Islam

May 2002 - Issue 345

May 2002
Issue No. 345
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Islam: Resistance and reform
What’s gone wrong? Why has Islam and its relation with the West become so fraught with violence and mistrust? Ziauddin Sardar takes a critical look at the current state of one of the world’s great faiths and charts a way out of a bloody impasse.

Key moments of Islamic civilization
From 570 A.D. to 2050

Islam - The basics
What does Islam really stand for?

A’ishah’s legacy
Amina Wadud seeks women’s rights in Islam – and finds them in the Qur’an.

Muslims - the facts

Do Muslims deserve democracy?
Democratic regimes are thin on the ground in the Muslim world. Abdelwahab El-Affendi explores the reasons why.

Wilful imaginings
Wild, barbaric, corrupt, fanatic and effete. Merryl Wyn Davies looks at the damage done by persistent Western images of Islam.

Good company
Islamic economics and ethical investment have much in common, argues M Iqbal Asaria.

Building bridges
Muslims have always travelled and been migrants. Ehsan Masood sees in the past lessons for today.

Action!
Books, websites and organizations.

News, views, and & voices

Letter from Lebanon
How refugees rejected by banks are going it alone, by Reem Haddad.

Southern Exposure
Bulletholes in Iran, photographed by Bahman Jalail.

View from the South
How can Africa transcend its ethnic inheritance? asks Ike Oguine.

Currents

Independent voices
Indymedia resistance in Zimbabwe.

US cyber-waste dumped in Asia
US cyber-waste dumped in Asia.

Mystery ingredient
An international body has ruled that governments are not allowed to trace the sources of their food’s genetic origins, unless a food turns out to be dangerous and the culprit is a modified gene.

Tree-sitters
Ecuadorian schoolchildren fight the oil pipeline.

Cabbie conspiracy
Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra is not amused by Bangkok’s opinionated cabbies.

Tigerland
Tamil rebels ready to talk

Politics kidnapped in Colombia

Rubber
Rubber

Seriously...
Film reviews from the website of the Maoist International Movement (MIM)

Worldbeaters
Queen Elizabeth II

Polyp's Big Bad World – May 2002
Cuckoo capitalism wets its nest.

The NI Prize Crossword
No.64 by Axe

Mixed Media

Books
Shifu, You'll Do Anything for a Laugh

Books
Heaven's Edge

Books
Mugabe: Power and Plunder in Zimbabwe

Books
The Video Activist Handbook

Film
Saudade do Futuro

Film
The Warrior

Music
The Rough Guide to Bollywood

Sharp Focus
on Robert Lepage

Essay
Loving my land, dying inside

Country Profile
Kyrgyzstan


 

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from
THIS MONTH'S EDITOR

Ziauddin Sardar

‘God is gentle,’ Prophet Muhammad once said, ‘and loves gentleness in all things.’ And he added: ‘Gentleness should adorn everything; its absence leaves everything tainted.’ Islam, it seems to me, has been tainted by a serious lack of gentleness.

Muslims are very quick to blame the West for their plight. Colonialism, support for Israel and despotic regimes, double standards and misrepresentation of Islam are high on the list of grievances. There is much truth in these assertions.

But such truths do not explain, for example, why sexism is so deeply entrenched, or violence in the name of God has become so endemic. Or why semi-literate Mullahs are so venerated and blindly followed by so many. Nor does it clarify the gulf between the ideals of Islam and the reality on the ground.

As a Muslim writer, I am often asked: why are Muslims so reluctant to look at themselves? Why so hesitant to re-examine their own assumptions and prejudices, their own perceptions of themselves and ‘the West’?

Here is a stab at an answer. It’s an attempt to go beyond apologia, to start a self-reflective debate in Muslim societies, and usher an engagement between Muslims and concerned people everywhere that rises above mutual blame and suspicion.

Above all, it is a call to move forward to what Prophet Muhammad described as the main characteristics of Islam: modesty and gentleness.

Ziauddin Sardar

Ziauddin Sardar
for the New Internationalist
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