in the millions
ISLAM'S INFIDELS
by
DAVID SOLWAY
______________________________
David
Solway is a Canadian poet and essayist (Random Walks)
and author of The Big Lie: On Terror, Antisemitism, and
Identity and Hear,
O Israel! (Mantua Books). His editorials appear
regularly in frontpagemag.com and
PJ Media. His monograph, Global Warning:
The Trials of an Unsettled Science (Freedom Press Canada)
was launched at the National Archives in Ottawa in September,
2012. His latest book of poetry, Habibi:
The Diwam of Alim Maghrebi
(Guernica Editions), is now available as is his most recent
collection of essays, The
Boxthorn Tree.
Perhaps
the major theological problem confronting the revisionist Muslim
community today—i.e., those whom we call “moderates”
or 'secular-oriented intellectuals'—is the canonical scriptures
which define their faith and without which Islam would cease
to exist. The dilemma for these ‘enlightened Muslims’
is the Koran itself, with its ubiquitous summons to warfare,
conquest, enslavement and social and economic persecution of
vanquished peoples, which is why they are preoccupied, to the
brink of obsession, with the twin concepts of re-interpretation
and contextualization.
These
meliorists are convinced that Islam is diametrically opposed
to something called ‘Islamism,’ that Islam is essentially
a religion of peace rather than a bellicose imperial movement
and that its founding texts therefore invite reinterpretation.
This belief can be readily demolished by anyone with a cursory
acquaintance with the Islamic literature and a modicum of common
sense. For once the incendiary and violent passages are expurgated
from the Koran and the Hadith, and the philosophical and political
curriculum appropriately bowdlerized, there is far too little
left over on which to base a credible and authoritative, world-historical
faith. Indeed, as I have argued before, the result would resemble
a version of Baha’i’ and could no longer legitimately
be called Islam. Re-interpretation is effectively a dead end,
a theological placebo swallowed by the naïve or the willfully
ignorant who find the strong medicine of reality unpalatable
or even abhorrent.
The
notion of contextualization fares no better. Here the thesis
is that one must adopt a historical or dialectical perspective
on the progressive evolution of belief systems. The repugnant
portions of the scriptures are understood to apply only to the
times in which they were conceived and written. Of course, there
is some truth to this contention. The Bible also contains offensive
passages which have been despumated with the passing of time.
But the difference between the Bible and the Koran is categorical.
The former is largely narrative and parabolic in structure and
the parts we would regard as objectionable are comparatively
few. The Koran, on the contrary—especially the longer,
Medinan section—is almost unrelentingly belligerent and
exhortative, commanding the believer to slay, conquer, oppress
and impose draconian taxes on those who have been subjugated.
To
say, as did reformer Salim Mansur, an apostle of contextualization,
that Jesus should not be held responsible for the actions of
his followers and therefore, by implication, neither should
Mohammed is to miss the point entirely. Jesus commanded the
faithful to turn the other cheek, not to “slay the unbelievers
wherever you find them” (Koran 9:5). Jesus is in no need
of contextualization. Judaism differs inasmuch as the messiah
has not yet arrived and the fundamental commandments are both
few and benign. In Christianity, as we have noted, Jesus is
a harbinger of peace and love, and his exegetes, like Saint
Paul, are fallible human beings whose utterances are seen to
be open to debate. In Islam, however, the word of the Prophet,
transmitted by Allah via the angel Gabriel, is set in theological
stone; it cannot be reinterpreted or contextualized, only abrogated
by Mohammed himself. Its directives are neither locally nor
temporally specific. They are meant to be understood as having
general and timeless application, constituting the default position
of Islamic belief. Efforts to neuter such clearly unmistakable
and bloody imperatives, which ramify throughout the Koran—as,
for example, in the Muslim Access website which strenuously
labors to sanitize the intractable—are embarrassingly
disingenuous.
The
abiding, if not insoluble, problem with the seductive hypothesis
of contextualization is a kind of prolepsis, an anticipation
of change before it happens—which in this case would then
render the original event tolerable. Are we to assume, in other
words, that the beheading of 600-900 Jewish males of the Banu
Qurayza and the enslavement of their women and children at the
Battle of the Trench is perfectly understandable because it
occurred in 627? That the annihilation of 60-80 million Hindus
during the conquest of India is historically unexceptionable
because it occurred between the 11th and 16th centuries? Need
we merely contextualize such atrocities—without apology—in
order not to be unduly disturbed by them? Were Islamic warriors
more primitive in the unenlightened past but are now well on
the way toward civilized behavior and international standards
of just conduct?
In
that case, how are we to process the myriad commands and injunctions
to kill, brutalize and devastate that remain “on the books,”
are reckoned as mandatory, and are regarded as perennially valid
by the majority of the world’s practicing Muslims. How
are these rules and ukases to be contextualized in the present,
let alone re-interpreted? How does one reinterpret and contextualize
the manifold orders to slaughter, mutilate, enslave and exploit
the infidel that are rife throughout what is considered a holy
and eternal text coeval with the Creator? To agree that such
recalibration is possible without expunging the Islamic faith
from the ledger of the world’s major religions or turning
it into something unrecognizable is a delusion that flies in
the face of reality.
A corollary
argument we often come across is that Islam, like Judaism and
Christianity, only needs time in which to reform itself. I have
contended that Islam cannot be reformed and yet perdure as Islam.
But even were renovation possible, the issue is that, in a nuclear
age in which terrorist organizations diligently seek the acquisition
of WMDs and will, most likely, eventually get them, we no longer
have the time to wait upon an Islamic “higher criticism”
to disarm an aggressively militant faith—which is also
a political ideology. Ayaan Hirsi Ali believes that Islam will
undergo a positive transformation, a necessary ‘cultural
change’ in another hundred years or so. Were this even
remotely possible, the predicament would persist: we do not
have another hundred years in which to exercise our patience.
I doubt if we even have a decade before a widespread conflagration
is ignited and casualties reach astronomic proportions, a consequence
that follows in the wake of Islamic virulence.
Roger
Kimball, parsing Charles Hill’s new book, Trial of
a Thousand Years: World Oder and Islamism, suggests that
“there are millions upon millions of Muslims outside the
Mideast who have made their peace with modernity.” But
such a metamorphosis strictly implies that these moderates are
not really Muslims any longer, and certainly not Muslims in
good standing. They are nominal Muslims, dissembling members
of the faith, Stanislavsky Muslims engaged in a species of method
acting, imagining themselves to be what they are not, for Islam
as such is not amenable to assimilation into the Western, post-Westphalian
world order. Re-interpretation is predicated on deliberate negligence
just as contextualization is a sop to the intellectual conscience,
and both are instances of theological fraud and the desire to
retain a venerable designation or a cultural habitus (French
sociologist Pierre Bourdieu’s term) to which they are
neither logically nor honestly entitled.
“Islam’s
borders are bloody and so are its innards,” wrote Samuel
Huntington in The Clash of Civilizations, and events appear
to have proven him right. But it is even worse than that. The
blood has spilled copiously from the borders of Islam across
the borders of the West and into the very nexus of our private
and public lives. If Islam were reformable, I would be in the
vanguard of those encouraging the anti-jihadist activists and
the sparse handful of moderates who have attempted to establish
a new synthesis. But it is not reformable. It cannot be re-interpreted,
contextualized and transformed while still remaining the religion
of Allah and his Prophet.
We
need to know and name what we are dealing with and devise an
appropriate strategy to contest and defeat a determined adversary
if we intend to ensure our survival. It is as simple—and
uncompromising—as that. Otherwise we will sink into the
Spenglerian abyss as merely one more civilization that has grown
weary of conflict and the requisites of perpetuation, and has
wished itself, as Spengler wrote in The Decline of the West,
into the featureless dark.