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<text id=93TT0342>
<link 93TO0134>
<title>
Oct. 04, 1993: The Dark Side Of Islam
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Oct. 04, 1993 On The Trail Of Terror
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER, Page 62
The Dark Side Of Islam
</hdr>
<body>
<p>With terror, Muslim radicals declare war on Arab states that
stray from the religious path
</p>
<p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--Reported by Lisa Beyer/Jerusalem, Dean Fischer/Cairo, Jefferson
Penberthy/Peshawar and Jay Peterzell/Washington
</p>
<p> The world has felt the power of Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman's words
before. In 1980 youthful members of a militant fundamentalist
group in Egypt called Jihad (Holy War) were secretly forming
a new cell and sought out their spiritual leader for guidance.
What, they asked the sheik, would be the fate of a ruler who
ignored the law of God? Abdel Rahman's reply: "Death."
</p>
<p> On Oct. 6, 1981, as Egyptian President Anwar Sadat stood reviewing
his troops, a military truck halted in front of him and four
uniformed men leaped out, firing automatic rifles at the reviewing
stand. One of the men ran straight toward Sadat, pumping bullet
after bullet into his body. "I am Khalid al-Islambouli!" the
attacker shouted. "I have killed Pharaoh."
</p>
<p> Army Lieut. al-Islambouli, a member of Jihad, was executed along
with four others for the assassination. Abdel Rahman was indicted,
accused of issuing a fatwa, or religious decree, ordering Sadat's
murder, but was acquitted. The assassination of the first Arab
leader to make peace with Israel settled nothing. The clash
between Islamic religious and political authority is more widespread
and in some places more threatening now than it was then. Today
every secular Muslim government from North Africa to the Persian
Gulf faces a challenge from radical fundamentalists. Their accusation
is not just that political leaders have strayed from the holy
law of the Koran but that they have done so without solving
the chronic unemployment, corruption and hopelessness that plague
the Arab world.
</p>
<p> This is the dark side of Islam, which shows its face in violence
and terrorism intended to overthrow modernizing, more secular
regimes and harm the Western nations that support them. Its
influence far outweighs its numbers. The Islamic revival that
has swept the Middle East is primarily a peaceful movement for
a return to religious purity. But where desperation is greatest,
a small number of radicals have resorted to military action
to impose the Islamic ideology they espouse. For the most part,
they are not members of some grand conspiracy sponsored by a
state apparatus, but loosely organized, grass-roots militants
who use similar terrorist methods and get money and weapons
from the same like-minded sources. Unlike the Palestinian and
Shi`ite revolutionaries of the 1970s and '80s, these disparate
cells of angry young men seem to boil up from the broad opposition
growing in the largely undemocratic countries of the region,
in a self-proclaimed war to force pure, undiluted Islamic law
on the societies that have failed them. When that violence spills
over into the U.S., it is usually aimed at punishing Washington's
support for Israel and the secular Arab states.
</p>
<p> In some countries the ideological conflict has developed into
a bloody struggle for political dominance. Violence inspired
by radicals determined to topple President Hosni Mubarak has
killed 200 people in Egypt over the past two years; in Algeria,
the government most immediately threatened by fundamentalists,
the toll is at least 1,200. Hamas, the Islamic Resistance Movement,
which is the biggest danger to the infant peace process in the
occupied Gaza Strip and West Bank, is a special case. Its first
aim is the destruction of Israel; after achieving that, Hamas
would establish a Muslim state on the wreckage as a precursor
to a greater pan-Islamic union.
</p>
<p> Yet one of the great ironies of the peacemaking between Israel
and the Palestinians is that it probably would not be happening
if the power of Islamic fundamentalists had not become so ominous.
The increasing strength of Hamas convinced Israel that it was
time to strike a deal with the Palestine Liberation Organization,
a lesser evil, while there was still a P.L.O. At the same time,
Yasser Arafat and the P.L.O. could see that the fundamentalists
were gaining on them and that the best way to stay in power
was to show some result from their three decades of leadership
in the Palestinian cause.
</p>
<p> Islam recognizes no distinction between mosque and state, theology
and politics. Of course, not all Muslims are what Americans
call fundamentalists. The term is not used in Islam, which calls
the zealots "Islamists" or "activists." Says Mary Jane Deeb,
an expert on Islam at the American University in Washington:
"The majority of Muslims are secular in the sense that they
see that politics and their beliefs can be separate." Nor do
all so-called fundamentalists condone the use of violence and
terrorism to achieve their goals.
</p>
<p> But those few who do take up the gun say it is their duty to
destroy leaders and governments that fail to rule strictly by
Shari`a, the Islamic legal code. Violent Islamists usually pursue
both a political and a social agenda in the name of the faith.
While no state in the world is governed purely by Shari`a--even Iran, Sudan and Saudi Arabia, which come closest to the
ideal, compromise in some ways with the modern world--Islamists
focus their ferocity on the Muslim states such as Egypt, Algeria
and Tunisia, which have tried to modernize and mix in elements
of nationalism and Western-style democracy.
</p>
<p> The random urban terrorism and calculated antigovernment attacks
by such radical organizations as Jihad and the Islamic Group
in Egypt, the Islamic Salvation Front in Algeria and An-Nahda
(Renaissance) in Tunisia are predominantly home grown. But the
target governments, which have responded with repression, tend
to charge that the violent onslaughts against them are inspired
by Islamic centers abroad, engaged in a conspiracy of subversion.
They most often cite Afghanistan, Iran and Sudan as the instigators
and paymasters, and claim that the cadres in their local terrorist
organizations can all be traced back to Afghanistan, where the
14-year war against Soviet invaders spawned an army of fanatics.
</p>
<p> Aware that homegrown corruption and poverty provide recruits
to the extremist ranks, Arab governments find it convenient
to exaggerate the threat from outside. It also suits the Islamist
rebels to evoke the fearsome image of a mighty army of trained
and dedicated fanatics in their quest for local political power.
The truth is that the Arab governments of the Middle East would
be under siege without any centrally directed threat or terrorists
returning home from the Afghan wars. Revivalists like Sudan's
Hassan al-Turabi can exploit Arab discontent, but they have
not been able to coordinate or direct the small, secretive cells
that plot violent subversion against local governments.
</p>
<p> The emotional wellsprings of Islamic extremism lie in the social
displacement and alienation of the modern Arab world. Discontent
runs deep in Muslim countries where poverty is endemic, unemployment
keeps growing, prices soar. Migration to urban areas has created
vast slums without the most basic services, as well as a profound
sense of rootlessness. Poorly educated, poverty-stricken peasants
are obvious recruits to fundamentalism. But so increasingly
are the younger members of the middle class who find themselves
jobless and poor, with no promise of a better future.
</p>
<p> Most of the embittered do not resort to violence even if they
embrace Islam as the solution. But nearly all of them are alienated
from a political process they find remote and unresponsive.
"These are societies in which all forms of opposition are repressed
and no hope of bettering one's own life exists," says Bruno
Etienne, an expert on Islam at the University of Aix-en-Provence.
"The mosque is left as the only venue of debate, while radical
Islamic ideologies are soon identified as the only viable means
of instigating change."
</p>
<p> The force of fundamentalism's appeal is its claim to answer
the region's malaise and fulfill a common desire to affirm the
prestige of the Arab people, who feel humiliated by colonialism
and by Israel's powerful presence in their midst. In the fundamentalist
view, says Zalmay Khalilzad, a former National Security Council
official now at the Rand Corp., things have gone wrong in Muslim
societies "because they have strayed from the righteous path,
and the West was brutal and immoral and encouraged the Muslims
to go astray. Only by returning to the righteous path can you
achieve greatness again, and that would involve throwing out
the West."
</p>
<p> Ultimately, if the Israeli-Palestinian deal bears fruit, most
experts believe fundamentalists, particularly the violent ones,
will lose ground in the occupied territories. The regional economic
cooperation and outside investment that will accompany the peace
settlement should provide new jobs, new industries and opportunities
for trade. When the economic initiatives are set in motion,
the recruits for extremism are likely to decrease.
</p>
<p> Fundamentalism, of course, is still capable of destructive,
murderous troublemaking throughout the Middle East. But it has
not had the power to overthrow any governments except Iran.
Even in relatively traditional Muslim societies, the majorities
want peace and prosperity. They put a higher value on economic
growth, and increasingly on social justice and political participation,
than on abstract religious definitions of purity. If that makes
them secular Muslims, so be it.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>