The Evolution of Islam :
Interview with Mohamed Ibn Guadi
By Ryan Mauro
http://www.worldthreats.com/
Mohamed
Ibn Guadi is an Islamologist at Strasbourg University and a researcher in
Semitic Philology. He is a contributor to Figaro, Le Point and other journals.
He is the Director of the Islamology Program at the French Center of Middle East
Studies (AFEMO) in Toulouse. He is currently preparing a book on Islam and the
West.
WRM: Is Islam growing more radical or
moderate overall? Where is it the most worrisome?
MIG:
That’s a good question, Ryan. Today, most people think that radical Islam is
growing to the detriment of the “real” Islam. Is Islam a religion of peace? No.
Is it a religion of war? Neither. As a matter a fact, this is a puzzle. Osama
Bin Laden is a good Muslim. I mean, what they say about the West is consistent
with Islamic history. It’s true that moderate Muslims represent Islam but we
have to keep in mind that Osama, Mullah Omar and others represent Islam as well.
WRM: But do you think that the religion of
Islam as a whole is growing more radical, or more peaceful
?
MIG: Islam is growing more original which means that
Islam is returning to its foundations. Islam is in a decisive time that it will
determine its future. The growing of democracy in the Arab world could change
the Arab minds but not Islam.
WRM: How did
radical Islam originate? Is it true the Soviet Union played a key role in
creating radical Islam in the first place?
MIG: Radical
Islam is not an ex nihilo creation. The so-called “radical Muslims” draw their
sources in 14 centuries of Islamic history as well as hadiths and Muhammad the
Prophet’s life that must be an example for Muslims. The Jihad is theologically
correct. Nevertheless, we have to keep in mind that the ones who are very
critical of their Arab country are also Muslims. Ibn Khaldoun, maybe the
greatest historian in Arab history, was very critical towards Muslims.
Arabs have always sought allies according to the circumstances. During
the 40's it was the Nazis, during the Cold War it was the Soviet Union. They
(Arabs) adopted some ideologies from their allies. But neither Nazism nor the
Soviet Union played a key role in the expansion of radical
Islam.
WRM: What do you believe is causing the
radicalization of the Islamic world?
MIG: The feeling
that all the problems comes from the West. But, this is not the only cause. The
only thing that saved the Arabs in the 20th century is secular nationalism.
After the Six Days War, the Arabs saw this nationalism trifling. The one source
the Arabs met in their history was the Islamic State. This is the only one
political organization they have experienced. Secular nationalism came from
Europe by Arab intellectuals who wanted to gather Arab Christians and Muslims
under the Arab nation.
WRM: What countries do
you believe are actively helping the growth of radical
Islam?
MIG: Saudi Arabia, Syria, Iran, and Pakistan
(within the ISI).
WRM: How come world opinion
tends to be anti-American, especially in respect to the wars in Afghanistan and
Iraq?
MIG: As for Western opinion, there are many ways
to explain that. I think that if the westerners are anti-American, it means that
words like freedom, democracy, and freedom of speech and so on have no
signification for them. If they are so anti-American this is because this
ideology uses simple words to understand. But, there is also a hate of
themselves from Westerners. And some Muslims have understood it. In the message
broadcast by Al-Jazeera television on 14 February 2003, Osama Bin Laden said:
"The interests of Muslims coincide with the interests of the socialists in the
war against the crusaders." After the bomb attack in Spain (14 March 2004),
these words seemed almost prophetic.
In the case of
Arab world, the anti-Americanism is also a way for some governments to save
their regime. Unfortunately, they don't worry about Muslims in Afghanistan or
Iraq. When the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in December 1979, the Arab World
became very silent. The UN has never condemned this invasion. At the meeting of
the Organization of Islamic Conferences in Islamabad, on 27 January 1980, Libya
gave a very harsh condemnation... of the United States.
WRM: How come we don’t see more action by the moderates in the
Islamic world?
MIG: Because their actions will be
interpreted as support for the West. There is no culture of peace in our
countries. If you want to see more action from moderates it has to be from true
pacifism in a healthy Arab society. How can we hope for such action when the
journalists, singers and television don't stop saying that Jews are murderers of
children and lead all the governments in the world?
But, in the Arab
world, you can be a very "moderate" Muslim if you're anti-American and
anti-Israeli in other ways. That's why some Arabs atheists are approved by
militant Muslims because they are anti-Semitic.
WRM: Is there a community of moderate Muslims in the Middle
East that can help fight anti-Americanism?
MIG: They needn't fight
anti-Americanism because they are fighting it by their way of life. Many of them
appreciate the American movies or fashion. Even in Lebanon, several activists of
Hamas go to MacDonald’s to eat.
WRM: How will the growing Islamic community in Europe affect
European policy? Has it already?
MIG: Well, it does
affect policy but not as seriously as you think. For example, France had had an
“Arab Policy” before the war in Iraq. In 1967, after the Six Days War, France
refused to support Israel. The French media and the army were very pro-Israel in
that period. A very short period, granted. However, most of the Muslims in
France don’t vote.
WRM: Do you believe that
stability and democracy in Iraq is possible?
MIG: I'm
not worried about Iraq's stability. Let's talk about it in ten or fifteen years.
I'm sure that the Iraqi people will not thank Europe. Now, the Iraqi people are
very angry with some Arab countries for their opposition to the overthrow the
Saddam regime. That's why I've said to you previously that it is possible that
what we saw in the former Soviet republics may occur again because some Arabs
don't want to live in oppression anymore.
WRM:
What in your opinion needs to be done to stop the growth of radical
Islam?
MIGL: First of all, I think that Westerners
have to accept that some people in the Islamic world don't want democracy. Then,
they also have to accept that terrorists attack due to the love of life and
freedom in the West. If the Colombian FARC, the Irish Republican Army, and
others, want to kill people, they don't strike a single embassy in Moscow,
Paris, Sidney, or even in Washington. The Islamic militant will strike all these
capitals because they feel that they are at war with the values of the West.
Their claim is first of all religious and then political. Islamic militants
would rather have more dead than alive. I think the Westerners should grant them
their wishes.
The Middle East is the only region that is poisoning
Muslims and Westerners next. The best way to stop the bleeding is to bring
democracy into this part of the world, even by force. But, democracy is not
perfect, it evolves and gets better. Over time, the democracy gets stronger and
better. It will happen as we saw in the former Soviet republics. The Arabs will
win their independence. Not independence from the West but from their Arab
leaders. I really think that the intervention in Iraq was good. It's a way to
accelerate history. Most of the Iranian diplomats I met would like for the
United States intervene against Tehran like they've done in Baghdad. But, they
know that the Iran situation is different as well.
WRM: The people of Iran are supposedly very eager to oust the
radicals. Why is there less radicalism here, despite the government being the
most radical of all?
MIG: Because there is in Iran,
unlike the Arab countries, a real movement of peace and social reform, despite
having a radical government. The Shiite society has much experience, through its
history, and the criticism of themselves. The Iranians really thought that the
Islamic Revolution would change their country. But that was not the case.
Secondly, the Iranian Shiites are not as obsessed in their anti-Semitism and
anti-American as the Sunni Muslims. Despite the warnings of the government, the
Iranian people are expressed their sympathy for the victims of 9/11/01.
In the Arab world and even in some western countries, there was that
jubilation over 9/11/01. I think that Iran could give help teach democracy to
the Arab world. Iran is a non-Arab country that became an Islamic state. And now
this is a non-Arab and possibly an ex-Islamic state in the future, which could
become an example of democracy in the Middle East. It's quite likely that the
first president of an Iranian democratic country be a woman.
WRM: How likely is it that there will be anti-terror and
pro-freedom leaders in Palestine to challenge Arafat, Hamas and the rest? Is the
plan for a Palestinian state likely to succeed anytime
soon?
MIG: Like in the Arab world, there are some
leaders in the Autonomous Territories to challenge Arafat and even the Hamas.
These leaders are not especially pro-Israeli but they could be more
conciliatory. Arafat is not eternal. When he dies, there will be an opportunity
to re-educate the people.
The plan for a Palestinian state is very
difficult. No Arab will accept a patch of land such that Autonomous Territories.
Some Muslims want all the land. I don't think we're on the way for a Palestinian
State. If Palestinians want a real state, it already exists: This is Jordan. It
is the only viable state for the Palestinians. But, at the same time, Arab
Palestinians cannot give up the Temple Mount which is called the Al-Aqsa Mosque.
It doesn't means that Autonomous Territories couldn't be a real state. But it
will be not enough for the Muslims.
RM: You
wrote in the last answer that Jordan is only the only viable Palestinian state.
Why do you believe this?
MIG: Because 75% of its people are
Palestinians or originate from the British mandate of Palestine. The Jordanian
nationality doesn’t exists.
RM: You also said a state in the Autonomous
Territories wouldn't be enough for the Muslims. Why is
that?
MIG: Because
Arabs from the beginning have wanted all the land. They don’t consider the Jews
to have a historical background in this place. The Temple Mount situation is a
strong example.