Religion

Were the Mumbai Terrorists Muslim?

Monday, December 8th, 2008

The Mumbai terrorist acts in India’s financial capital left more than 180 people dead and 280 wounded. The Indian and European press is reporting that the violence has sparked widespread debate as to whether the terrorists should be considered and referred to as followers of Islam, but most of the American coverage of the attack is oblivious to what could potentially be a remarkable transformation in the Muslim world.

Immediately after the attacks, several Bollywood stars began to blog about the problem of associating Islam with terrorism. OneIndia’s web site reported that actor Aamir Khan wrote that terrorists are neither people of religion nor people of God.

“When will these politicians realise and admit that terrorists have no religion,” wrote Khan. “Terrorists are not Hindu or Muslim or Christian.”

Further, Khan attributes their actions to mental illness, not Islam.

“They are people who have gone totally sick in their head and have to be dealt with in that manner,” Khan wrote in his blog.

Another Indian news outlet, Rediff India, interviewed Idris Ali, the president of All-India Minority Forum, shortly after the attacks. Ali is well known in India’s Muslim community as an advocate for minority and Islamic issues as well as a harsh opponent of anti-terrorism laws. When asked about the relationship between the events in Mumbai and Islam, Ali said:

“What we must realize is Islam never propagates violence. The word Islam is derived from aslama, which means submission to the supreme power. And submission can never be achieved through bloodshed. Those 10 bloodthirsty men who slaughtered innocent Mumbaikars cannot be the followers of Islam. Had they read the Quran, they would have waved olive branches and not automatic guns.”

Echoing the thoughts of actor Khan, Ali also said, “Fanatics have no religion, terrorists have no creed. The only religion that radicals follow is carnage.”

Many Indians and Islamic believers not only refuse to call the terrorists Muslim but have also denied the dead gunman burial in their cemeteries because in their eyes the men who committed these acts are not Muslims.

In a recent article on India’s NDTV web site, Abdul Razzak, the president of Dawat-e-Islami, an international movement for the propagation of the Quran and Sunnah, is quoted as saying: “The killing of innocents is against Islam. They are bringing shame to 25 crore (or 250 million) Muslims of India. These men are not Muslims. Why should we give them place anywhere? There is no place for them in our hearts and in our cemeteries.”

Despite the fact that this movement to disown the Mumbai terrorists is widespread and gaining momentum in the Muslim world, most of the commentators in the U.S. are calling the events an Islamic attack. Michael Rubin, author of the National Review Online’s blog The Corner, typifies the dismissive tone of many of the American journalists who at least acknowledge the debate.

“While it’s fashionable to argue that terrorists in Mumbai do not act out of religion,” Rubin writes, “but are simply misguided, the fact of the matter is that they justify their actions in Islam.”

Rubin and the rest of the American media tend to argue that our focus should be on how terrorists describe their beliefs and not on whether their supposed fellow travelers recognize those beliefs as their own.

“For the purposes of policy and security, religion should be what its practitioners believe it to be rather than what academics or outside commentators say it is,” said Rubin. “It is much more important to determine how terrorists are brainwashed in madrasas, than passing judgment on whether what they believe conforms to what academics believe Muslims should believe.”

Rubin’s comments betray a contradiction at the heart of our attitudes toward religion generally and Islam in particular. Millions of Islamic practitioners are telling us that the terrorists aren’t Muslims, but outside commentators like Rubin are telling us (and people like Aamir Khan and Idris Ali) that they are. This contradiction points toward a fundamental misunderstanding of how religious movements work. At best, this means that writers like Rubin will continue to offer commentary that doesn’t reflect the greater religious and political implications of identifying Islam with terrorism. At worst, it means that the curse of mutual incomprehension between America and the Muslim world will persist for some time to come.

Originally posted on USC Knight Chair in Media & Religion Site.

Weekend Leftovers: Daily News Roundup

Monday, October 20th, 2008

Will the real Sarah Palin please stand up? The Republican V.P. candidate made her first appearance on Saturday Night Live this weekend with a faux-surprise interruption of the opening sketch, in which Tina Fey, now famous for her impressions of the Alaska governor, was giving a press conference. Palin later bobbed her head to the beat and threw her hands in the air as a pregnant Amy Poehler rapped about Eskimos and shooting moose. Very funny, but at the same time, it seemed to me Palin was cringing throughout, like she was taking medicine for her sick campaign (see below).

Obama’s pushing for out-and-out socialism, McCain said over the weekend. By taxing the rich and redistributing the wealth through government programs, he is turning the IRS into a giant “welfare agency.” Obama responded quickly, telling an audience of 100,000 in St. Louis that “John McCain is so out of touch with the struggles you are facing that he must be the first politician in history to call a tax cut for working people ‘welfare.’”

(more…)

Pastors Take Politics Into Their Own Hands

Monday, September 29th, 2008

I thought we had a separation of church and state in the United States. Apparently, some ministers overlooked that memo.

This past Sunday, Christian ministers across the country took the laws into their own hands by telling their congregations to vote for John McCain.

According to a recent Wall Street Journal article, at least 33 ministers knew they were breaking the federal tax law but chose to do so anyway in protest.

“As Christians, it’s clear we should vote for John McCain,” said Rev. Fran Pulto of Calvary Chapel in Philadelphia in the Journal article. “He is the only candidate I believe a Christian can vote for.”

For these pastors, pushing conservative social values involving abortion and gay marriage were worth the IRS investigation.

Several Christian and evangelical ministers joined forces with the Alliance Defense Fund, a conservative legal-aid group, which has long argued that the tax code barring clergy from backing candidates from the pulpit is unconstitutional. The ADF, along with these ministers, hopes that the law will be overturned. The protesting ministers are responsible for forwarding the transcript of their sermons to the IRS. Lucky for them, the Alliance Defense Fund promises to represent any pastors who are investigated.

Although economic issues are heavy on the minds of most Americans right now, the impact of religion on politics and the 2008 presidential election cannot be understated. Spiritual beliefs influence political agendas. Is it lawfully and ethically OK for ministers to use their pulpit to endorse and criticize particular candidates?

Currently, there isn’t a law prohibiting ministers from using their freedom of speech for making personal endorsements. However, using their nonprofit churches, with their tax-exempt status, to support a political candidate seems to be a breach of the separation of church and state. Let’s see what the courts say.

Religion and Politics, Part 3: Unpacking Obama’s Faith

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

Earlier this week, we took a look at Sarah Palin’s religious background and discussed how she’s somehow managed to pack up her Pentecostalist past and ties to controversial faith leaders and, for the most part, escape public scrutiny. This is quite a contrast, compared to the full-frontal Obama had to suffer through when footage of Rev. Jeremiah Wright leaked onto the scene. The media was all up in his business.

Partly because no one really understood what was coming out of his pastor’s mouth.

Obama’s former church, Trinity United Church of Christ, describes itself as “unashamedly black and unapologetically Christian.” Black liberation theology is the name of its game. The church is politically liberal and very active in its outreach efforts on behalf of the disadvantaged.  It advances a “Black Value System” that promotes commitment to God, the black family, the black community, education, work ethic, and so forth.

Many critics attack Obama for his 20-year affiliation with a church that promotes a value system—solely for blacks. Some have wondered how Obama can campaign for unity when his church of choice seemed to instill a separatist ideology in its congregants. Nobel Peace Prize winner and human rights advocate Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu addresses this miconception on the “Truth About Trinity United Church of Christ” website:

Black theology and religion seek the liberation of all, oppressor and oppressed, black and white together—as we accomplished it in South Africa for freedom is indivisible. Whites won’t be truly free until blacks are free . . . America will not find peace with itself until you really deal with your history.

When examining Trinity United’s value system, it is also important to consider the social context within which the 8,000-strong church first developed. Ange-Marie Hancock, an associate professor of political science at USC, explains that the south-side Chicago neighborhood surrounding Trinity United is a central location for the practice of Islam. When black Muslim groups first started to migrate to the area in the 1950s and ’60s, Trinity embraced the tenants of black liberation theology as a means to advance its Christian mission in an environment where blackness and Christianity were likened to oil and water—that is, no mixing allowed.

Austin Dragon, the president of the Southern California Republican Club, recently told me that “religion impacts the politics of Republicans, whereas politics impact the religion of Democrats.” Considering the circumstances mentioned above and the way they shaped the tenants of Obama’s Trinity United, perhaps Dragon has a point. Perhaps politics do impact the religion of Democrats.

The question is: Is this such a bad thing? (more…)

Religion and Politics, Part 2: How Race and Religion Collide in the Media

Tuesday, September 23rd, 2008

When remarks made by Rev. Jeremiah Wright moved from YouTube to the boob tube back in March, Barack Obama’s religious beliefs came into question and took the sting. But what about John McCain’s religious beliefs? McCain is a long-time Episcopalian who now claims to be Baptist, despite having never been baptized in a Baptist church. Was a big hoopla ever made of this tidbit? No.

Sarah Palin was placed on the McCain ticket for a number of reasons, and surprisingly, the most important of them has nothing to do with lipstick. Or pitbulls. Or minivans. It’s the G-factor. She’s down with G-O-D. As previously discussed, however, Palin has a rather interesting affiliation with a curious and somewhat controversial congregation. Her religious history, a boon to the McCain campaign, is also a minefield of stories for the telling. But where is the media?

(more…)