Islam and the New Millennium
© Abdal-Hakim Murad
Whoever is not thankful for graces
runs the risk of losing them;
and whoever is thankful,
fetters them with their own cords.
(Ibn Ata'illah, Kitab al-Hikam)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
'Islam and the New Millennium' - rather a grandiose
subject for an essay, and one which, for Muslims,
requires at least two caveats before we can even begin.
Firstly, the New Millennium - the Year 2000 - is not our
millennium. Regrettably, most Muslim countries nowadays
use the Christian calendar devised by Pope Gregory the
Great, and not a few are planning celebrations of some
kind. Many confused and secularised people in Muslim
countries are already expressing a good deal of
excitement: in Turkey, there is even a weekly magazine
called Iki Bin'e Dogru(Straight to 2000). This
semi-hysteria should be of little interest to us: as
Muslims we have our own calendar. The year 2000 will in
fact begin during the year 1420 of the Hijra. So why
notice the occasion at all? Isn't this just another
example of annoying and irrelevant Western influence?
This point becomes still sharper when we remember that
according to most modern scholars, Jesus (a.s.) was in
fact born in the year 4 B.C. Thus 1996, not 2000, marked
the second millennium of his advent. The celebrations in
two years time will in fact mark an entirely meaningless
date: a postmodern festival indeed.
The second, more imponderable reservation, concerns our
ability to speak reliably about the future at all. In
this paper I propose to speculate about the directions
which Islam may take following the great and much-hyped
anniversary. But the theological question is a sharp one:
can we do this in a halal way? The future is in the
ghayb, the Unseen; it is known only to Allah. And it may
well be that the human race will not reach the year 2000
at all. Allah is quite capable of winding the whole show
up before then. The hadith of Jibril describes how the
angel came to the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace) asking when the Day of Judgement would come, and
he only replied, 'The one questioned knows no more of it
than the questioner.' But as the Holy Qur'an puts it,
'the very heavens are bursting with it.' It may well be
tomorrow.
Apocalyptic expectations are not new in Islamic history:
they appeared, for instance, in connection with the
Islamic millennium. Imam al-Suyuti, the greatest scholar
of medieval Egypt, was concerned about the nervous
expectations many Muslims had about the year 1000 of the
hijra. Would it herald the end of the world, as many
thought?
Imam al-Suyuti allayed these fears by examining all the
hadith he could find about the lifetime of this Umma. He
wrote a short book which he called al-Kashf an mujawazat
hadhihi al-umma al-Alf ('Proof that this Umma will
survive the millenium'). He concluded that there was no
evidence that the first millenium of Islam would end
human history. But rather soberingly for our generation,
he speculates that the hadiths at his disposal indicate
that the signs which will usher in the return of Isa
(a.s.), and the Antichrist (al-Masih al-Dajjal), are most
likely to appear in the fifteenth Islamic century; in
other words, our own.
But all these speculations were submissive to the Imam's
deep Islamic awareness that knowledge of the future is
with Allah; and only Prophets can prophesy.
What I shall be doing in the pages that follow, then, is
not forecast, but extrapolate. Allah ta'ala is capable of
changing the course of history utterly, through some
natural disaster, or a series of disastrous wars. He can
even end history for good. If that happens in the next
three years, then my forecasts will be worthless. All I
am doing is, in a sense, to talk about the present,
inasmuch as present trends, uninterrupted by catastrophe,
seem set to continue in the coming few years and decades.
Why is it useful to reflect on these trends? Because I
think we all recognise that the Muslims have responded
badly and largely unsuccessfully to the challenges of the
twentieth century; in fact, of the last three centuries.
Faced with the triumph of the West, we have not been able
to work out which changes are inevitable, and which can
be resisted.
For instance, in the early nineteenth century the Ottoman
empire lost a series of disastrous wars against Russia.
The main reason was the superior discipline and equipment
maintained by modern European armies. But the ulema, and
the janissary troops, resisted any change. They believed
that battles were won by faith, and that firearms and
parade grounds diminished the virtue of futuwwa, the
chivalric, almost Samurai-like code of the individual
Muslim warrior. To shoot at an enemy from a distance
rather than look him in the eye and fight with a sword
was seen as a form of cowardice. Hence the Ottoman army
continued to sustain defeat after defeat at the hands of
its better-equipped Christian enemies.
Another case in point was the controversy over printing.
Until the eighteenth century a majority of ulema believed
that printing was haram. A text, particularly one dealing
with religion, was something numinous and holy, to be
created slowly and lovingly through the traditional
calligraphic and bookbinding crafts. A ready availability
of identical books, the scholars thought, would cheapen
Islamic learning, and also make students lazy about
committing ideas and texts to memory. Further, it was
thought that the process of stamping and pressing pages
was disrespectful to texts which might contain the name
of the Source of all being.
It took a Hungarian convert to Islam, Ibrahim
Muteferrika, to change all this. Muteferrika obtained the
Ottoman Caliph's permission to print secular and
scientific books, and in 1720 he opened Islam's first
printing press in Istanbul. Muteferrika was a sincere
convert, describing his background and religious beliefs
in a book which he called Risale-yi Islamiyye. He was
also very concerned with the technical and administrative
backwardness of the Ottoman empire. Hence he wrote a book
entitled Usul al-Hikam fi Nizam al-Umam, and published it
himself in 1731. In this book he describes the
governments and military systems prevailing in Europe,
and told the Ottoman elite that independent Muslim states
could only survive if they borrowed not only military
technology, but also selectively from European styles of
administration and scientific knowledge.
Ibrahim Muteferrika's warnings about the rise of European
civilisation were slowly heeded, and the Ottoman state
set about the controversial business of modernizing
itself, while attempting to preserve what was essential
to its Islamic identity.
Muteferrika's story reminds us that unless Muslims are
conscious of the global trends of their age, they will
continue to be losers. My own experience of Muslims has
suggested that we are endlessly fascinated by short-term
political issues, but are largely ignorant of the larger
tendencies of which these issues are simply the passing
manifestations.
This ignorance can sometimes be astonishing. How many
leaders in the Islamic world are really familiar with the
ideas which underpin modernity? I have met some leaders
of activist factions, and have been consistently shocked
by their lack of knowledge. How many can even name the
principal intellectual systems of our time?
Structuralism, post-modernism, realism, analytic
philosophy, critical theory, and all the rest are closed
books to them. Instead they burble on about the
'International Zionist Masonic Conspiracy', or
'Baha'ism', or the 'New Crusader Invasion', or similar
phantasms. If we want to understand why so many Islamic
movements fail, we should perhaps begin by acknowledging
that their leaders simply do not have the intellectual
grasp of the modern world which is the precondition for
successfully overcoming the obstacles to Islamic
governance. A Muslim activist who does not understand the
ideologies of modernism can hardly hope to overcome them.
A no less lamentable ignorance prevails when it comes to
non-ideological trends in the late twentieth century, and
which are likely to prevail in the new millennium. And
hence I make no apologies for discussing them in this
paper. Like Ibrahim Mutefarrika three centuries ago, I am
concerned to alert Muslims to the realities which are
taking shape around them, and which are moulding a world
in which their traditional discourse will have no
application whatsoever. It is suicidal to assume that we
will be insulated from these realities. Increasingly, we
live in one world, thanks to a mono-culturising process
which is accelerating all the time. There is a mosque in
Belfast now, and there is also a branch of MacDonalds in
Mecca. We may be confident in our faith and assumptions,
but what of many of our young people? What happens to the
young Muslim student at an American university? He learns
about post-modernism and post-structuralism, and that
these are the ideologies of profound influence in the
modern West. He asks the Islamic activist leaders how to
disprove them, and of course they cannot. So he grows
confused, and his confidence in Islam as a timeless truth
is shaken. Under such conditions, only the less
intelligent will remain Muslim: a filtering process which
is already painfully evident in some activist circles.
It is, therefore, an obligation, a farida, to understand
the processes which are under way around us.
To summarise the leading trends of our age is beyond the
ambitions of this short paper. I will focus, therefore,
on just a few representative issues, not because I can
deal with them fully, but simply to suggest the nature of
the challenges for which the Umma should prepare over the
next few decades. These three issues are: demography,
religious change, and the environment.
Let me deal with the demographic issue first, because in
a sense it is the most inexorable. Population trends are
easily extrapolated, and the statistics are abundant for
the past hundred years at least. Projections are reliable
unless catastrophe supervenes: epidemics, for instance,
or destructive wars. I will assume that neither of these
things will assume sufficient proportions to affect the
general picture.
Here are some figures taken from D. Barrett's World
Christian Encyclopedia, published by Oxford University
Press in 1982. I will set them out in text rather than
tabular form, in case the format does not survive Web
downloading.
In 1900, 26.9% of the world's population was Western
Christian, while Islam accounted for 12.4%. In 1980 the
figures were 30% and 16.5% respectively. The projection
for 2000 is 29.9% and 19.2%. Percentages for other
religions are fairly static, and since 1970 the total of
atheists has, surprisingly perhaps, experienced a slow
decline.
These figures are of considerable significance. Over the
course of this century, the absolute proportion of
Muslims in the world has jumped by a quite staggering
amount. This has come about partly through conversion,
but more significantly through natural increase. And the
demographic bulge in the modern Muslim world means that
this growth will continue. Here, for instance, is the
forecast of Samuel Huntington in his new and resolutely
Islamophobic book The Clash of Civilizations (pp.65-6):
"The percentage of Christians in the world peaked at
about 30 percent in the 1980s, leveled off, is now
declining, and will probably approximate about 25% of the
world's population by 2025. As a result of their
extremely high rates of population growth, the proportion
of Muslims in the world will continue to increase
dramatically, amounting to 20 percent of the world's
population about the turn of the century, surpassing the
number of Christians some years later, and probably
accounting for about 30 percent of the world's population
by 2025."
It is not hard to see why this is happening. America and
Europe have increasingly aging populations. In fact, one
of the greatest social arguments of the new millennium
will concern the proper means of disposing of the
elderly. Medical advances ensure an average lifetime in
the high seventies. However active lifetimes have not
grown so fast. At the turn of the century, a Westerner
could expect to spend an average of the last two years of
life as an invalid. Today, the figure is seven years. As
Ivan Illich has shown, medicine prolongs life, but does
not prolong mobility nearly as well. These ageing
populations with their healthcare costs are an increasing
socio-economic burden. The UK Department of Health
recently announced that a new prescription drug for
Alzheimer's Disease is available on the National Health
Service - but its cost means that it is only available to
a selected minority of patients.
In the West's population is top-heavy, that of Islam is
the opposite. Today, more than half the population of
Algeria, for example, is under the age of twenty, and the
situation is comparable elsewhere. These young
populations will reproduce, and perpetuate the percentage
increase of Muslims well into the next millennium.
Hence, to take an example, in the Maghrib between 1965
and 1990, the population rose from 29.8 million to 59
million. During the same period, the number of Egyptians
increased from 29.4 million to 52.4 million. In Central
Asia, between 1970 and 1993, populations grew at annual
rates of 2.9 percent in Tajikistan, 2.6 percent in
Uzbekistan, 2.5 percent in Turkmenistan, and 1.9 percent
in Kyrgyzia. In the 1970s, the demographic balance in the
Soviet Union shifted drastically, with Muslims increasing
by 24 percent while Russians increased by only 6.5
percent. Almost certainly this is one reason why the
Russian empire collapsed: Moscow had to detach its Muslim
areas before their numbers encouraged them to dominate
the system. Even in Russia itself, Muslims (Tatars,
Bashkirs, and Chuvash, as well as immigrants) are very
visible, accounting for over 10 percent of the
populations of both Moscow and St Petersburg.
This reminds us that the increase in the Muslim
heartlands will have a significant impact in Muslim
minority areas as well. In some countries, such as
Tanzania and Macedonia, the Muslims will become a
majority within twenty years. Largely through
immigration, the Muslim population of the United States
grew sixfold between 1972 and 1990. And even in countries
where immigration has been suppressed, the growth
continues. Last year, seven percent of babies born in
European Union countries were Muslims. In Brussels, the
figure was a staggering 57 percent. Islam is already the
second religion of almost every European state - the only
exceptions being those European countries such as
Azerbaijan and Albania where it is the majority religion.
If current trends continue, then an overall ten percent
of European nationals will be Muslim by the year 2020.
What is the significance of this global change? Does it
in fact entail anything at all? After all, there is a
famous hadith narrated by Abu Daud on the authority of
Thawban, which says that the day will come when the
Muslims will be numerous, but will be like froth and
flotsam (ghutha') carried along by a flash-flood.
It is true that sheer weight of numbers counts for much
less today than it did, say, a couple of hundred years
ago, when military victories depended as much on numbers
as on technology. Napoleon could say that 'God is on the
side of the larger battalions' - but nowadays, when huge
numbers of soldiers can be eliminated by push-button
weapons, this is no longer the case; a fact demonstrated
by Saddam Hussein's hopeless and absurd defiance during
the recent conflict over Gulf oil supplies.
The rapid increase in Muslim numbers does, however, have
important entailments. But for this, the UN would not
have chosen Cairo, the world's largest Muslim city, as
the site of its 1994 Population Conference. There is
still some safety in numbers. But more significant than
mere numbers is the psycho-dynamic of population
profiles. Aging populations become introspective and
flaccid. Young populations are more likely to be
energetic, and encourage national political
assertiveness.
The new millennium will dawn over a Muslim world with
disproportionately young populations. Moreover, these
populations will be increasingly urban. And such
situations historically have always bred instability,
turmoil, and reform. One explanation for the Protestant
reformation in Europe is based on the preponderance of
young people in urban sixteenth-century Germany, the
result of new agricultural and political arrangements.
The growth of fascism in Central Europe in the 1930s is
also attributed in part to the growth in the number of
young people. And in Islamic history, one thinks of the
example of the Jelali rebellions in the sixteenth and
seventh century: once the great Ottoman conquests had
ceased, the young men who would have been occupied in the
army found themselves at a loose end, and launched a
variety of sectarian or social protest movements that
devastated large areas of Anatolia.
The Islamic revival over the past few years has
faithfully reflected this trend. One of the first Muslim
countries to reach a peak proportion of youth was Iran,
in the late 1970s (around 22% of the population), and the
revolution occurred in 1979. In other countries the peak
was reached rather later: in Algeria this proportion was
reached in 1989, just when the FIS was winning its
greatest support.
Following the millennium, this youth bulge will continue
in many Muslim societies. The number of people in their
early twenties will increase in Egypt, Morocco, Syria,
Tunisia, and several other countries. As compared to
1990, in the year 2010 entrants to the jobs market will
increase by about 50% in most Arab lands. The
unemployment problem, already acute, will become
intolerable.
This rapid growth is likely to render some states
difficult to govern. The bunker regimes in Cairo and
Algiers are already confronting rebellions which have
clear demographic as well as moral and religious
dimensions. So the first probable image we have of the
next millenium is: in the West, aging and static
populations, with stable, introspective political
cultures; and in the Islamic world, a population
explosion, and established regimes everywhere under siege
by radicals.
The next consideration has to be: will the bunker regimes
survive? This is harder to comment upon, although many
political scientists with an interest in the Islamic
world have tried. Before the modern period, peasant
revolts stood a good chance of success, because manpower
could carry the day against the ruler's army. Today,
however, advances in technology have made it possible for
military regimes to survive indefinitely in the face of
massive popular discontent. Spend enough money, and you
can defeat even the most ingenious infiltrator or the
most populous revolt. This technology is becoming
cheaper, and is often supplied on a subsidised basis to
the West's favoured clients in the Third World.
Similarly, techniques of interrogation and torture are
becoming far more refined, and have proved an effective
weapon against underground movements in a variety of
places.
Let me give you an example. Last year's Amnesty
International report explains that in January 1995, the
US government licenced the export to Saudi Arabia of a
range of security equipment including the so-called
'taser' guns. 'These guns shoot darts into a victim over
a distance of up to five metres before a 40-50,000 volt
shock is administered. These weapons are prohibited in
many countries, including the UK.
Another example, also documented by Amnesty, is the
export in 1990 of a complete torture chamber by a UK
company, which was installed in the police special branch
headquarters in Dubai. This is known in the Emirates as
the 'House of Fun'. The Amnesty report describes it as 'a
specially constructed cell fitted with a terrifyingly
loud sound system, a white-noise generator and
synchronized strobe lights designed to pulse at a
frequency that would cause severe distress.'
These are just two examples of the increasing
sophistication of torture equipment now being supplied to
the bunker regimes. One could add to this list the
improving techniques of telecommunications surveillance.
But what about the Internet? Isn't the Internet the
ultimate freedom machine, allowing the pervasion of all
types of dissent, from anywhere in the world, to anywhere
in the world?
At the moment the Internet is only available in a few
Muslim countries. Already there are indications that
monitoring of the phone lines which carry the signals is
in progress. The centralizing nature of the Internet is
in fact tailormade for intrusive regimes. A fairly
straightforward programme on a mainframe computer logged
on to the telephone net can inform the security forces
instantaneously if a forbidden site is being accessed.
Once that is established, investigation and arrest are a
matter of course.
I believe that as technology improves, including ever
more massive surveillance systems, it seems quite likely
that the regimes will be able to suppress any amount of
dissent, on one condition - that it does not spread to
the armed forces. The Shah fell because his army turned
against him, not because of the protests on the streets.
But in Algeria the revolution has been suppressed,
largely because the radicals think they can overwhelm a
modern state without support from the armed forces.
The societies governed in this way are now experiencing
severe traumas and cultural distortions. They are
sometimes called 'pressure-cooker cultures'. The
consequences for the human soul of being subjected to
this kind of pressure are quite alarming, and already in
the Muslim world we see manifestations of extreme
behaviour which only a decade ago would have been
unthinkable.
This is not the context for providing full details of the
problem of 'extremism', or what traditional Islam would
call ghuluww. But it is clearly a growing feature of our
religious landscape, and I will have to deal with it in
passing. In early Islam the movement known as Kharijism
fought against the khalifa Ali for the sake of a utopian
and purist vision of Muslim society. Today, tragically,
the Khawarij are with us once more. I have in mind
incidents such as the 1994 shooting in Omdurman, when
Wahhabi activists opened fire on Friday worshippers in
the Ansar al-Sunna mosque, killing fourteen. Ironically,
the mosque was itself Salafi, but followed a form of
Wahhabism that the activists did not consider
sufficiently extreme.
In Algeria, too, throat-slittings and massacres of
villagers, and fighting between rival groups, have
transformed large areas of the country into a smoking
ruin.
We sometimes like to dismiss these movements as marginal
irrelevancies. However, the signs are that until the
conditions which have bred them are removed, they will
continue to grow. The mainstream Islamic movements are
seen to have failed to achieve power, and desperate young
people are turning to more radical alternatives. It is
fairly clear that a growing polarisation of Muslim
society, and of the Muslim conscience, will be a hallmark
of the coming century.
What is the defining symptom of Kharijism? In a word,
takfir. That is, declaring other Muslims to be beyond the
pale, and hence worthy of death. This tendency was
attacked vigorously by the ulema of high classical Islam.
For instance, Imam al-Ghazali, in his book Faysal
al-Tafriqa bayn al-Islam wa'l-Zandaqa explained that it
is extremely difficult to declare anyone outside Islam
for as long as they say La ilaha illa'Llah, Muhammadun
rasulu'Llah. And today, Sunni schoolchildren in many
countries still memorise creeds such as the Jawharat
al-Tawhid of Imam al-Laqqani, which include lines like:
idh ja'izun ghufranu ghayri'l-kufri
fa-la nukaffir mu'minan bi'l-wizri
since forgiving what is not unbelief is possible,
as we do not declare an unbeliever any believer on
account of a sin.
wa-man yamut wa-lam yatub min dhanbihi
fa-amruhu mufawwadun li-rabbihi
Whoever dies and has not repented of his sin,
his matter is turned over to his Lord.
The legitimation of differences in fiqh was rooted in the
understanding of ijtihad. And differences in
spiritualities were justified by the Sufis in terms of
the idea that al-turuq ila'Llah bi'adadi anfas
al-khala'iq ('there are as many paths to God as there are
human breaths'). As Ibn al-Banna', the great Sufi poet of
Saragossa expressed it, ibaraatuna shatta wa-husnuka
wahidun, wa-kullun ila dhak al-jamali yushiru ('our
expressions differ, but Your beauty is one, and all are
pointing towards that Beauty').
Diversity has always been a characteristic of Islamic
cultures. It was only medieval Christian cultures which
strove to suppress it. However, there is a growing
tendency nowadays among Muslims to favour totalitarian
forms of Islam. 'Everyone who disagrees with me is a
sinner, cries the young activist, 'and is going to hell'.
This mentality recalls the Kharijite takfir, but to
understand why it is growing in the modern umma, we have
to understand not just the formal history, but the
psychohistory of our situation. Religious movements are
the _expression not just of doctrines and scriptures, but
also of the hopes and fears of human collectivities. In
times of confidence, theologies tend to be broad and
eirenic. But when the community of believers feels itself
threatened, exclusivism is the frequent result. And never
has the Umma felt more threatened than today.
Even in the UK, the takfir phenomenon is growing
steadily. There are factions in our inner cities which
believe that they are the only ones going to Heaven. 99%
of people who call themselves Muslims are, in this
distasteful insult to Allah's moral coherence, not
Muslims at all.
We can understand this psychic state more easily when we
recognise that it exists universally. Not just in Islam,
but in Christianity, Judaism, Hinduism and Buddhism,
there is a conspicuous tendency towards factional
excluvisism. In Christianity, one has to look no further
than the Branch Davidians of David Koresh, 89 of whom
died when their ranch in Texas was stormed by US troops
three years ago. The Davidians believed that they were
the sole true Christians - everyone else would burn in
Hell.
In Japan, even the usually peaceful religion of Buddhism
has been re-formed by this tendency. In early 1995, the
Aum Shinrikyo sect released Sarin nerve gas onto the
Tokyo underground system, killing eleven people and
sending 5,500 to hospital. Their guru, Shoko Asahara, had
for ten years been preaching the need to overthrow the
corrupt order in Japan, and transform the country into
the true Shambala. As he said, 'Our sphere shall extend
throughout the nation, and foster the development of
thousands of right-believing people.' In his book From
Destruction to Emptiness he explains that only those who
believe in authentic, pristine Buddism as taught by Aum
can expect to survive the corruption and destruction of
the world. Non-Aum Buddhists are not true Buddhists at
all.
On the basis of this kind of takfir, he and his 12,000
followers bought a factory complex on the slopes of Mount
Fuji, where they successfully manufactured nerve gas and
the botulism virus. The sinners of Japan's un-Buddhist
culture would be the first to suffer, they thought, but
they also laid extensive plans for terrorist actions in
North America. It is claimed that had the sect been
allowed to operate for another six months, tens of
thousands of people might have died from the sect's
attacks in the United States, which was seen as the great
non-Buddhist source of evil darkening the world.
It is important to note the close parallels between Aum
Shinryo-kyo and the modern takfir groups in the Middle
East. The diagnosis is the same: the pure religion has
been ignored or distorted by an elite, and the process
has been masterminded by Americans. Hence the need to
retreat and disown society - the idea of Takfir
wa'l-Hijra that informed Shukri Mustafa's group in late
1970s Egypt. In secretive inner circles, the saved elect
gather to plan military-style actions against the system.
They are indifferent to the sufferings of civilians - for
they are apostates and deserve death anyway. Such attacks
will prefigure, in some rather vague and optimistic
fashion, the coming to power of the true believers, and
the suppression of all other interpretations of religion.
This idea of takfir wa'l-hijra is thus, in structural
terms, a global phenomenon. Its members are usually
educated, almost always having science rather than arts
backgrounds. Technology is not disowned, but sedulously
cultivated. Bomb-making becomes a disciplined form of
worship.
I believe that this tendency, which has been fostered
rather than eliminated by the repressiveness of the
regimes, will grow in relative significance as we
traverse the end of the century. It will continue to
besmirch the name of Islam, by shooting tourists, or
blowing up minor targets in pinprick attacks that
strengthen rather than weaken the regimes. It will divide
the Islamic movement, perhaps fatally. And it will
provide the regimes with an excuse further to repress and
marginalise religion in society.
The threat of neo-Khariji heresy is thus a real one. It
will exist, however, against the backdrop of an even more
worrying transformation. It is time now to look at the
last of our three themes: the apparently disconnected
subject of the degradation of the natural environment,
one of the great neglected Islamic issues of our time -
arguably even the most important of all.
There are a whole cluster of questions here. Clearly, as
we leave the second millennium, the planet is in abjectly
poor physical shape as compared to the year 1000.
Materialism, enabled by Reformation notions of the world
as fallen, and by protestant capitalistic ethics, has
presided over the gang rape of Mother Earth. Everywhere
the face of the planet is scarred. Megatons of tons of
toxic waste are now circulating in the oceans, or
hovering in the stratosphere. Hormone and plastics
pollution has resulted in a 50% drop in male fertility in
the UK. Every day, another 12 important species become
extinct. Every form of life apart from our own, and
perhaps domestic animals, has been decimated by the
holocaust of modernity. The BSE disaster is a hint of
what may be in store: Government analysts have confirmed
that as many as 30,000 British people may contract
Creuzfeld-Jakob disease as a result of eating
contaminated beef. As technology advances, similar
scientific blunders may well wipe out large sections of
the human race.
But the most urgent and undeniable environmental issue
which we carry with us into the new millennium is that of
global warming. For a hundred years we have been pumping
greenhouse gases into the skies, and are now beginning to
realise that a price has to be paid. We need to focus
close attention on this issue, not least because it will
affect the Islamic countries far more radically than the
West. Worryingly few people in the Muslim world seem
interested in the question; and it is hence urgently
necessary that we remind ourselves of the seriousness of
the situation.
For years government scientists mocked the idea of global
warming. But the Rio Earth Summit in 1992 revealed to an
anxious world that the scientific facts were now so clear
as to brook no argument. The world is heating up. The
industrial gases in the atmosphere are turning our planet
into a greenhouse, reflecting heat back in rather than
allowing it to be dissipated into space.
Here in England, global warming is noticed even by the
ordinary citizen. Temperature records go back over three
hundred years, but the 10 hottest years have all occurred
since 1945, and three of the five hottest (1989, 1990 and
1995), have been in the past decade. Water supply is
equally erratic. January of 1997 was the driest for 200
years. Storms at sea have become so bad that the North
Sea oil industry is now laying pipelines because the seas
are too rough for tankers.
What are the exact figures? Surprisingly, they seem tiny.
The rise in average temperature between 1990 and 2050
will be 1.5 degrees Centigrade, which appears negligible.
But the temperature rise which 4000 years ago ended the
last ice age was only 2 degrees Centigrade. Research has
proved that the polar ice caps are already beginning to
melt, which is why the sea level is now creeping up by
five millimetres a year. In places like the North Norfolk
coast the EU is spending millions of pounds on new
concrete defences to keep the sea out. How long even the
most elaborate defences can be maintained is not clear.
However, for the West, the bad news is mixed with good.
Rising temperatures would probably be welcomed by most
people. It will, in thirty years, be possible to grow
oranges in some parts of southern England. Already, the
types of seeds bought by farmers reflect the awareness
that summers are warmer, and winters are dryer. But no
great catastrophe seems to threaten.
What is the situation, however, in the Muslim world? At
the Rio summit, many Islamic countries showed themselves
indifferent in the issue. In fact, the countries which
campaigned most strongly against environmental controls
were often Muslim: the Gulf states, Brunei, Kazakhstan
and others. The reason was that their economies depend on
oil. Cut back emissions on Western roads, or switch
electricity generating to sustainable sources like tidal
or wind power, and those countries lose out.
There is still inadequate awareness in Muslim circles of
the great climatic calamity that is looming in the next
millennium. But just consider some precursors of the
catastrophe that have already come about. In the Sahel
countries of Africa - Chad, Mali and Niger, which have
over 90% Muslim populations, rainfall is declining by ten
percent every decade. The huge Sahara Desert is becoming
ever huger, as it overwhelms marginal pasture and arable
land on its southern fringes. The disastrous drought
which recently afflicted the Sudan ended with
catastrophic floods.
Any climatic map will show that agriculture in many
Muslim countries is a marginal business. In Algeria, a
further 15% decline in rainfall will eliminate most of
the remaining farmland, sending further waves of migrants
into the cities. A similar situation prevails in Morocco,
where the worst drought in living memory ended only in
1995. The Yemen has suffered from the change in monsoon
patterns in the Indian Ocean - another consequence of
global warming. In Bangladesh the problem is not a
shortage of water - it is too much of it. Floods are now
normal every three or four years, largely because of
deforestation in the Himalayas which limits soil
retention of water.
Dr Norman Myers of Oxford University predicts that by
2050 'the rise in sea level and changes in agriculture
will create 150m refugees. This includes 15m from
Bangladesh, and 14m from Egypt.'
However, this figure does not include migrants generated
by secondary consequences of climatic change. These huge
waves of humanity will destabilise governments and
produce wars. The modern nation-state does not facilitate
migration: Bangladeshis before 1948 could move to other
parts of India, but with Partition, they are stuck within
their own borders. Epidemics, also, are likely to be
widespread. Some island nations, such as the Maldives or
the Comoros, will disappear completely beneath the waves,
and their populations will have to be accommodated
elsewhere.
Again, I repeat that these forecasts are not doomsday
scenarios. Those are much worse. I merely cite the
predictions of mainstream science, as set forth in
European Union and UK Department of the Environment
reports. It is true that measures are beginning to be
taken to limit greenhouse gas emission. But even if no
more gases were to be released into the skies at all,
temperatures would continue to rise for at least a
hundred years, because of the gases already circulating
in the atmosphere.
Let me close with some reflections on the above three
themes.
Are these developments on balance cause for optimism, or
for disquiet? Well, we know that the Blessed Prophet (s)
liked optimism. He also taught tawakkul - reliance upon
Allah's good providence. However, he also taught that
tying up our camels is a form of relying on Allah. So how
should Muslims consider their options over the next few
decades?
There are a number of issues here. Perhaps the most
important is the cultivation of an informed leadership. I
mentioned earlier that most Muslim leaders cannot provide
the intellectual guidance needed to help intelligent
young people deal with the challenges of today. Ask the
average Muslim activist how to prove a post-modernist
wrong, and he will not be able to help you very much. Our
heads are buried in the ground. However, it is not only
intellectual trends which we ignore. The environment,
too, is an impending catastrophe which has not grabbed
our attention at all. Perhaps our activists will still be
choking out their rival rhetoric on the correct way to
hold the hands during the Prayer, while they breath in
the last mouthful of oxygen available in their countries.
They seem wholly oblivious to the problem.
All this has to change. In my travels in the Islamic
world, I found tremendous enthusiasm for Islam among
young people, and a no less tremendous disappointment
with the leadership. The traditional ulema have the
courtesy and moderation which we need, but lack a certain
dynamism; the radical faction leaders have fallen into
the egotistic trap of exclusivism and takfir; while the
mainstream revivalist leaders, frankly, are often
irrelevant. Both ponderous and slightly insecure, trapped
by an 'ideological' vision of Islam, they do not
understand the complexity of today's world - and our
brighter young people see this soon enough.
Institutions, therefore, urgently need to be established,
to train young men and women both in traditional Shari'a
disciplines, and in the cultural and intellectual
language of today's world. Something like this has been
done in the past: one thinks of the Nizamiyya madrasa in
Baghdad where Ghazali taught, which encouraged knowledge
not only of fiqh, but of philosophical theology in the
Greek tradition. We need a new Ghazali today: a moderate,
spiritually minded genius who can understand secular
thought and refute it, not merely rant and rave about it.
The creation of a relevant leadership is thus the first
priority. The second has to be the evolution of styles of
da'wa that can operate despite the frankly improbable
task of toppling the bunker regimes. The FIS declared war
on the Algerian state, and has achieved nothing apart
from turning much of the country into a battleground.
Unless the military can be suborned, there is no chance
of victory in such situations. Egypt, Tunisia, Syria and
the rest are similar cases.
An alternative da'wa strategy already exists in a sense.
In many of these countries, particularly in Egypt, the
mainstream Ikhwan Muslimin operate a largescale welfare
system, which serves to remind the masses of the superior
ethical status of indigenous Islamic values. That model
deserves to be expanded. But there is another option,
which does not compete with it, but augments it. That is
the model of da'wa activity to the West.
New Muslims like myself are grateful to Allah for the
ni'ma of Islam - but we cannot say that we are grateful
to the Umma. Islam is in its theology and its historical
practice a missionary faith - one of the great missionary
faiths, along with Christianity and Buddhism. And yet
while Christianity and Buddhism are today brilliantly
organised for conversion, Islam has no such operation, at
least to my knowledge. Ballighu anni wa-law aya ('Convey
my message, even though a single verse') is a Prophetic
commandment that binds us all. It is a fard ayn, and a
fard kifaya - and we are disobeying it on both counts.
Ten years ago a book appeared in France called D'Une foi
l'autre, les conversions a l'Islam en Occident. The
authors, both career journalists, carried out extensive
interviews with new Muslims in Europe and America. Their
conclusions are clear. Almost all educated converts to
Islam come in through the door of Islamic spirituality.
In the middle ages, the Sufi tariqas were the only
effective engine of Islamisation in Muslim minority areas
like Central Asia, India, black Africa and Java; and that
pattern is maintained today.
Why should this be the case? Well, any new Muslim can
tell you the answer. Westerners are in the first instance
seeking not a moral path, or a political ideology, or a
sense of special identity - these being the three
commodities on offer among the established Islamic
movements. They lack one thing, and they know it - the
spiritual life. Thus, handing the average educated
Westerner a book by Sayyid Qutb, for instance, or
Mawdudi, is likely to have no effect, and may even
provoke a revulsion. But hand him or her a collection of
Islamic spiritual poetry, and the reaction will be
immediately more positive. It is an extraordinary fact
that the best-selling religious poet in modern America is
our very own Jalal al-Din Rumi. Despite the immeasurably
different time and place of his origin, he outsells every
Christian religious poet.
Those who puzzle over the da'wa issue in the West
generally refuse to take this on board. All too often
they follow limited, ideological versions of Islam that
are relevant only to their own cultural situation, and
have no relevance to the problems of educated modern
Westerners. We need to overcome this. We need to
capitalise on the modern Western love of Islamic
spirituality - and also of Islamic art and crafts. By
doing so, we can reap a rich harvest, in sha' Allah. If
the West is like a fortress, then we can approach it from
its strongest place, by provoking it politically and
militarily, as the absurd Saddam Hussein did; in which
case we will bring yet more humiliation and destruction
upon our people. Or we can find those areas of its
defences which have become tumbledown and weak. Those
are, essentially, areas of spirituality and aesthetics.
Millions of young Westerners are dissatisfied both with
the materialism of their world, and with the doctrines of
Christianity, and are seeking refuge in New Age groups
and cults. Those people should be natural recruits for
Islam - and yet we ignore them.
Similarly, and for the same constituency, we need to
emphasise Islam's vibrant theological response to the
problem of conservation. The Qur'an is the richest of all
the world's scriptures in its emphasis on the beauty of
nature as a theophany - a mazhar - of the Divine names.
As a Western Muslim, who understands what moves and
influences Westerners, I feel that by stressing these two
issues, Islam is well-placed not merely to flourish, but
to dominate the religious scene of the next century. Only
Allah truly knows the future. But it seems to me that we
are at a crossroads, of which the millennium is a useful,
if accidental symbol. It will either be the watershed
which marks the final collapse of Islam as an
intellectually and spiritually rich tradition at ease
with itself, as increasingly it presides over an
overpopulated and undernourished zone of chaos. Or it
will take stock, abandon the dead end of meaningless
extremism, and begin to play its natural world role as a
moral and spiritual exemplar.
As we look around ourselves today at the chaos and
disintegration of the Umma, we may ask whether such a
possibility is credible. But we are living through times
when the future is genuinely negotiable in an almost
unprecedented way. Ideologies which formerly obstructed
or persecuted Islam, like extreme Christianity,
nationalism and Communism, are withering. Ernest Gellner,
the Cambridge anthropologist has described Islam as 'the
last religion' - the last in the sense of truly believing
its scriptural narratives to be normative.
If we have the confidence to believe that what we have
inherited or chosen is indeed absolute truth, then
optimism would seem quite reasonable. And I am
optimistic. If Islam and the Muslims can keep their
nerve, and not follow the secularising course mapped out
for them by their rivals, or travel the blind alley of
extremism, then they will indeed dominate the world, as
once they did. And, we may I think quite reasonably hope,
they will once again affirm without the ambiguity of
worldly failure, the timeless and challenging words, wa
kalimatuLlahi hiya al-ulya - 'and the word of God is
supreme'.
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This essay is based on a lecture given at the Belfast
Central Mosque in March 1997.
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