The Pakistani community in Norway is the largest ethnic minority in the country, and while many of them have assimilated quite well and are serving in numerous professional positions, there are also others who remain on the margins. The same is true of other Muslim immigrants in Scandinavia. An unfortunate clash of cultures has indeed led to a rise in right-wing extremism across this otherwise peaceful and egalitarian region.
Pakistani-born Danish activist Bashy Quraishy has documented cases of racism against Muslims in the region. What is remarkable about Mr Quraishy’s work is that he is not religious personally, but has championed the cause of Muslims in Scandinavia and Europe in the face of rising extremism. No doubt, we have a clash of extremism that has turned malignant and must be addressed. The Oslo attacks will perhaps catalyse greater action in this regard and more soul-searching among conservative political parties in Europe. In this regard, it is important to keep the pressure on western media venues to be fair in their reporting and analysis and to give Muslims due respect and the benefit of any doubt.
Yet there was an unfortunate reaction from the Muslim world that is also palpable after this attack. As soon as it was revealed that the attacker was a non-Muslim, emails and tweets started coming through of Muslims feeling vindicated that this time it was not one of them. Implicit in this reaction was a disturbing smugness that we Muslims are now beyond reproach and are victims of a western media ‘smear campaign’. No doubt the media should have waited before jumping the gun and suggesting Muslim connections to the attack. In particular, The New York Times article right after the attacks was particularly irresponsible by quoting some rumours about an Islamist connection.
However, Muslims must not become complacent and need to be shocked out of denial and realise that the most pernicious terrorist attacks within Muslim countries, including Pakistan, are indeed caused by Islamic fundamentalists. We constantly have to deal with fundamentalism on a daily basis in Pakistan because of a paranoid view of the world where fanatics want everyone else to respect them and their interpretation of faith, and who consider anyone who disagrees with them as ‘infidels’. Note how many moderate Muslim scholars such as Javed Ghamdi have fled the country for this reason. So let’s not sink into a ‘victim complex’ and let’s not ignore these serious challenges.
Because one Christian fundamentalist terrorist committed a vile and despicable act in Norway does not exonerate or diminish the seriousness of the problem of Islamic fundamentalism. While I hope this tragedy will make western organisations reconsider their assumptions about the source of terrorism, it is essential that this is not used as an excuse by Muslims to become sanguine about the problem in their own house. All forms of absolutist ideologies have to be resisted whether right wing, left wing or flightless follies that might later take wing!
Published in The Express Tribune, July 26th, 2011.
COMMENTS (13)
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Killings and destruction is the outcome of hatred. Hatred creates hatred. Love and affection is creativeness, inventions, discoveries, peace and better life. One should not blame other`s believes. Afterall ALLAH THE ALMIGHTY loves all his creations, thus we have no right to hate anybody. Love everybody, peace will prevail, not only in Pakistan but everywhere. Try to make our muslim brothers better human beings, to create a better society, instead of persuing others to follow us and that also for what.
@Timurov Thanks for your detailed comments. I have no favors to gain from being branded a "Muslim intellectual" by the west. I am an environmental scientist but with a commitment to modernization of Pakistan and Islam and so that is why I write for the tribune beyond my regular responsibilities. As for Professor Walt's study (I have much respect for him regarding his work on US political influence) but the study you are referring to has the enumeration problem. Political violence can be categorized in so many different ways. What is significant is that the major public attacks against civilians in Europe in the last decade were carried out by Muslim jihadis -- Madrid, London, Stockholm and the 9/11 plot itself was hatched in Hamburg, Germany. Anyhow, why do you want to enumerate the terrorist attacks in Europe? What is more relevant for Pakistanis is the terrorist attacks at home -- how many of them are carried out by non-Muslims? All I am saying is that we have a problem in our own faith tradition regarding radicalization. That cant be forgotten with such an attack. If you read the article with care you will see that I am attempting to be "nuanced" as you demand and acknowledge the failings of the West where appropriate. As for the earlier article you mentioned -- that one was a book review of a 400-page study regarding the historical trajectory of Muslims in science -- you can read and evaluate -- it is quite convincing. You can choose to write a rebuttal review of that book if you like with evidence from your own sources to the contrary. Whether we want to call it a clash of civilizations or not -- we are seeing a clash of fundamentalisms for sure -- as Tariq Ali would call it. Until we wake up and realize that we need to all work together to reduce this threat across East and West, we are bound to repeat our mistakes.
This is a great article! I agree with you that we need to continue being introspective and remove extremist elements from our society.
The writer conveniently forgets that in the 20th Century Christian countries fought two world wars. They slaughtered each other in the most horrible way. The civilised behaviour after World War II was a cover - de-colonisation was violent. The European empires collapsed. The loss of empire did not mean that Europeans would come back to invade Asia and Africa for their natural resources. We have every reason to be smug because no Asian country has to date ever wanted to conquer another country in some other continent.
@Sajida: No he is not a Christian Fundo, He is a Christian crusader(jihadi) even the Norge authorities are checking-up on leads to others in Europe and the US. It will most likely eventually lead to United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary Committees and the NEOCONS
If this thing has happened in Norway of all places, think of the anger that is being built in into Christian right wing fundamentalist the throughout places like England, Germany, France, Spain, Portugal, Belgium and Holland, countries whose people have been lest hospitable in the past. If this has happened in Norway and if there are other angry Norwegians out there with the same attitude, I reckon there will be hundreds of thousands more in the rest of Europe, some already organized others just waiting to, or just ripe to be recruited. If the governments of Europe fail to recognize the threat of Islamic insurgency in their countries these groups will grow in popularity and psoe a threat to Christians in Europe. Already in France the French feel that depriving them of the cross just to deprive the Muslims of he Purdah is grossly unfair, to them the Cross is very much French, and the Muslims have to be deprived of the Purdah and made to accept the cross, that is fundamentalism at its earliest stage and that is already in place in many parts of Europe. If this is prologned I see the possibility of another Inquisition the Spanish type, I see the rise of another Charles Martel and I see another battle of Tours, where the winners take all, if there is anything to be taken. What a shame that this should be done in the name of the same God.
"Smugness" is pushing it. The dominant reaction is Relief. It was expected they would peg it to Muslims. I was just hoping it wasn't a Pakistani. But there is an interesting point to be made about whether the general expectation of it being carried out by Muslims was justified. "According to EU Terorism Situation and Trend Report 2010, 294 terorist attacks where carried out in Europe. Of which ONE attack was carried out by Muslims. Just, ONE attack in a population of Half a Billion. To put that in perspective, the same number of attacks was committed by the Comité d'Action Viticole, a French group that wants to stop the importation of foreign wine." Just because Terrorism by Muslims are highlighted by the media more consistently does not mean its actually more prevalent.
Javed Ghamdi have fled the country because he was helping Mush in his activities and he remained on TV screens like Tahir Qadri remained on TV's during entire Zia era. Norway's Christian fundamentalist is not only one, there are dozens of international events of hatred including writing Quranic words on nude body, caricatures issue, Dutch fundamentalists, Neo-Cons, burning Quran and list is very long. Do not justify your previous sayings.
Ahh as always yet another biased and un-nuanced piece by this author (I think he needs to keep churning them out to win accolades in the West as a leading "Muslim" intellectual).
Anyhu as always in the face of geniune scholarship his argument falls flat on its face. The OVERWHELMING majority of terrorist incidents in Europe are caused by non-Muslim terrorists (actually in 209 something like 0.34% of terrorism was at the behest of so-called Muslims). I'm not a scholar on the issue, but my mentor Harvard Professor Stephen Walt will tell you best: http://walt.foreignpolicy.com/. Among other things Professor Walt will make it very clear why from the second the incident happened it was clear that a Muslim wasn't behind it. While this fact by no means makes these incidents of terrorism any more acceptable, and they should be fully and robustly condemned it leads me to the point that Islamaphobia is well and truly rampant in the Western media, including the outrageous coverage by the Wall Street Journal and surprise, surprise - Fox News (read the O'Rielly factor) which spewed this Islamaphobic balderdash much after it was clear that a Muslim wasn't in fact involved in this despicable act.
I remember another piece by this author a few weeks back where he tried to claim that Muslim scientists in their glory days are over-glorified by the Muslim world today and he tried to even imply that no such golden era ever existed. The dubious author he quoted has had his argument comprehensively rebutted many decades ago by another of the great Professors I've had the privilege of studying under; George Saliba of Columbia whose cornucopia of research proves that Galileo and a bunch of enlightenment scholars stole the works of Muslim scientists without ever crediting or acknowledging them (which is great in terms of cross-civilization learning and the paragon of excellence that Muslims in Europe and the Middle East had created, sans the plagiarism part). Why then is the author of this article again and again bringing up arguments that are un-nuanced, historically incorrect, biased and deeply problematic?!
Look at the wording the author of this very article uses: "the clash of civilizations". A term made famous by Huntington and so easily accepted by so many (fear mongerers and their ilk) who are unable to see beyond a black and white binary. Again I'm not the paragon of scholarship so I won't talk in depth about this, but readers are strongly advised to read my Professor at Columbia, Richard Bulliet's "A Case for Islamo-Christian Civilization" which entirely rubbishes Huntington's choice of such a stark and black and white title.
I ask the readers of this paper to develop some semblance of a nuanced understanding of the world. The author of this article seems to have bought into this notion of a clash of civilizations. There is no such thing as one "Muslim civilization". And you the reader will get an incredible understanding of the joint and organic civilization that was once the Islamo-Christian one in Europe and what has since 1903 been called the "Middle East".
He was not a Christian fundamentalist. Islamic fundamentalism is being funded by ME. US Government knows that;but, attacks symptoms and not disease because of oil dollar deal that is keeping treasuries afloat. http://www.globalsecurity.org/security/library/congress/2003_h/030626-alexiev.htm Testimony United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary Terrorism: Growing Wahhabi Influence in the United States.
This guy wasn't even religious, and has no support from any Christian religious community. It's more accurate to call him a right wing terrorist, or an anti-multicultural terrorist, an anti-Islamic terrorist. Calling him a Christian terrorist suggests that there is some equivalent, violent Christian theology which approves of or permits this murder spree. There is not.
Very balanced. Hope the usual suspects (from all religious denominations) are listening.