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Waging A Cultural Revolutionary War

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  • Waging A Cultural Revolutionary War

    WAGING A CULTURAL REVOLUTIONARY WAR
    By Irfan Yusuf

    On Line opinion, Australia
    Sept 11 2006

    September 11, 2001 is seen as the beginning of a new (and very heated)
    Cold War. Writing in The Australian on August 11, Dr Tanveer Ahmed
    described politicised Islamic extremism as the new Marxism, an
    apparently monolithic force at war with an allegedly monolithic West.

    Ahmed's description of politicised Islamic extremism has been broadened
    by more jaundiced commentators. Addressing a dinner hosted by Quadrant
    magazine, former "Joh-for-PM" campaigner John Stone referred to
    "Australia's Muslim problem" and "the Islamic cancer in our body
    politic".

    Perhaps more subtly, Canadian theatre critic Mark Steyn warned
    Sydney-siders in August of the dangers of "resurgent Islam". He
    even suggested that the best antidote to conversion was convincing
    potential converts that it's better to be Australian or American or
    British "or even French" than to be Muslim. As if being Western and
    Muslim were mutually exclusive categories.

    More than September 11, it was last years July 7 London bombings that
    brought home the real possibility of terrorist threats from home-grown
    sources. Sadly, such security threats are still used as an excuse
    to wage a cultural revolutionary war which seeks to replace decades
    of liberal democratic multi-cultural consensus with an illiberal,
    almost Soviet-style government-enforced mono-cultural experiment.

    All this raises a number of questions. Does the existence of multiple
    cultures affect national security? If so, to what extent? If
    integration is an ideal, how should it be implemented? Should
    governments implement culture? Will the complete integration of all
    minority groups ensure security risks are minimised?

    For the likes of Steyn and Stone, any multiculturalism involving
    nominally Muslim migrants necessarily represents a security risk.

    Their generally crude analysis seeks to identify common features
    allegedly forming an essential part of a monolithic Muslim culture.

    Such simplistic formulations are not supported by even anecdotal
    evidence. In January I witnessed Indonesian Muslim artists perform
    the Ramayana ballet to a largely Muslim audience in an ancient
    Hindu temple complex located in the city of Yogyakarta, the cultural
    heartland of Javanese Islam. Such a performance by Muslims would be
    deemed sacrilegious in the Indian sub-Continent.

    To speak of a single monolithic Muslim culture, whether in Australia
    or elsewhere, is as absurd as to speak of a single Christian culture.

    Brazilian Catholics have more in common with Brazilian Muslims than
    with Lithuanian Catholics. Lebanese Muslims have more in common with
    Lebanese Maronites than with South African Muslims.

    If culture and terror were related, security officials should keep
    close watch on a range of communities. Writing in the Canberra Times
    on September 9, ANU Researcher Clive Williams provides a litany of
    terrorist incidents going back to 1868 when a Victorian Irishman
    belonging to a predecessor organisation to the IRA shot the visiting
    Duke of Edinburgh.

    Recent incidents include the 1980 assassination of the Turkish
    Consul-General and his bodyguard by Armenian extremists believed to
    be protected by local Armenians. The same group struck again about
    six years later in Melbourne.

    Other groups believed to be responsible for terrorist attacks include
    the Ananda Marga sect and the Croatian Revolutionary Brotherhood.

    Muslim involvement in terrorist incidents includes deportation of
    Mohammad Hassanein in 1996 for attempting to attack local Jewish
    community targets.

    Terrorism is hardly a mono-cultural affair, either in Australia or
    elsewhere. Hence, simplistic remarks by the Prime Minister about
    some Muslims refusing to integrate display a profound ignorance of
    the history, politics and motivations of terrorist groups.

    Howard has rarely shown much sophistication in his understanding
    of Australia's non-Western cultures. One of his former staffers,
    conservative columnist Gerard Henderson, commented on this in
    the Melbourne Age on May 25, 2004. Henderson wrote of "the one
    significant blot on [Howard's] record in public life ... a certain
    lack of empathy in dealing with individuals with whom he does not
    identify at a personal level: for example, Asian Australians in the
    late 1980s and asylum seekers in the early 21st century".

    Howard has repeatedly claimed Muslim migrants to be a new wave of
    migration, separate from Asian and European migration waves of the mid
    to late 20th centuries. This is historical revisionism at its worst,
    and most unbecoming of a leader so intent on our school children
    being taught "accurate" history.

    One needn't be a professor of history or demography to know that
    Muslims have been represented in all major waves of migration during
    the 20th century. For instance, post-war European migration included
    significant numbers of Yugoslav, Albanian, Turkish, Cypriot and Middle
    Eastern Muslim migrants.

    The first book on Islamic theology published in Australia was authored
    by Imam Imamovic, a Brisbane-based writer from the former Yugoslavia
    who wrote his book in the early part of the 20th century.

    The first mosque built in Sydney, known as the Sydney Mosque, was
    established by Turks in the Inner-Western suburb of Erskenville during
    the 1950's.

    On ABC TV's Four-Corners aired to coincide with the September 11
    attacks, Howard repeats his claim that a small section of Muslim
    communities refuses to integrate. He goes further, saying: "And I
    would like the rest of the Islamic community to join the rest of the
    Australian community in making sure that the views and attitudes of
    that small minority do not have adverse consequences."

    Howard's ambiguous reference to "adverse consequences" is most
    unhelpful. His inability to identify precisely what these consequences
    are means he cannot identify exactly how "the rest of the Australian
    community" have been working.

    Presuming adverse consequences means security threats, Howard's
    comments reflect a profound and fundamental ignorance of efforts
    made by Muslim communities to combat extremism, including individual
    Muslims reporting suspicious behaviour to authorities. Howard's views
    contrast with those expressed by law enforcement officials (including
    Federal Police Commissioner Mick Keelty) that Muslim efforts have
    been crucial in catching suspects and averting terrorist attacks.

    Perhaps the real problem is that Howard insists putting ordinary
    Muslims in a lose-lose situation. He has hand-picked a small number
    of Muslims to advise him as part of a "Muslim Community Reference
    Group". His choice of Muslims is dominated by men of his own generation
    who are generally as out-of-touch with mainstream Muslims as he is.

    Howard's choice of Muslim advisers is reflective of his choice of
    Muslim "leaders" joining him for a summit in August 2005. Howard's
    leaders were dominated by first generation migrant males of Howard's
    age group, men who routinely exclude and alienate women and youth
    from community management roles.

    It seems Howard wants to have the right to select which Muslims he
    talks to, and then reserves the right to criticise all Muslims should
    his chosen Muslims say the wrong things. If Howard were genuine
    about involving Muslim communities in decision-making on combating
    extremism, he might appoint mainstream Muslims who have made their
    mark on mainstream Australia, even if it means appointing people who
    will effectively challenge his views on culture and security.

    If Howard were serious about national security, he might also consider
    following the lead of his Deputy. Peter Costello has shown a far more
    sophisticated understanding of the relationship between culture and
    national security. Costello understands it isn't the wrong culture
    that presents a security threat. Rather, it is the absence of genuinely
    Islamic culture which is the problem.

    In his February address to the Sydney Institute, Costello spoke of
    young Muslims in "a twilight zone where the values of their parents'
    old country have been lost but the values of the new country not
    fully embraced".

    Further Costello has emphasised on the need for Muslim religious
    leaders to provide a greater degree of pastoral care to converts,
    saying leaders should "make it clear to would-be converts that when
    you join this religion you do not join a radical political ideology".

    Costello's remarks, though crude and inaccurate in some senses,
    display a more sophisticated understanding of how the relative
    ignorance and zeal of young people and converts can be trapped by
    fringe extremists. Costello doesn't see Islam itself as a problem,
    nor does he make any claims about Muslim cultures. He is more concerned
    with ensuring ordinary sincere Australian Muslims are not manipulated
    by foreign extremists.

    Of course, it is easy for Muslim leaders to blame politicians for
    their woes. I believe Muslim leaders should be selective in how they
    respond, particularly to Howard's ill-considered remarks. Muslim
    leaders should display more political sophistication, and appreciate
    that Howard's rhetoric is probably more determined by interest rates
    and the unpopularity of his industrial relations laws than by any
    concern for the nation's cultural health or security.

    Muslim leaders should seize upon Howard's admission that at least 99
    per cent of Muslim Australians are fully integrated. It is difficult
    to fund similar endorsement of any other ethnic or faith community
    in Australia. It certainly flies in the face of infantile commentary
    often found in metropolitan tabloids.

    Muslim leaders of Mr Howard's generation should heed the lesson that
    Mr Howard refuses to heed. They should step down when alternative
    and effective leadership is available. Muslim organisations are in
    desperate need of generational change. Younger Muslims, including
    and especially women, must form part of this change.

    Articulate Muslim women are far more capable of effecting positive
    change for Muslim women than neurotic feminists and cultural
    chauvinists that congregate on the op-ed pages of allegedly Australian
    newspapers. Muslim women need to come forward and take their rightful
    place as leaders of Muslim Australia. Their voices need to be heard,
    and they need to take control of decision making on issues affecting
    them and all women.

    Further, Muslims need to ensure that a diversity of Muslim voices
    are heard from across the cultural, sectarian, gender and political
    divide. There is no reason why debates within the Muslim community
    cannot be discussed in the public arena where followers of other
    traditions can share their experiences.

    In this respect, Muslim leaders must continue to strengthen their ties
    with their Jewish brethren. Australian Jews share profound cultural
    and religious similarities with Australian Muslims, who can learn
    much from Jewish experience in terms of community structure and
    infrastructure development.

    Finally, Muslims need to invest a good amount of time and money
    in decent PR. They need to ensure that Australians are made aware
    of Muslim values to the extent that irrelevant middle-aged male
    politicians are no longer able to claim that Muslims should ensure
    their women are treated with as much disdain as Mr Howard's faction
    of the NSW Liberal Party treats female preselection candidates.

    Ordinary Australians do have legitimate fears about security. They have
    even greater fears about rising home loan interest rates, conservative
    opposition to life-saving scientific research and workplace relations
    policies that remove job security. One way we can address these real
    issues is if Muslims allay Australian fears about Islam. In doing
    so, we can ensure governments cannot shirk their responsibilities by
    hiding behind the sound of dog whistles.
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