From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Sun Sep 15 2002 - 20:29:06 MDT
September 11, Islam, and a 
history of hatred
September 16 2002
Muslim frustration and anger, building for centuries, have 
reached a climax in our time, writes Bernard Lewis.
The immediate, general reaction as the facts of what happened on 
September 11, 2001, became known was one of utter 
astonishment. Most people in the Western world find it 
impossible to understand the motives and purposes that drove the 
perpetrators of these crimes, those who sent them and those who 
applauded them with song and dance in the streets.
Why would anyone be willing to sacrifice his own life to 
accomplish the random slaughter of other people selected merely 
by the place where they happen to be, irrespective of age, sex, 
nationality and religion?
This indifference to the suffering of others, even of their own 
people, is a common feature not of Islam as a religion but of these 
terrorist movements and of the regimes that use them. The motive, 
clearly, is hatred, and from then until now the question is being 
asked, with urgency and bewilderment: "Why do they hate us 
Americans so?"
At one level the answer is obvious. It is difficult if not impossible 
to be strong and successful and to be loved by those who are 
neither. The same kind of envious rancour can sometimes be seen 
in Europe, where attitudes to the US are often distorted by the 
feeling of having been overtaken, surpassed and in a sense 
superseded by the upstart society in the West. This feeling, with 
far deeper roots and greater intensity, affects attitudes in the 
Muslim world towards the Western world or, as they would put it, 
the infidel countries and societies that now dominate the world.
Most Muslims, unlike most Americans, have an intense historical 
awareness and see current events in a much deeper and broader 
perspective than Westerners normally do. And what they see is, 
for them, profoundly tragic.
For many centuries Islam was the greatest civilisation on earth - 
the richest, the most powerful, the most creative in every 
significant field of human endeavour. Its armies, its teachers and 
its traders were advancing on every front in Asia, in Africa, in 
Europe, bringing, as they saw it, civilisation and religion to the 
infidel barbarians who lived beyond the Muslim frontier.
And then everything changed, and Muslims, instead of invading 
and dominating Christendom, were invaded and dominated by 
Christian powers. The resulting frustration and anger at what 
seemed to them a reversal of both natural and divine law have 
been growing for centuries, and have reached a climax in our own 
time. These feelings find expression in many places where 
Muslims and non-Muslims meet and clash - in Bosnia and 
Kosovo, Chechnya, Israel and Palestine, Sudan, Kashmir and the 
Philippines, among others.
The prime target of the resulting anger is, inevitably, the US, now 
the unchallenged leader of what we like to call the free world and 
what others variously define as the West, Christendom and the 
world of the unbelievers.
For a long time politicians in Arab and some other Third World 
countries were able to achieve at least some of their purposes by 
playing the rival outside powers against one another - France 
against Britain, the Axis (German, Italy, and Japan up to WWII) 
against the Allies, the Soviet Union against the US. And then, 
with the collapse of the Soviet Union, came a truly radical change. 
Now, for the first time, there is only one superpower, dominant, 
however unwillingly, in the world: the United States.
Some Arab leaders try frantically to find a substitute for the Soviet 
Union as patron and protector of anti-American causes. Others, 
notably Osama bin Laden, took a different view. As they saw it, it 
was they who, by the holy war they waged in Afghanistan, brought 
about the defeat and collapse of the Soviet Union. From their 
perspective, they had dealt with one of the infidel superpowers - 
the more determined, the more ruthless, the more dangerous of the 
two. Dealing with the soft and pampered US would, so it seemed, 
be a much easier task.
The reasons for hatred are known and historically attested; the 
hatred has been growing steadily for many years and has been 
intensified by the conduct of some of the rulers whom America 
calls friends and allies and whom their own people see and resent 
as American puppets. A more important question is the reason for 
the contempt with which they regard the US. The basic reason for 
this contempt is what they perceive as the rampant immorality and 
degeneracy of the American way - contemptible but also 
dangerous, because of its corrupting influence on Muslim 
societies. What did the Ayatollah Khomeini mean when he 
repeatedly called America the "Great Satan"? The answer is clear. 
Satan is not an invader, an imperialist, an exploiter. He is a 
tempter, a seducer, who, in the words of the Koran, "whispers in 
the hearts of men".
Another aspect of this contempt is expressed again and again in 
the statements of bin Laden and others like him. The refrain is 
always the same. Because of their depraved and self-indulgent 
way of life, Americans have become soft and cannot take 
casualties. And then they repeat the same litany - Vietnam, the 
Marines in Beirut, Somalia. Hit them and they will run. More 
recent attacks confirmed this judgment in their eyes - on the 
World Trade Centre in New York in 1993; on the US mission in 
Riyadh in 1995; on the military living quarters in Khobar in Saudi 
Arabia in 1996; the embassies in East Africa in 1998; on the USS 
Cole in Yemen in October, 2000 - all those brought only angry but 
empty words and, at most, a few misdirected missiles.
The immediate and effective response against their bases in 
Afghanistan must have come as a serious shock to the terrorist 
organisations and compelled some revision of their earlier 
assessment of American weakness and demoralisation. The US 
must make sure they are not misled, by the unfamiliar processes 
of a democratic society, to return to that earlier misjudgment.
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2002/09/11/1031608270449.
html
Bernard Lewis is professor emeritus of Near Eastern studies at 
Princeton University. His most recent book is What Went Wrong? 
Western Impact and Middle Eastern Response. This article first 
appeared in The Washington Post.
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