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The Roots of Muslim RageBERNARD LEWISWhy do so many Muslims deeply resent the West, and why their bitterness will not easily be mollified. IN
one of his letters Thomas Jefferson remarked that in matters of religion "the
maxim of civil government" should be reversed and we should rather say, "Divided
we stand, united, we fall." In this remark Jefferson was setting forth with classic
terseness an idea that has come to be regarded as essentially American: the separation
of Church and State. This idea was not entirely new; it had some precedents in
the writings of Spinoza, Locke, and the philosophers of the Europea Enlightenment.
It was in the United States, however, that the principle was first given the force
of law and gradually, in the course of two centuries, became a reality.
If the idea that religion and politics should be separated is relatively new,
dating back a mere three hundred years, the idea that they are distinct dates
back almost to the beginnings of Christianity. Christians are enjoined in their
Scriptures to "render ... unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's and unto God
the things which are God's." While opinions have differed as to the real meaning
of this phrase, it has generally been interpreted as legitimizing a situation
in which two institutions exist side by side, each with its own laws and chain
of authority one concerned with religion, called the Church, the other
concerned with politics, called the State. And since they are two, they may be
joined or separated, subordinate or independent, and conflicts may arise between
them over qestions of demarcation and jurisdiction. This formulation of the
problems posed by the relations between religion and politics, and the possible
solutions to those problems, arise from Christian, not universal, principles and
experience. There are other religious traditions in which religion and politics
are differently perceived, and in which, therefore, the problems and the possible
solutions are radically different from those we know in the West. Most of these
traditions, despite their often very high level of sophistication and achievement,
remained or became local limited to one region or one culture or one people.
There is one, however, that in its worldwide distribution, its continuing vitality,
its universalist aspirations, can be compared to Christianity, and that is Islam.
Islam is one of the world's great religions. Let me be explicit about what I,
as a historian of Islam who is not a Muslim, mean by that. Islam has brought comfort
and peace of mind tocountless millions of men and women. It has given dignity
and meaning to drab and impoverished lives. It has taught people of different
races to live in brotherhood and people of different creeds to live side by side
in reasonable tolerance. It inspired a great civilization in which others besides
Muslims lived creative and useful lives and which, by its achievement, enriched
the whole world. But Islam, like other religions, has also known periods when
it inspired in some of its followers a mood of hatred and violence. It is our
misfortune that part, though by no means all or even most, of the Muslim world
is now going through such a period, and that much, though again not all, of that
hatred is directed against us.
We should not exaggerate the dimensions
of the problem. The Muslim world is far from unanimous in its rejection of the
West, nor have the Muslim regions of the Third World been the most passionate
and the most extreme in their hostility. There are still significan numbers,
in some quarters perhaps a majority, of Muslims with whom we share certain basic
cultural and moral, social and political, beliefs and aspirations; there is still
an imposing Western presence cultural, economic, diplomatic in Muslim
lands, some of which are Western allies. Certainly nowhere in the Muslim world,
in the Middle East or elsewhere, has American policy suffered disasters or encountered
problems comparable to those in Southeast Asia or Central America. There is no
Cuba, no Vietnam, in the Muslim world, and no place where American forces are
involved as combatants or even as "advisers." But there is a Libya, an Iran, and
a Lebanon, and a surge of hatred that distresses, alarms, and above all baffles
Americans.
At times this hatred goes beyond hostility to specific interests
or actions or policies or even countries and becomes a rejection of Western civilization
as such, not only what it does but what it is, and the principles and values hat
it practices and professes. These are indeed seen as innately evil, and those
who promote or accept them as the "enemies of God." This phrase, which
recurs so frequently in the language of the Iranian leadership, in both their
judicial proceedings and their political pronouncements, must seem very strange
to the modern outsider, whether religious or secular. The idea that God has enemies,
and needs human help in order to identify and dispose of them, is a little difficult
to assimilate. It is not, however, all that alien. The concept of the enemies
of God is familiar in preclassical and classical antiquity, and in both the Old
and New Testaments, as well as in the Koran. A particularly relevant version of
the idea occurs in the dualist religions of ancient Iran, whose cosmogony assumed
not one but two supreme powers. The Zoroastrian devil, unlike the Christian or
Muslim or Jewish devil, is not one of God's creatures performing some of God's
more mysterious asks but an independent power, a supreme force of evil engaged
in a cosmic struggle against God. This belief influenced a number of Christian,
Muslim, and Jewish sects, through Manichaeism and other routes. The almost forgotten
religion of the Manichees has given its name to the perception of problems as
a stark and simple conflict between matching forces of pure good and pure evil.
The Koran is of course strictly monotheistic, and recognizes one God, one universal
power only. There is a struggle in human hearts between good and evil, between
God's commandments and the tempter, but this is seen as a struggle ordained by
God, with its outcome preordained by God, serving as a test of mankind, and not,
as in some of the old dualist religions, a struggle in which mankind has a crucial
part to play in bringing about the victory of good over evil. Despite this monotheism,
Islam, like Judaism and Christianity, was at various stages influenced, especially
in Iran, by the dualist iea of a cosmic clash of good and evil, light and darkness,
order and chaos, truth and falsehood, God and the Adversary, variously known as
devil, Iblis, Satan, and by other names.

The
Rise of the House of Unbelief IN
Islam the struggle of good and evil very soon acquired political and even military
dimensions. Muhammad, it will be recalled, was not only a prophet and a teacher,
like the founders of other religions; he was also the head of a polity and of
a community, a ruler and a oldier. Hence his struggle involved a state and its
armed forces. If the fighters in the war for Islam, the holy war "in the path
of God," are fighting for God, it follows that their opponents are fighting against
God. And since God is in principle the sovereign, the supreme head of the Islamic
state and the Prophet and, after the Prophet, the caliphs are his vicegerents
then God as sovereign commands the army. The army is God's army and the
enemy is God's enemy. The duty of God's soldiers is to dispatch God's enemies
as quickly as possible to the place where God will chastise them that is
to say, the afterlife. Clearly related to this is the basic division
of mankind as perceived in Islam. Most, probably all, human societies have a way
of distinguishing between themselves and others: insider and outsider, in-group
and out-group, kinsman or neighbor and foreigner. These definitions not only define
the outsider but also, and perhaps moreparticularly, help to define and illustrate
our perception of ourselves. In the classical Islamic view, to which
many Muslims are beginning to return, the world and all mankind are divided into
two: the House of Islam, where the Muslim law and faith prevail, and the rest,
known as the House of Unbelief or the House of War, which it is the duty of Muslims
ultimately to bring to Islam. But the greater part of the world is still outside
Islam, and even inside the Islamic lands, according to the view of the Muslim
radicals, the faith of Islam has been undermined and the law of Islam has been
abrogated. The obligation of holy war therefore begins at home and continues abroad,
against the same infidel enemy. Like every other civilization known to
human history, the Muslim world in its heyday saw itself as the center of truth
and enlightenment, surrounded by infidel barbarians whom it would in due course
enlighten and civilize. But between the different groups of barbarian there was
a crucial difference. The barbarians to the east and the south were polytheists
and idolaters, offering no serious threat and no competition at all to Islam.
In the north and west, in contrast, Muslims from an early date recognized a genuine
rival a competing world religion, a distinctive civilization inspired by
that religion, and an empire that, though much smaller than theirs, was no less
ambitious in its claims and aspirations. This was the entity known to itself and
others as Christendom, a term that was long almost identical with Europe.
The struggle between these rival systems has now lasted for some fourteen
centuries. It began with the advent of Islam, in the seventh century, and has
continued virtually to the present day. It has consisted of a long series of attacks
and counterattacks, jihads and crusades, conquests and reconquests. For the first
thousand years Islam was advancing, Christendom in retreat and under threat. The
new faith conqueredthe old Christian lands of the Levant and North Africa, and
invaded Europe, ruling for a while in Sicily, Spain, Portugal, and even parts
of France. The attempt by the Crusaders to recover the lost lands of Christendom
in the east was held and thrown back, and even the Muslims' loss of southwestern
Europe to the Reconquista was amply compensated by the Islamic advance into southeastern
Europe, which twice reached as far as Vienna. For the past three hundred years,
since the failure of the second Turkish siege of Vienna in 1683 and the rise of
the European colonial empires in Asia and Africa, Islam has been on the defensive,
and the Christian and post-Christian civilization of Europe and her daughters
has brought the whole world, including Islam, within its orbit.

FOR
a long time now there has been a rising tide of rebellion against this Western
paramountcy, and a desire to reassert Muslim values and restore Muslim greatness.
The Muslim has suffered successive stages of defeat. The first was his loss of
domination in the world, to the advancing power of Russia and the West. The second
was the undermining of his authority in his own country, through an invasion of
foreign ideas and laws and ways of life and sometimes even foreign rulers or settlers,
and the enfranchisement of native non-Muslim elements. The third the last
straw was the challenge to his mastery in his own house, from emancipated
women and rebellious children. It was too much to endure, and the outbreak of
rage against these alien, infidel, and incomprehensible forces that had subverted
his dominance, disrupted his society, and finally violted the sanctuary of his
home was inevitable. It was also natural that this rage should be directed primarily
against the millennial enemy and should draw its strength from ancient beliefs
and loyalties.
Europe and her daughters? The phrase may seem odd to Americans,
whose national myths, since the beginning of their nationhood and even earlier,
have usually defined their very identity in opposition to Europe, as something
new and radically different from the old European ways. This is not, however,
the way that others have seen it; not often in Europe, and hardly ever elsewhere.
Though people of other races and cultures participated, for the most part
involuntarily, in the discovery and creation of the Americas, this was, and in
the eyes of the rest of the world long remained, a European enterprise, in which
Europeans predominated and dominated and to which Europeans gave their languages,
their religions, and much of their way of life. For a very long tie
voluntary immigration to America was almost exclusively European. There were indeed
some who came from the Muslim lands in the Middle East and North Africa, but few
were Muslims; most were members of the Christian and to a lesser extent the Jewish
minorities in those countries. Their departure for America, and their subsequent
presence in America, must have strengthened rather than lessened the European
image of America in Muslim eyes. In the lands of Islam remarkably little
was known about America. At first the voyages of discovery aroused some interest;
the only surviving copy of Columbus's own map of America is a Turkish translation
and adaptation, still preserved in the Topkapi Palace Museum, in Istanbul. A sixteenth-century
Turkish geographer's account of the discovery of the New World, titled The
History of Western India, was one of the first books printed in Turkey. But
thereafter interest seems to have waned, and not much is said about America in
Turish, Arabic, or other Muslim languages until a relatively late date. A Moroccan
ambassador who was in Spain at the time wrote what must surely be the first Arabic
account of the American Revolution. The Sultan of Morocco signed a treaty of peace
and friendship with the United States in 1787, and thereafter the new republic
had a number of dealings, some friendly, some hostile, most commercial, with other
Muslim states. These seem to have had little impact on either side. The American
Revolution and the American republic to which it gave birth long remained unnoticed
and unknown. Even the small but growing American presence in Muslim lands in the
nineteenth century merchants, consuls, missionaries, and teachers
aroused little or no curiosity, and is almost unmentioned in the Muslim literature
and newspapers of the time. The Second World War, the oil industry, and
postwar developments brought many Americans to the Islamic lands; increasing numbers
of Muslims alsocame to America, first as students, then as teachers or businessmen
or other visitors, and eventually as immigrants. Cinema and later television brought
the American way of life, or at any rate a certain version of it, before countless
millions to whom the very name of America had previously been meaningless or unknown.
A wide range of American products, particularly in the immediate postwar years,
when European competition was virtually eliminated and Japanese competition had
not yet arisen, reached into the remotest markets of the Muslim world, winning
new customers and, perhaps more important, creating new tastes and ambitions.
For some, America represented freedom and justice and opportunity. For many more,
it represented wealth and power and success, at a time when these qualities were
not regarded as sins or crimes. And then came the great change, when
the leaders of a widespread and widening religious revival sought out and identified
their enemies as the enemies of Gd, and gave them "a local habitation and a name"
in the Western Hemisphere. Suddenly, or so it seemed, America had become the archenemy,
the incarnation of evil, the diabolic opponent of all that is good, and specifically,
for Muslims, of Islam. Why?

Some
Familiar Accusations
AMONG
the components in the mood of anti-Westernism, and more especially of anti-Americanism,
were certain intellectual influences coming from Europe. One of these was from
Germany, where a negativ view of America formed part of a school of thought by
no means limited to the Nazis but including writers as diverse as Rainer Maria
Rilke, Ernst Junger, and Martin Heidegger. In this perception, America was the
ultimate example of civilization without culture: rich and comfortable, materially
advanced but soulless and artificial; assembled or at best constructed, not grown;
mechanical, not organic; technologically complex but lacking the spirituality
and vitality of the rooted, human, national cultures of the Germans and other "authentic" peoples. German philosophy, and particularly the philosophy of education,
enjoyed a considerable vogue among Arab and some other Muslim intellectuals in
the thirties and early forties, and this philosophic anti-Americanism was part
of the message.
After the collapse of the Third Reich and the temporary
ending of German influence, another philosophy, even more anti-American, took
is place the Soviet version of Marxism, with a denunciation of Western
capitalism and of America as its most advanced and dangerous embodiment. And when
Soviet influence began to fade, there was yet another to take its place, or at
least to supplement its working the new mystique of Third Worldism, emanating
from Western Europe, particularly France, and later also from the United States,
and drawing at times on both these earlier philosophies. This mystique was helped
by the universal human tendency to invent a golden age in the past, and the specifically
European propensity to locate it elsewhere. A new variant of the old golden-age
myth placed it in the Third World, where the innocence of the non-Western Adam
and Eve was ruined by the Western serpent. This view took as axiomatic the goodness
and purity of the East and the wickedness of the West, expanding in an exponential
curve of evil from Western Europe to the United States.These ideas, too, fell
on fertile ground, and won widespread support.
But though these imported
philosophies helped to provide intellectual expression for anti-Westernism and
anti-Americanism, they did not cause it, and certainly they do not explain the
widespread anti-Westernism that made so many in the Middle East and elsewhere
in the Islamic world receptive to such ideas.
It must surely be clear
that what won support for such totally diverse doctrines was not Nazi race theory,
which can have had little appeal for Arabs, or Soviet atheistic communism, which
can have had little appeal for Muslims, but rather their common anti-Westernism.
Nazism and communism were the main forces opposed to the West, both as a way of
life and as a power in the world, and as such they could count on at least the
sympathy if not the support of those who saw in the West their principal enemy.
But why he hostility in the first place? If we turn from the general to
the specific, there is no lack of individual policies and actions, pursued and
taken by individual Western governments, that have aroused the passionate anger
of Middle Eastern and other Islamic peoples. Yet all too often, when these policies
are abandoned and the problems resolved, there is only a local and temporary alleviation.
The French have left Algeria, the British have left Egypt, the Western oil companies
have left their oil wells, the westernizing Shah has left Iran yet the
generalized resentment of the fundamentalists and other extremists against the
West and its friends remains and grows and is not appeased.
The cause
most frequently adduced for anti-American feeling among Muslims today is American
support for Israel. This support is certainly a factor of importance, increasing
with nearness and involvement. But here again there are some odities, difficult
to explain in terms of a single, simple cause. In the early days of the foundation
of Israel, while the United States maintained a certain distance, the Soviet Union
granted immediate de jure recognition and support, and arms sent from a
Soviet satellite, Czechoslovakia, saved the infant state of Israel from defeat
and death in its first weeks of life. Yet there seems to have been no great ill
will toward the Soviets for these policies, and no corresponding good will toward
the United States. In 1956 it was the United States that intervened, forcefully
and decisively, to secure the withdrawal of Israeli, British, and French forces
from Egypt yet in the late fifties and sixties it was to the Soviets, not
America, that the rulers of Egypt, Syria, Iraq, and other states turned for arms;
it was with the Soviet bloc that they formed bonds of solidarity at the United
Nations and in the world generally. More recetly, the rulers of the Islamic Republic
of Iran have offered the most principled and uncompromising denunciation of Israel
and Zionism. Yet even these leaders, before as well as after the death of Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini, when they decided for reasons of their own to enter into a
dialogue of sorts, found it easier to talk to Jerusalem than to Washington. At
the same time, Western hostages in Lebanon, many of them devoted to Arab causes
and some of them converts to Islam, are seen and treated by their captors as limbs
of the Great Satan.
Another explanation, more often heard from Muslim
dissidents, attributes anti-American feeling to American support for hated regimes,
seen as reactionary by radicals, as impious by conservatives, as corrupt and tyrannical
by both. This accusation has some plausibility, and could help to explain why
an essentially inner-directed, often anti-nationalist movement should turn against
foreign power. But it does not suffice, especially since support for such regimes
has been limited both in extent and as the Shah discovered in effectiveness.
Clearly, something deeper is involved than these specific grievances, numerous
and important as they may be something deeper that turns every disagreement
into a problem and makes every problem insoluble.
This revulsion against
America, more generally against the West, is by no means limited to the Muslim
world; nor have Muslims, with the exception of the Iranian mullahs and their disciples
elsewhere, experienced and exhibited the more virulent forms of this feeling.
The mood of disillusionment and hostility has affected many other parts of the
world, and has even reached some elements in the United States. It is from these
last, speaking for themselves and claiming to speak for the oppressed peoples
of the Third World, that the mot widely publicized explanations and justifications
of this rejection of Western civilization and its values have of late been
heard.
The accusations are familiar. We of the West are accused of sexism,
racism, and imperialism, institutionalized in patriarchy and slavery, tyranny
and exploitation. To these charges, and to others as heinous, we have no option
but to plead guilty not as Americans, nor yet as Westerners, but simply
as human beings, as members of the human race. In none of these sins are we the
only sinners, and in some of them we are very far from being the worst. The treatment
of women in the Western world, and more generally in Christendom, has always been
unequal and often oppressive, but even at its worst it was rather better than
the rule of polygamy and concubinage that has otherwise been the almost universal
lot of womankind on this planet.
Is racism, then, the main rievance?
Certainly the word figures prominently in publicity addressed to Western, Eastern
European, and some Third World audiences. It figures less prominently in what
is written and published for home consumption, and has become a generalized and
meaningless term of abuse rather like "fascism," which is nowadays imputed
to opponents even by spokesmen for one-party, nationalist dictatorships of various
complexions and shirt colors.
Slavery is today universally denounced
as an offense against humanity, but within living memory it has been practiced
and even defended as a necessary institution, established and regulated by divine
law. The peculiarity of the peculiar institution, as Americans once called it,
lay not in its existence but in its abolition. Westerners were the first to break
the consensus of acceptance and to outlaw slavery, first at home, then in the
other territories they controlled, and fnally wherever in the world they were
able to exercise power or influence in a word, by means of imperialism.
Is imperialism, then, the grievance? Some Western powers, and in a sense
Western civilization as a whole, have certainly been guilty of imperialism, but
are we really to believe that in the expansion of Western Europe there was a quality
of moral delinquency lacking in such earlier, relatively innocent expansions as
those of the Arabs or the Mongols or the Ottomans, or in more recent expansions
such as that which brought the rulers of Muscovy to the Baltic, the Black Sea,
the Caspian, the Hindu Kush, and the Pacific Ocean? In having practiced sexism,
racism, and imperialism, the West was merely following the common practice of
mankind through the millennia of recorded history. Where it is distinct from all
other civilizations is in having recognized, named, and tried, not entirely without
success, to remedythese historic diseases. And that is surely a matter for congratulation,
not condemnation. We do not hold Western medical science in general, or Dr. Parkinson
and Dr. Alzheimer in particular, responsible for the diseases they diagnosed and
to which they gave their names.
Of all these offenses the one that is
most widely, frequently, and vehemently denounced is undoubtedly imperialism
sometimes just Western, sometimes Eastern (that is, Soviet) and Western alike.
But the way this term is used in the literature of Islamic fundamentalists often
suggests that it may not carry quite the same meaning for them as for its Western
critics. In many of these writings the term "imperialist" is given a distinctly
religious significance, being used in association, and sometimes interchangeably,
with "missionary," and denoting a form of attack that includes the Crusades as
well as the modern colonial empires. One also smetimes gets the impression that
the offense of imperialism is not as for Western critics the domination
by one people over another but rather the allocation of roles in this relationship.
What is truly evil and unacceptable is the domination of infidels over true believers.
For true believers to rule misbelievers is proper and natural, since this provides
for the maintenance of the holy law, and gives the misbelievers both the opportunity
and the incentive to embrace the true faith. But for misbelievers to rule over
true believers is blasphemous and unnatural, since it leads to the corruption
of religion and morality in society, and to the flouting or even the abrogation
of God's law. This may help us to understand the current troubles in such diverse
places as Ethiopian Eritrea, Indian Kashmir, Chinese Sinkiang, and Yugoslav Kossovo,
in all of which Muslim populations are ruled by non-Muslim governments. It may
also eplain why spokesmen for the new Muslim minorities in Western Europe demand
for Islam a degree of legal protection which those countries no longer give to
Christianity and have never given to Judaism. Nor, of course, did the governments
of the countries of origin of these Muslim spokesmen ever accord such protection
to religions other than their own. In their perception, there is no contradiction
in these attitudes. The true faith, based on God's final revelation, must be protected
from insult and abuse; other faiths, being either false or incomplete, have no
right to any such protection.
THERE are other difficulties in the way of accepting imperialism as an explanation of
Muslim hostility, even if we define imperialism narrowly and specifically, as
the invasion and domination of Muslim countries b non-Muslims. If the hostility
is directed against imperialism in that sense, why has it been so much stronger
against Western Europe, which has relinquished all its Muslim possessions and
dependencies, than against Russia, which still rules, with no light hand, over
many millions of reluctant Muslim subjects and over ancient Muslim cities and
countries? And why should it include the United States, which, apart from a brief
interlude in the Muslim-minority area of the Philippines, has never ruled any
Muslim population? The last surviving European empire with Muslim subjects, that
of the Soviet Union, far from being the target of criticism and attack, has been
almost exempt. Even the most recent repressions of Muslim revolts in the southern
and central Asian republics of the USSR incurred no more than relatively mild
words of expostulation, coupled with a disclaimer of any desire to interfere in
what are quaintly called the "internal ffairs" of the USSR and a request for
the preservation of order and tranquillity on the frontier.
One reason
for this somewhat surprising restraint is to be found in the nature of events
in Soviet Azerbaijan. Islam is obviously an important and potentially a growing
element in the Azerbaijani sense of identity, but it is not at present a dominant
element, and the Azerbaijani movement has more in common with the liberal patriotism
of Europe than with Islamic fundamentalism. Such a movement would not arouse the
sympathy of the rulers of the Islamic Republic. It might even alarm them, since
a genuinely democratic national state run by the people of Soviet Azerbaijan would
exercise a powerful attraction on their kinsmen immediately to the south, in Iranian
Azerbaijan.
Another reason for this relative lack of concern for the
50 million or more Muslims under Soviet rule may be a calculation of risk and advantage. The Soviet Union is near, along the northern frontiers of Turkey, Iran,
and Afghanistan; America and even Western Europe are far away. More to the point,
it has not hitherto been the practice of the Soviets to quell disturbances with
water cannon and rubber bullets, with TV cameras in attendance, or to release
arrested persons on bail and allow them access to domestic and foreign media.
The Soviets do not interview their harshest critics on prime time, or tempt them
with teaching, lecturing, and writing engagements. On the contrary, their ways
of indicating displeasure with criticism can often be quite disagreeable.
But fear of reprisals, though no doubt important, is not the only or perhaps
even the principal reason for the relatively minor place assigned to the Soviet
Union, as compared with the West, in the demonology of fundamentalism. After all,
the great social and intellectual and economic changes that havetransformed most
of the Islamic world, and given rise to such commonly denounced Western evils
as consumerism and secularism, emerged from the West, not from the Soviet Union.
No one could accuse the Soviets of consumerism; their materialism is philosophic to be precise, dialectical and has little or nothing to do in practice
with providing the good things of life. Such provision represents another kind
of materialism, often designated by its opponents as crass. It is associated with
the capitalist West and not with the communist East, which has practiced, or at
least imposed on its subjects, a degree of austerity that would impress a Sufi
saint.
Nor were the Soviets, until very recently, vulnerable to charges
of secularism, the other great fundamentalist accusation against the West. Though
atheist, they were not godless, and had in fact created an elaborate state apparatus
to impose the worship of their gods an apparatus with its own orthodoxy,
a hierarchy to define and enforce it, and an armed inquisition to detect and extirpate
heresy. The separation of religion from the state does not mean the establishment
of irreligion by the state, still less the forcible imposition of an anti-religious
philosophy. Soviet secularism, like Soviet consumerism, holds no temptation for
the Muslim masses, and is losing what appeal it had for Muslim intellectuals.
More than ever before it is Western capitalism and democracy that provide an authentic
and attractive alternative to traditional ways of thought and life. Fundamentalist
leaders are not mistaken in seeing in Western civilization the greatest challenge
to the way of life that they wish to retain or restore for their people.

A
Clash of Civilizations
THE
origins of secularism in the west may be found in two circumstances in
early Christian teachings and, still more, experience, which created two institutions,
Church and State; and in later Christian conflicts, which drove the two apart.
Muslims, too, had their religious disagreements, but there was nothing remotely
approaching the ferocity of the Christian struggles between Protestants and Catholics,
which devastated Christian Europe in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and
finally drove Christians in desperation to evolve a doctrine of the separation
of religion from the state. Ony by depriving religious institutions of coercive
power, it seemed, could Christendom restrain the murderous intolerance and persecution
that Christians had visited on followers of other religions and, most of all,
on those who professed other forms of their own.
Muslims experienced
no such need and evolved no such doctrine. There was no need for secularism in
Islam, and even its pluralism was very different from that of the pagan Roman
Empire, so vividly described by Edward Gibbon when he remarked that "the various
modes of worship, which prevailed in the Roman world, were all considered by the
people, as equally true; by the philosopher, as equally false; and by the magistrate,
as equally useful." Islam was never prepared, either in theory or in practice,
to accord full equality to those who held other beliefs and practiced other forms
of worship. It did, however, accord to the holders of partial truth a degree of
practical as well as teoretical tolerance rarely paralleled in the Christian
world until the West adopted a measure of secularism in the late-seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries.
At first the Muslim response to Western civilization
was one of admiration and emulation an immense respect for the achievements
of the West, and a desire to imitate and adopt them. This desire arose from a
keen and growing awareness of the weakness, poverty, and backwardness of the Islamic
world as compared with the advancing West. The disparity first became apparent
on the battlefield but soon spread to other areas of human activity. Muslim writers
observed and described the wealth and power of the West, its science and technology,
its manufactures, and its forms of government. For a time the secret of Western
success was seen to lie in two achievements: economic advancement and especially
industry; political institutions and especially freedom. Several generations of
reformers an modernizers tried to adapt these and introduce them to their own
countries, in the hope that they would thereby be able to achieve equality with
the West and perhaps restore their lost superiority.
In our own time
this mood of admiration and emulation has, among many Muslims, given way to one
of hostility and rejection. In part this mood is surely due to a feeling of humiliation a growing awareness, among the heirs of an old, proud, and long dominant
civilization, of having been overtaken, overborne, and overwhelmed by those whom
they regarded as their inferiors. In part this mood is due to events in the Western
world itself. One factor of major importance was certainly the impact of two great
suicidal wars, in which Western civilization tore itself apart, bringing untold
destruction to its own and other peoples, and in which the belligerents conducted
an immense propaganda effort, in the Islamic world and elsewhere, to discredit
and undermne each other. The message they brought found many listeners, who were
all the more ready to respond in that their own experience of Western ways was
not happy. The introduction of Western commercial, financial, and industrial methods
did indeed bring great wealth, but it accrued to transplanted Westerners and members
of Westernized minorities, and to only a few among the mainstream Muslim population.
In time these few became more numerous, but they remained isolated from the masses,
differing from them even in their dress and style of life. Inevitably they were
seen as agents of and collaborators with what was once again regarded as a hostile
world. Even the political institutions that had come from the West were discredited,
being judged not by their Western originals but by their local imitations, installed
by enthusiastic Muslim reformers. These, operating in a situation beyond their
control, using imported and inappropriate methods that they did not fully undrstand,
were unable to cope with the rapidly developing crises and were one by one overthrown.
For vast numbers of Middle Easterners, Western-style economic methods brought
poverty, Western-style political institutions brought tyranny, even Western-style
warfare brought defeat. It is hardly surprising that so many were willing to listen
to voices telling them that the old Islamic ways were best and that their only
salvation was to throw aside the pagan innovations of the reformers and return
to the True Path that God had prescribed for his people.

ULTIMATELY,
the struggle of the fundamentalists is against two enemies, seculaism and modernism.
The war against secularism is conscious and explicit, and there is by now a whole
literature denouncing secularism as an evil neo-pagan force in the modern world
and attributing it variously to the Jews, the West, and the United States. The
war against modernity is for the most part neither conscious nor explicit, and
is directed against the whole process of change that has taken place in the Islamic
world in the past century or more and has transformed the political, economic,
social, and even cultural structures of Muslim countries. Islamic fundamentalism
has given an aim and a form to the otherwise aimless and formless resentment and
anger of the Muslim masses at the forces that have devalued their traditional
values and loyalties and, in the final analysis, robbed them of their beliefs,
their aspirations, their dignity, and to an increasing extent even their livelihood.
There is something in the reliious culture of Islam which inspired, in even
the humblest peasant or peddler, a dignity and a courtesy toward others never
exceeded and rarely equalled in other civilizations. And yet, in moments of upheaval
and disruption, when the deeper passions are stirred, this dignity and courtesy
toward others can give way to an explosive mixture of rage and hatred which impels
even the government of an ancient and civilized country even the spokesman
of a great spiritual and ethical religion to espouse kidnapping and assassination,
and try to find, in the life of their Prophet, approval and indeed precedent for
such actions.
The instinct of the masses is not false in locating the
ultimate source of these cataclysmic changes in the West and in attributing the
disruption of their old way of life to the impact of Western domination, Western
influence, or Western precept and example. And since the United States is the
legitimate heir of European civilization and the recognized and unchallenged leader
of the West, the United States has inherited the resulting grievances and become
the focus for the pent-up hate and anger. Two examples may suffice. In November
of 1979 an angry mob attacked and burned the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad, Pakistan.
The stated cause of the crowd's anger was the seizure of the Great Mosque in Mecca
by a group of Muslim dissidents an event in which there was no American
involvement whatsoever. Almost ten years later, in February of 1989, again in
Islamabad, the USIS center was attacked by angry crowds, this time to protest
the publication of Salman Rushdie's Satanic Verses. Rushdie is a British
citizen of Indian birth, and his book had been published five months previously
in England. But what provoked the mob's anger, and also the Ayatollah Khomeini's
subsequent pronouncement of a death sentence on the autor, was the publication
of the book in the United States.
It should by now be clear that we are
facing a mood and a movement far transcending the level of issues and policies
and the governments that pursue them. This is no less than a clash of civilizations the perhaps irrational but surely historic reaction of an ancient rival
against our Judeo-Christian heritage, our secular present, and the worldwide expansion
of both. It is crucially important that we on our side should not be provoked
into an equally historic but also equally irrational reaction against that rival.
Not all the ideas imported from the West by Western intruders or native Westernizers
have been rejected. Some have been accepted by even the most radical Islamic fundamentalists,
usually without acknowledgment of source, and suffering a sea change into something
rarely rich but often strange. One such was political freedom, with the associatd
notions and practices of representation, election, and constitutional government.
Even the Islamic Republic of Iran has a written constitution and an elected assembly,
as well as a kind of episcopate, for none of which is there any prescription in
Islamic teaching or any precedent in the Islamic past. All these institutions
are clearly adapted from Western models. Muslim states have also retained many
of the cultural and social customs of the West and the symbols that express them,
such as the form and style of male (and to a much lesser extent female) clothing,
notably in the military. The use of Western-invented guns and tanks and planes
is a military necessity, but the continued use of fitted tunics and peaked caps
is a cultural choice. From constitutions to Coca-Cola, from tanks and television
to T-shirts, the symbols and artifacts, and through them the ideas, of the West
have retained even strengthened their appeal./p>

THE
movement nowadays called fundamentalism is not the only Islamic tradition. There
are others, more tolerant, more open, that helped to inspire the great achievements
of Islamic civilization in the past, and we may hope that these other traditions
will in time prevail. But before this issue is decided there will be a hard struggle,
in which we of the West can do little or nothing. Even the attempt might do harm,
for these are issues that Muslims must decide among themselves. And in the meantime
we must take great care on all sides to avoid the danger of a new era of religious
wars, arising from the exacerbation of differences and the revival o ancient
prejudices.
To this end we must strive to achieve a better appreciation
of other religious and political cultures, through the study of their history,
their literature, and their achievements. At the same time, we may hope that they
will try to achieve a better understanding of ours, and especially that they will
understand and respect, even if they do not choose to adopt for themselves, our
Western perception of the proper relationship between religion and politics. To
describe this perception I shall end as I began, with a quotation from an American
President, this time not the justly celebrated Thomas Jefferson but the somewhat
unjustly neglected John Tyler, who, in a letter dated July 10, 1843, gave eloquent
and indeed prophetic expression to the principle of religious freedom:
The United States have adventured upon a great and noble experiment,
which isbelieved to have been hazarded in the absence of all previous precedent
that of total separation of Church and State. No religious establishment
by law exists among us. The conscience is left free from all restraint
and each is permitted to worship his Maker after his own judgement. The offices
of the Government are open alike to all. No tithes are levied to support an established
Hierarchy, nor is the fallible judgement of man set up as the sure and infallible
creed of faith. The Mahommedan, if he will to come among us would have the privilege
guaranteed to him by the constitution to worship according to the Koran; and the
East Indian might erect a shrine to Brahma if it so pleased him. Such is the spirit
of toleration inculcated by our political Institutions.... The Hebrew persecuted
and down trodden in other regions takes up his abode among us with none to make
him afraid.... and the Aegis of the Government is over him to defend and protect
him. Such is the great expriment which we have tried, and such are the happy
fruits which have resulted from it; our system of free government would be imperfect
without it. The body may be oppressed and manacled and yet survive; but
if the mind of man be fettered, its energies and faculties perish, and what remains
is of the earth, earthly. Mind should be free as the light or as the air.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Bernand Lewis. "The Roots of Muslim Rage." The Atlantic Monthly
Volume 266, No. 3 (September, 1990): 47 - 60. Republished with permission
of Bernand Lewis via his publisher Oxford University Press. THE AUTHOR
Bernard Lewis, Cleveland E. Dodge Professor Emeritus of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University, is often described as te West's greatest historian and interpreter of the Near East. He is the author of twenty nine books, including: What Went Wrong: The Clash Between Islam and Modernity in the Middle East, Islam in History: Ideas, People, and Events in the Middle East, The Middle East and The Arabs in History are required reading for anybody who hopes to understand the region and its people. His latest book is The Crisis of Islam: Holy War and Unholy Terror.
Copyright © 1990 by Bernard Lewis
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