As the crisis that has emerged in
the aftermath of the publication of
the infamous cartoons that claim to
depict the Prophet Muhammad, peace
and blessings of God upon him,
escalates, we would do well by
stepping back and attempting to
analyze the situation as
dispassionately as possible. By
doing so, as Muslims, we can
hopefully formulate a more
productive and meaningful response,
and avoid being exploited by either
side in the ongoing conflict. Saying
this, I do not mean to imply that
Muslims are not justifiably angry
over the caricatures. However, I
would agree with those who argue
that responses that involve wild
outbreaks of frenzied violence are
inappropriate, and they only affirm
what the cartoonist is trying to
imply. Namely, that Islam is a
religion that encourages
obscurantist violence and terrorism.
The current
crisis shows the extent we Muslims
are vulnerable to media
manipulation, superficial shows of
piety, and counterproductive
one-upmanship militancy. If we start
with the issue of media
manipulation, it is clear that
Western and Eastern media outlets
played a large role in stirring up
Muslim, and now Western sentiments.
When the crisis initially broke in
September, it was barely a blip on
the media radar. Few outside of
Denmark even knew of the cartoons.
The Danish Muslim community,
appropriately, by and large ignored
the story.It was only after a
campaign undertaken by a delegation
of Danish Muslim community activists
to stimulate greater interest in the
issue that the crisis reached the
proportions we are currently
witnessing. These activists traveled
throughout the Muslim East trying to
draw attention to the issue. When
the issue was popularized by Iqra
and other Arab satellite channels,
and the cartoons were reprinted by
several European papers, the crisis
deepened. In light of that reality,
it would be hard to deny the role
the media has played in sparking and
now perpetuating the crisis.
A question we
must ask is if these cartoons, which
are an example of hundreds of other
anti-Islamic slights occurring daily
in Europe and America, were not
brought to the attention of Muslims
by the media, would we be undergoing
the current brouhaha? - Clearly not.
That being the case, what does this
say about our strategic vision? What
does this say about our level of
political maturity? And what does it
say about our ability to engage in
meaningful proactive work? The
answers to these questions are
obvious. We get angry about Israeli
troops breaking the bones of
Palestinian children, as long as it
is in the media. When it disappears
from our television screens, our
interest vanishes with it. We raise
millions of dollars for those
affected by the Tsunami, as long as
the images of death and destruction
are beamed into our homes by the
media. However, when the coverage
shifts to other issues, the
donations dry up. As for those
crises that do not make the news in
a big way, such as the ongoing
famines in Mali, Niger, and the Horn
of Africa, we are hardly stirred to
action.
Furthermore,
we go on living our lives oblivious
to the ongoing abuse of Islam and
our Prophet, peace and blessing of
God upon him, until it becomes a
major media event. At that point
based on urgings issued by parties,
the origins of their dubious agendas
unknown to us, we are expected to
drop everything and hastily rush
into the fray. In many instances,
our ill-conceived actions only make
the situation worse.
Sometimes,
those actions may constitute
superficial shows of piety emanating
from the mob hysteria underlying
them. In the mob we are empowered,
and find it easy to confront our
opponents, defy the rule of law,
behave with wanton abandon, or
engage in other acts which under the
proper circumstances we may view as
supporting Islam. In terms of more
constructive mass actions, such as
emerging into the streets by the
tens of thousands to protest the
brutal, authoritarian regimes that
make a mockery of the prophetic
ideals of justice, mutual
consultation, and service to the
oppressed and downtrodden of
society, we come up terribly short.
Similarly, there are no credible
grassroots efforts towards forming
effective anti-defamation
organizations to bring constructive
legal action against transgressing
organizations and individuals, on a
fulltime, proactive basis. As
individuals, we find it difficult to
support the Prophet, peace and
blessings of God upon him, by
adorning ourselves with his lofty
character traits, or reviving His
Sunnah in our daily lives.
On the other
hand, as mentioned above, it is all
too easy to get swept up into the
mob hysteria generated by the crowd,
and then engage in outrageous
actions that only affirm the
offensive claims of the
transgressing cartoonist. It is as
if we are saying, �We�ll show
the Kafirs our Prophet, peace
upon him was no terrorist! We�ll
defame the symbols of their religionburn their embassies,
murder their unsuspecting innocents,
and behead the bloody cartoonist if
we get our hands on him.�
This brings us to my third point,
that of counterproductive,
one-upmanship militancy. It is
during these crises that all Muslims
are supposed to drop everything and
join the latest �Jihad� fad.
Those of us who urge restraint are
mocked as not being militant enough,
or ridiculed as cowards who are
afraid to �stand up to the real
enemies of Islam.� No differences
in understanding, interpretation, or
strategy are allowed, because there
is only one correct approach, the
one stumbled upon with the aid of
modern, sensationalizing media.
Such a reactive, haphazard approach
is counterproductive for a number of
reasons. First of all, it destroys
the basis for proactive work based
on the existence of a strategic
vision. As long as the enemies of
Islam know that they can mobilize
the Muslims to chase after an
unimaginable number of distracting
issues, divide our ranks by those
issues, and diffuse our energies
through their debate and the pursuit
of their resolution, they will
possess a trump card that will
affect our ability to unite and work
more effectively towards creating
and implementing an agenda capable
of effecting meaningful change in
our circumstance. It also blinds us
to the underlying agenda that
reckless spontaneous action might be
unwittingly serving.
For example, it is interesting that
these events have come to a head in
the immediate aftermath of the
stunning landslide victory of Hamas
in the Palestinian elections. That
victory has rekindled, both in the
East and the West, the debate around
the implications of supporting
democratization in the Muslim world
when the biggest winners will be
Islamic parties and movements. There
are secularists in both the West and
the Muslim world who advocate ending
the democratizing experiment on that
basis. However, they know that
denying the democratic will of the
Muslim peoples cannot be done
without the support of the masses of
people in Europe and America. These
masses, especially in Britain and
America, are increasingly wary of
their governments� nefarious
agenda for the Middle East. However,
the frightening images of crazed
crowds rampaging, looting, and
burning provides a powerful
justification for the extreme,
repressive policies being advocated
by the far right for dealing with
Islam and Muslims, both
domestically, and internationally.
Democracy in the Muslim world, they
argue, will bring the advocates of
mob rule to power.
If brutal draconian measures, such
as those employed to end the
democratization process in Algeria
in the early 1990s, are employed
elsewhere, the Western public will
be psychologically prepared to
accept those measures, because of
the fear that has been created
around the �Islamic�
alternative. That fear can not only
be used to justify denying the
democratic will of the Muslim
peoples, it can also be used to
justify denying their legitimate
strategic ambitions. A recent
editorial in the Jerusalem Post
links the fanaticism of the cartoon
protests to the lawful nuclear
ambitions of Iran. It states, �If
anyone wants to appreciate why the
West views with such suspicion the
weapons programs of Muslim states
such as Iran, they need look no
further than the intolerance Muslim
regimes exhibit to these cartoons,
and what this portends.�
This crisis has also occurred in the
immediate aftermath of the
appearance of the latest �Bin
Laden� tape, intensified warnings
of an imminent major terrorist
attack in the West, something
"on the scale of 9/11,"
and it coincides with the escape of
the alleged mastermind of the attack
on the USS Cole from a Yemeni jail.
The fear associated with the latter
two events, combined with the images
of hysterical protesters, work to
create a climate that can support
unprecedented measures if another
major terrorist attack were to occur
in the near future �whoever the
perpetrators may be.
In addition to the setbacks on the
psychological front, the current
crisis indicates just how bad we are
losing in the Jihad of ideas. It is
not without significance that the
ultimate objective of Jihad is
linked to ideas. The Prophet
Muhammad, peace and blessings of God
upon him, was asked about a man who
fought to display his bravery,
another who fought out of fealty to
his tribe, and a third who fought to
show off. Which had fought in the
Way of God? He replied, peace and
blessings of God upon him, �The
one who fought to make the Word of
God uppermost has fought in the Way
of God.�
Is the nature of the current
campaign working to make the Word of
God uppermost? Every Muslim needs to
ask that question.
As Muslims, we are carrying the Word
of God in an increasingly secular,
militarized, and alienated world.
What it means to carry that word is
not an unknowable abstraction. We
carry it by following the concrete
example of our Noble Messenger
Muhammad, peace and blessings of God
upon him. In carrying the word, he
endured unimaginable abuses and he
persevered through them because he
was inspired by a grand vision. That
vision was to see his people saved
by the life-giving, life-affirming
message of Islam. No greater
illustration of this can be given
than the story of his expulsion from
the city of Ta�if, after the
arrogant leaders of that town
unleashed the fools, slaves, and
children against him.
In the aftermath of that onslaught,
the Prophet, peace and blessings of
God upon him, humbly raised his
hands towards the sky and prayed:
O, God! Unto you alone do I plead my
lack of strength, the paucity of my
efforts, and my humiliation before
the people. O, the Most Merciful of
all! You are the Lord of the
oppressed, you are my Lord. Unto who
have you dispatched me? To a distant
host who receives me repugnantly? Or
to an enemy you have authorized over
my affair? If you are not angry with
me, I care not. It is only your
goodness I seek to be covered with.
I seek refuge with the Light of your
Face, through which the darkness is
illuminated and all the affairs of
the world and hereafter are
rectified, that you do not cast your
anger down on me, nor cause your
wrath to settle upon me. There is
neither strength, nor power but with
You.Two significant events
are then related after this prayer
was uttered by the Prophet, peace
and blessing of God upon him. First
of all, when presented with an offer
by the Angels that God crush the
city of Ta�if, the Prophet, peace
and blessings of God upon him,
refused saying that perhaps from the
offspring of the offending hosts,
there would emerge those who would
worship God. This incident is well
known. A lesser known incident
associated with the journey to
Ta�if occurred when the Prophet,
peace and blessings of God upon him,
was preparing to reenter Mecca, in
the company of his companion Zaid
bin Haritha. Zaid asked, �How can
you reenter their presence when they
have expelled you?� The Prophet,
peace and blessings of God upon him,
replied, �O, Zaid! God is bringing
about through these events you have
witnessed a great opening. God is
most capable of assisting His
religion, and manifesting the truth
of His prophet.�
One of the most disturbing aspects
of the current campaign to �Assist
the Prophet,� for many converts,
like this writer, is the implicit
assumption that there is no da�wah
work being undertaken here in the
West, and no one is currently, or
will in the future enter Islam in
these lands. Therefore, it does not
matter what transpires in the Muslim
East. Muslims can behave in the most
barbaric fashion, murder, plunder,
pillage, brutalize and kidnap
civilians, desecrate the symbols of
other religions, trample on their
honor, discard their values and
mores, and massacre their fellow
Muslims. If any of that undermines
the works of Muslims in these
Western lands, it does not matter.
If it places a barrier between the
Western people and Islam, when many
of those people are in the most
desperate need of Islam, it does not
matter. If our Prophet, peace and
blessings of God upon him, had
responded to those who abused him in
Ta�if with similar disregard, none
of the generations of Muslims who
have come from the descendants of
those transgressors would have seen
the light of day.
These campaigns of desperation also
implicitly display a lack of
confidence in God�s ability to
protect his religion and defend the
honor of His Prophet, peace and
blessings of God upon him. We should
do what we can do within lawful
limits, and then we depute the
affair to God. When we despair of
help from God and find ourselves
with limited strategic resources, we
sometimes press forward with the
most desperate tactics imaginable,
taking little time to assess the
compatibility of those tactics with
Islamic teachings, or their
long-term implications for the cause
of Islam, especially in the West.
There are certainly more
constructive and productive ways to
defend the honor of the Prophet,
peace and blessings of God upon him.
Why are we calling for a �Day of
Outrage� when our Prophet has
instructed us repeatedly not to
become angry? There are surely times
when we should become angry for the
sake of God. However, under the
current circumstances, are anger and
outrage appropriate responses? Why
not a �Day of Familiarization,�
where we teach people who the
Prophet was and what he really
represents, peace and blessings of
God upon him? Why not a �Day of
Sunnah,� where we all vow to
revive a Sunnah we have allowed to
slip away from our religious life.
Such a day could also include the
Sunnah of showing concern for ones
neighbors? We could visit them and
tell them about Islam and our
beloved Prophet, peace and blessings
of God upon him.
Whatever we do, as Muslims in the
West, we may be approaching the day
when we will have to "go it
alone." If our coreligionists
in the East cannot respect the fact
that we are trying to accomplish
things here in the West, and that
their oftentimes ill-considered
actions undermine that work in many
instances, then it will be hard for
us to consider them allies. How can
one be an ally when he fails to
consult you concerning actions whose
negative consequences you will
suffer? No one from the Muslim east
consults us before launching these
campaigns. No one seeks to find out
as to how their actions are going to
affect our lives and families. The
confused incompetence of the Muslim
countries around the issue of
moon-sighting, a situation that has
painful consequences for Muslims
here in America is bad enough, the
added pressure generated by these
reoccurring crises is becoming
unbearable for many.
We have a generation of Muslim
children here who have to go to
schools where most of them are small
minorities facing severe peer
pressure. During these crises they
do not have the luxury of losing
themselves in a frenzied mob. Their
faith is challenged and many decide
to simply stop identifying with
Islam. Is that what they deserve? If
they are largely lost to Islam, what
is the future of our religion here?
We have obedient, pious Hijab
wearing women, who out of necessity
must work, usually in places where
they are the only Muslims. Should
their safety, dignity, and honor be
jeopardized by the actions of
Muslims halfway around the world?
I reiterate that I am not saying
these cartoons, and other
denigrations of our religion and our
Prophet, peace and blessings of God
upon him, should be totally ignored.
Imam Shafi�i stated that anyone
who is angered and does not respond;
he is a jackass. However, our
responses should be weighed on the
basis of a strategic calculus we
construct. Their timing should be
determined by that calculus, not by
media sensationalizing. They should
be undertaken in consultation with
those who will be directly affected
by the responses they generate. And
their long-range implications should
be deeply considered.
In conclusion, one should not see
the ongoing crisis as a clash of
civilizations. Phenomena as deep and
complex as civilizations cannot be
thrown into conflict overnight by
media-driven campaigns. A clash of
civilizations would also involve the
overwhelming majority of people
identified by a particular
civilizational nexus. The current
crisis is the result of a
regrettable incident that has been
exploited by an uncivilized minority
of provocateurs both in the West and
the East to advance their
conflicting agendas. As long as that
exploitation continues, the crisis
could aptly be called the clash of
the uncivilized.
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