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November 16, 2006

So, this is it

I will be posting exclusively at Eteraz: States of Islam from now on.

It is a joint effort involving Ali Eteraz, Haroon Moghul and Willow Wilson. We all owe a big thank you to Yursil Kidwai, who designed the site.

under|progress will remain up for the forseeable future as an archive of sorts (or at least until my existing agreement with Six Apart expires), but I may start to move some of my older writing to Eteraz.

Please join us for what will be an online collaborative effort involving not only us, but you, the all important reader. Please register with the community and sign up for a reader diary. We welcome views, whether you agree or disagree with anything we say. We only expect you show a modicum of respect for everyone else.

And please don't forget to add us to your blogrolls, feeds etc.

November 11, 2006

The Carnival of Islam in the West III

Munzareen Padela hosts the third volume of The Carnival of Islam in the West. Some highlights include:

November 10, 2006

Why cultural Islam is important

The Raddical Middle Way announces that Dr Umar Faruq Abd-Allah will be touring the United Kingdom. Dr. Abd-Allah is Chairman of the Board and Scholar-in-Residence at the Nawawi Foundation.

The event that I will try to get to will be "Cultural Jihad - Making Islam Matter" to be held in The Brunei Gallery at SOAS on 17th November (7 - 9.30pm):

"For Muslims living in the West the future lies not in the tinkering of theology but in the production of culture. But how is this process of cultural relevancy to take place? Is it taking place? What are its discernible forms? What are the challenges that need to be surmounted before a genuine cultural expression takes root? And what and who is to define what is ‘genuine’? To what extent is cultural output in Islamic civilisation a utilitarian exercise? In the global village of specialised economies and shared global tastes where does the process of being consumers stop and that of being producers of culture begin? What needs to be done to convert Western society to associate Islam with the beauty of the Taj Mahal and the Majesty of the Dome of the Rock rather than with the blasted Twin Towers of New York or the shattered Buddhist statues in Afghanistan? Can we develop an agenda of cultural do’s that would harness the energy of our young people – to teach them that singing, creating, beautifying and being joyous are all part of the Islamic agenda?"

This is a very crucial point, which I am always banging on about: the lack of any real engagement with wider society outside the confines of politics and rights. These have their place, but is that all one can define 'Islam' (in its broader sense) by? It's probably the reason why John Humphrys, in his search for faith, asked Rowan Williams about God, spirituality and philosophy, but asked Tariq Ramadan about politics and law. I am glad to see someone of repute like Dr. Abd-Allah, is keen to address this issue.

Jack Straw in conversation

Jack Straw was invited to speak about his recent comments by The City Circle and Three Faiths Forum last week. The event can now be downloaded from The City Circle website. I managed to get an invite, but couldn't make it due to other commitments.

November 07, 2006

Ramadan on BBC Radio 4

Tariq Ramadan speaks to John Humphrys as part of the BBC presenter's ongoing to series on religion.

November 06, 2006

Not a holy Trinity

1. I'll be moving soon (hence the lack of any updates). Read this.

2. The next volume of the Carnival of Islam in the West is now taking submissions. Due this Friday 10 November. You know the score. Submit here.

3. The Third Annual Brass Crescent Awards are open for nominations. Go forth and nominate. And get some buttony goodness from Aziz.

October 23, 2006

See Medinah and never leave your front door

Hood Bradford has produced a virtual tour of Medinah using Google Earth. Check his blog for a full listing of the sites he has marked, and download the file from here.

Eid Mubarak!

Image taken from www.salambazar.com/urduBlog/

Eid mubarak! May you have a blessed day with family and friends and may God accept your good deeds over the last month.

October 22, 2006

Q-News: Blaming foreign policy is a cop-out

From the latest edition of Q-News (scroll down a little):

"There are some ideological liberals in our community who take to the pulpit to argue that American, British and Canadian foreign policy is responsible for creating the fertile grounds for violent extremists to germinate. The argument is lame and they know it. It is true that Western foreign policy is often driven by greed and ignorance and in most cases it results in death and destruction to countless innocent people, many of them in the Muslim world. But to conclude that foreign policy is wholly responsible for terrorism and suicide bombings is hogwash. The people who are advancing this argument are trying to save their own skin.

"Blaming Western foreign policy for fomenting extremism is precisely the argument that Ayman Al-Zawahiri and his new sidekick, American convert Adam Yahiye Gadahn a.k.a. ‘Azzam the American’ want us to advance to justify their vision of a ‘New Jihad World Order.’ When we buy in we end up advancing the goals of this fringe group of loud and obnoxious Muslim men and women who are hell-bent on heralding The End."

But you read that argument here first folks. And blaming "ideological liberals" is also a cop-out.

Where Muslim leaders fail

The MCB should change its public rhetoricUnfortunately, it appears to have become a common theme amongst the popular media and politicians that 'Muslim leaders' are not doing enough to prevent extremism amongst Muslim youngsters. I say unfortunate, because it looks in the wrong places for solutions. This idea is borne of a lack of familiarity by outsiders with the inner social dynamics of the Muslim communities across Britain, and also the (unthinking) belief that Muslims are somehow insulated from broader social and cultural trends across post/modern Britain. However, contrary to assertions, we aren't superhumans who stand outside the contingencies of history and time.

In fact, it is highly unlikely that anything Muslim leaders say or do has any great influence on Muslim youths, much less what mosque members might be saying. More often than not, they're preaching to the converted. Remember that fatwa which condemned the London bombings, or the one which rebutted the claims of al-Muhajiroun? Both texts were produced by Muslim religious leaders whose words carry weight in religious circles (and squares, triangles and most other shapes). Shaykh Muhammad Afifi al-Atiki, who produced the rebuttal of Bakri et al., is an authoritative contemporary jurist. But how many youngsters know about these? How many even care? And if, as we're told, Muslims place great weight on pronouncements of religious authorities, how much weight can be put on the words of the head of the MCB, who, for all intents and purposes, is a 'secular' leader?

Traditionalist Muslims, like Timothy Winter, will see this as a sign of the loss of respect for classical learning and authority in contemporary Islam (and I'd agree to some degree) and tie it in with the general malaise in post/modern Britain. But this loss of respect for authorities is not unique to Muslims. It is a general cultural trend in wider society and may be a symptom of mass consumerism and individualism in post/modern societies (note, I am trying to be descriptive and not moral in my tone here).

It is also equally likely all of these people, religious scholars and public leaders, are seen as establishment figures, detached from the everyday grind of Muslim life in Britain. So blaming them for extremism and terrorism becomes a pointless exercise. What they say and do is irrelevant to most young Muslims anyway. But, there is one point on which Muslim leaders like Dr. Abdul Bari fail, and fail miserabley like only a Muslim can. That is they, like their critics, 'Islamise' problems affecting Muslims beyond all proportion.

A point I touched on earlier was about how the lack of socioeconomic opportunities causing 'alienation' does not affect Muslims only. What prominent public Muslim spokesmen need to stress when they bring up a lack of housing, jobs and good schools in the context of Muslim integration and participation in society, is that these concerns are broader social problems affecting not just 'Muslims'. They should not reduce them to a 'Muslim' issue as it appears they do. They need to address the point that if you're poor in Britain, or stuck outside the 'mainstream', or on the lower rungs of society, life isn't too pleasant or easy and it doesn't particularly matter if you're Muslim or not. They need to stress their concern for wider issues affecting Britain (health, education and so on), rather than dabbling in stupid political point-scoring (like the MCB's refusal to attend the Holocaust Memorial Day). They should divorce themselves from the public rhetoric which presents them and their organisations as single-issue bodies representing Muslims only, and transform themselves into grassroots organisation which are interested in helping society at large. They should show that theirs is an activism for goodness, and it just so happens that they're Muslims. Whether one likes it or not, in a secular society people are not really interested in your theological viewpoints. Let people connect the two (faith and deeds), rather force-feeding it down their throats. "God guides whom He wills". (And note, this is not a call for people abandon da'wah.) When they decry human rights violations against Muslims, they should also stand up for human rights violations against others who are not Muslims, which are prepetrated by Muslims (it is very real point to note is that most human rights violations against Muslims are committed by other Muslims). Pious platitudes are not enough.

This way they can transform the image (and sadly reality) of Muslim public discourse which is one of rights and politics to one of cultural and social engagement. And yes, there are grassroots organisations run by Muslims which tackle issues like drugs; I'm familiar with one in Tower Hamlets. There was also a seminar a few months ago about sexual abuse and counselling in minority communities organised by a friend of mine at a large mosque (unfortunately I was unable to attend). So these projects do exist, albeit the lack of media coverage and networking with national institutions means they do not get enough exposure. But, my argument is that should a journalist looking for good copy phone up the likes of MCB, MAB, IHRC, MPAC, SMC (who have been silent in recent weeks...) and so on, offices whose phone numbers reside in the diaries of most journalists, then instead of vexing themselves over the latest 'Muslim outrage' story, they should show a bit of nouse and ask the journalist to help cover a project to tackle drugs or illiteracy which they may be involved in or know of. Inayat Bunglawala and Faisal Bodi, from their privileged positions as public Muslim commentators, should use their next few posts at Comment is free blogging only about such projects, tuning out from the media cycles. This way they can expose those people who do have a genuine animus towards Muslims, and make friends with other people regardless of their own personal beliefs.

There are prominent Muslims who have spoken about these sorts of issues, trying to reposition public Muslim discourse as one about broader social concerns. Tariq Ramadan comes to mind, as does Yahya Birt (who is certainly capable of it). But unfortunately they're marginalised (or smeared in the case of Ramadan) by both the popular media and even Muslims (like these comments on my blog which sees Ramadan in the same category as Irshad Manji). Bunglawala and Bodi, the MCB, MAB, SMC, MPAC and so on have access to the media, and are now see as 'Muslim spokesmen' for better or for worse. If, for some reason, they start talking about these broader topics and only these topics (that is they do not discuss 'Muslim issues') and, for some reason they drop out of the public spotlight, then at least our oft-cited complaint against a biased media that is always on the lookout for the next Professional Muslim Extremist, will be fully justified. In the meantime, we could have made some friends across a wider range of society.

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