Cultural
Dialogue or Cultural Schism?
Dr Harry Hagopian,
KSL-KOG
Two weeks ago, I was invited to sit in on one
of the debates that took place in London during the General Synod of the Church
of England. The draft motion on the floor of the house dealt with the war in
Afghanistan as well as with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. During the
three-hour debate, one delegate after another stood up and emphasised the need
to learn much more about Islam and to open bridges of communication with the
followers of this fast-growing monotheistic faith. In fact, the most rousing
applause was reserved for Bishop Nazeer Ali of Rochester who leant on his own
Pakistani origins to provide a bird’s eye view of the contemporary make-up of
Islam.
At one stage of the debate,
though, I felt quite rueful that it had taken the deaths of well over 5000 men
and women of different national, ethnic or religious backgrounds for the
Western world to be reminded about its woeful ignorance of Islam! Yet now,
following the horrific acts of terror in the USA, newspapers, magazines and
radio or television channels cannot seem to get enough of all sorts of pointers
on Islam - its tenets, internal struggles, contradictions, visions and
shortcomings, its similarities and deep differences with Christianity and the
Western world. Although I must admit that some of what I read gives me hope,
others leave me decidedly uneasy about what lies ahead.
Just consider how things
stand today! Seven of the fifteen lead books on the New York Times paperback bestseller
list since 11 September 2001 are devoted to Islam. The Holy Koran has become a
bestseller. The whole world - but primarily the Western world - seems to have
been converted into a classroom as it tries to make sense of the tragic events
of that ill-fated day. Was it the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that caused this
outrage? Was it perchance a struggle over future oil supplies and pipelines?
Did countries like Libya, Iraq, Iran, Syria or Saudi Arabia contribute to this
recoil? Or was it more a lack of historical and cultural engagement between
Islam and the West?
As the readers of my
articles already know, I am an Armenian Christian from Jerusalem. Having grown
up in a Middle Eastern Palestinian culture that has also been predominantly
Muslim in nature, I have managed to forge many long-lasting friendships with
Muslims - as well as Jews and Christians. But I have also lived in Europe most
of my adult life. Therefore, and for the purposes of this article, I am going
to assume the mantle of a Westerner looking in on the ostensible ‘clash of
civilisations’ and explore this - purportedly - arcane world. In this way, I
might perhaps ask certain questions - and develop certain themes - that would
otherwise remain locked up in my own head!
The first question I would
ask is not necessarily what we have learnt about Islam as a faith or a way of
life! Rather, what matters more to me is what we have actually learnt about
ourselves? We in the West have
become so convinced of our own ‘values’ that we tend to regard attitudes that
differ in some fundamental respects from our own as being invalid. We have come
to accept, prima facie, that our way of life is the universal standard and our
references the only credible ones. We cannot imagine anyone not aspiring for them.
Therefore, in our minds, people who beg to differ from us in a radical way
either do not matter, or their way of thinking is so improper that we have no
way of making allowances for their presence. For all practical purposes, the
‘others’ are not there - they do not count! Indeed, over the past several
weeks, I have heard Muslim intellectuals use the word ‘humiliation’ to describe
how vast numbers of Muslims feel in the West. Humiliation is a deeply cultural
construct that cuts far deeper than economic or political terms such as
‘impoverished’ or ‘disenfranchised’. To feel humiliated is to be denied
consideration or respect.
But can such negative
realities born in violence be transformed into opportunities that are steeped
in conviviality, common understanding and respect? Instead of holding on to
every utterance of those extremists, analysing their every pronouncement or
fatwa, can we focus instead on the centre of gravity in the Muslim world and
call for a cultural dialogue between Islam and the West? Surely, we can learn
something from a great culture that has had a powerful impact on the world for
nearly 1500 years - and in which one in every five human beings finds meaning?
For long now, we have been investing large sums of energy and money into military
and political responses to terrorism. Is it not perhaps time to put as much
attention and effort on finding mechanisms to engage each other in the cultural
context too? For if we fail in this endeavour, there is little hope of
resolving the cultural divide that separates us - short of escalating violence
and a protracted struggle.
Let me examine a few bare
facts! Muslims today make up a majority in 52 countries, and a sizeable
minority in many others. There are 6 million Muslims living in the United States,
2 million in the United Kingdom, 3.2 million in Germany and 5 million in
France. Moreover, Islam is the fastest growing religion. Demographers predict
that one out of every four human beings will be Muslim in the year 2025. If
demographics mean power, then the world is tilting toward a Muslim century. We
need to initiate a cultural dialogue with Islam now, rather than wait until the
point of hard returns.
Let me also cite just two
ticking cultural time bombs. In the USA and Western Europe, the Muslim
populations are by and large young, often jobless, and at times the subject of
discrimination. Scores of Muslim youth have been left behind by globalisation.
In their anxious quest for identity, purpose, hope and dignity, many of them
are being won over to the fundamentalist call for a jihad that strives to
recapture the golden age of Islam and to re-conquer the world for God. This is
tantamount to a kind of Islamic view of globalisation.
In addition, and for most
of us Christians / Westerners (non-interchangeable terms) who have long
accepted the notion of giving private loyalty to our faith and public loyalty
to our government, the idea that substantial numbers of Muslims living among us
do not share our conviction is worrisome. A New York Times reporter recently
interviewed young Muslim students in the USA and was surprised to learn that
some did not think of themselves as Americans, but rather as Muslims living in
America. Their bonds are extra-territorial and based on the revival of the
Islamic idea of umma - a term which signifies the universal Islamic community.
Many young Muslims in Europe and the USA since 11 September 2001 averred that
they would not fight against their fellow Muslims in Afghanistan if called upon
to do so by their own governments. They consider the nation-state as a colonial
construct imposed on the Middle East and the rest of the world. Add to this the
fact that the Muslim Diasporas are spreading into virtually every country, and
we might just begin to understand the risks we undertake by perpetuating a
global ghetto-isation of Islam in ‘our’ cultural midst.
To my mind, there are
numerous questions awaiting answers.
For example, how do Muslims - who belong to different confessions,
schools and orientations in different parts of the world - feel about those
values like civil liberties, democratic participation and gender equality that
the West holds dear? Would most Muslims accept living in a pluralistic world,
with respect for different faiths, creeds and ways of life? Why is the West so
pre-occupied with material values? These three sample questions are by no means
exhaustive! They are just random ones that come to the fore when I think about
a dialogue between Islamic and post-Christian Western humanist cultures.
Indeed, such cultural components (which include religion, albeit not
exclusively) need to be put in perspective if we are ever to achieve any
progress in the foreseeable future.
Over the past few weeks,
politicians, military commanders and journalists have been talking with
rotating frequency about the ‘Great Game’. This is a reference to the
historical wars waged in Afghanistan ever since the conquest of this vast land
by Alexander the Great. But it also culminates in the geopolitical intrigues
and petroliferous interests being played out between Islam and the West in the
current Afghan war. What we need today is not a great game, but the start-up of
a ‘Great Discourse’ between Islam and the West so that we can begin to figure
out how to accommodate each other and how to respect one another’s values
without impinging upon our respective beliefs.
Mind you, we do not need to
feel comfortable with the questions we might expect of our interlocutors. Nor
do we have to agree with many of the answers we receive from Muslim scholars -
just as they could with ours too! After all, the aim of any dialogical exercise
is not to avert differences in values or perceptions - some of which are
historical, others theosophical and some even instinctual and gut-driven within
any society. But personal experience has taught me that dialogue is not an
exercise conducted between parties who have decided in advance on the outcome
of their talks. The issue is neither one of diplomacy or complacency, nor one
of nicety or sensitivity. Rather, it is one of urgent necessity for the healthy
survival of future generations.
And until we do engage in
an exercise that draws us back from the edge of a cultural schism, our cosmic
world will remain hostage to volatile, distrustful, wary, precarious and terror-fed
influences.
© harry-bvH
@ 21 November 2001