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Abdullah M. Hamidaddin |
Showing posts with label Jihad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jihad. Show all posts
Monday, 25 August 2014
Terrorism, Saudis, and the Trivialization of Life
This is a guest contribution by Abdullah Hamidaddin, a commentator on Middle Eastern affairs and presently a PhD candidate at King's College London. His book Harmonious Being is discussed in this earlier post.
I
n the heart of every terrorist is a trivialization of life; his
own or the innocent’s or both. Some terrorists come with a disposition for criminality
and trivialize the lives of others for lack of empathy. Such people hold on
dearly to their own lives and those they cares for – family – but can become butchers
when the matter is about other people’s lives. They may seem religious, but they
are nothing but criminals using a religious language. And in many ways it is
only language which differentiates a criminal who uses religious or
revolutionary language and the butchers in the Mexican drug cartels. On the
other hand some terrorists are ideologues. They trivialize life because they
are convinced that it does not merit care, or because there are things worth to
die for and also to kill thousands of others. Here they learn to trivialize
life, they read theory after theory on the matter, and then they teach others. Here
all lives are trivialized; one’s own life, those dear and also others. Such terrorists
who adopt an ideology that trivializes life (and glorifies death) are the most
dangerous type. They are the fuel that sustains terrorism. A criminal terrorist
will withdraw once he/she realizes that the costs outweigh the benefits. The
ideologue terrorist will continue until he/she is killed or incarcerated.
Those who combat terrorism in Saudi Arabia face a major hurdle. The
ideology of trivializing life is very popular. It is true that only a few
members of Saudi society turn towards terrorism, but a significant segment of
that society believes in many of the founding ideas of terrorism particularly
the ideology of trivializing life. This becomes apparent by following or participating
in Saudi debates on terrorism, even though the new terrorism laws enacted made
many Saudis less willing to speak their minds on terrorism. They want to
condone it or justify but they fear that it may constitute promotion of
terrorism as defined by the way and lead them to imprisonment. But there had
been a recent frank debate on Hamas and Palestinian military resistance and the
ideas expressed say much about the popularity of the ideology of trivializing
life. Though the debate was about Hamas it spoke our local reality; though it
was about an event outside Saudi Arabia it reflected a local mindset.
Following the debate on resistance can give us a glimpse on some of
the highlights of the ideology of trivializing life which sustains terrorism.
At the heart of that debate you find a culture of adoration to death. The
debates did not focus on the military or political feasibility of resistance rather
on the necessity to die and the triviality of life regardless of the gains. Some
of the common phrases were: “to die as martyrs is better than to live without
pride”; “what is the point of them living if it is under a siege”; “what is bad
about a whole nation dying for its dignity”; “what do they have to live for
anyhow”; “why is death a problem?” “it is not important how many of us are
killed, what matters is that we kill from them and strike fear in their
hearts”; “our dead will go to heaven so it is not a problem.”
Had we heard this from someone living in Gaza it would be
understood. He/she would be living in exceptionally harsh situations and thus
is expected to think about life and death in an exceptional even suicidal mode.
Living under an occupation can make one hate their enemies to the point of
hating their own lives and those one cares for.
Had those been said by soldier, it would have also been understood.
He/she is trained to kill; to violently confront; to die. His training extracts
from him respect for human life. A soldier in the end is a killing machine.
What is freighting however is to see such phrases coming out from
Saudis of all backgrounds and social classes. I almost feel that some of their
grievances about the deaths of Gazans is more about stirring Western conscience
and less about actually being sad over them. It is almost as if they are thrilled
about human loss or at least uncaring but are compelled to show a sad face. It
is indeed horrific to hear such logic from the religious, the intellectual, the
layman, the old and the young. All celebrate death in their own ranks – the
ranks of the Palestinians actually - as much as they celebrate death in the
ranks of their enemies – the Israelis.
I need to take a moment to differentiate between the undesired
necessity of death to protect one’s life, dignity, rights, land and nation on
one hand and the celebration of death on the other. I do not argue against the
necessity of death in extreme conditions (though I still consider it evil), but
I argue against celebrating it and welcoming it. We also need to differentiate between
holding on to life and loving life. We do hold on to life, no doubt. But sometimes
I feel it is an instinctive response; similar to that of a car or an ant. We
also fight for our lives, but perhaps in the same way as an amoeba protects its
own life. Yet, we – or many of us – do not love life. We do not hold it to be
sacred. On the contrary we love death and sacralise it; we consider death the ultimate
goodness and we may even ridicule those who love life or call for holding it
sacred.
All nations consider those killed for a grand cause to be martyrs.
All nations give the family the news of the death of a dear one. And all
nations cry and lament their losses. But we have a peculiar and odd phenomenon
which is that we give the news as if it’s good piece of news. Many of us are
actually happy to hear the news of martyrdom. Some families reject receiving condolences
because they consider it to be a happy occasion. Of course there is sadness. We
cannot avoid being sad. But we celebrate death. Some families even envy other
families who are strong enough in their faith to the point where they announce
their happiness when receiving the news of martyrdom.
We need a better understanding of this mindset. We need to
understand its roots. Where did the ideology of trivializing life/death come
from? The Quran speaks of Jihad as something people hate: "Fighting has been enjoined upon you while it is hateful to you" (Q 2.216). Yet now we have people speaking
about Jihad and about being killed as something they love. Is it the Marxist resistance
movements which also trivialized the life of the individual for the sake of the
life of the collective? There is a lot of evidence that local radical, Arab nationalists,
and Islamic movements were influenced by Marxist resistance literature. So
perhaps it was imported and then ‘Islamized’ by mixing it with Qur’anic verses,
Hadiths and historical stories of Muslim heroism. Being Islamized is a crisis,
as before that, such ideas would have been considered a pragmatic tool to encourage
resistance. But when Islamists adopted it, it became an ultimate value, a
religious principle, it became above everything. There is also a second crisis which
is that this principle was included in our educational programs and built into
the DNA of our culture and now a whole society is socialized on it.
To look for ISIS or Al-Qaeda or all forms of terrorism one needs to
look into the whole of society. In a way we all belong to ISIS. We are all
terrorists. We have all grown up to be soldiers for the ‘cause’ – whatever that
is; soldiers who know how to obey not to think; how to hate not to love; how to
fight not to make peace; how to confront not to maneuver; how to die not to live.
Such knowledge is a foundation of terrorism.
We repeatedly hear that it is futile to confront terrorism if the
religious clerics who are assigned the duty of confronting religious terrorism
are themselves radical. But the problem in my view is deeper. Society fights
terrorism but in its depth is a terrorist. The terrorist is not in discord with
his society rather a loyal member of his society’s culture. The terrorist is
one who disobeyed his society but not who left his society’s culture.
Another article on a related theme written by the same author for Al-Arabiya News appeared under the title 'How to Kill ISIS with the Right Discourse'.
Following him on twitter @amiQ1.
Labels:
Abdullah Hamidaddin,
ISIS,
Islam,
Jihad,
religion,
saudi arabia,
violence
Monday, 2 May 2011
The Muslim World in 2011: Another landmark Event
Mark Juergensmeyer's article, published by the Religion Dispatches website, carrying his first commentary on the death of Osama bin Laden and its impact on the future of radical Islamism and Muslim political extremism reiterates the point he made in an earlier essay on the impact of Egypt's 25 February 2011 Revolt and other uprisings in the Middle East and North Africa: That the war on terrorism was not won by US special forces or high-tech intelligence operations, but tweeting youths in the Arab world and elsewhere. It confirms the underpinnings of the Critical Muslims blog that -- in the long run -- the ideas of progressive, cosmopolitan and liberal-minded Muslims will outlast the nihilism of Islamist agendas. Here are a few excerpts corroborating this position:
The above assessment echoes his earlier observations on the Tahrir Square phenomenon in the Huffington Post:
Here are his musings on Bin Laden's reaction to recent events in the Arab World -- not that these conjectures matter anymore:
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Osama bin Laden 1957-2011 |
The imagined war of the Bush era may indeed be over. And the jihadi insurrection associated with bin Laden and his al Qaeda organization may also be dead. But I suspect that the real perpetrators of their deaths may not have been the elite American military cadre some hours ago in Pakistan, but the legion of cell-phone toting protestors earlier this year in Tahrir Square. They have helped to complete the erosion of legitimacy that has undermined the jihadi activists in recent years within the Muslim world.
What brought down the tyrants in Egypt and Tunisia, as it turned out, was about as far from jihad as one could imagine. It was a series of massive nonviolent movements of largely middle class and relatively young professionals who organized their protests through Facebook, Twitter, and other forms of electronic social networking.
The religiosity of Tahrir Square is far from the religion of radical jihad. Rather than separating Muslim from non-Muslim, and Sunni from Shi'a, the symbols that were raised on impromptu placards in Tahrir Square were emblems of interfaith cooperation; they showed the cross of Coptic Christians together with the crescent of Egypt's Muslims in a united religious front against autocracy.
Tahrir Square is a profound anti-jihadi lesson, and its significance has spread around the world. It has ignited similar nonviolent protests elsewhere in the Middle East, and it may also have altered the thinking of activists in other cultures as well. Intense discussion is underway in Palestine, where the Hamas-dominated strategy of strategic violence has been largely counterproductive; will a new nonviolent and non-extremist movement of young educated Palestinian professionals create a different kind of impetus for change in their region of the Middle East?Read the entire essay by clicking here.
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Mark Juergensmeyer |
What brought down Mubarak, as it turned out, was about as far from jihad as one could imagine. It was a massive nonviolent movement of largely middle class and relatively young professionals who organized their mass protests through Facebook, Twitter, and other forms of electronic social networking. No doubt the passivity of the Egyptian military was also a critical factor; the army did not forcibly resist the protests, as the military has in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and Libya. Yet one cannot underestimate the importance of Tahrir Square, and similar protests in Alexandria and throughout Egypt. Clearly, they constituted the catalyst for change. The rallies at Tahrir Square often seemed more like rock concerts than like urban warfare, and when fighting did break out it was largely promulgated by thugs hired by the Mubarak regime rather than the anti-government protestors. Perhaps not since the peaceful overthrow of the Marcos regime in the Philippines has the world seen such a dramatic demonstration of the power of nonviolent resistance. The protests were not the weapons of jihad, nor were the voices of opposition the strident language of Islamist extremism.
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Cairo's Tahrir Square, 25 February 2011 |
Imagine what Osama bin Laden must have made of all of this as news trickled into the cave or cellar or whatever lair in which he is hiding. Imagine even more the puzzled chagrin of someone like bin Laden's primary lieutenant, Zawahiri, the Egyptian medical doctor who joined the most extreme Islamist jihadi movement years ago, convinced that only violent guerrilla warfare would topple someone like Mubarak. Tahrir Square clearly showed that Zawahiri was wrong.However, he also added a cautionary caveat:
Does this mean that al Qaeda is finished, and the radical struggles of jihad will fizzle into history?Perhaps, in part. It is unlikely, however, that the al Qaeda organization, such as it is, will be abandoned. The small group of people who comprise the inner circle of the bin Laden organization will no doubt harden its resolve. Like the followers of millennarian movements who become more extreme and entrenched in their beliefs when the prophecized end of the world does not terminate on schedule, the true believers of al Qaeda will soldier on. (The whole essay can be found here).In today's commentary he repeated that warning:
The rise of a new nonviolent popularism in the Middle East may seriously undercut the viability of the jihadi image of violent social change. On the other hand, a significant number of failures of nonviolent resistence may lead to a violent backlash once again.
Indeed, we are not there yet...Specialists in religiously inspired violence such as Juergensmeyer will have their work cut out for many years to come, but so will the analysts of the alternative discourses on the other side of the spectrum. 2011 may very well enter history as the watershed year for the amplification of those other voices.
For some of Juergensmeyer's books, click on the images below:
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