There Is No “Radical Islam” and There Is Also No “Moderate Islam.” By Mordechai Kedar. Breaking Israel News, November 15, 2015. Also at Arutz Sheva 7.
Kedar:
Beginning more or less with 9/11, the expression “radical Islam” became the accepted way for the media, politicians and public to define the religious and ideological foundations of Islam-based violence when referring to what the world calls “terror.” This expression was meant to be contrasted with “moderate Islam” which presents Muslims as ordinary people who wish to live in peace with all of mankind – Christians, Jews, Buddhists, unbelievers and the rest of us. The world created the image of two Islams, one radical and impossible to live with, and one moderate and “just like us.”
Beginning more or less with 9/11, the expression “radical Islam” became the accepted way for the media, politicians and public to define the religious and ideological foundations of Islam-based violence when referring to what the world calls “terror.” This expression was meant to be contrasted with “moderate Islam” which presents Muslims as ordinary people who wish to live in peace with all of mankind – Christians, Jews, Buddhists, unbelievers and the rest of us. The world created the image of two Islams, one radical and impossible to live with, and one moderate and “just like us.”
This
differentiation between “radical” and “moderate” Islam is what gave rise to the
claim that Islam had been “hijacked” by the radicals, implying that the real
and original Islam is the moderate, not the false, radical one.
This is
what allows today’s Europe to relate positively to the wave of mostly-Muslim
illegal immigrants washing up on its shores – they represent “moderate Islam”
and all they want is to live in peace and harmony with their European
neighbors.
Permit
me to raise some doubts concerning the psychological mindset that claims the
existence of two types of Islam. In order to do this, let us clarify an
important point: Islam is a text-based framework of ideas and behaviors,
covering religion, culture, strictures, politics, law and economics. It is an
all-embracing way of life. The most basic text is the Qu’ran, followed by the
Hadith (oral law) and the Sura – biography – of Muhammad. The Sharia,
Muslim law, is a system of binding laws
and injunctions that Muslims are obliged to obey.
There
are no two Islams, no moderate one and no radical one, there is just one Qu’ran
that includes everything: verses on Jihad and all out war against unbelievers
along with verses that speak of recognizing the “other” and living beside him.
There
are no two types of hadith, one radical and the other moderate; there is just
one body of hadith that includes everything, both violent and moderate ideas.
Muhammad
does not have a moderate biography and a radical one; there is only one life
story of the prophet of Islam and it has stories that express a radical,
violent approach and others presenting a moderate one.
There
is also just one Sharia that includes everything, from the radical cutting off
of a thief’s hands to the unquestionably moderate admonition to care for the
poor and indigent.
That
being the case, there is no “moderate Islam” and no “radical Islam”, just one
Islam that incorporates both terms, ranging from extreme radicalism to extreme
moderation. In practice, we see people with different cultures, some of them
extremists and some moderates, all finding verses,ideas, precedents and laws
that support their views on life and society in the same Qu’ran, Hadith, Sura
and Sharia. The radical Muslim chooses to quote sources that support his
extremist approach, while the moderate Muslim finds sources to buttress his
moderate approach.
Those
two Muslims, the most extreme and the most moderate, are “kosher”, because they
both rely on legitimate Islamic sources, and neither can claim that the other
“hijacked” Islam. All the Muslims in the world, all one and a half billion of
them, men, women and children, are to be found somewhere on the
moderate-extremist continuum. They may
live alone or as part of families, tribes, organizations and societies.
Islamic
State is a state established and continuing its operations with the
participation and cooperation of a large body of Muslims and converts to Islam
who are on the extremist tip of the continuum.
Al Qaeda is right there next to them, as are Hamas, Hezbollah and all
the other terrorist organizations. On the other end of the continuum, the moderate
one, are the members of the “Muslims for Tomorrow” organization, a totally
moderate group of Muslims living in Toronto, Canada.
Along
the scale connecting the endpoints of the continuum, one can find all the other
Muslims in the world, each one on a point of his choosing, somewhere between
radicalism and moderation. His place on the continuum is a dynamic, not a
static one, and a once moderate Muslim can undergo a process of radicalization,
while another, who was an extreme radical can change his views and become more
moderate. Life has a way of moving people along the continuum, making it harder
to predict the future of an individual or group.
Moderate
Muslim migrants live in harmony with the foreign societies to which they have
migrated. They blend in nicely, work for a living, are law abiding and
contribute to the economy and society that absorbs them. More radical Muslims
who migrate to new societies tend to live in the enclaves that preserve their
culture and way of life, only partially blending into society and the work
force and constantly attempting to influence and change for their own ends the
society that let them in. If they are on the violent side of the continuum,
that violence will be turned on the society that accepted them – a fact that is
most evident in today’s Europe.