Begin forwarded message:
From: Bob Rosenberg <bob@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: December 30, 2005 1:05:27 PM EST
To: dave@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: wsj.com: Right Islam vs. Wrong Islam
Dave
This is a bit longer than what I usually send, as co-founder of a  
local
Muslim/Jewish group, but I believe the topic is important enough  
for  you to
consider posting it to IP.
Cordially,
Bob Rosenberg
P.O. Box 33023
Phoenix, AZ  85067-3023
LandLine:  (602)274-3012
Mobile:  (602)206-2856
bob@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
**********************************************
The responsibility of ministers for the public safety is absolute,   
and requires
no mandate. It is in fact the prime object for which governments  
come  into
existence.
-- Winston Churchill
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HEARTS AND MINDS
Right Islam vs. Wrong Islam
Muslims and non-Muslims must unite to defeat the Wahhabi ideology.
http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110007743
BY ABDURRAHMAN WAHID
Friday, December 30, 2005 12:01 a.m. EST
JAKARTA--News organizations report that Osama bin Laden has  
obtained  a religious
edict from a misguided Saudi cleric, justifying the use of nuclear   
weapons
against America and the infliction of mass casualties. It requires  
great
emotional strength to confront the potential ramifications of this   
fact. Yet
can anyone doubt that those who joyfully incinerate the occupants  
of  office
buildings, commuter trains, hotels and nightclubs would leap at  
the  chance to
magnify their damage a thousandfold?
Imagine the impact of a single nuclear bomb detonated in New York,   
London,
Paris, Sydney or L.A.! What about two or three? The entire edifice  
of  modern
civilization is built on economic and technological foundations  
that  terrorists
hope to collapse with nuclear attacks like so many fishing huts in   
the wake of a
tsunami.
Just two small, well-placed bombs devastated Bali's tourist  
economy  in 2002 and
sent much of its population back to the rice fields and out to  
sea,  to fill
their empty bellies. What would be the effect of a global economic   
crisis in
the wake of attacks far more devastating than those of Bali or 9/11?
It is time for people of good will from every faith and nation to   
recognize that
a terrible danger threatens humanity. We cannot afford to continue   
"business as
usual" in the face of this existential threat. Rather, we must set   
aside our
international and partisan bickering, and join to confront the  
danger  that lies
before us.
An extreme and perverse ideology in the minds of fanatics is what   
directly
threatens us (specifically, Wahhabi/Salafi ideology--a minority   
fundamentalist
religious cult fueled by petrodollars). Yet underlying, enabling and
exacerbating this threat of religious extremism is a global crisis of
misunderstanding.
All too many Muslims fail to grasp Islam, which teaches one to be   
lenient
towards others and to understand their value systems, knowing that   
these are
tolerated by Islam as a religion. The essence of Islam is   
encapsulated in the
words of the Quran, "For you, your religion; for me, my religion."   
That is the
essence of tolerance. Religious fanatics--either purposely or out of
ignorance--pervert Islam into a dogma of intolerance, hatred and   
bloodshed.
They justify their brutality with slogans such as "Islam is above   
everything
else." They seek to intimidate and subdue anyone who does not  
share  their
extremist views, regardless of nationality or religion. While a  
few  are quick
to shed blood themselves, countless millions of others sympathize   
with their
violent actions, or join in the complicity of silence.
This crisis of misunderstanding--of Islam by Muslims themselves-- 
is  compounded
by the failure of governments, people of other faiths, and the   
majority of
well-intentioned Muslims to resist, isolate and discredit this  
dangerous
ideology. The crisis thus afflicts Muslims and non-Muslims alike,   
with tragic
consequences. Failure to understand the true nature of Islam  
permits the
continued radicalization of Muslims world-wide, while blinding the   
rest of
humanity to a solution which hides in plain sight.
The most effective way to overcome Islamist extremism is to  
explain  what Islam
truly is to Muslims and non-Muslims alike. Without that  
explanation,  people
will tend to accept the unrefuted extremist view--further   
radicalizing Muslims,
and turning the rest of the world against Islam itself.
Accomplishing this task will be neither quick nor easy. In recent   
decades,
Wahhabi/Salafi ideology has made substantial inroads throughout  
the  Muslim
world. Islamic fundamentalism has become a well-financed,   
multifaceted global
movement that operates like a juggernaut in much of the developing   
world, and
even among immigrant Muslim communities in the West. To neutralize   
the virulent
ideology that underlies fundamentalist terrorism and threatens the  
very
foundations of modern civilization, we must identify its  
advocates,  understand
their goals and strategies, evaluate their strengths and  
weaknesses, and
effectively counter their every move. What we are talking about is   
nothing less
than a global struggle for the soul of Islam.
The Sunni (as opposed to Shiite) fundamentalists' goals generally   
include:
claiming to restore the perfection of the early Islam practiced by   
Muhammad and
his companions, who are known in Arabic as al-Salaf al-Salih, "the   
Righteous
Ancestors"; establishing a utopian society based on these Salafi   
principles, by
imposing their interpretation of Islamic law on all members of  
society;
annihilating local variants of Islam in the name of authenticity  
and  purity;
transforming Islam from a personal faith into an authoritarian  
political
system; establishing a pan-Islamic caliphate governed according to   
the strict
tenets of Salafi Islam, and often conceived as stretching from   
Morocco to
Indonesia and the Philippines; and, ultimately, bringing the  
entire  world under
the sway of their extremist ideology.
Fundamentalist strategy is often simple as well as brilliant.   
Extremists are
quick to drape themselves in the mantle of Islam and declare their   
opponents
kafir, or infidels, and thus smooth the way for slaughtering   
nonfundamentalist
Muslims. Their theology rests upon a simplistic, literal and  
highly  selective
reading of the Quran and Sunnah (prophetic traditions), through  
which  they seek
to entrap the world-wide Muslim community in the confines of their   
narrow
ideological grasp. Expansionist by nature, most fundamentalist groups
constantly probe for weakness and an opportunity to strike, at any   
time or
place, to further their authoritarian goals.
The armed ghazis (Islamic warriors) raiding from New York to  
Jakarta,  Istanbul,
Baghdad, London and Madrid are only the tip of the iceberg,   
forerunners of a
vast and growing population that shares their radical views and  
ultimate
objectives. The formidable strengths of this worldwide  
fundamentalist  movement
include:
1) An aggressive program with clear ideological and political  
goals;  2) immense
funding from oil-rich Wahhabi sponsors; 3) the ability to  
distribute  funds in
impoverished areas to buy loyalty and power; 4) a claim to and aura of
religious authenticity and Arab prestige; 5) an appeal to Islamic   
identity,
pride and history; 6) an ability to blend into the much larger   
traditionalist
masses and blur the distinction between moderate Islam and their   
brand of
religious extremism; 7) full-time commitment by its agents/  
leadership; 8)
networks of Islamic schools that propagate extremism; 9) the  
absence of
organized opposition in the Islamic world; 10) a global network of
fundamentalist imams who guide their flocks to extremism; 11) a  
well- oiled
"machine" established to translate, publish and distribute Wahhabi/  
Salafi
propaganda and disseminate its ideology throughout the world; 12)   
scholarships
for locals to study in Saudi Arabia and return with degrees and   
indoctrination,
to serve as future leaders; 13) the ability to cross national and   
cultural
borders in the name of religion; 14) Internet communication; and  
15) the
reluctance of many national governments to supervise or control  
this  entire
process.
We must employ effective strategies to counter each of these   
fundamentalist
strengths. This can be accomplished only by bringing the combined   
weight of the
vast majority of peace-loving Muslims, and the non-Muslim world,  
to  bear in a
coordinated global campaign whose goal is to resolve the crisis of
misunderstanding that threatens to engulf our entire world.
An effective counterstrategy must be based upon a realistic   
assessment of our
own strengths and weaknesses in the face of religious extremism  
and  terror.
Disunity, of course, has proved fatal to countless human societies   
faced with a
similar existential threat. A lack of seriousness in confronting  
the  imminent
danger is likewise often fatal. Those who seek to promote a  
peaceful and
tolerant understanding of Islam must overcome the paralyzing  
effects of
inertia, and harness a number of actual or potential strengths,  
which  can play
a key role in neutralizing fundamentalist ideology. These  
strengths  not only
are assets in the struggle with religious extremism, but in their   
mirror form
they point to the weakness at the heart of fundamentalist  
ideology.  They are:
1) Human dignity, which demands freedom of conscience and rejects  
the  forced
imposition of religious views; 2) the ability to mobilize immense   
resources to
bring to bear on this problem, once it is identified and a global   
commitment is
made to solve it; 3) the ability to leverage resources by  
supporting  individuals
and organizations that truly embrace a peaceful and tolerant  
Islam;  4) nearly
1,400 years of Islamic traditions and spirituality, which are   
inimical to
fundamentalist ideology; 5) appeals to local and national--as well as
Islamic--culture/traditions/pride; 6) the power of the feminine   
spirit, and the
fact that half of humanity consists of women, who have an inherent   
stake in the
outcome of this struggle; 7) traditional and Sufi leadership and   
masses, who
are not yet radicalized (strong numeric advantage: 85% to 90% of  
the  world's
1.3 billion Muslims); 8) the ability to harness networks of  
Islamic  schools to
propagate a peaceful and tolerant Islam; 9) the natural tendency  
of  like-minded
people to work together when alerted to a common danger; 10) the   
ability to form
a global network of like-minded individuals, organizations and   
opinion leaders
to promote moderate and progressive ideas throughout the Muslim   
world; 11) the
existence of a counterideology, in the form of traditional, Sufi  
and  modern
Islamic teachings, and the ability to translate such works into  
key  languages;
12) the benefits of modernity, for all its flaws, and the  
widespread  appeal of
popular culture; 13) the ability to cross national and cultural   
borders in the
name of religion; 14) Internet communications, to disseminate   
progressive
views--linking and inspiring like-minded individuals and organizations
throughout the world; 15) the nation-state; and 16) the universal   
human desire
for freedom, justice and a better life for oneself and loved ones.
Though potentially decisive, most of these advantages remain  
latent  or diffuse,
and require mobilization to be effective in confronting fundamentalist
ideology. In addition, no effort to defeat religious extremism can   
succeed
without ultimately cutting off the flow of petrodollars used to   
finance that
extremism, from Leeds to Jakarta.
Only by recognizing the problem, putting an end to the bickering   
within and
between nation-states, and adopting a coherent long-term plan   
(executed with
international leadership and commitment) can we begin to apply the   
brakes to
the rampant spread of extremist ideas and hope to resolve the  
world's  crisis of
misunderstanding before the global economy and modern civilization   
itself begin
to crumble in the face of truly devastating attacks.
Muslims themselves can and must propagate an understanding of the   
"right" Islam,
and thereby discredit extremist ideology. Yet to accomplish this  
task  requires
the understanding and support of like-minded individuals,   
organizations and
governments throughout the world. Our goal must be to illuminate  
the  hearts and
minds of humanity, and offer a compelling alternate vision of  
Islam,  one that
banishes the fanatical ideology of hatred to the darkness from  
which it
emerged.
Mr. Wahid, former president of Indonesia, is patron and senior   
advisor to the
LibForAll Foundation (www.libforall.org), an Indonesian and U.S.-based
nonprofit that works to reduce religious extremism and discredit  
the  use of
terrorism.
Copyright © 2005 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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