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Islamic and Western Values
Dr. Ali A. Mazrui
On December
6, 1997, the Al-Hewar Center in metropolitan Washington, D.C., had the distinct
honor of welcoming Dr. Ali Mazrui as its guest speaker. Dr. Mazrui is the
Director of the Institute of Global Cultural Studies at the State University of
New York at Binghamton. He is also Ibn Khaldun Professor-at-Large at the School
of Islamic and Social Sciences in Leesburg, Virginia, and Senior Scholar in
Africana Studies at Cornell University. His books include Cultural Forces in
World Politics and, with Alamin M. Mazrui, the forthcoming The Power of Babel:
Language and Governance in Africa’s Experience [See the November/December 1997
issue of The Arab-American Dialogue for a profile of Dr. Mazrui].
At Al-Hewar Center, Dr. Mazrui provided an engaging discussion of "Islamic
Values, the Liberal Ethic and the West," followed by an open discussion with the
audience. The following article addresses many of the topics he discussed at
Al-Hewar Center. It originally appeared in the September/October 1997 issue of
Foreign Affairs (Vol. 76, No. 5, pp. 118-132) and is reprinted here with Dr.
Mazrui’s permission:
Democracy and The Humane Life
Westerners
tend to think of Islamic societies as backward-looking, oppressed by religion,
and inhumanely governed, comparing them to their own enlightened, secular
democracies. But measurement of cultural distance between the West and Islam is
a complex undertaking, and that distance is narrower than they assume. Islam is
not just a religion, and certainly not just a fundamentalist political movement.
It is a civilization, and a way of life that varies from one Muslim country to
another but is animated by a common spirit far more humane than most Westerners
realize. Nor do those in the West always recognize how their own societies have
failed to live up to their liberal mythology. Moreover, aspects of Islamic
culture that Westerners regard as medieval may have prevailed in their own
culture until fairly recently; in many cases, Islamic societies may be only a
few decades behind socially and technologically advanced Western ones. In the
end, the question is what path leads to the highest quality of life of the
average citizen, while avoiding the worst abuses. The pat of the West does not
provide all the answers; Islamic values deserve serious consideration.
The Way
it Recently Was
Mores and
values have changed rapidly in the West in the last several decades as
revolutions in technology and society progressed. Islamic countries, which are
now experiencing many of the same changes, may well follow suit. Premarital sex,
for example, was strongly disapproved of in the West until after World War II.
There were laws against sex outside marriage, some of which are still on the
books, if rarely enforced. Today sex before marriage, with parental consent, is
common.
Homosexual acts between males were a crime in Great Britain until the 1960s
(although lesbianism was not outlawed). Now such acts between consenting adults,
male or female, are legal in much of the West, although they remain illegal in
most other countries. Half the Western world, in fact, would say that laws
against homosexual sex are a violation of gays’ and lesbians’ human rights.
Even within the West, one sees cultural lag. Although capital punishment has
been abolished almost everywhere in the Western world, the United States is
currently increasing the number of capital offenses and executing more death row
inmates than it has in years. But death penalty opponents, including Human
Rights Watch and the Roman Catholic Church, continue to protest the practice in
the United States, and one day capital punishment will almost certainly be
regarded in America as a violation of human rights.
Westerners regard Muslim societies as unenlightened when it comes to the status
of women, and it is true that the gender question is still troublesome in Muslim
countries. Islamic rules on sexual modesty have often resulted in excessive
segregation of the sexes in public places, sometimes bringing about the
marginalization of women in public affairs more generally. British women,
however, were granted the right to own property independent of their husbands
only in 1870, while Muslim women have always had that right. Indeed, Islam is
the only world religion founded by a businessman in commercial partnership with
his wife. While in many Western cultures daughters could not inherit anything if
there were sons in the family, Islamic law has always allocated shares from
every inheritance to both daughters and sons. Primogeniture has been illegal
under the sharia (Islamic law) for 14 centuries.
The historical distance between the West and Islam in the treatment of women may
be a matter of decades rather than centuries. Recall that in almost all Western
countries except for New Zealand, women did not gain the right to vote until the
twentieth century. Great Britain extended the vote to women in two stages, in
1918 and 1928, and the United States enfranchised them by constitutional
amendment in 1920. France followed as recently as 1944. Switzerland did not
permit women to vote in national elections until 1971– decades after Muslim
women in Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq and Pakistan had been casting ballots.
Furthermore, the United States, the largest and most influential Western nation,
has never had a female president. In contrast, two of the most populous Muslim
countries, Pakistan and Bangladesh, have had women prime ministers: Benazir
Bhutto headed two governments in Pakistan, and Khaleda Zia and Hasina Wajed
served consecutively in Bangladesh. Turkey has had Prime Minister Tansu Çiller.
Muslim countries are ahead in female empowerment, though still behind in female
liberation.
Concepts
of the Sacred
Censorship
is one issue on which the cultural divide between the West and Islam turns out
to be less wide than Westerners ordinarily assume. The most celebrated case of
the last decade – that of Salman Rushdie’s novel The Satanic Verses,
published in Britain in 1988 but banned in most Muslim countries – brought the
Western world and the Muslim world in conflict, but also uncovered some
surprising similarities and large helpings of Western hypocrisy. Further
scrutiny reveals widespread censorship in the West, if imposed by different
forces than in Muslim societies.
As their civilization has become more secular, Westerners have looked for new
abodes of the sacred. By the late twentieth century the freedom of the artist –
in this case, Salman Rushdie – was more sacred to them than religion. But many
Muslims saw Rushdie’s novel as holding Islam up to ridicule. The novel suggests
that Islam’s holy scripture, the Koran, is filled with inventions of the Prophet
Muhammad or is, in fact, the work of the devil rather than communications from
Allah, and implies, moreover, that the religion’s founder was not very
intelligent. Rushdie also puts women characters bearing the names of the
Prophet’s wives in a whorehouse, where the clients find the blasphemy arousing.
Many devout Muslims felt that Rushdie had no right to poke fun at and twist into
obscenity some of the most sacred symbols of Islam. Most Muslim countries banned
the novel because officials there considered it morally repugnant. Western
intellectuals argued that as an artist, Rushdie had the sacred right and even
duty to go wherever his imagination led him in his writing. Yet until the 1960s
Lady Chatterley’s Lover was regarded as morally repugnant under British
law for daring to depict an affair between a married member of the gentry and a
worker on the estate. For a long time after Oscar Wilde’s conviction for
homosexual acts, The Picture of Dorian Gray was regarded as morally
repugnant. Today other gay writers are up against a wall of prejudice.
The Satanic Verses was banned in some places because of fears that it
would cause riots. Indian officials explained that they were banning the novel
because it would inflame religious passions in the country, already aroused by
Kashmiri separatism. The United States has a legal standard for preventive
action when negative consequences are feared – "clear and present danger." But
the West was less than sympathetic to India’s warnings that the book was
inflammatory. Rushdie’s London publisher, Jonathan Cape, went ahead, and the
book’s publication even in far-off Britain resulted in civil disturbances in
Bombay, Islamabad, and Karachi in which some 15 people were killed and dozens
more injured.
Distinguished Western publishers, however, have been known to reject a
manuscript because of fears for the safety of their own. Last year Cambridge
University Press turned down Fields of Wheat, Rivers of Blood by
Anastasia Karakasidou, a sociological study on ethnicity in the Greek province
of Macedonia, publicly acknowledging that it did so because of worries about the
safety of its employees in Greece. If Jonathan Cape had cared as much about
South Asian lives as it said it cared about freedom of expression, or as
Cambridge University Press cared about its staff members in Greece, less blood
would have been spilled.
Targets, sources, and methods of censorship differ, but censorship is just as
much a fact of life in Western societies as in the Muslim world. Censorship in
the latter is often crude, imposed by governments, mullahs and imams, and, more
recently, militant Islamic movements. Censorship in the West, on the other hand,
is more polished and decentralized. Its practitioners are financial backers of
cultural activity and entertainment, advertisers who buy time on commercial
television, subscribers of the Public Broadcasting System (PBS), influential
interest groups including ethnic pressure groups, and editors, publishers, and
other controllers of the means of communication. In Europe, governments, too,
sometimes get into the business of censorship.
Censoring America
The threat
to free speech in the United States comes not from the law and the Constitution
but from outside the government. PBS, legally invulnerable on the issue of free
speech, capitulated to other forces when faced with the metaphorical description
in my 1986 television series "The Africans" of Karl Marx as "the last of the
great Jewish prophets." The British version had included the phrase, but the
American producing station, WETA, a PBS affiliate in Washington, deleted it
without authorial permission so as not to risk offending Jewish Americans.
On one issue of censorship WETA did consult me. Station officials were unhappy I
had not injected more negativity into the series’ three-minute segment on
Libya’s leader, Muammar Qaddafi. First they asked for extra commentary on
allegations that Libya sponsored terrorism. When I refused, they suggested
changing the pictures instead – deleting one sequence that humanized Qaddafi by
showing him visiting a hospital and substituting a shot of the Rome airport
after a terrorist bombing. After much debate I managed to save the hospital
scene but surrendered on the Rome airport addition, on condition that neither I
nor the written caption implied that Libya was responsible for the bombing. But,
ideally, WETA would have preferred to cut the whole segment.
WETA in those days had more in common with the censors in Libya than either side
realized. Although the Libyans broadcast an Arabic version and seemed pleased
with the series as a whole, they cut the Qaddafi sequence. The segment also
offended Lynne Cheney, chair of the National Endowment for the Humanities, who
demanded that the endowment’s name be removed from the series credits. After she
stepped down from her post, she called for the NEH to be abolished, citing "The
Africans" as an example of the objectionable liberal projects that, she said,
the endowment had tended to fund.
In another case of decentralized censorship that affected my own work, Westview
Press in Boulder, Colorado, was about to go to press with my book Cultural
Forces in World Politics when editors there announced they wanted to delete
three chapters: one discussing The Satanic Verses as a case of cultural
treason, another comparing the Palestinian intifada with Chinese students’ 1989
rebellion in Tiananmen Square, and a third comparing the South African apartheid
doctrine of separate homelands for blacks and whites with the Zionist doctrine
of separate states for Jews and Arabs. Suspecting that I would have similar
problems with most other major U.S. publishers, I decided that the book would be
published exclusively by James Currey, my British publisher, and Heinemann
Educational Books, the American offshoot of another British house, which brought
it out in 1990. Not even universities in the United States, supposed bastions of
intellectual freedom, have been free from censorship. Until recently the
greatest danger to one’s chances of getting tenure lay in espousing Marxism or
criticizing Israel or Zionism.
The positive aspects of decentralized censorship in the West, at least with
regard to my books, is that what is unacceptable to one publisher may be
acceptable to another; what is almost unpublishable in the United States may be
easily publishable in Britain or the Netherlands. With national television, the
choices are more restricted. Many points of view are banned from the screen,
with the possibility of a hearing only on the public access stations with the
weakest signals.
In Western societies as in Muslims ones, only a few points of view have access
to the national broadcast media and publishing industry or even to university
faculties. In both civilizations, certain points of view are excluded from the
center and marginalized. The source of the censorship may be different, but
censorship is the result in the West just as surely as in the Islamic world.
Life
Among the Believers
Many of the
above issues are bound up with religion. Westerners consider many problems or
flaws of the Muslim world products of Islam and pride their societies and their
governments on their purported secularism. But when it comes to separation of
church and state, how long and wide is the distance between the two cultures?
A central question is whether a theocracy can ever be democratized. British
history since Henry VIII’s establishment of the Church of England in 1531 proves
that it can be. The English theocracy was democratized first by making democracy
stronger and later by making the theocracy weaker. The major democratic changes
had to wait until the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, when the vote was
extended to new social classes and finally to women. The Islamic Republic of
Iran is less than two decades old, but already there seem to be signs of
softening theocracy and the beginnings of liberalization. Nor must we forget
Muslim monarchies that have taken initial steps toward liberalization. Jordan
has gone further than most others in legalizing opposition groups. But even
Saudi Arabia and the smaller Gulf states have begun to use the Islamic concept
of shura (consultative assembly) as a guide to democracy.
The West has sought to protect minority religions through secularism. It has not
always worked. The Holocaust in secular Germany was the worst case. And even
today, anti-Semitism in Eastern Europe is disturbing, as are anti-Muslim trends
in France.
The United States has had separation of church and state under the Constitution
for over 200 years, but American politics is hardly completely secular. Only
once has the electorate chosen a non-Protestant president – and the Roman
Catholic John F. Kennedy won by such a narrow margin, amid such allegations of
electoral fraud, that we will never know for certain whether a majority of
Americans actually voted for him. Jews have distinguished themselves in many
fields, but they have so far avoided competing for the White House, and there is
still a fear of unleashing the demon of anti-Semitism among Christian
fundamentalists. There are now more Muslims – an estimated six millions – than
Jews in the United States, yet anti-Muslim feeling and the success of appeals to
Christian sentiment among voters make it extremely unlikely that Americans will
elect a Muslim head of state anytime in the foreseeable future. Even the
appointment of a Muslim secretary of commerce, let alone an attorney general, is
no more than a distant conjecture because of the political fallout that all
administrations fear. When First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton entertained Muslim
leaders at the White House last year to mark a special Islamic festival, a
Wall Street Journal article cited that as evidence that friends of Hamas had
penetrated the White House. In Western Europe, too, there are now millions of
Muslims, but history is still awaiting the appointment of the first to a cabinet
position in Britain, France, or Germany.
Islam, on the other hand, has tried to protect minority religions through
ecumenicalism throughout its history. Jews and Christians had special status as
People of the Book – a fraternity of monotheists. Other religious minorities
were later also accorded the status of protected minorities (dhimmis).
The approach has had its successes. Jewish scholars rose to high positions
in Muslim Spain. During the Ottoman Empire, Christians sometimes attained high
political office: Suleiman I (1520-1566) had Christian ministers in his
government, as did Selim III (1789-1807). The Moghul Empire integrated Hindus
and Muslims into a consolidated Indian state; Emperor Akbar (1556-1605) carried
furthest the Moghul policy of bringing Hindus into the government. In the 1990s
Iraq has had a Chaldean Christian deputy prime minister, Tariq Aziz. And Boutros
Boutros-Ghali, a Coptic Christian, would never have been appointed
secretary-general of the United Nations if not for his long and distinguished
service in the foreign ministry of an otherwise Muslim government in Egypt.
The Republic of Senegal in West Africa, which is nearly 95 percent Muslim, had a
Roman Catholic president for two decades (1960-80). In his years presiding over
that relatively open society, Léopold Sédar Senghor never once had to deal with
anti-Christian disturbances in the streets of Dakar. His political opponents
called him a wide range of derogatory names –hypocrite, stooge of the French,
dictator, political prostitute – but virtually never taunted him for being a
kafir (infidel).
When Senghor became the first African head of state to retire voluntarily from
office, Abdou Diouf, a Muslim, succeeded him, and he remains president today.
But the ecumenical story of Senegal did not end there; the first lady is
Catholic. Can one imagine an American president candidate confessing on Larry
King Live, "Incidentally, my wife is a Shiite Muslim"? That would almost
certainly mark the end of his hopes for the White House.
One conclusion to be drawn from all this is that Westerners are far less secular
in their political behavior than they think they are. Another is that Muslim
societies historically have been more ecumenical, and therefore more humane,
than their Western critics have recognized. Islamic ecumenicalism has sometimes
protected religions minorities more effectively than Western secularism.
Between
the Dazzling and the Depraved
Cultures
should be judged not merely by the heights of achievement to which they have
ascended but by the depths of brutality to which they have descended. The
measure of cultures is not only their virtues but also their vices.
In the twentieth century, Islam has not often proved fertile ground for
democracy and its virtues. On the other hand, Islamic culture has not been
hospitable to Nazism, fascism, or communism, unlike Christian culture (as in
Germany, Italy, Russia, Czechoslovakia), Buddhist culture (Japan before and
during World War II, Pol Pot’s Cambodia, Vietnam, North Korea), or Confucian
culture (Mao’s China). The Muslim world has never yet given rise to systematic
fascism and its organized brutalities. Hafiz al-Assad’s Syria and Saddam
Hussein’s Iraq have been guilty of large-scale violence, but fascism also
requires an ideology of repression that has been absent in the two countries.
And apart from the dubious case of Albania, communism has never independently
taken hold in a Muslim culture.
Muslims are often criticized for not producing the best, but they are seldom
congratulated for an ethic that has averted the worst. There are no Muslim
equivalents of Nazi extermination camps, nor Muslim conquests by genocide on the
scale perpetrated by Europeans in the Americas and Australia, nor Muslim
equivalents of Stalinist terror, Pol Pot’s killing fields, or the starvation and
uprooting of tens of millions in the name of Five Year Plans. Nor are there
Muslim versions of apartheid like that once approved by the South African Dutch
Reformed Church, or of the ferocious racism of Japan before 1945, or of the
racist culture of the Old South in the United States with its lynchings and
brutalization of black people.
Islam brings to the calculus of universal justice some protection from the abyss
of human depravity. Historically, the religion and the civilization have been
resistant to forces that contributed to the worst aspects of the twentieth
century’s interludes of barbarism: racism, genocide, and violence within
society.
First, Islam has been relatively resistant to racism. The Koran confronts the
issue of national and ethnic differences head on. The standard of excellence it
sets has nothing to do with race, but is instead moral and religious worth –
what the Koran calls "piety" and what Martin Luther King, Jr., called "the
content of one’s character." An oft-quoted verse of the Koran reads:
O
people! We have created you from a male and a female, and have made you nations
and tribes so that you may know one another. The noblest among you is the most
pious. Allah is all-knowing.
In his
farewell address, delivered on his last pilgrimage to Mecca in A.D. 632,
Muhammad declared: "There is no superiority of an Arab over a non-Arab, and
indeed, no superiority of a red man over a black man except through the piety
and fear of God… Let those who are present convey this message to those who are
absent."
Unlike Christian churches, the mosque has never been segregated by race. One of
Muhammad’s most beloved companions was an Ethiopian, Bilal Rabah, a freed slave
who rose to great prominence in early Islam. Under Arab lineage systems and
kinship traditions, racial intermarriage was not discouraged and the children
were considered Arab regardless of who the mother was. These Arab ways
influenced Muslim societies elsewhere. Of the four presidents of Egypt since the
revolution of 1952, two had black African ancestors – Muhammad Nagib and Anwar
al-Sadat.
Islam has a doctrine of Chosen Language (Arabic) but no Chosen People. Since the
conversion of the Roman Emperor Constantine I in A.D. 313, Christianity has been
led if not dominated by Europeans. But the leadership of the Muslim world has
changed hands several times: from the mainly Arab Umayyad dynasty (661-750) to
the multiethnic Abbasid dynasty (750-1258) to the Ottoman Empire (1453-1922),
dominated by the Turks. And this history is quite apart from such flourishing
Muslim dynasties as the Moghuls of India and the Safavids of Persia or the
sub-Saharan empires of Mali and Songhai. The diversification of Muslim
leadership – in contrast to the Europeanization of Christian leadership – helped
the cause of relative racial equality in Islamic culture.
Partly because of Islam’s relatively nonracial nature, Islamic history has been
free of systematic efforts to obliterate a people. Islam conquered by
co-optation, intermarriage, and conversion rather than by genocide.
Incidents in Muslim history, it is true, have caused large-scale loss of life.
During Turkey’s attempt in 1915 to deport the entire Armenian population of
about 1,750,000 to Syria and Palestine, hundreds of thousands of people, perhaps
up to a million, died of starvation or were murdered on the way. But – though
this does not exonerate Turkey or its responsibility for the deaths – Armenians
had provoked Turkey by organizing volunteer battalions to help Russia fight
against it in World War I. Nor is the expulsion of a people from a territory,
however disastrous its consequences, equivalent to the Nazi Holocaust, which
systematically took the lives of six million Jews and members of other despised
groups. Movement of people between India and Pakistan after partitioning 1947
also resulted in thousands of deaths en route.
Saddam Hussein’s use of poison gas against Kurdish villages in Iraq in 1988 is
more clearly comparable to Nazi behavior. But Saddam’s action was the use of an
illegitimate weapon in a civil war rather than a planned program to destroy the
Kurdish people; it was an evil incident rather than a program of genocide. Many
people feel that President Harry S Truman’s dropping of the atomic bombs on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki was also an evil episode. There is a difference between
massacre and genocide. Massacres have been perpetrated in almost every country
on earth, but only a few cultures have been guilty of genocide.
Nor did Islam ever spawn an Inquisition in which the burning of heretics at the
stake was sanctioned. Cultures that had condemned human beings to burn and
celebrated as they died in the flames, even hundreds of years before, were more
likely to tolerate the herding of a whole people of another faith into gas
chambers. Islam has been a shield against such excesses of evil.
The
Order of Islam
Against
Western claims that Islamic "fundamentalism" feeds terrorism, one powerful
paradox of the twentieth century is often overlooked. While Islam may generate
more political violence than Western culture, Western culture generates more
street violence than Islam. Islam does indeed produce a disproportionate share
of mujahideen, but Western culture produces a disproportionate share of muggers.
The largest Muslim city in Africa is Cairo. The largest westernized city is
Johannesburg. Cairo is much more populous than Johannesburg, but street violence
is only a fraction of what it is in the South African city. Does Islam help
pacify Cairo? I, along with many others, believe it does. The high premium Islam
places on umma (community) and ijma (consensus) has made for a Pax
Islamica in day-to-day life.
In terms of quality of life, is the average citizen better off under the
excesses of the Islamic state or the excesses of the liberal state, where
political tension may be low but social violence has reached crisis proportions?
Tehran, the capital of the Islamic Republic of Iran, is a city of some ten
million. Families with small children picnic in public parks at 11 p.m. or
midnight. Residents of the capital and other cities stroll late at night,
seemingly unafraid of mugging, rape, or murder. This is a society that has known
large-scale political violence in war and revolution, but one in which petty
interpersonal violence is much rarer than in Washington or New York. Iranians
are more subject to their government than Americans, but they are less at risk
from the depredations of their fellow citizens. Nor is dictatorial government
the explanation for the safe streets of Tehran – otherwise, Lagos would be as
peaceful as the Iranian capital.
The Iranian solution is mainly in the moral sphere. As an approach to the
problems of modernity, some Muslim societies are attempting a return to
premodernism, to indigenous traditional disciplines and values. Aside from Iran,
countries such as Sudan and Saudi Arabia have revived Islamic legal systems and
other features of the Islamic way of life, aspects of which go back 14
centuries. Islamic movements in countries like Algeria, Egypt, and Afghanistan
are also seeking revivalist goals. A similar sacred nostalgia is evident in
other religions, such as the born-again Christian sects in the United States and
Africa.
Of all the value systems in the world, Islam has been the most resistant to the
leading destructive forces of the twentieth century – including AIDS. Lower
levels of prostitution and of hard drug use in conservative Muslim cultures
compared with other cultures have, so far, contributed to lower-than-average HIV
infection rates. If societies closer to the sharia are also more distant from
the human immunodeficiency virus, should the rest of the world take a closer
look?
One can escape modernity by striving to transcend it as well as by retreating
from it into the past. Perhaps the Muslim world should explore this path,
searching for postmodern solutions to its political tensions and economic woes,
and pursuing the positive aspects of globalization without falling victim to the
negative aspects of westernization.
The
Dialectic of Culture
Western
liberal democracy has enabled societies to enjoy openness, government
accountability, popular participation, and high economic productivity, but
Western pluralism has also been a breeding ground for racism, fascism,
exploitation, and genocide. If history is to end in arrival at the ultimate
political order, it will require more than the West’s message on how to maximize
the best in human nature. Humankind must also consult Islam about how to check
the worst in human nature – from alcoholism to racism, materialism to Nazism,
drug addiction to Marxism as the opiate of the intellectuals.
One must distinguish between democratic principles and human principles. In some
human principles – including stabilizing the family, security from social
violence, and the relatively nonracial nature of religious institutions – the
Muslim world may be ahead of the West.
Turkey is a prime example of the dilemma of balancing human principles with
democratic principles. In times of peace, the Ottoman Empire was more human in
its treatment of religious minorities than the Turkish Republic after 1923 under
the westernizing influence of Mustafa Kamal Atatürk. The Turkish Republic, on
the other hand, gradually moved toward a policy of cultural assimilation. While
the Ottoman Empire tolerated the Kurdish language, the Turkish Republic outlawed
its use for a considerable period. When not at war, the empire was more humane
than the Turkish Republic, but less democratic.
At bottom, democracy is a system for selecting one’s rulers; human governance is
a system from treating citizens. Ottoman rule at its best was human governance;
the Turkish Republic at its best has been a quest for democratic values. In the
final years of the twentieth century, Turkey may be engaged in reconciling the
greater humaneness of the Ottoman Empire with the great democracy of the
Republic.
The current Islamic revival in the country may be the beginning of a fundamental
review of the Kemalist revolution, which inaugurated Turkish secularism. In
England since Henry VIII, a theocracy has been democratized. In Turkey, might a
democracy by theocratized? Although the Turkish army is trying to stop it,
electoral support for Islamic revivalism is growing in the country. There has
been increased speculation that secularism may be pushed back, in spite of the
resignation in June, under political pressure from the generals, of Prime
Minister Necmettin Erbakan, the leader of the Islamist Welfare Party. Is Erbakan
nevertheless destined to play in the Kamalist revolution the role that Mikhail
Gorbachev or Boris Yeltsin played in the Leninist revolution? Or is Erbakan a
forerunner of change? It is too early to be sure. The dialectic of history
continues its conversation with the dialectic of culture within the wider
rhythms of relativity in human experience.
Source:
http://www.alhewar.com/AliMazrui.htm
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