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Islam,
Academe, and Freedom of the Mind
By Akbar Ahmed and Lawrence Rosen
In the weeks since the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon,
as America and its allies have set about building coalitions that include
many of the Islamic nations,
The image shown to the world on the cover of the June 17 New York Times
Magazine, of Saad Eddin Ibrahim, a respected Egyptian sociologist, caged
and on trial for the exercise of
From South Asia to North Africa, an entire generation of Muslim intellectuals
is at this moment under threat: Many have already been killed, silenced,
or forced into exile. Consider Pakistan. The late nuclear physicist
Abdus Salam, Pakistan's only Nobel laureate, was pressured to leave
early in his career, in the late 1950s, because he belonged to a sect
not recognized by most Pakistani Muslims. Fazlur Rahman, instrumental
in starting Islamic studies at the University of Chicago in the late
'60s, was chased out earlier in that There is considerable irony in the fact that Pakistan's record in relation to freedom of thought is not good, given the nature of its founder, Mohammed Ali Jinnah. Jinnah believed in human rights, women's rights, minority rights, and the rule of law. Along with his followers, he hoped to create a modern Muslim nation, one that would respect Islamic tradition but at the same time be part of a modern community of nations.
Jinnah so respected women's rights that he insisted that his sister,
Fatima Jinnah, be with him publicly in his struggle for the creation
of Pakistan in 1947. Fatima Jinnah herself
That view of Jinnah was pushed most strongly after Gen. Zia-ul-Haq took
power in 1977 through a military coup and launched a campaign to "Islamize"
Pakistan. But how do you To portray the real Jinnah, Akbar Ahmed, one of the authors of this essay, along with several friends and colleagues, spent the 1990s on several related projects, which came to be called the Jinnah Quartet. They included the feature film Jinnah (released in English and Urdu in 2000); a television documentary, Mr. Jinnah -- The Making of Pakistan (released in 1997); an academic book called Jinnah, Pakistan and Islamic Identity: The Search for Saladin (published by Routledge in 1997); and a graphic novel (published by Oxford UniversityPress in 1997).
The Jinnah Quartet attempted to answer a crucial question about Muslim
society that many scholars and intellectuals -- Muslims and non-Muslims
alike -- are asking in their The Jinnah Quartet project was controversial. Once the filming started in 1997 -- in England, where the author was living, and on location in Pakistan -- the Pakistani press and various political parties launched a disinformation campaign, claiming that Salman Rushdie had written the script for the film, or that it was part of a Hindu or a Zionist conspiracy.
While filming in Pakistan, the author and others involved in the project
were verbally attacked and threatened by journalists and "concerned
citizens," and important officials When Muslim scholars and intellectuals -- those who seek and foster knowledge -- are silenced, Muslim citizens are cut off from part of who they are. Islam places enormous emphasis on knowledge. It charges humans to use their God-given reason to better themselves and their dependents, and throughout history ordinary Muslims have cherished that expectation and the benefits such knowledge has produced. They appreciate the control that knowledge gives them over their destiny, the connections it allows them to form with people different from themselves, the insight it gives them into their faith, and the limits it may place on those who exercise power. For that multifarious search for knowledge to be jeopardized is to risk not only the loss of information but a crucial element of who Muslims know themselves to be. We think of knowledge in this information age as readily accessible to all. When we see an Internet cafe in a dusty town of South Asia or a satellite dish hooked up to a car battery in the countryside of North Africa, we assume that authoritarian regimes can no longer control the flow of communication. But being hooked up and online may make it easier to know what is happening acrossthe world than to know of events in the next town or district.
In many Muslim regimes, intelligence agencies with their own agendas
and presidents who exercise their powers capriciously create a constant
state of uncertainty that spreads well
Pressures on intellectual freedom come from many sources. Throughout
much of the Muslim world, university students are among the most ardent
fundamentalists, fueled by the literal interpretation of Islam taught
at madrassahs (Muslim religious schools). The network of madrassahs
in turn links up with religious political parties across national boundaries.
In Muslim countries, madrassahs are seen as a legitimate Islamic alternative
to unaffordable private schools patronized by the westernized elite.
Professors, particularly in the liberal arts, are often cowed by their
own students into silence, both in their teaching and in their writing.
Like some postmodernist gone mad, the student of literature may see
fiction as nothing but the expression of the writer's politics, while
the science student is not concerned with questioning fundamentals,
but with applying technologies to religious and political ends. The
results for intellectuals range from a denial of the finest traditions
of open debate to working in an environment of omnipresent threat. (In
Islamabad, a professor at a medicalcollege this year was found guilty
of blasphemy and sentenced to death, after students complained about
him to the local
It is impossible to ignore the discrepancy between the Islamic emphasis
on knowledge and the questionable climate for scholars and intellectuals
in Muslim countries. Great scholars
When Abdus Salam needed to be protected by riot police on his first
visit home after winning the Nobel Prize in 1979, when the co-author
of this essay, on returning home after a year at the Institute for Advanced
Study in Princeton, was asked by a Pakistani general, "Why have
you returned home? We don't need scholars and intellectuals in Pakistan,"
when researchers like Professor Ibrahim must risk their freedom to publish
a survey What
was once an occasional event -- silencing scholars -- increasingly has
become a way of life in most Muslim countries. Along with the appearance
of open information -- At a time when it is easy to ignore intellectual freedom while concentrating on combating terrorism, we must remember that only when Muslims have a full range of options freely and openly available to them can creative alternatives to extremism be entertained; only when we in the West support the same openness of thought in the Muslim world that we expect in our own societies can the hopes of ordinary people for improvement in their lives become the basis for a common bond. Saad Ibrahim remains behind bars in Egypt, the quiet American pressures to gain his release obscured by the needs of momentary alliance with that country's government.
If Ibrahim and others like him are, like truth itself, further casualties
of a war on terrorism, the victory that will be gained will only fertilize
the seeds of perpetual disaffection in Muslim countries and reinforce
the image that Westerners are not concerned with freedom except for
their own citizens. Meanwhile the lack of clarity and stability in Muslim
society will further encourage those who interpret Islam to mean
Akbar Ahmed is a professor of Islamic studies at American University,
a former high commissioner of Pakistan to the United Kingdom, and the
author, most recently, of |
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