Salman Rushdie calls for 'Muslim Reformation'

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Aeesta
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Joined: Mon Jul 25, 2005 7:26 pm

Salman Rushdie calls for 'Muslim Reformation'

Post by Aeesta »

An Interesting article in the news today:

Salman Rushdie calls for 'Muslim Reformation'

Thursday, August 11, 2005 Posted: 1828 GMT (0228 HKT)

SPECIAL REPORT

British author Salman Rushdie on Thursday called for a reform
movement that would move Islam into the "modern age" to combat
jihadists and closed Muslim communities in the West that produce
disaffected youths wielding "lethal rucksacks."

In 1989, Rushdie was forced into hiding when the late Iranian
Islamic fundamentalist leader Ayatollah Khomeni issued a religious
death decree for alleged blasphemy against Islam in Rushdie's
novel "The Satanic Verses."

The Indian-born Rushdie made his statement in an essay published
Thursday in The Times of London titled, "Muslims unite! A new
Reformation will bring your faith into the modern era."

"What is needed is a move beyond tradition -- nothing less than a
reform movement to bring the core concepts of Islam into the modern
age, a Muslim Reformation to combat not only the jihadi ideologues
but also the dusty, stifling seminaries of the traditionalists,
throwing open the windows of the closed communities to let in much-
needed fresh air," Rushdie wrote.

Much of the article addresses the positions of Sir Iqbal Sacranie,
head of the Muslim Council of Britain.

"It is high time, for starters, that Muslims were able to study the
revelation of their religion as an event inside history, not
supernaturally above it," Rushdie wrote.

"It would be good to see governments and community leaders inside
the Muslim world as well as outside it throwing their weight behind
this idea, because creating and sustaining such a reform movement
will require, above all, a new educational impetus whose results may
take a generation to be felt, a new scholarship to replace the
literalist dictates and narrow dogmatisms that plague present-day
Muslim thinking," he wrote.

According to Rushdie, Islam comprises millions who are "tolerant"
and "civilized" but many others whose viewpoints are "antediluvian,
who think of homosexuality as ungodly, who have little time for real
freedom of _expression, who routinely express anti-Semitic views, and
who, in the case of the Muslim Diaspora, are -- it has to be said --
in many ways at odds with the cultures among which they live."

Rushdie pointed to the English city of Leeds -- where police have
said three July 7 London suicide bombers grew up -- as a place
where "many traditional Muslims lead lives apart, inward-turned
lives of near-segregation from the wider population."

The July 7 bombs, on three Underground trains and a double-decker
bus, killed 52 commuters as well as four bombers. It's thought that
the attackers carried their weapons in rucksacks.

"From such defensive, separated worlds some youngsters have
indefensibly stepped across a moral line and taken up their lethal
rucksacks," Rushdie wrote. "The deeper alienations that lead to
terrorism may have their roots in these young men's objections to
events in Iraq or elsewhere, but the closed communities of some
traditional Western Muslims are places in which young men's
alienations can easily deepen."

Rushdie wrote that "the insistence within Islam" that the Quran "is
the infallible, uncreated word of God renders analytical scholarly
discourse all but impossible" and the rigidity "plays right into the
hands of the literalist Islamofascists."

"If, however, [the Quran] were seen as a historical document, then
it would be legitimate to reinterpret it to suit the new conditions
of successive new ages. Laws made in the 7th century could finally
give way to the needs of the 21st. The Islamic Reformation has to
begin here, with an acceptance that all ideas, even sacred ones,
must adapt to altered realities."
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