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Islamic Moderates and The Great Theft 
By Paco Pond 
   ( Paco Pond a Blog Name  teaches, and  runs at 
least one marathon a year, and has published poetry, reviews, and literary 
criticism.) 
Monday, October 30, 2006
 I walked into the house after work today and turned on my radio to hear
National Public Radio interviewing Khaled Abou El Fadl. I've never heard the 
man's voice, but intuitively I knew who I was hearing. I have been reading his 
book 
The Great Theft: Wrestling Islam From the Extremists. I quote from the 
dust jacket, "Dr. Khaled Abou El Fadl is one of the most important and 
influential Islamic thinkers in the modern age. An accomplished Islamic jurist 
and scholar, he is a professor at the UCLA School of Law, where he teaches 
Islamic law, immigration law, human rights law, and international and national 
security law. As the most critical and powerful voice against puritanical and 
Wahhabi Islam today, he regularly appears on national and international 
television and radio...."
 Part one of his book, titled "The Battleground for Faith" depicts the 
contemporary struggle between the forces within Islam that he characterizes as 
moderation and puritanism. His account of the "Islamic Reformation" so closely 
parallels the account I published a while back that it was a fascinating 
experience to find my own speculations confirmed by an Islamic jurist and 
contemporary legal scholar. Indeed, if one read El Fadl, one might suspect me of 
academic kidnapping. But the truth is, I had only encountered this author once 
or twice on the internet and in an excellent essay "The Ugly Modern and the 
Modern Ugly" in Omid Safi's compilation, Progressive Muslims. The idea 
of "Islamic Renaissance" is in the air elsewhere, but it is most clearly 
articulated in The Great Theft.
 Khaled Abou El Fadl emphasizes the moderate traditions of his faith. As a 
religion without a hierarchy, structurally akin to Judaism in that its clergy 
were lay scholars who won reputations for scholarship, piety, and good sense. 
Muslims traditionally recognized that opinions on aspects of ritual and law 
varied significantly, depending on the interpretation of the alim, (or mullah, 
shaykh, or imam, all basically equivalent titles). A central text of Islam is 
the Qur'anic statement "there is no compulsion in religion." Muslims, El Fadl 
says, have for centuries lived among co-religionists whose practice of the faith 
varied in significant ways. All this began to change with Muhammad bin "Abd 
al-Wahhab, who died in 1792, the leader of an extremely puritannical, 
intolerant, zealous, and violent strain of Islam, which by historical 
contingency allied itself with the al Saud family that ultimately took control 
of most of the Arab Peninsula (ironically, with the aid of British weapons) in 
the 1930s.
 The story of the Wahabis in Arabia has been told many times before. El Fadl 
believes that Wahabism might well have been gradually marginalized and minimized 
as have been other militant Muslims sects in the past, such as the Assassins. 
But a combination of the guardianship of the Holy Places and, starting in the 
1970s, the deliberate and systematic Wahabi evangelism financed by petrodollars 
and orchestrated by the Saudi state, has led to a radicalism of large points of 
the Ummah, the Muslim community. The Saudis offered paid sabbaticals, teaching 
positions, grants and financial aid, and subsidized book sales of scholars who 
agreed with them. Even without resorting to declaring their Muslim opponents to 
be apostates, the Saudi Wahabists have spread their austere and rigorous brand 
of the faith.
 El Fadl is concerned, as one might expect of a scholar, about words. In the 
story linked above, he takes issue with the term "jihadi." In addition to the 
military denotation of the term, he sees the word as meaning "struggling for the 
way of God." Therefore, he sees his struggle against Wahabism as a jihadist one, 
albeit a nonviolent jihad. He also calls his opponents puritans rather than 
"fundamentalists," primarily because the latter word has highly positive 
connotations in Arabic translation. Likewise, he refers to the humanistic type 
of Islam that he espouses as "moderate" rather than "liberal" or "progressive."
 Incidentally, one of the most interesting points he makes is that salafism, or 
the turning back to the acts and decisions of the Prophet and the first two 
generations of successors as a guide to what Islam should be, was originally a 
liberal idea. Salafism tried to cut through the thicket of centuries of Islamic 
jurisprudence, but eventually the movement merged with Wahabism to the extent 
that there is no significant practical distinction between the two movements any 
more.
 I have been reading about moderate Islam recently. El Fadl is a significant and 
powerful voice opposing the murderous ideologies that countenance the killing of 
Muslims who do not follow every detail of Wahabist custom, who believe that 
Allah wants Muslims to kill the Jews, and who justify mass murder and terror in 
the name of Allah, the Merciful, the Beneficent.
 On my desk I also have a recently-secured copy of 
Milestones, by Sayyid Qutb, the ideological font of both the Muslim 
Brotherhoods and al Qaeda. I'll report on my readings soon.
   Source: 
http://pacopond.blogspot.com/2006/10/islamic-moderates-and-great-theft.html |