Three years after “7/7,” the British version of 9/11, when four suicide bombers immolated themselves and fifty-two other innocents—British people, foreign residents, or visitors to the UK, including Muslims and an Israeli woman who feared to return to Israel because of the danger of suicide bombings—any belief that the Islamist rage fueling the murderous rampage grew out of economic resentment has surely been laid to rest.
At least two new two pieces of information back up this view. First, poll after poll has revealed that British-born Muslims at British universities share a view of Islam dangerously sympathetic to Islamism, the preferred technical term for radical Islamic ideology. Second, two former British Islamists, Ed Husain and Maarjid Nawaz, have founded a counter-extremist Islamic think-tank in the UK that exposes the domestic roots of British Islamic extremism and is attempting to counter extremist ideas freely current in the British Muslim community.
The latest opinion poll, conducted on behalf of Britain’s Center for Social Cohesion, targeted 600 Muslims and 800 non-Muslims at twelve British universities. The results were both illuminating and alarming. Sample findings:
“Significant numbers [of British Muslims] appear to hold beliefs which contravene democratic values,” Hannah Stuart, one of the report’s authors, told The Times of London. “These results are deeply embarrassing for those who have said there is no extremism in British universities.” The polling also confirmed that there is a “ghettoized mentality” at several British universities because many Muslim students have been exposed to extremist speakers and do not want to associate with non-Muslim fellow students.
Predictably, left-of-center political activists in Britain denounced the findings as “right-wing” (though unable to demonstrate any bias in the polling methodology) because it doesn’t fit with the tired cliché that terrorist ideology is always based on political and economic grievances and never on religious motivation.
Even more convincing on this topic, however, is the testimony of Ed Husain and Maajid Nawaz that the British extremist Islamism evinced by the 7/7 bombers is the expression of a political ideology, which is essentially an Islam-centered protest against modernity. Husain and Nawaz were both senior activists in the radical organization Hizb ut-Tahrir. Although this group is not itself a terrorist organization, its goals include infiltrating power centers in both Muslim and non-Muslim countries with the objective of bringing to power throughout the world a global Islamic caliphate.
Maajid attributes his own counter-conversion from extremism to a pluralist, tolerant Islam to his experiences of conversations with a variety of prisoners in an Egyptian prison. The Quilliam Foundation, founded this year in the UK, is attempting to educate British and other Muslims, as well as law-enforcement officials in the UK and the U.S., into effective ways of countering the Islamist ideology and to reconstruct an older version of Islam in the West that was indeed pluralistic and tolerant. But the foundation has an uphill battle. According to Nawaz, Islamists in the UK are far more numerous now than before 9/11 or 7/7.
Dr. Aikman, a Senior Fellow of the Trinity Forum, was for many years senior correspondent for Time.
Provocations, Faiths and Worldviews, Global Culture, David Aikman, Sun 10 Aug 2008
Where there is no vision, there is no hope.
George Washington Carver
The Purchase of a Soul (Audio): A Tale of Transformation from Les Misérables by Victor Hugo, foreword by Alonzo L. McDonald.
David Aikman narrates this Trinity Forum Reading selection that helps us think about the connection between giving, repentance, and forgiveness.
The Institutionalization of Greed
John Piper explains Why Calvinists are so Negative: This, with the item below from Frederica, offer two timely perspectives on appropriate humility—which could also be approached with profit from the perspective of strategy. “I must tell you that whenever I have had a profound experience of God through reading his word or encountering God in worship or community, it tends to just humble me, and make me want to say something like what Joni Mitchell said about love—‘it’s love’s illusions I recall; I really don’t know love, at all.’ I have barely touched the hem of the Master’s garment, I hardly know him though I long to know him better. In the face of the divine-human encounter, even Barth’s Dogmatics appear to be little more than a good start to understanding God.” (New Testament scholar Ben Witherington III • 2008 11 19)
Confessions of an Obnoxious Orthodox: Salutary. “Most people like to be polite and get along, so they highlight our commonalities. But every church must have its distinctiveness, or we’d all be in the same church. At the time, I was so occupied with comprehending this strange thing called Orthodoxy that I emphasized the differences, and was impatient with kindly big-tent suggestions.” (Frederica Mathewes-Green, Beliefnet • 2008 11 19)
Finding Home: A worthwhile meditation on place: “My parents have moved a lot in their lives, and view towns and cities as places to go for opportunities, not places to live for love of the place itself. They still pressure us occasionally to move closer to them. Maybe someday we will; as I said above, I know I would find things to love wherever we lived. But after all the moves of my childhood, I find myself warmly grateful to this city for being a place where I can send my roots down deep, grateful that I have at last found my home.” (Veronica Mitchell, Toddled Dredge • 2008 11 18)
The Obama Dilemma: “Which of these factions in evangelicalism’s divided house is more reflective of its essential character? In truth, both have a strong claim. Evangelicalism has always been centrally concerned with social reform as the necessary expression of spiritual regeneration. It is not merely a religion of inwardness. Nor is it a religion devoted to maintaining the status quo and propping up social elites. Instead, it challenges settled arrangements and champions the lowly and the marginalized.” (Senior Fellow Wilfred M. McClay, The Wall Street Journal • 2008 11 01)
• Stephen Fry in America (2008 10 10)
• Give Me Liberty and Give Me Death (2008 09 30)
• Give Me That Old-Time Religion (2008 09 29)
• The Real Digital Revolution (2008 08 27)
• Après Lewis (2008 08 15)
Reflections on the Millennium by Alonzo L. McDonald.
As we enter the third millennium, responsible leaders at all levels of society will do well to take stock of where we have been and where we are now.