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		What's 
		your problem with Islam? 
		  
		By Timothy Garton AshTIMOTHY GARTON ASH is the professor of European studies at Oxford 
		University and a Hoover Institution senior fellow.
 
 September 15, 2005
 
 SITTING IN THE CAPITAL of the Islamic Republic of Iran, with a metal 
		arrow on the ceiling of my hotel room pointing to Mecca, I feel impelled 
		to write about our troubles with Islam. Four years after the Sept. 11 
		attacks on New York and Washington, which were perpetrated in the name 
		of Allah, most people in what we still loosely call the West would agree 
		that we do have troubles with Islam.
 
 Why? What's the nub of the problem? Here are six different views often 
		heard in the West but also, it's important to add, in Muslim countries 
		such as Iran. As you go down the list, consider which one matches your 
		opinion.
 
 1. The fundamental problem is not just Islam but religion itself. The 
		world would be a much better place if everyone understood the truths 
		revealed by science, had confidence in human reason and embraced secular 
		humanism. What we need is not just a secular state but a secular 
		society.
 
 This is a view held by many highly educated people in the post-Christian 
		West, especially in Western Europe. If translated directly into a 
		political prescription, it has the drawback of requiring that 3 billion 
		to 5 billion men and women abandon their fundamental beliefs. Nor has 
		the track record of purely secular regimes over the last 100 years been 
		altogether inspiring.
 
 2. The fundamental problem is not religion itself but the particular 
		religion of Islam. It does not allow the separation of church and state, 
		religion and politics. The fact that an Iranian newspaper gives the year 
		as 1384 points to a larger truth: Islam is stuck in the Middle Ages. 
		What it needs is its Reformation.
 
 Two objections to this widespread view are that it encourages 
		monolithic thinking about Islam and that it is based too much in Western 
		terms (Middle Ages, Reformation). If we mean by Islam "what people 
		calling themselves Muslim actually think, say and do," there is a huge 
		spectrum of different realities.
 
 3. The problem is not Islam but Islamism. Fanatics such as Osama bin 
		Laden have twisted a great religion into the service of hate. We can 
		separate the poisonous fruit from the healthy tree.
 
 This is the view promulgated by George W. Bush and Tony Blair. But then, 
		they're not going to insult millions of Muslim voters and the countries 
		that the West relies on for oil. Do they really believe it? Put them on 
		a truth serum, and I bet they'd be closer to No. 2. On the other hand, 
		this analysis is made with learning and force by distinguished 
		specialists on the Muslim world.
 
 4. The problem is not religion, Islam or even Islamism, but the 
		specific history of the Arabs. Among 22 Arab League members, none is a 
		home-grown democracy. (Iraq now has elements of democracy but hardly 
		home-grown.) This is not a racist claim but an argument about history, 
		economics, political culture, society and a set of failed attempts at 
		post-colonial modernization.
 
 Indeed, there are democracies with Muslim majorities — Turkey, Mali. 
		Columbia University political scientist Alfred Stepan has suggested 
		that, in the democracy stakes, non-Arab Muslim countries have fared 
		roughly as well as non-Muslim countries at a comparable level of 
		economic development. But even in a traditionally anti-Arab country such 
		as Iran, very few people think the trouble is just with Arabia.
 
 5. We, not they, are the root of the problem. From the Crusades to 
		Iraq, Western imperialism, colonialism, Christian and post-Christian 
		ideological hegemonism have themselves created the mortal enemies of 
		Western liberal democracy. And, after causing (via the 
		Holocaust), supporting or at least accepting the establishment of 
		Israel, we have for more than half a century ignored the terrible plight 
		of the Palestinians.
 
 Even if this simplistic version of history were entirely true, we 
		couldn't change the past. But we could acknowledge the historical damage 
		for which we are genuinely responsible. And we could do more to create a 
		free and law-abiding Palestine next to a secure Israel.
 
 6. The most acute tension between the West and Islam comes at the 
		edges where they meet, where young first- or second-generation Muslim 
		immigrants encounter secular modernity. Its seductions attract them, 
		but, repelled by its hedonistic excesses or perhaps disappointed in 
		their secret hopes or their marginalization, a few Muslim young people 
		embrace a fierce, extreme new version of the faith of their fathers.
 
 I wish I could find some compelling evidence against this account. Even 
		if we were to assist at the birth of a free Palestine and pull out of 
		Iraq tomorrow, this problem would remain.
 
 Now, to which of the six views do you subscribe? What we call Islam is a 
		mirror in which we see ourselves. Tell me your Islam and I will tell you 
		who you are.
 Source: 
		
		
		http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-ash15sep15,0,4968389.story   |