The Culture of Defeat
The past three months witnessed a number of incidents worldwide marked by anti-Muslim violence as well as violence between Muslims and citizens of other cultures. One of these incidents involved the murder of an Egyptian woman by a German extremist in a German courtroom.
However,
almost all these incidents provoked angry reactions from Muslim Arabs and
non-Arabs without achieving any of its objectives at any level in the end.
After the
dust settled following the murder of Marwa Elsherbini by a German fanatic, what
are the lessons to be learnt from this dramatic incident? Does it actually
reveal deep cracks in the dialogue of cultures which we all for decades have
been trying to hold between the West and Islam? Is it just a storm caused by
fanaticism and fuelled by ethnic and religious zeal, then passed into oblivion,
as is the case with all Arabs, and Muslims series of misfortunes without
learning the lessons drawn from them or modifying our behaviour and thinking,
particularly as we are living hard times which require thinking and careful
consideration more than ever before?
Following
that vicious crime, Arabs, anger flared up everywhere. There’s nothing wrong in
this; we may be angry about any abuses carried out against us. Similarly, we
may be angry about any insult to any person anywhere in the world as we are all
human beings. However, it is unfortunate that such anger was somewhat emotional
and was limited to shouting and demanding the German embassy to apologize,
without considering every aspect of the issue.
This case
is in fact another episode in a series of contradictions of the dialogue of
cultures. Whenever there is a Muslim or Arab victim, there are protests
everywhere about infringed Arabs rights, and the West s anti-Arab and Muslim
intentions. Media organizations use the incident to provoke argument,
neglecting their role and responsibility for shaping public opinion and giving
facts to the people without influencing their feelings.
Such
cases should in fact motivate us strongly to carefully consider our cultural
and social conditions as well as our behaviour towards ourselves and others. We
neglect Muslim and Arab human rights violations if committed in our own
countries, but condemn them if committed elsewhere.
Unsound sympathy
In point
of fact, in these circumstances we ignore the terrorist acts committed by some
anti-West Muslim extremists in some Arab countries since the 1980s, without any
public or media sympathy with the hundreds of innocent victims of those acts
who were just foreign tourists who came to visit some of our cities and
familiarize themselves with our culture and societies. The relatives of those
victims though many- didn t demand an apology from Arab governments because
they know the reality of this phenomenon and that such extremism does not
express an official or popular attitude towards the subjects of foreign
countries.
The big
difference between reactions on both sides reflects the serious crisis facing
our Arab culture, which has become one of defeat rather than power. In such a
situation people have a sort of a passive irrational approach to issues
influenced by zeal and hostile reactions resulting from loss of
self-confidence. Arabs reactions to similar incidents involving abuses against
us over the last few years are no more than extremely hostile attitudes without
understanding of the aspects of the problem, whereas we can achieve more if we
think objectively about practical, effective means.
Culture of defeat concerns
There was
a serious escalation in this issue when Uighur Muslims in the Chinese region of
Xinjiang staged an uprising, with many calls for separation from China. There
were calls from Muslims and Arabs for interference to save Muslims in China.
Unaware that what happens in China is an internal affair, these calls disregard
international conventions, treaties and protocols which regulate China s
relations with the outside world and prevent interference in its internal
affairs. The same applies to any Arab country in case any group demands
separation from the homeland. The culture of defeat makes us believe that what
takes place there is directed towards us as Arabs and Muslims, while most of it
is an internal matter in a country with which we have conventions, protocols,
commercial and economic agreements, etc.
Serious
conflicts occur in Iraq on a daily basis, particularly between religious and
sectarian groups, and Iraq s Christians are the main group who suffer all kinds
of pressure, discrimination and murder, and there are even calls for expelling
them from Iraq, although they are the oldest sect to live in Iraq, ages before
the entry of Islam.
Similarly,
many Arab media organizations regarded the release of the man accused in the
Lockerbie case as a victory for Islam, but the whole matter is in fact related
to the blowing up of an international airliner, and has nothing to do with
religion, ethnicity or Muslims. Surprisingly, in their attitude to these three
cases, some Arab intellectuals, like the general public who don t know the hard
facts, followed an irrational way of thinking influenced by defeatism. This way
of thinking and emotional, hostile reactions only lead to further
misunderstanding of Islam and Arab societies by non-Arab parties, which deepens
hostility against us at a time we are in a pressing need for the world’s
understanding of us so as to enable us to resolve the Iraqi and Palestinian
crises and other pending issues.
In the
meantime, a racist country par excellence like Israel, which acts hostilely
towards us all, presents itself to the world as a democratic, advanced country
to reinforce a negative image of Muslim Arabs as peoples who hate the world and
fight others in the name of Islam. This is one of the main differences between
the Arabs and Israel. Unlike it, we act out of defeatism, without awareness or
careful investigation. That is why there are differences in stories and
reactions.
False conceptions
There are
several reasons behind the culture of defeat, one of which is that in restoring
its independence over the past century, contemporary Arab culture adopted an
utterly hostile attitude towards the West as a colonial enemy, without
differentiating between modernization as a conception not related to the West
and its being a natural development of any society striving to achieve progress
freely. Furthermore, the Arab individual s identity crisis reflected in his
attempt to link it to heritage, but instead of freeing the heritage of formal
rituals related to the historical circumstances in which it emerged, he adhered
to form rather than content. In this context and misunderstanding we can
understand such retrogression which manifests itself in a number of signs
around us, including heated arguments over headscarves or veils, or details
about rites and clothing, whereas the essence of the argument is missing or
ignored. That, among other reasons, led to sectarian strife as almost each
party consider themselves the only omniscient. This is a natural thing in the
climate of fanaticism which causes sticking to superficialities and formalities
far from the tenets and true values of religion, rather than questions about
issues concerning the realities of life, society and the future.
Evidence
of this is represented in the huge number of people who took to the street in
protest at abuses against Islam, but there were no public protests against
violations of their basic rights or stripping them of their dignity through
infringement of their political and economic rights by government and
non-government forces alike. Instead of this, they embrace such issues that
seem to them agreed upon and secure and make them safe from arrest. This is the
usual position of conservative groups acting, as previously mentioned, out of
defeatism.
We will
therefore see that all political religious forces in any Arab area do not offer
economic, social or political reform programmes of any value and only take up
controversial matters and focus on formalities without any real political
reform ideas. They derive their popularity from a defeatist public who find
relief from their crises in formal practices of religion instead of real
religion, which seeks progress, welfare and rationalism, which, in essence, are
among the most important values of Islam and other revealed religions.
Myths of the ages of backwardness
The
culture of defeat which triggers angry Arab reactions shows regression in our
contemporary human march at a time when countries around us reduce centuries in
a single day, as well as a decline in the progress and development which
Islamic civilization achieved as a creative power in terms of thought, science,
art and philosophy in its heyday as minds combined to identify the source of
the power of Islam as a producer of tolerance, fraternity, and piety in every
sense of the word and not just sticking to formalities of religion for other
reasons. The result is a series of failures and decline in the areas of
thought, philosophy, translation and even Islamic jurisprudence itself which
was a tool of keeping up with daily developments in Muslim society in its
heyday until the industrial and technological production which threatens our
very existence, for, in the absence of reason and recurrent failures and
pent-up frustration, we will have nothing but grudge and hatred against the
West which we, out of our weakness, think is an aggressor against our religion,
and we later stir up animosity and hatred against other Arab groups whose
juristic views of religion differ from ours.
Unfortunately,
this defeatism is nothing but an attempt to follow myths of the ages of
backwardness instead of the Islamic heritage of modernization on which the
pioneers of Islamic Arab thought based the principles of tolerance and rational
dialogue, guided by the Holy Quran and the Tradition of Prophet Muhammad
(PBUH).
One of
the reasons why the Arab individual s dilemma continues under the culture of
defeat is given by writer Hashim Salih: Orthodoxy (usuliya) has become a
serious problem which hinders the progress of Arab and Muslim peoples because
its views disagree with modern science, but, nevertheless, it imposes itself as
sacred and infallible views. Consequently, Muslims find themselves seriously
divided if they adopt theories of modernization and reject orthodox views they
feel a sense of guilt; if otherwise, they will feel isolated from the spirit of
the times, scientific, philosophical and rational progress, and be seriously
confused and in a real dilemma which can only be resolved if Arab thinkers
present a rational understanding of Islam to stand in the face of today s
prevalent rigid, reactionary interpretation.
And
before this public, some thinkers who showed contradictions because of falling
prey to the culture of defeat should believe that the only way to restore the
prosperity of Arab civilization is to insist on their positions and begin a
new, different cultural production which monitors events away from slogans and
excessive self-assertion as a reaction to defeatism and inferiority, but
through rationalism and belief that any productive civilization will be able to
raise such an awareness that turns society s energy, fosters the values of
rationalism and puts intellectual and social courses back on track. This will
create critical mental abilities in the face of all aspects of corruption,
domination and superficialities. Such a mentality is striving to represent the
majority of the Arabs as it is likely to be a sign of developing awareness instead
of repeated attempts to alienate it.
Sulaiman
Al-Askary
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