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WHY
DEMOCRACY, AND WHY NOW?
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Abdulaziz
Sachedina
University of Virginia
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After the atrocities of September 11, many of us who are Muslim
intellectuals living and working in North America made a discovery
that deepened the horrors of that terrible day. We learned,
to our intense dismay, that some of the Muslim organizations
around us were getting their notions about Islam from imported
Middle Eastern or South Asian preachers who pushed a deeply
illiberal, "us against them" worldview and reviled
the proposition that Muslims should learn the basic civic virtues
and responsibilities of life in a free, democratic, and pluralist
society. Claiming to care only about safeguarding the "purity"
of Islam, these preachers of intolerance continue to promote
seclusion and mistrust and to slander those of us Muslims who
disagree with them as "enemies of Islam."
Seclusion and mistrust lead nowhere, and least of all to the
promotion of Islam. The truth is that Muslims today-wherever
they live-can only benefit from hearing more, not less, about
the opportunities connected with democratic civil society, the
inspiriting demands that flow from civic responsibility, and
the ideas that undergird government by consent and ordered liberty.
Muslim intellectuals who can help their brothers and sisters
critically rethink their political heritage and find their way
to a free and faithful future have never been more urgently
needed-or more threatened with irrelevance-than they are today.
Worse yet, this irrelevance is at least partly self-inflicted.
If the voices of those who could stir discussion of freedom
and democracy are silent or unintelligible, the preachers of
intolerance will win by default. That must not be allowed to
happen.
Too many of us-occupying comfortable, even privileged positions
in the academy or the professions, enjoying the freedoms of
life in democratic societies-have been "absent without
leave" from what should be the fight of our lives: the
struggle for liberty of Muslim peoples. This must not continue:
Our absence must end, and our silence must stop.
Democracy means, among other things, that people can demand
an accounting from their leaders, whether political, religious,
or cultural. Have our safe jobs in the ivory tower made us forget
our moral responsibility to the community? Can we not see that
our indifference to the political and intellectual empowerment
of average people-whether on the streets of Cairo and Karachi
or around the corner at our local mosque-has allowed the most
backward elements among the traditional religious leadership,
the ulama, to come far too close to setting themselves up as
the sole custodians of political and social education? Their
ideas might be foolish, benighted, and far from authentically
Islamic, but they know how to speak the language of the people,
and they are gaining an alarming amount of traction in the Muslim
street.
Given that staggering fact, can we afford to wrap our own message
in an arcane academic argot that the average Muslim, intelligent
but not a specialist, finds impenetrable? The reactionaries
among the ulama all too often use populist-sounding rhetoric
to prop up retrograde and conformist attitudes toward existing
unfree governments. Muslim autocrats need their court preachers
to lend a veneer of Islamic legitimacy to dictatorship, and
the ulama (at least in the Sunni world) need the rulers to keep
the money flowing to the religious establishment.
The preachers may not have the people's best interests at heart,
but they know how to talk the people's talk. It is this sociological
fact that needs our undivided attention today. The answer to
the question "Why Democracy, and why now?" must be
sought in the moral numbness and political indifference to injustice
that prevail today across far too large a swath of the Muslim
world.
Let me be clear: Fostering a positive understanding of democratic
ideals within an Islamic framework will take the best efforts
that a host of intellectual specialists can muster. For this
is not a matter of superficial "Islamizing" verbiage,
but rather of a deep and comprehensive effort to show both the
learned and the lay in Muslim societies that democratic ideas
can and must be thought from within the authentic ethical culture
of Islam and its teachings about the awesome accountability
of human beings in this world and the next.
We need to learn how to guide ourselves and our community back
to the sources, to the living heart of Islamic belief, and take
seriously the emphasis that we find there on building nurturing,
constructive relationships of justice and charity at all levels
of human existence. By taking Islam seriously in this way, I
believe, we will come to see perhaps more clearly than ever
that the kinds of relationships our faith enjoins us to build
cannot exist without respect for the equal dignity of all human
persons and a broad appreciation for the God-given liberty of
the human conscience.
I also believe that we will find ulama-and here I am thinking
especially of the rising generation among them-who are willing
to make this journey with us, who are not pathologically distrustful
of intellectuals or hopelessly compromised by too close a proximity
to power, and who will agree about much of that which constitutes
the common good. Their help will be crucial in dismantling political
and religious authoritarianism and building democratic institutions.
One need not be a secularist in order to seek a practical consensus
on the basis of which peoples of diverse backgrounds and religious
opinions can relate fairly with one another. To engage the more
tractable elements among the ulama in fruitful ways, and to
outargue the extremists, we need to do a better job of learning
about and discussing classical Islamic traditions so that we
can meet religious interlocutors and opponents on their own
ground, and not allow anyone to dismiss us as "outsiders"
to our own religion. It's fine for us to produce critical scholarship
in sociology and anthropology that wins plaudits from our colleagues
in the Western universities where we teach. Yet we must also
learn to challenge and persuade a Muslim community at large-and
this includes many Muslims living in the West-that still mistakes
the rantings of Sayyid Qutb and Maulana Maududi (neither of
whom was much of an Islamic scholar and both of whom came from
secular educational backgrounds, by the way) for the last word
in "authentically Islamic" thought about the modern
world.
We also need to care about what is being taught in Muslim seminaries
and theological faculties, and we need to study-carefully and
in detail-how these teachings affect the political thinking
of Muslim peoples. On subjects such as the rights of women or
non-Muslim minorities, too many ulama and too many seminaries
are disseminating illiberal, antidemocratic attitudes and attacking
anything that smacks of rationality and tolerance.
In 2002, I spent eight months in Iran. During my stay, I had
intense conversations with scholars at Islamic seminaries and
Iranian universities alike. I came away convinced that we Muslim
intellectuals living in the West absolutely must end our irrelevance
and take up the crucial role that only we-or more precisely,
our ideas-can play in renewing the way Muslims think about politics
and society. Unless and until our critical scholarship is translated
and disseminated to the seminaries and theological faculties
of the Muslim world-and to Islamic institutions right here in
our own backyards-it is impossible for me to see how the reformist
renewal that we all hope and pray for can take off and change
the future.
It is in light of all this that we should appreciate the work
that is being done by some dissident scholars in Iran and Egypt.
They are writing in Persian and Arabic, and speaking directly
to people who long to understand how their religion is relevant
to modern times, and desperate to hear of word of hope as they
labor under oppression. Autocrats can and do make the lives
of these brave scholars very hard. But even one article by one
of them-a critique, perhaps, of the spuriously "Islamic"
arguments that the local religious establishment uses to justify
its absolutism and obscurantism-does the work of thousands of
books that we produce here: That's how much evidence there is
to show that Muslim dissident scholarship in Western languages
has not reached the people who can rethink Islamic theology
and Islamic juridical traditions by applying modern findings
about the study of religion.
As Muslim scholars who wish to assist the culture of tolerance
in the Muslim world and help our fellows in their search for
truth, we require not only cultural legitimacy in order to reach
intelligent Muslim audiences, but also the means to transmit
our research in languages that can carry our ideas to a wide
public outside the West.
Speaking of matters closer to home, I believe that there are
a number of scholars here in the United States whose work could
foster better interfaith and intercommunal relations and lead
to badly needed change in our own local Muslim communities.
We've seen narrowmindedness propagated here and abroad for a
quarter-century, and we know that buckets of petrodollars still
grease the way for extremist individuals and organizations that
traduce Islam while claiming to promote it. Overcoming their
false appeals and winning acceptance for "dissident"
thought will be a long-term project, but that is all the more
reason to get started now. We should all leave here tonight
thinking of ways to reach out to our community, to combat the
confusion of obscurantism with faithfulness to Islam, and to
counteract the intolerance and bigotry that are taught in too
many Muslim institutions in America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and
the Middle East.
I have no illusions that any of this will be easy. Backwardness
and extremism have powerful backers with deep pockets-just look
at who gets invited to speak at so many Muslim gatherings in
the West. But that is our challenge, and more, our sacred duty.
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