Mbaye Lo
Cleveland State University
Kent State University
Abstract
This article analyzes the associational relationship between
Islam and terrorism as embedded in the current popular culture.
Two questions are examined: (a) whether from a historical
and political perspective current organizations that are
terror threats and Bin Laden are natural outgrowths of the
Islamic tradition; (b) whether the Muslim popular tradition
has historically interpreted some Qur'anic terms such as Jihad and Kuffar "allegedly
infidels" to promote hate and violence against non-Muslims.
In view of this discussion, the article suggests that the
current terror treats is due to the politicization of the
Muslim faith, rather than rooted in Islamic teachings.
Introduction: Scope and Thesis
[1] The aim of this article is twofold. First, to address
whether from a historical and political perspective, current
organizations that are terror threats and Osama Bin Laden,
the founder and spiritual leader of al-Qaeda, are natural
outgrowths of Islamic tradition. Second, to survey the understanding
of the terms Kuffar, Jihad and the concept of non-Muslims
in the Muslim popular tradition. Finally, the article illustrates
that the roots of terrorism is in the misinterpretation
and politicization of Islam.
[2] In the aftermath of the September
11 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center, a popular
trend of thought quickly emerged that Islam is the root
of terrorism. A range of religious leaders, academicians
and public intellectuals subscribe to this theory. For
example, Franklin Graham, a popular evangelical leader,
told NBC News that Islam is a "very evil and wicked
religion. When you read the Qur'an and you read the verses
from the Qur'an, it instructs the killing of the infidel,
or those that are non-Muslim.''1 Another
religious leader and broadcaster, Pat Robertson, is the
founder and chairman of the Christian Broadcasting Network
(CBN), asserted that upon reading the Qur'an, he found Islam "not
a peaceful religion that wants to co-exist."2 Bernard
Lewis, professor of history at Princeton University seized
the opportunity to use the event of September 11 as proof
of his long held-theory that there is a "clash
of civilization" between Islam and the West.3 Daniel
Pipes, a columnist for the New York Post and Jerusalem
Post, equated converts to Islam with converts to violence.4 He
considers collective Islamic organizations the same as terrorist
groups who have been promoting "violence against the
U.S. for more than two decades." Another writer, Jonah
Goldberg of the New Republic, describes Islam as "alien,
sometimes medieval, and often corrupt, theoretical fascism."5
[3] With such strong beliefs that Islam is the source of
terrorism, one might ask what evidence associates Islam
with terrorism? The relevant literature centres on two types
of evidence: empirical and relational. First, more than
two-thirds of the terrorist organizations on the U.S. State
Department's terrorist list are linked with Islam. These
organizations, under the pretext that Qur'anic teachings
encourage Jihad and call non-Muslims Kuffar (infidels),
use Islam as a rallying point to perpetuate violence against
the U.S. and U.S. nationals. Second, Osama Bin Laden, a
follower of Islam, and al-Qaeda, a purported Islamic organization,
was behind the heinous act of September 11.
The Origin of Modern Islamic Organizations
[4] As to the first kind of evidence, a historical look
at the true origin of modern Islamic organizations offers
no proof that they promoted hate or violence. Actually,
Islamic organizations emerged in the late nineteen and early
twentieth century to reconcile Islamic intellectualism with
European modernity. The history of modern Muslim groups,
reformists and Islamists alike, goes back to five towering
figures who laid the intellectual foundation for collective
activism in modern Muslim society.
[5] The Salafi movement was started
in the turn of the nineteenth century by Muhammed Abduh
(1844-1905), an Egyptian intellectual reformer, and Seyyed
Jamaluddin Afghani (1838-1897), whose last name "Afghani" refers
to his Afghan-Persian heritage. These two met while in
exile in Paris, where they established a religious society
called the Salafi movement that sought to remedy Islamic
schism by attempting to rationalize the laws of the Qur'an
with what they called the Nahdah movement
(renaissance). While Abduh focused on Egypt and rest
of the Arab world, Afghani traveled across India, Persia,
Afghanistan, Egypt and the Ottoman Empire. Abduh's conciliatory
views between Islam and the West are evident in his perspective
on reform. He returned to Egypt in 1889 to become the Grand
Mufti of Egypt and a close friend to Lord Cromer, the British
consul general. From this powerful position of controlling
all religious establishments, he took on the task of transforming
the educational systems from the shackles of religious tradition.6 He
criticized both radical as well as progressive interpretations
of Islam; called for de-politicizing the educational system,
and advocated good relationships with Western countries.
He once explained to a group of journalists who confronted
him on his return from Europe, "I found Islam [in the
West], but not Muslims, and in the Muslim World I found
Muslims, but not Islam." His statement views Islam
as tantamount to freedom, transparency and rule of law,
which he admires in the West.7 The
impact of these two figures on Arab and Muslim intellectual
circles around the turn of the twentieth century was similar
to the impact of the European renaissance in the sixteenth
century.
[5] The third illustrious figure was Hasan Al-Banna (1906-1949),
an Egyptian ideologue and founder of Ikhwanul-Muslimeen (The
Muslim Brotherhood) in 1928. Al-Banna followed the lead
of the Salafi movement, but capitalized on spiritual
reformation as going hand in hand with socio-political reform
in the Muslim world. Al-Banna had the most profound influence
on modern Islamic organizations. His movement, the Muslim
Brotherhood, used the symbol of Jihad in unifying Muslim
nations, fighting illiteracy and poverty. By 1948, the Muslim
Brotherhood had branches that included hundred of thousands
in Syria, Iraq, Palestine, and Sudan. The movement built
schools, created clinics, and disseminated the idea of civic
activism to the masses. Although Al-Banna has repeatedly
explained the centrality of spiritual struggle and self-purification
in his definition of Jihad, he has been widely and incorrectly
portrayed as a man of violence. He was assassinated by the
Egyptian secret police in 1949, because he was perceived
as a threat to the Egyptian government.
[6] Sayyid Qutb (1906-1966), An Egyptian
teacher and a social critic who joined the Muslim Brotherhood
movement after his return from a two-year study in the
United States in 1950, brought the intellectual aspects
of Islam to the Brotherhood. His two books: Social Justice in Islam and Inthe
Shade of the Qur'an mirror his wish for a just political
system that reconciles Western modernity and Islamic values.
Looking beyond Qutb's sharp criticism of democracy, which
he considers bankrupted in the West, one will not find any
contradiction between Qutb's focus on the Islamic concept
of Shura, which he considers the principle of Muslim
politics, and the concept of democracy as it is practiced
in the West.8 Shura,
the Arabic word for consultation, refers to the process
of mutual consultation in Islamic law, in which the ruler
must consult his followers in making decisions. Qutb was
detained in concentration camps by President Jamal Abudu
Nasser of Egypt and eventually executed in 1966.
[7] Sayyid Abu'l-A'la Mawdudi (1903-1979) established the Jama'at
al-Islami Party in Lahore, Pakistan. He assimilated
Western ideas of activism and oppositionalism to postulate
a mechanism of power transfer in an Islamic state. Mawdudi,
one of the most important Islamic revivalists, rejected
the case of Jihad in Kashmir and underwent imprisonment
in Pakistan as a result.
[8] For each of these figures, the term Jihad was
mostly seen in its spiritual meaning, as a struggle for
self-purification, and physical Jihad is interpreted as
non-existent except in the case of protecting oneself and
preserving ones property or religion. Although Western scholars
have widely portrayed Qutb as the spiritual father of current
radical Muslim groups, 9 and
the "Islamic world's answer to Solzhenitsyn, Sartre,
and Havel" who "easily ranks with all of them
in influence," to quote Daniel Benjamin and Steven
Simon,10 scholars
throughout the Muslim world consider Qutb an intellectual,
a person of letters and not a source of religious knowledge.11 His
literary style is used in language and literature courses
to demonstrate the discursive potency of the Qur'an and
never to draw religious edicts.
The Ideological Foundation of al-Qaeda
[9] As to the second kind of evidence, related to Bin Laden,
an analytical study of the ideological foundation of the
organization and Bin Laden's narrative discourse gives a
clear view that this man and his organization are products
of what the Egyptian press calls Petrodollar ideology and
fanaticism. The term Petrodollar was coined by the Egyptian
press in the late 1980s to attack the Wahhabi ideology
that was spreading throughout the Muslim world. "Petro" denotes
the oil wealth of the Arabian Peninsula that supports this
ideology, while "dollar" denotes the Western backing
of this radical interpretation of Islam. Wahhabi ideology
became the surrogate army in fighting the Soviets in Afghanistan.
In Charlie Wilson's War, George Crile explained how
the U.S. government sponsored the biggest Jihad of the twentieth
century through this ideology.12
[10] The leading terrorist groups on the U.S. State Department's
terrorist list are militant Kashmiri groups, the Islamic
Movement of Uzbekistan, the Abu Sayyaf group in the Philippines,
Armed Islamic Group in Algeria and its radical offshoots
known as the Salafi groups. What these groups have
in common is that their core leadership is exclusively battle-hardened
and highly motivated Afghan fighters¾former Mujahideen or
Arab Afghans.
[11] Wahhabism, which is the ideological underpinning
of Bin Laden, is monolithic in its origin and conservative
in its interpretation of Islam; it has long been rejected
by the overwhelming majority of the Muslims. Both the theology
and the political apparatus of Wahhabism came from Hijaz (modern
day Saudi Arabia) to remedy what was perceived as a deviation
by the Muslims of Arabia from the true Islamic faith. In
1744, Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab, a religious leader, agreed
with Muhammad bin Saud, the founding father of the Saudi
Royal family, to take an oath that they would work together
to bring the Arabs of the Peninsula back to the simplest
and purest form of Islam. This marriage of interest between
the Wahhabi interpretation of Islam and the Saud
dynasty was revived in the rebirth of Modern Saudi Arabia
in 1932.
[12] Following the large oil revenues of the 1970s and early
1980s, the Wahhabi stream became the driving force
throughout the Muslim World. On the one hand, it used the
wealth of the Arabia to pay royalties to its citizens, the
Arab world, and promote its vision of Islam to other Muslim
countries. It also carefully placed its graduates in religious
schools, called Madarasa in Southeast Asia, Khalwa in
North Africa and Dara in West Africa. On the other
hand, Western powers used the Wahhabi movement as
the vanguard for resisting the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
Bin Laden's early messages as a fund-raiser for the Afghan Mujahideen were
directed to the Arabian royal families. He reminded them
that the fight against the Soviets was not only to protect
Afghanistan, but also to defend them from the creeping communism.
Bin Laden's early messages were printed in leading Arabic
journals of the Gulf such as Majallatul Al-Faisal, Majalatul
Al-alam, etc.
[13] Wahhabism is radical
in its interpretation of the formal moralityof Islam,
and naïve in its
interpretation of the ritual practices of Islam. Although
it is a Sunni subgroup, it repudiates other Muslim sects¾Shiites
and Sufi as well as other Sunni reformists such as Muhammad
Abduh, Jamaluddin Afgani, Hasan Al-Banna, Sayyid Qutb and
Sayyid Mawdudi.
Bin Laden's Narrative Discourse
[14] A linguistic analysis of Bin Laden's speeches in his
current rhetorical manipulation through Al-Jazirah and
Arabic newspapers, uncovers that Bin Laden crafts a selective
and biased, i.e., distorted interpretation of Islam, while
ignoring the moderate interpretation that is more popular
and widely adopted in the Muslim world. There are two aspects
to Bin Laden's rhetorical strategy. First, there is
a common denominator between his vocabulary and that found
in Wahhabi literature. The only difference is that
Bin Laden shifted this rhetoric from condemning Muslim opponents
of the Wahhabi ideology as it was used before, to addressing
Westerners in general and American and Israelis in particular.
Second, recognizing his flimsy religious base, Bin Laden
uses two sets of vocabulary in his speeches. In some instances,
he uses religiously oriented language such as Kuffr (infidel), Mushrik (polytheist), Mufsid
fil- Ard (oppressor), Mutajabbir (arrogant) and Hubal (of
the age). In others, Bin Laden uses politically oriented
vocabulary such as language regarding police state, rights
of the people, Muslim issues in alQuds and
Palestine, and deaths of Iraqi children, in order to denounce
Arab regimes' alliances with the U.S.
[15] On the first level, Bin Laden's
target audience is his core adherents¾those who fought with him in the
Afghan war. They are known across the Arab world as the "Arab
Afghans," but Bin Laden has constantly addressed them
as the true Mujahideen, thus breaking rank with the
mainstream Arabs and Muslims who do not keep the Mujahideen label
for these former fighters. In a linguistic sense, the term Mujahideen is
from the root word Jahada from which the term Jihad is
formed. Jihad means "to strive in the cause
of Allah," therefore, Mujahideen literary means "strugglers
in the cause of Allah." In popular Islamic Fiqh (jurisprudence), Jihad is
applied widely to many forms of peaceful striving such as
providing for one's family, seeking knowledge, resisting
one's desire, etc.13 The
term also has developed some special meanings over time
to center on two concepts: the first concept is Jihad
ul-akbar [the highest form of Jihad], which is spiritual Jihad or
self-purification, and the second concept is Jihad ath-thukhra [the
loWest level of Jihad] that may involve physical struggle.14 Among
Muslim social scientists, the physical struggle, including
war, is only justified if it is to protect oneself, preserve
one's property or to stop oppression.15 As
such, keeping the status of Mujahideen for these
former fighters, as Bin Laden does, is a selective and deliberated
misuse of Jihad outside its traditional context.
Ironically, Bin Laden may not be alone in this self-serving
usage of the term. Western popular actions films such as The
Living Daylights (1987) and RamboIII (1988)
have portrayed the Mujahideen flatteringly. They
have depicted Afghan fighters as Mujahideen, heroes
and freedom fighters defending their country and the rest
of the "free world."
[16] On the second level, Bin Laden's
target audience is mainstream Arab society, which is
only unified with respect to the Palestinian issue and
linguistic heritage. In the absence of any political
opposition to the widespread despotic and totalitarian
regimes in the Arab world, Bin Laden appears as the only
true and independent political alternative. As Shafeeq
Ghabra, a popular Kuwaiti intellectual, noted: "if
an election were held in Saudi Arabia today, Bin Laden would
win it."16 Obviously,
such a victory would have a political base, not a religious
one.
[17] What Bin Laden did was shift Wahhabi ideology
from its traditional Muslim-bashing base to serve his own
political convictions, including violence. As Said Aburish
wrote in A Brutal Friendship: The West and the Arab Elite, "The
Wahhabis of Saudi Arabia are a mere 20 percent of the population
of the country and are favored in a way that allows them
to control all aspects of public and private life in the
Kingdom."17
Muslim Popular Tradition and the Interpretation of the Qur'an
[18] A closer look at Muslim popular tradition shows clearly
that it contradicts current Western popular interpretations
of the Qur'an from two perspectives. First, in the West,
popular and even intellectual interpretations of the Qur'an,
as witnessed in the post 9/11 era, clearly depart from Islamic
tradition. While this new interpretation emphasizes the
semantic meanings of the sacred texts, the Muslim tradition
combines them with the directives of the Sunnah.
In his 1970s book, Muhammad al-Nuwayahi, a leading Islamic
scholar, explains that "Islam does not grant any special
group or person the right to monopolize interpretation of
its teachings or the representation of the community of
Muslims … some binding Qur'anic laws at the time
of the Prophet were eliminated in later periods, even as
late as the period of the second caliph. Thus, legislation
concerning worldly affairs was not meant to be eternal,
literal or unchangeable. The principle of Hurf ('community
interest') is at the root of all Islamic legislation."18
[19] In the Islamic sciences, Qura'nic verses are not taken
at face value. Traditional Muslim scholars have agreed that
a correct interpretation of the Qur'an is either by the
Qur'an itself or by Sunnah, the tradition of the
prophet Muhammad and his companions. The science of interpreting
the Qur'an "At-tafsir" has been one of
the most exclusive avenues of Islamic sciences. It requires
scholarly understanding of Arabic hermeneutics, and the
biography of the prophet of Islam, Sirah. A popular Hadith (saying
of the prophet of Islam) reads, "Whoever interprets
the Qur'an intellectually is wrong even if he appears to
be correct."19 Interpretation
of any given verse in the Qur'an is only valid if there
is a Daleel, which means precedent example
from Sunnah, to support that view. There are two
sciences that need to be incorporated in interpreting the
Qur'an: first, Al-nasekh wal Mansoukh (the science
of abrogation), which enables a reader to understand the
verses in the holy Qur'an that have been invalidated and
abrogated by other verses. Second, Sababu an-Nuzul (occasion
of revelation), which helps a reader determine the period
in which each verse or chapter of the Qur'an was revealed,
thus understanding the circumstances for its revelation.
These two sciences are fundamental in understanding the
historical circumstances of the life of the prophet of Islam—the
attribute of each period of his life is evident from the
verses revealed in that period, whether in war or peace.
[20] Second, saying that the Qur'an itself promotes violence
by using the word Kuffar ("infidels") with
reference to non-Muslims is antithetical to Muslim popular
tradition. The term Kuffar is from the Arabic root
word Kaffara, which means "bury something in
the ground/cover." Etymologically, the structure of
the word Kuffar means those who bury/cover. Although
many verses of the Qur'an call ahlul kitab (Jews
and Christians) kuffar, as they objected to or suppressed
the message of Islam during the time of the Prophet, most
Muslim scholars consider this as only referring to those
who fought against Islam when it was presented to them by
the prophet of Islam. As the word Muslims is used
in the Qur'an to describe Jews, Christians and Muslim alike,
the word Kuffar is also used to describe the vigorous
rejection of Islam at the time of its inception. In Islamic
tradition, the word Kuffar has not been used to address
others in the sense of ideological pejorative or name-calling.
Hassan Hathan has noted, "As matter of fact, the term "infidel"[as
it is used to translate the term Kuffar] is of European
origin used at the time of the Crusades to describe Muslims."20 The
Qur'an rejects name-calling,21 and
never allowed forced conversion of other people because
that contradicts the universality and inclusiveness of the
Islamic message.22 Throughout
premodern history, Jews and Christians as minorities in
Muslim societies were granted citizenship rights under a
national pact ('ahd) that dictates their rights as Dhimmis ("protectees").
This pact granted them protection under the law, security
of life and property, and their places of worship, in exchange
for paying Jizya ("tax") on mutually agreed
upon terms. In non-Muslim societies, Bernard
Lewis explains, "During eight centuries of Muslim rule
in Spain both Judaism and Christianity survived and in some
limited measure flourished … The Muslim states, both
in old and in newly conquered Muslim realms, were more tolerant."23
[21] Islamic history is rampant with examples of tolerance
and acceptance being depicted as wisdom and virtue. After
the conquest of Mecca in 630 C.E., the Prophet destroyed
all the idols in the Ka'ba, except an icon of the
Virgin Mary and a painting of the prophet Ibrahim.24 Another
example is when the second caliph Umar Ibn Qattab conquered
Jerusalem. He refused to pray in the Church of Ascension,
knowing that if he had done so, the Muslims would convert
the church to a mosque.
Muslim Intellectual Tradition and the Interpretation of the Qur'an
[22] A close reading of the four most revered books in the
science of interpretation of the Qur'an reveals that Muslim
scholars have used a simplistic interpretation of Islam
when addressing people of other faiths. Ismael ibn Kathir,
a fourteenth century scholar,25 Ibn
Jareer Al-Tabari, a tenth century scholar,26 Imam
Al-Qurtubi, a thirteenth century scholar, 27 and
As-shawkani, a sixteenth century scholar,28 have
all suggested a peaceful and harmonious attitude toward
non-Muslims, and did not use the term Kuffar as synonymous
with infidel. Their interpretation of the meanings
of the Qur'an has centred on an approach that looks at the
teachings of Islam as a faith not a territory, through verses
of the Qur'an that promote respect, and justice toward others
such as "there is no compulsion in matters of
religion,"29 and "bear
witness to the truth in all equity and never let hatred
of others lead you to deviate from Justice. Be just for
this is closest to righteousness. Remember God is well aware
of all that you do."30 There
is also a common call for the imperative of cooperation
between the races based on the Qur'anic verse "Oh,
Mankind! We created you from a single soul, male and female,
and made you into nations and tribes, so that you may come
to know one another [not to despise each other]. Truly,
the most honored of you in God's sight is the one who is
most righteous." 31
[23] Leading jurists in Islamic criminology
such as Imam Abu Hanifa (700-768), Abu Yusuf (731-803),
and their contemporary jurist Imam Abu Layla, considered
equal treatment between Muslims and non-Muslims an absolute
fact in Islamic jurisprudence. They draw their arguments
from the last sermon of the Prophet in 632, C.E. In their
views, this sermon made it clear that "All
humankind is from Adam and Eve. An Arab has no superiority
over a non-Arab, and a non-Arab has no superiority over
an Arab. A white person has no superiority over a black
person, and a black person has no superiority over a white
person, except by piety and righteous actions."32
[24] Drawing on this tradition, modern Muslim public intellectuals
extend the concept of ahl-al-Dhimm, "people
of covenant, which is traditionally limited to Jews and
Christians," to include any non-Muslims, Sabeans, Zoroastrians,
Buddhists, etc., who chose to reside in a Muslim land.33 Non-Muslims
are accorded the same rights as those of Muslims. Contemporary
Muslim social and educational institutions such as the Muslim
World League, Al Azar University, and the Pakistani Council
of Ulama "scholars" have all endorsed the
rights of non-Muslims in any Muslim society. Rashid Ganoushi,
an exiled public intellectual from Tunisia, notes that "It
is the consensus of opinion among modern Muslims scholars
that non-Muslims in modern Islamic states can even criticize
Islam itself freely and praise their own religion."34
[25] Moreover, modern Muslim scholars
have rejected the notion of "clash of civilizations" as it is used
to describe the relationship between Islam and the West.
In a lengthy critical article, Dr. Quasim Abdu Qasim, a
famous Egyptian historian, dismisses the idea of "clash
of civilization" because it simply contradicts the
universality of Islam.35 Speaking
in the name of Arab and Muslim public intellectuals, Dr.
Sulaiman I. Al-Askari of Kuwait calls for an intellectual
dialogue between the two sides rather than misinterpretation
of religion. Terrorism, in his view, is as dangerous to
Islam as it is to world order and harmony. It is rooted
in corrupt groups and individuals, and unjust policies in
the world, and has nothing to do with the Islamic tradition.36
Conclusion
[26] In sum, a thoughtful look into terrorism that are perpetrated
in the name of Islam through historical and political contexts
would see its roots in contemporary corrupt politics and
fanatical ideologies, rather than in the Islamic teachings.
Alain Krueger and Jitka Maleckova of Princeton University
have made a definite point in their study of the roots of
terrorism as correlated with despotic political regimes
and self-serving ideologies.37 Practices
associated with political oppression and ideological corruption
are the results of colonial subjugation, intellectual stagnation
and wrong priorities—and have little to do with Islam.
A proper and comprehensive interpretation of the Muslim
faith based on its popular and intellectual traditions would
not find it as the root cause of the terrorism that we are
continuing to face.
Notes
1 Comments made on
NBC Nightly News, November 19, 2001.
2 Remarks
made during Robertson's "700 Club" television
program with co-host, Lee Webb, on February 21, 2002.
Also see Alain Cooperman, Washington Post, February 22, 2002.
3 See Bernard Lewis's
views in The Crisis of Islam: Holy War and Unholy Terror (New
York: Modern Library, 2003). Also read his May 2003 article
in The Atlantic Monthly, "I'm Right, You're
Wrong, Go to Hell."
4 Read, for instance,
his New York Post article "Convert to Violence," October
25, 2002.
5 Jonah
Goldberg, "the
Goldberg File" In the New Republic, October 1, 2001.
6 Albert Hourani, Arab
Thought in the Liberal Age, 1798-1939 (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1970).
7 See Mbaye Lo, Muslims
in America: Race, Politics and Community Building (Beltsville,
MD: Amana Publications, 2004), 134.
8 See for instance, Inthe
Shade of the Qur'an: Sura al-Shura (chapter 42 of
the Qur'an).
9 See John Esposito, The
Islamic Threat: Myth or Reality? (New York: Oxford
University Press, 1992), 135.
10 Daniel Benjamin
and Steven Simon, The Age of Sacred Terror: Radical Islam's
War Against America (New York: Random House, 2002),
62.
11 See Muhammad Ibn
Abdurrahman Al Makhrawi, Al- Mufassirun (Interpreters
of the Qu'ran), vol. 2 (Riyadh: Dar Tayyiba, 1985), 319.
12 George Crile, Charlie
Wilson's War (New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 2003).
13 See these forms
in Bukhai's collection of Hadith (sayings and tradition
of the prophet of Islam), Sahihu-l Bukhari, which
is the most common and accepted source of Hadith.
Volume 1 has 241 chapters under the title of Jihad;
the English version is in volume 4 (34-275). Sahih
Muslim, which is the second most common source of Hadith,
has 100 chapters under the title of Jihad; the English
version is in volume 3 (942-1063).
14 This is the official Fatwa of
all Muslim educational institutions in the Muslim world
as well as in the Muslim diaspora. It is based on a story
that upon the Prophet's return from a battle he said, "We
have returned from the lesser jihad to the greater jihad
[the struggle against the evil of one's soul]." In Tarikh
al Baghadadi, vol. 13, 493.
15 See interpretations
of the Qu'ran 22:39-40.
16 This quotation
is from his May 14, 2003 address to the Cleveland Council
on World Affairs, Cleveland, Ohio.
17 Said Aburish, A
Brutal Friendship: the West and the Arab Elite (New
York: St. Martin's Press, 1997) 14-15.
18 M.
al-Nuwayahi, Nahwa athawra fi-l fikri al-dini (Toward
New Religious Thought), (Beirut: Dar al-adab, 1970).
19 This is an authentic Hadith that
has been related in the main sources of Abudawud,
At-tirmizi and An-nisa'i.
20Hassan Hathan, Reading
the Muslim Mind (Indiana: American Trust Publication,
1998), 15.
21 Qur'an: 4:148;
17:53; 28: 55.
22 Qur'an: 21: 107;
2: 256.
23 Bernard Lewis, The
Multiple Identities of the Middle East (New York:
Schocken Books, 1998), 116-17.
24 This story is
mentioned by Abu Al-Walid Al-Azraqi (d. 845) in his book Akhbar
Makkah [News of Mecca] (Cairo: Maktabat Mustapha al-Babi
al-Halabi, 138), vol. 2, 160. And also see Martin
Lings, Muhammad: His Life Based on the Earliest Sources (Rochester,
VT.: Inner Traditions International, 1983), 300.
25 Ismael Ibn Kathir, The
Commentary of the Glorious Qur'an (Cairo: Mu-assasatu
Al-Mukhtar Linashri wa-tawzi), 2001.
26 Ibn Jareer At-Tabari, Jaami-ul-Bayaan (Cairo: Tabaha
Publications, 1967).
27 Muhammad Al-Qurttubi, Al-Jaami'u
li-Ahkaamil-Qur'an (Cairo: Dar al-Kutub al-Masriyah,
1959).
28 Imam As-shawkani, Fathul
Qadir (Damascus: Al Matbah Al-Ilmiyyah, 1976).
29 Qur'an 2:256.
30 Qur'an 5:8.
31 Qur'an 49:13.
32 All versions of
the sermon are available in several traditional sources
as Al-Bukhari and Al-Muslim. Also read Muhammad
Al-khudari's book, Nuru-alyaqin (Beirut: Darul-Jabal,
1987), 305.
33 See
Rashid Gannouchi, "The
Rights of Non-Muslims in a Muslim State," in The
Message International (New York: ICNA Publications,
April-May 2004), 27.
34 Gannouchi, "Rights," 27
35 See Alarabi
Magazine, published by Ministry of Information of
the state of Kuwait, January 2004 edition.
36 Alarabi Magazine,
July 2004 edition.
37 Alan
B. Krueger and Jitka Maleckova, "Seeking the Roots
of Terrorism," Chronicle
of Higher Education (June 6, 2003).