Taliban perpetuate Muslim world's failed governance paradigm
By James M. Dorsey
The Taliban takeover of Afghanistan perpetuates a
paradigm of failed governance in the Muslim world based on a centuries-old
alliance between Islamic scholars and the state that, according to scholar Ahmet T Kuru, explains
underdevelopment in many Muslim-majority states and authoritarianism in most.
The takeover also highlights that, in a twist of
irony, a majority of competitors for
Muslim religious soft power, leadership of the Muslim world, and the ability to
define Islam have as much in common as they have differences.
The takeover further spotlights the Muslim world’s
struggles to free itself from the shackles of a paradigm that is at the root of
its ills. That struggle has expressed itself in a decade of protest, dissent,
defiance, and often brutally suppressed or derailed popular revolts as well as
the self-defeating flight into militant and jihadist interpretations of the
faith that fail to recognize that their radical view is nothing else but
another variant of a failed model.
Neither do the other major religious soft power
contenders, with the exception of Nahdlatul Ulama, one of the world’s largest,
if not the largest Muslim organization based in Indonesia, irrespective of the
ideological bent of their religious vision.
Nahdlatul Ulama, a politically influential civil
society movement, is the only non-state player in what amounts to a battle
for the soul of Islam that will determine the degree to which a moderate
Islam incorporates principles of tolerance, pluralism, gender equality,
secularism, and human rights as defined in the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights.
The other major contenders include Saudi Arabia, the
United Arab Emirates, and Qatar, proponents of a state-led moderate form of
Islam that propagates absolute obedience to the ruler; Turkey that pushes a
Turkic-centric and nationalist state-controlled interpretation of the faith, and
Iran that is ruled by the clergy.
“Some ‘moderates’ think that Islam should be
controlled by the state… The result is strengthening of the ulema-state
alliance and its authoritarianism. Radicals. on the other hand, have sought a
unification; claiming that Islam is both religion and the state,” Mr. Kuru said
in an email exchange with the author.
The contenders, again except for Nahdlatul Ulama,
insist that there is not only one religious but also only one political truth. Nahdlatul
Ulama officials say that the movement’s most influential ‘spiritual’ wing
argues the diametrically opposite despite a diversity of views within their
ranks.
“The spiritual wing of the Nahdlatul Ulama teaches the
duty to find the truth… Don’t try to impose your opinion and your so-called
perception on other human beings. Nobody knows if you are correct or if you’re
wrong… The spiritual ulema strive to know the truth rather than proclaim the
truth,” said a prominent figure in the movement.
Taliban-ruled Afghanistan is not a major contender in
the battle for the soul of Islam but revives the country’s adherence to Mr.
Kuru’s paradigm.
The Middle Eastern contenders in the battle have more
than just the ulema-state paradigm in common. Some also share an arbitrary
attitude towards the sanctity of private property.
Authorities in Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Turkey
have in recent years confiscated some US$135 billion in assets and cash as part
of naked power grabs and crackdowns on political opponents that appeared
arbitrary rather than anchored in legally credible procedures.
The confiscations cast a shadow over economic reform
efforts, hinder unfettered economic development and stymie innovation at a
moment that oil producers’ ability to continue to rely on export revenues may
be diminishing.
In a just-released study,
Mr. Kuru calls for the replacement of the ulema-state alliance with “open, meritocratic, and competitive
systems where the political, religious, intellectual, and economic classes are
able to operate autonomously, and none is able to dominate. Such a reform
requires the expansion of freedom of thought, by abolishing apostasy and
blasphemy laws, and a deeper protection of private properties by preventing the
state’s seizure of them. The reform also necessitates an institutionalisation
of separation between religion and the state.”
Muslim
autocrats and authoritarians, in contrast to China, which has experienced
phenomenal economic growth directed by an autocratic regime, perpetuated under-
or lop-sided economic development by maintaining the ulema-state alliance, creating
rentier states in resource-rich countries, and failing to invest in education
and bureaucratic efficiency.
Shifting the
paradigm may constitute a challenge that few Muslim rulers are likely to
accept. Sounding on an optimistic note, Mr. Kuru argued that the fact that rentier
oil-producing states will need to diversify their economies may leave rulers
with little choice.
“Oil rents
have funded ulema-state alliances for the past five decades. Soon, these rents
may lose their importance with the depletion of reserves, rise of domestic
consumption, and/or innovation of alternative energy technologies. Many Muslim
countries will need economic restructuring and innovations to be prepared for
the challenges of the post-oil era. To maintain long-term stability and
prosperity, these countries need to build productive systems that encourage
entrepreneurship. Such a reform requires that the ulema-state alliance ceases
to control socio-political life,” Mr. Kuru said.
Mr. Kuru suggests that his prescription is not without
precedent in Islamic history. The Muslim world’s golden age that lasted from
the 8th to 11th century was enabled by intellectual and
mercantile classes that could drive scientific and economic progress because it
enjoyed “a certain
degree of separation” from its political rulers.
“During the
same time period, Western Christian societies had almost the opposite
characteristics. There was a strong alliance between the Catholic church and
royal authorities, while the philosophical and merchant classes were either
non-existent or very weak. Western Christian countries were places of religious
orthodoxy and intolerance in comparison to their Muslim counterparts,” Mr. Kuru
said.
The 11th
century is when the Muslim and Christian worlds reversed roles. The Muslim
world moved towards the ulema-state alliance and militarisation while Europe
institutionalized the separation of state and church.
Europe
witnessed the opening of universities and the rise of commercial city-states
while the Muslim world experienced the emergence of a stifling feudal economy,
the origins of sectarianism, the marginalization of private landowners and
merchants, and the dominance of narrow-minded religious education.
To be sure the facets of post 11th century Muslim
society have evolved over the centuries as the world moved forward and as a
result of social, economic, technological, and political advances. Muslim-majority countries today all
have the attributes of a modern state. They embrace economic reform, social change,
and technological innovation to varying degrees, and political change not at
all.
In the 19th
century, Ottoman and Egyptian reformers reduced the power of the ulema by
absorbing their role rather than creating space for a more independent
intelligentsia and merchant class. So did 20th century secularist
leaders who viewed intellectuals and independent businessmen as threats to
their grip on power that they sought to legitimize with Islam.
These 20th-century
leaders revived the ulema state alliance in different forms, including the
creation of institutions Turkey’s Directorate of Religious Affairs or Diyanet
or the state-encouraged and controlled Islamization of countries like Egypt and
Pakistan.
Taken to its
logical conclusion, Mr. Kuru argues that current ‘moderate’ Muslim rulers, as
well as jihadists and militants, misinterpret Muslim history in ways that
justify their autocratic rule and give them an edge in the battle for the soul
of Islam yet are not born out by historical research.
The golden
age of Islam teaches the opposite. The norm then was a degree of ‘separation of
church and state,’ not the control of religion by the state advocated today by
statist moderates and radicals alike.
A podcast
version of this story is available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr, Podbean, Audecibel, Patreon and Castbox.
Dr. James
M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and scholar and a senior fellow at the
National University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute.
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