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SECULAR MUSLIMS: Does Islam need reformation?
 
March 25, 2007 MOHAMMAD 
ILYAS, M.D., Jacksonville 
  Over the 
last two decades, we have seen a vast number of efforts to reform Islam so it 
would be more compatible to Western values.
 Several small, proclaimed reform movements are trying to correct the assumed 
wrongness of Islam and call for an Islamic reformation.
 
 These self-proclaimed secularists represent only a small minority of Muslims. 
The majority of Muslims, not only in the United States but worldwide, have 
different opinions. Yet, the media, governments and neoconservative pundits pay 
more attention to the secular minority.
 
 The secular Muslim agenda is promoted because these ideas reflect a Western 
vision for the future of Islam.
 
 Since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, many people, including high-ranking officials 
in the Bush administration, have prescribed to a preferred remedy for Islam: 
Reform the faith so it is imbued with Western values - the privatization of 
religion and outsourcing democracy.
 
 The rulers in Muslim countries who are secular are labeled good Muslims. The 
problem with this prescription is that it is far from reality.
 
 Consider the facts: Islamic renaissance has spread across the globe in the past 
60 years from the East to West.
 
 In Egypt, it is hard to find a woman on the street who does not wear a head 
scarf.
 
 Islamic political groups and movements are on the rise. Even in the United 
States, more and more Americans are curious about Islam, particularly the young. 
Some are embracing Islam.
 
 In Europe and the United States, where Muslims have maximum exposure to Western 
culture, they are increasingly embracing Islamic values.
 
 In Britain, a growing number of Muslims advocate creating a court system based 
upon Islamic principles.
 
 What all this means is that Western hopes for full integration by Muslims in the 
West are unlikely to be realized, and the future of the Islamic world will be 
much more Islamic than Western.
 
 Instead of championing the loud voices of the secular minority who are capturing 
media attention with their conferences, manifestos and memoirs, the United 
States would be wise instead to pay more attention to the far less loquacious 
majority.
 
 
 
 http://as-clips.blogspot.com/2007/08/secular-muslims-does-islam-need.html |