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Religion Title: We Need to Talk About Islam’s Jihadism Problem Its time to confront Islamism head onwithout cries of Islamophobia. Holding Islam up to scrutiny, rationally and ethically, must not be confused with anti-Muslim bigotry. Ours was an inauspicious first meeting. Nawaz, a former Muslim extremist turned liberal reformer, had just participated in a public debate about the nature of Islam. Though he had spent five years in an Egyptian prison for attempting to restore a medieval caliphate, Nawaz argued in favor of the motion that night, affirming that Islam is, indeed, a religion of peace. Harris, a well-known atheist and strident critic of Islam, had been in the audience. At a dinner later that evening, Harris was asked to comment on the event. He addressed his remarks directly to Nawaz: Harris: Maajid, it seems to me that you have a problem. You need to convince the worldespecially the Muslim worldthat Islam is a religion of peace that has been hijacked by extremists. But the problem is that Islam isnt a religion of peace, and the so-called extremists are seeking to implement what is arguably the most honest reading of the faiths actual doctrine. So the path of reform appears to be one of pretense: You seem obliged to pretend that the doctrine is something other than it isfor instance, you must pretend that jihad is just an inner spiritual struggle, whereas its primarily a doctrine of holy war. Here, in this room, cant you just be honest with us? Is the path forward for Islam a matter of pretending certain things are true long enough and hard enough so as to make them true? Nawaz: Are you calling me a liar? Harris: What? Nawaz: Are you calling me a liar? It was good that we werent seated at the same table, because we were now more apes than scholars. The conversation ended abruptly, and with bad feelings. Happily, the room quickly erupted with dozens of parallel conversations, diffusing the tension. Talking about Islam today is a dangerous business. Disagreements about the role this religion plays in the world have become a wellspring of intolerance and violence. Cartoonists have been massacred in Paris to shouts of We have avenged the Prophet! Secular bloggers have been hacked to death in Bangladesh. Embassies have burned over YouTube videos. And young men and women by the thousands have abandoned their lives in free societies to join the apocalyptic savagery of ISIS. For years, Western politicians and commentators have struggled to understand this phenomenon. And many have struggled not to understand it, denying any link between Muslim extremism and the religion of Islam. Honest conversation about the need for reform within Islam has become a necessity. So we began our dialogue anew, and initial doubts about each others integrity and motives were soon replaced by mutual trust and respect. Neither of us would have imagined having such a productive conversation with the other 10 years ago. The result is now a short book, Islam and the Future of Tolerance. What most discussions of Muslim extremism miss, and what is obfuscated at every turn by commentators like Glenn Greenwald, Reza Aslan, Karen Armstrongand even Nicholas Kristof and Ben Affleckis the power of specific religious ideas such as martyrdom, apostasy, blasphemy, prophecy, and honor. These ideas do not represent the totality of Islam, but neither are they foreign to it. Nor do they exist in precisely the same way in other faiths. There is a reason why no one is losing sleep over the threat posed by Jain and Quaker extremists. Specific doctrines matter. Since 9/11, the whole focus of the international community has been on destroying terrorist organizations like al Qaeda and ISIS, as if they were mere criminal gangs that needed to be disrupted operationally. The briefest survey of the state of the world, from North Africa to the North-West Frontier, demonstrates that this strategy has failed, abysmally. The underlying ideologywe call it Islamismhas metastasized and must be confronted directly. After more than a decade of conventional, physical wars, we must finally wage an effective war of ideas. Islamism, often referred to as political Islam, is the desire to impose a version of Islam on the rest of society. Political Islamists, like the Muslim Brotherhood, generally do not believe in resorting to violence, though there are different attitudes even among Brotherhood franchises toward democratic participation, ranging from post-Islamists like the Ennadha Party in Tunisia, to semi-authoritarian conservatives, like South Asias Jamat-e-Islami. Jihadism, on the other hand, is the use of force to spread Islamism. Poster Comment: Article is by an atheist. Published in the Daily Beast no less! Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: redleghunter (#0)
The problem is, islam doesn't believe it has a problem. It believes it is specially licensed by allah to enslave, conquer, or kill anyone who does not believe in it.
Nor do western elites, so we end up waging war against the enemies tactics rather than the enemy. Non auro, sed ferro, recuperando est patria
Leftist mobocracy ... stupid jimmy carter started it --- yes we con - hoax - chains - arab spring - muslim brotherhood ! DNC - Hamas - isis - black lives matter ... rape - riot - pillage - plunder - sudden jihad syndrome - * PC SHARIAH * --- what's the difference ! If you ... don't use exclamation points --- you should't be typeing ! Commas - semicolons - question marks are for girlie boys !
We need to talk about jihadism's Islam problem. we have been looking at this the wrong way round, islam tells us that it does not favour jihadists that they are a minority. The problem is that jihadists hold to a fundamentalist view of islamic teachings and all those moderate mosque going muslims do not agree with or support them. How then do we find that there are jihadist cells within mosques? If there was no support among mainstream muslims jihadism would fade away as did crusadeism a thousand years ago. If crusadeism had not faded away we would still be invading the middle east to liberate Jerusalem. So it is not the west who pursues conquest in the name of religion, it is islam, backed by a fundamentalist interpretation of islam fostered by Saudi Arabia creating problems in many parts of the world and the way to root out jihadism is to root out muslim clerics who support and preach it, the real hidden jihadists
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