New Books Network interview: The Fate of Abraham: Why the West is Wrong about Islam by Peter Oborne
By
James M. Dorsey
2 July 2022
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Peter Oborne’s The Fate of Abraham: Why the
West is Wrong about Islam (Simon and Schuster 2022) is as much a history of US,
British, and French attitudes towards Islam and Muslims as it is about a
relationship that was almost doomed from the outset. Not because of inherent
problems with either the essence of the West or the essence of Islam but due to
prejudice, bias, and, certainly in the 21st century, politicisation and
weaponization of religion on both sides of the divide. Nonetheless, the book
sketches how many of the Western and non-Western policy assumptions about Islam
echo past fears, prejudices, and debates that that have fuelled a widening gap
and Islamophobia.
Oborne, the scion of a military and old-style
politically conservative family, is passionate but well-documented,
well-researched, and well-argued, in his description of the United States,
France, and Britain’s encounters with Islam and Muslims, who initially were
either subjects with very different experiences of colonialism or slaves.
Although these encounters vary widely, Islam, whose adherents were often not
granted full and equal recognition in society, has in Oborne’s telling in the
21th century replaced replaced communism as the
enemy in the post-Cold War and post 9/11 era.
Based on extensive historical research and
investigative journalism, Oborne debunks myths and distortions of the truth. In
doing so, he is clear about where he stands in the debate on whether non-violent
political Islam poses a threat. Terms that have become fashionable such as
Islamism and non-violent extremism constitute in his mind part of the
vocabulary developed to force Muslims into a cultural straight jacket.
With a well-put together list for further
reading and spiced with historical nuggets, Oborne’s book is a valuable and
important contribution to discussions about Islamophobia, political Islam, and
the relationship between the United States, European countries, and Islam – a
relationship that is likely to co-shape the 21st century world
order.
This interview was first published by New Books Network
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and scholar, a
Senior Fellow at the National University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute and the author of the syndicated column and blog, The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer.
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