Monday, March 24, 2008

The Resilience of Radical Islam

Paul Berman wrote a provocative piece on the resilience of radical Islamism for Sunday's New York Times. While I'm not in agreement with all of his expressed views, he makes the vital point that Islamist ideology has developed over decades and continues to grow regardless of American policy. One reason for this resilience, as Berman points out, is the Islamist ability to silence their Muslim critics. Sadly, some Western intellectuals choose to wittingly or unwittingly abet this process:

I notice a little gloomily that I may have underestimated the extremist ideologies in still another respect. Five years ago, anyone who took an interest in Middle Eastern affairs would easily have recalled that, over the course of a century, the intellectuals of the region have gone through any number of phases — liberal, Marxist, secularist, pious, traditionalist, nationalist, anti-imperialist and so forth, just like intellectuals everywhere else in the world.

Western intellectuals without any sort of Middle Eastern background would naturally have manifested an ardent solidarity with their Middle Eastern and Muslim counterparts who stand in the liberal vein — the Muslim free spirits of our own time, who argue in favor of human rights, rational thought (as opposed to dogma), tolerance and an open society.

But that was then. In today’s Middle East, the various radical Islamists, basking in their success, paint their liberal rivals and opponents as traitors to Muslim civilization, stooges of crusader or Zionist aggression. And, weirdly enough, all too many intellectuals in the Western countries have lately assented to those preposterous accusations, in a sanitized version suitable for Western consumption.

Even in the Western countries, quite a few Muslim liberals, the outspoken ones, live today under a threat of assassination, not to mention a reality of character assassination. Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the Somali-Dutch legislator and writer, is merely an exceptionally valiant example. But instead of enjoying the unstinting support of their non-Muslim colleagues, the Muslim liberals find themselves routinely berated in the highbrow magazines and the universities as deracinated nonentities, alienated from the Muslim world. Or they find themselves pilloried as stooges of the neoconservative conspiracy — quite as if any writer from a Muslim background who fails to adhere to at least a few anti-imperialist or anti-Zionist tenets of the Islamist doctrine must be incapable of thinking his or her own thoughts.

4 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

only conservatives are pro-israel, it's all part of this distorted idea that there's going to be second coming. i'm a liberal yet practicing jew, and my parents taught me that g-d intended for us to be in exile, and live among the christians and muslims.

people like you make me nauseous.

3:43 AM  
Blogger Dave said...

Wow, how can I possibly respond to such a sophisticated critique of my work? The brilliance of your analysis is exceeded only by your flair for avoiding upper case letters.

"only conservatives are pro-israel, it's all part of this distorted idea that there's going to be second coming."

I guess that makes Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama conservatives then.

"i'm a liberal yet practicing jew, and my parents taught me that g-d intended for us to be in exile, and live among the christians and muslims."

Yeah, how did that work out, again? You realize, of course, that if Israel disappears a lot of Jews will disappear with it. I guess you're cool with that because it's "God's will". Which makes your efforts to paint all Israel supporters as religious fanatics especially ironic.

Frankly, you sound like one of those Neturai Karta whackjobs. Shouldn't you be in Tehran groveling before that delightful Mahmoud Ahmadinejad? With a couple more years to bring their atomic weapons program to fruition he and Khamenei might fulfill your wish.


"people like you make me nauseous."

Mission accomplished, baby!

7:29 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

don't try to make me out to be sort of self-loather, just because i'm not a supremacist. maybe i have a soft spot for peace, and justice. israel has a right to exist, but at what expense? i think jewish blood is worth the same as arab blood. just my opinion. and if any real progress were to ever happen, it'd only happen if everyone makes up, and apologizes to one another. maybe i'm too much of an idealist.

i think people like you escalate problems. have you ever hung out with a palestinian and heard their side? i'm not trying to be an apologist, i just think that people like you see things narrowly, and that's dangerous.

i'd rather be friends with a muslim than an evangelist/fake jew. just saying, heretical librarian.

8:37 PM  
Blogger Dave said...

I probably shouldn't bother, but what the hell...

"don't try to make me out to be sort of self-loather, just because i'm not a supremacist. maybe i have a soft spot for peace, and justice."

Peace and justice are wonderful things. Too bad those terms are all too frequently hijacked by purveyors of muddle-headed moral equivalence.

BTW, on the topic of supremacism, I trust you've saved up plenty of righteous indignation for the numerous Middle Eastern states that explicitly define themselves as Arab and/or Islamic in nature.


"israel has a right to exist, but at what expense? i think jewish blood is worth the same as arab blood. just my opinion. and if any real progress were to ever happen, it'd only happen if everyone makes up, and apologizes to one another. maybe i'm too much of an idealist."

So, will this glorious mass apology include gratuitous singing and hand holding? If so, I'm sure Hamas, the same Islamist terror organization that approvingly cites the Protocols of the Elders of Zion in its founding document, will eagerly give up both suicide bombing and its oft stated desire to wipe Israel off the map for a chance to take part.


"i think people like you escalate problems. have you ever hung out with a palestinian and heard their side?

No, it's not Palestinians who gleefully send their children to die while committing mass murder who are the problem. It's not imams calling for the annihilation of Jews who are the problem. It's not Islamist fanatics who use lovable children's characters to teach hatred who are the problem. It's Americans with blogs documenting such things who "escalate problems". You're right: if we just ignore such things they will magically go away.

BTW, I do believe that there should be a democratic Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza living in peace with Israel. Unfortunately, neither the corrupt, quasi-Islamist authoritarian Fatah nor the fanatical Islamist Hamas appear capable of, or interested in, producing such an outcome.


"i'm not trying to be an apologist, i just think that people like you see things narrowly, and that's dangerous."

Yes, of course. Because believing that "only conservatives are pro-israel, it's all part of this distorted idea that there's going to be second coming" is the height of open mindedness. Thank you for gracing me with your enlightenment.


"i'd rather be friends with a muslim than an evangelist/fake jew. just saying, heretical librarian."

That's interesting, because unlike you I don't choose my friends based on their religious affiliation. Just saying.

BTW, to return to the issue of being open minded, you're the second retard who's come here and assumed that because I'm anti-Islamist I'm either Jewish or Evangelical (not "evangelist). Just for the record, I'm a semi-lapsed Catholic. Oh, and Heretical Librarian is the name of the site. My name's in the upper right corner.

10:07 PM  

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