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The Clash of Ignorance
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by Edward
Said
Samuel Huntington's article "The Clash of Civilizations?" appeared in
the Summer 1993 issue of Foreign Affairs, where it immediately attracted
a surprising amount of attention and reaction. Because the article was
intended to supply Americans with an original thesis about "a new phase"
in world politics after the end of the cold war, Huntington's terms of
argument seemed compellingly large, bold, even visionary. He very
clearly had his eye on rivals in the policy-making ranks, theorists such
as Francis Fukuyama and his "end of history" ideas, as well as the
legions who had celebrated the onset of globalism, tribalism and the
dissipation of the state. But they, he allowed, had understood only some
aspects of this new period. He was about to announce the "crucial,
indeed a central, aspect" of what "global politics is likely to be in
the coming years." Unhesitatingly he pressed on:
"It is my hypothesis that the fundamental source of conflict in this new
world will not be primarily ideological or primarily economic. The great
divisions among humankind and the dominating source of conflict will be
cultural. Nation states will remain the most powerful actors in world
affairs, but the principal conflicts of global politics will occur
between nations and groups of different civilizations. The clash of
civilizations will dominate global politics. The fault lines between
civilizations will be the battle lines of the future."
Most of the argument in the pages that followed relied on a vague notion
of something Huntington called "civilization identity" and "the
interactions among seven or eight [sic] major civilizations," of which
the conflict between two of them, Islam and the West, gets the lion's
share of his attention. In this belligerent kind of thought, he relies
heavily on a 1990 article by the veteran Orientalist Bernard Lewis,
whose ideological colors are manifest in its title, "The Roots of Muslim
Rage." In both articles, the personification of enormous entities called
"the West" and "Islam" is recklessly affirmed, as if hugely complicated
matters like identity and culture existed in a cartoonlike world where
Popeye and Bluto bash each other mercilessly, with one always more
virtuous pugilist getting the upper hand over his adversary. Certainly
neither Huntington nor Lewis has much time to spare for the internal
dynamics and plurality of every civilization, or for the fact that the
major contest in most modern cultures concerns the definition or
interpretation of each culture, or for the unattractive possibility that
a great deal of demagogy and downright ignorance is involved in
presuming to speak for a whole religion or civilization. No, the West is
the West, and Islam is Islam.
The challenge for Western policy-makers, says Huntington, is to make
sure that the West gets stronger and fends off all the others, Islam in
particular. More troubling is Huntington's assumption that his
perspective, which is to survey the entire world from a perch outside
all ordinary attachments and hidden loyalties, is the correct one, as if
everyone else were scurrying around looking for the answers that he has
already found. In fact, Huntington is an ideologist, someone who wants
to make "civilizations" and "identities" into what they are not:
shut-down, sealed-off entities that have been purged of the myriad
currents and countercurrents that animate human history, and that over
centuries have made it possible for that history not only to contain
wars of religion and imperial conquest but also to be one of exchange,
cross-fertilization and sharing. This far less visible history is
ignored in the rush to highlight the ludicrously compressed and
constricted warfare that "the clash of civilizations" argues is the
reality. When he published his book by the same title in 1996,
Huntington tried to give his argument a little more subtlety and many,
many more footnotes; all he did, however, was confuse himself and
demonstrate what a clumsy writer and inelegant thinker he was.
The basic paradigm of West versus the rest (the cold war opposition
reformulated) remained untouched, and this is what has persisted, often
insidiously and implicitly, in discussion since the terrible events of
September 11. The carefully planned and horrendous, pathologically
motivated suicide attack and mass slaughter by a small group of deranged
militants has been turned into proof of Huntington's thesis. Instead of
seeing it for what it is--the capture of big ideas (I use the word
loosely) by a tiny band of crazed fanatics for criminal
purposes--international luminaries from former Pakistani Prime Minister
Benazir Bhutto to Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi have
pontificated about Islam's troubles, and in the latter's case have used
Huntington's ideas to rant on about the West's superiority, how "we"
have Mozart and Michelangelo and they don't. (Berlusconi has since made
a halfhearted apology for his insult to "Islam.")
But why not instead see parallels, admittedly less spectacular in their
destructiveness, for Osama bin Laden and his followers in cults like the
Branch Davidians or the disciples of the Rev. Jim Jones at Guyana or the
Japanese Aum Shinrikyo? Even the normally sober British weekly The
Economist, in its issue of September 22-28, can't resist reaching for
the vast generalization, praising Huntington extravagantly for his
"cruel and sweeping, but nonetheless acute" observations about Islam.
"Today," the journal says with unseemly solemnity, Huntington writes
that "the world's billion or so Muslims are 'convinced of the
superiority of their culture, and obsessed with the inferiority of their
power.'" Did he canvas 100 Indonesians, 200 Moroccans, 500 Egyptians and
fifty Bosnians? Even if he did, what sort of sample is that?
Uncountable are the editorials in every American and European newspaper
and magazine of note adding to this vocabulary of gigantism and
apocalypse, each use of which is plainly designed not to edify but to
inflame the reader's indignant passion as a member of the "West," and
what we need to do. Churchillian rhetoric is used inappropriately by
self-appointed combatants in the West's, and especially America's, war
against its haters, despoilers, destroyers, with scant attention to
complex histories that defy such reductiveness and have seeped from one
territory into another, in the process overriding the boundaries that
are supposed to separate us all into divided armed camps.
This is the problem with unedifying labels like Islam and the West: They
mislead and confuse the mind, which is trying to make sense of a
disorderly reality that won't be pigeonholed or strapped down as easily
as all that. I remember interrupting a man who, after a lecture I had
given at a West Bank university in 1994, rose from the audience and
started to attack my ideas as "Western," as opposed to the strict
Islamic ones he espoused. "Why are you wearing a suit and tie?" was the
first retort that came to mind. "They're Western too." He sat down with
an embarrassed smile on his face, but I recalled the incident when
information on the September 11 terrorists started to come in: how they
had mastered all the technical details required to inflict their
homicidal evil on the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and the aircraft
they had commandeered. Where does one draw the line between "Western"
technology and, as Berlusconi declared, "Islam's" inability to be a part
of "modernity"?
One cannot easily do so, of course. How finally inadequate are the
labels, generalizations and cultural assertions. At some level, for
instance, primitive passions and sophisticated know-how converge in ways
that give the lie to a fortified boundary not only between "West" and
"Islam" but also between past and present, us and them, to say nothing
of the very concepts of identity and nationality about which there is
unending disagreement and debate. A unilateral decision made to draw
lines in the sand, to undertake crusades, to oppose their evil with our
good, to extirpate terrorism and, in Paul Wolfowitz's nihilistic
vocabulary, to end nations entirely, doesn't make the supposed entities
any easier to see; rather, it speaks to how much simpler it is to make
bellicose statements for the purpose of mobilizing collective passions
than to reflect, examine, sort out what it is we are dealing with in
reality, the interconnectedness of innumerable lives, "ours" as well as
"theirs."
In a remarkable series of three articles published between January and
March 1999 in Dawn, Pakistan's most respected weekly, the late Eqbal
Ahmad, writing for a Muslim audience, analyzed what he called the roots
of the religious right, coming down very harshly on the mutilations of
Islam by absolutists and fanatical tyrants whose obsession with
regulating personal behavior promotes "an Islamic order reduced to a
penal code, stripped of its humanism, aesthetics, intellectual quests,
and spiritual devotion." And this "entails an absolute assertion of one,
generally de-contextualized, aspect of religion and a total disregard of
another. The phenomenon distorts religion, debases tradition, and twists
the political process wherever it unfolds." As a timely instance of this
debasement, Ahmad proceeds first to present the rich, complex, pluralist
meaning of the word jihad and then goes on to show that in the word's
current confinement to indiscriminate war against presumed enemies, it
is impossible "to recognize the Islamic--religion, society, culture,
history or politics--as lived and experienced by Muslims through the
ages." The modern Islamists, Ahmad concludes, are "concerned with power,
not with the soul; with the mobilization of people for political
purposes rather than with sharing and alleviating their sufferings and
aspirations. Theirs is a very limited and time-bound political agenda."
What has made matters worse is that similar distortions and zealotry
occur in the "Jewish" and "Christian" universes of discourse.
It was Conrad, more powerfully than any of his readers at the end of the
nineteenth century could have imagined, who understood that the
distinctions between civilized London and "the heart of darkness"
quickly collapsed in extreme situations, and that the heights of
European civilization could instantaneously fall into the most barbarous
practices without preparation or transition. And it was Conrad also, in
The Secret Agent (1907), who described terrorism's affinity for
abstractions like "pure science" (and by extension for "Islam" or "the
West"), as well as the terrorist's ultimate moral degradation.
For there are closer ties between apparently warring civilizations than
most of us would like to believe; both Freud and Nietzsche showed how
the traffic across carefully maintained, even policed boundaries moves
with often terrifying ease. But then such fluid ideas, full of ambiguity
and skepticism about notions that we hold on to, scarcely furnish us
with suitable, practical guidelines for situations such as the one we
face now. Hence the altogether more reassuring battle orders (a crusade,
good versus evil, freedom against fear, etc.) drawn out of Huntington's
alleged opposition between Islam and the West, from which official
discourse drew its vocabulary in the first days after the September 11
attacks. There's since been a noticeable de-escalation in that
discourse, but to judge from the steady amount of hate speech and
actions, plus reports of law enforcement efforts directed against Arabs,
Muslims and Indians all over the country, the paradigm stays on.
One further reason for its persistence is the increased presence of
Muslims all over Europe and the United States. Think of the populations
today of France, Italy, Germany, Spain, Britain, America, even Sweden,
and you must concede that Islam is no longer on the fringes of the West
but at its center. But what is so threatening about that presence?
Buried in the collective culture are memories of the first great
Arab-Islamic conquests, which began in the seventh century and which, as
the celebrated Belgian historian Henri Pirenne wrote in his landmark
book Mohammed and Charlemagne (1939), shattered once and for all the
ancient unity of the Mediterranean, destroyed the Christian-Roman
synthesis and gave rise to a new civilization dominated by northern
powers (Germany and Carolingian France) whose mission, he seemed to be
saying, is to resume defense of the "West" against its
historical-cultural enemies. What Pirenne left out, alas, is that in the
creation of this new line of defense the West drew on the humanism,
science, philosophy, sociology and historiography of Islam, which had
already interposed itself between Charlemagne's world and classical
antiquity. Islam is inside from the start, as even Dante, great enemy of
Mohammed, had to concede when he placed the Prophet at the very heart of
his Inferno.
Then there is the persisting legacy of monotheism itself, the Abrahamic
religions, as Louis Massignon aptly called them. Beginning with Judaism
and Christianity, each is a successor haunted by what came before; for
Muslims, Islam fulfills and ends the line of prophecy. There is still no
decent history or demystification of the many-sided contest among these
three followers--not one of them by any means a monolithic, unified
camp--of the most jealous of all gods, even though the bloody modern
convergence on Palestine furnishes a rich secular instance of what has
been so tragically irreconcilable about them. Not surprisingly, then,
Muslims and Christians speak readily of crusades and jihads, both of
them eliding the Judaic presence with often sublime insouciance. Such an
agenda, says Eqbal Ahmad, is "very reassuring to the men and women who
are stranded in the middle of the ford, between the deep waters of
tradition and modernity."
But we are all swimming in those waters, Westerners and Muslims and
others alike. And since the waters are part of the ocean of history,
trying to plow or divide them with barriers is futile. These are tense
times, but it is better to think in terms of powerful and powerless
communities, the secular politics of reason and ignorance, and universal
principles of justice and injustice, than to wander off in search of
vast abstractions that may give momentary satisfaction but little
self-knowledge or informed analysis. "The Clash of civilizations" thesis
is a gimmick like "The War of the Worlds," better for reinforcing
defensive self-pride than for critical understanding of the bewildering
interdependence of our time.
Source:
by courtesy & 2001 MIFTAH & Edward Said
by the same author:
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