Islam: Misunderstood throughout the World
James
A. Bill (professor of government and director of the Reves Center for
International Studies at the College of William and Mary in Virginia)
writes - 'By the turn of the century, for the first time in history, the
number of Muslims (those who practice Islam) will have surpassed the
number of Christians in the world. Islam is a monotheistic religion,
civilization and way of life now practiced by 1.1 billion people.
Easily
the world's fastest growing religion, Islam is not confined to the
Middle East. It is a truly universal force. More Muslims live in America
today than all the Presbyterians and Episcopalians put together. There
are more than 1,200 mosques in the United States and 1000 mosques in
England, where the Muslim community has established its own national
parliament.
There
are more Muslims in Indonesia than in Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Syria and
Saudi Arabia put together. More live in Malaysia than in Jordan, Lebanon
and Kuwait combined. Nearly 20 million Muslims live in China. Wherever
one looks, Islam is on the move. As the people of many societies find
themselves rootless, disconnected and alienated, they increasingly seek
help in a comforting Islamic ideological refuge.
In
a world of incoherent violence, widening inequities, political
corruption and shattered families, many are massing behind the green
flag of Islam. This is essentially a populist movement, a bubbling up
from below, a march of the distressed, the dispossessed and the
oppressed. .... .
Although
the great bulk of Muslims seek to improve their status through quiet,
moderate and pacific means, violent methods have been adopted by fringe
groups-elements also present in Christianity and Judaism. Oblivious to
their own profound ignorance and often harboring crude political
motivations, many Western opinion leaders consistently label all Muslims
with words such as 'aggressive', 'militant' and 'uncivilized'.
Islam
is the 'religion of the sword'; Muslim activists are 'terrorists,' and
Muslims countries that challenge Western policies are 'outlaw states'.
Muslims themselves maintain quite a different worldview. It is in the
deepest interest of the United States to attempt to understand this
perspective. In brief, Muslims see themselves as the afflicted, not the
afflictors; they feel themselves desperately on the defensive, not on
the offensive; they consider themselves the objects of violence, not the
initiators of violence. In sum, Muslims across the world
consider
themselves victims. In support of their position, Muslims will take
their Christian and Jewish neighbors on a quick tour of the world. They
inevitably begin with Bosnia, where nearly 200,000 Muslims have been
slaughtered by Serbian Christians. Muslims are horrified and sickened by
the fact that 22,000 Muslim women, aged 9 to 82, have been raped by
Christian troopers. Muslims wonder privately about the weak and very
late Western
response.
In Kashmir, Indian occupying forces violently oppress Muslims, killing
thousands of Kashmiris. Elsewhere in India in December 1992 and January
1993, violent Hindu mobs went on a rampage in Bombay, killing over 800
Muslims, destroying 5000 Muslim homes and forcing 200,000 Muslims to
flee the city. Mosques were firebombed and mothers
watched
as their sons were pulled from their homes and slain or burned alive.
In Tajikstan and other places in Central Asia, the Communists have made a
comeback and, with the help of Russian troops, have attacked and killed
more than 20,000 Muslims. Another 350,000 have been forced to flee.
Even in China, Muslims find themselves under heavy military pressure.
Chinese troops oppress Muslims in the western province of Xinjiang. Even
in many of the predominantly Muslim countries of the Middle East,
Muslims find themselves under attack where the leadership is essentially
secular.
In
Iraq, Saddam Hussein continues his war of genocide against the Shi'ites
in the south. In Algeria, when the Islamists scored a surprise victory
in the December 1991 elections, the regime declared the election null
and void. Since then, Algeria has been the scene of a bloody civil war.
The government blames Islamic fundamentalists of striking terror in the
very same areas where they had received majority of votes from.
The
governments explanation of fundamentalists unleashing waves of terror
in their own strongholds, sounds very plausible indeed and casts shadows
of dound over the credentials of the secular government instead. In
Egypt, Hosni Mubarak's regime, facing widespread disaffection of its
people, pursues a policy of torture and execution of members of the
Muslim opposition.
In
March 1993, his troops fired upon 500 unarmed Muslims at prayer in the
Rahman Mosque in Aswan, killing nine and injuring 50. In the West Bank,
another more widely publicized mosque massacre occurred a year later in
Hebron when a Jewish settler killed 30 in a group of praying Muslims
before the survivors could beat him to death. This litany of
anti-Islamic violence is recognized and recited by Muslims everywhere.
The
situation is exacerbated when Muslims incredulously find themselves
labeled as terrorists and when Western governments encourage their
secular Middle Eastern allies to confront Muslim populist movements with
brute force. One result of these Western perceptions and policies, of
course, is that they begin to radicalize the huge mass of moderate
Muslim believers. Meanwhile, the extremists on the fringes become more
active and militant.
A
vicious cycle of misunderstanding, misguided policy and increasing
violence has been set in motion. Before this vicious cycle begins to
spin wildly out of control, it is essential that non-Muslims make a
major effort to slow it down. Such an effort will, as the very first
step, require that stereotypes be discarded.
Second,
recent history shows that the application of force is not always an
effective way of countering a system of deeply held ideas and beliefs.
The steady flame of resurgent Islam will not be extinguished by the
breeze of bullets or the blast of missiles. A recently published report
in Washington Post,
confirms
Islam to be the fastest growing religion in the United States despite
hostile government policies and negative media stereotyping, only goes
on to prove the truth of this statement. It is time for everyone to take
a crash course on Islam. More recently, CNN too published a report,
first of US kind ever done in this part of the World, titled as: Islam
in US - Growing and maturing.'
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