Islam and the Challenge of Civilization
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Western Europe is now home to millions of Muslims, where Christianity and Judaism have come to coexist with secular humanism and positivist law. In Islam and the Challenge of Civilization, Meddeb advocates a new approach to Islam in tune with today’s diverse society. Rather than calling for “moderate” Islam—which Meddeb views as thinly disguised Whabism—he calls for an Islam inspired by the great Sufi thinkers, whose practice of religion was not bound by doctrine.
With a return to long-standing doctrinal questions, Meddeb calls upon Muslims to distinguish between Islam’s spiritual message and the temporal, material, and historically grounded origins of its founding scriptures. He contrasts periods of Islamic history—when Muslim philosophers engaged in lively dialogue with other faiths and civilizations—with modern Islam’s collective amnesia of this past.
In this erudite and impassioned study, Meddeb demonstrates that Muslims cannot join the concert of nations unless they set aside outmoded notions such as jihad. Ultimately, he argues, feuding among the monotheisms must give way to the more important issue of citizenship in today’s global setting.
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Islam and the Challenge of Civilization - Abdelwahab Meddeb
Islam and the Challenge of Civilization
Copyright © 2013 Fordham University Press
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other—except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publisher.
This work was originally published in French as Pari de civilisation, © Éditions du Seuil, 2009.
Cet ouvrage a béneficié du soutien des Programmes d’aide à la publication de l’Institut Français.
This work, published as part of a program of aid for publication, received support from the Institut Français.
Ouvrage publié avec le concours du Ministère français chargé de la Culture–Centre National du Livre.
This work has been published with the assistance of the French Ministry of Culture–National Center for the Book.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Meddeb, Abdelwahab.
Islam and the challenge of civilization / Abdelwahab Meddeb ; translated by Jane Kuntz.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references.
1. Islam—21st century. 2. Islamic civilization. 3. Muslims—Non-Muslim countries. 4. Islamic renewal. I. Kuntz, Jane. II. Title.
BP161.3.M43 2013
297.2'709051—dc23
2012050168
Printed in the United States of America
15 14 13 5 4 3 2 1
First edition
Contents
Prologue: Religion and Violence
1. The Koran as Myth
2. The Clash of Interpretations
3. On the Arab Decline
4. Civilization or Extinction
5. Enlightenment between High and Low Voltage
6. The Physics and Metaphysics of Nature
Epilogue: Religion and Cosmopolitics
Appendixes
A. The Veil Unveiled: Dialogue with Christian Jambet
B. Obama in Cairo
Notes
Prologue: Religion and Violence
All is not well with Islam. In fact, it is seriously ailing. I have ventured to diagnose this ailment and to prescribe the cure in four previous books written since the horrendous attacks of September 11, 2001.¹ This new work is an extension of the scrutiny undertaken in those earlier ones. I open with a reminder that this ailment can be best summed up as the use of violence in the name of God. I will pursue this point of inquiry, asking whether it is somehow a fate peculiar to Islam, or whether we are dealing here with a structural feature shared by religious constructions in general.
I posit from the outset that violence produced by belief is not unique to Islam but finds virulent expression even among beliefs issuing from the Indian subcontinent, a region stereotypically associated with a spirituality grounded in the miracle of nonviolence. Thus, an apparent predisposition to violence is in evidence beyond the sphere of monotheisms, whose internal conflict, need I point out, is itself fratricidal by nature.
One has only to survey monotheisms over space and time to note that wars fought in the name of the Lord were biblical before they were Koranic. One typical illustration would be the massacre ordered by an angry Moses upon discovering that his people had lapsed into paganism. As a result of the Golden Calf episode, the Levites carried out the orders of their prophet and slaughtered three thousand people in one day (Exodus 32:28). Joshua, successor to the founder, was no exception. If readers need convincing, I would urge them to reread the passage relating to the massacre he perpetrated after the fall of Jericho, where he spared neither man, woman, nor child, nor even animals (Joshua 6:21). Today, certain fanatical Jewish literalists are seeking to universalize and contemporize what they call the Judgment of Amalek, which refers to the chief of the Amalekites, whom the Hebrews had to combat, because they were preventing the Hebrews from getting to the Promised Land (Exodus 17:8–15).
Thus, when it comes to violence, the Prophet of Islam is a direct descendant of the Old Testament. The much-discussed Verse of the Sword
ordaining that pagans be killed and the War Verse
calling for a fight to the death against Christians and Jews both have a biblical
ring (Koran 9:5, 29). Yet it is these verses that feed the murderous fanaticism of fundamentalist Muslims.
If the exercise of violence seems consistent with revealed scripture, nevertheless an important matter of degree distinguishes Judaism from Islam, which is that the latter universalizes what the former particularizes. Where Judaism wages the Lord’s war for the Holy Land only, Islam sets its sights on the entire world. Contemporary Muslim fundamentalists did not invent jihād, the driving force that propelled the expansion of Islam from the start. As an eleventh-century Chinese chronicler, Ou-Yang Hsui, attests, Muslim troops hurled themselves into the thick of battle, hoping for martyrdom, after their chief had galvanized them with promises of paradise for those who die in combat for the holy cause.²
Though it is true that the Gospels move away from this violence, Christians have nonetheless resorted to surprising extremes of violence over the course of history. I see in this a betrayal of Christianity’s founding message. Admittedly, Augustine theorized the just war to defend the city against barbarian invasion. He was not talking about a call to war in the name of the faith, but the Doctor of Hippo had to legitimize that call even though he knew it conflicted with the spirit of the Gospels. The notion of a just war has often been contested in Christian circles, where it is considered to be in direct contradiction with Christ’s teachings. Hence, to justify the use of violence, the notion of necessary war was introduced. Yet it took nearly a millennium and the launching of the Crusades for Christianity to arrive at a notion equivalent to jihād, perhaps to counter its effects using the same weapons.
These reminders are not intended to mitigate the malady that is afflicting Islam, but to show that believers often take their founding scriptures a step further, or even move beyond them altogether. If, throughout history, Christianity has not always honored the Gospel’s message of peace, Islam today should still strive to find a way to foil those clauses of the Koranic text that call for war. This book works toward that goal by waging what I call the war of interpretations, while placing special emphasis on the context in which the holy text itself was issued and received.
This check on violence via the return to context is absolutely crucial, with regard not only to the question of violence but also to the many anthropological anachronisms carried forward by the law that issues from the spirit and the letter of the founding text (here, of course, I am thinking of the Koran-inspired sharī‘a).
Again, with regard to violence, states founded in Islam will need to realize that it is their duty to counteract the notion of holy war, of jihād, for it flagrantly contradicts both their participation in the concert of nations and the march toward the Kantian utopia of perpetual peace
that has remained an aspiration of the times, despite the persistence of war and the hegemonic effects of the powerful, with their urge to rule the world. Indeed, an ever more diverse sample of humanity is trending toward hegemony by force of arms or economic clout. Is this not the aim of emerging nations such as China, India, and the Arab oil states alongside Europe and the United States?
Islamic countries must wake up to the fact that times have changed, that the world is a different place. When it comes to religious identity, Islam continues to perceive Christianity as if it were still its medieval antagonist, despite modern notions of nation and peoples that have circumscribed the influence of religion. And now that the whole issue of state has become postnational, the factor of religion is receding even further. In Europe, for example, religion necessarily cedes priority to the all-important prime notion of citizenship, one that involves a wholly different set of laws designed outside the kind of religious prescription that belongs to another age.
In short, if Islam is to be cured of its current affliction, it must get to that post-Islamic, postreligious place where Christianity and Judaism have managed to arrive. Only this will ease the tension that prevails among nations. But for the moment, the Islamic states—Saudi Arabia in particular—exhort their citizenry to practice a middle-of-the-road Islam, with the intention of setting them off from their fellow Muslims who live their faith according to a more extreme, maximalist interpretation. These moderates base their appeal theologically on the Koran, which refers negatively to these extremists as ghulw, calling for moderation among all the People of the Book
in interpreting their respective dogmas (Koran 4:171, 5:77).
This is a praiseworthy step, though woefully inadequate and timid, especially when it comes to the presence of Islam in Europe. Here, we have the means to achieve an operative post-Islamic space by urging the Muslim citizens of Europe to live according to their free conscience, in the spirit of positive law and the charter of human rights, abolishing any reference to sharī‘a. As such, these Muslims who make their own free choices will be practicing a more spiritualized, less legalistic worship that will draw on the mystical side of their religious tradition, the rich Sufi substratum to which I often refer in the pages that follow.
In this book, I propose a series of rereadings of the founding text and the Tradition (sunna and hadīth) to conduct this effort to neutralize and move beyond religion. This will result in a transfiguration of values achieved through an enhanced familiarity with Islamic material, not by merely glossing it or neglecting it altogether. It is by revisiting the Islamic past, by focusing on those aspects that moved civilization forward, that we will recover the means to get beyond the restrictive boundaries of identity and become active participants on the world scene, in full acknowledgment of who we once were and who we have become. In other words, the politics and poetics of the effort to neutralize and surpass cannot be effective without a fresh redeployment of the founding reference, one that inscribes Islam anew rather than suppressing or ignoring it. It is not in denial but rather in full recognition of the Islamic self that Islam’s believers will gain access to the cosmopolitan stage and will turn away from barbarity and make their contribution to contemporary world civilization. This is the challenge of civilization that I will be putting forth.
But first, believers must be freed from their worship of scripture, with its literal reading and one-track interpretation, which can only lead to violence. Next, meaning derived from the text must be placed back in the context from which it issued: I will do this at every opportunity. To carry out such a project, one has to make the Koran one’s own, to renew the energy it inspires by becoming Koran oneself, as if at the time of its reception, playing the role in the presence of the angel, as recommended by Ibn ‘Arabī, who never ceased repeating throughout his works: Be Koran unto yourself
(kun qur’ān fī nafsika). This initiative will have us experience the Koran as myth, but will not prevent us from situating it within its historical moment in order to wage the necessary hermeneutic battle and restore to the Text its myriad of meanings out of the deafening clash of interpretations.
Your cure is within you, but you are not aware
And your illness comes from within, but you see it not.
—Molla Sadra
The cure for the disease within the disease itself
—Jean-Jacques Rousseau
CHAPTER 1
The Koran as Myth
1
My relationship to Arabic, particularly Koranic Arabic, is at the core of who I am as a person. As a child, my experience of Arabic diglossia was a very physical one. My mother tongue was the Tunis vulgate, used by my mother and the women in my family home. Next, at the age of four, I was inducted into what I will call the father tongue,
a notion I borrow from Dante and his relation to Virgil, his father figure and guide in the first two parts of the Divine Comedy. Dante’s father tongue was Latin, regulated by grammar,
as distinct from the vulgate,
as he said, which we speak without rules, imitating our nurse,
¹ and which would be reinvented by the Tuscan poet once he had chosen it as his writing language. For me, the father tongue was the Arabic of the Koran, very different from the dialect, and which dates from the late seventh and early eighth centuries, an archaic idiom comparable to other dead languages that linger in the collective memory. Though one will hear anecdotally that Arabic has not changed much, there is no denying that it has actually evolved considerably. When linguists broach the topic, they speak of a language locked in time, but this fixedness is relative, for the language has undergone very deep changes, despite appearances. This ambivalence between dead or living language is what makes Arabic such an effective liturgical medium. So, at the age of four, when I was first introduced to the Koran by my father, that language began working with my mother tongue in a system of communicating vessels. My father was a theologian, an ‘alīm, a member of that last generation of traditional doctors of religion that made up the faculty of the mosque-based university of the Zaytūna (founded in the ninth century). He was thus my initiator in the full sense of the term, both for the Koran and for its language.
To this first literacy training via the Koran was added modern schooling at age six when I was enrolled in a bilingual primary school (Arabic and French). The foreign language then clustered with the other two. It would be incidental here to dwell on all the benefits of this third language (which could be called a vehicle, a language of knowledge as power) in terms of complexity, tension, situations of linguistic complicity and competition, and blurring of boundaries, none of which impeded the mutual contamination, the creation of hybrids and even creoles.
From that point forward, traditional education no longer exercised an exclusive claim on my learning time. Yet I was able to gain an insider’s perspective on the impact of this paternal decision to see that I was exposed to the Koran as material for learning to read, write, and recite. This early apprenticeship via the Koran granted a privileged status to the father tongue. From a tender age, then, young Muslims internalize the notion that the sacred language is the language of the Father, the language through which the Law is transmitted, keeping alive the genealogical principle from elder master to young initiate. This transmission is all the more effective in that, for a child catechumen, the language of initiation remains obscure, steeped in a kind of hieratic majesty that distances without separating entirely from the mother tongue, the vernacular that provides the speaker with his or her first tools of communication. I learned the Koran by heart, understanding virtually nothing. But at the same time, I did recognize phrases, words here and there, the same we used in everyday speech. My learning of the Koran came to resemble a walk through a dark forest with occasional clearings, nevertheless, where shafts of light shone on scattered bits of meaning.
This early contact with Koranic language endowed me with a penchant for what I call poetic reading. I favored a physical rapport with language, whichever one it might be. I was attentive to its scansion, to the way the combination of vowels and consonants produced a musicality. I yielded to the overwhelming desire to return the text before my eyes to its oral origins, as if sound evinced sense. Whether voiced or graphically represented, a language acquires a holy status when the signifier takes precedence over the signified.
2
This personal experience testifies to something universal in Islam. The same principle is at work where the theory and practice of Koranic psalmody (tajwīd) is concerned. The technique involved in this chanted reading is based on the construction of musical forms that exalt sound, thereby impeding access to meaning. In other words, the privilege granted to sound suppresses other forms of reception by inciting the cantor to improvise, to test harmonic patterns and rhythms that play on the effects produced by contraction and expansion, lengthening and shortening, staccato and legato, the dense and the ethereal, compact and airy, pushing vocal capacities to the limit of how they might act upon the column of air breathed in and out in an intensely disciplined and studied manner. The text is thus overwhelmed by a halo of chant whereby the melodic undulations that deliver word and phrase end up diverting attention away from syntax and meaning. The effort to produce the most exalted sound determines the diction, sometimes at the expense of grammatical and phonological logic, and obscures the syntactical patterns.
This withdrawal of meaning, this emphasis placed upon the signifier at the expense of the signified, is also present in visual systems of representation where the material object represented is the written word of the Koran. This is particularly noticeable in the move from mere inscription to decorative calligraphy within the codex, a shift marked by an aesthetic intent that gets magnified when the letter migrates from the page to cover all available surfaces, from solid objects to textiles to walls. By virtue of this migration and its underlying theory, calligraphy rose to the top rank in the hierarchy of visual arts. Once installed in the monumental order, the letter enters the vocabulary of architecture: despite its two-dimensionality, it stands out from