Russian News  
Analysis: Political Islam's problems

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only
by Anwar Iqbal
Washington (UPI) Aug 21, 2007
Political Islam is an attractive concept for many Muslims, and some expect it to resolve some of the economic, political and cultural problems they face. But most don't know how this will happen.

From the early 19th to the mid-20th century, the Islamic world produced a string of scholars -- Jamaluddin Afghani and Syed Abul A'ala Maududi in British India, Hassan al-Banna and Syed Qutub in Egypt and Ali Shariati in Iran -- who provided an intellectual basis for what is now known as political Islam.

What they wrote made sense in an era when most of today's Islamic nations were either under direct colonial control or had just regained independence and were still struggling under a colonial legacy.

But the Islamists, unlike the nationalists, never believed that the end of colonial rule will also bring economic, social and cultural freedom from Western influence.

"When the British left the subcontinent, they also left behind a system, and enough people to run that system, which prevents the formerly colonized nations to attain full independence," says Khurshid Ahmad, a leading intellectual of Pakistan's Jamaat-e-Islami Party.

At a recent lecture at the University of Birmingham, England, Ahmad argued that the developing world currently owes a total of $3.242 trillion to the richest countries of the world. He said the richest 1 percent of the world earns as much as the bottom 57 percent.

Ahmad and other Islamist economists blame the world's interest-based economy for this disparity and want to establish an interest-free economic system.

But the problem is that the Islamists have been unable to implement this system. Individual financial institutions have tried to implement this new system in some countries, but at best they offer cosmetic changes or rephrase the economic jargon to justify the prevalent interest-based system.

Another major complaint Islamists often voice is the West's cultural domination. They want it to be replaced by an Islamic culture.

But Islamic culture itself is a contentious term. Muslims in Iran or South Asia are culturally as different from Arab Muslims as all of them are from Western culture. In fact, all of them have borrowed more from Western culture than they have from one another.

Politically, the Islamic world is even more divided. Perhaps the only common factor in more than 50 Muslim nations is that most of them are run by autocratic rulers.

Several major Muslim states have serious differences with one another and have also often gone to war against their co-religionists.

To provide an intellectual basis for the unification of more than 50 nations with such major economic, cultural and political differences is a huge task. And since the 1960s, the movement known as political Islam has not produced any major intellectual.

Islamic political parties also have had very little experience in running a modern state. The only country that has remained under religious rule for a considerable period is Iran, where Islamists toppled the shah in 1979.

But there is little in the Iranian experience that fascinates ordinary Muslims. Most Muslims outside -- and many inside -- Iran blame the religious elite that is running the country for creating more problems than they resolve.

Another example is Afghanistan, where extremists like the Taliban and al-Qaida had an opportunity to create a model Islamic state but failed miserably.

For almost five years the Taliban and al-Qaida movements had an entire country at their mercy, with full freedom to do what they wanted. Osama bin Laden and his clique had enough resources and plenty of connections in oil-rich Arab states to get the finances they needed to build roads, schools, hospitals and factories destroyed in 20 years of war and civil strife.

They did not.

Instead, they turned Afghanistan into a launching pad for terrorist attacks against the Western world. Many in the Islamic world believe the Taliban and al-Qaida failed in running Afghanistan because they did not know how to run a modern state.

Political Islam also has been unable to resolve the differences that exist between their version of an Islamic state and the modern nation-states that exist in today's Islamic world.

Their ultimate goal is to create an international fraternity of Muslim nations that can slowly be guided toward a united caliphate. But they are unable to explain how they will make modern Muslim nation states accept such a caliphate. Will nation-states such as Iran, Saudi Arabia and Morocco be forced to join such a caliphate? Will they willingly give up their sovereignty for the sake of a greater unity or be forced to do so?

How would the rest of the world react to the emergence of a new religious bloc in the world? Will it lead to a greater jihad against the rest of the world?

Within an Islamic caliphate, how much power shall the caliph have and how much freedom should be given to its citizens? Will there be a free media? Can women appear on television and cinema screens? Can there be music in an Islamic state?

How would people dress? Will the veil be imposed on women living in an Islamic state, whether they like it or not? Will all men be forced to grow beards?

Each of these questions evokes emotional debates within the Islamic world, sometimes causing violence and bloodshed.

It is not that political Islamists do not have answers to these questions. They do. The problem is that their answers are not acceptable to an overwhelming majority of Muslims.

The modern, interest-based banking system is well-entrenched in many Muslim countries. Poor Muslim nations depend on financial assistance from the United States and other Western nations and financial institutions. They cannot defy them.

Rich Muslim states neither have the desire nor the intellectual depth needed to create an alternative economic system. They are even less willing to share their riches with poorer Muslim countries.

Workers from poor Muslim countries in these rich states are often treated like slaves and return home with a taste of bitterness that remains with them for the rest of their lives.

Middle-class and educated Muslim women are not willing to wear the veil, at least not the type presented by the mullahs and the Islamists, though many cover their heads with scarves.

Both Muslim men and women are addicted to Western-style television shows, films, music and other cultural influences and are unwilling to give them up. They are unwilling to go along with the Islamists or the traditional mullahs, like the Taliban.

They fear that in a Taliban-like state, or the Iranian-style Islamic republic, they will be marginalized and will be forced to accept an orthodox version of Islam that they do not believe in.

Muslims have become so used to the modern nation-states, many of them will put up a fight if forced to give up their Pakistani, Afghan, Syrian or Algerian identities in return for a new identity introduced by the likes of bin Laden or Mullah Omar.

Rich Muslim states are not likely to abolish visas and open their doors to poorer Muslims just because Islamists want them to do so.

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Related Links
Democracy in the 21st century at TerraDaily.com

First Votes In 2008 US Election ... Could Be In 2007
Washington (AFP) Aug 09, 2007
The first votes in the marathon US 2008 presidential election could be cast in 2007, if key state South Carolina, as expected, Thursday tips the compressed nominating calendar into deeper turmoil. Traditionally, every four years, beginning nine months before presidential elections held in November, the Democratic and Republican parties go from state to state holding primary contests and caucuses to chose a nominee.







  • Walker's World: Will Putin step down
  • Analysis: SCO energy ties
  • Walker's World: Do we face another 1931?
  • Outside View: Ad men for U.S. defense

  • Iran's Ahmadinejad vows to continue nuclear programme
  • US says new UN-Iran nuclear agreement has 'limitations'
  • B-52 Bombers To Remain In Service For Foreseeable Future
  • Pakistan warns India against nuclear tests



  • Exploitation in Chinese factories blamed for unsafe toys
  • Taiwan, wary of China, to hike military spending
  • China foundry blast kills 14: report
  • Blue-eared pig disease has spread to 26 Chinese provinces

  • Japan eyes chopsticks for biofuel
  • Kazakhstan may halt ENI-run oil field over environment
  • Uganda's Museveni launches 770 million-dollar power project
  • IEA concerned about hurricane's impact on Mexico oil production

  • Boeing Hardware Installed During Space Shuttle Endeavour Mission
  • Outside View: Obsolete space industry
  • Mastracchio And Williams Install New Station Control Moment Gyroscope (CMG)
  • Punctured astronaut's spacesuit cuts short spacewalk

  • Northrop Grumman Showcases Information-Enabled Joint Warfighting Capabilities At LandWarNet Conference
  • Antenna Wings For Advanced EHF Communications Satellite Delivered To Integrator
  • Russian Armed Forces To Adopt New Communications System By 2015
  • Empire Challenge 07 Tests Emerging Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Concepts

  • Putin shows off Russia's military aviation
  • Rafael And GD Bolting On The Good Stuff
  • Comfort Uses New Technology And Extends Critical Communications
  • Weather Center Receives Production System Upgrades

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement