Features » Politics And Society

Comments on the article: Europeanisation, not Islamisation

22/03/2007

Bassam Tibi argues for Euro-Islam as a bridge between civilisations.

 
Darryl
(2 comments)
registered on 17/03/2007
Our Global Project: Reforming Islam
It appears that Islam has decided to make a mission field of Europe. I suppose this is only poetic justice since the Europeans in their time declared a religious war, er, excuse me, undertook a holy mission to bring the blessings of Christianity to the barbarians. What our world needs today is not more proselytization for any religion, but less religion all around. The Europeans understand this; the Americans do not, or refuse to consider it. I don’t think the world can withstand another wave of persecutions, blasphemy trials, inquisitions, tortures, and all the rest in behalf of new hegemonic orthodoxy. We do not need to relive the Middle Ages and the Reformation. We cannot go backward and we must not give up all that we have struggled to gain.

Islam is on a collision course with the West and we can only avoid a catastrophe by a reformation of Islam that comes from within and is supported from without. If we cannot hope to eradicate religion outright, we can at least do it in degrees through reform. Let us be clear: reformation is an incremental process of religious eradication, if carried to its logical end.

Bassam Tibi has said “It is half-witted of Garton Ash to confuse the demand for a reform of Islam in Europe with the demand for Muslims to give up their faith.” (Sign and Sight, 3/22/2007) Tibi is wrong; Ash is right. To make Islam compatible with European culture requires Islam to be reformed. All religious reformation is a giving up of some aspects of a religion—this is undeniable. Islamic fundamentalism is no different in this respect than Christian fundamentalism. If I were to require Jerry Falwell to quit believing that his Bible is without error and authoritative on all matters that it addresses, and consequently quit denouncing homosexuals, in order for him to integrate into European culture, wouldn’t he be right to conclude that I was asking him to give up his faith, or some part of it that he considers to be ‘fundamental’ to it? Look at the history of religious reformation in Europe and what do you find? Once reformation begins, if it is uninterrupted, it leads inevitably to a giving up of the faith itself—and this is want we need.

Unless and until we all give up our fighting faiths we will continue to threaten and to harm one another. Taking the fight out of our faiths is reformation, a slow process of neutering religion and acclimating it to a rational, secular, humanistic culture. This is our challenge and our responsibility, one just as great as building economic, ecological, and political sustainability. Indeed, reformation may be a precondition for species sustainability.
Created on 28/03/2007 | Reviewed on 28/03/2007
› Report this comment to editors
to rate a comment › login
Rating: (0 users rated)

Write a comment

You have to › login to write a comment.