Book Review
Chasing A
Mirage – The Tragic Illusion of an Islamic State.
- Author:
Tarek Fatah
-
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.,
Canada
-
Reviewed
By: Javed I.
Chaudry
It would have been fruitful to the entire
community if FOTH had hosted a debate on this book
in a live forum, but since Javed Chaudry backed
out of the challenge, this cyber discussion is the
next best place.
At the core of all things being discussed is the
notion of jihad. The same jihad that was launched
by Maudoodi against the Ahmadiyas in 1952, which
Tarek Fatah has dwelled on at length in Chasing a
Mirage and which escaped the attention of Javed
Chaudry.
This article by Tarek Fatah and Salma Siddiqui
appeared in the Ottawa Citizen newspaper last week
and should be read by this forum because it gets
to brass tacks of the jihad issue without much
fuss, ripping apart the hypocrisy so many Muslims
spout when defending jihad.
Nargis
------------------------------
What
jihad really means
Instead of condemning extremists,
too many Muslim leaders are protecting them by
hiding behind the supposed peaceful nature of
'jihad'
Tarek Fatah and Salma Siddiqui
Ottawa Citizen
http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/opinion/story.html?id=32f4a299-fce2-4830-a392-15e2b895b0d2
'Had there been Nobel Prizes in 1000, they would
have gone almost exclusively to Muslims." These
are the words of Martin Kramer, a Jewish scholar
of Islam and Arab history, published in the
Jerusalem Post on Dec. 31, 1999.
The question that perplexes the world today is not
just, "what happened to Muslim civilization and
what caused its catastrophic decline in the
millennium that followed?" but also, "why can't
Muslims recover?"
The recent exchange in the Citizen between two
Muslim letter writers provides us with an answer.
The exchange was a window into the ongoing debate
within the Muslim community for the very soul of
Islam. Akbar Hussain had observed, "When the
non-Muslim world says with clear conviction that
Islam propagates extremism, Muslims all around the
world, even the terrorists, cry foul, and declare
that they are maligning Islam."
Respondent Safaa Fouda protested: "Islam as a
faith never made (its) followers extremists,
extremism is an ideology that can emanate from any
background be it religious, political, or
cultural." Ironically, she proved Akbar Hussain's
point by invoking Islam and quoting from the Koran
to deflect criticism of Islamic extremists who
openly march with an AK-47 in one hand and the
Koran in the other.
Today, as Muslims struggle to find their bearings
in a world that is leaving them behind in almost
every aspect of life, a knee-jerk defensiveness
will simply not work. The veil of deception that
is being thrown over the actions and ideology of
jihadis in our midst needs to be ripped off.
Instead of condemning the jihadis, too many Muslim
leaders are defending them by hiding behind the
supposed peaceful nature of "jihad."
At every opportunity they get, Muslim leaders take
to the pulpit and state with disarming smiles and
polite language that jihad is a peaceful exertion
of spiritual warfare waged against oneself --
against one's ego and against one's evil
intentions, a sort of a cleansing of the soul.
This is all true, because the Prophet after
returning from a battle told his colleagues: "You
are returning from a lesser jihad to a greater
jihad," and when asked to clarify, he said the
greater jihad "is the jihad against your
passionate souls."
However, make no mistake: the jihad that Osama bin
Laden has launched against all of us is,
unfortunately, the lesser jihad.
The jihad that Momin Khawaja talks about in his
musings is the jihad of warfare as clearly
enunciated by such 20th-century Islamists of the
Muslim Brotherhood as Syed Qutb and Hassan al-Banna
and Pakistan's Syed Maudoodi.
This triad are ideological gurus of the world
jihadi movements and their apologists in Canada.
It is not what the Koran says that matters; it is
how Mr. Qutb, Mr. Banna, and Mr. Maudoodi
interpret the Koran for the jihadis that needs to
be discussed.
In the fall of 2007, Islamists set up a stand at
Toronto's annual "Word on the Street" book
festival where they distributed a free booklet
titled Towards Understanding Islam, written by Mr.
Maudoodi. In the booklet, Mr. Maudoodi exhorts
ordinary Muslims to launch jihad, as in armed
struggle, against non-Muslims.
"Jihad is part of this overall defense of Islam,"
he writes. In case the reader is left with any
doubt about the meaning of the word "jihad," Mr.
Maudoodi clarifies:
In the language of the Divine Law, this word
[jihad] is used specifically for the war that is
waged solely in the name of God against those
who perpetrate oppression as enemies of Islam.
This supreme sacrifice is the responsibility of
all Muslims."
Maudoodi goes on to label Muslims who refuse the
call to armed jihad as apostates:
Jihad is as much a primary duty as are daily
prayers or fasting. One who avoids it is a
sinner. His every claim to being a Muslim is
doubtful. He is plainly a hypocrite who fails in
the test of sincerity and all his acts of
worship are a sham, a worthless, hollow show of
deception.
If Muslim countries do not go to war against the
enemies of Islam, Mr. Maudoodi says a worldwide
uprising by ordinary Muslims is the answer. He
writes: "Muslims of the whole world must fight the
common enemy."
Does it surprise anyone that ordinary Muslims in
Britain and Canada have rallied to his call and
declared jihad against their own countries of
birth?
If Mr. Maudoodi's exhortations to jihad are not
enough, we have the words of the late Hassan al-Banna
being distributed in our schools and universities.
Mr. Banna makes it quite clear that the word
"jihad" means armed conflict. He mocks the concept
of the lesser and greater jihad, suggesting that
this theory is a conspiracy so that "Muslims
should become negligent."
In addition, here is what Mr. Qutb, another
Egyptian stalwart of the Islamist movement and the
Muslim Brotherhood, writes in his classic book
Milestones:
Any place where Islamic Shariah is not
enforced and where Islam is not dominant becomes
the Home of Hostility (Dar-ul-Harb). ... A
Muslim will remain prepared to fight against it,
whether it be his birthplace or a place where
his relatives reside or where his property or
any other material interests are located."
Syed Qutb reduces the message of Islam to the
rejection of all laws made by parliaments. He
says: "The basis of the message [Islam] is that
one should accept the Shariah without any question
and reject all other laws in any shape or form.
This is Islam."
Unless the leaders of Canadian mosques as well as
the Islamic organizations denounce the doctrine of
jihad as pronounced by the Muslim Brotherhood, and
distance themselves from the ideology of Mr. Qutb,
Mr. Banna and Mr. Maudoodi, the propaganda that
"jihad means peace" will be meaningless.
It will merely reinforce the suspicions of many
Canadians who feel some overseas groups are
pulling the strings in this carefully staged
puppet show.
--------------------------
Tarek Fatah is the author of Chasing a
Mirage: The Tragic Illusion of an Islamic State.
Salma Siddiqui is an Ottawa businesswoman and
vice-president of the Muslim Canadian
Congress.