Реферат: Islam in the eyes of the West
Реферат: Islam in the eyes of the West
Islam in the eyes of the West
(essay)
The representations
prevailing in the West about the Muslim world stem from a complex elaboration process
where historical and political factors are intertwined.
Historical and
geographical proximity always means complex and competitive relations between
the geopolitical entities concerned. And this has certainly been the case between
the European and the Muslim world since the Middle Ages and implied handing over
an historical memory of conflicts. The rivalry between Islam and Chistianity, between
Al-Andalus and the Christian kingdoms, between the Christian and Ottoman empires
triggered conflicts of interests and ideologies tending to turn the other into
the Devil. You just have to read Amin Maalouf's book "The Crusades seen by
the Arabs" or to sea Youssef Chahine's film "Saladin" to realize
that their interpretation of such historic events is just the opposite of the one
we have built in the West with a reverse symbolism. Nevertheless, the distorsions
brought about by such a situation did not prevent the development of mutual influence.
The Bizantine Empire had close links to the Omeyas and th Abbasis in the East (even
closer than with the European Christian kingdoms), there will be constant economic
and cultutral exchanges between Al-Andalus and the Christian kingdoms just as
the westernization of medieval Islam is an undeniable historic process (Sicily,
the Iberian peninsula, the Balkans).
However, the modern
and contemporary times witnessed the development by the West of an ideology based
on western cultural superiority, which will be the corner stone of its relations
with others, and more intensively so with Islam, giving rise to what apparently
looked like a cultural gap but that had, in effect, deep political roots.
The time when Jews
and Muslims were expelled from Spain, as well as the discovery of America represent
the starting point of a process whereby Europe sees itself as a close identity and
proclaims it is the only one to possess the attributes of mankind, considering as
a consequence other peoples as inferior. The ideological elaboration process that
supports this European vision was completed during the Renaissance and is still
at play nowadays. It has to do with a selective interpretation of History, which
eradicates the East from European thinking and gives birth to the myth of Greco-roman
culture being its sole and only original source. In other words, the founding mith
of European thinking expelled radically the oriental contribution, and within
this contribution, the significant role played by Muslim thinking in the safeguard
and revitalization of hellenistic philosophy as well as in the development of a
rationalistic philosophy of its own. As a result, the concept of two different isolated
worlds that do not have the least common heritage, flourished.
Later on, with
the development of colonialism, we came to consider European culture as superior
to all others and to look upon the cultures of colonized peoples as inferior. Since
then, Europe is infused with a deep cultural ethnocentricism through which it looks
upon other cultures in an essentialist manner (that is to say as if they were
closed up, inmutable and monolithic, incapable of progress nor evolution, in a
way that is determinant for their future). As a result we tend to consider that
the notions of progress, dynamism and innovation belong to European civilization,
that was then transformed in Western, and it should be universally imitated[1].
At a later stage, when the anti-colonial movement developed in Europe, it will
question the legimacy of the methods used (political domination and economic exploitation),
but not the vocation of the West to serve as the cultural model that would enable
the world to modernize. Progress and development could not be but the identical
reproduction of what had happened in the West.
In the Arab and
Muslim world, the colonial vision at work will look upon the native cultural heritage
and trsnmit the idea that everything that came from from the Islamic heritage was
backward and contrary to progress and modernity. From then on, the idea according
to which Islam and modernity are mutually exclusive gained more and more strength,
the only valued contribution will be the one coming from Arab and Muslim intellectuals
who are close to European thinking, since this is yet an other way to stress their
dependance vis à vis Western supremacy.
The problem is
that the belief in such a supremacy prevailed also among the nationalist elites
that lead the way to independance and then constitued the governments of the newly
born Nation - States, which were convinced that the ideal solution lied in the imitation
of the West.
As a consequence,
the post-colonial value system in the Muslim world turned its back on islamic legitimacy
and culture as it launched its political and economic modernization process, and
thus took over the symbolic anti-islamic vision of the Western model. Far from
renovating or updating the pre-colonial legal, political and cultural framework,
the principle of "islamic authenticity", that was obsessively repeated
by the official propaganda, turned into the intouchable pilar of islamic heritage,
and remained completely left out of the process of building a modern State.
As a consequence,
the State will leave behind, and even suppress, just as the Europeans had done,
thecmodernist trends within Muslim reformist movements. On the contrary, it
supported the more traditional ulemas, and granted them official status through
the "Councils of Ulemas" that were set up by governments, so that their
fatwas[2] could be used as devices
to give islamic legitimacy to any position, opinion or decision taken by the regime.
In turn, The governments rewarded these ultra-conservative ulemas by allowing
them to control the social model of Muslim society. They became the censors of
society and caretakers of tradition, and thus prevented any change or social reform
as well as any modernist interpretation of Islam. This is how the Arab States
closed the door on new interpretations or readings of Muslim tradition aimed at
adapting it to the modern world, for the greatest satisfaction of the Western world,
convinced that the world od Islam is incapable of producing modernity.
This concept shared
both by the West and the westernized elites of the Arab and Muslim world came to
a crisis in the seventies when the value system put in place by the first post-colonial
generation revealed all of its failures. The value system was based on the socio-economic
model of the all protecting state, on pan-arabism. socialism and anti-imperialism,
focused on the fight against Israel. The overall failure of such principles (acute
socio-economic crisis, corruption, authoritarian political system, loss of political
influence as a regional group within the international community and striking defeat
in the fight against Israel with the loss of the 1967 war as a symbolic date) created
a growing gap from the seventies onward between government and society. And within
society, the gap was even wider with the most relevant sector, (in demographic
terms) that is to say the young people, the following generation who make up for
the vast majority: over 60% of the total population in the Arab world to-day are
under 20 years of age. Confronted with the overall failure of the political and
ideological models derived from the West, this new generation will feel attracted
by a new model, that contrary to what the first nationalist generation had done,
was inspired by their own cultural heritage and would build an up-dated model based
on their own cultural, historical and legal universe. This explains why, from
the eighties, this part of the world has gone through a process of Islamic
cultural affirmation, that politically identifies with the reformist islamist parties.
Or, to say things
differently, after the experience of failure, in terms of political and economic
independance, there is in the Arab and Muslim world to-day a strong feeling rising
from the sphere that was long most neglected by the nationalist elites who built
the State, that is to say the sphere of cultural identity and independance, which
in the Arab world is closely linked to the Islamic framework. This is where reformist
islamism anwers, in sociological terms, the need felt by a vast proportion of
Muslim populations to build a new, modern, democratic order based on their own
culture and identity. What is expected from the West is respect and acknowledgement,
however this revitilazation of Islam is not aimed against the West. What is questioned
is the way the specificity of the Western cultural universe has been arbitrarily
raised to the status of absolute universal standard. When islamists express their
resentement against the West, this does not mean that they despise its values of
progress and development, or of public liberties, but simply that they reject
the arrogance of the West, and the double standards that it applies to question
such as the fight for human rights, democracy or the ever pending Palestinian
question.
In the West, instead
of trying to understand the causes and depth of the social and political evolution
going on in the Muslim world, we have concentrated on "islamic fundamentalism"
while focusing the analysis of what happens in this part of the world on the
cultural difference between "them" and "us", with no proper
attention as to what consequences international politics have on the Middle East
region.
The phantasm of
"islamic fundamentalism" has proved useful to feed prejudice and strengthen
essentialist cultural visions of Islam as well as legitimate authoritarian governments
in many Arab and Muslim countries. However, the most important aspect probably is
the analytical confusion around the notion of islamist fundamentalism which prevented
western societies to understand the diversity of the social and political situation
in the Arab and Muslim world and what the real problems in the area are. The dominant
opinion on islamists in the West has been unable to make the difference - and
this is where the problem lies - between reformist islamists (the majority, respecful
of law and opposed to violence), religious ultra-conservative circles (supported
by goverments themselves) and radical islamists (a minority, blown out of proportion
by the media). This lack of insight reveals the great ignorance of Western public
opinion about the Muslim world.
The cultural explanation of political situations
In the beginning
of the nineties, an other historic process took place that reinforced Western superiority
complex vis a vis Islam and the overall anti-islamic vision presert in Western societies,
I mean the legitimacy of a one-polar world and in is wake, the globalization process.
With this new situation, the West set up a mecanism that tends to locate the origin
of conflicts in the cultural difference between peoples, eliminating thus other
relevant factors, such as the growing economic gap between various regions in
the world.
Globalization means
a global capitalist system but not a global market, social problems are not a
priority in development programs, foreign investment mainly target developed countries,
economic growth in the developing countries takes place in a catastrophic social
framework and as a consequence does not have positive effects for the population.
Globalization also means giving up gradually the fight for human rights since economic
interests prevail over democratic political reform, it also means having to face
the consequenses of the ever growing depreciation towards non-Western cultures
(the Muslims being at the fore front, but we should not forget other parts of
the world, like the fight of nativeLatin American Indians).
As a consequence,
the essentialist vision of the Others' culture, and especially the Muslim's, will
gain even more influence. The framework of Islam is thought of as rigid, anchoring
society in the past, tending to regression, as if Islam alone determined the
fututre of these peoples. Islam is then often interpreted as the general source
of History but also of the future of Arabs and Muslims, and it is seen as determinist
and omnipresent. Such analysis think of Muslim societies as complete, close up entities,
as if they were not in constant evolution, transforming their identities, their
visions, their culture and institutions, according to new circumstances and situations.
These theories easily turn in an "islamic exception" situations that in
fact exist in many other parts of the world, and that can be explained by a variety
of political, economic and social factors. It was not very difficult in such circumstances
to convince public opinion in the West that what happens in the Muslim world is
always related to an irrational wave of cultural and religious anti-western fanaticism,
while in reality governments themselves, strongly supported by the West, are greatly
responsible for the present situation mainly because of their resistance to democratization.
One should not
forget that the Gulf War was the first instance staging this new order. It not only
meant U. S. supremacy in the world, it was also used to give more weight to Western
domination over others, and more specifically over Arab and Muslims. What was in
theory a fight against a specific tyran in a specific Arab country (even if it aimed
at protecting other tyrans from the area), turned also into a cultural world
crusade against Islam.
This transformation
was very useful in order to mobilize just about everybody in the West, and define
with general approbation the general orientation of Western policy in the area.
That is to say: to protect Israeli interests as well as the energy sources in
the Gulf, to support allied Arab dictatorships that depend dramatically from the
West, to build a new global concept based on the existence of "legitimate"
and "rogue" states, whereby one can identify supposed and uncertain
threats in order to justify enormous military expenses in the region (Saudi Arabia,
the United Arab Emirates and Koweit alone spent 44,2 billion dollars beween
1990 and 1994, for the great benefit of Western armement indutries).
The promotion of
democracy and human rights were left behind (read Amnisty International and Human
Rights Watch reports), while the West put together an ad hoc litterrature in order
to avoid having to make a real political analysis and to find a justification for
its policies in the region, focusing on the so-called "cultural question",
that is so cherished by Western public opinion. ( Samuel Huntington published his
theory on the "clash of civilizations" in 1993). [3]
This theory will
serve first of all as the ideological basis on which Western supremacy will be
solemnly consecrated while other cultures, would be discriminated against in regions
of the world where Western interests are dominant, at political, economic and military
level, and where active forces refuse to accept such domination or superiority.
The principle of the cultural threat posed by the Other being thus sustained, it
becomes possible to dehumanize the sufferings expierenced by civilian populations
that derive from Western international policies. And more specifically, the fear
around the "islamic factor" will mean as a consequence that Western societies
turned insentive to the situation of the Kurds, the Palestinians, the Irakis,
the Afghans, etc... a situation that is rooted in the convergence of interests of
local dictatorial regimes and the West's.
The September
11th attacks in New - York and Washington gave more weight to such anti-Muslim
cultural perceptions. We are confronted with the revival of a "neocolonial"
type of attitude that keeps repeating that the West equals "the civilized
world" and justifies therefore its action on the basis of such cultural
superiority, in order once again to strengthen its control and to keep bringing
to the " World of others" nothing but arrogance, oppression and dictatorships.
We have recently been through an exercice of exaltation of the "virtues of
our culture" as opposed to the Muslim world presented as a solid block and
described as "medieval", "primitive" "archaic". Many
(too many) people have come to dual conception that presents the September attacks
attributed to a specific terrorist group, as a confrontation between two models,
two opposed monolithic worlds, the Western and the Muslim worlds, that even are
"at war".
In such circumstances,
the Arab and Muslim populations resent the situation with a deep feeling of
"humilation" (a very far reaching cultural notion, since it means that
one is denied respect and consideration), because of the number of conflicts where
the "civilized "international community does not show a real determination
to solve problems with justice and democracy. But this situation does not imply
in our societies a feeling of sympathy with the victims, on the contrary, because
of the anti-islamic cultural essentialist theory, the people are deprived of their
dignity and turned into fake enemies and potential massive threat, "because
they hate our civilization and our values".
All this brings
us to the conclusion that the dominant view that prevails in Western societies on
the islamic threat or the civilization conflict between Islam and the West is first
and foremost a tool that is used in order to justify the effects of Western policies
on the Muslim world in the eyes of our own societies.
There are many arguments
that say that the Muslim world has remained a prisonner of its historic memory,
that it has not been able to go beyond the trauma of colonialism, and renovate
through the implementation of the modern values that colonialism had revealed and
the organization of an extensive social and political debate; that it has not been
able to solve the question of political legitimacy because it did not succeed in
developing workable models, or because intellectuals did not play their role as
critics within society, and that all this is not the U. S. nor Europe's fault. But
this is only half true. The Muslim world is not an hostage of the past, since foreign
intervention was not limited to colonialism itself but has been ongoing up to now,
and even more so since the Gulf War.
There has also
been a responsibility of the West in the failure of all attempts to build political
models oriented toward democratization. The first attempts to set up a constitutional
order in the XIXth century in the Arab provinces of Tunisia and Egypt, or at the
very heart of the Ottoman Empire with the Turkish reforms, were torpedoed by France
and England. The experience of liberal government in the first half of the XXth
century in Egypt, Irak or Syria were to a great extent undermined, in their democratic
exercice, by the interests of those two European powers, that wanted to keep control
over their ancient colonies. In the case of Lebanon, the cause for the disaster
that plunged the country in a bloody civl war for 15 years is to be found in the
creation of a State that was conceived to grant political supremacy to the Maronite
Christian minority (that is to say France's main clientele in the Middle East) over
the Muslim majority. After the long interlude of socialist governments that were
up to the soviet autocratic model they had adopted, the neo-liberal governments
that followed, implemented economic liberalization reforms coupled with a growing
political despotism that is "laundered" by their European and American
allies, for the great misery of the population who is submitted to a fierce repression.
The most open and transparent elections held in the region, took place in Algeria
in 1991 and they were reduced to ashes by a military coup that was supported by
the whole of the Western world.
Regimes that are
in place in Algeria, Tunisia or Egypt, (to take just the most striking examples)
survive by using repression as a mean of social control with European and American
support, both at economic and political level. The Western allies do not want to
know of the ongoing human rights violations that are denounced by all N. G.O. s.
The Gulf War against
Saddam Hussein is immediately brought to an end from the moment he could have been
overthrown by the most representative opposition movement in the country, simply
because the resistance was led by the Irakian Shiis, and this did not suit the
strategic interests of the U. S. in the region. The tyran thus remained in power
and Irak was submitted to an embargo that only weighs on the civilian population,
who is furthermore exposed to the impunity of a clannish governement, unable to
act as a regional power, but very capable of plundering society and the country's
revenues. Double standards are used as to the inforcement of the U. N. resolutions.
On the one hand, Irak is strictly required to comply with them. Whereas, Israel
can go on ignoring them with respect to the rights of the Palestinians, while its
strategic interests in the region are respected and its views followed as who is
or is not a terrorist.
At the end of
the Gulf War, the Arab countries were more divided than ever, while the dominant
position of the U. S. in the region had never been stronger, partly because most
countries in the area depend from the U. S.A., at economic and military level,
but also because Europe does not, in the least, represent a political challenge
for the U. S. un the region, in spite of its commercial competitiveness, and
Russia prefers to compete with the U. S. over Caucase and Central Asia, that has
been rising since the end of the XXth century as a main producer of energy sources,
competing at strategic level with the Middle East.
In fact, the result
of the American views and action in the Middle East, with respect to security and
stability, has been to block all attempts aiming at setting up multilateral institutions,
that could have given a better positioning to the region as a whole. As a consequence,
it opted for the creation of strategic axes and bilateral alliances. Irak and Iran
being declared rogue states, a policy of penalty (embargo and sanctions) and
"double contention" as of 1993 was applied. This meant that Iran has
been artificially separated from the Gulf States and that all attempts that could
have lead to a rapprochement in the perspective of a regional forum to set up a
dialogue among all the neighbour countries, including the ostrascised ones, were
frustated. As a result Irak still is ostracised, which has given rise to large
scaled smuggling networks with Jordan, and even more so with Turkey. At the same
time, the reformist sector in Iran, that promotes economics and political liberalization,
and defends a diplomatic normalization with its Middle East neighbours as well as
with the Western world, does not find enough support abroad that would enable it
so solve the socio-economic crisis and to get a stronger position within the government
vis a vis the "old revolutionnary guard".
The influence of
Israel's views on the stability of the region and its obvious refusal to be integrated
in the Middle East geographic environment, as well as its role as inconditional
ally of the U. S., explain for the most part these contradictions, and which is
worse, is greatly responsible for the unending fragmentation of the region.
This priviliged
relation with the U. S. explains how Israel was able in 1995 to escape international
pressure in order to become a party to the Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty and
to take part in 1996 to the creation of the strategic military axis between Israel
and Turkey, under the American umbrella, with the aim to weaken Syria's position
in the region. The U. S. also opposed the institutional setting up of multilateral
groups that could have had a determinant role to play in the Arab-Isareli peace
process.
The countries
that belong to the Gulf Cooperation Council (Saudi Arabia and the Gulf oil producing
countries) all signed bilateral defense agreements and armament contracts with
the U. S., Great Britain and France after the Gulf war with the objective to protect
themselves from future threats. Since they do not trust their Arab neighbours and
because of the unquestionnable superiority of Western armies, the GCC members did
not even consider regional security arrangements, and they even stressed further
the importance of bilateral relations, since they did not conclude agreements among
themselves either. Furthermore, the massive investments in military eqipment and
defence, the enormous expenses resulting from financing Gulf war I (1980-88 between
Iran and Irak), and Gulf war II (Iraki invasion of Koweit, 1990-91), and the end
of the oil prices boom, gave rise to a growing socio-economic crisis that resulted
in a very uncomfortable situation for governments. The most illustrative example
is the case of Saudi Arabia with its demographic rate of 3,5%, which have had to
reduce social benefits since the beginning of the 90s, while the middle class is
growing in numbers and importance, and is more and more dissatisfied with the regime's
political "tribalism" that does not represent them in any way, with
the growing inadequacies in the fields of education, health, housing, etc... as
well as with Western military presence in their country. The system based on oil
revenues and the socio-political balance that existed thanks to such income undergoes
a crisis that in turn increases the opposition to the regime.
These regional and
international political developments have had consequences for the clientelist and
clannish governments in place in this part of the Arab and Muslim world that are
now in a situation of growing inner and regional weakness. As a consequence, these
governements depend more and more on Western support in order to remain in power,
and tend to act individually, which means that they no longer have any sort of
political influence as regional geopolitical and economic group on the international
scene. From a Western perspective, such a dependance turn these countries in faithful
allies that are incapable to counteract in front of Western dominant policies. It
also enables the West to control the sources of energy that are located in the area.
(For example, recently, the Arab and Muslin oil producing countries proved incapable
to use oil as a a weapon to put pressure on the international community in order
to stop the brutal Israeli invasion in the Palestinian territories). The Western
domination is exercised at the expense of the population governed by dictatorial
regimes that impose anti-democratic practises to societies that are moreover
submitted to the enormous socio-economic pressure of economic liberal reform and
its structural adjustments.
What is truly appalling
in this situation is that our societies are so obsessed by the "cultural
clash between Islam and the West", so convinced that there is no democracy
in the Muslim world because of Islam, that the inequality between men and women
comes from inmutable constraints in the Muslim universe, that violence stems from
an innate islamic cultural-religious fanaticism, that they are unable to see what
are the deeply political causes for this lack of democracy, this inequality and
this violence. And what is even worse no one asks the question of what the West
does to feed such inadequacies and violence. It is true that there is no democracy,
but that is not because they are Muslims, but because an alliance has been
struck between the local despotic governing elites and the Western powers. It is
true that there is no processs of social modernization, but that is not imposed
by Islam, but comes about rather because of the complicity between dictatorial
regimes and ultra-conservative religious circles that preserve the patriarchal and
puritan social models (just as it occured in other dictatorships in Southern Europe
or Latin America). The only way to open up the doors of social evolution would
be to promote democratization and the Rule of Law. It is true that there is violence,
but not because "they are Muslims" but because the State exerts its violence
continuously and the feelings of humiliation, despair and neglect that prevail in
these societies constitute a culture medium favorable to a social explosion and
to extremism.
This is how we
come to this paradox that caracterizes the approach of Western societies toward
the Muslim world. The cultural perspective is supposedly used to fight fundamentalist
islamic attitudes, but at political level, we support those who defend and impose
obsolete interpretations of Islam and suppress the modernists. We proclaim ourselves
to be the representatives of civilization and of the model to be followed by all
the others, while our political action promotes at the same time depotism and assents
to the violation of human rights. This political stand of ours favours in the
Muslim world the players that give the most negative image of Islam in the West
and who even tend to a monopoly of this image, used as an overall discrimination
tool against a vast social majority that does not identify with them. Because if
such an unfair contradiction, feelings of bitterness and anti-western resentment
keep growing to-day in Muslim societies, that see how their cultural heritage is
generally despised and looked upon, while the self - proclaimed supremacy of the
West is used as an instrument of political and military domination.
[1] Gema Martín Muñoz (ed), Islam, Modernism and the
West. London, IB Tauris; and Sophie Bessis, L'Occident et les Autres.
Paris, La Découverte, 2001.
[2] Opinion on a matter where islamic lawfulness is concerned.
[3] Huntington published his theory in 1993 ((Foreign Affairs,
no.3, pp. 22-49) and is certainly now the most well known on the question, but
it is interesting to note that this kind of ideas started circulating just at
the end of the Gulf war: Barry Buzan (1991) “New Patterns of Global security in
the Twenty-First Century”, International Affairs, 67, no 3, pp. 431-451.
|