[Cause Terrorism, Madrassa, Madrasa, Koran Quran Sunnah Hadith
Prophet Muhammad Osama bin-Laden, Education al-Zarqawi Bangladesh
India Pakistan Bangla Bhai Hezbollah Hamas and Islamic Jihad al-Aqsa
Saddam Hussein, Taleban, Israel-Palestine]
The recent surge in religious
violence amongst the Muslims, particularly after the 9/11 (2001)
attack in New York, has left the world desperately guessing about
the underlying reasons behind it. In this hair-splitting
brainstorming, pundits from all sections of the society,
irrespective of religious backgrounds, have aired their opinions.
The four common reasons that have received overwhelming acceptance
are:
-
Illiteracy: Lack of
education amongst the Muslims.
-
Poverty: Alleged
desperate poverty in Muslim countries.
-
Discrimination:
Alleged social and economic deprivation of the Muslim community,
especially in the Western countries.
-
Oppression: Muslims
have forwarded another reason which is the oppression against
them such as wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The fact that 9/11 and many other
terrorists attacks took place before the invasion of Afghanistan
and Iraq easily rules out these two wars (4th reason) from the
list of alleged underlying reasons for the surge in Islamic
violence. However, Islamist terrorist group have definitely
exploited these wars as an excuse to give a boost to their
Jihadist recruitment drives. This means that these wars are only
secondary reasons, if at all, but definitely not the primary cause
of religious violence amongst the Muslims.
In this essay, I will analyze
these views of the pundits in detail to evaluate if those are
justifiable causes underlying the present scourge of Islamic
violence and terrorism.
Illiteracy
Lack of education amongst the
Muslims has been put forward as a prime reason for a sudden
radical transformation of the Muslims in recent years with the
concomitant increase in violent and terrorist acts. If this
reasoning is to be taken as valid, then we must conclude that as
compared to now, the Muslim world was more educated in the 1950s
and 60s, when there existed much less religious violence in the
Muslim community anywhere in the world. But the reality says the
opposite. Let us analyze this in the context of the subcontinent.
During the colonial rule, the
Muslims of the subcontinent resisted undertaking the secular
education instituted by the British rulers despite desperate
efforts by the government. Muslims considered the learning of
English and undertaking the secular education un-Islamic and
largely kept away from it. The Muslims instead insisted on the
religious (Arabic) education so much so that the British rulers
were forced to institute the separate Madrassa education for the
Muslims of India. Thus, the Muslim community there remained
relatively uneducated (in secular education) until the British
rule ended in 1947. On the other hand, the Hindus and other
religious sections embraced the secular curricula, comprising of
science and literature, more openly. Muslims were left happy with
the very limited scope of Madrassas education to learn Islamic
scriptures in Arabic, which was of little daily-life value. As a
result, the Hindus and other non-Muslim communities flourished in
India while the Muslims were left behind as a relatively
uneducated and backward class.
The bottom-line is that Muslims
of the subcontinent were a very uneducated people in the 1950s.
Whatever education they had was mainly the religious type.
However, Muslims started going to schools in large numbers to
study secular curricula in the 1960s onwards in Pakistan and
subsequently in Bangladesh. Schools were built at every nook and
corner of the country which outnumbered the Madrassas to a great
extent despite the fact that there were sharp rise in number of
Madrassas after the 1970s, thanks to the oil-money coming from the
Middle East.
When I started going to school in
the early 1970s, rarely parents in my village would send their
children to schools. As a young boy, I recall people traveling a
mile to find someone who can read a letter which they might have
received from some sources. By the early 1990s, however, almost
every child was going to schools (although many drop out) – thanks
to the Government’s and various NGOs’ whole-hearted efforts to
bring every child to school. As a result, there has been a massive
increase in the level of education and literacy amongst the Muslim
population in Bangladesh, compared to the situation in the 1950s
and 60s. Almost every family in Bangladesh now has a member who
can read and write. The same should apply to the Muslims in
Pakistan and India. Likewise, literacy rate in Arabic (Madrassa)
education has also gone up significantly. Hence, the present level
of religious bigotry, fanaticism, violence and terrorism should
have been substantially less amongst the Muslims in these
countries, as compared to that of the 1950s and 60s. In reality,
the opposite has happened. That is, there has been a massive
increase in Islamic fanaticism and violence in recent years as
compared to the 1950s and 60s. Hence, lack of education can no way
be blamed for the increase in fanaticism and terrorism as seen in
the Muslim societies at all corners of the world today.
Poverty
The next principal reason put
forward as the underlying cause of recent worldwide surge in
Islamic terrorism is the alleged desperate poverty amongst the
Muslims. To analyze this point, I will once again compare the
relative wealth and prosperity of the Muslims in the 1950s and 60s
to those of the present time. When I was a young boy in the early
1970s, my father was a very ordinary farmer with limited lands and
we used to make a hand-to-mouth living often with difficulty
during some periods of the year. The income from the agricultural
farming was such that when we, the 4 siblings, started going to
school (2nd – 8th grade, free education); my father was failing to
support the family. So, he decided to sell away all the land to
set up a small business, which worked much better to feed the
family and support our education.
During those days, my mother
would require some temporary domestic help during the harvesting
season. When she used to send inquiries to the neighborhood about
if anyone available to give her a hand, in a matter of hours a few
parents would come to our house to request my mother to employ
their young daughters, sometimes just for subsistence (3 meals a
day). As compared to then, the quality of living in our family has
improved no less than ten folds now. My parents live a kind of
luxurious life in a beautiful bungalow house on the money sent by
three of our well-off brothers. Recently, as my mother became
frail with age, she tried to find someone to do the much simpler
job of cooking and cleaning the house. She needed six months to
find someone to do those simple chores in exchange of subsistence
plus a good salary.
There is definitely poverty in
Bangladesh today. However, the situation has improved a lot as
compared to the desperate poverty and hunger that existed in the
1960s and 70s. The above example clearly proves this assertion.
Hence, if poverty is to be taken as a genuine cause of the current
surge in Islamic extremism, then there should have been more
terrorism in the 1970s than that of the present time in
Bangladesh. But in truth, today Bangladesh is plagued by Islamic
intolerance and terrorism almost as much as any other Muslim
country in the world. The same parallel also applies to Pakistan,
Malaysia, Indonesia and all of the Middle East countries. Indeed,
the oil-producing Muslim countries have made massive economic
strides with concomitant increase in religious violence. This
clearly discounts poverty as an underlying driver of the
recent bubble in Islamic terrorism worldwide.
Deprivation/Disenfranchisement of the Muslims
The issue of deprivation or
disenfranchisement is more relevant to the context of the migrant
Muslims in the Western countries or those living in the countries
where Muslims constitute a minority, such as in India. It is true
that the Muslim migrants remain relatively poor in the Western
countries when compared with other migrants, such as the Hindus
from India and the Chinese from the various parts of Asia. Yet,
the average Muslim house-hold income is higher than average
American house-hold according to a recent report [Washington
Post], which would rules out economic deprivation of the
Muslims in the US.
Indeed, there is no concrete
evidence of selective discrimination against the Muslims in the
Western countries, at least there wasn’t before the 9/11 terrorist
attack in New York. Since the 9/11, there has been an increasing
skepticism and concern about them as perpetration of acts
of violence and terrorism or attempt to do so continue unabated.
Yet, there have existed many terror cells across Europe and North
America since many years before the 9/11 and their acts became
coordinated and bold enough to strike the United States at New
York on the 11th of September, 2001.
If we agree that there is some
discrimination against the immigrant communities in the West, such
discrimination must apply to all immigrant communities, including
the Hindus, the Chinese and so on. However, there has not been any
trace of terror cells established by the Hindus and Chinese in the
West, nor have they committed or attempted to commit any acts of
terrorism to kill unarmed and innocent civilians.
In Australia, however, the
Chinese immigrant community, have faced severe hatred and racism
during much of the 1990s and early 2000s, at least on the streets.
Other immigrant communities, such as the Muslims, Hindus/Indians
etc. did not face the same in Australia. Yet, the Chinese who form
a big bulk of the immigrants in Australia are not known to have
established any terror cells, nor organized any terror attacks,
nor attempted to do so.
So, it is absolutely groundless
to claim that there is a selective deprivation or
disenfranchisement of the Muslim community in the West. Yet, they
are a relatively poor and less educated community because of their
lack of serious interest in education and working hard to improve
their economic condition. Hindus of India, the Chinese and other
immigrant communities have done better because of their good
work-ethics and efforts to excel in studies and careers. It is a
common knowledge in the West, especially in Europe, that when
Hindu parents of Indian origin remain anxious about their
children’s ability to enter into a good university for studying
science, engineering or medicine, many Muslim parents of the
Indian, Pakistani and Bangladeshi descent pray that their children
be obedient and go to Madrassa to receive religious education.
In regard to the countries where
Muslims form a minority community, such as China, India and
Singapore, it will be very difficult to establish that there are
serious discriminations against the Muslims in these countries. In
stead, discriminations are much more rife against non-Muslim
communities in Muslim countries, such as in Pakistan, Malaysia,
Bangladesh, Indonesia and those in the Middle East. Discrimination
against non-Muslims is a state policy in some of these countries
whilst in others, it is unofficial and rife. If discrimination,
deprivation or disenfranchisement has anything to do with
terrorism, then non-Muslim communities should have overwhelmed the
countries like Malaysia, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia with massive
violence and terrorist attacks for clearly justifiable reasons,
which never happen.
Again, Muslims cannot be
discriminated, deprived or disenfranchised in countries where they
form the majority. Yet, Muslim countries like Pakistan, Bangladesh
and Indonesia etc. have seem massive rise in intolerance and
terrorist activities unleashed not by the severely discriminated
and deprived non-Muslim communities but by the privileged Muslim
community itself. Thus allegation of selective deprivation or
disenfranchisement of the Muslims neither exist, nor can in any
way form the basis of the surge in Islamic intolerance
and violence – be it in the West or the East, in the
Muslim-dominated or Muslim-minority countries.
Education and
Economic prosperity: remedy or cause?
Pundits have overwhelming
supported the theory that illiteracy and desperate poverty are the
principle reasons behind the recent upsurge in Islamic violence
after the relative calm during past few decades. If this proposal
is to be taken as valid, then better education and economic
prosperity would act as the remedy to the Islamic intolerance that
we have witnessed in recent years. But as I have discussed with
clearly verifiable examples in the context of the subcontinent
that Muslims are much more educated and much better-off
economically today as compared to the situation of the 1960s and
70s. Yet, countries in that region have experienced a massive
surge in violent activities from the religious-motivated Muslim
groups in recent years as compared to the 1960s and 70s.
Be it Bangladesh, Pakistan,
Indonesia, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia or any other Muslim country of
the Middle East, the level of education and economic prosperity
have significantly improved across the masses since the 1960s and
70s. We do not see the desperate poverty and hunger and lack of
education that existed in many of these countries in the 1960s and
70s. With the increase in level of educational and economic
prosperity, the level of religious bigotry and intolerance,
accompanying with violence and terrorism, have seen proportional
increase amongst the Muslim populace of these countries. Hence,
the more logical theory would predict that better education and
economic prosperity might act as the cause and definitely not as
the remedy for terrorism. That is:
Level of Education & Wealth ≡
Islamic intolerance & violence
Education and Wealth as primers of Islamic terrorism
Howsoever, unbelievable this
theory may sound; it requires a thorough examination before
accepting or rejecting it. The following points would be helpful
in arriving at a conclusion on this supposedly contentious and
incredible hypothesis:
-
Education and Wealth in 1960s and now:
The first compelling support to this theory comes from the fact
that when compared with the situation of the 1960s and 70s,
Islamic intolerance and violence have proportionally increased
with the improvement of education and economic condition of the
Muslims.
-
Terrorism, Asia vs. Africa:
When compared with Asia and the Middle East, some Muslims
countries of the African continent has seen a serious decline in
economic condition since the 1970 and early 80s, after the
Western colonial powers left those countries. Yet, those
countries have experienced much less increase in violence of the
Islamic nature, if at all. However, there has been an increase
in violence between various factions of tribal nature for the
control of economic resources as in Ivory Coast, Ethiopia and
Chad etc. On the other hand, the relatively better-off Muslim
countries or region of Nigeria, Morocco and Sudan have seen an
increase in violence and terrorism of religious nature amongst
the Muslim community.
One notable exception is Somalia,
which is in desperate poverty and at the same time, has
experienced significant increase in religiously-motivated
violence. It needs to be noted, however, that until 1992, when UN
peacekeeping forces were sent to Somalia to establish law and
order, the desperate chaos that exited there was absolutely of
tribal nature for grabbing power and control over regional
territories and resources. Such violence typically emanates from
desperate poverty and lack of functioning Government in a
territory. However, after the UN forces landed there in April
1992, violence and chaos in Somalia took the color of religious
variety. This religious turn in violence there did not originate
locally but instead was exported from the overseas shores by the
terrorist groups of the better-off Muslim countries of Asia and
the Middle East. Osama bin-Laden’s al-Qaeda group sent money,
weapons and fighters to Somalia to fight the UN peacekeepers in
Somalia leading to latter’s forced withdrawal after taking heavy
casualty. Hence, terrible economic turmoil by itself did not give
rise to violence and terrorism of Islamic nature in Somalia.
Poverty cannot be blamed as the seed of Islamic terrorism as
witnessed there.
-
Education and Economics of the Terrorist Masterminds.
The most compelling evidence that supports the “Education and
Wealth as the primers of Islamic terrorism” thesis is the level
of education and economic prosperity of the major terrorist
masterminds across the world. All the leading Islamic terrorist
figures including Osama bin-Laden, his deputy Ayman Al-Zawahiri,
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, Sheikh Abdur Rahaman & Bangla Bhai
(Bangladesh), the militant leaders of Hezbollah, Hamas and
Islamic Jihad militant groups etc. are all moderate-to-well
educated and belong to moderate-to-highly well-off families.
Osama bin-Laden belonged to one of the richest and highly
influential family of Saudi Arabia and is an engineer by
education and training. His deputy al-Zawahiri is medical doctor
by training from Egypt. Sheikh Abdur Rahaman & Bangla Bhai – the
two terrorist masterminds of Bangladesh are known to have
traveled to Pakistan and Saudi Arabia of education. Such
opportunities are rather uncommon in Bangladesh. Poverty and
hunger have never been an issue in their lives that might have
driven them towards terrorism out of desperation. And their
level of education is enviable to the overwhelming majority of
their countrymen.
-
Money flow for terrorism:
There is no secret in the fact that Islamic terrorism bubbled
across the world as a result of money-flow from the Arab world,
which made stunning economic prosperity through the sales of oil
during the last few decades. Another source of money have been
the so-called Muslim charity organizations, which mushroomed in
the Western countries after Muslims arrived there in big numbers
and achieved better economic prosperity than that they have in
their home countries. This once again shows ‘how relative
economic prosperity drives the Muslims towards investment in
terrorist organizations’.
-
Saddam’s Pay-checks and the Suicide Bombing in Palestine:
When Saddam Hussein
announced big bounties for suicide bombing against Israeli
targets, Muslim militants in Palestine launched waves of
sustained suicide bombing against Israel. As soon as the checks
from Iraqi coffer stopped after the ouster of Saddam Hussein in
2003, there has been a sharp decline in the suicide bombing
operations against Israel. Thus, when there are money-checks for
organizing terrorist operations, there will be terrorism. When
money dries out, there won’t. Another reason is that when these
terrorists get a big check in their hands so that their family
can leave in comfort, they can dedicate themselves to the cause
of his/her God. When economic solvency or security is there,
Muslims can dedicate themselves to campaign of martyrdom for a
straight-landing in Islamic heaven.
Concluding Remarks
The prominent Jihadists in the
rank of bin-Laden, al-Zawahiri and al-Zarqawi have repeatedly and
loudly claimed that they are fighting Jihad in way of Allah to
defeat the Western infidels such as the Zionist and Crusader
coalition in Palestine as well as to establish the Koranic
law-based and Western influence-free puritanical Islamic society
in countries like Afghanistan, Kashmir, Bangladesh, Somalia and
throughout the Middle East. The
latest al-Qaeda video
demanded that Americans convert to Islam or suffer, clearly
spelling their desire to expand the domination of Islam to all
corners of the world which is line with Prophet Muhammad’s
incessant effort to spread Islam through ceaseless wars against
the non-Muslim communities and territories in his life-time.
Defying these repeated and loud declarations of the terrorist
masterminds, the so-called educated moderate Muslims and their
infidel sympathizers from the Communist, leftist and liberal
coalition of the West and elsewhere, have repeatedly sought to
sell the illiteracy and poverty amongst the Muslims and alleged
discrimination and deprivation against them as the underlying
causes behind the massive rise of Islamic violence in recent
years. The thorough examination of the circumstances and facts
regarding the Muslim populace, both in the West and elsewhere,
discount these naïve excuses as the underlying causes of Islamic
violence and terrorism with absolute certainty.
Better education and wealth seem
to have a positive link with the recent surge in violence by the
Muslim groups, instead of being the remedy for it. It can be said
with good degree of certainty that had Osama bin-Laden been a
pauper who had to slog round the day to support his family, in
stead of being a wealthy sheikh, he would never have gone on to
set up such huge terror network having cells at every corner of
the world. Other big terrorist masterminds – who might have come
from relatively humble family – have been given huge sums of money
by the richer terrorist leaders, supporters or the so-called
Islamic charities, to launch their Jihadi campaigns. Financial
security for the family and financial capability for organizing
terrorists acts clearly seem to work as the primers of terrorism
amongst the Muslims.
And almost invariably, all of the
terrorist masterminds have been well-educated in the community
they come from. Education probably helps them analyze their
religious duty better in the contexts of the religious Scriptures
and the historical events right from the beginning of Islam.
Prophet Muhammad’s life was characterized by more 100 wars and
raiding expeditions against the infidel communities, territories
and caravans, which are well-recorded in Islamic annals and
literature, support such a hypothesis. Further, the fact that
these terrorist masterminds are well-versed in the religious
matters who frequently quote Koranic verse, Ahadiths (Sunna) and
historical events to justify their actions, reinforces the notion
that better education are likely inspirational factors behind
Islamic terrorism that we witness today. On the other hand, the
uneducated Muslims, who cannot read the Islamic Scriptures, the
Sunna and the Islamic historical background and who have to slog
hard to support the family, are rarely found to be a founder of
any Islamic terror cell anywhere in the world.
The bottom-line is that better
education and prosperity of the Muslim populace is definitely not
a solution to the violence unleashed by the Muslim terrorist
groups across the world but instead, are very likely to work as the
recipe for worsening violence and terrorism by them.