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Will moderate Muslims please stand up?

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Will moderate Muslims please stand up?
By Rafiullah Kakar
Published: November 21, 2015


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The writer is a Rhodes Scholar and an alumnus of the Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford

Each time a terror attack carried out by Muslim militants wrecks a Western country, Muslims from across the world take to electronic and social media to condemn the horrific act, dissociate themselves from the perpetrators and defend Islam as a religion of peace. Despite these condemnations, moderate Muslims have neither been able to undermine the militants’ resolve to continue their ‘holy’ war against the ‘infidel’ West nor have they been effective in dissuading Islamophobes in the West from demonising Islam and painting moderate and extremist Muslims with the same brush. Consequently, it is no surprise that while both Muslim extremists and Islamophobes are increasingly dictating terms of debate on extremism, the so-called moderate Muslims are not only bearing the brunt of this aggravating polarisation, they are also losing influence and yielding the debate to extremists. Who is to blame for this?

Although moderate Muslims would like to apportion blame solely to the interventionist and imperialistic foreign policies of the West, they cannot completely exonerate themselves from responsibility for the current mess. The standard Muslim line that militant groups like the Islamic State (IS), the Taliban, Boko Haram and so on, are not ‘true’ representatives of Islam and that their brutal acts have nothing to do with religion is actually part of the problem. This approach indicates the denial on the part of Muslims to acknowledge that one of the root causes of terrorism is radicalisation through a very literalistic and distorted interpretation of Islamic scripture.

Before I elucidate my argument, it is worth emphasising that a radical interpretation of religion does not necessarily have to translate into violence. Instead, it is often a combination of politics and conservative religion that produces the vitriolic narrative and rampage that most Muslim countries are grappling with today. There might have been no IS had the US and the UK not invaded Iraq. Similarly, the rise of extremism in South Asia and the Middle East cannot be explained without mentioning the role of some key regional and extra-regional countries that used religion as a tool to further their strategic interests. Additionally, there is also no denying that colonialism, endless Western military interventions and decades of secular authoritarian rule, often backed by Western powers, have helped push the Middle East into violence.

While Muslims almost always talk about the politics that creates terrorism and rightly so, they rarely discuss its other important source, namely a radicalised interpretation of religion. This piece contends that politics alone does not explain the origin and sustenance of the likes of the Taliban, al Qaeda and the IS. Regardless of the conditions in which they originated, these groups derive their sustenance mainly from the obscurantist and retrogressive ideology that views the modern nation-state as a system of kufr and affirms the inherent, and perhaps exclusive, right of Muslims to rule.

Followers of militant groups such as the IS and al Qaeda are often devout Muslims with a reactionary and warped worldview. These groups come closest to what would be dubbed the religious equivalent of fascism in modern times. Be it stoning women to death or beheading and killing innocent people, they invoke scripture to justify these acts, which is clearly wrong.

Being a moderate Muslim, I know that the majority of Muslims do not share the ideology espoused by these radical elements. Nevertheless, the problem is that most Muslims do not even acknowledge that radicalisation is a problem and that something needs to be done about it. By asserting that the likes of the IS, al Qaeda and the Taliban have nothing to do with religion, the moderate Muslims let these radicals get away with their virulent perversion of religion and thus squander a potential opportunity for discrediting them publicly.

A segment of moderate Muslims does recognise the challenge posed by radical interpretations of religion and dispute the conservative and literalist reading of scriptures advocated by religious fundamentalists. Quranic verses, the moderate Muslims argue, are often misinterpreted and quoted out of context, including some verses pertaining to non-Muslims, jihad and various forms of punishments. The problem with this debate is that it only happens in drawing rooms and private gatherings of a tiny liberal, secular and left-leaning class. Publicly, most Muslims are reluctant to openly engage in critical debate regarding religion. Those who do so often pay a huge price for it. Indeed, most Muslim countries lack the conducive environment required for fostering such debates. The places where there is space for critical debates are the relatively advanced democracies of the developed world. However, in almost all such countries, Muslims are in a minority and often the victims of hatred and prejudice inspired by Islamophobia. Consequently, conscious of their minority status, moderate Muslims in these countries hold back their views on religion for fear of being seen as abettors of Islamophobia.

Defeating extremism requires a holistic and all-encompassing strategy that simultaneously addresses its social, economic and political causes. Reclaiming control of theological interpretation is just one part of the wider strategy.

Moderate Muslims need to come out of their comfort zones and actively contest and challenge the radical interpretations of scriptures advanced by extremists. In order to establish their position as the true representatives of Islam, the moderates need to provide a strong counter-narrative and win the war of ideas within the Islamic world. In pursuit of this goal, they should initiate an informed and open public dialogue about religion and rescue it from the grip of radicals. This may sound like a daunting task, but it is the only way moderate Muslims can ensure that their vision of a more tolerant and inclusive Islam prevails.

Published in The Express Tribune, November 22nd, 2015.
 
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Let the Jewish moderate free Palestine then the Muslim moderates will stand up

Or how about

Let the moderate go to war with extremist ? You would love that won't you , and then UK and other nations can arm the both factions and call it Civil war , and ban display of war images in media for 2-3 years.

Then Tony blair will smile and say , ok I messed up but it is safer now then before

Let the Goyim fight another goyim :P

How about we do this !!!!

How about Christian countries , ellect moderte Christans who get along with Islam ?
And they don't bomb Muslim countries how about them moderate

how about them moderate Isralies , open their door and invite a PAlestinian family for dinner
and then arrange a rally against the Zionist , how about it ? Let us all be moderates

How about them Israelis , (moderates stand up and say ... hey look take the land and be happy palestinians ) we messed it up bad , real bad
 
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Moderate Muslims need to come out of their comfort zones and actively contest and challenge the radical interpretations of scriptures advanced by extremists. In order to establish their position as the true representatives of Islam, the moderates need to provide a strong counter-narrative and win the war of ideas within the Islamic world. In pursuit of this goal, they should initiate an informed and open public dialogue about religion and rescue it from the grip of radicals. This may sound like a daunting task, but it is the only way moderate Muslims can ensure that their vision of a more tolerant and inclusive Islam prevails.

This is not just a "daunting" task, it has been rendered impossible due to actions taken by all sides.
 
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Look at his big smile he is really sorry :) how moderate is he

Lovely shirt by the way top button unbutton , a true maverick just like that spy movie guy

If all the Terrorist simply said sorry we would have no wars , imagine that

Hey gets his FAT retirement paycheck , he did good started a war created ISIS with others now he can retire happily like all good moderates should



Here is another moderate , He said now Iraq is safe place it was needed


HOW true is that now !!! Iraq / Syria all region is so safe thank you Mr Bush

I am thankful you all are moderates that I must follow to become or other muslims should use as role models


"Sorry" is such a powerful word


United Nation has just announced that if you bomb 2-3 countries and kill 3-4 Million people you can say "Sorry" becasue you are moderate and all will be good


General Wesley Clark explains ISIS was created by U.S. Allies


Thank you
 
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Media doesn't want to show moderate Muslims, sometimes they do but Rupert Murdoch and his gang are lackeys of Israel.
 
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Examples of what exactly? My comment merely indicates my view that the task being expectantly assigned to moderates is well nigh impossible.
And therefore it's misguided to think that "moderate Muslims" can do anything to fight Islamist terror?
 
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When Israeli Moderates will stop Zionist and christian moderates will reclaim their congress , and parliament then yes , Muslim moderates can also step it up

We are not , free to waste time on apologizing because ISIS is result of wars done by UK and USA in iraq and syria

We have no say in the matter

I do appeal to Muslims stop appealing , and point the finger to past politicians and political members who were in power when war in iraq started, its them who need to apologize
 
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