Was the prophet Muhammad a pervert and a tyrant? Does Islam promote terrorism
and enslave women? Does Islam oblige its followers to wage jihad on Westerners
whose roots lie in the secular Enlightenment?
Should Muslims consider converting to Christianity? For the Somali-born writer Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the answer to all these questions is a resounding “Yes!” Hirsi Ali, who renounced Islam in her thirties, speaks from experience of bigotry and intolerance among her former co-religionists: she was genitally mutilated as a child in Somalia, briefly radicalized by a preacher of jihad in Kenya, nearly forced into a marriage, threatened with death in the Netherlands by the Muslim assassin of her collaborator, the filmmaker Theo van Gogh, and is still hounded by murderous fanatics in her new home, America.
In her latest book, “Nomad: From Islam to America” (Free Press; $27), she reminds her readers of the West’s tradition of intellectual revolt against clerical tyranny and warns of the insidious, intransigent enemies in their midst. “The Muslim mind today seems to be in the grip of jihad,” she writes.
She is not hopeful that Americans will heed her warning. Her initial job interviews in the United States were discouraging: the Brookings Institution, she writes, worried that she might offend Arab Muslims. (The conservative American Enterprise Institute, however, immediately appointed her as a fellow.)
On college campuses, Muslim students accuse her of wanting to “trash” Islam, while Western feminists, convinced that white men are “the ultimate and only oppressors,” lack the “courage or clarity of vision” to help her knock down the mental “hovels” of the East. Pointing to Major Nidal Malik Hasan’s murderous rampage in Texas, last November, she deplores the “conspiracy to ignore the religious motivation for these killings” in America.
Muslims today, Hirsi Ali believes, must be forced to choose between the darkness
of Islam and the light of the modern secular West. In her new book, which bears the
additional subtitle “A Personal Journey Through the Clash of Civilizations,” she takes
an uncompromising line with her own relatives, who remain faithful to their benighted
religion.
The book opens with an account of her visit to her father’s deathbed, in
Whitechapel, in London’s East End, in 2008. Her father, a highly respected political
opponent of Somalia’s Soviet-backed military dictator, became more religious during
exile and old age.
Father and daughter hadn’t spoken since 2004, when Hirsi Ali and
van Gogh made the film “Submission,” about the oppression of Muslim women, and she
learned that he was fatally ill only a few weeks before his death. She didn’t want to visit him at his home, since it was in “a mostly immigrant area and overwhelmingly Muslim,” and had to be escorted by policemen to his hospital. In a brief but moving scene, she describes her father longing, but physically unable, to communicate with her.
The emotions of the moment dissipate soon after she leaves the hospital, when, driving
down Whitechapel Road with her bodyguards, Hirsi Ali glimpses covered Muslim
women on the pavement and long-bearded men outside a large mosque. Overcome by
“an instant sense of panic and suffocation,” she feels as though she were “the only true
nomad.”
The Muslims in Whitechapel “had brought their web of values with them,”
values of a culture that she has left behind. She deplores her “conflicted” half sister
Sahra, who is interested in studying psychology in London while remaining a devout
Muslim, and who has an annoying habit of saying “Inshallah” after every phrase. “How
long will Western societies . . . continue to tolerate the spread of Sahra’s way of life?”
Hirsi Ali asks. Considering her vain and financially needy brother, she laments, “This is
the tragedy of the tribal Muslim man.” She writes a letter to a deceased grandmother in
Africa, educating her about the enviable ways of the Western “infidel”: “He may take
care of his parents but has no use for a memory filled with an endless chain of ancestors. All the seeds of his toil are spent on his own offspring, not those of his brothers or uncles.”
“The only difference between my relatives and me is that I opened my mind,” Hirsi
Ali writes. The book ends with a letter to an imagined unborn daughter, which is also
a tribute to her fellow anti-Islam agitator Oriana Fallaci, who memorably claimed that
Muslims “breed like rats” in Europe. Hirsi Ali worries that her daughter will confront
“the bleakness of having no challenges in life,” in “an America of many posts: post-
civil rights, postfeminism, post-cold war.”
She wonders, “What will you fight for? What will you fight against?” Yet there are plenty of dangers that remain, and she warns her child about being brainwashed by “Allah and his agents,” and by the “many isms” that she will be exposed to in America: “socialism and communism and all sorts of cults and collectivisms.”
“Nomad” is unlikely to earn Hirsi Ali many Muslim admirers. Neither will her recent
support for the proposed French ban on face veils and the Swiss referendum outlawing
minarets. In denouncing Islam unreservedly, she has claimed a precedent in Voltaire—
though the eighteenth-century scourge of the Catholic Church might have been perplexed by her proposal that Muslims embrace the “Christianity of love and tolerance.”
In another respect, however, the invocation of Voltaire is more apt than Hirsi Ali seems to realize. Voltaire despised the faith and identity of Europe’s religious minority: the Jews, who, he declared, “are, all of them, born with raging fanaticism in their hearts,” who had “surpassed all nations in impertinent fables, in bad conduct and in barbarism,” and who “deserve to be punished.” Voltaire’s denunciations remind us that the Enlightenment was a much more complex and multifaceted phenomenon than the dawn of reason and freedom that Hirsi Ali evokes.
Many followed Voltaire in viewing the Jews as backward, an Oriental abscess in the heart of Europe. Hirsi Ali, recording her horror of ghettoized Muslim life in Whitechapel, seems unaware of the similarly contemptuous accounts of
Jewish refugees who made the East End of London their home after fleeing the pogroms.
Whitechapel has much in its past—oppression, bigotry, poverty, radicalism—that would
have helped Hirsi Ali understand not only the neighborhood’s newest inhabitants but
also her own family. But “Nomad” reveals that her life experiences have yet to ripen
into a sense of history. The sad truth is that the problems she blames on Islam—fear
of sexuality, oppression of women, militant millenarianism—are to be found wherever
traditionalist peoples confront the transition to an individualistic urban culture of
modernity.
Many more young women are killed in India for failing to bring sufficient
dowry than perish in “honor killings” across the Muslim world. Such social pathologies
no more reveal the barbaric core of Hinduism or Islam than domestic violence in Europe
and America defines the moral essence of Christianity or the Enlightenment.
Islamic fundamentalist groups have long terrorized many Muslim countries, especially
those, such as Pakistan and Afghanistan, that were ravaged by blowback from the Cold
War and the war on terror. These extremists, who now assault the West as well, have
always lacked popular support within their own countries. The anarchic vivacity of
contemporary Muslim societies—featuring such figures as Ali Saleem, Pakistan’s cross-
dressing television host, and Cairo’s hijab-wearing sex therapist Heba Kotb, whose talk
show is beamed across the Arab world—does not quite match Hirsi Ali’s description
of an incurably medieval people busy devising ever-harsher laws for themselves while
plotting mayhem for the infidels. In recent years, Islamist movements, led or assisted by
women activists, have helped democratize Indonesia and Turkey; innumerable Muslims,
such as Asma Jahangir, in Pakistan, and Shirin Ebadi, in Iran, fight to defend the rights of women against both Islamic fundamentalists and secular autocrats.
Nor do Hirsi Ali’s simple oppositions—traditional societies versus democracy, Islam
versus Western secularism—sum up the experiences of Muslims in Europe, who are
the Continent’s most globalized minority, with multilayered identities that are usually
influenced less by the Koran or Sharia than by the politics, culture, and economy of
various nations and transnational networks. Her praise for the United States, her new
home, shows a growing familiarity with right-wing touchstones (self-reliance, distrust
of government, family values, gun ownership, Christianity). But when she writes that a
Muslim can be “an American patriot” only if he doesn’t “care very much about being a
Muslim,” she seems suspicious of the country’s un-European traditions of cultural and
religious pluralism. Eager to reëducate her “fellow nomads” in “the ways of the infidel,”
Hirsi Ali is convinced that “lingering between the two value systems,” as her half sister
does, “stunts the process of becoming one’s own person.” But those privileged enough to
find refuge in the West rarely find it easy or desirable to abandon their ancestral culture
and convert to the Randian individualism that she appears to uphold as the noblest form
of human existence. The fate of the truly modern nomad is, rather, a ceaseless inner
conflict between ways of life and value systems; this very quality has made the nomad an
emblematic figure of the contemporary age.
If Hirsi Ali’s rhetoric has earned her critics among Western liberals, she has a fierce
defender in Paul Berman, whose new polemic, “The Flight of the Intellectuals” (Melville
House; $26), hails her as a “classic example of a persecuted dissident intellectual.” He
upbraids such writers as the Anglo-Dutch journalist Ian Buruma and the British academic
Timothy Garton Ash, who, he says, “sneered at Ayaan Hirsi Ali for having taken up
the ideas of Western liberalism.” Berman also condemns Buruma and Garton Ash for
“grovelling” to Tariq Ramadan, a Swiss-born Muslim professor at Oxford University,
whose work seeks to integrate observant Muslims into secular Western societies, and
whom Berman sees as an apologist for extremism. For Berman, the spectacle of writers
attacking Hirsi Ali while embracing Ramadan points to a dangerous “reactionary turn in
the intellectual world” of Europe and America.
Berman, who started his intellectual career in the early nineteen-seventies, as an
anthologist of anarchist quotations, has emerged as a prominent critic of liberal-left
pieties. In “A Tale of Two Utopias” (1996), he reprimanded the American student
radicals of the sixties for failing to recognize the evil of Communism. In “Terror and
Liberalism” (2003), he scolded liberals too timid to join what he saw as America’s
crusade for liberal democracy in Iraq. His recent writings call for unambiguous
ideological commitment in what he describes as a worldwide clash between liberalism
and totalitarianism (or “fascism,” which Berman prefers, since to hear the “pungent”
word “is to flare your nostrils”).
There is no doubt that 9/11 announced a new enemy of liberal civilization—an enemy far
more obscure than, say, Prussian militarism, Nazism, or Communist totalitarianism, all
of which were embodied by territorial states and standing armies. What was one to make
of men who hid in caves and spoke in apocalyptic tones, mixing modern anti-imperialist
rhetoric with invocations of a glorious Islamic past? Were they rootless and marginalized
revolutionaries trying to realize an Islamic myth of community, or did they express
a deeper pathology of backward tradition-bound societies? Had the Muslim world
produced a modern totalitarian ideology called “Islamism”? “Terror and Liberalism”
offered answers that could seem consolingly simple.
During the Vietnam War, Hannah Arendt noted that members of the Democratic
Administration had frequent recourse to phrases like “monolithic communism,” and
“second Munich,” and deduced from this an inability “to confront reality on its own
terms because they had always some parallels in mind that ‘helped’ them to understand
those terms.” Similarly, Berman, who wasn’t known previously for his expertise on
modern political movements east of Europe, identified Islamism as a derivative version
of the totalitarian enemies—Fascism and Communism—that liberalism had already
fought throughout the twentieth century. After “trolling the Islamic bookstores of
Brooklyn,” he offered a genealogy of “Islamism” that rested almost entirely on his
reading of Sayyid Qutb, an ideologue of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood. According
to Berman, liberal intellectuals were obliged to do battle with the new nihilistic Fascism,
which included secular dictatorships like Iraq’s as well as pan-Islamist movements. “I’m
happy to be a laptop general,” he wrote, and his work quickly united a variety of public
figures, from Richard Holbrooke to Martin Amis, in the cause.
The book had its liberal critics. Writing in The New York Review of Books, Ian Buruma
rejected Berman’s “radical vision of an American state, filled with revolutionary élan
and military steel, battling heroically and alone with outside enemies,” and wrote, “There
is something in the tone of Berman’s polemic that reminds me of the quiet American
in Graham Greene’s novel, the man of principle who causes mayhem, without quite
realizing why.” In 2007, when Buruma published a profile of Tariq Ramadan in the
Times Magazine, Berman responded with a twenty-eight-thousand-word article in The
New Republic that presented his own appalled discovery of the academic’s ideas and
inspirations. He focussed on Ramadan’s “family relations that shape everything he writes
and does,” particularly Ramadan’s grandfather Hasan al-Banna, the Egyptian founder of
the Muslim Brotherhood.
In “The Flight of the Intellectuals,” Berman expands his original indictment, arguing that
Ramadan makes the right noises but is actually quite vague about women’s rights, and
his reinterpretations of Islamic texts do not sound very liberal or moderate. In Berman’s
account, the modern Islamic thinkers whom Ramadan is related to or admires turn out to
be promoters of jihadi violence against Israel and the West. Ramadan’s grandfather, for
instance, was an early supporter of the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Muhammad Amin
al-Husseini, who tried to create an Arab-Nazi alliance. Berman concedes that Ramadan
himself doesn’t advocate terrorism or anti-Semitism, but says he is soft on those who do,
which makes it more inexplicable that liberal intellectuals should depict Ayaan Hirsi Ali,
the “admirer of the West,” as a loose cannon while hailing Ramadan as “a long-awaited
Islamic hero—the religious thinker who was going, at last, to adapt Islam to the modern
world.” According to Berman, intellectuals like Buruma and Garton Ash have helped
Ramadan “become a representative man of our age.”
Ramadan, a prolific author who has preached a “European” Islam in the heart of secular
France, has certainly attracted the attention of journalists and academics, along with those
uncompromising secularists who use him as a foil. But Berman, assessing Ramadan
from within this echo chamber, is prone to overestimate his resonance in the wider
world. “In the eyes of a vast number of European Muslims a more glorious ancestry
than Tariq Ramadan’s does not exist,” he writes. It is more likely that the majority of
European Muslims worry more about unemployment, discrimination, and inequality
than about setting up an Islamic caliphate, and have never heard of Hasan al-Banna.
Ramadan himself is virtually unknown among many of Europe’s Muslim communities,
not least the South Asian Muslims in Britain, who, in the age of the Internet and satellite
television, have their own transnational reformist thinkers, Urdu-speaking pop preachers,
and charismatic evangelists. Ramadan’s over-all reputation in Europe and the Middle
East can’t begin to compare with that of a reformist “satellite sheikh” like Egypt’s Amr
Khaled, or, for that matter, a figure like Yusuf al-Qaradawi, a Qatar-based theologian
who justifies suicide attacks on Israel and whose program on Al Jazeera reaches tens of
millions of people.
It seems irrational to fear, as Berman does, that a lukewarm profile in the Times
Magazine, a favorable mention or two in The New York Review of Books, and a teaching
job at Oxford would help Ramadan “break into . . . the American conversation,” not to
mention force a “reactionary turn” in the country’s intellectual life.
Sooner or later, just about every writer of non-Western background finds himself taken to be a representative of, or spokesperson for, his community, nation, race, or religion. Ramadan, who has solemnly, even pompously, embraced this role, seems no more than one of the many academics struggling to fulfill the West’s post-9/11 demand for “moderate” Islam.
Berman clearly wants him to prove his credentials by unconditionally repudiating
various Islamist grandees. Ramadan is evidently fearful of losing credibility in the very
community of conservative Muslims that he wishes to reconcile with the West. But
Berman reads volumes into Ramadan’s silences and pursues him with inquisitorial zeal.
He suggests that Ramadan supports the Taliban, even while admitting that Ramadan
never mentions the Taliban.
He says that Ramadan not just “admires” but “worships”
Qaradawi, although the citations of Ramadan that he produces to illustrate this claim
reveal nothing more fervent than the standard lexicon of scholarly attribution: “Yusuf
al-Qaradawi aptly notes that . . . ”; “For details, see Yusuf al-Qaradawi. . . .” Berman’s
fulminations against Ramadan—“He is imprisoned in a cage. . . . He cannot think for
himself. He does not believe in thinking for himself ”—cause his usually sprightly prose,
finally, to crack. What is he trying to accomplish?
It’s possible that, by building Ramadan up as a treacherous enemy of liberal civilization,
Berman hopes to vindicate his own earlier role as a laptop general. After nearly a
decade, the Bush Administration’s global war on terror, which Berman saw as a crusade
for liberal democracy, seems a fiasco. In addition to destroying innumerable lives, it
has helped an initially small band of fanatics multiply and mutate (Al Qaeda in Iraq,
the Pakistani Taliban) in new locations (Waziristan, Connecticut). Of course, the
proliferation of extremists could be taken as further evidence of a worldwide Fascist
conspiracy, and this, it seems, may be Berman’s larger project. In rummaging through the “hidden corners” of Ramadan’s thought, he seems less interested in describing a “new twist . . . in the history of the Western intellectuals” (a melodramatic and unconvincing move) than in finding as many examples of Muslim extremism as possible—the “murk,” as he described it in “Terror and Liberalism,” of people “drunk on the idea of slaughter.”
This sets him off on a long exploration of the virulent hatred of Jews manifested by
Ramadan’s grandfather and his Islamist allies.
Certainly, this malignity does still fester in the proclamations of Hamas and Hezbollah;
and Berman deftly summarizes a revisionist history that emphasizes “centuries of Muslim cruelty toward the Jews,” challenging the conventional view that European-style anti-Semitism was unknown under the Ottoman Empire. But he misses an opportunity to enrich his genealogy of hate by setting it within the modern history of the Middle East and Asia. For instance, he makes a passing reference to Rashid Rida, a prominent Islamist thinker at the turn of the twentieth century and al-Banna’s revered teacher, expressing curiosity about his praise for early Zionist settlers, but doesn’t explore the matter further.
Although, ultimately, Rida turned against Zionism as Jewish immigration
to Palestine surged in the wake of the Balfour Declaration, he had been an outspoken
critic of European anti-Semitism during the Dreyfus trial and made early attempts,
including an exchange with Chaim Weizmann, regarding an agreement between “the
Arabs and their Hebrew cousins.” Berman rightly points out that the mufti of Jerusalem
showed an obscene eagerness to help extend the Final Solution to the Middle East, and
hatred of British colonialists and Zionist settlers certainly provoked Naziphilia among
many Arabs of the nineteen-thirties and forties. But it is worth noting that, by 1941,
when the mufti sidled up to Hitler and, soon afterward, began to air his anti-Semitic
rants on the radio, reactionary pan-Islamists like him had to contend with overlapping
groups of liberal Westernizers, Marxists, and secular Arab nationalists; far from being
representative of the larger Arab world, the mufti was a fast-diminishing figure even
in his own small sphere of influence—forced out of Palestine by the British in 1937
and blamed for a series of political debacles there. Berman himself relates that Arabs
comprehensively failed to respond to the mufti’s exhortations to kill the Jews.
What you wouldn’t guess from Berman’s account is how common it was for anti-
colonialist leaders to stumble into such unlikely alliances. In the nineteen-twenties,
Mahatma Gandhi, a devout Hindu and pacifist, vigorously campaigned for the restoration of the caliphate. And in 1941 an old colleague of his, Subhas Chandra Bose, travelled to Berlin and enlisted Indian P.O.W.s who later fought in the Waffen S.S. The expedient notion that my enemy’s enemy is my friend even motivated the Jewish militant leader Avraham Stern to try, in 1940, to enlist Nazi support against the British rulers of Palestine.
Bose, who went on to collaborate with Japanese militarists against the British in the
Japanese invasion of India, remains a great nationalist icon, while Winston Churchill,
the resolute anti-Fascist so admired in the West, is reviled as a crudely racist imperialist
who delayed Indian independence as long as he could and inflicted death on millions with
his callous policies during the Great Famine of Bengal, in 1943. These Janus reputations
should remind us that what Berman casts as an epic moral struggle between liberalism
and Fascism in the West has been experienced and remembered very differently in the
East.
In “Terror and Liberalism,” Berman invoked Woodrow Wilson’s liberal internationalist
intervention in the First World War, rebuking weak-kneed liberals unwilling to join what
he saw as a new American crusade for liberal democracy beginning in Iraq. Wilson had
asserted, “Liberalism is the only thing that can save civilization from chaos,” even after
he led the United States into the bloodbath that inaugurated the extraordinary violence
of the twentieth century. Declaring his support for national self-determination, Wilson
briefly enjoyed unqualified reverence, from Cairo to Peking. At home, he had his most
vociferous supporters among the liberal intelligentsia, then a new force in American
life, which believed that America’s entry into the war would make not only Prussia
and Europe but also the world safe for democracy. But war, which follows its own
grim illogic, is rarely subservient to virtuous intentions; and peacemaking can be an
even dirtier business. Outwitted by his French and British allies at the postwar peace
conference in Paris, Wilson ended up surrendering his immense moral prestige among
colonized peoples to European imperialists. By 1919, the presumed beneficiaries of
liberal internationalism—India, China, and the Middle East—instead felt betrayed. As the
Harvard historian Erez Manela explains in a recent book, “The Wilsonian Moment,” to
many leaders and thinkers of the colonized world who had viewed Wilson as their savior,
Western liberalism now appeared synonymous with imperialism.
In light of these alternative histories, “The Flight of the Intellectuals” seems to be
laboring merely to underline the obvious: that a Muslim with a political subjectivity
shaped by decades of imperial conquest, humiliation, and postcolonial failure does not
share the world view of a liberal from Brooklyn. Yet there has long been such a chasm
between Western intellectuals and their counterparts in formerly subordinate countries,
an incompatibility of historical memories. The terrorist attacks of 9/11 and the war
on terror have hardened prejudice and suspicion on all sides; now more than ever it is
necessary for Western intellectuals to find real interlocutors among Muslim thinkers
and activists. Tariq Ramadan may not be ideal, but the impulse to engage with him
seems to exemplify the best kind of liberalism—unself-righteous and aware of its own
inadequacies.
Certainly, Berman’s hopes for delivering reason and freedom at gunpoint have proved
calamitous. Lamenting many similar flights of the intellectuals in the long twentieth
century—their noisy ideological identifications and terrible political choices—the late
Polish philosopher Leszek Kolakowski once pointed out that, however much intellectuals
yearn to be both “prophets and heralds of reason,” those roles cannot be reconciled. “The
common human qualities of vanity and greed for power” are particularly dangerous
among intellectuals, he observed, and their longing to identify with political causes often
results in “an almost unbelievable loss of critical reasoning.”
This was never a risk for Kolakowski’s model thinker-activist, Erasmus of Rotterdam,
a “peace-loving incendiary,” who was at once engaged in the major conflicts of his
day and “withdrawn and careful, unwilling to go to extremes”—the great promoter of
religious reform who declined to join the Reformation. Those wishing to stage worldwide revolution and force open Muslim and Western minds may not see the appeal of Erasmus’s sixteenth-century decorum. But, in these volatile times, intellectuals would do well to reacquaint themselves with what Kolakowski described as the “history of many deceitful hopes”—the crimes of ideological passion in which even liberals have been complicit.