Greetings,
Here is part IV of my series on sacraments and mission, which I started many years ago for St Francis Magazine. This
one contains an introduction summarizing why I think that liturgy is
valuable for those engaged in mission to and among Muslims, and then
contains a liturgy for baptism (of an adult) based on the Book of Common Prayer of the Episcopal Church (USA), which yes is very liberal, but the liturgy in the Prayer Book is very good.
So check it out, try it out if you are doing any work among Muslims, and let me know what you think.
'Mission and Sacrament, Part IV: A Liturgy for the Baptism of Muslims, to be Conducted on the Feast of Pentecost' in St Francis Magazine Vol 10:2, June 2014.
The first three articles can be found (in order) here, here, and here.
Peace,
Abu Daoud
Friday, July 25, 2014
Wednesday, July 9, 2014
Why the rise of Extermism among Muslims in the Middle East?
Why the rise of Extermism among Muslims in the Middle East?
by Abu Daoud
I was recently asked to comment on this topic, and here is what I wrote
by Abu Daoud
I was recently asked to comment on this topic, and here is what I wrote
There is a complex web of reasons, but I think overall here are the main reasons:
1. The failure to achieve success
by copying European models, including capitalism and communism.
Capitalism cannot work in the ME because it requires a) rule of law, and
b) freedom to form new businesses and c) creativity to invent new products.
All of these are lacking because of deeply ingrained traditions of
favoring one's own religion or family or tribe. I do trace this back to
Islam (a lot of people don't), where the dhimmi system forces people to
discriminate against non-Muslims, and where the shari'a is clear that
women are worth less than men, and of course the Arabo-centric facet of
Islam, which more or less implies that God is an Arab, because his book
is in Arabic and cannot be translated, and thus Arabs are (in reality,
not in theory) better than non-Arabs. (This last reason is why lots of
Berbers and Pakistanis and Iranians have left Islam, by the way.)
2. Regarding creativity, I feel that Islam clearly suppresses it because
when you cannot ask basic questions about God and his prophet and book,
then at a basic level you are taught not to be critical and analytical.
This then overflows from the area of religion into other areas like
commerce and computer science and so on. I trace this back historically
to the victory of asharites over the mu'atazila and the affirmation of bila kayf--that certain doctrines must be affirmed but without asking why. The doctrine of al insan al kamil (the ideal or perfect man) comes up here too, because a quick glance at Muhammad's life shows he is clearly not perfect.
3. A
related, but minor, point: commerce was hindered in the Ottoman Empire because the
formation of corporations was legally impossible. So there was no
incentive to form large international businesses, because upon the
owner's death it had to pass on to his sons, whether they were good or bad. This has been remedied, but centuries too late.
4.
This rise of independent nation states and authoritarian governments.
One of the most unfortunate aspects of society in the ME is the tendency
to always blame others for any problem that takes place, rather than to
try to address problems as far as on can. Anyway, with the end of
European hegemony countries were formed and to a real degree free to
govern themselves. It is true they were never entirely free to do as
they please, but this does not matter--no country (or person) is
entirely free to do as they please. So authoritarian governments arose
and they did not prosper, at least not to the extent that some people
thought they should. I too attribute this to the very DNA of Islam. When
Muhammad died there was right away a great struggle between the Shi'a
and the Sunni, and we also see this principle operating in the wars of
apostasy or hurub al ridda.
Historically one finds that Islamic societies over the long term
alternate between authoritarian governments and anarchy/tribalism. The
period of European colonialism artificially enforced Western practices
of government and business that were foreign to Islam. And when Europe
left, these traditions started to deteriorate. Authoritarian governments
silenced public discourse, but they could not or would not silence the
discourse of Islam, including Islamic reforms which we in the West call
radicalism or extremism, but which are really just reformed Islam.
5. The problem of natural resources. Egypt's population in 1900 was about five million,
today it is about 80 million. Many of the countries in the Middle East
do not have the natural resources to feed their enormous populations.
Right now Egypt imports over 50% of its wheat. That is an amazing
number. This naturally results is large numbers of unemployed young men, many cannot get married because they don't have a job.
With the reformed Islamic militant ideology (a more accurate term than
fundamentalist, I think) present, the opportunity to be part of
something new and good and powerful (like the Caliphate) is attractive. This is not so much a reason for the
Islamic reformation (to radicalism) but is a key reason that right now
it is easily able to get recruits. The Middle East has a demographic
profile that makes economic prosperity almost impossible in many
countries, coupled with the non-critical education (mentioned above) and the lack of rule of law
6.
One often hears that the Arab-Israel problem is at the heart of the
problems in the region. I think that even if all Israel-Palestine was
again ruled by Muslims and the Jews who arrived by Aliyah were made to
leave and then a lot of European and American Jews would leave
voluntarily this would not solve anything at all.
Indeed, even if every Jew left and every Palestinian refugee returned
and all those apartments in Tel Aviv and Haifa were given to them, it
would not decisively change the dynamic described above. I do believe,
as unpopular as it is to say so, that many of the problems we see in the
ME today can be traced to the very heart of Islam--the life and
practice of Muhammad.
More than you wanted to hear I think! Why do you ask? I liked the book Sandcastles: Arabs in search of the Modern World by Milton Viorst on this topic. They have it at the library at St George's College in Jerusalem. I still think that reading Qutb's Milestones
is the best intro for people who want to know more. His writings are
like those of Martin Luther, sometimes brilliant, sometimes with gaping
holes of logic.
Labels:
Arab Spring,
Extremism,
future,
History,
Middle East,
politics,
truth
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