Islam Through West­ern Eyes

Edward W. Said

(We do not nec­ces­sar­i­ly agree with every­thing that is said by the author ? Ed. )

The media have become obsessed with some­thing called Islam,” which in their vogu­ish lex­i­con has acquired only two mean­ings, both of them unac­cept­able and impov­er­ish­ing. On the one hand, Islam” rep­re­sents the threat of a resur­gent atavism, which sug­gests not only the men­ace of a return to the Mid­dle Ages but the destruc­tion of what Sen­a­tor Daniel Patrick Moyni­han calls the demo­c­ra­t­ic order in the West­ern world. On the oth­er hand, Islam” is made to stand for a defen­sive coun­ter­re­sponse to this first image of Islam as threat, espe­cial­ly when, for geopo­lit­i­cal rea­sons, good” Moslems like the Sau­di Ara­bi­ans or the Afghan Moslem free­dom fight­ers” against the Sovi­et Union are in ques­tion. Any­thing said in defense of Islam is more or less forced into the apolo­getic form of a plea for Islam’s human­ism, its con­tri­bu­tions to civ­i­liza­tion, devel­op­ment and per­haps even to demo­c­ra­t­ic niceness.

Along with that kind of coun­ter­re­sponse there is the occa­sion­al fool­ish­ness of try­ing to equate Islam with the imme­di­ate sit­u­a­tion of one or anoth­er Islam­ic coun­try, which in the case of Iran dur­ing the Shah’s actu­al removal was per­haps a rea­son­able tac­tic. But after that exu­ber­ant peri­od and dur­ing the hostage cri­sis, the tac­tic has become a some­what trick­i­er busi­ness. What is the Islam­ic apol­o­gist to say when con­front­ed with the dai­ly count of peo­ple exe­cut­ed by the Islam­ic komitehs, or when — as was report­ed on Sep­tem­ber 19, 1979, by Reuters — Aya­tol­lah Ruhol­lah Khome­i­ni announces that ene­mies of the Islam­ic rev­o­lu­tion would be destroyed ? The point is that both media mean­ings of Islam” depend on each oth­er, and are equal­ly to be reject­ed for per­pet­u­at­ing the dou­ble bind.

How fun­da­men­tal­ly nar­row and con­strict­ed is the seman­tic field of Islam was brought home to me after my book Ori­en­tal­ism appeared last year. Even though I took great pains in the book to show that cur­rent dis­cus­sions of the Ori­ent or of the Arabs and Islam are fun­da­men­tal­ly premised upon a fic­tion, my book was often inter­pret­ed as a defense of the real” Islam. Where­as what I was try­ing to show was that any talk about Islam was rad­i­cal­ly flawed, not only because an unwar­rant­ed assump­tion was being made that a large ide­o­log­i­cal­ly freight­ed gen­er­al­iza­tion could cov­er all the rich and diverse par­tic­u­lar­i­ty of Islam­ic life (a very dif­fer­ent thing) but also because it would sim­ply be repeat­ing the errors of Ori­en­tal­ism to claim that the cor­rect view of Islam was X or Y or Z. And still I would receive invi­ta­tions from var­i­ous insti­tu­tions to give a lec­ture on the true mean­ing of an Islam­ic Repub­lic or on the Islam­ic view of peace. Either one found one­self defend­ing Islam – as if the reli­gion need­ed that kind of defense – or, by keep­ing silent, seem­ing to be tac­it­ly accept­ing Islam’s defamation.

But rejec­tion alone does not take one very far, since if we are to claim, as we must, that as a reli­gion and as a civ­i­liza­tion Islam does have a mean­ing very much beyond either of the two cur­rent­ly giv­en it, we must first be able to pro­vide some­thing in the way of a space in which to speak of Islam. Those who wish either to rebut the stan­dard anti-Islam­ic and anti-Arab rhetoric that dom­i­nates the media and lib­er­al intel­lec­tu­al dis­course, or to avoid the ide­al­iza­tion of Islam (to say noth­ing of its sen­ti­men­tal­iza­tion), find them­selves with scarce­ly a place to stand on, much less a place in which to move freely.

From at least the end of the eigh­teenth cen­tu­ry until our own day, mod­ern Occi­den­tal reac­tions to Islam have been dom­i­nat­ed by a type of think­ing that may still be called Ori­en­tal­ist. The gen­er­al basis of Ori­en­tal­ist thought is an imag­i­na­tive geog­ra­phy divid­ing the word into two unequal parts, the larg­er and dif­fer­ent” one called the Ori­ent, the oth­er, also known as our world, called the Occi­dent or the West. Such divi­sions always take place when one soci­ety or cul­ture thinks about anoth­er one, dif­fer­ent from it, but it is inter­est­ing that even when the Ori­ent has uni­form­ly been con­sid­ered an infe­ri­or part of the world, it has always been endowed both with far greater size and with a greater poten­tial for pow­er than the West. Inso­far as Islam has always been seen as belong­ing to the Ori­ent, its par­tic­u­lar fate with­in the gen­er­al struc­ture of Ori­en­tal­ism has been to be looked at with a very spe­cial hos­til­i­ty and fear. There are, of course, many obvi­ous reli­gious, psy­cho­log­i­cal and polit­i­cal rea­sons for this, but all of these rea­sons derive from a sense that so far as the West is con­cerned, Islam rep­re­sents not only a for­mi­da­ble com­peti­tor but also a late-com­ing chal­lenge to Christianity.

I have not been able to dis­cov­er any peri­od in Euro­pean or Amer­i­can his­to­ry since the Mid­dle Ages in which Islam was gen­er­al­ly dis­cussed or thought about out­side a frame­work cre­at­ed by pas­sion, prej­u­dice and polit­i­cal inter­ests. This may not seem like a sur­pris­ing dis­cov­ery, but includ­ed in the indict­ment is the entire gamut of schol­ar­ly and sci­en­tif­ic dis­ci­plines which, since the ear­ly nine­teenth cen­tu­ry, have either called them­selves Ori­en­tal­ism or tried sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly to deal with the Ori­ent. No one would dis­agree with the state­ment that ear­ly com­men­ta­tors on Islam like Peter the Ven­er­a­ble and Barthele­my D’Her­be­lot were pas­sion­ate Chris­tian­polemi­cists in what they they said. But it has been an unex­am­ined assump­tion that since Europe advanced into the mod­ern sci­en­tif­ic age and freed itself of super­sti­tion and igno­rance, the march must have includ­ed Ori­en­tal­ism. Was­n’t it true that Sil­vestre de Sacy, Edward Lane, Ernest Renan, Hamil­ton Gibb and Louis Mas­signon were learned, objec­tive schol­ars, and isn’t it true that, fol­low­ing upon all sorts of advances in twen­ti­eth-cen­tu­ry soci­ol­o­gy, anthro­pol­o­gy, lin­guis­tics and his­to­ry, Amer­i­can schol­ars who teach the Mid­dle East and Islam in places like Prince­ton, Har­vard and Chica­go are there­fore unbi­ased and free of spe­cial plead­ing in what they do ? The answer is no. Not that Ori­en­tal­ism is more biased than oth­er social and human­is­tic sci­ences ; it is as ide­o­log­i­cal and as con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed by the world as oth­er dis­ci­plines. The main dif­fer­ence is that the Ori­en­tal­ists use the author­i­ty of their stand­ing as experts to deny – no, to cov­er – their deep-seat­ed feel­ings about Islam with a car­pet of jar­gon whose pur­pose is to cer­ti­fy their objec­tiv­i­ty” and sci­en­tif­ic impartiality.”

That is one point. The oth­er dis­tin­guish­es a his­tor­i­cal pat­tern in what would oth­er­wise be an undif­fer­en­ti­at­ed char­ac­ter­i­za­tion of Ori­en­tal­ism. When­ev­er in mod­ern times there has been an acute­ly polit­i­cal ten­sion felt between the Occi­dent and its Ori­ent (or between the West and its Islam), there has been a ten­den­cy to resort in the West not to direct vio­lence but first to the cool, rel­a­tive­ly detached instru­ments of sci­en­tif­ic, qua­si-objec­tive rep­re­sen­ta­tion. In this way Islam is made more clear, the true nature of its threat appears, an implic­it course of action against it is pro­posed. In such a con­text both sci­ence and direct vio­lence end up by being forms of aggres­sion against Islam.

Two strik­ing­ly sim­i­lar exam­ples illus­trate my the­sis. We can now see ret­ro­spec­tive­ly that dur­ing the nine­teenth cen­tu­ry both France and Eng­land pre­ced­ed their occu­pa­tions of por­tions of the Islam­ic East with a peri­od in which the var­i­ous schol­ar­ly means of char­ac­ter­iz­ing and under­stand­ing the Ori­ent under­went remark­able tech­ni­cal mod­ern­iza­tion and devel­op­ment. The French occu­pa­tion of Alge­ria in 1830 fol­lowed a peri­od of about two decades dur­ing which French schol­ars lit­er­al­ly trans­formed the study of the Ori­ent from an anti­quar­i­an into a ratio­nal dis­ci­pline. Of course there had been Napoleon Bona­parte’s occu­pa­tion of Egypt in 1798, and of course one should remark the fact that he had pre­pared for his expe­di­tion by mar­shal­ing a sophis­ti­cat­ed group of sci­en­tists to make his enter­prise more effi­cient. My point, how­ev­er, is that Napoleon’s short-lived occu­pa­tion of Egypt closed a chap­ter. A new one began with the long peri­od dur­ing which, under de Sacy’s stew­ard­ship at French insti­tu­tions of Ori­en­tal study, France became the world leader in Ori­en­tal­ism ; this chap­ter cli­maxed a lit­tle lat­er when French armies occu­pied Algiers in 1830.

I do not at all want to sug­gest that there is a causal rela­tion­ship between one thing and the oth­er, nor to adopt the anti-intel­lec­tu­al view that all sci­en­tif­ic learn­ing nec­es­sar­i­ly leads to vio­lence and suf­fer­ing. All I want to say is that empires are not spon­ta­neous­ly born, nor dur­ing the mod­ern peri­od have they been run by impro­vi­sa­tion. If the devel­op­ment of learn­ing involves the rede­f­i­n­i­tion and the recon­sti­tu­tion of fields of human expe­ri­ence by sci­en­tists who stand above the mate­r­i­al they study, it is not imper­ti­nent to see the same devel­op­ment occur­ring among politi­cians whose realm of author­i­ty is rede­fined to include infe­ri­or regions of the world where new nation­al” inter­ests can be dis­cov­ered, and lat­er seen to be in need of close super­vi­sion. I very much doubt that Eng­land would have occu­pied Egypt in so long and mas­sive­ly insti­tu­tion­al­ized a way were it not for the durable invest­ment in Ori­en­tal learn­ing first cul­ti­vat­ed by schol­ars like Lane and William James. Famil­iar­ly, acces­si­bil­i­ty, rep­re­sentabil­i­ty : these were what Ori­en­tal­ists demon­strat­ed about the Ori­ent. The Ori­ent could be seen, it could be stud­ied, it could be man­aged. It need not remain a dis­tant, mar­velous, incom­pre­hen­si­ble and yet very rich place. It could be brought home – or, more sim­ply, Europe could make itself at home there, as it sub­se­quent­ly did.

My sec­ond exam­ple is a con­tem­po­rary one. The Islam­ic Ori­ent today is impor­tant for its resources or for its geopo­lit­i­cal loca­tion. Nei­ther of these, how­ev­er, is inter­change­able with the inter­ests, needs or aspi­ra­tions of the native Ori­en­tals. Ever since the end of World War II, the Unit­ed States has been tak­ing posi­tions of dom­i­nance and hege­mo­ny once held in the Islam­ic world by Britain and France. With this replace­ment of one impe­r­i­al sys­tem by anoth­er have gone two things : first, a remark­able bur­geon­ing of aca­d­e­m­ic and expert inter­est in Islam, and, sec­ond, an extra­or­di­nary rev­o­lu­tion in the tech­niques avail­able to the large­ly pri­vate-sec­tor press and elec­tron­ic jour­nal­ism indus­tries. Togeth­er these two phe­nom­e­na, by which a huge appa­ra­tus of uni­ver­si­ty, gov­ern­ment and busi­ness experts study Islam and the Mid­dle East and by which Islam has become a sub­ject famil­iar to every con­sumer of news in the West, have almost entire­ly domes­ti­cat­ed the Islam­ic world. Not only has that world become the sub­ject of the most pro­found cul­tur­al and eco­nom­ic West­ern sat­u­ra­tion in his­to­ry – for no non-West­ern realm has been so dom­i­nat­ed by the Unit­ed States as the Arab-Islam­ic world is dom­i­nat­ed today – by the exchange between Islam and the West, in this case the Unit­ed States, is pro­found­ly one-sided.

So far as the Unit­ed States seems to be con­cerned, it is only a slight over­state­ment to say that Moslems and Arabs are essen­tial­ly seen as either oil sup­pli­ers or poten­tial ter­ror­ists. Very lit­tle of the detail, the human den­si­ty, the pas­sion of Arab-Moslem life has entered the aware­ness of even those peo­ple whose pro­fes­sion it is to report the Arab world. What we have instead is a series of crude, essen­tial­ized car­i­ca­tures of the Islam­ic world pre­sent­ed in such a way as to make that world vul­ner­a­ble to mil­i­tary aggres­sion. I do not think it is an acci­dent, there­fore, that recent talk of U.S. mil­i­tary inter­ven­tion in the Ara­bi­an Gulf (which began at least five years ago, well before the Sovi­et inva­sion of Afghanistan) has been pre­ced­ed by a long peri­od of Islam’s ratio­nal pre­sen­ta­tion through the cool medi­um of tele­vi­sion and through objec­tive” Ori­en­tal­ist study : in many ways our actu­al sit­u­a­tion today bears a chill­ing resem­blance to the nine­teenth-cen­tu­ry British and French exam­ples pre­vi­ous­ly cited.

Even if mil­i­tary aggres­sion does not occur, the impli­ca­tions of all this are far-reach­ing. As men­tioned ear­li­er, Islam has uni­form­ly appeared to Europe and the West in gen­er­al as a threat. Today, the phe­nom­e­non is more in evi­dence than ever before because on the one hand there has been an enor­mous media con­ver­gence upon what has been called the emer­gence, return or resur­gence of Islam, and on the oth­er hand, because parts of the Islam­ic world – Pales­tine, Iran, Afghanistan, among oth­er places – which have been under­go­ing var­i­ous unequal process­es of his­tor­i­cal devel­op­ment, have also seemed to be encroach­ing upon tra­di­tion­al West­ern (more par­tic­u­lar­ly Amer­i­can) hege­mo­ny. The views of the experts and of the media are near­ly iden­ti­cal on this. Far from attempt­ing to refine, or even dis­sent from, the gross image of Islam as a threat, the intel­lec­tu­al and pol­i­cy com­mu­ni­ty in the Unit­ed States has con­sid­er­ably enforced and con­cen­trat­ed the image. From Zbig­niew Brzezin­ski’s vision of the cres­cent of cri­sis” to Bernard Lewis’s return of Islam,” the pic­ture drawn is a unan­i­mous one. Islam” means the end of civ­i­liza­tion as we” know it. Islam is anti-human, anti­de­mo­c­ra­t­ic, anti-Semit­ic, anti­ra­tional. Uni­ver­si­ty schol­ars whose pro­fes­sion­al lives are tied to the study of Islam have either been will­ing col­lab­o­ra­tors with this state of things, or if they have been silent, their mar­gin­al­i­ty in the cul­ture at large fur­ther con­firms the fact that in the Unit­ed States at least, there is no major seg­ment of the poli­ty, no sig­nif­i­cant sec­tor of the cul­ture, no part of the whole com­mu­ni­ty capa­ble of iden­ti­fy­ing sym­pa­thet­i­cal­ly with the Islam­ic world.

On the oth­er hand, most of the Third World is now ful­ly bathed in U.S.-produced TV shows, and is whol­ly depen­dent upon a tiny group of news agen­cies that trans­mit news back to the Third World, even in the large num­bers of cas­es where the news is about the Third World. From being the source of news, the Third World gen­er­al­ly, and Islam­ic coun­tries in par­tic­u­lar, have become con­sumers of news. For the first time in his­to­ry (for the first time, that is, on such a scale) the Islam­ic world may be said to be learn­ing about itself in part by means of images, his­to­ries and infor­ma­tion man­u­fac­tured in the West. If one adds to this fact that stu­dents and schol­ars in the Islam­ic world are still depen­dent upon U.S. and Euro­pean libraries and insti­tu­tions of learn­ing for what now pass­es as Mid­dle East­ern stud­ies (con­sid­er, for exam­ple, that there isn’t a sin­gle first-rate, usable library of Ara­bic mate­r­i­al in the entire Islam­ic world), plus the fact that Eng­lish is a world lan­guage in a way that Ara­bic isn’t, plus the fact that for its élite the Islam­ic world is now pro­duc­ing a man­age­r­i­al class of basi­cal­ly sub­or­di­nate natives who are indebt­ed for their economies, their defense estab­lish­ments and for their polit­i­cal ideas to the world­wide con­sumer-mar­ket sys­tem con­trolled in the West – one gets an accu­rate, although extreme­ly depress­ing, pic­ture of what the media rev­o­lu­tion (serv­ing a small seg­ment of the soci­eties that pro­duced it) has done to Islam.

To the extent that Islam is known about today, it is known prin­ci­pal­ly in the form giv­en it by the mass media : not only radio, films and Tv but also text­books, mag­a­zines and best-sell­ing, high-qual­i­ty nov­els. This cor­po­rate pic­ture of Islam on the whole is a depress­ing and mis­lead­ing one. What emerges is that Aya­tol­lah Khome­i­ni, Col. Muam­mar e‑Qaddafi, Sheik Ahmad Zaki Yamani and Pales­tin­ian ter­ror­ists are the best-known fig­ures in the fore­ground, while the back­ground is pop­u­lat­ed by shad­owy (though extreme­ly fright­en­ing) notions about jihad, slav­ery, sub­or­di­na­tion of women and irra­tional vio­lence com­bined with extreme licen­tious­ness. If you were to ask an aver­age lit­er­ate West­ern­er to name an Arab or Islam­ic writer, or a musi­cian, or an intel­lec­tu­al, you might get a name like Kahlil Gibran in response, but noth­ing else. In oth­er words, whole swatch­es of Islam­ic his­to­ry, cul­ture and soci­ety sim­ply do not exist except in the trun­cat­ed, tight­ly pack­aged forms made cur­rent by the media. As Her­bert Schiller has said, TV’s images tend to present real­i­ty in too imme­di­ate and frag­men­tary a form for either his­tor­i­cal or human con­ti­nu­ity to appear. Islam there­fore is equiv­a­lent to an undif­fer­en­ti­at­ed mob of scim­i­tar-wav­ing oil sup­pli­ers, or it is reduced to the utter­ances of one or anoth­er Islam­ic leader who at the moment hap­pens to be a con­ve­nient for­eign scapegoat.

We are well past the point of being able to say whether the media or the experts or the gov­ern­ments or the mass audi­ences are to blame for this state of affairs. With very few excep­tions, one is struck by the blind­ing uni­for­mi­ty of the pic­ture. Per­haps it is true that the state of infor­ma­tion that now exists on any sub­ject is as stan­dard­ized, and as low, as this one ; and per­haps also it is true that what­ev­er the experts, the spe­cial-inter­est groups, the manip­u­la­tors touch they turn into flat­ness, igno­rance and stereo­types. But we must be espe­cial­ly alarmed that whether Islam is depict­ed on tele­vi­sion, or whether it turns up in school text­books, or whether it appears in best-sell­ing nov­els by high-class nov­el­ists, or whether it’s learned­ly dis­cussed by an aca­d­e­m­ic expert on Islam (who is still respect­ed in parts of the Arab world), the pic­ture is almost exact­ly the same. That does not mean that the pic­ture is an inac­cu­rate one ; rather, it is a pic­ture ; it has the con­sis­ten­cy of some­thing made up, not of life ; it por­trays cer­tain aspects of what Mar­shall Hodges has called the Islam­i­cate world, but deforms them into a pat­tern that express­es cer­tain things about a mass-media soci­ety, very lit­tle about what is referred to as Islam. What is cru­cial­ly impor­tant about this pre­sen­ta­tion of Islam is the medi­a’s ascen­dan­cy, their intel­lec­tu­al and per­cep­tu­al hege­mo­ny, over the whole thing, and since the media sell their prod­uct to con­sumers who pre­fer sim­plic­i­ty to com­plex­i­ty, the uni­form image of Islam that emerges is con­struct­ed out of much the same mate­r­i­al from which his­to­ry, soci­ety and human­i­ty have been eliminated.

What can be done ? To begin with, what should be avoid­ed is an attempt to alter, improve, beau­ti­fy, make more appeal­ing the image of Islam. Such an effort falls into the trap of believ­ing that reduc­tive images can be made sub­sti­tutes for a very com­plex real­i­ty, and it ends up per­pet­u­at­ing the entire sys­tem of ide­o­log­i­cal fic­tions by which Islam is made to do ser­vice for West­ern designs upon rich­es, peo­ples and ter­ri­to­ries that hap­pen to call them­selves Moslem. A hard and fast dis­tinc­tion has to be made between seri­ous con­sid­er­a­tion of the Islam­i­cate world and near­ly every­thing that pass­es for Islam in the media and in all but a few places in the cul­ture. One can­not look for help in pro­mot­ing seri­ous inves­tiga­tive dis­cus­sion of Islam – even as a sub­ject of aca­d­e­m­ic inquiry – among tra­di­tion­al Ori­en­tal­ists or with­in the nor­mal­ly con­struct­ed pro­grams of Mid­dle East­ern stud­ies in today’s West­ern uni­ver­si­ties. On the oth­er hand, younger schol­ars and stu­dents can be extreme­ly use­ful in car­ry­ing work beyond prej­u­dices and con­stric­tions of their elders. And, just as impor­tant, a seri­ous inter­est in the prob­lems of Islam­ic soci­ety and Islam­ic peo­ples is very like­ly to devel­op not among the Mid­dle East experts, or media peo­ple who have a pur­port­ed spe­cial­ty in mod­ern Islam, but inside seg­ments of the pop­u­la­tion who have a wider and more seri­ous view of human prob­lems in gen­er­al : men and women who are com­mit­ted not to Ori­ent and Occi­dent but to the cause of human rights, rather than lob­by­ists who act on behalf of human rights when they are paid to do so ; stu­dents of com­par­a­tive lit­er­a­ture rather than Semit­ic philol­o­gists who know noth­ing about oth­er lit­er­a­tures and who care lit­tle for the con­tem­po­rary world ; gen­uine­ly enter­pris­ing soci­ol­o­gists who know some­thing about the­o­ry and care a great deal about issues con­fronting con­crete soci­eties, rather than spe­cial­ists in the Islam­ic mind or in a mono­lith­ic thing called Islam­ic soci­ety. What­ev­er the per­son, what­ev­er the field of endeav­or, I doubt that there can be any sub­sti­tute for a gen­uine­ly engaged and sym­pa­thet­ic – as opposed to a nar­row­ly polit­i­cal or hos­tile – atti­tude to the Islam­ic world. Indeed, I sus­pect that only if we get beyond politi­cized labels like East” and West” will we be able to reach the real world at all.

As for what the Islam­ic, and more espe­cial­ly the Arab-Islam­ic, world might do, this can be put very sim­ply. There is no longer any excuse for bewail­ing the hos­til­i­ty of the West” toward the Arabs and Islam and then sit­ting back in out­raged right­eous­ness. When the rea­sons for this hos­til­i­ty and those aspects of the West” that encour­age it are ana­lyzed, an impor­tant step has been tak­en toward fight­ing it, but that is by no means the whole way. Cer­tain­ly there are great dan­gers today in actu­al­ly fol­low­ing, actu­al­ly ful­fill­ing this hos­tile image of Islam – and that has only been the doing, it is true, of some Moslems and some Arabs and some black Africans. But such ful­fill­ments under­line the impor­tance of what still has to be done. In the great rush to indus­tri­al­ize, mod­ern­ize and devel­op itself, the Islam­i­cate world has been com­pli­ant about turn­ing itself into a great con­sumers’ mar­ket. To dis­pel the myths and stereo­types of Ori­en­tal­ism, the world as a whole has to be giv­en an oppor­tu­ni­ty to see Moslems and Ori­en­tals pro­duc­ing a dif­fer­ent form of his­to­ry, a new kind of soci­ol­o­gy, a new cul­tur­al aware­ness : in short, the rel­a­tive­ly mod­est goal of writ­ing a new form of his­to­ry, inves­ti­gat­ing the Islam­i­cate world and its many dif­fer­ent soci­eties with a gen­uine seri­ous­ness of pur­pose and a love of truth. But, alas, we must rec­og­nize that even with vast sums of mon­ey eas­i­ly avail­able, the Islam­ic world as a whole does not seem inter­est­ed in pro­mot­ing learn­ing, build­ing libraries, estab­lish­ing research insti­tutes whose main pur­pose would be mod­ern sci­en­tif­ic atten­tion to Islam­ic real­i­ties and to see­ing whether in fact there is some­thing specif­i­cal­ly Islam­ic about the Islam­ic world.

Why is there a rush to pro­duce row upon row of func­tion­al­ly illit­er­ate tech­ni­cians – with each new gen­er­a­tion more like­ly than its pre­de­ces­sors to be vul­ner­a­ble to the media rev­o­lu­tion in its worst excess­es ? This is the great ques­tion of the hour. If it is a fact that this is the gen­er­al direc­tion tak­en by the Third World coun­tries that have recent­ly gained their inde­pen­dence, it isn’t much of a con­so­la­tion to say con­fi­dent­ly that the prob­lem is not an Islam­ic one but a social and cul­tur­al one. Nor is the rhetor­i­cal attack upon neo-impe­ri­al­ism very con­vinc­ing at a time when nation­al gov­ern­ments and rulers open­ly espouse val­ues that fur­ther the new style of impe­ri­al­ism with­out colonies. To say that this reflects a pre­oc­cu­pa­tion with rhetoric and style at the expense of con­crete sub­stance is, how­ev­er, not to have learned any­thing from what we have been call­ing the dis­tor­tion of the Arab-Islam­ic image in the West­ern media. That this dis­tor­tion has occurred at all is a func­tion of pow­er, and in this instance style and image are direct polit­i­cal indices of pow­er. Thus, we must con­cede that any dras­tic attempt to cor­rect dis­tor­tions of Islam and the Arabs is a polit­i­cal ques­tion involv­ing the use and deploy­ment of power.

Let me return to the pow­er of the media in the cur­rent sit­u­a­tion involv­ing Islam. As the press comes to per­ceive an increas­ing num­ber of Moslems as Amer­i­can ene­mies, rulers like Egyp­t’s Pres­i­dent Anwar el-Sadat (whose remark that Khome­i­ni was a lunatic and a dis­grace to Islam was repeat­ed ad nau­se­am) have been made to seem like a more desir­able Islam­ic norm. The same is true of the Sau­di roy­al fam­i­ly, although what gen­er­al­ly goes unre­port­ed as a result is a con­sid­er­able amount of dis­turb­ing infor­ma­tion and, in the case of Iran, this deep­ens the hostage crisis.

Since the Camp David agree­ments of 1978 there has been a con­sen­sus that Sadat is our friend in the region ; along with Prime Min­is­ter Men­achem Begin of Israel he has been open­ly pro­claim­ing his will­ing­ness to become a region­al police­man and to give the Unit­ed States bases on his ter­ri­to­ry. As a con­se­quence, near­ly every­thing report­ed out of Egypt effec­tive­ly makes his point of view seem like the cor­rect one on mat­ters Egypt­ian, Arab and region­al. Egypt and the Arab world, in fact, now often report­ed with a view to con­firm­ing Sadat’s pre-emi­nence ; lit­tle appears about the wide­spread oppo­si­tion to him. Exact­ly the same thing hap­pened dur­ing the Pahle­vi régime, of course, when, with the excep­tion of Berke­ley schol­ar Hamid Algar, no one paid the slight­est atten­tion to the poten­tial of the Shah’s reli­gious and polit­i­cal oppo­si­tion. Many of our polit­i­cal, mil­i­tary, strate­gic and eco­nom­ic invest­ments today are made through Sadat, and by virtue of Sadat’s per­spec­tive on things.

There are oth­er rea­sons too. One is the Mid­dle East­’s sen­si­tive domes­tic aspects for this coun­try. It is no acci­dent, for exam­ple, that even after Water­gate and the rev­e­la­tions about the Cen­tral Intel­li­gence Agency (and even with the Free­dom of Infor­ma­tion Act), there have been no major dis­cov­er­ies con­cern­ing U.S. activ­i­ties in the Mid­dle East. This is sur­pris­ing in the case of Iran, not sim­ply because so many Amer­i­cans were on the take from the Shah but also because of Israel’s extreme­ly close involve­ment with the Unit­ed States there under the ex-Shah’s régime. Savak was set up with the direct help of the Mossad, the Israeli intel­li­gence agency, and, as in so many oth­er cas­es, the C.I.A. and the Fed­er­al Bureau of Inves­ti­ga­tion coop­er­at­ed will­ing­ly with the Israeli secret services.

In addi­tion, there is an increas­ing­ly influ­en­tial new lob­by in this coun­try whose main func­tion is to assure the U.S. pub­lic that the present Arab regimes in the Gulf are sta­ble. Among all the reporters for the major net­works and news­pa­pers, in fact, only CBS’s Ed Bradley not­ed on Novem­ber 24, 1979, that all infor­ma­tion about the Novem­ber occu­pa­tion of the Great Mosque in Mec­ca came from the Gov­ern­ment and that no oth­er news was per­mit­ted. Sub­se­quent­ly, The Chris­t­ian Sci­ence Mon­i­tor’s Hele­na Cob­ban report­ed from Beirut on Novem­ber 30 that the mosque’s seizure had a very def­i­nite polit­i­cal mean­ing, that far from being Islam­ic fanat­ics, the attack­ers were part of a polit­i­cal net­work hav­ing a sec­u­lar as well as an Islam­ic pro­gram, point­ed­ly direct­ed at the polit­i­cal and finan­cial monop­oly held by the Sau­di roy­al fam­i­ly. One month after her arti­cle appeared, the Sau­di spokesman for the group, who had giv­en Cob­ban the sto­ry, was picked up off a Beirut street and has dis­ap­peared ; Sau­di intel­li­gence is report­ed­ly behind the man’s abduction.

With the Sovi­et inva­sion of Afghanistan, we are prob­a­bly going to have an even more dra­mat­ic cleav­age sep­a­rat­ing good Moslems from bad. We will undoubt­ed­ly be see­ing ever more news hail­ing the achieve­ments of good Moslems like Sadat, Pak­istan’s Zia ul-Haq and the Afghan Moslem insur­gents – more equat­ing of good Islam with anti-Com­mu­nism and, if pos­si­ble, with mod­ern­iza­tion. As for Moslems who do not serve our pur­pose, they will, as always, be por­trayed as back­ward fanatics.

This arti­cle can be found on the web

Endmark


Published:

in

,

Author:

Tags:

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *