By Alan Caruba
The news from Paris about the killing
of twelve journalists highlights Islam's war on the West that represents a
fundamental truth about this cult of Mohammad.
Most are familiar with the Islamic
schism between the majority Sunnis and the minority Shiites. It dates back to
the very earliest days of Islam when the two groups disagreed over who should be
the successor to Mohammad.
There is a new schism in Islam these
days and it is between a moderate interpretation of Islam and fundamentalism. We
have all seen what fundamentalism produces.
The past year had dramatic and tragic
slaughters by the Islamic State (ISIS) in the Syrian-Iraqi area they control,
the murder of more than 140 school children in Pakistan by the Taliban, and the
kidnapping of 276 girls by Boko Haram in Nigeria. These acts represent a strict
interpretation of Shia law based on the Koran.
That is why an address by Egyptian
President, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, on New Year’s Day to clerics at Al-Azhar
and the Awqaf Ministry is particularly significant. As reported by Raymond
Ibrahim of the Middle East Forum, Sisi “a vocal supporter for a renewed vision
of Islam, made what must be his most forceful and impassioned plea to
date.”
His speech was a warning that “the
corpus of (Islamic) texts and ideas that we have made sacred over the years” are
“antagonizing the entire world.”
Referring to the 1.6 billion Muslims,
Sisi said it is not possible that they “should want to kill the rest of the
world’s inhabitants—that is 7 billion—so that they themselves may live.” Islam,
said Sisi “is being torn, it is being destroyed, it is being lost—and it is
being lost by our own hands.”
I cannot recall any other Islamic
leader saying anything this bold and this true. Directly addressing the clerics,
Sisi said “It’s inconceivable that the thinking that we hold most sacred should
cause the entire umma (Islamic world)
to be a source of anxiety, danger, killing and destruction for the rest of the
world.” That is, of course, exactly what has been
occurring.
Sisi called for “a religious
revolution”, what Christians would call a reformation. “You, imams, are
responsible before Allah. The entire world is waiting for your next
move…”
Based on negotiations led by the U.S.,
the world is waiting to see what Iran, the home of the Islamic Revolution—the
name given to the ayatollah’s movement that overthrew the Shah in 1979—will do
in the face of demands that it cease its quest to produce its own nuclear
weapons.
You don’t have to be a U.S. diplomat
to know the answer to that. As Behnam Ben Taleblu of the Foundation for Defense
of Democracies recently wrote, for decades the Iranian leadership has referred
to “American Islam”, a term that describes what Iran “perceives to be a
depoliticized perversion of the true faith, devoid of the revolutionary
sentiment that guides the Islamic Republic.” Calling it “American” demonstrates
their contempt for everything American.
The Iranians even apply the term to
Muslim nations “deemed pliant before the will of superpowers like the United
States.” In their view, they are the champions of “the pure Islam of Mohammad.”
The Iranians are Shiites. As such, they are a minority sect within Islam, though
a large one by any standard.
Those U.S. diplomats negotiating to
get Iran to agree to cease pursuing the ability to construct their own nuclear
weapons should read the memoirs of Mohammad Javad Zarif, Iran’s foreign minister
and lead nuclear negotiator. As Taleblu notes, Zarif has a PhD from an American
university, but he still wrote “We have a fundamental problem with the West and
especially with America. This is because we are claimants of a mission, which
has a global dimension.”
That mission is to impose Islam—their
fundamental brand of it—on the entire world. That would get easier if they can
threaten the world with nuclear weapons. Iran has been the leading sponsor of
Islamic terror since its revolution in 1979.
The gap between Egyptian President
Sisi’s concerns about the state of Islam today and the intention of
fundamentalists like Zarif are a capsule version of what is occurring among
Muslims throughout the world.
Islam is not inclined toward any form
of modernity and most certainly not toward any form of personal freedom so the
world has to remain watchful and, at this point, far less inclined to give its
terrorists a pass with the claim they do not represent
Islam.
© Alan Caruba, 2015
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