South Asia replaces the Middle East as the epicentre of Muslim religious ultra-conservatism
By James M.
Dorsey
The fault
line gains significance as various Muslim-majority states compete with one
another in their efforts to define Islam in the 21st century in what
is as much geopolitical as it is an ideological struggle. The battle’s
importance is further magnified by the fact that diplomacy, economics, public
affairs, and soft power increasingly take centre stage as countries like Saudi
Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Turkey, and Iran seek to manage their
differences in a bid to prevent them from spinning out of control.
The fault
line by default divides proponents and detractors of political Islam and shifts
the epicentre of religious ultra-conservatism in the Muslim world from the Arab
to the non-Arab Middle East and expands it into South Asia.
The Taliban
victory in Afghanistan cemented by the US withdrawal in August and coupled with
multiple steps by the government of Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan that
encourage and embolden religious ultra-conservatism and militancy emphasize
South Asia’s new place in the Muslim competition for ranking on the pecking
order of a new world order.
Concern that
Afghanistan could emerge as a hub for cross border and trans-national political
violence and drive militancy and bloodshed in Pakistan coupled with a surge in attacks in Kashmir in recent weeks compounds South Asia’s
positioning. The attacks suggest that India’s decision in 2019 to end Kashmir's
autonomy and deprive it of its statehood has driven renewed militancy.
Analysts fear
that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s discriminatory Hindu nationalist policies
will encourage radicalism elsewhere in India, home to the world’s third-largest Muslim
population.
Retired Indian Lt. General H. S. Panag warned of the threat posed by “the
fissures developing in the minds of the large Muslim community because of them
being targeted by lumpen ideology-driven elements of the majority community.
That these elements enjoy political/State patronage only substantiates the
persecution theory of radical Islam.”
What the
religious divide does mean is that the Taliban are in good company in a swath
of land stretching from Istanbul to Islamabad when it comes to restricting
social behaviour like their preventing girls from getting an education, banning
music and western hairstyles, and forbidding men to shave their beards.
Similarly, Mr.
Khan, the Pakistani prime minister, made waves earlier this year with his misogynist
assertion that the mounting number of attacks on women was because they were wearing “very
few clothes.” Mr. Khan has since welcomed the Taliban victory as “breaking the chains of slavery.”
Turkish Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s religious guru, 84-year-old Muslim scholar
Hayrettin Karaman, reinforced the club recently by declaring that a Sunni Muslim man cannot marry an
Alevi woman.
Alevis, who
account for up to 25 per cent of Turkey’s population, adhere to more liberal
and tolerant religious precepts than those propagated by traditional Sunni
Muslim Islam as well as Mr. Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party
(AKP). Mr. Karaman’s fatwa threatened to fuel Turkey’s culture wars at a time
that Mr. Erdogan is tanking in opinion
polls.
Education is
one major marker of the different worlds reflected in the religious divide.
Restrictions of girls’ and women’s education in the Taliban’s Afghanistan and
Pakistan’s introduction of a single national curriculum that fuses secular and
religious education together and seeks to Islamicize it contrast starkly with
the Gulf’s emphasis on modern science-based education and the creation of local
campuses of major Western universities.
Pervez
Hoodbhoy, a nuclear scientist, human rights activist, and frequent commentator
on educational issues noted that Ottomans and others had failed in their attempts
to join regular schools and religious seminaries in one system.
“This is why
Arab countries today are fast changing their curricula into modern ones. Pakistan is trying to be an exception, but it will pay a heavy price.
Masses of the SNC unemployed graduates – even those with PhDs – will be the
result of a failed experiment,” Mr. Hoodbhoy said, referring to the single
national curriculum by its initials.
A study
published earlier this year suggested that Turkish schoolbooks had replaced
Saudi texts
as the bull’s eye of criticism of supremacist and intolerant curricula in the
Muslim world.
The study
found that Turkish curricula, once a model of secularism with an education
system that taught evolution, cultural openness, and tolerance towards
minorities, had increasingly replaced those concepts with notions of jihad,
martyrdom in battle and a neo-Ottoman and pan-Turkist ethnoreligious worldview.
“The idea
that jihad war is now part of the Turkish curriculum, that martyrdom in battle
is now glorified, might not be surprising given what we know about Erdogan …
But seeing it in black and white is quite
a shock,”
said Marcus Sheff, CEO of Impact-se, the group that sponsored the study.
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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