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Masters	
  in	
  International	
  Development	
  |	
  PSIA	
  
Islam	
  and	
  Politics	
  in	
  a	
  Changing	
  Middle	
  East
Name	
  :	
  Edwin	
  Johan	
  Santana	
  Gaarder	
  
Student	
  number	
  :	
  100047222	
  
	
  
Page	
  1	
  of	
  12	
  
POLITICAL	
  ISLAM	
  AND	
  THE	
  PHILOSOPHY	
  OF	
  LANGUAGE	
  
What	
  role	
  for	
  linguistic	
  theory	
  in	
  the	
  struggle	
  against	
  violent	
  extremism?	
  
Arabo-­‐Islamic	
  discourse	
  –	
  the	
  vocabulary,	
  idioms	
  and	
  other	
  modes	
  of	
  signification	
  that	
  
are	
  made	
  available	
  to	
  arabophone	
  Muslims	
  through	
  the	
  religious,	
  cultural	
  and	
  linguistic	
  
environment	
   into	
   which	
   they	
   are	
   socialised	
   –	
   has	
   always	
   been	
   the	
   locus	
   of	
   intense	
  
contestation.	
  Innumerable	
  conflicts	
  in	
  North	
  Africa	
  and	
  the	
  Middle	
  East	
  are	
  centred	
  on	
  
the	
  issue	
  of	
  whether,	
  to	
  what	
  extent,	
  and	
  how	
  Islam	
  should	
  structure	
  the	
  way	
  societies	
  
are	
  organised	
  and	
  governed,	
  whether	
  it	
  be	
  in	
  Mesopotamia	
  or	
  the	
  Maghreb,	
  the	
  Arabian	
  
Peninsula	
  or	
  the	
  Levant.	
  These	
  dynamics	
  are	
  historically	
  determined	
  to	
  a	
  large	
  degree:	
  
from	
  the	
  period	
  of	
  expansion	
  (7th
-­‐9th
	
  centuries)	
  until	
  the	
  period	
  of	
  European	
  colonisation	
  
(late-­‐19th
	
  /	
  early-­‐20th
	
  centuries)	
  and	
  thereafter,	
  Islam	
  has	
  played	
  a	
  central	
  role	
  in	
  the	
  lives	
  
of	
   the	
   people	
   that	
   inhabit	
   this	
   region,	
   forming	
   the	
   basis	
   of	
   their	
   belief	
   systems,	
   their	
  
moral	
  and	
  legal	
  codes,	
  their	
  cultures,	
  their	
  political	
  systems,	
  and	
  much	
  more.	
  Although	
  a	
  
singular	
   noun	
   is	
   used,	
   it	
   is	
   obvious	
   that	
   ‘Islam’	
   has	
   never	
   meant	
   the	
   same	
   thing	
   to	
   all	
  
Muslims,	
  even	
  though	
  the	
  doctrine	
  of	
  tawhid1
	
  –	
  translated	
  as	
  ‘oneness’	
  and	
  understood	
  
to	
  mean	
  the	
  monotheistic	
  belief	
  in	
  a	
  unique	
  and	
  indivisible	
  God	
  –	
  suggests	
  that	
  there	
  is	
  
little	
  room	
  for	
  deviation	
  from	
  a	
  single,	
  absolute	
  and	
  transcendental	
  truth	
  established	
  by	
  
the	
  Qur’an.	
  In	
  practice,	
  the	
  Islamic	
  community	
  (umma)	
  has	
  always	
  had	
  to	
  strike	
  a	
  fine	
  
balance	
   between	
   its	
   belief	
   in	
   the	
   existence	
   of	
   revealed,	
   unambiguous	
   and	
  
incontrovertible	
   Qur’anic	
   principles,	
   to	
   which	
   all	
   Muslims	
   must	
   adhere,	
   and	
   its	
   lack	
   of	
  
agreement	
  over	
  what	
  these	
  principles	
  actually	
  are.	
  This	
  paper	
  will	
  seek	
  to	
  explain	
  this	
  
aporia	
  –	
  which	
  is	
  at	
  the	
  heart	
  of	
  many	
  of	
  the	
  political	
  and	
  religious	
  conflicts	
  in	
  the	
  region	
  
–	
  by	
  analysing	
  it	
  from	
  a	
  number	
  of	
  different	
  angles,	
  including	
  the	
  logocentric	
  approach	
  of	
  
mediaeval	
  neo-­‐platonic	
  scholars,	
  the	
  salafi	
  approach	
  of	
  the	
  Hanbali	
  scholar	
  Ibn	
  Taymiyya,	
  
and	
   the	
   structuralist	
   and	
   post-­‐structuralist	
   approaches	
   developed	
   by	
   20th
-­‐century	
  
philosophers	
  of	
  language	
  like	
  Ferdinand	
  de	
  Saussure	
  and	
  Jacques	
  Derrida.	
  
It	
   will	
   be	
   argued,	
   moreover,	
   that	
   the	
   ongoing	
   conflict	
   over	
   Arabo-­‐Islamic	
   heritage	
   is	
   a	
  
struggle	
   over	
   the	
   ‘meaning’	
   of	
   the	
   Qur’an	
   and	
   the	
   sunna,	
   an	
   attempt	
   to	
   establish	
   a	
  
‘transcendental	
  signified’	
  that	
  is	
  the	
  subject	
  of	
  consensus	
  (ijma’)	
  and	
  can	
  thus	
  serve	
  as	
  the	
  
basis	
  for	
  a	
  form	
  of	
  social	
  organisation	
  that	
  is	
  free	
  from	
  discord	
  (fitna).	
  Whereas	
  mediaeval	
  
Sunni	
  scholars	
  were	
  generally	
  able	
  to	
  engage	
  in	
  such	
  epistemological	
  and	
  hermeneutic	
  
debates	
  from	
  within	
  an	
  Islamic	
  caliphate	
  –	
  confident	
  that	
  fundamental	
  Islamic	
  precepts	
  
would	
  be	
  protected	
  from	
  external	
  aggression	
  –	
  post-­‐colonial	
  Muslim	
  intellectuals	
  have	
  
had	
   to	
   operate	
   in	
   a	
   climate	
   of	
   existential	
   crisis,	
   due	
   to	
   the	
   threat	
   of	
   interference	
   by	
  
foreign	
   actors	
   in	
   their	
   countries’	
   internal	
   political,	
   economic	
   and	
   cultural	
   affairs.	
  
Delegitimized	
   and	
   ridiculed	
   during	
   the	
   colonial	
   period,	
   undermined	
   by	
   the	
   economic	
  
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
1
	
  Derived	
  from	
  the	
  Arabic	
  root	
  ‫ﺩد‬-­‐‫  
	ﻭو‐­-ﺡح‬
Masters	
  in	
  International	
  Development	
  |	
  PSIA	
  
Islam	
  and	
  Politics	
  in	
  a	
  Changing	
  Middle	
  East
Name	
  :	
  Edwin	
  Johan	
  Santana	
  Gaarder	
  
Student	
  number	
  :	
  100047222	
  
	
  
Page	
  2	
  of	
  12	
  
underdevelopment	
   that	
   is	
   almost	
   ubiquitous	
   in	
   the	
   region,	
   and	
   suppressed	
   or	
  
manipulated	
  by	
  autocratic	
  governments	
  with	
  links	
  to	
  the	
  former	
  colonial	
  powers,	
  Islam	
  
and	
   its	
   quest	
   for	
   ‘meaning’	
   have	
   therefore	
   been	
   forced	
   to	
   abandon	
   the	
   confines	
   of	
  
academic	
   speculation	
   and	
   have	
   instead	
   become	
   the	
   site	
   of	
   a	
   desperate	
   battle	
   for	
  
relevance	
  in	
  a	
  world	
  dominated	
  by	
  Western	
  soft	
  and	
  hard	
  power.	
  This	
  paper	
  will	
  attempt	
  
to	
  demonstrate	
  that	
  this	
  state	
  of	
  affairs	
  has	
  been	
  responsible	
  for	
  a	
  shift	
  in	
  many	
  Muslims’	
  
relationship	
   with	
   Islam,	
   reducing	
   the	
   appeal	
   of	
   theory	
   and	
   increasing	
   the	
   relative	
  
importance	
  of	
  praxis,	
  which	
  can	
  to	
  some	
  extent	
  explain	
  the	
  rise	
  of	
  activist	
  Islamism	
  in	
  
both	
  its	
  moderate	
  and	
  violent	
  forms.	
  It	
  will	
  be	
  suggested,	
  therefore,	
  that	
  one	
  effective	
  
way	
   of	
   preempting	
   violent	
   extremism	
   in	
   Muslim	
   societies	
   would	
   be	
   to	
   promote	
   more	
  
widespread	
  and	
  rigorous	
  instruction	
  in	
  all	
  the	
  exegetical	
  traditions	
  that	
  have	
  arisen	
  from	
  
within	
  Islam,	
  as	
  well	
  as	
  to	
  introduce	
  modern	
  linguistic	
  theory	
  into	
  schools,	
  universities,	
  
mosques	
  and	
  kuttab	
  (traditional	
  Islamic	
  schools).	
  It	
  is	
  imagined	
  that	
  such	
  an	
  approach	
  –	
  if	
  
coupled	
  with	
  the	
  establishment	
  of	
  inclusive	
  and	
  representative	
  political	
  regimes	
  –	
  could	
  
lead	
   to	
   a	
   more	
   empowered	
   and	
   self-­‐critical	
   Islamist	
   movement,	
   one	
   that	
   is	
   able	
   to	
  
tolerate	
  divergent	
  readings	
  of	
  the	
  Qur’an	
  and	
  the	
  sunna	
  without	
  sacrificing	
  the	
  unity	
  of	
  
the	
  umma	
  or	
  faith	
  in	
  the	
  single,	
  absolute	
  and	
  transcendental	
  truth	
  of	
  revelation.	
  
In	
   his	
   Introduction	
   à	
   la	
   Pensée	
   Islamique	
   Classique,	
   Mohammed	
   Arkoun	
   studies	
   the	
  
implications	
  of	
  the	
  aforementioned	
  dilemma	
  on	
  mediaeval	
  Sunni	
  scholars,	
  identifying	
  the	
  
debate	
  over	
  the	
  relative	
  merits	
  of	
  faith	
  and	
  reason	
  as	
  the	
  overriding	
  question	
  of	
  the	
  Age:	
  
“aucune	
  intelligence	
  ne	
  pouvait	
  échapper	
  à	
  […]	
  une	
  confrontation	
  entre	
  la	
  Vérité	
  éternelle	
  
et	
  les	
  réalités	
  contraignantes	
  de	
  l’histoire	
  et	
  de	
  la	
  culture,	
  […]	
  entre	
  la	
  foi	
  et	
  la	
  raison”.2
	
  
Arkoun’s	
   historical	
   account	
   of	
   epistemological	
   developments	
   within	
   Islam	
   cannot	
   be	
  
reproduced	
  here,	
  but	
  it	
  will	
  be	
  useful	
  to	
  point	
  out	
  some	
  common	
  ideas	
  that	
  he	
  identifies	
  
as	
  having	
  structured	
  mainstream	
  Sunni	
  thought	
  over	
  the	
  centuries,	
  focussing	
  in	
  particular	
  
on	
  his	
  analysis	
  of	
  objective	
  and	
  subjective	
  sources	
  of	
  knowledge	
  in	
  the	
  Islamic	
  tradition.	
  
These	
  two	
  sources	
  of	
  knowledge	
  correspond	
  to	
  revelation,	
  which	
  was	
  sent	
  down	
  (tanzil)	
  
by	
  an	
  Infallible	
  Being	
  and	
  is	
  therefore	
  irrefutable,	
  and	
  the	
  logical	
  deductions	
  that	
  are	
  the	
  
the	
  result	
  of	
  human	
  reflection	
  and	
  interpretation	
  of	
  the	
  sacred	
  texts.	
  It	
  is	
  interesting	
  to	
  
note	
   that,	
   in	
   the	
   early	
   years	
   of	
   Islam,	
   the	
   second	
   source	
   of	
   knowledge	
   somehow	
  
constituted	
  the	
  more	
  dynamic	
  intellectual	
  space,	
  in	
  which	
  reason	
  (‘aql)	
  and	
  the	
  cultural	
  
inheritance	
  of	
  other	
  cultures	
  (especially	
  Greek	
  philosophy	
  or	
  falsafa)	
  were	
  used	
  to	
  enrich	
  
the	
   Islamic	
   tradition	
   through	
   the	
   practice	
   of	
   kalam	
   (speculative	
   theology)	
   and	
   ijtihad	
  
(interpretation	
  of	
  scripture).	
  The	
  use	
  of	
  reason	
  was	
  particularly	
  prominent	
  in	
  the	
  work	
  of	
  
the	
  mu’tazilites	
  and,	
  to	
  a	
  lesser	
  extent,	
  of	
  the	
  ash’arites,	
  who	
  went	
  so	
  far	
  as	
  to	
  claim	
  that	
  
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
2
	
  Mohammed	
  Arkoun,	
  Essais	
  sur	
  la	
  Pensée	
  Islamique,	
  Paris,	
  France,	
  G.-­‐P.	
  Maisonneuve	
  et	
  Larose,	
  1973,	
  p.	
  18.	
  “No	
  single	
  
intelligence	
  could	
  escape	
  from	
  the	
  conflict	
  between	
  eternal	
  Truth	
  and	
  the	
  constraining	
  realities	
  of	
  history	
  and	
  culture,	
  
between	
  faith	
  and	
  reason”	
  [my	
  translation].	
  The	
  arabic	
  terms	
  translated	
  as	
  faith	
  and	
  reason	
  are	
  ‘aql	
  and	
  naql.	
  	
  
Masters	
  in	
  International	
  Development	
  |	
  PSIA	
  
Islam	
  and	
  Politics	
  in	
  a	
  Changing	
  Middle	
  East
Name	
  :	
  Edwin	
  Johan	
  Santana	
  Gaarder	
  
Student	
  number	
  :	
  100047222	
  
	
  
Page	
  3	
  of	
  12	
  
“when	
  the	
  sense	
  of	
  the	
  transmitted	
  texts	
  conflicts	
  with	
  the	
  dictates	
  of	
  reason,	
  reason	
  
should	
   be	
   given	
   precedence,	
   and	
   the	
   text	
   subjected	
   to	
   metaphorical	
   yet	
   rational	
  
interpretation”.3
	
  	
  
The	
   problem,	
   of	
   course,	
   and	
   the	
   reason	
   why	
   this	
   second	
   source	
   of	
   knowledge	
   was	
  
eventually	
   relegated	
   to	
   an	
   inferior	
   position	
   in	
   the	
   hierarchy,	
   is	
   that	
   the	
   use	
   of	
   reason	
  
leads	
  to	
  divergent	
  opinions,	
  whereas	
  the	
  doctrine	
  of	
  tawhid	
  suggests	
  that	
  there	
  is	
  only	
  
one	
   absolute	
   and	
   indivisible	
   truth.	
   Ahmad	
   ibn	
   Hanbal	
   (790-­‐855	
   C.E.)	
   was	
   the	
   first	
   to	
  
respond	
  to	
  this	
  paradox	
  and	
  reject	
  the	
  use	
  of	
  reason,	
  prioritising	
  what	
  he	
  would	
  call	
  the	
  
‘obvious’	
  meaning	
  (zahir)	
  of	
  revelation	
  in	
  an	
  attempt	
  to	
  promote	
  consensus	
  and	
  prevent	
  
schisms	
  within	
  the	
  umma.	
  The	
  Hanbali	
  approach	
  is	
  based	
  on	
  a	
  logocentric	
  conception	
  of	
  
language,	
  which	
  attributes	
  a	
  signified	
  (‘idea’,	
  ‘meaning’,	
  ‘sense’)	
  to	
  each	
  signifier	
  (‘word’,	
  
‘phrase’,	
  ‘idiom’,	
  ‘ideogram’),	
  and	
  which	
  finds	
  its	
  Western	
  equivalent	
  in	
  Plato’s	
  Theory	
  of	
  
Ideas.	
   The	
   logocentric	
   conception	
   of	
   language	
   in	
   Islam	
   –	
   which	
   is	
   not	
   unique	
   to	
   the	
  
Hanbalis,	
  but	
  finds	
  in	
  them	
  its	
  most	
  reductionist	
  manifestation	
  –	
  posits	
  that	
  there	
  is	
  a	
  
meaning	
   that	
   exists	
   outside	
   or	
   behind	
   language	
   and	
   that	
   can	
   be	
   accessed	
   through	
   a	
  
‘correct’	
   reading	
   and	
   understanding	
   of	
   authoritative	
   texts.	
   Yet,	
   the	
   question	
   remains:	
  
what	
  is	
  the	
  ‘correct’	
  interpretative	
  method	
  that	
  should	
  be	
  applied	
  in	
  order	
  to	
  understand	
  
a	
  text	
  that	
  was	
  produced	
  in	
  a	
  different	
  context	
  than	
  that	
  of	
  the	
  reader,	
  that	
  is	
  to	
  say,	
  in	
  a	
  
different	
  place,	
  at	
  a	
  different	
  time,	
  for	
  a	
  different	
  audience,	
  through	
  a	
  different	
  mode	
  of	
  
communication	
  (oral,	
  not	
  written),	
  using	
  a	
  language	
  that	
  has	
  since	
  evolved	
  semantically	
  
and	
  gramatically,	
  and	
  so	
  on?	
  Hanbal	
  based	
  his	
  arguments	
  on	
  the	
  repeated	
  claims	
  that	
  can	
  
be	
  found	
  in	
  the	
  Qur’an	
  itself	
  that	
  a	
  language	
  (Arabic)	
  was	
  chosen	
  in	
  order	
  to	
  make	
  the	
  
meaning	
  clear	
  and	
  ease	
  the	
  understanding	
  of	
  the	
  revelation	
  (Qur’an	
  12:2;	
  41:44;	
  43:3)	
  
but	
  –	
  despite	
  the	
  fact	
  that	
  Qur’anic/standard	
  Arabic	
  has	
  changed	
  surprisingly	
  little	
  over	
  
the	
   course	
   of	
   one	
   and	
   a	
   half	
   millenia	
   –	
   his	
   arguments	
   founder	
   when	
   confronted	
   with	
  
continuing	
  disagreements	
  over	
  the	
  ‘meaning’	
  of	
  revelation.	
  	
  
Post-­‐Saussurean	
   linguists	
   now	
   know	
   that	
   effective	
   communication	
   depends	
   more	
   on	
  
societal	
  conventions	
  regarding	
  the	
  different	
  use	
  of	
  signs	
  in	
  different	
  contexts,	
  rather	
  than	
  
on	
   reference	
   to	
   absolute	
   and	
   unchanging	
   ‘meanings’	
   that	
   exist	
   independently	
   of	
   the	
  
language	
  itself,	
  but	
  logocentric	
  Islamic	
  scholars	
  would	
  continue	
  their	
  search	
  for	
  ‘meaning’	
  
for	
   centuries,	
   resorting	
   to	
   a	
   number	
   of	
   different	
   techniques,	
   including:	
   etymologal	
  
analysis	
  (ta’wil)	
  or	
  the	
  search	
  for	
  original	
  /	
  historical	
  meanings;	
  analogy	
  (qiyas)	
  or	
  the	
  use	
  
of	
  comparison	
  for	
  the	
  purpose	
  of	
  explanation	
  or	
  clarification;	
  traditionalism	
  (taqlid)	
  or	
  
systematic	
   reference	
   to	
   authoritative	
   precedents;	
   literalism,	
   or	
   the	
   search	
   for	
   obvious	
  
meanings	
   (as	
   explained	
   above);	
   mysticism,	
   or	
   the	
   search	
   for	
   an	
   emotional	
   or	
   spiritual	
  
understanding	
  of	
  God	
  through	
  ritual	
  practices;	
  and	
  rational	
  argumentation	
  or	
  personal	
  
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
3
	
  Yossef	
  Rapoport	
  and	
  Shahab	
  Ahmed	
  (eds.),	
  Ibn	
  Taymiyya	
  and	
  his	
  times,	
  Karachi,	
  Pakistan,	
  Oxford	
  University	
  Press,	
  
2010,	
  p.	
  84.	
  	
  
Masters	
  in	
  International	
  Development	
  |	
  PSIA	
  
Islam	
  and	
  Politics	
  in	
  a	
  Changing	
  Middle	
  East
Name	
  :	
  Edwin	
  Johan	
  Santana	
  Gaarder	
  
Student	
  number	
  :	
  100047222	
  
	
  
Page	
  4	
  of	
  12	
  
opinion	
  (tafsīr	
  bir-­‐raʾy).	
  Ironically,	
  it	
  is	
  the	
  repeated	
  failures	
  and	
  periodic	
  reappearance	
  of	
  
all	
  these	
  efforts	
  to	
  arrive	
  at	
  a	
  coherent	
  and	
  consensual	
  ‘truth’	
  that	
  led	
  to	
  the	
  long-­‐term	
  
development	
   of	
   Islam’s	
   rich	
   exegetical	
   tradition.	
   Constant	
   dialogue	
   and	
   exchange	
   –	
  
incentivised	
  by	
  the	
  promise	
  of	
  ultimately	
  knowing	
  God,	
  a	
  single,	
  conclusive	
  and	
  absolute	
  
Truth	
  –	
  led	
  to	
  a	
  keen	
  awareness	
  among	
  Islamic	
  scholars	
  of	
  the	
  contradictions	
  inherent	
  in	
  
Arabo-­‐Islamic	
   discourse	
   and	
   the	
   need	
   for	
   caution	
   and	
   rigor	
   in	
   the	
   justification	
   of	
  
philosophical	
  theories	
  and	
  political	
  acts,	
  implying	
  a	
  degree	
  of	
  openness	
  and	
  self-­‐criticism	
  
that	
  is	
  less	
  common	
  in	
  modern	
  Islamist	
  discourse.4
	
  In	
  the	
  words	
  of	
  Walid	
  A.	
  Saleh:	
  “Sunni	
  
medieval	
   hermeneutics	
   was	
   premised	
   on	
   the	
   impossibility	
   of	
   ever	
   exhausting	
   the	
  
meanings	
   of	
   the	
   divine	
   word,	
   and	
   contradictory	
   interpretations	
   were	
   not	
   a	
   sign	
   of	
  
religious	
  heresy”.5
	
  
One	
  question	
  that	
  arises	
  from	
  all	
  of	
  the	
  above,	
  of	
  course,	
  is	
  whether	
  it	
  is	
  even	
  possible	
  to	
  
access	
  objective	
  sources	
  of	
  knowledge,	
  in	
  Arkoun’s	
  sense,	
  without	
  resorting	
  to	
  individual	
  
judgments	
  on	
  the	
  meanings	
  of	
  Qur’anic	
  language.	
  The	
  response	
  that	
  will	
  be	
  explored	
  here	
  
was	
  developed	
  by	
  Ibn	
  Taymiyya	
  in	
  the	
  13th
	
  and	
  14th
	
  centuries	
  C.E.	
  and	
  is	
  noteable	
  in	
  part	
  
due	
  to	
  the	
  influence	
  it	
  has	
  had	
  on	
  Islamists	
  and	
  Islamic	
  extremists	
  in	
  the	
  20th
	
  and	
  21st
	
  
centuries.	
  It	
  has	
  been	
  analysed	
  in	
  depth	
  by	
  Walid	
  A.	
  Saleh	
  in	
  Ibn	
  Taymiyya	
  and	
  the	
  Rise	
  of	
  
Radical	
  Hermeneutics,	
  in	
  a	
  chapter	
  on	
  the	
  mediaeval	
  author’s	
  short	
  treatise	
  entitled	
  An	
  
Introduction	
  to	
  the	
  Foundations	
  of	
  Qur’anic	
  Exegesis.	
  Taymiyya’s	
  argument	
  is	
  as	
  follows:	
  	
  
Muhammad	
  not	
  only	
  proclaimed	
  the	
  Qur’an	
  to	
  the	
  Muslims	
  but	
  also	
  its	
  meaning	
  […]	
  the	
  
Prophet	
  is	
  presented	
  as	
  having	
  commented	
  on	
  the	
  Qur’an,	
  in	
  the	
  manner	
  of	
  an	
  exegete,	
  to	
  
his	
   Companions	
   […]	
   Ibn	
   Taymiyya’s	
   aim	
   is	
   thus	
   to	
   turn	
   the	
   commentary	
   literature	
   into	
  
prophetic	
   knowledge,	
   and	
   as	
   such	
   interpretation	
   itself,	
   as	
   issuing	
   from	
   an	
   infallible	
  
individual,	
  becomes	
  a	
  type	
  of	
  knowledge	
  that	
  is	
  in	
  agreement	
  with	
  his	
  definition	
  of	
  what	
  
constitute	
  knowledge.	
  One	
  needs	
  only	
  to	
  verify	
  that	
  it	
  is	
  indeed	
  from	
  Muhammad	
  for	
  it	
  to	
  
become	
  authoritative.6
	
  
This	
  argument	
  is	
  circular,	
  of	
  course,	
  and	
  does	
  not	
  resolve	
  the	
  hermeneutic	
  problem	
  that	
  
has	
   been	
   described	
   above:	
   if	
   the	
   prophet	
   interpreted	
   his	
   own	
   message,	
   who	
   has	
   the	
  
authority	
   to	
   interpret	
   his	
   interpretation?	
   If	
   the	
   pious	
   ancestors	
   (al-­‐salaf	
   al-­‐salih)	
   are	
  
considered	
  to	
  be	
  the	
  only	
  ones	
  who	
  had	
  access	
  to	
  the	
  prophet’s	
  interpretations,	
  how	
  can	
  
we	
   ensure	
   that	
   our	
   interpretations	
   of	
   their	
   interpretations	
   of	
   his	
   interpretations	
   are	
  
correct?	
   Musnad	
   material	
   –	
   	
   recorded	
   ‘chains	
   of	
   transmission’	
   that	
   are	
   either	
   reliable	
  
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
4
	
  Another	
  irony,	
  of	
  course,	
  is	
  that	
  post-­‐modern	
  /	
  post-­‐structuralist	
  discourse	
  –	
  which	
  is	
  generally	
  sceptical	
  about	
  the	
  
existence	
  of	
  ‘God’	
  or	
  any	
  ‘transcendental	
  truth’	
  or	
  ‘grand	
  narrative’	
  –	
  has	
  completely	
  eliminated	
  this	
  incentive	
  towards	
  
positive	
  knowledge.	
  The	
  challenge	
  faced	
  by	
  monotheists,	
  including	
  modern	
  Islamic	
  scholars,	
  is	
  to	
  counter	
  this	
  nihilistic	
  
trend	
  by	
  convincingly	
  reinstating	
  the	
  notions	
  of	
  God	
  and	
  religious	
  truth	
  into	
  modern	
  life.	
  	
  	
  
5
	
  Rapoport	
  and	
  Ahmed	
  (eds.),	
  p.	
  139.	
  	
  
6
	
  Ibid.,	
  p.	
  128.	
  	
  
Masters	
  in	
  International	
  Development	
  |	
  PSIA	
  
Islam	
  and	
  Politics	
  in	
  a	
  Changing	
  Middle	
  East
Name	
  :	
  Edwin	
  Johan	
  Santana	
  Gaarder	
  
Student	
  number	
  :	
  100047222	
  
	
  
Page	
  5	
  of	
  12	
  
(sahih),	
  unreliable	
  (da’if)	
  or	
  uncertain	
  –	
  suffers	
  from	
  similar	
  flaws	
  when	
  used	
  to	
  ascertain	
  
the	
  ‘true	
  meaning’	
  of	
  the	
  revelation:	
  the	
  nature	
  of	
  language	
  is	
  such	
  that,	
  in	
  the	
  manner	
  of	
  
Chinese	
  whispers,	
  a	
  message	
  is	
  transformed	
  every	
  time	
  it	
  is	
  received	
  and	
  /	
  or	
  reproduced	
  
by	
  an	
  individual	
  subject.	
  In	
  some	
  senses,	
  therefore,	
  one	
  could	
  claim	
  that	
  Ibn	
  Taymiyya’s	
  
exegetical	
  approach	
  is	
  similar	
  to	
  the	
  post-­‐structuralist	
  position	
  on	
  the	
  endless	
  deferral	
  of	
  
the	
  signified,	
  which	
  suggests	
  that	
  one	
  can	
  never	
  arrive	
  at	
  ‘truth’	
  or	
  meaning	
  through	
  the	
  
use	
  of	
  language.	
  “In	
  the	
  final	
  analysis”,	
  writes	
  Saleh,	
  “hermeneutics	
  to	
  Ibn	
  Taymiyya	
  is	
  not	
  
a	
   repeatable	
   process	
   or	
   approach;	
   one	
   cannot	
   fathom	
   the	
   method	
   used	
   by	
   the	
  
Companions	
  and	
  the	
  Successors	
  and	
  use	
  the	
  same	
  method	
  to	
  arrive	
  at	
  the	
  truth	
  again	
  and	
  
independently”.7
	
  Rather,	
  Taymiyya	
  held	
  that	
  “the	
  best	
  way	
  to	
  interpret	
  the	
  Qur’an	
  is	
  by	
  
Qur’an”,	
   thus	
   acting	
   as	
   a	
   precursor	
   to	
   structuralists	
   and	
   post-­‐structuralists	
   like	
   Roland	
  
Barthes,	
  who	
  claim	
  that	
  a	
  given	
  text	
  can	
  only	
  be	
  explained	
  through	
  the	
  use	
  of	
  the	
  text	
  
itself.8
	
  
Another,	
  related	
  quandary	
  that	
  emerges	
  from	
  the	
  life	
  and	
  works	
  of	
  Ibn	
  Taymiyya	
  and	
  his	
  
disciples	
   (both	
   mediaeval	
   and	
   modern)	
   concerns	
   the	
   relationship	
   between	
   theoretical	
  
knowledge	
  –	
  as	
  established	
  by	
  the	
  Quran	
  and	
  the	
  sunna	
  –	
  and	
  praxis,	
  as	
  discussed	
  by	
  
Caterina	
  Bori:	
  
…association	
  with	
  the	
  Shaykh	
  seems	
  to	
  have	
  implied	
  not	
  only	
  loyalty	
  to	
  his	
  teachings,	
  but	
  
also	
  a	
  dynamic	
  sharing	
  of	
  his	
  commitment	
  to	
  public,	
  direct	
  action	
  in	
  the	
  name	
  of	
  religion.	
  
Some	
  well-­‐known	
  instances	
  include	
  Ibn	
  Taymiyya	
  and	
  his	
  jama’a	
  attacking	
  Damascus	
  wine	
  
shops,	
  breaking	
  wine	
  jars,	
  pouring	
  wine	
  on	
  the	
  floor	
  and	
  censuring	
  wine	
  sellers.9
	
  
One	
   wonders	
   whether	
   the	
   direct	
   public	
   actions	
   described	
   above	
   were	
   based	
   on	
   a	
  
meticulously	
   argued	
   legal	
   opinion	
   (fatwa)	
   following	
   the	
   application	
   of	
   the	
   exegetical	
  
method	
   described	
   by	
   Saleh,	
   or	
   whether	
   Ibn	
   Taymiyya	
   was	
   willing	
   to	
   disregard	
   certain	
  
Qur’anic	
  injunctions	
  (on	
  the	
  right	
  to	
  private	
  property,	
  for	
  example)	
  in	
  favour	
  of	
  others	
  
(the	
  illegality	
  of	
  alcohol)	
  and	
  thus	
  to	
  act	
  on	
  the	
  basis	
  of	
  his	
  own	
  preferences,	
  without	
  
having	
   recourse	
   to	
   explicit	
   statements	
   from	
   the	
   Quran	
   or	
   the	
   sunna	
   justifying	
   the	
  
aforesaid	
  preferences	
  and	
  actions	
  (e.g.	
  the	
  destruction	
  of	
  wine	
  shops).10
	
  In	
  fact,	
  it	
  would	
  
seem	
   that	
   Taymiyya	
   was	
   willing	
   to	
   employ	
   some	
   “intellectual	
   creativity”	
   in	
   his	
  
interpretations	
  of	
  the	
  Qur’an	
  and	
  the	
  sunna	
  –	
  albeit	
  from	
  within	
  the	
  stringent	
  literalist	
  
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
7
	
  Ibid.,	
  p.	
  143.	
  
8
	
  Vincent	
  B.	
  Leitch	
  (ed.),	
  The	
  Norton	
  Anthology	
  of	
  Theory	
  and	
  Criticism,	
  London,	
  W.W.	
  Norton	
  and	
  Company,	
  2001,	
  p.	
  
1457.	
  
9
	
  Rapoport	
  and	
  Ahmed	
  (eds.),	
  p.	
  30.	
  	
  
10
	
  Although	
  I	
  have	
  not	
  read	
  the	
  Quran	
  and	
  the	
  sunna	
  in	
  their	
  entirety,	
  a	
  quick	
  search	
  suggests	
  that	
  statements	
  on	
  the	
  
illegal	
  nature	
  of	
  alcohol	
  in	
  Islam	
  are	
  formulated	
  as	
  commands	
  for	
  individuals	
  to	
  abstain	
  from	
  consumption,	
  rather	
  than	
  
as	
  calls	
  for	
  activism	
  and	
  “moral	
  policing”	
  of	
  the	
  sort	
  practised	
  by	
  Ibn	
  Taymiyya	
  and	
  his	
  colleagues.	
  	
  	
  
Masters	
  in	
  International	
  Development	
  |	
  PSIA	
  
Islam	
  and	
  Politics	
  in	
  a	
  Changing	
  Middle	
  East
Name	
  :	
  Edwin	
  Johan	
  Santana	
  Gaarder	
  
Student	
  number	
  :	
  100047222	
  
	
  
Page	
  6	
  of	
  12	
  
standards	
  that	
  he	
  had	
  set	
  himself	
  –	
  in	
  order	
  to	
  advance	
  his	
  own	
  political	
  agenda.11
	
  The	
  
most	
  famous	
  example	
  of	
  this	
  is	
  his	
  ruling	
  on	
  the	
  legality	
  of	
  armed	
  resistance	
  against	
  the	
  
13th
-­‐century	
  Mongol	
  invasions	
  of	
  the	
  Levant,	
  which	
  has	
  been	
  discussed	
  in	
  depth	
  in	
  Ibn	
  
Taymiyya	
  and	
  His	
  Times.12
	
  Whereas	
  Ibn	
  Taymiyya	
  was	
  often	
  criticised	
  by	
  contemporaries	
  
for	
   the	
   “excessive	
   features	
   of	
   [his]	
   personality:	
   his	
   choleric	
   moods,	
   his	
   fondness	
   of	
  
supremacy	
   (riyasa),	
   his	
   contempt	
   for	
   his	
   fellow	
   ‘ulama	
   and	
   his	
   rough	
   manners”,	
   his	
  
willingness	
  to	
  instrumentalise	
  Islamic	
  teaching	
  in	
  order	
  to	
  urge	
  opposition	
  to	
  the	
  Mongols	
  
ensured	
  that	
  “people	
  –	
  and	
  all	
  sorts	
  of	
  people	
  –	
  loved	
  him	
  and	
  supported	
  him	
  until	
  his	
  
death”.13
	
  In	
   other	
   words,	
   despite	
   his	
   literalist	
   and	
   seemingly	
   unforgiving	
   approach	
   to	
  
Islamic	
  precepts,	
  it	
  seems	
  that	
  the	
  manner	
  in	
  which	
  he	
  chose	
  to	
  live	
  his	
  life	
  and	
  put	
  his	
  
faith	
  into	
  practice	
  guaranteed	
  his	
  position	
  as	
  a	
  figure	
  of	
  public	
  reverence,	
  at	
  a	
  period	
  in	
  
time	
  when	
  his	
  compatriots	
  were	
  faced	
  with	
  the	
  threat	
  of	
  external	
  aggression.	
  	
  
Given	
   all	
   of	
   the	
   above	
   (the	
   elusiveness	
   of	
   objective	
   knowledge,	
   the	
   slipperiness	
   of	
  
‘meaning’,	
  the	
  centrifugal	
  tendencies	
  of	
  rational	
  thought,	
  the	
  limitations	
  of	
  literalism)	
  one	
  
cannot	
  be	
  blamed	
  for	
  asking:	
  how	
  is	
  the	
  individual	
  Muslim	
  supposed	
  to	
  derive	
  a	
  praxis	
  
and	
  a	
  political	
  position	
  from	
  Islamic	
  teachings,	
  which	
  are	
  meant	
  to	
  encompass	
  all	
  realms	
  
of	
  human	
  life?	
  This	
  question	
  is	
  at	
  the	
  heart	
  of	
  a	
  movement	
  which	
  emerged	
  in	
  Egypt	
  in	
  the	
  
first	
  half	
  of	
  the	
  20th
	
  century	
  and	
  which	
  has,	
  since	
  then,	
  often	
  seen	
  fit	
  to	
  draw	
  inspiration	
  
from	
  Ibn	
  Taymiyya.	
  The	
  originators,	
  theorists	
  and	
  practitioners	
  of	
  this	
  movement	
  –	
  known	
  
as	
  Islamism	
  or	
  political	
  Islam	
  –	
  operated	
  in	
  a	
  context	
  that	
  was,	
  of	
  course,	
  fundamentally	
  
different	
   from	
   that	
   of	
   Ibn	
   Taymiyya,	
   and	
   they	
   did	
   not	
   always	
   have	
   an	
   equally	
   firm	
  
grounding	
   in	
   Islamic	
   scholarship	
   as	
   their	
   mediaeval	
   predecessors.	
   Both	
   Hassan	
   al-­‐Bann	
  
and	
  Sayyid	
  Qutb,	
  for	
  example,	
  were	
  educated	
  at	
  the	
  Dar	
  al’Ulum,	
  “an	
  institution	
  founded	
  
in	
   the	
   late	
   nineteenth	
   century	
   to	
   establish	
   something	
   of	
   a	
   middle	
   ground	
   between	
   al-­‐
Azhar	
   University	
   in	
   Cairo	
   and	
   modern,	
   secular	
   education,	
   although	
   it	
   gradually	
   veered	
  
towards	
  the	
  latter”.14
	
  Less	
  familiar	
  with	
  the	
  traditional	
  Islamic	
  disciplines	
  (which	
  were	
  the	
  
realm	
   of	
   the	
   ‘ulama),	
   exposed	
   to	
   external	
   cultural	
   influences	
   and	
   intimidated	
   by	
   the	
  
technological	
   and	
   economic	
   superiority	
   of	
   the	
   Western	
   powers,	
   these	
   Muslim	
  
intellectuals	
   began	
   to	
   seek	
   refuge	
   in	
   the	
   “word	
   of	
   God	
   […]	
   without	
   the	
   mediation	
   of	
  
present	
   or	
   past	
   scholars,	
   […]	
   plain	
   Islam	
   as	
   it	
   was	
   understood	
   by	
   its	
   first	
   adherent,	
  
Muhammad,	
  and	
  his	
  sincere	
  Companions”.15
	
  Unlike	
  Ibn	
  Taymiyya,	
  however,	
  the	
  Islamists’	
  
recourse	
   to	
   literalism	
   was	
   not	
   an	
   attempt	
   to	
   engage	
   with	
   and	
   challenge	
   other	
  
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
11
	
  Rapoport	
  and	
  Ahmed.,	
  p.	
  356.	
  	
  
12
	
  Ibid.	
  	
  
13
	
  Ibid.,	
  p.	
  37	
  and	
  p.	
  41.	
  
14	
  
	
  Roxanne	
  L.	
  Euben	
  and	
  Muhammad	
  Qasim	
  Zaman,	
  Princeton	
  Readings	
  in	
  Islamist	
  Thought:	
  Texts	
  and	
  Contexts	
  from	
  
al-­‐Banna	
  to	
  Bin	
  Laden,	
  Oxford,	
  United	
  Kingdom,	
  Princeton	
  University	
  Press,	
  2009,	
  p.	
  10.	
  
15
	
  Sayyid	
  Qutb,	
  cited	
  in	
  Euben	
  and	
  Zaman,	
  p.	
  15.	
  	
  
Masters	
  in	
  International	
  Development	
  |	
  PSIA	
  
Islam	
  and	
  Politics	
  in	
  a	
  Changing	
  Middle	
  East
Name	
  :	
  Edwin	
  Johan	
  Santana	
  Gaarder	
  
Student	
  number	
  :	
  100047222	
  
	
  
Page	
  7	
  of	
  12	
  
interpretative	
   practices,	
   but	
   was	
   rather	
   a	
   way	
   to	
   “sidestep	
   the	
   exegetical	
   tradition”	
  
altogether,	
   to	
   “write	
   outside,	
   and	
   often	
   in	
   conspicuous	
   opposition	
   to,	
   any	
   such	
  
framework”.16
	
  For	
  Qutb	
  in	
  particular,	
  the	
  exegetical	
  tradition	
  is	
  an	
  unwelcome	
  distraction	
  
from	
  the	
  existential	
  struggle	
  (jihad)	
  that	
  should	
  be	
  prioritised	
  by	
  all	
  Muslims,	
  a	
  struggle	
  to	
  
protect	
  the	
  revealed	
  truth	
  of	
  Islam	
  from	
  the	
  myriad	
  threats	
  posed	
  by	
  the	
  modern	
  world	
  
(jahiliyya).	
   By	
   using	
   the	
   word	
   jihad	
   –	
   which	
   simultaneously	
   invokes	
   the	
   psychological	
  
struggle	
  of	
  individual	
  believers	
  and	
  the	
  Holy	
  War	
  that	
  must	
  be	
  waged	
  against	
  anti-­‐Islamic	
  
forces	
  –	
  Qutb	
  makes	
  it	
  clear	
  that	
  the	
  ultimate	
  calling	
  is	
  to	
  revive	
  Islam	
  through	
  praxis	
  and	
  
not	
  through	
  theory,	
  through	
  action	
  and	
  not	
  through	
  language,	
  using	
  the	
  sword	
  and	
  not	
  
the	
  pen.	
  Although	
  his	
  work	
  is	
  “complex,	
  polyvalent	
  and	
  susceptible	
  to	
  multiple	
  readings”,	
  
it	
  is	
  this	
  radical	
  emphasis	
  on	
  the	
  practice	
  of	
  Islam	
  that	
  has	
  inspired	
  a	
  number	
  of	
  violent	
  
acts,	
  and	
  has	
  prompted	
  one	
  journalist	
  to	
  label	
  him	
  “The	
  Philosopher	
  of	
  Islamic	
  Terror”.17
	
  
Qutb’s	
  position	
  is	
  not	
  uncontested	
  within	
  the	
  realm	
  of	
  political	
  Islam,	
  though,	
  and	
  it	
  is	
  
instructive	
  to	
  note	
  the	
  significant	
  differences	
  between	
  Qutb	
  and	
  other	
  members	
  of	
  the	
  
Muslim	
  Brotherhood	
  such	
  as	
  Yusuf	
  al-­‐Qaradawi,	
  a	
  salafi	
  ‘literalist’	
  and	
  a	
  sheikh	
  of	
  al-­‐Azhar	
  
who	
  has	
  vigorously	
  opposed	
  the	
  “outright	
  dismissal”	
  of	
  “Islamic	
  history	
  and	
  civilization”	
  
“at	
  the	
  hands	
  of	
  Islamists	
  like	
  Qutb”.18
	
  Al-­‐Qaradawi’s	
  positions	
  are	
  indicative	
  of	
  what	
  can	
  
be	
   achieved	
   through	
   religious	
   teaching	
   in	
   a	
   strong	
   institution	
   that,	
   despite	
   numerous	
  
politically	
  motivated	
  encroachments	
  over	
  the	
  years,	
  has	
  maintained	
  some	
  independence	
  
from	
   the	
   Egyptian	
   government.	
   These	
   positions	
   are	
   summarised	
   by	
   Mona	
   Hassan	
   in	
  
Modern	
  Interpretations	
  and	
  Misinterpretations	
  of	
  a	
  Medieval	
  Scholar:	
  
In	
  the	
  realm	
  of	
  politics	
  and	
  broader	
  social	
  interaction,	
  al-­‐Qaradawi	
  locates	
  the	
  origin	
  of	
  
the	
   contemporary	
   malaise	
   of	
   Islam	
   in	
   the	
   mentalities	
   of	
   some	
   Muslim	
   groups,	
   ranging	
  
from	
   the	
   constantly	
   beseiged,	
   the	
   literalist,	
   the	
   harsh	
   and	
   narrow-­‐minded,	
   to	
   the	
  
excessively	
  traditionalistic.	
  Al-­‐Qaradawi	
  advocates	
  instead	
  that	
  Muslims	
  should	
  develop	
  a	
  
depth	
  of	
  understanding	
  that	
  is	
  attuned	
  to	
  the	
  ways	
  of	
  the	
  world,	
  reflects	
  the	
  overall	
  aims	
  
of	
  the	
  Shari’a	
  and	
  recognizes	
  the	
  importance	
  of	
  prioritization	
  and	
  balance.	
  Critically,	
  al-­‐
Qaradawi	
  urges	
  Islamists	
  to	
  break	
  out	
  of	
  an	
  isolationist	
  mode	
  (where	
  they	
  only	
  speak	
  and	
  
write	
   to	
   one	
   another)	
   and	
   emphasizes	
   the	
   importance	
   of	
   engaging	
   in	
   sincere	
   and	
  
productive	
  dialogue	
  with	
  other	
  groups,	
  such	
  as	
  secular	
  nationalists	
  […]	
  local	
  regimes	
  [and]	
  
Western	
  governments	
  and	
  intellectuals.19
	
  
By	
  recommending	
  that	
  Muslims	
  “develop	
  an	
  understanding	
  that	
  is	
  attuned	
  to	
  the	
  ways	
  of	
  
the	
  world”,	
  al-­‐Qaradawi	
  seems	
  to	
  be	
  working	
  on	
  the	
  assumption	
  that	
  it	
  is	
  impossible	
  to	
  
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
16
	
  Euben	
  and	
  Zaman,	
  p.	
  16.	
  	
  
17	
  
Berman,	
  cited	
  in	
  Euben	
  and	
  Zaman,	
  p.	
  129.	
  	
  
18
	
  Euben	
  and	
  Zaman,	
  p.	
  17.	
  	
  
19	
  
Rapoport	
  and	
  Ahmed.,	
  p.	
  353.
	
  
Masters	
  in	
  International	
  Development	
  |	
  PSIA	
  
Islam	
  and	
  Politics	
  in	
  a	
  Changing	
  Middle	
  East
Name	
  :	
  Edwin	
  Johan	
  Santana	
  Gaarder	
  
Student	
  number	
  :	
  100047222	
  
	
  
Page	
  8	
  of	
  12	
  
retrieve	
   the	
   “plain”	
   meaning	
   of	
   “the	
   word	
   of	
   God”,	
   “as	
   it	
   was	
   understood	
   by	
   its	
   first	
  
adherent,	
  Muhammad,	
  and	
  his	
  sincere	
  companions”.	
  Instead,	
  one’s	
  understanding	
  needs	
  
to	
  be	
  tuned	
  –	
  rather	
  like	
  a	
  radio	
  –	
  so	
  that	
  it	
  is	
  on	
  the	
  same	
  wavelength	
  as	
  the	
  rest	
  of	
  the	
  
modern	
  world.	
  His	
  emphasis	
  on	
  the	
  “overall	
  aims”	
  of	
  the	
  shari’a	
  shows	
  a	
  willingness	
  to	
  
engage	
  in	
  a	
  debate	
  over	
  differing	
  interpretations	
  of	
  what	
  those	
  aims	
  actually	
  are,	
  and	
  in	
  
doing	
   so	
   he	
   declares	
   his	
   exegetical	
   strategy	
   to	
   be	
   one	
   of	
   “prioritization	
   and	
   balance”,	
  
implying	
   that	
   one	
   must	
   use	
   reason	
   (‘aql)	
   to	
   evaluate	
   the	
   diverse	
   and	
   sometimes	
  
conflicting	
  principles	
  in	
  the	
  Qur’an.	
  Lastly,	
  al-­‐Qaradawi	
  acknowledges	
  that	
  there	
  is	
  a	
  need	
  
to	
   change	
   the	
   “harsh	
   and	
   narrow-­‐minded	
   […]	
   mentalities”	
   of	
   those	
   who	
   inhabit	
   the	
  
“isolationist	
  mode”,	
  where	
  opinions	
  and	
  interpretations	
  are	
  reinforced	
  through	
  endless	
  
reiteration	
  by	
  conformist	
  members	
  “who	
  only	
  speak	
  and	
  write	
  to	
  one	
  another”,	
  leaving	
  
beliefs	
   unchallenged	
   and	
   conclusions	
   unquestioned.	
   As	
   such,	
   he	
   inserts	
   himself	
   into	
   a	
  
long	
  tradition	
  of	
  Islamic	
  scholars	
  who	
  considered	
  the	
  hard	
  (and	
  often	
  thankless)	
  quest	
  for	
  
meaning	
  to	
  be	
  a	
  recurrent	
  duty,	
  one	
  that	
  can	
  only	
  be	
  enriched	
  by	
  “engaging	
  in	
  sincere	
  
and	
   productive	
   dialogue”	
   with	
   groups	
   that	
   hold	
   different	
   opinions	
   and	
   beliefs.	
   In	
   al-­‐
Qaradawi’s	
  work,	
  the	
  ‘other’	
  thus	
  becomes	
  a	
  mirror	
  of	
  the	
  self,	
  a	
  test	
  of	
  faith,	
  a	
  tool	
  for	
  
self-­‐reflection	
   and	
   self-­‐criticism	
   that	
   can	
   lead	
   the	
   individual	
   to	
   a	
   more	
   sophisticated	
  
understanding	
  and	
  a	
  more	
  refined	
  practice	
  of	
  Islam.	
  	
  
This	
   approach,	
   however,	
   presupposes	
   that	
   the	
   ‘other’	
   is	
   willing	
   to	
   play	
   his	
   part	
   in	
   a	
  
“sincere	
   and	
   productive”	
   dialogue,	
   which	
   is	
   not	
   always	
   the	
   case.	
   On	
   the	
   contrary,	
  
“Western	
   governments	
   and	
   intellectuals”	
   have	
   historically	
   been	
   either	
   hostile	
   or	
  
condescending	
   towards	
   Islamic	
   culture,	
   often	
   coopting	
   “local	
   governments”	
   in	
   their	
  
imperialist	
   exploits,	
   as	
   Edward	
   Said	
   demonstrated	
   to	
   such	
   effect	
   in	
   his	
   post-­‐colonial	
  
masterpiece:	
  Orientalism	
  (1978).20
	
  It	
  is	
  important	
  to	
  recognise,	
  here,	
  that	
  the	
  experience	
  
of	
  European	
  colonisation	
  in	
  the	
  regions	
  that	
  used	
  to	
  be	
  part	
  of	
  Ottoman	
  Empire	
  (or	
  other	
  
Islamic	
   empires)	
   was	
   not	
   merely	
   a	
   matter	
   of	
   economic	
   and	
   political	
   subjugation	
   to	
  
Western	
  powers,	
  it	
  also	
  entailed	
  a	
  profound	
  process	
  of	
  cultural	
  delegitimisation.	
  Frantz	
  
Fanon,	
  an	
  expatriate	
  activist	
  of	
  the	
  FLN	
  in	
  Algeria,	
  described	
  this	
  process	
  as	
  follows:	
  	
  
Colonial	
  domination,	
  because	
  it	
  is	
  total	
  and	
  tends	
  to	
  oversimplify,	
  very	
  soon	
  manages	
  to	
  
disrupt	
  in	
  spectacular	
  fashion	
  the	
  cultural	
  life	
  of	
  a	
  conquered	
  people	
  […]	
  Every	
  effort	
  is	
  
made	
  to	
  bring	
  the	
  colonized	
  person	
  to	
  admit	
  the	
  inferiority	
  of	
  his	
  culture	
  […As	
  a	
  result,	
  the	
  
native]	
  intellectual	
  throws	
  himself	
  in	
  frenzied	
  fashion	
  into	
  the	
  frantic	
  acquisition	
  of	
  the	
  
culture	
  of	
  the	
  occupying	
  power	
  and	
  takes	
  every	
  opportunity	
  of	
  unfavorably	
  criticizing	
  his	
  
own	
  national	
  culture.21
	
  
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
20
	
  Vincent	
  B.	
  Leitch	
  (ed.),	
  pp.	
  1986-­‐2012.	
  	
  
21
	
  Ibid.,	
  p.	
  1587.	
  	
  
Masters	
  in	
  International	
  Development	
  |	
  PSIA	
  
Islam	
  and	
  Politics	
  in	
  a	
  Changing	
  Middle	
  East
Name	
  :	
  Edwin	
  Johan	
  Santana	
  Gaarder	
  
Student	
  number	
  :	
  100047222	
  
	
  
Page	
  9	
  of	
  12	
  
In	
  other	
  words,	
  once	
  a	
  society	
  has	
  been	
  forced	
  to	
  incorporate	
  foreign	
  elements	
  that	
  –	
  
through	
   economic	
   and	
   military	
   might	
   –	
   are	
   made	
   to	
   seem	
   superior,	
   it	
   becomes	
  
increasingly	
  difficult	
  to	
  seek	
  solace	
  in	
  local	
  cultures,	
  which	
  have	
  been	
  violently	
  disparaged	
  
and	
  discredited	
  by	
  the	
  the	
  local	
  intelligentsia	
  as	
  well	
  as	
  by	
  the	
  colonial	
  powers.	
  In	
  the	
  case	
  
of	
  Islam,	
  the	
  challenge	
  is	
  to	
  retrieve	
  a	
  discourse	
  from	
  a	
  distant	
  past	
  and	
  reinstate	
  it	
  as	
  the	
  
main	
   source	
   of	
   self-­‐identification	
   in	
   lands	
   that	
   are	
   no	
   longer	
   entirely	
   and	
   essentially	
  
Muslim,	
   or	
   (to	
   use	
   Islamic	
   terminology)	
   where	
   the	
   integrity	
   of	
   the	
   umma	
   has	
   been	
  
violated.	
  Although	
  is	
  true	
  that	
  Islam	
  has	
  been	
  able,	
  throughout	
  history,	
  to	
  accommodate	
  
minorities	
  and	
  remain	
  open	
  to	
  outside	
  influences	
  (e.g.	
  Greek	
  philosophy,	
  Persian	
  political	
  
theory)	
  the	
  difference	
  is	
  clear:	
  in	
  the	
  social	
  structure	
  of	
  the	
  former	
  Islamic	
  empires,	
  Sunni	
  
Islam	
  occupied	
  a	
  hegemonic	
  position	
  and	
  syncretic	
  tendencies	
  were	
  rigorously	
  managed	
  
by	
  the	
  religious	
  establishment;	
  in	
  a	
  post-­‐colonial	
  world,	
  by	
  contrast,	
  it	
  is	
  a	
  common	
  belief	
  
that	
  Islam	
  must	
  regain	
  a	
  position	
  of	
  control	
  before	
  it	
  can	
  begin	
  to	
  engage	
  with	
  Western	
  
culture,	
  otherwise	
  it	
  will	
  risk	
  being	
  undermined	
  by	
  jahiliyya.	
  Under	
  these	
  circumstances,	
  
the	
   appeal	
   of	
   Qutb’s	
   uncompromising	
   calls	
   for	
   an	
   “Islamic	
   State”	
   (dawla	
   islamiyya)	
  
become	
  easier	
  to	
  understand:	
  Muslims	
  will	
  only	
  be	
  free	
  to	
  choose	
  the	
  right	
  path	
  when	
  
they	
  are	
  able	
  to	
  proclaim	
  “the	
  universal	
  freedom	
  of	
  every	
  person	
  and	
  community	
  from	
  
servitude	
  to	
  any	
  other	
  individual	
  or	
  society,	
  the	
  end	
  of	
  man’s	
  arrogance	
  and	
  selfishness,	
  
the	
  establishment	
  of	
  the	
  sovereignty	
  of	
  Allah	
  and	
  His	
  Lordship	
  throughout	
  the	
  world,	
  and	
  
the	
  rule	
  of	
  the	
  divine	
  shari’a	
  in	
  human	
  affairs”.22
	
  
Qutb’s	
   radical	
   approach	
   gains	
   traction	
   from	
   the	
   sense,	
   not	
   uncommon	
   in	
   the	
   Muslim	
  
world,	
  that	
  Islam	
  is	
  under	
  threat.	
  Although	
  there	
  is	
  some	
  disagreement	
  about	
  the	
  nature	
  
of	
   this	
   threat,	
   different	
   jihadi	
   movements	
   have	
   capitalised	
   on	
   this	
   general	
   zeitgeist	
   in	
  
order	
  to	
  attack	
  the	
  specific	
  ‘enemies	
  of	
  Islam’	
  that	
  each	
  of	
  them	
  considers	
  to	
  be	
  most	
  
pernicious.	
   In	
   the	
   case	
   of	
   al-­‐Jihad	
   and	
   al-­‐Jamaʻa	
   al-­‐Islamiya,	
   for	
   example,	
   the	
   military	
  
regime	
  in	
  Egypt	
  of	
  the	
  60s	
  and	
  70s	
  was	
  identified	
  as	
  the	
  principal	
  target,	
  and	
  remained	
  as	
  
such	
  even	
  when	
  their	
  members	
  joined	
  the	
  war	
  against	
  the	
  Soviet	
  Union	
  in	
  Afghanistan	
  in	
  
the	
  1980s.23
	
  In	
  the	
  case	
  of	
  Abdullah	
  Yusuf	
  Azzam,	
  by	
  contrast,	
  the	
  war	
  in	
  Afghanistan	
  was	
  
the	
  beginning	
  of	
  a	
  pan-­‐Islamic	
  effort	
  to	
  expel	
  what	
  he	
  perceived	
  to	
  be	
  the	
  illegitimate	
  
occupiers	
  of	
  Islam	
  lands,	
  which	
  included,	
  of	
  course,	
  the	
  Israelis	
  in	
  Palestine.	
  For	
  Usama	
  
bin	
  Laden	
  –	
  who	
  learnt	
  the	
  ropes	
  of	
  jihad	
  from	
  Azzam	
  and	
  al-­‐Zawahiri	
  in	
  Afghanistan	
  –	
  
the	
  decision	
  to	
  found	
  al-­‐Qa’ida	
  and	
  attack	
  the	
  United	
  States	
  of	
  America	
  was	
  based	
  on	
  
what	
  he	
  perceived	
  to	
  be	
  the	
  invasion	
  of	
  Saudi	
  Arabia	
  by	
  American	
  forces	
  during	
  the	
  First	
  
Gulf	
  War	
  in	
  1990.24
	
  Many	
  efforts	
  have	
  been	
  made	
  to	
  identify	
  the	
  underlying	
  drivers	
  of	
  
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
22
	
  Sayyid	
  Qutb,	
  cited	
  in	
  Euben	
  and	
  Zaman,	
  p.	
  42.	
  	
  
23
	
  Lawrence	
  Wright,	
  The	
  Looming	
  Tower:	
  Al-­‐Qaeda’s	
  Road	
  to	
  9/11,	
  London,	
  Penguin,	
  Kindle	
  Edition,	
  2011.	
  	
  
24
	
  Cf.	
  Usama	
  bin	
  Laden,	
  Declaration	
  of	
  War	
  Against	
  the	
  Americans	
  Occupying	
  the	
  Land	
  of	
  the	
  Two	
  Holy	
  Places,	
  in	
  Euben	
  
and	
  Zaman,	
  p.	
  436.	
  	
  
Masters	
  in	
  International	
  Development	
  |	
  PSIA	
  
Islam	
  and	
  Politics	
  in	
  a	
  Changing	
  Middle	
  East
Name	
  :	
  Edwin	
  Johan	
  Santana	
  Gaarder	
  
Student	
  number	
  :	
  100047222	
  
	
  
Page	
  10	
  of	
  12	
  
violence	
  in	
  these	
  men	
  and	
  their	
  associates,	
  but	
  the	
  explanatory	
  power	
  of	
  these	
  theories	
  is	
  
limited	
   at	
   best:	
   rational	
   choice	
   theories,	
   for	
   example,	
   are	
   inconsistent	
   with	
   the	
  
observation	
  that	
  violent	
  acts	
  are	
  often	
  counter-­‐productive	
  and	
  fail	
  to	
  bring	
  about	
  stated	
  
goals;	
   socio-­‐economic	
   theories	
   struggle	
   to	
   account	
   for	
   the	
   fact	
   that	
   mujahideen	
   often	
  
stem	
   from	
   middle-­‐class	
   backgrounds	
   and	
   are	
   quite	
   well	
   educated;	
   psychopathological	
  
analysis	
   finds	
   that	
   “most	
   terrorists	
   do	
   not	
   meet	
   diagnostic	
   criteria	
   for	
   a	
   major	
   mental	
  
illness	
  or	
  for	
  sociopathy”;	
  and	
  so	
  on	
  and	
  so	
  forth.25
	
  This	
  paper	
  has	
  chosen	
  to	
  set	
  aside	
  
scientific	
  theories	
  in	
  order	
  to	
  analyse	
  the	
  Arabo-­‐Islamic	
  discourse	
  that	
  has	
  been	
  hijacked	
  
by	
  these	
  men,	
  a	
  discourse	
  that	
  was	
  developed	
  hundreds	
  of	
  years	
  ago	
  by	
  the	
  first	
  Muslims	
  
and	
  their	
  successors,	
  by	
  mediaeval	
  Islamic	
  scholars	
  and	
  philosophers	
  like	
  Ibn	
  Taymiyya	
  
who	
  lived	
  through	
  the	
  “Golden	
  Age”	
  of	
  Islam	
  and	
  contributed	
  to	
  the	
  rich	
  cultural	
  heritage	
  
that	
  is	
  still	
  treasured	
  by	
  Muslims	
  today.	
  This	
  discourse,	
  I	
  would	
  argue,	
  has	
  been	
  used	
  to	
  
generate	
  an	
  aura	
  of	
  heroism	
  and	
  authenticity	
  around	
  the	
  jihadi	
  movement	
  that	
  strikes	
  a	
  
deep	
  chord	
  among	
  some	
  Muslims,	
  playing	
  on	
  their	
  fears	
  that	
  the	
  Islamic	
  way	
  of	
  life	
  is	
  
becoming	
   increasingly	
   marginalized,	
   particularly	
   among	
   secular	
   elites.	
   This	
   fear	
   is	
  
reinforced	
  by	
  the	
  equally	
  reductionist	
  discourse	
  that	
  is	
  employed	
  by	
  noteable	
  figures	
  in	
  
the	
  West,	
  including	
  Geert	
  Wilders	
  in	
  the	
  Netherlands,	
  Marine	
  Le	
  Pen	
  in	
  France,	
  Anders	
  
Breivik	
  in	
  Norway,	
  the	
  PEGIDA	
  movement	
  in	
  Germany	
  and,	
  of	
  course,	
  George	
  Bush,	
  the	
  
founding	
  father	
  of	
  the	
  War	
  on	
  Terror.	
  By	
  using	
  phrases	
  like	
  “axis	
  of	
  evil”,	
  “you’re	
  either	
  
with	
   us	
   or	
   against	
   us”,	
   “islamicization	
   of	
   the	
   West”,	
   “fascist	
   book”	
   and	
   so	
   on,	
   these	
  
ideologues	
   accelerate	
   the	
   process	
   of	
   polarisation	
   and	
   mutual	
   essentialisation.26
	
  In	
   the	
  
words	
  of	
  Catherine	
  Belsey:	
  
Society	
  blames	
  the	
  demons	
  it	
  has	
  created	
  for	
  its	
  own	
  inevitable	
  tensions,	
  and	
  allows	
  itself	
  
to	
  believe	
  that	
  their	
  elimination	
  will	
  make	
  it	
  whole.	
  There	
  is	
  every	
  danger	
  that	
  in	
  the	
  21st
	
  
century	
  the	
  West	
  will	
  construct	
  as	
  its	
  antagonist	
  in	
  this	
  sense	
  the	
  Islamic	
  fundamentalist,	
  
who	
  can	
  then	
  be	
  held	
  accountable	
  for	
  global	
  disunity.27
	
  
The	
  gathering	
  storm	
  of	
  Islamophobia	
  in	
  the	
  West,	
  however,	
  is	
  a	
  different	
  topic	
  altogether,	
  
and	
  this	
  paper	
  will	
  now	
  conclude	
  by	
  returning	
  to	
  the	
  notion	
  of	
  Arabo-­‐Islamic	
  discourse	
  
and	
  suggesting	
  some	
  remedies	
  that	
  might	
  serve	
  to	
  counter	
  the	
  radical	
  interpretation	
  of	
  
Islamic	
  texts	
  that	
  have	
  been	
  adopted	
  by	
  violent	
  extremists.	
  To	
  begin	
  with,	
  it	
  is	
  essential	
  to	
  
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
25
	
  Jeff	
  Victoroff,	
  The	
  Mind	
  of	
  the	
  Terrorist:	
  A	
  Review	
  and	
  Critique	
  of	
  Psychological	
  Approaches,	
  The	
  Journal	
  of	
  Conflict	
  
Resolution,	
  Vol.	
  49,	
  No.	
  1,	
  February	
  2005,	
  pp.	
  3-­‐42.	
  	
  
26
	
  BBC,	
  Dutch	
  anti-­‐Islam	
  MP	
  Geert	
  Wilders	
  goes	
  on	
  trial,	
  4	
  October	
  2010,	
  http://www.bbc.com/news/world-­‐europe-­‐
11464025,	
  (accessed	
  27	
  April	
  2015);	
  Henry	
  Samuel,	
  National	
  Front's	
  Marine	
  Le	
  Pen	
  to	
  prove	
  formidable	
  rival	
  to	
  Nicolas	
  
Sarkozy,	
  The	
  Telegraph,	
  26	
  December	
  2010,	
  
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/france/8225697/National-­‐Fronts-­‐Marine-­‐Le-­‐Pen-­‐to-­‐prove-­‐
formidable-­‐rival-­‐to-­‐Nicolas-­‐Sarkozy.html,	
  (accessed	
  27	
  April	
  2015).	
  
27
	
  Catherine	
  Belsey,	
  Post-­‐Structuralism:	
  A	
  Short	
  Introduction,	
  Oxford,	
  United	
  Kingdom,	
  Oxford	
  University	
  Press,	
  Kindle	
  
Edition,	
  2002,	
  p.	
  94.	
  	
  
Masters	
  in	
  International	
  Development	
  |	
  PSIA	
  
Islam	
  and	
  Politics	
  in	
  a	
  Changing	
  Middle	
  East
Name	
  :	
  Edwin	
  Johan	
  Santana	
  Gaarder	
  
Student	
  number	
  :	
  100047222	
  
	
  
Page	
  11	
  of	
  12	
  
improve	
  the	
  quality	
  of	
  religious	
  education	
  in	
  Muslim	
  countries	
  so	
  that	
  young,	
  educated	
  
Muslims	
   are	
   made	
   aware	
   of	
   the	
   wealth	
   and	
   diversity	
   of	
   the	
   Islamic	
   tradition.28
	
  It	
   is	
  
particularly	
  important	
  to	
  promote	
  the	
  teaching	
  of	
  mediaeval	
  Islamic	
  hermeneutics	
  and	
  
the	
  politics	
  of	
  religious	
  dissent,	
  of	
  which	
  Ibn	
  Taymiyya’s	
  unconventional	
  Hanbalism	
  is	
  only	
  
one	
   example.	
   In	
   the	
   long	
   term,	
   the	
   teaching	
   of	
   structuralist	
   and	
   post-­‐structuralist	
  
linguistics	
   could	
   serve	
   to	
   further	
   encourage	
   interpretative	
   practice	
   and	
   tolerance	
   for	
  
polysemy	
  within	
  Islam.	
  Secondly,	
  it	
  is	
  crucial	
  that	
  the	
  Islamist	
  movement	
  be	
  provided	
  with	
  
a	
  safe	
  and	
  free	
  political	
  space	
  within	
  which	
  it	
  can	
  express	
  itself.	
  In	
  Egypt,	
  mosques	
  have	
  
sometimes	
  found	
  themselves	
  playing	
  this	
  role,	
  but	
  even	
  these	
  sacred	
  spaces	
  have	
  been	
  
subject	
   to	
   interference	
   by	
   successive	
   military	
   governments	
   over	
   the	
   last	
   fifty	
   years,	
  
succumbing	
   to	
   the	
   megalomanic	
   growth	
   of	
   the	
   Egyptian	
   state	
   apparatus.	
   Ayman	
   al-­‐
Zawahiri	
  is	
  the	
  quintessential	
  example	
  of	
  how	
  such	
  trends	
  towards	
  totalitarian	
  control	
  
can	
  lead	
  to	
  violent	
  outcomes:	
  persecuted,	
  imprisoned	
  and	
  tortured,	
  al-­‐Zawahiri	
  became	
  
more	
  and	
  more	
  radical	
  over	
  the	
  course	
  of	
  his	
  life	
  and	
  is	
  now	
  the	
  nominal	
  leader	
  of	
  al-­‐
Qa’ida.29
	
  Although	
  it	
  has	
  not	
  been	
  possible	
  to	
  explore	
  the	
  Arab	
  Spring	
  in	
  this	
  paper,	
  for	
  
lack	
   of	
   space	
   and	
   time,	
   it	
   is	
   suggested	
   that	
   further	
   research	
   could	
   be	
   carried	
   out	
   in	
  
Tunisia,	
   where	
   an	
   Islamist	
   government	
   conceded	
   defeat	
   in	
   the	
   2014	
   election	
   and	
  
peacefully	
  handed	
  power	
  over	
  to	
  its	
  secular	
  opponents.	
  To	
  what	
  extent	
  has	
  this	
  peaceful	
  
process	
  been	
  determined	
  by	
  a	
  reciprocal	
  recognition,	
  by	
  Islamists	
  and	
  secularists,	
  of	
  the	
  
legitimate	
   discourse	
   mobilised	
   by	
   their	
   political	
   counterparts?	
   How	
   is	
   Arabo-­‐Islamic	
  
discourse	
  employed	
  now	
  that	
  the	
  Islamists	
  are	
  in	
  opposition,	
  and	
  how	
  has	
  it	
  changed?	
  
Lastly,	
  it	
  is	
  absolutely	
  paramount	
  that	
  Western	
  governments	
  revise	
  their	
  policies	
  towards	
  
the	
  region,	
  in	
  order	
  to	
  address	
  the	
  siege	
  mentality	
  that	
  currently	
  prevails	
  in	
  the	
  minds	
  of	
  
many	
  Muslims.	
  The	
  almost	
  compulsive	
  interventions	
  that	
  have	
  been	
  carried	
  out	
  over	
  the	
  
last	
  hundred	
  years	
  –	
  the	
  economic	
  sanctions	
  against	
  Iran,	
  the	
  mismanaged	
  wars	
  in	
  Iraq	
  
and	
  Afghanistan,	
  the	
  constant	
  support	
  for	
  autocratic	
  regimes	
  and	
  the	
  bungled	
  response	
  
to	
  the	
  Israel	
  crisis	
  –	
  all	
  need	
  to	
  be	
  scaled	
  back	
  and	
  the	
  rhetoric	
  scaled	
  down	
  by	
  several	
  
notches.	
  Only	
  when	
  when	
  the	
  religion	
  is	
  felt	
  to	
  be	
  free	
  from	
  physical	
  threats,	
  it	
  is	
  argued,	
  
will	
   Islamic	
   discourse	
   shift	
   its	
   emphasis	
   back	
   again,	
   from	
   praxis	
   to	
   theory,	
   from	
   the	
  
practice	
   of	
   war	
   (jihad)	
   to	
   the	
   philosophy	
   of	
   peace	
   (salaam)	
   which	
   is	
   at	
   the	
   root	
  
(grammatical	
  and	
  philosophical)	
  of	
  Islam	
  itself.	
  	
  
	
   	
  
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
28
	
  Towards	
  the	
  end	
  of	
  a	
  class	
  on	
  Islam	
  and	
  Politics	
  taught	
  by	
  Stéphane	
  Lacrois	
  at	
  Sciences-­‐Po,	
  for	
  example,	
  the	
  author	
  of	
  
this	
  paper	
  heard	
  North	
  African	
  and	
  Middle	
  Eastern	
  fellow	
  students	
  claim	
  –	
  more	
  than	
  once!	
  –	
  that	
  they	
  had	
  learnt	
  more	
  
about	
  Islam	
  in	
  Paris	
  than	
  they	
  had	
  in	
  their	
  home	
  countries.	
  
29
	
  Lawrence	
  Wright,	
  The	
  Looming	
  Tower:	
  Al-­‐Qaeda’s	
  Road	
  to	
  9/11,	
  London,	
  Penguin,	
  Kindle	
  Edition.	
  
Masters	
  in	
  International	
  Development	
  |	
  PSIA	
  
Islam	
  and	
  Politics	
  in	
  a	
  Changing	
  Middle	
  East
Name	
  :	
  Edwin	
  Johan	
  Santana	
  Gaarder	
  
Student	
  number	
  :	
  100047222	
  
	
  
Page	
  12	
  of	
  12	
  
WORKS	
  CITED	
  
Arkoun,	
  M.,	
  Essais	
  sur	
  la	
  Pensée	
  Islamique,	
  Paris,	
  France,	
  G.-­‐P.	
  Maisonneuve	
  et	
  Larose,	
  
1973.	
  
BBC,	
  Dutch	
  anti-­‐Islam	
  MP	
  Geert	
  Wilders	
  goes	
  on	
  trial,	
  4	
  October	
  2010,	
  
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-­‐europe-­‐11464025,	
  (accessed	
  27	
  April	
  2015).	
  
Belsey	
  C.,	
  Post-­‐Structuralism:	
  A	
  Short	
  Introduction,	
  Oxford,	
  United	
  Kingdom,	
  Oxford	
  
University	
  Press,	
  Kindle	
  Edition,	
  2002.	
  	
  
Euben	
  R.L.	
  and	
  Zaman	
  M.Q.,	
  Princeton	
  Readings	
  in	
  Islamist	
  Thought:	
  Texts	
  and	
  Contexts	
  
from	
  al-­‐Banna	
  to	
  Bin	
  Laden,	
  Oxford,	
  United	
  Kingdom,	
  Princeton	
  University	
  Press,	
  2009.	
  
Leitch	
  V.B.	
  (ed.),	
  The	
  Norton	
  Anthology	
  of	
  Theory	
  and	
  Criticism,	
  London,	
  W.W.	
  Norton	
  and	
  
Company,	
  2001.	
  	
  
Rapoport	
  Y.	
  and	
  Ahmed	
  S.	
  (eds.),	
  Ibn	
  Taymiyya	
  and	
  his	
  times,	
  Karachi,	
  Pakistan,	
  Oxford	
  
University	
  Press,	
  2010.	
  	
  
Samuel	
  H.,	
  National	
  Front's	
  Marine	
  Le	
  Pen	
  to	
  prove	
  formidable	
  rival	
  to	
  Nicolas	
  Sarkozy,	
  
The	
  Telegraph,	
  26	
  December	
  2010,	
  
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/france/8225697/National-­‐Fronts-­‐
Marine-­‐Le-­‐Pen-­‐to-­‐prove-­‐formidable-­‐rival-­‐to-­‐Nicolas-­‐Sarkozy.html,	
  (accessed	
  27	
  April	
  
2015).	
  
Victoroff	
  J.,	
  The	
  Mind	
  of	
  the	
  Terrorist:	
  A	
  Review	
  and	
  Critique	
  of	
  Psychological	
  Approaches,	
  
The	
  Journal	
  of	
  Conflict	
  Resolution,	
  Vol.	
  49,	
  No.	
  1,	
  February	
  2005,	
  pp.	
  3-­‐42.	
  	
  
Wright	
  L.,	
  The	
  Looming	
  Tower:	
  Al-­‐Qaeda’s	
  Road	
  to	
  9/11,	
  London,	
  Penguin,	
  Kindle	
  Edition,	
  
2011.	
  	
  
	
  

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  • 1. Masters  in  International  Development  |  PSIA   Islam  and  Politics  in  a  Changing  Middle  East Name  :  Edwin  Johan  Santana  Gaarder   Student  number  :  100047222     Page  1  of  12   POLITICAL  ISLAM  AND  THE  PHILOSOPHY  OF  LANGUAGE   What  role  for  linguistic  theory  in  the  struggle  against  violent  extremism?   Arabo-­‐Islamic  discourse  –  the  vocabulary,  idioms  and  other  modes  of  signification  that   are  made  available  to  arabophone  Muslims  through  the  religious,  cultural  and  linguistic   environment   into   which   they   are   socialised   –   has   always   been   the   locus   of   intense   contestation.  Innumerable  conflicts  in  North  Africa  and  the  Middle  East  are  centred  on   the  issue  of  whether,  to  what  extent,  and  how  Islam  should  structure  the  way  societies   are  organised  and  governed,  whether  it  be  in  Mesopotamia  or  the  Maghreb,  the  Arabian   Peninsula  or  the  Levant.  These  dynamics  are  historically  determined  to  a  large  degree:   from  the  period  of  expansion  (7th -­‐9th  centuries)  until  the  period  of  European  colonisation   (late-­‐19th  /  early-­‐20th  centuries)  and  thereafter,  Islam  has  played  a  central  role  in  the  lives   of   the   people   that   inhabit   this   region,   forming   the   basis   of   their   belief   systems,   their   moral  and  legal  codes,  their  cultures,  their  political  systems,  and  much  more.  Although  a   singular   noun   is   used,   it   is   obvious   that   ‘Islam’   has   never   meant   the   same   thing   to   all   Muslims,  even  though  the  doctrine  of  tawhid1  –  translated  as  ‘oneness’  and  understood   to  mean  the  monotheistic  belief  in  a  unique  and  indivisible  God  –  suggests  that  there  is   little  room  for  deviation  from  a  single,  absolute  and  transcendental  truth  established  by   the  Qur’an.  In  practice,  the  Islamic  community  (umma)  has  always  had  to  strike  a  fine   balance   between   its   belief   in   the   existence   of   revealed,   unambiguous   and   incontrovertible   Qur’anic   principles,   to   which   all   Muslims   must   adhere,   and   its   lack   of   agreement  over  what  these  principles  actually  are.  This  paper  will  seek  to  explain  this   aporia  –  which  is  at  the  heart  of  many  of  the  political  and  religious  conflicts  in  the  region   –  by  analysing  it  from  a  number  of  different  angles,  including  the  logocentric  approach  of   mediaeval  neo-­‐platonic  scholars,  the  salafi  approach  of  the  Hanbali  scholar  Ibn  Taymiyya,   and   the   structuralist   and   post-­‐structuralist   approaches   developed   by   20th -­‐century   philosophers  of  language  like  Ferdinand  de  Saussure  and  Jacques  Derrida.   It   will   be   argued,   moreover,   that   the   ongoing   conflict   over   Arabo-­‐Islamic   heritage   is   a   struggle   over   the   ‘meaning’   of   the   Qur’an   and   the   sunna,   an   attempt   to   establish   a   ‘transcendental  signified’  that  is  the  subject  of  consensus  (ijma’)  and  can  thus  serve  as  the   basis  for  a  form  of  social  organisation  that  is  free  from  discord  (fitna).  Whereas  mediaeval   Sunni  scholars  were  generally  able  to  engage  in  such  epistemological  and  hermeneutic   debates  from  within  an  Islamic  caliphate  –  confident  that  fundamental  Islamic  precepts   would  be  protected  from  external  aggression  –  post-­‐colonial  Muslim  intellectuals  have   had   to   operate   in   a   climate   of   existential   crisis,   due   to   the   threat   of   interference   by   foreign   actors   in   their   countries’   internal   political,   economic   and   cultural   affairs.   Delegitimized   and   ridiculed   during   the   colonial   period,   undermined   by   the   economic                                                                                                                   1  Derived  from  the  Arabic  root  ‫ﺩد‬-­‐‫  ﻭو‐­-ﺡح‬
  • 2. Masters  in  International  Development  |  PSIA   Islam  and  Politics  in  a  Changing  Middle  East Name  :  Edwin  Johan  Santana  Gaarder   Student  number  :  100047222     Page  2  of  12   underdevelopment   that   is   almost   ubiquitous   in   the   region,   and   suppressed   or   manipulated  by  autocratic  governments  with  links  to  the  former  colonial  powers,  Islam   and   its   quest   for   ‘meaning’   have   therefore   been   forced   to   abandon   the   confines   of   academic   speculation   and   have   instead   become   the   site   of   a   desperate   battle   for   relevance  in  a  world  dominated  by  Western  soft  and  hard  power.  This  paper  will  attempt   to  demonstrate  that  this  state  of  affairs  has  been  responsible  for  a  shift  in  many  Muslims’   relationship   with   Islam,   reducing   the   appeal   of   theory   and   increasing   the   relative   importance  of  praxis,  which  can  to  some  extent  explain  the  rise  of  activist  Islamism  in   both  its  moderate  and  violent  forms.  It  will  be  suggested,  therefore,  that  one  effective   way   of   preempting   violent   extremism   in   Muslim   societies   would   be   to   promote   more   widespread  and  rigorous  instruction  in  all  the  exegetical  traditions  that  have  arisen  from   within  Islam,  as  well  as  to  introduce  modern  linguistic  theory  into  schools,  universities,   mosques  and  kuttab  (traditional  Islamic  schools).  It  is  imagined  that  such  an  approach  –  if   coupled  with  the  establishment  of  inclusive  and  representative  political  regimes  –  could   lead   to   a   more   empowered   and   self-­‐critical   Islamist   movement,   one   that   is   able   to   tolerate  divergent  readings  of  the  Qur’an  and  the  sunna  without  sacrificing  the  unity  of   the  umma  or  faith  in  the  single,  absolute  and  transcendental  truth  of  revelation.   In   his   Introduction   à   la   Pensée   Islamique   Classique,   Mohammed   Arkoun   studies   the   implications  of  the  aforementioned  dilemma  on  mediaeval  Sunni  scholars,  identifying  the   debate  over  the  relative  merits  of  faith  and  reason  as  the  overriding  question  of  the  Age:   “aucune  intelligence  ne  pouvait  échapper  à  […]  une  confrontation  entre  la  Vérité  éternelle   et  les  réalités  contraignantes  de  l’histoire  et  de  la  culture,  […]  entre  la  foi  et  la  raison”.2   Arkoun’s   historical   account   of   epistemological   developments   within   Islam   cannot   be   reproduced  here,  but  it  will  be  useful  to  point  out  some  common  ideas  that  he  identifies   as  having  structured  mainstream  Sunni  thought  over  the  centuries,  focussing  in  particular   on  his  analysis  of  objective  and  subjective  sources  of  knowledge  in  the  Islamic  tradition.   These  two  sources  of  knowledge  correspond  to  revelation,  which  was  sent  down  (tanzil)   by  an  Infallible  Being  and  is  therefore  irrefutable,  and  the  logical  deductions  that  are  the   the  result  of  human  reflection  and  interpretation  of  the  sacred  texts.  It  is  interesting  to   note   that,   in   the   early   years   of   Islam,   the   second   source   of   knowledge   somehow   constituted  the  more  dynamic  intellectual  space,  in  which  reason  (‘aql)  and  the  cultural   inheritance  of  other  cultures  (especially  Greek  philosophy  or  falsafa)  were  used  to  enrich   the   Islamic   tradition   through   the   practice   of   kalam   (speculative   theology)   and   ijtihad   (interpretation  of  scripture).  The  use  of  reason  was  particularly  prominent  in  the  work  of   the  mu’tazilites  and,  to  a  lesser  extent,  of  the  ash’arites,  who  went  so  far  as  to  claim  that                                                                                                                   2  Mohammed  Arkoun,  Essais  sur  la  Pensée  Islamique,  Paris,  France,  G.-­‐P.  Maisonneuve  et  Larose,  1973,  p.  18.  “No  single   intelligence  could  escape  from  the  conflict  between  eternal  Truth  and  the  constraining  realities  of  history  and  culture,   between  faith  and  reason”  [my  translation].  The  arabic  terms  translated  as  faith  and  reason  are  ‘aql  and  naql.    
  • 3. Masters  in  International  Development  |  PSIA   Islam  and  Politics  in  a  Changing  Middle  East Name  :  Edwin  Johan  Santana  Gaarder   Student  number  :  100047222     Page  3  of  12   “when  the  sense  of  the  transmitted  texts  conflicts  with  the  dictates  of  reason,  reason   should   be   given   precedence,   and   the   text   subjected   to   metaphorical   yet   rational   interpretation”.3     The   problem,   of   course,   and   the   reason   why   this   second   source   of   knowledge   was   eventually   relegated   to   an   inferior   position   in   the   hierarchy,   is   that   the   use   of   reason   leads  to  divergent  opinions,  whereas  the  doctrine  of  tawhid  suggests  that  there  is  only   one   absolute   and   indivisible   truth.   Ahmad   ibn   Hanbal   (790-­‐855   C.E.)   was   the   first   to   respond  to  this  paradox  and  reject  the  use  of  reason,  prioritising  what  he  would  call  the   ‘obvious’  meaning  (zahir)  of  revelation  in  an  attempt  to  promote  consensus  and  prevent   schisms  within  the  umma.  The  Hanbali  approach  is  based  on  a  logocentric  conception  of   language,  which  attributes  a  signified  (‘idea’,  ‘meaning’,  ‘sense’)  to  each  signifier  (‘word’,   ‘phrase’,  ‘idiom’,  ‘ideogram’),  and  which  finds  its  Western  equivalent  in  Plato’s  Theory  of   Ideas.   The   logocentric   conception   of   language   in   Islam   –   which   is   not   unique   to   the   Hanbalis,  but  finds  in  them  its  most  reductionist  manifestation  –  posits  that  there  is  a   meaning   that   exists   outside   or   behind   language   and   that   can   be   accessed   through   a   ‘correct’   reading   and   understanding   of   authoritative   texts.   Yet,   the   question   remains:   what  is  the  ‘correct’  interpretative  method  that  should  be  applied  in  order  to  understand   a  text  that  was  produced  in  a  different  context  than  that  of  the  reader,  that  is  to  say,  in  a   different  place,  at  a  different  time,  for  a  different  audience,  through  a  different  mode  of   communication  (oral,  not  written),  using  a  language  that  has  since  evolved  semantically   and  gramatically,  and  so  on?  Hanbal  based  his  arguments  on  the  repeated  claims  that  can   be  found  in  the  Qur’an  itself  that  a  language  (Arabic)  was  chosen  in  order  to  make  the   meaning  clear  and  ease  the  understanding  of  the  revelation  (Qur’an  12:2;  41:44;  43:3)   but  –  despite  the  fact  that  Qur’anic/standard  Arabic  has  changed  surprisingly  little  over   the   course   of   one   and   a   half   millenia   –   his   arguments   founder   when   confronted   with   continuing  disagreements  over  the  ‘meaning’  of  revelation.     Post-­‐Saussurean   linguists   now   know   that   effective   communication   depends   more   on   societal  conventions  regarding  the  different  use  of  signs  in  different  contexts,  rather  than   on   reference   to   absolute   and   unchanging   ‘meanings’   that   exist   independently   of   the   language  itself,  but  logocentric  Islamic  scholars  would  continue  their  search  for  ‘meaning’   for   centuries,   resorting   to   a   number   of   different   techniques,   including:   etymologal   analysis  (ta’wil)  or  the  search  for  original  /  historical  meanings;  analogy  (qiyas)  or  the  use   of  comparison  for  the  purpose  of  explanation  or  clarification;  traditionalism  (taqlid)  or   systematic   reference   to   authoritative   precedents;   literalism,   or   the   search   for   obvious   meanings   (as   explained   above);   mysticism,   or   the   search   for   an   emotional   or   spiritual   understanding  of  God  through  ritual  practices;  and  rational  argumentation  or  personal                                                                                                                   3  Yossef  Rapoport  and  Shahab  Ahmed  (eds.),  Ibn  Taymiyya  and  his  times,  Karachi,  Pakistan,  Oxford  University  Press,   2010,  p.  84.    
  • 4. Masters  in  International  Development  |  PSIA   Islam  and  Politics  in  a  Changing  Middle  East Name  :  Edwin  Johan  Santana  Gaarder   Student  number  :  100047222     Page  4  of  12   opinion  (tafsīr  bir-­‐raʾy).  Ironically,  it  is  the  repeated  failures  and  periodic  reappearance  of   all  these  efforts  to  arrive  at  a  coherent  and  consensual  ‘truth’  that  led  to  the  long-­‐term   development   of   Islam’s   rich   exegetical   tradition.   Constant   dialogue   and   exchange   –   incentivised  by  the  promise  of  ultimately  knowing  God,  a  single,  conclusive  and  absolute   Truth  –  led  to  a  keen  awareness  among  Islamic  scholars  of  the  contradictions  inherent  in   Arabo-­‐Islamic   discourse   and   the   need   for   caution   and   rigor   in   the   justification   of   philosophical  theories  and  political  acts,  implying  a  degree  of  openness  and  self-­‐criticism   that  is  less  common  in  modern  Islamist  discourse.4  In  the  words  of  Walid  A.  Saleh:  “Sunni   medieval   hermeneutics   was   premised   on   the   impossibility   of   ever   exhausting   the   meanings   of   the   divine   word,   and   contradictory   interpretations   were   not   a   sign   of   religious  heresy”.5   One  question  that  arises  from  all  of  the  above,  of  course,  is  whether  it  is  even  possible  to   access  objective  sources  of  knowledge,  in  Arkoun’s  sense,  without  resorting  to  individual   judgments  on  the  meanings  of  Qur’anic  language.  The  response  that  will  be  explored  here   was  developed  by  Ibn  Taymiyya  in  the  13th  and  14th  centuries  C.E.  and  is  noteable  in  part   due  to  the  influence  it  has  had  on  Islamists  and  Islamic  extremists  in  the  20th  and  21st   centuries.  It  has  been  analysed  in  depth  by  Walid  A.  Saleh  in  Ibn  Taymiyya  and  the  Rise  of   Radical  Hermeneutics,  in  a  chapter  on  the  mediaeval  author’s  short  treatise  entitled  An   Introduction  to  the  Foundations  of  Qur’anic  Exegesis.  Taymiyya’s  argument  is  as  follows:     Muhammad  not  only  proclaimed  the  Qur’an  to  the  Muslims  but  also  its  meaning  […]  the   Prophet  is  presented  as  having  commented  on  the  Qur’an,  in  the  manner  of  an  exegete,  to   his   Companions   […]   Ibn   Taymiyya’s   aim   is   thus   to   turn   the   commentary   literature   into   prophetic   knowledge,   and   as   such   interpretation   itself,   as   issuing   from   an   infallible   individual,  becomes  a  type  of  knowledge  that  is  in  agreement  with  his  definition  of  what   constitute  knowledge.  One  needs  only  to  verify  that  it  is  indeed  from  Muhammad  for  it  to   become  authoritative.6   This  argument  is  circular,  of  course,  and  does  not  resolve  the  hermeneutic  problem  that   has   been   described   above:   if   the   prophet   interpreted   his   own   message,   who   has   the   authority   to   interpret   his   interpretation?   If   the   pious   ancestors   (al-­‐salaf   al-­‐salih)   are   considered  to  be  the  only  ones  who  had  access  to  the  prophet’s  interpretations,  how  can   we   ensure   that   our   interpretations   of   their   interpretations   of   his   interpretations   are   correct?   Musnad   material   –     recorded   ‘chains   of   transmission’   that   are   either   reliable                                                                                                                   4  Another  irony,  of  course,  is  that  post-­‐modern  /  post-­‐structuralist  discourse  –  which  is  generally  sceptical  about  the   existence  of  ‘God’  or  any  ‘transcendental  truth’  or  ‘grand  narrative’  –  has  completely  eliminated  this  incentive  towards   positive  knowledge.  The  challenge  faced  by  monotheists,  including  modern  Islamic  scholars,  is  to  counter  this  nihilistic   trend  by  convincingly  reinstating  the  notions  of  God  and  religious  truth  into  modern  life.       5  Rapoport  and  Ahmed  (eds.),  p.  139.     6  Ibid.,  p.  128.    
  • 5. Masters  in  International  Development  |  PSIA   Islam  and  Politics  in  a  Changing  Middle  East Name  :  Edwin  Johan  Santana  Gaarder   Student  number  :  100047222     Page  5  of  12   (sahih),  unreliable  (da’if)  or  uncertain  –  suffers  from  similar  flaws  when  used  to  ascertain   the  ‘true  meaning’  of  the  revelation:  the  nature  of  language  is  such  that,  in  the  manner  of   Chinese  whispers,  a  message  is  transformed  every  time  it  is  received  and  /  or  reproduced   by  an  individual  subject.  In  some  senses,  therefore,  one  could  claim  that  Ibn  Taymiyya’s   exegetical  approach  is  similar  to  the  post-­‐structuralist  position  on  the  endless  deferral  of   the  signified,  which  suggests  that  one  can  never  arrive  at  ‘truth’  or  meaning  through  the   use  of  language.  “In  the  final  analysis”,  writes  Saleh,  “hermeneutics  to  Ibn  Taymiyya  is  not   a   repeatable   process   or   approach;   one   cannot   fathom   the   method   used   by   the   Companions  and  the  Successors  and  use  the  same  method  to  arrive  at  the  truth  again  and   independently”.7  Rather,  Taymiyya  held  that  “the  best  way  to  interpret  the  Qur’an  is  by   Qur’an”,   thus   acting   as   a   precursor   to   structuralists   and   post-­‐structuralists   like   Roland   Barthes,  who  claim  that  a  given  text  can  only  be  explained  through  the  use  of  the  text   itself.8   Another,  related  quandary  that  emerges  from  the  life  and  works  of  Ibn  Taymiyya  and  his   disciples   (both   mediaeval   and   modern)   concerns   the   relationship   between   theoretical   knowledge  –  as  established  by  the  Quran  and  the  sunna  –  and  praxis,  as  discussed  by   Caterina  Bori:   …association  with  the  Shaykh  seems  to  have  implied  not  only  loyalty  to  his  teachings,  but   also  a  dynamic  sharing  of  his  commitment  to  public,  direct  action  in  the  name  of  religion.   Some  well-­‐known  instances  include  Ibn  Taymiyya  and  his  jama’a  attacking  Damascus  wine   shops,  breaking  wine  jars,  pouring  wine  on  the  floor  and  censuring  wine  sellers.9   One   wonders   whether   the   direct   public   actions   described   above   were   based   on   a   meticulously   argued   legal   opinion   (fatwa)   following   the   application   of   the   exegetical   method   described   by   Saleh,   or   whether   Ibn   Taymiyya   was   willing   to   disregard   certain   Qur’anic  injunctions  (on  the  right  to  private  property,  for  example)  in  favour  of  others   (the  illegality  of  alcohol)  and  thus  to  act  on  the  basis  of  his  own  preferences,  without   having   recourse   to   explicit   statements   from   the   Quran   or   the   sunna   justifying   the   aforesaid  preferences  and  actions  (e.g.  the  destruction  of  wine  shops).10  In  fact,  it  would   seem   that   Taymiyya   was   willing   to   employ   some   “intellectual   creativity”   in   his   interpretations  of  the  Qur’an  and  the  sunna  –  albeit  from  within  the  stringent  literalist                                                                                                                   7  Ibid.,  p.  143.   8  Vincent  B.  Leitch  (ed.),  The  Norton  Anthology  of  Theory  and  Criticism,  London,  W.W.  Norton  and  Company,  2001,  p.   1457.   9  Rapoport  and  Ahmed  (eds.),  p.  30.     10  Although  I  have  not  read  the  Quran  and  the  sunna  in  their  entirety,  a  quick  search  suggests  that  statements  on  the   illegal  nature  of  alcohol  in  Islam  are  formulated  as  commands  for  individuals  to  abstain  from  consumption,  rather  than   as  calls  for  activism  and  “moral  policing”  of  the  sort  practised  by  Ibn  Taymiyya  and  his  colleagues.      
  • 6. Masters  in  International  Development  |  PSIA   Islam  and  Politics  in  a  Changing  Middle  East Name  :  Edwin  Johan  Santana  Gaarder   Student  number  :  100047222     Page  6  of  12   standards  that  he  had  set  himself  –  in  order  to  advance  his  own  political  agenda.11  The   most  famous  example  of  this  is  his  ruling  on  the  legality  of  armed  resistance  against  the   13th -­‐century  Mongol  invasions  of  the  Levant,  which  has  been  discussed  in  depth  in  Ibn   Taymiyya  and  His  Times.12  Whereas  Ibn  Taymiyya  was  often  criticised  by  contemporaries   for   the   “excessive   features   of   [his]   personality:   his   choleric   moods,   his   fondness   of   supremacy   (riyasa),   his   contempt   for   his   fellow   ‘ulama   and   his   rough   manners”,   his   willingness  to  instrumentalise  Islamic  teaching  in  order  to  urge  opposition  to  the  Mongols   ensured  that  “people  –  and  all  sorts  of  people  –  loved  him  and  supported  him  until  his   death”.13  In   other   words,   despite   his   literalist   and   seemingly   unforgiving   approach   to   Islamic  precepts,  it  seems  that  the  manner  in  which  he  chose  to  live  his  life  and  put  his   faith  into  practice  guaranteed  his  position  as  a  figure  of  public  reverence,  at  a  period  in   time  when  his  compatriots  were  faced  with  the  threat  of  external  aggression.     Given   all   of   the   above   (the   elusiveness   of   objective   knowledge,   the   slipperiness   of   ‘meaning’,  the  centrifugal  tendencies  of  rational  thought,  the  limitations  of  literalism)  one   cannot  be  blamed  for  asking:  how  is  the  individual  Muslim  supposed  to  derive  a  praxis   and  a  political  position  from  Islamic  teachings,  which  are  meant  to  encompass  all  realms   of  human  life?  This  question  is  at  the  heart  of  a  movement  which  emerged  in  Egypt  in  the   first  half  of  the  20th  century  and  which  has,  since  then,  often  seen  fit  to  draw  inspiration   from  Ibn  Taymiyya.  The  originators,  theorists  and  practitioners  of  this  movement  –  known   as  Islamism  or  political  Islam  –  operated  in  a  context  that  was,  of  course,  fundamentally   different   from   that   of   Ibn   Taymiyya,   and   they   did   not   always   have   an   equally   firm   grounding   in   Islamic   scholarship   as   their   mediaeval   predecessors.   Both   Hassan   al-­‐Bann   and  Sayyid  Qutb,  for  example,  were  educated  at  the  Dar  al’Ulum,  “an  institution  founded   in   the   late   nineteenth   century   to   establish   something   of   a   middle   ground   between   al-­‐ Azhar   University   in   Cairo   and   modern,   secular   education,   although   it   gradually   veered   towards  the  latter”.14  Less  familiar  with  the  traditional  Islamic  disciplines  (which  were  the   realm   of   the   ‘ulama),   exposed   to   external   cultural   influences   and   intimidated   by   the   technological   and   economic   superiority   of   the   Western   powers,   these   Muslim   intellectuals   began   to   seek   refuge   in   the   “word   of   God   […]   without   the   mediation   of   present   or   past   scholars,   […]   plain   Islam   as   it   was   understood   by   its   first   adherent,   Muhammad,  and  his  sincere  Companions”.15  Unlike  Ibn  Taymiyya,  however,  the  Islamists’   recourse   to   literalism   was   not   an   attempt   to   engage   with   and   challenge   other                                                                                                                   11  Rapoport  and  Ahmed.,  p.  356.     12  Ibid.     13  Ibid.,  p.  37  and  p.  41.   14    Roxanne  L.  Euben  and  Muhammad  Qasim  Zaman,  Princeton  Readings  in  Islamist  Thought:  Texts  and  Contexts  from   al-­‐Banna  to  Bin  Laden,  Oxford,  United  Kingdom,  Princeton  University  Press,  2009,  p.  10.   15  Sayyid  Qutb,  cited  in  Euben  and  Zaman,  p.  15.    
  • 7. Masters  in  International  Development  |  PSIA   Islam  and  Politics  in  a  Changing  Middle  East Name  :  Edwin  Johan  Santana  Gaarder   Student  number  :  100047222     Page  7  of  12   interpretative   practices,   but   was   rather   a   way   to   “sidestep   the   exegetical   tradition”   altogether,   to   “write   outside,   and   often   in   conspicuous   opposition   to,   any   such   framework”.16  For  Qutb  in  particular,  the  exegetical  tradition  is  an  unwelcome  distraction   from  the  existential  struggle  (jihad)  that  should  be  prioritised  by  all  Muslims,  a  struggle  to   protect  the  revealed  truth  of  Islam  from  the  myriad  threats  posed  by  the  modern  world   (jahiliyya).   By   using   the   word   jihad   –   which   simultaneously   invokes   the   psychological   struggle  of  individual  believers  and  the  Holy  War  that  must  be  waged  against  anti-­‐Islamic   forces  –  Qutb  makes  it  clear  that  the  ultimate  calling  is  to  revive  Islam  through  praxis  and   not  through  theory,  through  action  and  not  through  language,  using  the  sword  and  not   the  pen.  Although  his  work  is  “complex,  polyvalent  and  susceptible  to  multiple  readings”,   it  is  this  radical  emphasis  on  the  practice  of  Islam  that  has  inspired  a  number  of  violent   acts,  and  has  prompted  one  journalist  to  label  him  “The  Philosopher  of  Islamic  Terror”.17   Qutb’s  position  is  not  uncontested  within  the  realm  of  political  Islam,  though,  and  it  is   instructive  to  note  the  significant  differences  between  Qutb  and  other  members  of  the   Muslim  Brotherhood  such  as  Yusuf  al-­‐Qaradawi,  a  salafi  ‘literalist’  and  a  sheikh  of  al-­‐Azhar   who  has  vigorously  opposed  the  “outright  dismissal”  of  “Islamic  history  and  civilization”   “at  the  hands  of  Islamists  like  Qutb”.18  Al-­‐Qaradawi’s  positions  are  indicative  of  what  can   be   achieved   through   religious   teaching   in   a   strong   institution   that,   despite   numerous   politically  motivated  encroachments  over  the  years,  has  maintained  some  independence   from   the   Egyptian   government.   These   positions   are   summarised   by   Mona   Hassan   in   Modern  Interpretations  and  Misinterpretations  of  a  Medieval  Scholar:   In  the  realm  of  politics  and  broader  social  interaction,  al-­‐Qaradawi  locates  the  origin  of   the   contemporary   malaise   of   Islam   in   the   mentalities   of   some   Muslim   groups,   ranging   from   the   constantly   beseiged,   the   literalist,   the   harsh   and   narrow-­‐minded,   to   the   excessively  traditionalistic.  Al-­‐Qaradawi  advocates  instead  that  Muslims  should  develop  a   depth  of  understanding  that  is  attuned  to  the  ways  of  the  world,  reflects  the  overall  aims   of  the  Shari’a  and  recognizes  the  importance  of  prioritization  and  balance.  Critically,  al-­‐ Qaradawi  urges  Islamists  to  break  out  of  an  isolationist  mode  (where  they  only  speak  and   write   to   one   another)   and   emphasizes   the   importance   of   engaging   in   sincere   and   productive  dialogue  with  other  groups,  such  as  secular  nationalists  […]  local  regimes  [and]   Western  governments  and  intellectuals.19   By  recommending  that  Muslims  “develop  an  understanding  that  is  attuned  to  the  ways  of   the  world”,  al-­‐Qaradawi  seems  to  be  working  on  the  assumption  that  it  is  impossible  to                                                                                                                   16  Euben  and  Zaman,  p.  16.     17   Berman,  cited  in  Euben  and  Zaman,  p.  129.     18  Euben  and  Zaman,  p.  17.     19   Rapoport  and  Ahmed.,  p.  353.  
  • 8. Masters  in  International  Development  |  PSIA   Islam  and  Politics  in  a  Changing  Middle  East Name  :  Edwin  Johan  Santana  Gaarder   Student  number  :  100047222     Page  8  of  12   retrieve   the   “plain”   meaning   of   “the   word   of   God”,   “as   it   was   understood   by   its   first   adherent,  Muhammad,  and  his  sincere  companions”.  Instead,  one’s  understanding  needs   to  be  tuned  –  rather  like  a  radio  –  so  that  it  is  on  the  same  wavelength  as  the  rest  of  the   modern  world.  His  emphasis  on  the  “overall  aims”  of  the  shari’a  shows  a  willingness  to   engage  in  a  debate  over  differing  interpretations  of  what  those  aims  actually  are,  and  in   doing   so   he   declares   his   exegetical   strategy   to   be   one   of   “prioritization   and   balance”,   implying   that   one   must   use   reason   (‘aql)   to   evaluate   the   diverse   and   sometimes   conflicting  principles  in  the  Qur’an.  Lastly,  al-­‐Qaradawi  acknowledges  that  there  is  a  need   to   change   the   “harsh   and   narrow-­‐minded   […]   mentalities”   of   those   who   inhabit   the   “isolationist  mode”,  where  opinions  and  interpretations  are  reinforced  through  endless   reiteration  by  conformist  members  “who  only  speak  and  write  to  one  another”,  leaving   beliefs   unchallenged   and   conclusions   unquestioned.   As   such,   he   inserts   himself   into   a   long  tradition  of  Islamic  scholars  who  considered  the  hard  (and  often  thankless)  quest  for   meaning  to  be  a  recurrent  duty,  one  that  can  only  be  enriched  by  “engaging  in  sincere   and   productive   dialogue”   with   groups   that   hold   different   opinions   and   beliefs.   In   al-­‐ Qaradawi’s  work,  the  ‘other’  thus  becomes  a  mirror  of  the  self,  a  test  of  faith,  a  tool  for   self-­‐reflection   and   self-­‐criticism   that   can   lead   the   individual   to   a   more   sophisticated   understanding  and  a  more  refined  practice  of  Islam.     This   approach,   however,   presupposes   that   the   ‘other’   is   willing   to   play   his   part   in   a   “sincere   and   productive”   dialogue,   which   is   not   always   the   case.   On   the   contrary,   “Western   governments   and   intellectuals”   have   historically   been   either   hostile   or   condescending   towards   Islamic   culture,   often   coopting   “local   governments”   in   their   imperialist   exploits,   as   Edward   Said   demonstrated   to   such   effect   in   his   post-­‐colonial   masterpiece:  Orientalism  (1978).20  It  is  important  to  recognise,  here,  that  the  experience   of  European  colonisation  in  the  regions  that  used  to  be  part  of  Ottoman  Empire  (or  other   Islamic   empires)   was   not   merely   a   matter   of   economic   and   political   subjugation   to   Western  powers,  it  also  entailed  a  profound  process  of  cultural  delegitimisation.  Frantz   Fanon,  an  expatriate  activist  of  the  FLN  in  Algeria,  described  this  process  as  follows:     Colonial  domination,  because  it  is  total  and  tends  to  oversimplify,  very  soon  manages  to   disrupt  in  spectacular  fashion  the  cultural  life  of  a  conquered  people  […]  Every  effort  is   made  to  bring  the  colonized  person  to  admit  the  inferiority  of  his  culture  […As  a  result,  the   native]  intellectual  throws  himself  in  frenzied  fashion  into  the  frantic  acquisition  of  the   culture  of  the  occupying  power  and  takes  every  opportunity  of  unfavorably  criticizing  his   own  national  culture.21                                                                                                                   20  Vincent  B.  Leitch  (ed.),  pp.  1986-­‐2012.     21  Ibid.,  p.  1587.    
  • 9. Masters  in  International  Development  |  PSIA   Islam  and  Politics  in  a  Changing  Middle  East Name  :  Edwin  Johan  Santana  Gaarder   Student  number  :  100047222     Page  9  of  12   In  other  words,  once  a  society  has  been  forced  to  incorporate  foreign  elements  that  –   through   economic   and   military   might   –   are   made   to   seem   superior,   it   becomes   increasingly  difficult  to  seek  solace  in  local  cultures,  which  have  been  violently  disparaged   and  discredited  by  the  the  local  intelligentsia  as  well  as  by  the  colonial  powers.  In  the  case   of  Islam,  the  challenge  is  to  retrieve  a  discourse  from  a  distant  past  and  reinstate  it  as  the   main   source   of   self-­‐identification   in   lands   that   are   no   longer   entirely   and   essentially   Muslim,   or   (to   use   Islamic   terminology)   where   the   integrity   of   the   umma   has   been   violated.  Although  is  true  that  Islam  has  been  able,  throughout  history,  to  accommodate   minorities  and  remain  open  to  outside  influences  (e.g.  Greek  philosophy,  Persian  political   theory)  the  difference  is  clear:  in  the  social  structure  of  the  former  Islamic  empires,  Sunni   Islam  occupied  a  hegemonic  position  and  syncretic  tendencies  were  rigorously  managed   by  the  religious  establishment;  in  a  post-­‐colonial  world,  by  contrast,  it  is  a  common  belief   that  Islam  must  regain  a  position  of  control  before  it  can  begin  to  engage  with  Western   culture,  otherwise  it  will  risk  being  undermined  by  jahiliyya.  Under  these  circumstances,   the   appeal   of   Qutb’s   uncompromising   calls   for   an   “Islamic   State”   (dawla   islamiyya)   become  easier  to  understand:  Muslims  will  only  be  free  to  choose  the  right  path  when   they  are  able  to  proclaim  “the  universal  freedom  of  every  person  and  community  from   servitude  to  any  other  individual  or  society,  the  end  of  man’s  arrogance  and  selfishness,   the  establishment  of  the  sovereignty  of  Allah  and  His  Lordship  throughout  the  world,  and   the  rule  of  the  divine  shari’a  in  human  affairs”.22   Qutb’s   radical   approach   gains   traction   from   the   sense,   not   uncommon   in   the   Muslim   world,  that  Islam  is  under  threat.  Although  there  is  some  disagreement  about  the  nature   of   this   threat,   different   jihadi   movements   have   capitalised   on   this   general   zeitgeist   in   order  to  attack  the  specific  ‘enemies  of  Islam’  that  each  of  them  considers  to  be  most   pernicious.   In   the   case   of   al-­‐Jihad   and   al-­‐Jamaʻa   al-­‐Islamiya,   for   example,   the   military   regime  in  Egypt  of  the  60s  and  70s  was  identified  as  the  principal  target,  and  remained  as   such  even  when  their  members  joined  the  war  against  the  Soviet  Union  in  Afghanistan  in   the  1980s.23  In  the  case  of  Abdullah  Yusuf  Azzam,  by  contrast,  the  war  in  Afghanistan  was   the  beginning  of  a  pan-­‐Islamic  effort  to  expel  what  he  perceived  to  be  the  illegitimate   occupiers  of  Islam  lands,  which  included,  of  course,  the  Israelis  in  Palestine.  For  Usama   bin  Laden  –  who  learnt  the  ropes  of  jihad  from  Azzam  and  al-­‐Zawahiri  in  Afghanistan  –   the  decision  to  found  al-­‐Qa’ida  and  attack  the  United  States  of  America  was  based  on   what  he  perceived  to  be  the  invasion  of  Saudi  Arabia  by  American  forces  during  the  First   Gulf  War  in  1990.24  Many  efforts  have  been  made  to  identify  the  underlying  drivers  of                                                                                                                   22  Sayyid  Qutb,  cited  in  Euben  and  Zaman,  p.  42.     23  Lawrence  Wright,  The  Looming  Tower:  Al-­‐Qaeda’s  Road  to  9/11,  London,  Penguin,  Kindle  Edition,  2011.     24  Cf.  Usama  bin  Laden,  Declaration  of  War  Against  the  Americans  Occupying  the  Land  of  the  Two  Holy  Places,  in  Euben   and  Zaman,  p.  436.    
  • 10. Masters  in  International  Development  |  PSIA   Islam  and  Politics  in  a  Changing  Middle  East Name  :  Edwin  Johan  Santana  Gaarder   Student  number  :  100047222     Page  10  of  12   violence  in  these  men  and  their  associates,  but  the  explanatory  power  of  these  theories  is   limited   at   best:   rational   choice   theories,   for   example,   are   inconsistent   with   the   observation  that  violent  acts  are  often  counter-­‐productive  and  fail  to  bring  about  stated   goals;   socio-­‐economic   theories   struggle   to   account   for   the   fact   that   mujahideen   often   stem   from   middle-­‐class   backgrounds   and   are   quite   well   educated;   psychopathological   analysis   finds   that   “most   terrorists   do   not   meet   diagnostic   criteria   for   a   major   mental   illness  or  for  sociopathy”;  and  so  on  and  so  forth.25  This  paper  has  chosen  to  set  aside   scientific  theories  in  order  to  analyse  the  Arabo-­‐Islamic  discourse  that  has  been  hijacked   by  these  men,  a  discourse  that  was  developed  hundreds  of  years  ago  by  the  first  Muslims   and  their  successors,  by  mediaeval  Islamic  scholars  and  philosophers  like  Ibn  Taymiyya   who  lived  through  the  “Golden  Age”  of  Islam  and  contributed  to  the  rich  cultural  heritage   that  is  still  treasured  by  Muslims  today.  This  discourse,  I  would  argue,  has  been  used  to   generate  an  aura  of  heroism  and  authenticity  around  the  jihadi  movement  that  strikes  a   deep  chord  among  some  Muslims,  playing  on  their  fears  that  the  Islamic  way  of  life  is   becoming   increasingly   marginalized,   particularly   among   secular   elites.   This   fear   is   reinforced  by  the  equally  reductionist  discourse  that  is  employed  by  noteable  figures  in   the  West,  including  Geert  Wilders  in  the  Netherlands,  Marine  Le  Pen  in  France,  Anders   Breivik  in  Norway,  the  PEGIDA  movement  in  Germany  and,  of  course,  George  Bush,  the   founding  father  of  the  War  on  Terror.  By  using  phrases  like  “axis  of  evil”,  “you’re  either   with   us   or   against   us”,   “islamicization   of   the   West”,   “fascist   book”   and   so   on,   these   ideologues   accelerate   the   process   of   polarisation   and   mutual   essentialisation.26  In   the   words  of  Catherine  Belsey:   Society  blames  the  demons  it  has  created  for  its  own  inevitable  tensions,  and  allows  itself   to  believe  that  their  elimination  will  make  it  whole.  There  is  every  danger  that  in  the  21st   century  the  West  will  construct  as  its  antagonist  in  this  sense  the  Islamic  fundamentalist,   who  can  then  be  held  accountable  for  global  disunity.27   The  gathering  storm  of  Islamophobia  in  the  West,  however,  is  a  different  topic  altogether,   and  this  paper  will  now  conclude  by  returning  to  the  notion  of  Arabo-­‐Islamic  discourse   and  suggesting  some  remedies  that  might  serve  to  counter  the  radical  interpretation  of   Islamic  texts  that  have  been  adopted  by  violent  extremists.  To  begin  with,  it  is  essential  to                                                                                                                   25  Jeff  Victoroff,  The  Mind  of  the  Terrorist:  A  Review  and  Critique  of  Psychological  Approaches,  The  Journal  of  Conflict   Resolution,  Vol.  49,  No.  1,  February  2005,  pp.  3-­‐42.     26  BBC,  Dutch  anti-­‐Islam  MP  Geert  Wilders  goes  on  trial,  4  October  2010,  http://www.bbc.com/news/world-­‐europe-­‐ 11464025,  (accessed  27  April  2015);  Henry  Samuel,  National  Front's  Marine  Le  Pen  to  prove  formidable  rival  to  Nicolas   Sarkozy,  The  Telegraph,  26  December  2010,   http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/france/8225697/National-­‐Fronts-­‐Marine-­‐Le-­‐Pen-­‐to-­‐prove-­‐ formidable-­‐rival-­‐to-­‐Nicolas-­‐Sarkozy.html,  (accessed  27  April  2015).   27  Catherine  Belsey,  Post-­‐Structuralism:  A  Short  Introduction,  Oxford,  United  Kingdom,  Oxford  University  Press,  Kindle   Edition,  2002,  p.  94.    
  • 11. Masters  in  International  Development  |  PSIA   Islam  and  Politics  in  a  Changing  Middle  East Name  :  Edwin  Johan  Santana  Gaarder   Student  number  :  100047222     Page  11  of  12   improve  the  quality  of  religious  education  in  Muslim  countries  so  that  young,  educated   Muslims   are   made   aware   of   the   wealth   and   diversity   of   the   Islamic   tradition.28  It   is   particularly  important  to  promote  the  teaching  of  mediaeval  Islamic  hermeneutics  and   the  politics  of  religious  dissent,  of  which  Ibn  Taymiyya’s  unconventional  Hanbalism  is  only   one   example.   In   the   long   term,   the   teaching   of   structuralist   and   post-­‐structuralist   linguistics   could   serve   to   further   encourage   interpretative   practice   and   tolerance   for   polysemy  within  Islam.  Secondly,  it  is  crucial  that  the  Islamist  movement  be  provided  with   a  safe  and  free  political  space  within  which  it  can  express  itself.  In  Egypt,  mosques  have   sometimes  found  themselves  playing  this  role,  but  even  these  sacred  spaces  have  been   subject   to   interference   by   successive   military   governments   over   the   last   fifty   years,   succumbing   to   the   megalomanic   growth   of   the   Egyptian   state   apparatus.   Ayman   al-­‐ Zawahiri  is  the  quintessential  example  of  how  such  trends  towards  totalitarian  control   can  lead  to  violent  outcomes:  persecuted,  imprisoned  and  tortured,  al-­‐Zawahiri  became   more  and  more  radical  over  the  course  of  his  life  and  is  now  the  nominal  leader  of  al-­‐ Qa’ida.29  Although  it  has  not  been  possible  to  explore  the  Arab  Spring  in  this  paper,  for   lack   of   space   and   time,   it   is   suggested   that   further   research   could   be   carried   out   in   Tunisia,   where   an   Islamist   government   conceded   defeat   in   the   2014   election   and   peacefully  handed  power  over  to  its  secular  opponents.  To  what  extent  has  this  peaceful   process  been  determined  by  a  reciprocal  recognition,  by  Islamists  and  secularists,  of  the   legitimate   discourse   mobilised   by   their   political   counterparts?   How   is   Arabo-­‐Islamic   discourse  employed  now  that  the  Islamists  are  in  opposition,  and  how  has  it  changed?   Lastly,  it  is  absolutely  paramount  that  Western  governments  revise  their  policies  towards   the  region,  in  order  to  address  the  siege  mentality  that  currently  prevails  in  the  minds  of   many  Muslims.  The  almost  compulsive  interventions  that  have  been  carried  out  over  the   last  hundred  years  –  the  economic  sanctions  against  Iran,  the  mismanaged  wars  in  Iraq   and  Afghanistan,  the  constant  support  for  autocratic  regimes  and  the  bungled  response   to  the  Israel  crisis  –  all  need  to  be  scaled  back  and  the  rhetoric  scaled  down  by  several   notches.  Only  when  when  the  religion  is  felt  to  be  free  from  physical  threats,  it  is  argued,   will   Islamic   discourse   shift   its   emphasis   back   again,   from   praxis   to   theory,   from   the   practice   of   war   (jihad)   to   the   philosophy   of   peace   (salaam)   which   is   at   the   root   (grammatical  and  philosophical)  of  Islam  itself.                                                                                                                         28  Towards  the  end  of  a  class  on  Islam  and  Politics  taught  by  Stéphane  Lacrois  at  Sciences-­‐Po,  for  example,  the  author  of   this  paper  heard  North  African  and  Middle  Eastern  fellow  students  claim  –  more  than  once!  –  that  they  had  learnt  more   about  Islam  in  Paris  than  they  had  in  their  home  countries.   29  Lawrence  Wright,  The  Looming  Tower:  Al-­‐Qaeda’s  Road  to  9/11,  London,  Penguin,  Kindle  Edition.  
  • 12. Masters  in  International  Development  |  PSIA   Islam  and  Politics  in  a  Changing  Middle  East Name  :  Edwin  Johan  Santana  Gaarder   Student  number  :  100047222     Page  12  of  12   WORKS  CITED   Arkoun,  M.,  Essais  sur  la  Pensée  Islamique,  Paris,  France,  G.-­‐P.  Maisonneuve  et  Larose,   1973.   BBC,  Dutch  anti-­‐Islam  MP  Geert  Wilders  goes  on  trial,  4  October  2010,   http://www.bbc.com/news/world-­‐europe-­‐11464025,  (accessed  27  April  2015).   Belsey  C.,  Post-­‐Structuralism:  A  Short  Introduction,  Oxford,  United  Kingdom,  Oxford   University  Press,  Kindle  Edition,  2002.     Euben  R.L.  and  Zaman  M.Q.,  Princeton  Readings  in  Islamist  Thought:  Texts  and  Contexts   from  al-­‐Banna  to  Bin  Laden,  Oxford,  United  Kingdom,  Princeton  University  Press,  2009.   Leitch  V.B.  (ed.),  The  Norton  Anthology  of  Theory  and  Criticism,  London,  W.W.  Norton  and   Company,  2001.     Rapoport  Y.  and  Ahmed  S.  (eds.),  Ibn  Taymiyya  and  his  times,  Karachi,  Pakistan,  Oxford   University  Press,  2010.     Samuel  H.,  National  Front's  Marine  Le  Pen  to  prove  formidable  rival  to  Nicolas  Sarkozy,   The  Telegraph,  26  December  2010,   http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/france/8225697/National-­‐Fronts-­‐ Marine-­‐Le-­‐Pen-­‐to-­‐prove-­‐formidable-­‐rival-­‐to-­‐Nicolas-­‐Sarkozy.html,  (accessed  27  April   2015).   Victoroff  J.,  The  Mind  of  the  Terrorist:  A  Review  and  Critique  of  Psychological  Approaches,   The  Journal  of  Conflict  Resolution,  Vol.  49,  No.  1,  February  2005,  pp.  3-­‐42.     Wright  L.,  The  Looming  Tower:  Al-­‐Qaeda’s  Road  to  9/11,  London,  Penguin,  Kindle  Edition,   2011.