From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Fri Jul 12 2002 - 17:05:48 MDT
Islam's War Against the West: Can It Abide a Secular State?
by Anthony Flew
        In his letter inviting me to contribute to this issue of FREE 
INQUIRY, the editor referred to "the thesis expressed by Paul Kurtz, Ibn 
Warraq, and others "that the terrorist attacks on New York City and 
Washington, D.C., 'were profoundly religious acts'"; it went on to say 
that I had "made predictions about the likelihood of religious terrorism 
that have proven horribly correct".  Indeed I had (1).  But why does 
anyone pretend that these were not profoundly religious acts when 
Usama Bin Laden himself insists that they were? (2)
        With the general public the main reason for this pretense is 
presumably a nearly if not quite total ignorance of Islamic teachings.  
But any responsible politician in any of those Christian or post-Christian 
countries that since World War II have been subjected to substantial 
immigrations from Muslims must, whatever the extent of their knowledge 
of the teachings of Islam, feel a heavy duty to do all they can to spread 
the conviction - at least among the members and descendants of those 
immigrants - that Usama bin Laden's terrorist war against the United 
States and its allies is radically incompatible with the actual teachings 
of the Prophet Muhammad.
        But FREE INQUIRY is not a political journal.  Our concern here 
is, therefore, solely with the truth.  And the truth is that whereas 
Christianity, for the first three centuries of its remarkable expansion in 
the face of successive persecutions, made all its converts by peaceful 
individual persuasion, Islam already during the later years of the 
prophet's own lifetime - from the time of the move from Mecca to 
Medina - was gaining most of its converts in consequence of military 
victories (3).  And after his death Islam soon showed itself to be - in 
post-Marxian terms - the uniting and justifying ideology of Arab 
imperialism.  This beginning has had, as we shall see, lasting 
consequences for the relations between Islam and all other religions.
        When in 1920 Bertrand Russell visited the USSR - decades 
before the Politburo found it convenient to present itself as the protector 
of the Arabs - he discerned similarities between Bolshevism and Islam: 
"Bolshevism combines the characteristics of the french Revolution with 
thise of the rise of Islam"(4); and "Marx has taught that Communism is 
fatally predestined to come about; this produces a state of mind not 
unlike that of the early successors of Mahommet"(5).  So Russell 
himself concluded: "Mahommedanism and Bolshevism are practical, 
social, unspiritual, concerned to win the empire of this world.   What 
Mahommedanism did for the Arabs, BVolshevism may do for the 
Russians"(6).
        As a clear, commendably honest, and altogether authoritative 
epitome of the totalitarian character of Islam, consider this manifesto 
issued in Leicester, England, on behalf of the Islamic Council of 
Europe:
        "The religion of Islam embodies the final and most complete   
word of God...Departmentalization of life into different atertight 
compartments, religious and secular, sacred and profane, spiritual and 
material is ruled out...Islam is not a religion in the Western 
understanding of the word.  It is a faith and a way of life, a religion and a 
social order, a doctrine and a code of conduct, a set of values and 
principles, and a social movement to realize them in history." [emphasis 
supplied]
        In this we have a statement that satisfactorily transcends all 
differences within and between various Muslim communities, such as 
those between Sunni and Shi'a, or between the so-called 
fundamentalists and their opponents.  The term fundamentalist is 
anyway in the present case peculiarly inappropriate.  It is derived from 
the title of a series of tracts - The Fundamentals - published in the 
United States in 1909; and it is defined as the belief that the Bible, as 
the Word of God, is wholly, literally, and infallibly true - a belief that, 
notoriously, commits fundamentalist Christians to defending the 
historicity of the accounts of Creation given in the first two chapters of 
Genesis.  To rate as truly a Christian it is by no means necessary to be 
in this understanding fundamentalist.  It is instead fully sufficient to 
accept the Apostles' and/or the Nicene Creed wholeheartedly.  But in 
order to be properly accounted a Muslim it is essential to be a 
fundamentalist with regard to (not the Bible but) the Qu'ran.
        It was his recognition of the truth of those last two heavily 
emphasized sentences of that statement made on behalf of the Islamic 
Concil of Europe that provoked the conservative prime minister of Italy, 
Silvio Berlusconi, in the last week of September 2001, boldly to insist 
that "We must be aware of the superiority of pur civilization, a system 
that has guaranteed the well-being, respect for human rights and - in 
contrast with Islamic countries - respect for religious and political 
rights."
        Just as son as they learned that Berlusconi had uttered these 
words, a bevy of European politicians rushed forward to denounce him.  
The Belgian prime minister, Guy Verhofstadt, said, "I can hardly believe 
that the Italian prime minister made such statements."  The spokesman 
for the European Commission, Jean-Christophe Filori, added: "We 
certainly do not share the views expressed by Signor Berlusconi."  
Italy's center-left opposition spokesman Giovanni Berlinguer called the 
words of Berlusconi "eccentric and dangerous".  Within days he was 
effectively forced to withdraw those politically most incorrect words.
ISLAM AND THE STATE
        One especially good way of revealing the practical 
consequences of Islam's not being "a religion in the Western 
understanding of the word" but being instead "a religion and a social 
order, a doctrine and...a set of values and principles and a social 
movement to realize them in history" is by considering the history of the 
creation of Pakistan (7).
        When in India during the 1920's M. A. Ansari was promoting the 
Nationalist Muslim Party, he did this in the belief that a future whole-
continent state of independent India could be religiously neutral, to the 
extent of accommodating both Hndus and Muslims as equal citizens.  
But his party failed to win substantial Muslim support.  Instead there 
was among Muslims in India throughout that decade a general retreat 
from the original idea of all-Indian nationalism towards the eventually 
realized ideal of the two separate communities of Hindus and Muslims 
forming two separate independent states.
        The Muslims in fact opted decisively for an exclusively religious 
rather than a secular pluralist identity.  It proved impossible for Ansari 
or anyone else to overcome this Islamic predisposition and to persuade 
the majority of Indian Muslims to be willing to coexist with Indian Hindus 
in the secular nation state envisaged by Nehru, the leader of the Indian 
National Congress.  Nehru had declared: "There shall be no state 
religion...nor shall the state either directly or indirectly endow any 
religion..."
        As early as April 1929 the Muslim League founder Muhhamad 
Ali Jinnah (8) had opposed that ideal with his Fourteen Points.  In these 
he had insisted that state neutrality was not enough and that it was 
state support that Muslims demanded.  This Muslim position had 
already been foreshadowed as early as 1870, when varoius imams in 
Northern india issued a famous fatwa to the effect that India was Dar-al-
Islam - "Islamic Territory" - in virtue of the positive protection given to 
Islamic observance by the laws of the (British) Indian Empire.
        When in 1906 the newly elected (classically) Liberal 
administration in London took some very small and tentative initial steps 
toward the ultimate establishment of an independent, democratically 
self-governing nation state in India, it began to discover what it was 
extremely reluctant to learn, that a secular, pluralist state grounded in 
universal adult suffrage was unacceptable to Muslims.
        It was and is unacceptable because it is, apparently, contrary to 
the Islamic dhimma (9).  Thius excluded all non-Muslims other than 
"People of the Book" from any political rights whatever.  "People of the 
Book" - mainly if not solely Christians and jews - are tolerated as 
tribute-paying citizens of an Islamic state, though without any form of 
franchise beyond their own religious community.
        In the Indian case, the subsequent course of events is fairly 
well known.  Muslims, having rejected the all-Indian nationalism 
espoused by Ansari, were unable to reconcile themselves to the 
prospect of citizenship in a secular, pluralist state.  In 1940 the Muslim 
League, unwilling to tolerate the consequences of the wider franchise 
that this required, demanded and was given what amounted to a 
constitutional veto.  The eventual independence agreement in 1947 
resulted, after a huge amount of inter-communal slaughter (10), in the 
separation from India of the principal overwhelmingly Muslim areas 
other than Kashmir, and the consequent emergence of East and West 
Pakistan.  Kashmir was retained by India because its hereditary ruler 
was a Hindu and Nehru himself was a Kashmiri Brahmin.  As for east 
Pakistan, it eventually became Bangladesh.
        Since then, whereas India has achieved an unblemished record 
of democratic self-government, becoming by far the most populous 
democracy in the world (11), Pakistan and the two other provinces of 
the former British Empire in which Muslims formed a very substantial 
majority have not.  About Pakistan no more need be said here than that, 
at the time of writing, a Pakistani academic was under prosecution for 
the capital offence of defection from Islam.
        The first communal catastrophe in Nigeria after its 
independence was a civil war in which the Muslim and animist majority 
suppressed an independence revolt by the Christian Ibo.  In the 
suppression of this revolt at least a million Ibo lost their lives.  When 
later, in 1973, a military coup overthrew an administration that was said 
to have been outstandingly corrupt even by Nigerian standards, but 
which had been elected on an adult franchise that included Christians 
and animists as well as Muslims, students at Beyero, Kano and other 
universities in the overwhelmingly Muslim part of the country paraded 
carrying banners which proclaimed in Hausa, Arabic, and English: 
"Democracy is unbelief: We do not want a constitution, We want 
government by Qu'ran alone."
        The second of those "two other provinces of the former british 
Empire in which Muslims formed a very substantial majority" was what 
in the days of that Empire was called the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan.  This 
has become by far the worst case of all.  For, over many years, forces 
of different kinds from the overwhelmingly Muslim north have been 
striving by different methods and with different degrees of intensity to 
subjugate the equally overwhelmingly Christian and animist south.  
Most recently and most scandalously, the northern authorities have 
been permitting if not positively encouraging brown-skinned Muslims 
from the north to enslave blacks, and particularly Christian Blacks in the 
south (12).
TRANSFORMING SOCIETIES - AND THE WORLD
        It has long been obvious that the same Islamic predispositions - 
an inability to come to terms with state secularism, religious pluralism, 
and universal adult suffrage, of which the mirror image is a visceral 
longing for the hermetic and exsclusive theocracy of traditional Islam - 
has been forming the attitudes of the Muslim immigrant population of 
Western Europe, especially Britain, in much the same measure as they 
have those of Muslims elsewhere, confronted with democratic pluralism.  
A general statement of the Muslim position will be found in Sheikh 
Shabbir Akhtar's Be Careful with Muhammed: the Salman Rushdie 
Affair (13).  This is far more than just a defense of the Muslim stand in 
that affair.  despite the author's protestations to the contrary, it is 
difficult to see it as other than an implicit justification of the Muslims' 
right to set up an Islamic theocracy in Britain as being what he 
considers to be the only solution to the problem of the Muslim theocrat's 
irreconcilable confrontation with secularism.  He says:
        "Yet one needs to rise above one's ethnocentricity to see what 
cultural memories the democracy evokes in the Muslim mind.  For 
theocracy is as precious to Muslims as democracy is to Westerners..."
        I myself have no difficulty at all in understanding "what cultural 
memories theocracy evokes in the muslim mind."  But, as usual refusing 
to heed calls for political correctness, I insist on saying that I have 
myself no sympathy whatsoever for the egregious arrogance of this 
demand from recent immigrants into my native land.  If they truly find 
life in a secular state intolerable, why do they not now return to the 
Islamic states from which they came rather than demanding that the 
host country make radical constitutional changes to accommodate 
them?
        It is characteristic of a secular, pluralist democracy that all 
religious beliefs are tolerated as long as they remain, within reason, 
within the limits of personal belief and do not impinge unduly upon 
those who do not share those beliefs.  Or, to put it another way, while 
religious beliefs are tolerated, religious practices and institutions may 
not necessarily be accorded the same freedom if they conflict with the 
law or constitution of the wider state.  But this "live and let live" 
approach is apparently unacceptable to many Muslim spokesmen, of 
whose attitudes the following quotation is typical: "The implementation 
of Islam as a complete code of life cannot be limited to the home and to 
personal relationships.  It is to be sought and achieved in society as a 
whole."
        Those words were preached from the minbar of bradford, 
England's mosque.  A well-known imam in France is reported as 
preaching to the effect that, "There can be no government contrary to 
what god has revealed" (in the Qu'ran).  He concludes that it is the duty 
of every Muslim to overthrow every power "which governs in 
contravention of that which God enjoins and (to bring about) the 
erection of the Islamic state."  In more moderate terms, but to the same 
effect, Sheikh Shabbir Akhtar says:
        "Our inherited (Islamic) understanding of religious freedom, of 
the nature and role of religion in society, is in the last analysis being 
fundamentally challenged by the new religious pluralism in Britain."
        Behind this, too, surely lies the plea articulated by Jinnah, that 
Islam must be protected from the consequences of democratic 
pluralism.
        Perhaps the most direct expression of Muslim defiance of 
western-style democracy is the following, uncompromising statement 
issued jointly by the two most representative Islamic organizations in 
Britain, the Islamic Academy of Cambridge, and the islamic Cultural 
Centre of London.  This statement insists that the Muslim community: 
"cannot commit itself to follow all 'current laws' however antireligious 
these laws may become through democratic means" (emphasis 
supplied).
        Quotations are given to illustrate Muslim attitudes of discontent 
with state neutrality towards Islam; a visceral objection to living under 
pluralist dispensation; an inability to accept the authority of democratic 
decision-making when this conflicts with revelation; and a refusal to 
contemplate the possibility of Islam existing simply as a personal belief 
system, shorn of its political and social institutions.  Such quotations 
could be multiplied indefinitely.  They are clearly constants of the 
Muslim world outlook whether in the context of post-imperial India, 
Nigeria, the Sudan, or Muslim settlement in Western Europe.
        The nature of this world outlook can be further elucidated by 
expounding the views of Dr. Kalim Siddiqui, director of the London 
Muslim Institute.  He became locally nototious by publicly calling for 
Muslims to murder salman Rushdie, author of The Satanic Verses, an 
indisputably criminal offence for which, since he was an Arab Muslim, 
he was of course neither arrested nor prosecuted.  Siddiqui is the 
moving spirit of an international Islamic tendency inspired by Ayatolluh 
Khomeini's Iranian Revolution.  The aims of this tendency are set out as 
follows:
        "...to eliminate all authority other than Allah and His Prophet; to 
eliminate nationalism in all its shapes and forms, in particulae the 
nation-State; to unite all Islamic movements into a single global Islamic 
movement to establish the Islamic State; to re-establish a dominant and 
global Islamic civilization based on the concept of Tawheed [the unity of 
Allah]."
        Nationalism, the nation-state, and democracy for Siddiqui 
represent Kufr, literally infidelity but equivalent in modern context to 
atheism.  Thus the greatest political Kufr in the modern world is 
nationalism, followed closely by democracy ("sovereignty of the 
people"), socialism ("dictatorship of the proletariat"), capitalism, and 
free elections.  and "modern Kufr has disguised itself as science, 
philosophy, technology, democracy and 'progress.'"  On the contrary, 
the "political party framework as found in Western 'democracies' is 
divisive of the society and therefore does not suit the Ummah" (the 
world-wide Islamic community).  He concludes that "one Ummah must 
mean one Islamic movement, leading to one global Islamic State under 
one Imam/Khalifa [Caliph}."
        For Siddiqui, "there is no compatibility whatsoever between 
Islam and the west" and the Islamic Movement "regards the west as 
totally incompatible with Islam."  The notion that a Muslim may live 
under the government a of non-Islamic nation-state and still practice his 
Islam as a personal belief system is apparently unacceptable to 
Siddiqui, for "A Muslim can neither live the 'good life' on his own nor 
pursue 'personal taqwa' [faithfulness to Allah] in isolation."  Dr. Siddiqui 
concluded one of his published essays with the following rallying cry, 
addressed to his fellow Muslims among whom, one must assume, are 
those in Britain:
        "Just as the power and influence of kufr in the modern world is 
global, so are the bonds of faith and destiny of the Muslim Immah.  
History has come full circle.  The global power of kufr waits to be 
challenged and defeated by the global power of Islam.  This is the 
unfinished business of history, so let us go ahead and finish it."
        The achievement of Siddiqui's aims certainly does not exclude 
armed force: "Lightly-armed muttawi [faithful to Allah] soldiers who go 
out to fight and die for islam are more powerful than the heavily-armed 
professional soldiers who fear death."
        Moreover, the odds are in Islam's favor: "with a population of 
almost one billion and with infinite sources of wealth, you can defeat all 
the powers."  It is therefore possible for the Muslims to bring about "the 
total transformation of the world."
        Dr. Siddiqui is particularly scornful of the compromisers who 
have been trying to prove Islam compatible with their secular ambitions 
and Western preferences, and contemptuous of those who seek to set 
up "a liberal and democratic nation-state with a few cosmetic 'Islamic' 
features."
RESISTANCE TO REFORM
        The moral from all that british material is absolutely clear.  If we 
are to understand the nature of islam, and to meet and overcome the 
threat that it presents to the entire Western world, we have now to 
abandon assumptions that were sufficiently realistic when we were 
dealing with earlier threats to that world.  Before World War II, for 
instance, it was common to speak of the United States as a tri-faith 
country.During that war a popular song insisted that the "Siths and the 
Jones, the kellys and Cohns" were all equally committed to the war 
effort of the U.S.A.   That was their country as Americans, regardless of 
their present religious beliefs or the countries from which their parents 
or grandparents had originated.  After that war, President Eisenhower 
made a remark that my theologian father thought could only have been 
made by an American president: "Everyone must have a religion, and I 
don't care what it is."  Such indifference was all very well, indeed 
properly presidential, at a time when the United States had no 
significant number of Muslim citizens.
        Certainly it is possible for people professedly committed to 
aggressively incompatible religious beliefs to live together in friendly 
toleration.  But this is achieved only by the more or less conscious and 
explicit abandonment of those of their pretended beliefs that would 
make such friendly and tolerant cohabitation impossible.  So the 
possibility of such cohabitation is irrelevant to the question of what the 
relevant teachings of the Qu'ran actually are.  But because of these 
possibilities of friendly cohabitation it was not preposterous for 
President Bill Clinton to say in 1994, in an address to the Jordanian 
Parliament:
        "After all, the chance to live in harmony with our neighbors and 
to build a better life for our children is the hope that binds us all 
together.  Whether we worship in a mosque in Irbid, a Baptist church 
like my own in Little Rock, Arkansas, or a synagogue in Haifa, we are 
bound together by that hope."
        It was not preposterous for President clinton to say this in an 
address to the parliament of a country of which almost the entire 
population is Muslim.  For Jordan - unlike, for instance, Iraq and saudi 
Arabia - does have an effective parliament, and its king at that time was 
a man who had made peace with israel and succeeded in defeating a 
terrorist offensive against his own country (14).  But for an account of 
the actual teaching sof the Qu'ran and of their great and growing threat 
to western civilization it will be instructive to attend to a warning from an 
earlier century.
        Sir William Muir's Life of Mahomet, based on original Muslim 
sources, appeared in Edinburgh in four volumes between 1856 and 
1861.  muir's judgment on the life, which was to be repeated over and 
over again by subsequent scholars, was based upon a distinction 
between its earlier Meccan and later medinan period.  In Mecca, 
Muhammed was a sincere, religiously motivated seeker after truth.  In 
Medina, Muhammed the man showed his feet of clay, and was 
corrupted by power and by worldly ambitions.
        Muir went on th say that so long as the Qu'ran remained the 
standard of Islamic belief certain evils would continue to flourish: 
"Polygamy, divorce and slavery strike at the root of public morals, 
poison domestic life, and disorganize society; while the Veil removes 
the female sex from its just position and influence in the 
world...Freedom of thought and private judgment are crushed and 
ahhihilated.  Toleration is unknown, and the possibility of free and 
liberal institutions is foreclosed (15)."  Muir's final judgment was: "The 
sword of mahomet and the Coran [the Qu'ran] are the most stubborn 
enemies of Civilization, Liberty and Truth which the world has yet 
known (16)."
Anthony Flew is professor emeritus of philosophy, Reading University 
(UK)
NOTES
        1)  They can be found in Paul Kurtz, ed., Skeptical Odysseys 
(Amherst, NY; Prometheus, 2001), p. 377.  My earlier paper on "The 
Terrors of Islam" is included in Paul Kurtz, ed. Challenges to the 
Enlightenment (Buffalo, Prometheus 1994).
        2)  See, for instance, his 1998 interview with al-Jazeera Arab 
TV Channel, published in the UK, in The Sunday Telegraph on October 
7, 2001.
        3)  See Ibn Warraq, Why I Am Not a Muslim (Amherst, NY; 
Prometheus, 1995), p. 115, pp. 122-123, and pp. 163-164.
        4)  The Practice and Theory of Bolshevism (London: Allen and 
Unwin, 2nd ed., 1962) p. 7
        5)  Ibid., p. 27
        6)  Ibid., p. 74
        7)  In doing this I am exploiting a comparative advantage.  For I 
am not only british myself, but my also-British wife was born in Burma, 
the daughter of a father serving in the Indian Civil Service, an institution 
of which several of my own father's Oxford friends served.  My father-in-
law was the first of the senior British officials to say that britain must, as 
it soon did, do a deal with the burmese Nationalist leader U Aung San, 
despite his period of collaboration with the Japanese, because he was 
so clearly an honorable man.  The entire surviving family were both 
proud and delighted that the memorial celebratum for my father-in-law's 
life was attended by the husband of U Aung San's daughter, Daw Aung 
San Soo Kyi.  She might well have attended herself had she not then 
been, as she still is of this writing, under house arrest for the offence of 
winning an election.
        8)  Muhammed Ali Jinnah (1876-1948), founder of the state of 
Pakistan.
        9)  See Mervyn Hiskett, Some to Mecca Turn to Pray (London: 
Claridge, 1993).  Hiskett was a lecturer in Islamic studies in the London 
School of Oriental and African Studies.
        10) There was slaughter of members of the Muslim community 
by members of the Hindu "community" and vice-versa.
        11) It is a matter of fact, and I believe significant, that the only 
provinces of the former british Empire where the population was and is 
not White that have matched this achievement are those of the 
Caribbean and the Indian subcontinent, which had both been under 
British rule for over a hundred years and had become enthusiasts for 
the game of cricket.  As a former prime minister of Barbados said, after 
his party had been defeated in a general election: "The religion of my 
people is cricket and in cricket the umpire's decision is final."
        12) Reliable evidence about this extremely remote and 
inaccessible area is hard to come by.  But there can be no reasonable 
doubt about the fact of the enslaving of several Christian Blacks in that 
region.  For my friend the Baroness Cox has undertaken several 
missions to purchase and thus to free such slaves, and has been 
reproached for so doing on the grounds that such emancipatings, in 
that nightmare region, actually encourage further enslavings.
        13) London: Belew, 1989.
        14) His successor shosw every sigh of following in his father's 
admirable footsteps.  On his visit to london in November 2001 he was 
reported as saying: "The events of September 11 were plainly and 
simply an affront to all humanity.  That is the view of the too rarely 
heard Arab majority."
        15) I should very much like to know how many of those 
Departments of Women's Studies, which it seems are now to be found 
on almost if not quite all the university campuses in the USA., students 
are required to study the impact upon the lives of women of the 
imposition of the Sharia.  If, as I suspect, the answer is very few, then 
the publication of the findings of research showing this to be the case 
would surely have a salutatory effect.
        16)Vol. I, pp. 503-06.
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