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- <text id=93TT0342>
- <link 93TO0134>
- <title>
- Oct. 04, 1993: The Dark Side Of Islam
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 04, 1993 On The Trail Of Terror
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER, Page 62
- The Dark Side Of Islam
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>With terror, Muslim radicals declare war on Arab states that
- stray from the religious path
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--Reported by Lisa Beyer/Jerusalem, Dean Fischer/Cairo, Jefferson
- Penberthy/Peshawar and Jay Peterzell/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The world has felt the power of Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman's words
- before. In 1980 youthful members of a militant fundamentalist
- group in Egypt called Jihad (Holy War) were secretly forming
- a new cell and sought out their spiritual leader for guidance.
- What, they asked the sheik, would be the fate of a ruler who
- ignored the law of God? Abdel Rahman's reply: "Death."
- </p>
- <p> On Oct. 6, 1981, as Egyptian President Anwar Sadat stood reviewing
- his troops, a military truck halted in front of him and four
- uniformed men leaped out, firing automatic rifles at the reviewing
- stand. One of the men ran straight toward Sadat, pumping bullet
- after bullet into his body. "I am Khalid al-Islambouli!" the
- attacker shouted. "I have killed Pharaoh."
- </p>
- <p> Army Lieut. al-Islambouli, a member of Jihad, was executed along
- with four others for the assassination. Abdel Rahman was indicted,
- accused of issuing a fatwa, or religious decree, ordering Sadat's
- murder, but was acquitted. The assassination of the first Arab
- leader to make peace with Israel settled nothing. The clash
- between Islamic religious and political authority is more widespread
- and in some places more threatening now than it was then. Today
- every secular Muslim government from North Africa to the Persian
- Gulf faces a challenge from radical fundamentalists. Their accusation
- is not just that political leaders have strayed from the holy
- law of the Koran but that they have done so without solving
- the chronic unemployment, corruption and hopelessness that plague
- the Arab world.
- </p>
- <p> This is the dark side of Islam, which shows its face in violence
- and terrorism intended to overthrow modernizing, more secular
- regimes and harm the Western nations that support them. Its
- influence far outweighs its numbers. The Islamic revival that
- has swept the Middle East is primarily a peaceful movement for
- a return to religious purity. But where desperation is greatest,
- a small number of radicals have resorted to military action
- to impose the Islamic ideology they espouse. For the most part,
- they are not members of some grand conspiracy sponsored by a
- state apparatus, but loosely organized, grass-roots militants
- who use similar terrorist methods and get money and weapons
- from the same like-minded sources. Unlike the Palestinian and
- Shi`ite revolutionaries of the 1970s and '80s, these disparate
- cells of angry young men seem to boil up from the broad opposition
- growing in the largely undemocratic countries of the region,
- in a self-proclaimed war to force pure, undiluted Islamic law
- on the societies that have failed them. When that violence spills
- over into the U.S., it is usually aimed at punishing Washington's
- support for Israel and the secular Arab states.
- </p>
- <p> In some countries the ideological conflict has developed into
- a bloody struggle for political dominance. Violence inspired
- by radicals determined to topple President Hosni Mubarak has
- killed 200 people in Egypt over the past two years; in Algeria,
- the government most immediately threatened by fundamentalists,
- the toll is at least 1,200. Hamas, the Islamic Resistance Movement,
- which is the biggest danger to the infant peace process in the
- occupied Gaza Strip and West Bank, is a special case. Its first
- aim is the destruction of Israel; after achieving that, Hamas
- would establish a Muslim state on the wreckage as a precursor
- to a greater pan-Islamic union.
- </p>
- <p> Yet one of the great ironies of the peacemaking between Israel
- and the Palestinians is that it probably would not be happening
- if the power of Islamic fundamentalists had not become so ominous.
- The increasing strength of Hamas convinced Israel that it was
- time to strike a deal with the Palestine Liberation Organization,
- a lesser evil, while there was still a P.L.O. At the same time,
- Yasser Arafat and the P.L.O. could see that the fundamentalists
- were gaining on them and that the best way to stay in power
- was to show some result from their three decades of leadership
- in the Palestinian cause.
- </p>
- <p> Islam recognizes no distinction between mosque and state, theology
- and politics. Of course, not all Muslims are what Americans
- call fundamentalists. The term is not used in Islam, which calls
- the zealots "Islamists" or "activists." Says Mary Jane Deeb,
- an expert on Islam at the American University in Washington:
- "The majority of Muslims are secular in the sense that they
- see that politics and their beliefs can be separate." Nor do
- all so-called fundamentalists condone the use of violence and
- terrorism to achieve their goals.
- </p>
- <p> But those few who do take up the gun say it is their duty to
- destroy leaders and governments that fail to rule strictly by
- Shari`a, the Islamic legal code. Violent Islamists usually pursue
- both a political and a social agenda in the name of the faith.
- While no state in the world is governed purely by Shari`a--even Iran, Sudan and Saudi Arabia, which come closest to the
- ideal, compromise in some ways with the modern world--Islamists
- focus their ferocity on the Muslim states such as Egypt, Algeria
- and Tunisia, which have tried to modernize and mix in elements
- of nationalism and Western-style democracy.
- </p>
- <p> The random urban terrorism and calculated antigovernment attacks
- by such radical organizations as Jihad and the Islamic Group
- in Egypt, the Islamic Salvation Front in Algeria and An-Nahda
- (Renaissance) in Tunisia are predominantly home grown. But the
- target governments, which have responded with repression, tend
- to charge that the violent onslaughts against them are inspired
- by Islamic centers abroad, engaged in a conspiracy of subversion.
- They most often cite Afghanistan, Iran and Sudan as the instigators
- and paymasters, and claim that the cadres in their local terrorist
- organizations can all be traced back to Afghanistan, where the
- 14-year war against Soviet invaders spawned an army of fanatics.
- </p>
- <p> Aware that homegrown corruption and poverty provide recruits
- to the extremist ranks, Arab governments find it convenient
- to exaggerate the threat from outside. It also suits the Islamist
- rebels to evoke the fearsome image of a mighty army of trained
- and dedicated fanatics in their quest for local political power.
- The truth is that the Arab governments of the Middle East would
- be under siege without any centrally directed threat or terrorists
- returning home from the Afghan wars. Revivalists like Sudan's
- Hassan al-Turabi can exploit Arab discontent, but they have
- not been able to coordinate or direct the small, secretive cells
- that plot violent subversion against local governments.
- </p>
- <p> The emotional wellsprings of Islamic extremism lie in the social
- displacement and alienation of the modern Arab world. Discontent
- runs deep in Muslim countries where poverty is endemic, unemployment
- keeps growing, prices soar. Migration to urban areas has created
- vast slums without the most basic services, as well as a profound
- sense of rootlessness. Poorly educated, poverty-stricken peasants
- are obvious recruits to fundamentalism. But so increasingly
- are the younger members of the middle class who find themselves
- jobless and poor, with no promise of a better future.
- </p>
- <p> Most of the embittered do not resort to violence even if they
- embrace Islam as the solution. But nearly all of them are alienated
- from a political process they find remote and unresponsive.
- "These are societies in which all forms of opposition are repressed
- and no hope of bettering one's own life exists," says Bruno
- Etienne, an expert on Islam at the University of Aix-en-Provence.
- "The mosque is left as the only venue of debate, while radical
- Islamic ideologies are soon identified as the only viable means
- of instigating change."
- </p>
- <p> The force of fundamentalism's appeal is its claim to answer
- the region's malaise and fulfill a common desire to affirm the
- prestige of the Arab people, who feel humiliated by colonialism
- and by Israel's powerful presence in their midst. In the fundamentalist
- view, says Zalmay Khalilzad, a former National Security Council
- official now at the Rand Corp., things have gone wrong in Muslim
- societies "because they have strayed from the righteous path,
- and the West was brutal and immoral and encouraged the Muslims
- to go astray. Only by returning to the righteous path can you
- achieve greatness again, and that would involve throwing out
- the West."
- </p>
- <p> Ultimately, if the Israeli-Palestinian deal bears fruit, most
- experts believe fundamentalists, particularly the violent ones,
- will lose ground in the occupied territories. The regional economic
- cooperation and outside investment that will accompany the peace
- settlement should provide new jobs, new industries and opportunities
- for trade. When the economic initiatives are set in motion,
- the recruits for extremism are likely to decrease.
- </p>
- <p> Fundamentalism, of course, is still capable of destructive,
- murderous troublemaking throughout the Middle East. But it has
- not had the power to overthrow any governments except Iran.
- Even in relatively traditional Muslim societies, the majorities
- want peace and prosperity. They put a higher value on economic
- growth, and increasingly on social justice and political participation,
- than on abstract religious definitions of purity. If that makes
- them secular Muslims, so be it.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-