Why the West Is Best: A Muslim Apostate’s Defense of Liberal Democracy
The legendary Ibn Warraq is my dear friend. I decided to review his new and very excellent book Why the West is Best: A Muslim Apostate’s Defense of Liberal Democracy and to interview him here as well.
But let’s be clear from the outset. I am reviewing his book not because he is my friend. Rather, he is my friend because he writes great and important books. He is someone with whom I can share serious and witty conversations; he may very well be the best-read man I know. His familiarity with a vast array of fields is truly astounding and a great consolation (at least to me) in our world of apps and pads and short attention spans. He is supremely knowledgeable about philosophy, Islamic and Western art, music, theater, architecture, and literature, both sacred and secular.
I view Ibn Warraq as the intellectual leader of the global anti-Islamist/anti-jihadic dissident movement. He knows and supports everyone doing anti-jihad work.
As his friend, I know Ibn Warraq as a shy and rather humble man; occasionally mournful, touchingly private. He can, miraculously, be an Indian, a Frenchman, an Englishman, and a quintessential American, at any hour of the day. He inhabits all these identities. He commands many centuries of knowledge. Whatever language he may be speaking, whatever country he may be in, Ibn Warraq is mainly at home in the world of ideas. He dresses indifferently, not foppishly. He often wears a hat the way men of my father’s generation did. If you don’t stop him, he will absent-mindedly wander over to any nearby bookshelf or bookstall and immediately begin reading.
Now, on to the review, or rather, to the homage due this scholar-warrior.
Ibn Warraq has written a bracing, definitive, scholarly, masterful, unapologetic, and possibly redemptive defense of Western values. It is a rallying cry for an Islamic “Enlightenment,” not merely a “Reformation,” but one which will never happen unless Westerners engage in the most spirited defense of Western freedoms.
In Why the West is Best, Ibn Warraq urges us to “defend these rights without compromise and without fear of hurting the feelings” of potentially friendly Muslim countries or of angry Islamic terrorists. Westerners must not self-censor or censor and must not allow “barbaric laws from 7th century Arabia” to supersede Western freedom. We must end our failed policies of multicultural relativism, anti-Americanism, and anti-Westernism which have led to the most profound, possibly suicidal crisis. Indeed, this is the best way we can strengthen our like-minded allies who are trapped in theologically fundamentalist Muslim countries.
The book is not boring. It is unexpectedly charming. But it is also a riveting read.
Ibn Warraq engages in a fearless discussion of non-western — including Islamic — nations’ long histories of racism,
colonialism, imperialism, slavery, and gender and religious apartheid. This history has been omitted from textbooks, in both the East and the West. The East remains unrepentant but is neither blamed nor held accountable for these crimes; the West has fought and won wars to end slavery and has withdrawn from its former colonies. It has also steadily granted freedom and rights to both women and minorities. Nevertheless, leading Western intellectuals continue to blame only the West, never the East.
Why the West is Best is both eye-opening and radical. For example, Ibn Warraq teaches us that racism is not only confined to the West but is a world-wide plague which operates in Asia (Japan, China) India, Africa, and the Middle East. He documents the fact that Islamic Jew hatred existed in Mohammed’s time, that historically, Muslims have used the Qu’ran to justify their ceaseless persecution of Jews (and other infidels), and that such Judeophobia preceded the founding of the Jewish state thirteen centuries later; that black Africans and Arabs were more involved in the global slave trade than the Western powers; and that in the short period of time in which England colonized India, it prepared the country to become a modern democratic state. Ibn Warraq compares this to the very long colonization of India by Islam which led to the slaughter of 80 million Hindus and to the complete erasure of India’s (and for that matter, Turkey’s and Persia’s) non-Islamic past. Only Westerners lovingly restored Christian, Pagan, Buddhist, and Zoroastrian temples and only Westerners taught the people to honor rather than to erase their past glories.
Most important, Ibn Warraq describes the “mind-set” of most Muslims as intolerant, self-pitying, stagnant, and trained to blame others for their own failures. He also sees the Muslim “mind-set” as akin to that of people trapped in totalitarian regimes. The need to control thought and to sacrifice individuality characterizes both Islamic and Marxist regimes. Thus, we understand the affinity that Western “leftists” have with reactionary Islamists. Ibn Warraq contrasts this with a Western “mind-set” which is built upon Greco-Roman, Judeo-Christian, scientific, and Enlightenment foundations and is characterized by intellectual curiosity, genuine interest in the “other,” a sense of irony, the ability to engage in self-criticism, and a concern with finding the truth.
He does not view Western survival or success as due to historical imperialism, colonialism, or slavery:
The West has succeeded because of an insatiable curiosity that has fueled countless experiments and innovations. That is surely something to be proud of.
Ibn Warraq makes concrete suggestions as to what Westerners and our pro-Western allies may do. I urge that everyone read him and take his advice. Our lives, and the survival of our civilization, depend upon doing so.
I recently spoke to him about his work:
Phyllis Chesler: How do you answer the infernal accusations that because you are anti-Islam you are therefore a racist?
Ibn Warraq: I am from India, of Indian origin. Second, Islam is a religion, not a race — more and more Westerners are converting to Islam. How, then, could I possibly be considered a racist if I choose to use my constitutional rights to criticize that most criticizable of all religions, Islam? It is the duty of all those who value our Constitution and take seriously the First Amendment to criticize Islam and its non-human-rights-respecting holy book, the Koran.
PC: Why did you write this book, what do you hope it will accomplish?
IW: We have an urgent need to defend Western civilization. We, in the West in general and the United States in particular, have witnessed over the last twenty years a slow erosion of our civilizational self-confidence. Under the influence of intellectuals and academics in Western universities, and destructive intellectual fashions such as post-modernism, moral relativism, and multiculturalism, the West has lost all self-confidence in its own values, and seems incapable and unwilling to defend those values. By contrast, resurgent Islam, in all its forms, is supremely confident, and is able to exploit the West’s moral weakness and cultural confusion to demand ever more concessions from her. The growing political and demographic power of Muslim communities in the West, aided and abetted by Western apologists of Islam, not to mention a compliant, pro-Islamic USAdministration, has resulted in an ever-increasing demand for the implementation of Islamic law — the Sharia — into the fabric of Western law and Western constitutions. There is an urgent need to examine why the Sharia is totally incompatible with human rights and the US Constitution. My book proposes to examine the Sharia and its potential and actual threat to democratic principles. This book defines and defends Western values, strengths and freedoms often taken for granted. This book also tackles the taboo subjects of racism in Asian culture, Arab slavery, and Islamic imperialism.
I hope Western readers come away with some pride of the achievements of Western civilization after reading this book, and no longer have feelings of guilt for all the ills of the world, and are better prepared to defend Western values. Pride, self-confidence, and a willingness to fight for Western civilization — that is what I hope my book will instill into its readers.
PC: You begin the book by writing in depth and with both knowledge and love of New York City. Why?
IW: It begins with an homage to New York City, as a metaphor for all we hold dear in Western culture — pluralism, individualism, freedom of expression and thought, the complete freedom to pursue life, liberty, and happiness unhampered by totalitarian regimes, and theocratic doctrines. In New York, I show the principles of the United States Constitution being applied in a real, vibrant place. I give the term “Western civilization” a physical context in the very concrete of the city. The details of New York’s streets and structures create a believable, breathing image of Western civilization, just as Dickens created believable, breathing characters. See this building, I say — it’s an example of beautiful architecture, one of the glories of New York, and as integral to Western civilization as the works of Shakespeare. See that building — it’s the New York Public Library. Inside the Beaux Arts masterpiece is an institution that embodies key aspects of Western civilization: philanthropy, education, the love of knowledge, the preservation of all the best that has been written and published. Each time you admire the façade of the New York Public Library, you are paying homage to Western civilization. Each time you consult a book in the magnificent Main Reading Room, you are participating in the maintenance of Western civilization. By working and living in New York, you are breathing Western civilization, continuously reminded of its benefits and its values. Henry James, going up the East River, found the wide waters of New York exhilarating. But it was left to P. G. Wodehouse’s Bertie Wooster to discover the what and why of New York:
The odd part of it was that after the first shock of seeing all this frightful energy the thing didn’t seem so strange. I’ve spoken to fellows since who have been to New York, and they tell me they found it just the same. Apparently there’s something in the air, either the ozone or the phosphates or something, which makes you sit up and take notice. A kind of zip, as it were. A sort of bally freedom, if you know what I mean, that gets in your blood and bucks you up, and makes you feel that “God’s in His Heaven: All’s right with the world,” and you don’t care if you’ve got odd socks on.
A sort of bally freedom, yes indeed.
PC: What have you just been working on in Europe?
IW: I have been trying to learn German, and have been working with my German colleagues preparing for a conference in March 2012 on the origins of Islam and the Koran. I have found the first task fiendishly difficult — a question of age and memory. I have been more successful in encouraging my colleagues to write more articles on various aspects of the Koran and the early history of Islam.
PC: What can other Muslims and ex-Muslims like yourself do now that they are trapped in increasingly totalitarian Islamist regimes in the Middle East and central Asia?
IW: Fortunately, living in the West I am not confronted with this problem in a direct way. Those secular minded Muslims living in Egypt, for example, have no short term solutions — they will have to form secular, reform-minded political parties, and slowly educate their own people on the merits of democracy, human rights, and pluralism. They will have to win through the ballot box. That, I realize, is an extremely difficult task. But I cannot see any alternative.
The ex-Muslims living in the West must continue to pressure the US administration to back democratic reforms in Islamic countries. Ex-Muslims must continue to educate the West on the iniquities of Sharia, and fight its slow imposition on the West.
PC: In Why The West is Best, you write very movingly about popular American music. What music have you been listening to lately?
IW: I have been listening to Billie Holliday singing the classics from the Great American Songbook — I found a great four-disc CD in a flea-market near where I am staying (in Germany). I also came across CDs by John Coltrane and Miles Davis, including a fairly rare one of their joint European tour.
PC: What books are you currently reading?
IW: I have almost finished a biography of William Wordsworth — not particularly well-written, unfortunately, but well-worth sticking with. I have just finished a biography of Madison by Richard Brookhiser — an intrinsically fascinating story of our fourth president. I always keep several books going at the same time: having finished several thrillers/ mysteries by Val Mcdermid and Michael Connelly, I have embarked on Tobias Smollett’s 18th century picaresque novel The Adventures of Roderick Random.
PC: Thank you.
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Check out these previous Phyllis Chesler interviews with more inspiring defenders of freedom:







Wow, from the perspective of my own life, readings of history and travels, this is really on the mark. Am I a choir? Maybe, but I believe what is contained in your article contains massive truths.
America needs back it’s cocky audacity and to also realize that it is not a multicultural airport at the service of the Third World. In this sense I am not a baggage handler and saying that doesn’t make me a racist.
One can talk about the brilliance of the Mughal Empire, rightly or wrongly, the brightness of Aztec culture but if I single out the brightness of European success and creation of America in almost all its wonderful particulars, I am fitted with a swastika armband and a hood not to mention a bill for a genocide that never took place.
What makes that all the worse is the obvious sources of success and failure which race-based political correctness simply ignores in favor of a fascist politeness that ignores American exceptionalism while giving that same trait to cultures that show no sign of it. It’s nuts. Your buddy is not.
Maybe someone should print this out and paste it to every signpost and wall in the area of the 9/11 memorial. It’s only when Muslims (or former Muslims) speak of the intolerance of fundamentalist Islam, will American’s finally wake up to reality of Sharia. A powerful indictment of our obsession with political correctness and multiculturalism.
I hope Mr. Warraq has a body guard or some kind of security measures in place – his former brethren do not take criticism well.
Judaism was defanged by the Talmud; Christianity was defanged by the Enlightenment. The Thirty-Years War (1618-1648), between Catholic and Protestants, makes the current battles between Sunnis and Shiites look trivial. Witches were burned in Europe and hanged in Salem, Massachusetts, despite the fact that there is no such thing as a witch and never has been, but people for the first 1700 years of Christianity felt they had to obey Exodus 22:18.
Can Islam ever be defanged?
Unlike the instances you cite, none in the Third World, there is nothing to defang within Islam as brilliant, productive and eccentric geniuses seem to be in short supply. Were it otherwise, Islam would’ve been stuffed back into a mosque generations ago as people can claim a disdain for decadent tech all they want but in every single instance in history when it has become available, people have embraced it.
There is nothing to natively embrace within Islam, just someone else’s cell phones, cable TV and microwave ovens so Salafi big talk is “The Fox and the Grapes.” Believe me if Islamic polities were capable of producing one tenth of what you see on a show like “How It’s Made”, it’d be shut up time for Imams.
Islam, as it always has, occupies vacuums, not prevents space from occurring. That’s why every Islamic nation is basically a failed entity compared to the West; the overwhelming majority of Muslims are descendants of forced conversions because of the vacuum of a receding or non-existent opposition empire – losers. When a few thousand Englishmen came to India, they slowly and over decades pushed down the northern Mughal Empire and southern remnant city-states with their wits until they ceased to exist.
Unlike would be the case were the situation reversed with Islam, the entirety of the Third World retains sovereignty on our sufferance. Their is no such sufferance within Islam, just a “No can do” spirit.
Judaism was defanged by the Talmud? What exactly does it mean? Of course you meant it to sound deep, but you really have no idea what you are talking about. A little education in Jewish history wouldn’t be amiss. To to make Judaism, Christianity and Islam, sound the same, shows that you are an an ignorant leftist or brainwashed by their ideas.
He’s saying that rationalism defanged superstition and that we were a lot more aggressively superstitious than Muslims although our spells to magically fire cannon were a lot better than Muslim spells.
It is very interesting to see how in the islamic world is looked upon the western enlightenment. According to the writer they have (had) their own and therefore they can look with contempt to the western world. This article was published on internet.
Dr. Abdulaziz Othman Altwaijri
Enlightenment as an Islamic
Concept
Publications of the Islamic Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization -ISESCO- 1423H / 2002
Contents
■ Preface ……………………………………………………
■ Introduction ……………………………………………
9 ■ Terminology …………………………………………………..
10 ■ The historical context of enlightenment ……………
12 ■ Enlightenment in the Holy Quran ……………………
14 ■ Enlightenment as an Islamic concept ……………………..
17 ■ Islamic enlightenment and contemporary reality ….
Preface
Islam came as a heavenly message to show mankind their way to peace. It promised guidance and prosperity. Our religion seeks to bring mankind out of darkness into light. Islam is an enlightening religion in terms of belief and legislation.
There has been much talk about ‘enlightenment’ as a term, a concept, a philosophy and a way of life. Some wrong concepts have been promoted regarding enlightenment. This has created erroneous ideas and an intellectual debate that need to be deeply studied and analysed.
For this reason, I have thought it would be appropriate to participate in the Third General Conference of the High Council of Islamic Affairs in Egypt, held from May 31 to June 3, 2001, with this study that I have entitled Enlightenment as an Islamic Concept’. This study, which I publish in its french and english versions, defines the Islamic concept of enlightenment, analyses some related ideas and corrects certain erroneous concepts. Islamic intellectuals, academicians, and media specialists should now gather their efforts in order to clarify for the whole world the facts of Islam.
May God guide our endeavor.
Dr Abdulaziz Othman Altwaijri
Director General of the Islamic, Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
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Introduction :
The imprecision of the word ‘enlightenment’ in term of linguistic and cultural meanings resulted in a confusion that has gone beyond cultural and intellectual contexts and has become a political issue. Enlightenment has therefore been used as an excuse to achieve certain goals that have nothing to do with culture.
This confusion, which was deliberately created by some people, has lead to great errors. It is worth mentioning that the propagation of the term enlightenment has coincided with the failure of material and atheist currents in modern societies, including the Arab and Islamic ones, and that the insistence on using this term coincides with the domination of globalization over cultural and cultural particularities of peoples.
Enlightenment also coincided with the intellectual currents that appeared in the Arabo-Islamic world in the last decades of the 20th century with more intensity than in the previous decades, although it was presented in different terms such as ‘intellectual freedom’, ‘free thought’, ‘the renaissance’. Enlightenment, as a contemporary term, is in part related to neocolonialism.
It is used to mislead the public opinion and create cultural instability and conflicts. This requires rectification and adjustments.
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Terminology :
It would be more appropriate to elucidate the issue of enlightenment before we tackle it from an Islamic point of view.
I- Enlightenment as a linguistic term :
In Lissan El Arab (Arab Tongue) of Ibn Mandour, enlightenment means dawn. “Dawn has enlightened” means that the light of day has come. It is also said: “one has prayed at enlightenment time”, that is near dawn.
In Mouaajam Al-Wassit, ‘to enlighten’ means to shed light. People have been enlightened’ means that they have become more cultivated. “God has enlightened one’s heart” means that God has given him/her guidance(1). Enlightenment also means guidance, as in “God guides the believers from darkness to light”. “We resurrect the dead and guide them to light” and “God is the light of the earth and the sky”.
In El Kaffoui’s book Al Koulyate, we read: “Light is the enlightening core. It is the opposite of obscurity”. Guidance, whether it means belief or religion, is one entity. Belief is apparent and religion is a set of rules. As for misguiding, it comes in several ways because of the great number of wrong beliefs(2). This corresponds to Al Kafoui’s idea that light is one unity and obscurity comes in several representations.
(1) Mouaajam Al-Wassit of the Arabic Language, Cairo, vol. 2, p. 962.
(2) Al Koulyate Dictionary of Linguistic Terminology, Abou El Bakaa El Kafoui, p. 909, Arrissala editions. Beirut.
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In the lexicon of the terms used in the Quran, light is described as: knowledge, truths and proofs that dispel doubt and assert belief in religion(3). Light is not illusions. It is proven truths.
II- Enlightenment as a philosophical term :
The term ‘enlightenment’ appeared in Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries to express liberal and bourgeois trends that were characterized by humanist, logical, scientific and empirical reasoning. These trends favored materialism at the expense of religion and used nature and reason instead of theology and mythology to explain natural phenomena and set the rules of the universe(4).
Enlightenment, as a cultural trend, dominated Europe in the 18th century. European intellectuals such as Voltaire, Diderot, Condorset, Holbagh and Picariah promoted it. These intellectuals were influenced by rational philosophers such as Descartes, Spinosa, Leipniz and Lock, who dominated the cultural trends of the 17th and 18th centuries and gave birth to the ‘Age of Reason’.
The Idea of enlightenment can be divided into three categories (reason, nature, progress)(5). These constitute natural philosophy and virtues based on science. The idea of enlightenment appeared in an atheist European environment. It was the enemy of the church, the state, superstition, ignorance and poverty.
(3) The lexicon of the terms used in the Quran, vol. 6, p. 172.
(4) The Encyclopedia of General Islamic Concepts, vol. 2000, p. 169.
(5) The Encyclopedia of Philosophy and philosophers, Dr. Abdelmouniim Hanafi, vol. 1, p. 405, Madbouli Library, Cairo.
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Enlightenment philosophers called for a return to nature(6). In European philosophy, enlightenment meant abandoning old teachings that constituted an authority and a reproduction of life on a rational basis(7).
European enlightenment endeavored to liberate civilization of the church’s dominance and of superstitious beliefs. It sought to achieve the progress of humanity through scientific research(8).
The German philosopher Kant was the first to use the term ‘enlightenment’ to refer to the rationalist movement that started in Europe in the 17th century and flourished in the 18th century, influencing European and non-European civilizations(9).
Enlightenment as a cultural term was therefore born in Europe, bearing European meanings and references . It was also the guideline of a cultural current that dominated Europe at a certain period of its history that was called ‘the ‘Age of Enlightenment’ and was characterized by the emergence of the enlightenment philosophers(10).
The historical context of enlightenment :
We can say that enlightenment is a purely European issue that appeared as a reaction to the church’s dominance over the cultural life in Europe. It was therefore logical that European
(6) The previous source. p. 405.
(7) Religion, Philosophy and Enlightenment, Dr. Mahmoud Hamdi Zakzouk, p. 79, Dar El-Maarif, Cairo 1996.
(8) The previous source.
(9) The previous source
(10) The Battle of Terminology between the West and Islam, Dr. Mohamed Omara, p. 54, Cairo 1997.
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enlightenment should fight against religion, given the superstition that the church represented. Europe then lived in the age of darkness whereas the Arabo-Islamic world enjoyed cultural prosperity.
As a European concept, enlightenment enlightened Europe after the age of darkness. It is worth mentioning here that only Europe and the West were concerned with the term ‘Mediaeval Ages of Darkness’ after the fall of the Roman Empire in the 4th century. Muslims, on the contrary, have brought light to humanity since the advent of Islam in the 6th century. They brought light back to the East and the West(11).
In Europe, enlightenment was a reaction to the church’s despotism and repression of reason. The Islamic civilization has never experienced such a situation.
Logic and rational thinking represented an emancipation of the church and the clergy. Enlightenment rejected the hegemony of religion and feudalism. It adopted the slogan ‘There is no master over the mind but reason’(12). The church’s despotism and repression of intellectual freedom was the driving force behind enlightenment, which makes it a purely European issue that should be studied as such.
This issue was clear in Europe: Church against reason. The church, with its spiritual, financial, political and scientific despotism, stood against political and social reform. ‘Free intellectuals’ were right in opposing the church and its system, but they were wrong in fighting religion and calling for the use
(11) Maalamat Al-Islam, Dr. Anouar Al-Joundi, p. 61, Beirut 1982. (12) The same source, p. 54.
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of reason instead. God has blessed mankind with mind so that they can know Him, not in order to negate Him(13). Therefore, it is not logical nor scientific to impose the European concept of enlightenment on Arabo-Islamic societies and to resort to pressure –to the point of intellectual terrorism- to impose this concept that does not belong to our Islamic culture and civilization. We will detail this point when we examine enlightenment as referred to in the Quran to explain the Islamic concept of enlightenment.
Enlightenment in the Holy Quran :
The term ‘enlightenment’ was not mentioned in the Quran, but the stem ‘light’ was mentioned 43 times, as in these verses :
-“Allah is the protector of those who have faith: from the depths of darkness He will lead them forth into light. Of those who reject faith, the patrons are the Evil Ones: from light they will lead them forth into the depths of darkness. They will be Companions of the Fire, to dwell therein (forever)”.(14)
-“Wherewith Allah guideth all who seek His good pleasure to ways of peace and safety, and leadeth them out of darkness, by His Will, unto the light, guideth them to a Path that is Straight”(15).
-“O People of the Book! there hath come to you Our Messenger, revealing to you much that ye used to hide in the
(13) ‘The Issue of Enlightenment In the Islamic World’, Mohamed Qotb, p. 72, 1999.
(14) Al-Baqarah, 257. (15) Al-Maida 16.
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Book, and passing over much (that is now unnecessary): There hath come to you from Allah a (new) light and a perspicuous Book”(16).
These verses show that bringing mankind out of obscurities (not only one obscurity) to light (not lights) cannot be achieved without God’s guidance to man. An enlightened man is one whom God saves of the darkness of ignorance, non-belief and superstition and brings out to the light of belief, science and true knowledge. In this sense, enlightenment is God’s guidance to man. The Quran, the Bible and the Torah were a light and guidance from God, as in “It was We who revealed the Law (to Moses): therein was guidance and light. By its standard have been judged the Jews, by the Prophets who bowed (as in Islam) to Allah’s Will, by the Rabbis and the Doctors of Law: “for to them was entrusted the protection of Allah’s Book, and they were witnesses thereto: therefore fear not men, but fear Me, and sell not My Signs for a miserable price. If any do fail to judge by (the light of) what Allah hath revealed, they are (no better than) Unbelievers”(17).
“And in their footsteps We sent Jesus the son of Mary, confirming the Law that had come before him: We sent him the Gospel: therein was guidance and light, and confirmation of the Law that had come before him: a guidance and an admonition to those who fear Allah”.(18)
“Allah is the Light of the heavens and the earth. The parable of His Light is as if there were a Niche and within it a
(16) Al-Maida 15. (17) Al-Maida, 44. (18) Al-Maida 46.
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Lamp: the Lamp enclosed in Glass; the glass as it were a brilliant star: lit from a blessed Tree, an Olive, neither of the East nor of the West, whose Oil is well-nigh luminous, though fire scarce touched it: Light upon Light! Allah doth guide whom He will to His Light: Allah doth set forth Parables for men: and Allah doth know all things”(19).
The holy scriptures were messages from God to His prophets to bring mankind out of darkness to light.
In this way, God’s guidance is closely linked to light(20), that is a guidance to Mankind. “Or (the Unbelievers’ state) is like the depths of darkness in a vast deep ocean, overwhelmed with billow topped by billow, topped by (dark) clouds: depths of darkness, one above another: if a man stretches out his hand, he can hardly see it! For any to whom Allah giveth not light, there is no light!”(21). We notice here that light is mentioned in the Quran as a singular noun, whereas obscurities are mentioned as plural. This is a very exact description because God is the source of every light. Therefore, light must be singular, unlike obscurities. A man whom God guides to light lives in permanent enlightenment. God’s light is like no other light(22). “Whatever beings there are in the heavens and the earth do prostrate themselves to Allah (acknowledging subjection) – with good-will or in spite of themselves – so do their shadows in the mornings and evenings”(23). In this
(19) Al-Maida 44. (20) Nour, 35. (21) Al Koulyate, p. 909. (22) Nour 40.
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analogy, God compares non-belief to obscurities and belief to light. In his book entitled ‘The Synthesis of Eloquence’, Essabouni says: “this is one of the best analogies because non-belief is like the obscurity where the confused is lost, and belief is like light, where the confused is guided. Belief is rewarded with paradise and non-belief is punished with hell”. The meanings of the Quran are the best illustration of the Islamic concept of enlightenment.
Enlightenment as an Islamic concept :
The Islamic concept of enlightenment is based on a solid foundation of belief and science. It is a Quranic concept that sheds light on the reality of enlightenment that combines the enlightenment of mind and that of the heart through belief in God and in science. A mind is useless if the light of Islam does not guide it in thought and behavior. Sheikh Mohamed Abdou says: “Islam liberated the mind of its shackles and of slavery. It enabled it to submit to none but God and His teachings”(24). Islamic enlightenment is based on free will and independent intellect. Mohamed Abdou also said: “Mankind have achieved their freedom through free will, opinion and logic. These complete their humanity and help them reach the happiness that God offers them”(25).
The high stature of reason in Islam has made it possible for intellect to play its role in the scientific and cultural spheres in Islamic societies. In this way, the reasons that allowed one institution to dominate in the name of religion have been
(24) The Synthesis of Eloquence, vol. 1 p. 146. (25) The complete works of Sheikh Mohamed Abdou, vol. 3, p. 455.
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omitted and the excuses that were used to oppress the freedom of mind have been outdone.
For these reasons, the conflicts between science and religion that Europe underwent in the dark mediaeval ages did not take place in Islam. In Europe, these conflicts led to the emergence of the idea of enlightenment. This was a war that free intellectuals, the tenors of the movement of enlightenment, waged against the clergy.
The conflict between science and religion is a Western issue that is proper to the Europeans and their attitude towards the church and religion. This issue was erroneously raised in the Muslim context. There has never been a conflict between Islam and science. Western scientists discovered contradictions between their holy books and scientific facts. Therefore, they opposed their religion. The Quran, on the contrary, does not state facts that are contradictory with science. Many scientific concepts are rather stated in Islam’s holy Book(26).
The issue of European enlightenment, which discredits religion and adopts science and nature to understand the secrets of life and organize society, was erroneously raised in Islamic societies. Western enlightenment was completely opposed to religion and it still adopts the same attitude. Islamic enlightenment, on the contrary, combines belief and science, religion and reason, in a reasonable equilibrium between these components.
Used alone, reason did not enable those who used it to discover the truth. Likewise, those who ignored reason and
(26) The previous source, pp. 455-456. – 18 -
sought intuition and spiritual knowledge were misled. The Islamic theory of knowledge combines the mind and the heart, the spiritual and the material.
Unlike Europe and the West, Islam has never imposed restrictions on reason. Therefore, the European experience cannot apply outside its context(27). Those who seek to apply European enlightenment to an Islamic context only try to mislead people because European enlightenment completely ignores religion. European enlightenment is contradictory with the Islamic one and does not express the Islamic perspective. The reasons behind the decline of the Islamic nation were different from those that led to Europe’s decline during the Dark Ages. The church imposed restrictions on reason and adopted the slogan “believe and do not discuss”. This attitude resulted from an erroneous interpretation of religion of which the clergy claimed to preserve the secrets. Anyone who would discuss the clergy was considered as hallucinating and was “deprived of God’s mercy”, if not killed. This oppression, not religion, propagated obscurity over European thought in the mediaeval ages.
In Islam, all mankind worship one God without intermediaries or tutors. This religion calls for good deeds and for meditation in the universe and the creatures with reason to achieve happiness in life and heaven. It criticizes those who do not use reason.
Islamic enlightenment enlightens with the light of Islam. It promotes the use of reason to understand religion. European enlightenment, on the contrary, rejects religion.
(27) Maalamat Al-Islam, Anouar Al Joundi, vol. 2, p. 15. – 19 -
Ignorance is darkness. In Islam, the quest for knowledge liberates man “Forbidden to you (for food) are: dead meat, blood, the flesh of swine, and that on which hath been invoked the name of other than Allah; that which hath been killed by strangling, or by a violent blow, or by a headlong fall, or by being gored to death; that which hath been (partly) eaten by a wild animal; unless ye are able to slaughter it (in due form); that which is sacrificed on stone (altars); (forbidden) also is the division (of meat) by raffling with arrows: that is impiety. This day have those who reject Faith given up all hope of your religion: yet fear them not but fear Me. This day have I perfected your religion for you, completed My favour upon you, and have chosen for you Islam as your religion. But if any is forced by hunger, with no inclination to transgression, Allah is indeed Oft-Forgiving, Most Merciful”(28).
This is the ultimate degree of Islamic enlightenment.
Islamic enlightenment and contemporary reality :
Islamic enlightenment is not a theory. It is a reality in the life of Muslims. It is a revival movement that aims at achieving the finalities of Islam in the lives of Muslims. It is a renewal of the concept and functions of religion and a bond that unites all Muslims.
An enlightened person cannot deny the urgent need to reform and change Muslim societies through Islamic action and a right understanding of religion. In facing the current reality of the Islamic world, Islamic enlightenment has to tread the right path in order to fulfill its mission. It is not a mere intellectual
(28) Maida, 3.
- 20 -
and cultural activity. It is a rectifying movement that aims to change erroneous ideas about religion and to promote tolerance, love, cooperation, and solidarity in Islamic societies. It encourages the quest for knowledge in order to achieve the real renaissance.
The Islamic world is now at the crossroads, and Muslims should combine their efforts to achieve their renaissance through the respect of the principles of their religion. Many obstacles impede these efforts, but they can be removed through firm will. Official and public institutions, universities in particular, should join these efforts. Islamic enlightenment is not limited to religious and human science. It covers the intellectual, scientific and cultural areas of Muslim societies. Mastering science and technology is the core of Islamic enlightenment because it sets the mind to work and uses the skills that God has bestowed on mankind. Muslim intellectuals should use these abilities to achieve progress, in an enlightened endeavor.
Our enlightened understanding of the issues and problems of society is the fruit of firm belief. The Islamic approach to Muslim reality should be elaborated on this basis.
- 21 -
The only way out of these mentally confusing word games is to stop calling Religion(s) … Religion(s), and to start calling them (for what they actually are) … Politics.
“Holification” of so called “Religion(s)” (from now on “Policies”) is the mentally trickiest (game) of all: fews dare to criticize them, and/or better, anything which comes from them. Who dares to criticize something “holy”?
“Holiness” is considered, per se, as superior than anything else <- that's why this alleged Arabo islamic religious "holy" Enlightement might be considered superior than the Western (purely) "human" one.
But here, hey, the West and Westerners first, MUST make an effort and understand, then show, that so called "Holiness" or "Religiousity" (as opposed to "Humanity" or "Politics") simply DOES NOT EXIST.
Then, next step, we (all) might discuss about the tenets of the one or the other … Ideology, and its/their ethical Goodness(es) or (un)ethical Evil(s).
Loveliest regards.
@4…Helleno
How about, we just call the whole mohammedan construct of islam “Holy-Poly”, with echoes of rolly-poly and hoi-polloi? Like:
“Holy-Poly mohammed, how did you get Aisha to sit on you?”
And forget the word ‘religion’, mohammedanism is an evil cult and supremacist ideology, with a pseudo-religious wing.
That post was terse to the point of truculence. Are you a hermit?
I remember first trying to read Why I am Not a Muslim expecting standard right-wing blog stuff, and being caught completely off-guard by the intellectual sophistication of that little book. He gives a panorama of Islamic intellectual history from its 7th-8th century beginnings to modern times; he criticizes the Islamophile bias of Western historiography inherited from Enlightenment-era critics of Christianity like Voltaire and Gibbon; he introduces the recent revisionist scholarship, based on non-Muslim sources, on early Islamic history (incidentally, Ibn Warraq is just about the only English source on this whole subject for the general reader); etc., etc… In short, if you’re going to read Ibn Warraq be prepared to learn a lot…
Ibn Warraq exposes hard truths. I have immense admiration for the tenacity of his mind. America is standing on the brink. We must realize that allowing aspects of Islamic fundamentalism into American society and culture will counter-act many of the founding promises that arose at the time of our country’s inception.
For example: to allow Sharia courts to operate in New York State (there is currently a bill underway), would normalize the injustices that occur in Sharia courts. Sharia courts are unanimously anti-woman and anti-West. We seem to have become more concerned with appearing politcally correct than protecting the fundamental constitutional freedoms that actually DO stand for universal liberty.
I hope the truths contained in the works of both Ibn Warraq and Phyllis Chesler continue to spread.
Ibn Warraq, like Ms. Chesler are authentic truth tellers in today’s high tech world full of information, so much of which is questionable at best.
I never thought I’d see the day when political correctness would be blazing a truly fascist trail the way it has been doing, and continues to do–for so many years now.
People behind the islamist threat do not respect the philosophy of “to each his/her own.” Not at all. These folks want the world under their thumb–and that includes those in veils; think of the honor killings that have spread to thde west if you don’t think so.
Menawhile the average braindead, lobotomized educated Leftist, straight from the academy, thinks that the west is the only place where any mistakes have been made. These folks, I sometimesw think, would be better off on dope; at least then they wouldn’t have such a deleterious effect on world politics. The way they view the third world in general reminds me of the way parents who spoil their toddler children think, i.e., what does one expect from a child, or, in this case, folks from the third world–being such victims of the west and all. It is shockingly condescending and patronizing and racist when you think about it, truly insulting.
But, isn’t that what a true nanny state is all about? Infantalizing everyone in the name of human rights?
What a sickening joke.
It looks like Ibn Warraq’s book might be a good read. One problem I see is that he thinks democracy is the answer. Really, democracy is actually mob rule, and if you get 50% +1 who believe in Jihad as as the way to go, the state will go that way.
What we really need, and what truly made the US great, was Christian values and the rule of law. It is so sad to see they are abandoning Christian values and are attributing their success to democracy. I think that, as a result, they are going to fade to backwater status, just like Britain.
Still, this does promise to be a worth-while read, with that one caveat.
Did the U.S. Constitution create America or did Americans enable the U.S. Constitution. Without a great people what is a piece of paper worth? They voted in Gaza and then quickly devolved into the Planet of the Apes.
Muslims Treated Like Jews Right Before the Holocaust? Not So Much
By Editor, The Propagandist Magazine, (forwarded by Huck Folder):
Michael Coren demolishes the lie pushed by Syed Soharwardy that Muslims are being treated in the West just like the Jews were treated before the Holocaust. December 15th, 2011. You must watch and forward this Hard Hitting Michael Coren Video (3:52) to all your friends:
http://www.propagandistmag.com/2011/12/15/muslims-treated-jews-right-holocaust-not-so-much?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+propagandistmag+%28The+Propagandist%29
Lowes Lowers Boom on Muslims
What’s wrong with American Muslims?
Nothing, according to Muslims and Democrat politicians who are incensed over Lowes pulling its ads from The Learning Channel’s new reality show, “All American Muslim.” Something, according to Lowes which makes money when people buy stuff at their home improvement stores but which felt advertising on”All American Muslim” was counterproductive to its interests.
There are also the questions as to what constitutes worthwhile “learning” and Muslim realities.
Lowes’ apt corporate motto is “Never Stop Improving” and this week it joined some 75 other advertisers in bailing on sponsoring the show. Some people, including those Democrat pols, attribute Lowes’ action to caving to prejudiced, conservative special interest groups, others including the travel website, Kayak.com, to the fact “the show sucked.”
In the interests of full disclosure, I’ve never seen an “All-American Muslim.” However, from what I’ve researched, it does suck and even more relevantly, the Muslims depicted are far from representative of American Muslims. TLC’s offering seems more an exercise in propagandistic political correctness than a serious effort at informational entertainment.
There’s a major difference between infotainment and infoganda.
Minnesota Democrat Rep. Keith Ellison, the first Muslim to serve in Congress who staged a 24 hour hunger strike in solidarity with the Occupy Wall Sreet anarchists, also protested against Lowes saying, “Corporate America needs to take a stand against these anti-Muslim fringe groups and stand up for what is right because this is what it means to be an American.”
Joining Ellison in his righteous indignation were Detroit-area Democrats, the first Bangladeshi-American congressman, Hansen Hashim Clarke, John Dingell, and Gary Peters who expressed dismay over the Florida Family Association’s dismay over ”All-American Muslim.”
The good congressmen dutifully dispatched a letter to Lowes defending Muslims and their contributions to the nation, without delineating those contributions. They concluded their missive by saying, ”We implore you to reconsider your decision and live up to your corporate ideals of diversity and inclusion and the values of tolerance and acceptance that create the foundation of our nation.”
Anymore than Ellison explained how an American corporation refusing to advertise on a television show it felt distorted reality related in any way to “what it means to be an American,” the other congressmen failed to clarify how supporting intolerance is a building block of America’s foundation.
That aside, Ellison’s comment regarding alleged “Muslim anti-fringe groups” and “what it means to be an American” bears more scrutiny.
The Florida Family Association which organized a wildly-successful petition against TLC’s ”All-American Muslim” is a quarter century old organization dedicated to the betterment of life in America. Its mission statement, to “Educate people on what they can do to defend, protect and promote traditional, biblical values,” is hardly a “fringe” sentiment.
Toward that end, the FFA has campaigned against what it deems offensive television shows advocating aberrant lifestyles, smutty fare for children, pornography–as well as Islamic propaganda. The FFA is urging Florida Gov. Rick Scott to order an investigation into whether a Muslim woman’s death was due to suicide or to an all-too-common Islamic “honor killing.” . . . (Read more at http://www.genelalor.com/blog1/?p=11016.)
The west remain the best. God bless the us