boat, and it’s one which is constantly overlooked by the tired line that the likes of ISIS championing a “medieval ideology” which in actuality bears about as much similarity to Islamic medieval theology as Pat Roberson does to St. Francis.