Gaza divides the wheat from the chaff among religious leaders.
By James M. Dorsey
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Hamas’ October 7 attack on Israel has not just divided
Muslim political leaders. It’s also solicited diverse responses from religious figures
and institutions, reflecting deeper divisions about what Islam stands for in
the 21st century.
At the core of the differences is the ability and
willingness to empathise with innocent victims on both sides of the
Israeli-Palestnian divide, even if the focus is on the carnage caused by
Israel’s assault on Gaza, the West’s double standards, and the international
community’s impotence in imposing a long-term halt to the fighting.
The divide is mirror imaged among Israelis and Jews, many of
whom have little sympathy for the extreme suffering of innocent Palestinian
civilians.
To be sure, a majority of Muslim religious leaders believe
that the Hamas attack stemmed from decades of occupation of Palestinian lands
conquered during the 1967 Middle East war and Israeli policies designed to
repress Palestinian resistance and thwart resolving the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict by establishing an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel.
Many also argue that the indiscriminate Israeli bombing and
ground offensive in Gaza that has killed more than 14,000 Gazans, injured more
than 30,000 others, and destroyed infrastructure needed for the basics of life overshadows
the brutality of the Hamas attack that caused the death of 1,200, mostly
civilian Israelis.
The divide among Muslim religious leaders and scholars is
evident in the response of two poles of the spectrum of Muslims who define
themselves as moderate.
The spectrum ranges from religious leaders and scholars who
advocate reform of Islamic jurisprudence to remove supremacist and
discriminatory clauses in Sharia and political pluralism to religious figures
and institutions aligned with autocrats, some of whom favour greater social
freedoms, but repress dissent and oppose religious law reform.
The diversity in ‘moderate’ interpretations of Islam
reflects a struggle to define what moderate Islam means in the 21st
century. It also echoes the divide between moderate and more militant
expressions of the faith that run the gamut from Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan to Iran to jihadists.
With the wanton killing of civilian Israelis in its October
7 attack, Hamas, an Islamist group inspired by the Muslim Brotherhood that
cloaks its nationalism in a religious mantle, has blurred the lines between
moderates and more militant expressions of Islam.
The muddling of the different perspectives highlights the
need for reform of Muslim religious jurisprudence to ensure compliance with
international humanitarian law and deprive militants of the ability to find
legitimization in Sharia.
The contrast in responses to the Gaza war by Nahdlatul
Ulama, the world’s largest and most moderate, Indonesia-based Muslim civil
society movement, and Al-Azhar, a Cairo-based, 1,053-year-old citadel of
Islamic learning, spotlights the muddle.
In a statement calling for a “just” resolution of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Nahdlatul
Ulama urged that religious inspiration —
including the values of universal love and compassion, human fraternity, and
justice — be brought to the forefront of public awareness at all times, to help
resolve conflict at every level of society, from the grassroots to the corridors
of state power.”
The statement called on Muslims “to collectively pray for
the souls of all who have perished in the escalating (Israeli-Palestinian)
violence.”
It further advocated that “people and governments
everywhere...refrain from weaponizing identity or appealing to religion to fuel
hatred and hostility, including in relation to the conflict and violence
between Israel and Palestine.”
Following up on the statement, Nahdlatul Ulama has invited
Muslim and non-Muslim religious authorities for a summit to discuss “religion’s
role in addressing Middle East violence and threats to a rules-based
international order.”
By contrast Al Azhar, in its
statement “proudly salut(ed) the efforts of the resistance of the proud
Palestinian people. It offered “sincere condolences” to Palestinians “who were
martyred in order to defend their homeland and nation” with no mention of
innocent Israelis killed.
Al Azhar’s Global Fatwa Center issued a religious opinion
echoing Hamas’ assertion that there
are no innocent Israelis, a mirror image of Israeli statements
that all Gazans are terrorists and supporters of Hamas.
"The term 'civilian' does not apply to the Zionist
settlers on the occupied land. Rather, they are occupiers of the land who usurp
rights, disregard the prophets’ ways, and attack the holy sites in historic
Jerusalem,” the fatwa said.
It was unclear whether the fatwa was referring to settlers
on Palestinian land conquered by Israel during the 1967 Middle East war or
defined all Israeli Jews as settlers.
Endorsing the Hamas attack, various senior Al Azhar clerics described
Jews as “the
cursed descendants of apes and pigs."
At no point did a stream of other official Gaza-related Al
Azhar statements and declarations by individual scholars denounce the killing
of innocent civilians irrespective of religion, race, or creed.
The Gaza war has evoked human beings’ most destructive
instincts – survival, anger, fear, despair, and vengeance – on both sides of
the Israeli-Palestinian divide.
The war constitutes a litmus test for Muslim and Jewish
religious leaders on whether they can rise above the fray and adopt humanitarian
and morally and ethically defendable positions.
So far, they have largely failed the test.
Among Muslims, the contrast between Al-Azhar and Nahdlatul
Ulama’s approach to the Gaza war is Exhibit A.
The contrast spotlights the essence of a battle for the soul
of Islam that separates the wheat from the chaff in a competition between
multiple players wanting to be seen as the beacon of Muslim moderation.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an Honorary Fellow at
Singapore’s Middle East Institute-NUS, an Adjunct Senior Fellow at Nanyang
Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, and
the author of the syndicated column and podcast, The
Turbulent World with James M. Dorsey.
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