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Extremism on the WWW

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Title: Extremism on the WWW


1
Extremism on the WWW
By Aftab Ahmad Malik Visiting Fellow
CENTRE FOR THE STUDY OF ETHNICITY AND CULTURE
2
Topics
  • Filling the gap The Internets Challenge to
    Authority
  • Defining Extremism
  • Extremism is Not New
  • The Root of Muslim Extremism
  • Extremist Traits
  • Extremist websites identified
  • Who do they represent?
  • What commonalities do they share, if any?
  • What attracts young Muslims to their sites?
  • The Internet as the ideal Medium

3
Filling the Gap The Internets Challenge to
Authority
  • A growing gap in communication between the old
    and the young
  • Young Muslims search for quick and immediate
    answers
  • No need is there to travel to seek out or consult
    learned scholars when an individual can go
    directly and effortlessly to the World Wide-Web
  • Ignore the complexities and nuances of Islamic
    scholarship
  • such nuances vanish as a simple and comforting
    worldview is constructed for Muslims
  • While the vast majority of Muslims condemn
    extremism, many do have grave concerns over the
    war on terrorism and it is here that confusion
    amongst the present generation of Muslims sets
    in
  • who speaks for Islam and by what authority?
  • The Internet has compounded this problem as
    ill-informed opinions appear to be fatwas written
    by scholarly authorities.
  • In an attempt to project authority, most of the
    websites use the term fatwa to indicate some
    authenticity to their claim. A fatwa is a
    juristic legal opinion that is not binding. The
    key word here is juristic. One needs to be a
    qualified expert (a Mufti) and grounded in all
    the necessary requisite sciences to be able to
    present one.

4
Defining Extremism
  • Utilise the word carefully and as a Muslim
    looking at the state of the Muslim world from
    within his tradition.
  • The Prophet Muhammad said Beware of extremism
    in the religion, and the Quran in many
    instances warns
  • Commit not transgression therein, lest My anger
    should justly descend upon you, and
  • Do not exceed the bounds in your religion.
  • Islamic terms often used to describe an imbalance
    in the believer are
  • al-taassub (being zealous or a zealot in
    religion) 
  • al-ghuluw (excessiveness, extremism)
  • al-tashdid (exceedingly restrictive) and
  • al-tatarruf (moving to the farthest point).
  • All these terms basically signifying a tendency
    that is away from what is deemed moderate and
    balanced, whether in belief or by action, and so,
    it is this understanding that I apply to the
    words extremism and extremist.

5
  • Extremism is not New

Are men to arbitrate in the affairs of Allah?
There can be no arbitration except by Allah.
"The prerogative of command rests with none but
Allah. He declares the truth and He is the best
of judges" (Quran 657)
Urwa ibn Udaiyya objecting to the pact that was
agreed between Ali and Muawiyyah at the Battle
of Siffin who then seceded from the party of Ali
along with 12,000 others.
6
  • The Root of Muslim Extremism
  • The prerogative of command rests with none but
    Allah. He declares the truth and He is the best
    of judges"
  • This statement read in its proper Kharijite
    context, is only we (with our swords) have the
    prerogative of command.
  • The Hadith of Hurqus ibn Zuhair (Distribution of
    booty after the battle of Hunain
  • Rebuking the Prophet seem to know better than
    the Prophet Muhammad
  • Hurqus confronted Ali and said, "O son of Abi
    Talib, I fight you not except for the sake of
    Allah, and for my reward in the afterlife." Ali
    retorted, "Your kind, Hurqus, is the kind that
    God Almighty refers to in the Quran where He
    states, 'Say Shall We tell you of those who lose
    most in respect of their deeds? Those whose
    efforts have been wasted in this life, while they
    imagined that they were acquiring good by their
    works' (18 103). Amongst these - and I swear by
    this in the name of the Lord of the Kaba - are
    you Hurqus!"
  • "There will come a time when a group of people
    will leave our ranks. They will recite the Quran
    with fervour and passion but its spirit will not
    go beyond their throats. They will leave our
    ranks in the manner of an arrow when it shoots
    from its bow."
  • Abdullah ibn Wahb al-Rasibi was one of the
    Khawarij leaders. al-Rasibi was known for his
    fervour in reciting the Quran and was also
    nicknamed Dhu al-Thafanat (the one whose kneecaps
    appeared like two humps of a camel because of the
    intense and extended nature of his prostration in
    prayer)
  • Numerous factions occurred within the Kharajite
    ranks, which created other sub-factions. These
    factions and sub-factions merely differed in the
    extent of their extremism (kufr Vs shirk)

7
Extremist traits
  • They transfer the Quranic verses meant to refer
    to those of no faith to refer to Muslims.
  • "What I most fear in my community is a man who
    interprets verses of the Qur'an out of context."
  • "They recite Quran and consider it in their
    favor but it is against them."
  • Three principles that set them apart from
    mainstream Muslims
  • That all perpetrators of major sins were
    permanently destined for hell (Exception are the
    Ibadites).
  • The declaration of either kufr or shirk upon
    those who differ with them.
  • It is obligatory to overthrow an oppressive ruler
    by force.

8
Extremist Websites Identified
  • In all the websites examined, three underlying
    intellectual orientations were apparent
  • Salafi
  • Political and
  • Jihadi
  • The salafi approach itself falls into moderate
    and extreme factions, which often are at
    loggerheads with one another
  • traditional Vs classical Vs neo-/takfiri
    Salafi Next Generation
  • Political discourses on Islam focus on the need
    to re-instate the Caliphate and the prohibition
    and condemnation of those being involved in any
    democratic process
  • The Jihadist discourse criticises the former two
    orientations for their lack of attention to the
    necessity of jihad.
  • National Vs Global Jihadists
  • From reviewing their websites, these three
    orientations share a number of commonalities and
    over-lapping concerns

9
Extremist Websites Identified
  • They all claimed to hold the belief of the
    salaf (salafee aqeeda sic)
  • Condemnation and/or excommunication of fellow
    Muslims and movements/groups that follow
    something other than their methodology. In
    particular, their contempt and rejection of any
    mystical aspect of Islam with particular
    condemnation of Sufism.
  • Espousal of the medieval Muslim view that the
    world is categorized in two domains The domain
    of War (dar al-Islam) and the domain of Peace
    (dar al-Islam)
  • A narrow definition of innovation effectively
    allowing them to categorise many Muslim scholars,
    activities, celebrations, habits, customs and
    ideas as taking a Muslim outside the pail of
    Islam.
  • The reduction of issues into black and white and
    ignoring the feasibility that there may be a
    scholarly difference over any given issue
  • Most equate the war on terrorism with a war
    against Islam and make no distinction between the
    governments that sanction war and the civilians
    that are opposed to it
  • The extensive use of emotional blackmail. By
    highlighting Muslim suffering around the world as
    a crime perpetuated by Western governments, the
    surfer is urged to fulfil his or her religious
    duty to remove hardships on fellow Muslims

10
What Attracts Young Muslims to their Sites?
  • Discussing issues openly that are almost
    closed/prohibited from being addressed/discussed
    in mosques (even more so in Muslim countries)
  • They appear to ask questions that many Muslims
    want asked about the war on terrorism
  • Keeping messages simple and written in an
    accessible language to all
  • Being almost always first to analyse current
    events and put forward their commentary and
    making quick use of e-mailing lists
  • Having articles (and small books) that are easily
    downloadable and printed off as fliers that can
    be circulated on the streets and particularly,
    after the Friday Sermon
  • Having the status of taboo websites provokes many
    to visit the website to find out exactly why they
    have been told not to go there
  • They dont call for restraint their message is
    one of emergency Muslims are being killed and
    Islam itself is under siege. You have to do
    something or be complicit in the assault against
    Islam

11
The Internet as the Ideal Medium
  • The Internet itself is an ideal medium for the
    transportation of these ideas because it offers
  • easy access
  • little or no regulation, censorship, or other
    forms of government control
  • anonymity of communication
  • fast flow of information
  • inexpensive development and maintenance of a web
    presence
  • a multimedia environment (the ability to combine
    text, graphics, audio, and video and to allow
    users to download films, songs, books, posters,
    etc)
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