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Understanding Islam

Daniel C. Peterson, “Understanding Islam,” in Mormons and Muslims: Spiritual Foundations and
Modern Manifestations, ed. Spencer J. Palmer (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young
University 2002), 11–43.

Understanding Islam

Daniel C. Peterson

Daniel C. Peterson was associate executive director for Brigham Young University’s Institute for the
Study and Preservation of Ancient Religious Texts when this was published.

Why should we seek to learn about and to understand Islam? If the attacks of September 11, 2001, and
subsequent events haven’t made the answer to this question obvious, nothing else is likely to do so. But
there are more fundamental reasons, and these far transcend the terrorist horrors of that morning. A
sizable portion of the earth’s population adheres to the religion of Islam, and Islam—a major force in
human history for a millennium and a half—is a powerful, living factor in international politics in the
Near East, Africa, and Asia.

Moreover, even apart from the palpable shrinking of the globe that has resulted from modern
communications, means of transportation, and the interlinking of national economies, Muslims can no
longer be simply dismissed as people far away and “over there.” Increasingly, Muslims are our
neighbors. By means of immigration, high birth rates, and conversions, Islam is rapidly becoming a
mainstream religion throughout the West. There may well be more Muslims praying in the mosques of
the United Kingdom on Fridays than there are worshipers in the Church of England on Sundays. A
mosque stands prominently on the hills above Guatemala City. A few years ago, I spoke in a mosque in
the relatively small city of Hamilton, New Zealand, and I have met with Muslim leaders in most of the
major cities of Australia. And, although precise figures are difficult if not impossible to come by, Muslims
may soon outnumber Jews in the United States of America.

However, for Latter-day Saints there is an even more fundamental reason for seeking to understand the
faith of approximately a billion of God’s children on earth: He has commanded us to do so. The Lord has
told us to seek after knowledge

Of things both in heaven and in the earth, and under the earth; things which have been, things which
are, things which must shortly come to pass; things which are at home, things which are abroad; the
wars and the perplexities of the nations, and the judgments which are on the land; and a knowledge also
of countries and of kingdoms—

That ye may be prepared in all things when I shall send you again to magnify the calling whereunto I
have called you, and the mission with which I have commissioned you. (D&C 88:79–80)

In this essay, I will first offer an extremely basic summary of the history and theology of Islam. [1] Then I
will offer background for apparent Muslim anger against the West to provide guidance on what lies
behind current newspaper headlines. Although current events are ever-changing, the fundamental
issues and historical facts will not be altered by breaking news.

A Basic History of Islam

On the eve of the birth of Islam—which is to say, in the late sixth and early seventh centuries after
Christ—the Arabian peninsula was a place far removed from the major centers of culture and political
power. A vast and desolate area, it was for the most part sparsely populated by Bedouin nomads and
punctuated only occasionally by small oasis towns.

The two great powers of the day were the Byzantine empire, the Greek-speaking and Christian
continuation of the old Roman empire (which now had its capital in Constantinople), and the Persian
empire of the Sassanids. The Persians were followers of the prophet Zoroaster, or Zarathustra. Each
empire was militantly dedicated to its own religion and to the destruction of the other. Perso-Roman
hostilities were centuries old. However, when the seventh century dawned, the two empires were about
to embark on a long war that would eventually leave each of them exhausted and vulnerable to a totally
unexpected threat from Arabia.
The Arabians were polytheists but perhaps not very pious ones. [2] Somewhere up above the jinn (the
“genies”) and the subordinate godlings to whom they occasionally paid a little attention was the distant
and mysterious high god, Allah. His name—or, better his title, which takes its emphasis on the second
syllable—is simply the Arabic equivalent of the English word God. Allah is a contraction of the Arabic
words al and ilah, which, together, mean “the god.” In other words, it is related to the old Semitic names
for the high god, EI and Elohim, the latter of which should be quite familiar to Latter-day Saints. Elohim
is formed from the Hebrew word eloh, “god” and the masculine plural suffix -im. It should never be
thought that Allah is the name of some strange idol or foreign deity. In fact, Arabic and Turkish
Christians use the same word for God as do their Muslim counterparts, and Allah is the word used for
God in the Arabic translation of the Book of Mormon and other Latter-day Saint materials.

To most of the pre-Islamic Arabians, though, Allah was too remote to pray to or even to think about. But
things were changing. Arabia had long derived much of what wealth it possessed from the trade routes
that ran its length, bringing frankincense and myrrh from Yemen, Ethiopia, Somalia, and even India. It
was probably along the most important of these trade routes that Lehi had led his caravan six hundred
years before Christ. [3] Not far from that same trade route was the ancient oasis of Mecca—hot and
dusty, clustered around a brackish well called Zamzam. As our period opens, Mecca was beginning to
grow very wealthy. It had managed to gain a major share of the caravan trade, and, with its shrine,
called the Ka’ba, it had become a significant center of pilgrimage for the entire Arabian peninsula.

However, wealth brings change, and change brings problems. Class distinctions arose, and every man
was after his own self-interest. The old values of family and tribe, which had taken the place of a
government in the modern sense, fell victim to a new lust for gain. Widows and orphans, who had been
secure and cared-for under the old tribal system, were now left largely on their own. Some men,
though, seem to have been sensitive to these problems, and they began to look, or at least to yearn, for
something better. They sought higher values than wealth, and a higher religion than the vague and
primitive paganism around them.

Little was available. There were Jews in pre-Islamic Arabia, but they weren’t interested in converts.
There were Christians, as well—but to align oneself with Christianity was, willingly or not, to make a
political statement and to join the pro-Byzantine “party.” On the other hand, if one decided to become a
Zoroastrian that could be seen as aligning oneself with the pro-Persian “party.” And such choices had
consequences, because both the Byzantines and the Persians, as part of their ongoing rivalry, were
becoming interested in the merchant wealth that traversed Arabia and were seeking control of
peninsular trade routes.
So these seekers—or, as they are known in Arabic, these hunafa’—seem to have held to a non-aligned
and simple monotheism, praying and fasting and hoping, perhaps, for something better.

Muhammad was one of them. [4] His father died before he was born in 570, and his mother died while
he was a small boy. As an orphan, he was exposed to many of the rigors of life in Mecca. Even though he
triumphed over his disadvantages by virtue of character and ability, and even though he became a
caravan merchant himself and married a rich widow, he seems not to have forgotten his childhood. He
always remained sensitive to children, to widows and orphans.

In the year 610, Muhammad was in a cave in the hills above Mecca, praying and engaging in religious
devotions. According to later Muslim tradition, it was there that the angel Gabriel—he who made the
Annunciation to Mary—came to Muhammad with the beginning of the revelation of the Qur’an, the
holy book and bedrock of Islamic faith and doctrine.

Muslims today regard the Qur’an (or, as it is sometimes spelled, the Koran) as the literal word of God.
That is, it is not about Muhammad (as the four Gospels are about Christ), nor is it by Muhammad. It is a
collection of the actual words of God to Muhammad as God spoke them in Arabic. (A translation of the
Qur’an, according to the orthodox Muslim view, is therefore not the Qur’an; only the Arabic original can
claim to be the veritable words of God.) Muslims also view the Qur’an as the Word of God, a role which
in Christianity is taken by Christ Himself, as the logos of John 1:1. The Qur’an is taken from the great,
celestial Book, which was with God from all eternity, uncreated, as God’s everlasting and unchanging
utterance. (The Torah and the Psalms and the Gospels come likewise from the heavenly tablet but are
viewed as corrupted in their present form.) It might be helpful, for Latter-day Saints, to compare the
Qur’an to the Doctrine and Covenants. Unlike the Old Testament or Book of Mormon, the Qur’an is not
a narrative or history. But like the Doctrine and Covenants, it is a collection of revelations on many
different subjects, arranged in a roughly chronological order. [5]

Muhammad’s early days as a prophet were spent in his hometown of Mecca. His revelations during this
period were intense, poetic, vivid, apocalyptic, and concise. They proclaimed the reality of physical
resurrection and the imminence of the end of the world and of judgment day. They called for social
justice; they denounced the practice—widespread in pagan Arabia—of female infanticide. Muhammad
preached against shirk (Arabic “association” or, more loosely, “polytheism”), the ultimate sin of
worshiping something or someone else beside (or instead of) the one true God. His preaching earned
him a small following at first, mostly of the insignificant and the disenfranchised, and a great deal of
contempt, ridicule, and actual persecution.
It was perhaps during this period that Muhammad’s famous Night Vision occurred. Unfortunately,
accounts of the vision are so garbled and contradictory that it is difficult to ascertain the real facts. In
any case, the basic story as given by Islamic tradition is that Muhammad was taken during the night
from Central Arabia to the holy city of Jerusalem, where he led several of the ancient prophets in prayer
on the temple mount and from which he then ascended through the seven heavens into the presence of
God. His ascent is said to have commenced from the very spot where Abraham was sent to sacrifice his
son. This is the place now enclosed, on the temple mount, by the famous Dome of the Rock.

Muhammad’s situation in Mecca was not infinitely bearable. As the anger of Mecca’s city fathers against
him intensified, they even began to plot against his life. So when a group of men came for the pilgrimage
from a village called Yathrib and asked Muhammad to come and act as an arbitrator in the squabbles
that were ruining their town, he jumped at the chance. First he sent his followers, and then he himself
went to the town which would ever afterwards be known as Madinat al-Nabi, “the city of the
Prophet”—or, simply, Medina (pronounced Meh-deen-ah). This emigration, called in Arabic the hijra,
took place in the year 622, and the Muslim calendar is dated from this year.

Muslims were entirely correct in seeing, in the hijra, a fundamental turning point in the life of the
prophet and in the nature of Islam. From being a rejected preacher, Muhammad became a statesman, a
diplomat, a judge. His revelations became longer, more prosaic, full of detail on inheritance law and the
like. (It is something like the difference between Isaiah and Leviticus or even the difference between
Doctrine and Covenants section 4 and a Brigham Young sermon on farming, mining, or irrigation canals.)

Muhammad was phenomenally successful. Within a few years, he conquered Mecca. Already, he had
made the Ka’ba and its attendant pilgrimage rituals part of Islam. Today, Mecca and the Ka’ba are the
geographical center of the universe to approximately a billion Muslims. (Medina is the second holiest
city; Jerusalem is the third.) By the end of his career, he essentially ruled the entire Arabian peninsula.
But the prophet died in 632. And, since the Qur’an had labeled him “the seal of the prophets,” in the
view of the overwhelming majority of Muslims there can be no more.

Still, somebody had to succeed Muhammad as the political head of a now growing and quite powerful
Muslim state. His followers divided, on the question of who this successor should be, into two major
groups which still exist today. The Sunnis, the majority of Muslims, cared less about the identity of the
ruler than about the fact that there must be one, in order to avoid anarchy and civil strife. The Shi’ites,
on the other hand, insisted—somewhat as the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
(now known as the Community of Christ) once did—that the leadership of the community legitimately
belongs to the family of the prophet. That disagreement persists to the present time.

After Muhammad’s death, the Arabs poured out of their desert home. The ancient and mighty Persian
empire, weakened and demoralized by its long war with Constantinople, collapsed before a ragtag army
of Bedouin nomads. The Byzantines, too, lost much of their territory—including their breadbasket, the
incredibly fertile province of Egypt. Within a hundred years, Arab armies were in India, as well as in what
is today known as Spain and the former Soviet republics of Central Asia.

Islam, however, did not spread by the sword. While the Arabs conquered huge territories, they did not
force conversions. In fact, for certain reasons they actually tended to discourage conversion, especially
in the early days. Their general practice was to allow freedom of worship to Jews and Christians, merely
taxing them at a somewhat higher rate—among other things, to maintain the armies, in which Jews and
Christians did not have to serve. Islam was, in fact, uniformly more tolerant of minority religions than
was medieval Christianity.

Another fact that it is important to recognize in this context is that the terms Arab and Muslim are not
equivalent. While most Arabs are Muslims, not all are. And most Muslims are not Arabs. Indeed, the
largest Muslim nation is non-Arab Indonesia. Iran and Afghanistan, too, though overwhelmingly Muslim,
are not Arab. And Islam is a powerful and sometimes dominant presence in such varied places as China,
Pakistan, India, Nigeria, Kenya, and Bangladesh.

The immense empire that the early Muslims suddenly controlled required laws and techniques of
governing that were far different from those of the simple nomads of Arabia. Where was guidance to be
found? The Qur’an, of course, was the most prestigious and the most authoritative source of legal and
moral guidance. But it was also very limited in terms of the range of issues that it covered. So, for a
while, the young Arab empire simply followed the laws and practices of the areas that it conquered and
left much of the day-to-day government in the hands of the local population. But this was not a
satisfactory solution. Many Muslims began to wonder, “What did Muhammad, our Prophet, do in
situations like these? Is there an ideal Islamic way to govern?” And they began to gather information
about what, in fact, he had done and said, on almost any question that could be imagined.

Eventually, this information took the form of reports called hadith (pronounced “ha-deeth”) or, as the
word is often (if not very precisely) translated, “traditions.” It is largely on the basis of these hadith that
the all-inclusive legal code of Islam was constructed. The code is called the shari’a (roughly pronounced
“shar-ee-ah”). Actually, it is somewhat misleading to call it a legal code, since it regulates things that are
far removed from anything that would be recognized as “law” in the contemporary secular West. Not
only does it deal with crimes, inheritance, marriage, and divorce, but, rather like the Talmudic law of
Judaism, it lays down rules on prayer, fasting, etiquette, and virtually every other aspect of human
existence.

Out of this mix of Qur’an and hadith, of Sunni and Shi’ite, of Arab and Persian and Turk and Mongol and
African and Indian, grew a remarkably rich and complex culture. It drew on Jewish legends and on Greek
philosophy, medicine, and science, on Indian mathematics and Persian manners. It produced lawyers
and mystics and skeptics and poets. We must be careful, then, when we talk about Islam. Very few
generalizations on this subject will be true of, say both a tenth-century surgeon in Baghdad and a
twentieth-century Indonesian peasant. Although far fewer “denominations” exist in Islam than in
Christianity, there are innumerable points of view, and Islam’s history is every bit as rich and complex as
is Christendom’s.

The Five Pillars of Islam

We would be skeptical, wouldn’t we, of anyone who purported to tell us all about Christianity in fifty
minutes or in a few pages. Would he or she be able to do justice to the Roman Catholics, the Unitarians,
Christian Science, the Latter-day Saints, Eastern Orthodoxy? To Luther, St. Augustine, Jim Jones, Martin
Luther King, Billy Graham, St. Francis, and the Apostle Paul? To the Jesuits and the Moonies and the
Reformation and the Council of Nicea? To the philosophical theology of St. Thomas Aquinas as well as
the beliefs of a television revivalist? And this is just scratching the surface!

With this warning in mind, thought, I shall now proceed to explain some basic concepts of Islam.
Perhaps the best way of doing it is to discuss, briefly, the basic principles known as the five pillars of
Islam.

The first pillar is known as the shahada (pronounced “sheh-had-ah”), the “testimony” or the “profession
of faith.” It is fulfilled when someone says, with full sincerity, “There is no god but God, and Muhammad
is His Messenger.” The first part of the statement is a declaration of a timeless monotheistic principle,
while the second half of the statement identifies the specific historical community of monotheists to
which the speaker belongs.
Second is prayer. This may be performed anywhere, and should be done (minimally) five times daily. It
involves a prescribed set of physical movements, as well, of course, as turning heart and mind toward
God. On Friday’s, it usually is performed at least once in a building called, in English, a mosque
(pronounced “mosk”). This word is a garbled version of the Arabic masjid, meaning “a place of bowing”
(sajada). Mosques are simply places of prayer. Islam has no priesthood and no ordinances or
sacraments. Most mosques are open to visits by non-Muslims. Typically, each mosque has a highly
ornamented niche in one of its walls, called a mihrab (pronounced “mih-rob”). This arched, recessed
niche is designed merely to indicate the direction of Mecca, toward which all Muslims face during
prayer. It is most definitely not, as some have supposed, some kind of idol or the actual object of prayer.
Many mosques also feature a platform, called a minbar, that often resembles a flight of stairs. It is from
this platform that the local religious official, the imam, gives his Friday sermon. One other characteristic
feature of almost all mosques is the exterior tower called a minaret. From this tower, faithful Muslims
are summoned to prayer five times each day. Loudspeakers have mostly replaced the old muezzin, or
prayer-caller.

The third pillar is the practice of almsgiving. Muslims tend to take this principle very seriously, and
Islamic governments typically levy a tax that is specifically designed to fulfill the requirement of giving to
the poor.

Fourth is the practice of fasting, especially during the holy month of Ramadan, when no food or drink is
consumed between sunrise and sunset for the entire month. Since the religious calendar of Islam is a
lunar one, the month of Ramadan cycles through the seasons and through the solar calendar that we
use and that even Muslims employ for their secular business and day-to-day lives.

The fifth and last pillar is the hajj, or the pilgrimage to Mecca. It is obligatory for every Muslim who is
able to do so, that he or she complete the pilgrimage at least once in a lifetime. Pilgrims dress in white,
and perform various rituals including circumambulation of the Ka’ba.

Some have tried to establish the principle of jihad (pronounced “jee-had”) as a sixth pillar. This word is
usually translated into English as “holy war,” but it means, literally, “struggle” or “striving.” Drawing on a
teaching generally ascribed to the Prophet Muhammad, Muslims often distinguish the “greater jihad”—
struggle against one’s own evil, base, selfish, or unrighteous inclinations—from the “lesser jihad” of
military struggle against the enemies of Islam. But even in military jihad, Islamic law has long held that
the deliberate targeting of noncombatants, of children, women, and the elderly, is unjustifiable. And it
has insisted that those launching a jihad must first summon their enemies to accept Islam
(“submission”). Furthermore, at least in theory, jihad is supposed to be defensive. “Fight in the way of
God with those who fight you,” says the Qur’an, “but aggress not: God loves not the aggressors.” [6] Nor
is suicide acceptable: “Cast not yourselves by your own hands into destruction.” [7] Those who die on
behalf of Islam are considered martyrs (shuhada’). [8]

Other Basic Beliefs

Muslims have traditionally expended more thought on law and ethics than on theology, but certain
theological principles are reasonably clear and universal. For example, God is One. He is not a Trinity. He
is completely different from anything earthly. He is purely spiritual and invisible. Moreover, He is all-
powerful and probably determines all human actions. One of the most common Arabic phrases is In sha’
Allah, “If God wills,” which is repeated before almost any action or promise. This is sometimes seen as a
kind of Muslim fatalism, but compare with James 4:13–15, where the same kind of respect for God’s
sovereignty is enjoined.

Islam recognizes the biblical prophets and several others and believes that literally thousands of
prophets are lost to history but known to God. Significantly among these, Muslims accept Jesus of
Nazareth as a prophet and as having been born of a virgin. The Qur’an speaks of Jesus as a “word” of
God. Islamic believers expect His Second Coming at the end of time. But most hold, on the basis of
certain passages in the Qur’an, that His crucifixion was only an illusion of the Jews. They believe that He
was not crucified and atones for no sins, that He is not the Son of God, and is not divine. Allah alone is
God. “Say: He is God, the One and Only; God, the Eternal, Absolute; He begetteth not, nor is He
begotten; And there is none like unto Him.” [9]

Muhammad, too, is only a prophet. But, as noted above, he is the “seal of the prophets,” which is
almost always taken to signify that he is the last of them. Muslims object greatly to their religion being
called “Muhammadanism” and to being themselves termed “Muhammadans.” This implies, they say,
that Muhammad occupies the place in their religion that Christ occupies in Christianity—and such a
supposition is false. They do not worship him. The correct name of their faith is Islam (pronounced “Iss-
lam”), meaning “submission (to God).” An adherent of the religion of Islam is a Muslim (“Muss-lim”), a
“submitter.”

Muslims are noted for some of the prohibitions of their religion. Although, unsurprisingly, not all are
faithful, they are directed to refrain from drinking wine, and, like Jews, to avoid pork. They are
commanded by their religion not to make religious images and pictures—which is, again, reminiscent of
Judaism.
Westerners have also been fascinated by such things as the veiling of women and “harems.” In passing,
it is worth noting that the historical origins of the veiling of women are unclear but that it may well have
been borrowed from Christians several centuries after Muhammad’s death. (Muhammad’s own wives
veiled themselves because of their special status in the community, but the rule probably was not
generally applied.) And harems, never very common, are almost extinct in the world of contemporary
Islam.

What should Latter-day Saints make of Muhammad and Islam? If Qur’anic statements against the
divinity of Christ accurately represent the teachings of Muhammad—and there is no evidence that they
do not—then we cannot accept him as a true prophet in the full sense of the word. We have little choice
in this matter because, as Revelation 19:10 explains, “the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy”
(emphasis added). But it is virtually certain that Muhammad was sincere, and it may well be that he was
inspired by God to do and say much of what he said and did.

Elders George A. Smith and Parley P. Pratt of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles had a high opinion of
him in 1855, at a time when just about everybody else in Europe and America thought it obvious that
Muhammad—along with Joseph Smith, incidentally, who was often compared to him—was a cunning
fraud. [10] And that high estimation has continued into recent times. In a 15 February 1978 declaration,
the First Presidency paid tribute to Muhammad, among others, as a divinely inspired religious and moral
leader: “The great religious leaders of the world such as Mohammed, Confucius, and the Reformers, as
well as philosophers including Socrates, Plato, and others, received a portion of God’s light. Moral truths
were given to them by God to enlighten whole nations and to bring a higher level of understanding to
individuals.”

The History Behind the Headlines

As I write, slightly more than six months after the brutal attacks of September 11, 2001, portions of the
Arab and Islamic world are gripped in mounting anguish and even despair, overflowing with seething
anger, and oppressed by a growing sense of urgency. [11] It is important for people in the West to try to
understand why this is so (though I should not be taken as claiming that to understand is wholly to
excuse). In order to understand, however, we must once again look to the past.

For several centuries, Islam, along with the region and culture that it dominated, was at the forefront of
civilization and human achievement. In fact, in Muslim eyes, Islam was civilization, and those who lived
beyond the Islamic world were often regarded not only as infidels but as barbarians. [12] During the
time of the Islamic world’s richest flourishing, only China could claim a comparable level of culture. But
even China was not entirely to be compared, since its culture was basically confined to one ethnic group,
while, by contrast, Islam’s dominion was vast, even intercontinental (including southeastern Europe,
West Asia, South Asia, Central Asia, and North Africa) and its subjects were multiethnic and multiracial.

For most of its first thousand years, Islam clearly exercised the greatest military power on earth. From its
homeland in Arabia, its armies came to dominate not only the Middle East but also parts of Europe,
Central Asia, North Africa, portions of the eastern and western African coasts, and large areas of the
Indian subcontinent. Only the threat of their eastern Islamic rivals in Persia kept the Ottoman Turks from
deploying their armies westward and conquering Europe. [13] And, even so, by 1682–83 the Ottomans
were conducting their second siege of Vienna.

Muslims had commerce and communications everywhere. They had inherited advanced knowledge and
skills from their predecessors in the ancient Near East, Greece, and Persia. They had taken the decimal
system from India and the art of making paper from China—and it is very difficult to imagine modern
civilization without these two elements. In fact, the indebtedness of the West to the Islamic world is
illustrated nicely by the number and nature of the words that we have borrowed from Arabic and
cognate languages. These include such terms as algebra, alchemy, algorithm, nadir, zenith, and even
punch. Such indebtedness was incurred, as well, by the influence of Islamic thinkers like Avicenna (Ibn
Sina) and Averroës (Ibn Rushd) upon St. Thomas Aquinas, the Doctor Angelicus, who was incomparably
the greatest philosopher of the Latin Middle Ages and, for many years, effectively the official theologian
of the Roman Catholic Church.

Islamic rulers were tolerant of their Christian and Jewish minorities not only because such tolerance was
enjoined by Islam but also, very likely, because of a sense of comfortable security. Christians were
looked down upon. As for today, although Islam’s record of pre-modern toleration is far better than
Christendom’s, that toleration has receded under current conditions of threat, despair, and anger; and
the links of Christian and Jewish minorities to the West, and their concomitant prosperity, have caused
hatred in some circles.

The Crusades represented a brief interruption of the Muslims’ seemingly inevitable march toward
ultimate triumph, but the Crusader states didn’t last very long and didn’t prove lastingly significant from
the Near Eastern point of view—although they proved very fruitful for the Europeans, who were
exposed, through them, to a much superior civilization. Byzantium continued to shrink. And, as for the
rest of Europe, it was dismissed by those few Muslim writers who concerned themselves at all with it as
a dark and barbarous place, valuable largely as a source of strong slaves and useful raw materials. Much
of Europe depended, for its science and civilization, on translations from Arabic, sometimes even
translations of works originally composed in Greek. Even Europe’s religion had been borrowed from the
Near East.

In 1453, Constantinople finally fell to the Ottoman Turks. And, now that the Byzantine Empire had been
conquered, the so-called Holy Roman Empire, in Europe proper, was slated to be next.

But that conquest did not happen.

In retrospect, we can see that a certain stagnation had entered into the Islamic world with the advent of
the Mongols and the Turks, if not before. The great translation movement that had brought so much of
Greek medicine, science, and philosophy to the Muslims was past by this time. New intellectual stimuli
were no longer entering Islamic life at anything like the previous astonishing pace.

Meanwhile, Europe was surging forward. Chairs of Arabic and Persian (of “oriental” languages) began to
appear in European universities such as Cambridge, Oxford, and Paris. But Muslims seems to have
known little, and to have cared less, about such things. They knew nothing about the Renaissance, the
Reformation, and the technological leaps associated with Gutenberg’s invention of the printing press
and with the Industrial Revolution. While there have long been “Orientalists” in the West, it is only quite
recently that “Occidentalists” began to appear in the Near East. And, for a long time after that, even
those Near Easterners who knew Western languages tended to be not Muslims but Christians and Jews,
who had a natural reason to cultivate ties with their fellow believers in Europe.

While Muslims traveled extensively within the Islamic world (in order to perform the hajj, or pilgrimage,
to Mecca, as well as for ordinary commercial purposes), they seldom if ever traveled to Europe. Unlike
Europeans, many of whose holiest places were located in the Near East, Muslims had no objects of
pilgrimage in Europe. Furthermore, for many centuries, Muslim merchants saw little in Europe to attract
them. The slaves and raw materials of Europe could be purchased at trading posts located along the
border between the predominantly Christian and predominantly Muslim lands, so there was no real
need for Muslims to enter into Europe. And those few merchants from the Near East who actually
penetrated Europe tended to be, once again, either Jews or Greek or Armenian Christians. And, again in
stark distinction to Near Eastern attitudes, Western merchants tended to view the Mediterranean (and,
hence, the Islamic world that occupied much of it) as a vast, sophisticated, and incredibly wealthy trade
emporium—as, in fact, it had long been. Jewish and Christian commercial travelers had local
communities of co-believers to help them both in Europe and the Near East, whereas, by contrast, no
European communities of Muslims existed under Christian domination to facilitate trading by Islamic
businessmen. Likewise, while Europeans maintained permanent embassies in the Near East, Islamic
states dispatched only occasional envoys—who entered, disposed of their business, and left as soon as
they possibly could. In fact, Muslims thought it ethically and theologically wrong to visit, let alone to live
in, infidel territories. As believers in Muhammad’s message had fled pagan Mecca to join him in his exile
in Medina, so too were later believers to flee the rule of unbelievers and gather with the faithful. Thus,
while Europeans had considerable knowledge of and exposure to much of the heartland of the Islamic
world, Muslims had little if any direct knowledge of Europe. Accordingly, long after the notion was out
of date, Muslim residents of the Near East typically regarded Europeans as primitives who had little to
offer to civilized people.

When Vasco da Gama pioneered his route around the cape of Africa at the end of the fifteenth century,
he managed to connect Europe and Asia in a way that allowed European merchants to bypass the Near
East. Accordingly, countries such as Egypt, which depended heavily upon revenue from tariffs on
imports and transit goods—and which, as luck would have it, was in that very period under the rule of
the architecture-loving and rather free-spending Circassian Mamluks—saw their income plunge. By the
seventeenth century, the Portuguese, the Dutch, and other intrepid Europeans had established
permanent bases in Asia that gradually evolved into colonies. The Islamic world was now outflanked.

But things became worse still. Columbus’s first voyage to the New World, also in the late fifteenth
century, opened the Americas (with their gold and silver and other resources) to European exploitation
and vastly increased the size of Christendom, both absolutely and relative to the by now fairly stable size
of the Islamic world. Bernard Lewis, a brilliant Anglo-American scholar of Islam, uses coffee and sugar—
significantly, both originally products of the Near East—to illustrate the economic consequences for the
Islamic world of European colonization in Asia and the Americas: Coffee came from Ethiopia. Gradually,
though, its use spread via Arabia and Egypt to Syria and Turkey, and then on to Europe. Sugar came
originally from Persia and India. By the end of the eighteenth century, however, even Muslims in the
Near East were drinking coffee from beans that had been cultivated in Dutch Java or in the colonies of
New Spain, in the Americas. And they were mixing it with sugar from the British and French West Indies.
Only the hot water with which they mixed these ingredients was local. And then, in the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries, European companies gained control of the water and gas supplies in the Near East.
[14]

Western commercial expansion meant that western legal principles guided the formation of
international commercial law—even in the Muslim lands. Thus, the shari’a, which most Muslim rulers
had honored in theory but ignored in practice (since they wanted laws they could shape or spin to their
own advantage) became even further marginalized.
At the close of the fifteenth century, the Spanish had reconquered Spain after nearly 800 years of
Muslim presence and cultural efflorescence there. As the last Muslim ruler of Granada rode away from
his beloved palace, the Alhambra, he turned to take one last look at it in a pass still known as the Ultimo
Suspiro del Moro, “The Last Sigh of the Moor.” A tear trickled down his cheek. Seeing it, his mother-in-
law remarked, “It is fitting that you should weep like a woman for what you could not defend like a
man.”

During this period, the Islamic world needed creative, dynamic, and resourceful leadership.
Unfortunately, during this period the formerly dependable sources of its leaders failed. The Ottoman
Empire, for example, had been founded and developed by a long and essentially unbroken series of
extraordinarily competent (if seldom exactly saintly) sultans like Selim the Grim, Mehmet the
Conqueror, and Suleyman the Magnificent. But then the empire passed into a period that has often
been compared to a lengthy and eventually fatal illness, an epoch that can be illustrated by (but cannot
be entirely laid at the feet of) a series of sultans who were as incompetent and ineffective as their
predecessors had been brilliant. Not a few of them may even have been mad.

What had changed? One thing that had altered was the method of handling young Ottoman princes
while they waited to take their turn on the sultan’s throne. In the earlier days of the Ottoman empire,
the princes had been sent out to gain experience as army commanders and provincial governors. Thus,
when a new sultan came to power, he already had considerable experience with both military and civil
administration, and with the various peoples under Ottoman rule. However, young princes accustomed
to command sometimes grew impatient when their fathers took too long to depart the scene, and
fathers, watching them, grew nervous upon their imperial thrones. Accordingly, it was decided to keep
the princes in the harem with their mothers, thus depriving them not only of the opportunity to launch a
coup—which was the goal—but also, as a lamentable side effect, of any experience beyond the
restricted environs of the women’s quarters of the palace. And then, in order to eliminate rival claimants
and the instability that they could create, the custom arose of executing all of the other princes once
one of them had succeeded to the sultanate. So what was left to the young princes and their mothers
was constant palace intrigue, which they practiced as if their lives depended upon it—which, of course,
they literally did. There can be little wonder, therefore, that many of those who came to the throne
were not only inexperienced and untested but neurotic and paranoid. And then, suddenly, they were all-
powerful. It was a perfect recipe for disaster.

The second siege of Vienna failed as the first had. Then, in 1686, the Ottomans lost Buda, and a century
and a half of Muslim Turkish rule in Hungary came to an end. A Turkish lament of the time captures the
impact that the loss carried:
In the fountains they no longer wash

In the mosques they no longer pray

The places that prospered are now desolate

The Austrian has taken our beautiful Buda. [15]

Yet the defeats were by no means over. The Ottomans suffered several reverses, for example, at the
hands of Peter the Great. In 1699, they were obliged to sign the Treaty of Carlowitz, in which they made
concessions to victorious Christians, something previously unthinkable. Nobody in the Muslim world had
seen the loss of Spain as terribly significant. It was, they imagined at the time, just part of the normal
ebb and flow of war. Muslims would, it was thought, eventually take Andalusia back. In retrospect,
however, the Spanish Reconquista began to be seen as one in a now long and menacing list of disasters
and losses. Muslims began to perceive that Islam, or the Islamic world, had entered into a period of
crisis and that something had to be done.

At first, it was assumed that military reforms were the primary need. Thus, very limited European help
was sought by various Islamic rulers, most notably by the authorities of the Ottoman empire. They
decided to buy what they needed, which was not limited merely to weapons but also included
consultation on military organization, the conduct of warfare, and actual training.

Accordingly, Western experts begin to arrive, bringing with them expertise in military engineering,
artillery and ballistics, and the mathematics associated with such subjects. They also brought Western
military uniforms and, even, Western military music. [16] Improved administrative techniques were
introduced into the civil bureaucracy as well as the military. For one thing, there were renewed efforts
to base employment and promotion on merit and qualifications rather than, as was typically the case,
on patronage and connections. Ironically, though, such reforms, in making autocratic regimes more
efficient, also tended to make them more oppressive, which would have consequences for the future.

But such alterations were still not enough. Between 1768 and 1774, the Ottomans suffered further
defeats at the hands of the Russians. And these defeats were particularly painful because their effects
could not be dismissed as limited merely to outlying areas. On the contrary, their consequences could
be felt in the Islamic heartland itself. The Treaty of Küçuk Kaynarca (1774), for instance, granted the
Russians rights of navigation and even intervention within the Ottoman empire. Indeed, in 1783, Russia
actually annexed the Crimea, a traditionally Muslim land.

Meanwhile, Portugal and the Netherlands—relatively tiny European countries—had come to dominate
Asian trade and to control the seas. This occurred partly because of the manifest superiority of
European sailing vessels over their Islamicate counterparts. So clear was this superiority that, by the
eighteenth century, even Muslim pilgrims from India and Indonesia, finding them cheaper, safer, and
more reliable, were booking passage to Mecca on Dutch, English, and Portuguese ships.

One thing that should be clear from this history is that, despite the differing and often impassioned
accounts offered up by some contemporary Muslim political leaders and thinkers, Western imperialism
was attracted by preexisting weakness in the Islamic world; it did not cause it. While colonialism
certainly exacerbated many problems in the region, most of those problems—and the most
fundamental of them—cannot actually be blamed on the West (nor, for that matter, attributed to any
other external factor). Places like Hong Kong, with far fewer natural resources than the Islamic world,
have nonetheless flourished economically. Moreover, strength repels colonization: even tiny
Switzerland, surrounded during the Nazi period by Hitler’s Germany to the north, Mussolini’s Italy to the
south, occupied Austria to the east, and Vichy France to the west, managed to maintain its
independence. By contrast, the vast and populous Indian subcontinent, because it was divided among
squabbling factions, fell prey to the armies of a small island off the coast of Europe, and Queen Victoria
was able to claim the title of Empress of India.

It is tempting to say that unless and until Muslim leaders and thinkers recognize that they have a
problem—in much the same way that those who attend Alcoholics Anonymous must recognize that they
have a problem—they will never be able to solve it. So long as the CIA or the Zionists or the French or
the British or Mossad or the United States are blamed for all of the weaknesses and frustrations in the
region, there can be little or no substantial progress.

In 1798, Napoleon Bonaparte conquered and occupied Egypt. The French were driven out of Egypt only
a few years later, but, tellingly, not by the Egyptians and not by any coalition of Muslims. Instead, it was
the British who claimed the honor, and French occupied Egypt now came effectively under British
control. If the Crimea had been a traditionally Islamic land, and its surrender a terrible shock, Egypt was
absolutely central to the Islamic world. It had been ruled by Muslims since roughly a decade after the
death of Muhammad, and its loss to the European infidel—and the inability of the Islamic world to do
anything about that loss—represented not merely a catastrophe but a revelation.
It was now impossible to miss the fact that the Islamic world was in actual decline. Merely military
reforms had clearly not been sufficient to fix what was wrong. And, with Westerners now bestriding
their heartland as conquerors and rulers, Muslims became painfully aware of European superiority in
many aspects of political life and in technical and scientific achievement. Moreover, the French and
British occupations spread to the Near East ideas that were beginning to circulate in Europe and that
were, by the standards of the Islamic world, positively revolutionary. The French embassy in Istanbul
had already established a newspaper there; Napoleon’s occupying forces founded newspapers in Egypt.
The Jesuits in Beirut also recognized the powerful potential of newspaper journalism, and their
publications soon acquired influence far beyond the Lebanese Christian community. Western ideals and
concepts were circulating in Muslim cities.

Much against their traditional inclinations, Muslim leaders began to send student delegations to Europe
for study. “Our countries,” declared Shaykh Hasan al-’Attar, an Egyptian cleric who had worked with
Napoleon’s troops, “should be changed and renewed through knowledge and sciences that they do not
possess.” The student delegates were intended to master the practices of Western civil administration
and to learn what they could of Western science and technology. And this, to a certain extent, they did.
But they also began to return with some of the ideas that were circulating on the Continent in the wake
of the French Revolution. This was awkward for the old elites who had sent them, and probably for the
returning students as well. Technology was one thing. Notions of representative democracy, human
rights, and freedom of the press were quite another. Muslims wrestled, along with the world, with such
concepts as liberty, equality, and fraternity. Although, as early as the era of Napoleon, some Muslims
recognized the threat to Islam posed by the ideology of the French Revolution, many regarded it—
precisely because it was non-Christian, or even anti-Christian—as relatively safe.

The movement known as the “Young Ottomans,” modeled on Giuseppi Mazzini’s “Young Italy,” which
sought to unify Italy under a republican form of government, arose in the mid-1860s. The Young
Ottomans and their allies sought to establish their own newspapers, to found parliamentary institutions,
and to institute liberal reforms of various kinds. They called for representative democracy, fundamental
changes in school and university curriculum, and alterations of the traditional agrarian and merchant
economy in the direction of free-market capitalism. And, of course, the Christian and Jewish minorities
of the Islamic world, with their long-standing ties to their fellow believers in Europe, rapidly developed a
taste for progressive Western thinking and served as conduits for the entry of such ideas into the Near
East.

Liberal reformers in the Near East were encouraged by the outcome of the 1905 Russo-Japanese War, in
which the Japanese, the only Asian people to adopt parliamentary democracy, defeated Russia, the only
European country to reject it. The precedent was inspiring. The future must have seemed bright with
promise.

But liberal democratic reform too failed to solve the problems of the Near East and the Islamic world,
largely because it failed to come to effective power in the region. The British, for example, lingered on in
Egypt long after the time when the Wafd Party—which had staked its credibility on the promise that
European colonialists would depart once local elites had shown themselves capable of democratic self-
rule—expected to reclaim Egypt’s dignity as a fully sovereign, autonomous state. For their part, the
Ottoman sultans and their courts were wary of democracy. Although they experimented with
parliamentary representation, they dissolved such bodies at the first sign of genuine independence. The
legacy of the failure of genuine democracy to take root in the Islamic world is still apparent, even in
relatively benign places like modern Egypt. Ritualistic elections are held, yet there is little true choice for
the electorate, and, while a great deal is said about freedom, it has little solid reality anywhere in either
the Near East or, for that matter, in the Islamic world generally.

Such facts made the sense of backwardness and stagnation among Muslims even more painfully
apparent. And not a few Europeans noticed it. With astonishing chauvinism (to say nothing of historical
ignorance) some French voices—the self-announced French mission civilisatrice made for a form of
colonialism that was arguably much harsher than that of the British—were heard to declare that Arabs
and even the Arabic language were incapable of sustaining genuine civilization. This cannot have been
other than humiliating to those sensitive and educated Arab souls who heard of it. Finally, and perhaps
worst of all, the establishment of Israel—by people coming mostly from Europe and the West,
recognized and legitimated with stunning speed by Western governments—represented, in the minds of
many Muslims, the emergence of a European colonial outpost in some of the holiest of Islamic territory.

Some other remedy to the problems of the Islamic world had to be found. And many people soon came
to believe that they had found that remedy in socialism and in nationalism, which had the distinct
advantage over later proposals that members of all Near Eastern faiths could participate as equals in the
furtherance of their cause. For example, prominent leaders in the older Palestinian movement included
not merely Muslims but such notorious militants as the Christian George Habbash, of the Popular Front
for the Liberation of Palestine. [17] It was Palestinian ethnicity that counted, not religious affiliation. The
Palestine Liberation Organization (or PLO) continues to be a largely secular or, at least, non-sectarian
operation. And pan-Arabism—the notion that all of the Arabs form one nation, and that political reality
ought to reflect that ideal—came to dominate a substantial portion of the Islamic world under the
inspiration of Gamal Abdel Nasser (d. 1970). However, to make a rather long and dismal story brief,
socialism and Arab nationalism failed too. Just as Lenin’s and Stalin’s “five-year plans” and economic
collectivization proved disastrous for the former Soviet Union, the command economies erected by
Nasser and others led to economic ruin and, in many cases, to tyranny and oppression. Nasser’s attempt
to unify Egypt and Syria in the United Arab Republic (1958–61) fell apart after only three years, his pan-
Arabist military adventure in Yemen was a disaster, and the Six-Day War was, at best, a pan-Arab
humiliation. Today, perhaps only Libya’s Qaddafi still holds to the old dream of Arab nationalism.

The sense of frustration and embarrassment among elites in the Islamic world grew even more acute
with the failure of these latest attempts to cure their ever more obviously dysfunctional region. They
could not fail to notice, for example, that the nations of East Asia, which had begun at an even lower
economic and social level than had the Near East—and which had, in addition, been devastated by the
horrors of the Second World War—were now competitive with the West, and not merely economically
but scientifically and technologically. The situation in the Islamic world is, unfortunately, far different. In
contrast to its golden age, many centuries ago, little if any original science is done by Muslims living in
Muslim countries, and little if any new technology is created there. Still today, Western investments do
not come, by and large, to the Near East and the Islamic world. Instead, Near Easterners and other
Muslims prefer to invest outside of their region, often in the West. If fossil fuels (essentially petroleum
products) are excluded from the calculation, the exports of the entire Arab world are roughly on a par
with those of Finland, a country of five million people. [18] And, ominously, fossil fuels are a finite
resource. They are not renewable and not exclusive to the Middle East.

The social, economic, and political problems in the region include oppressive and tyrannical regimes
and, despite oil revenues, continuing widespread poverty and illiteracy. In fact, as democracy takes root
throughout much of the former Eastern bloc, as well as in Latin America and the new economic
powerhouses of the Pacific Rim, Muslim states can now be seen—and not a few Muslims see
themselves—as bringing up the absolute rear. Even where money abounds, at least for the moment, oil
shaykhs are hiring Koreans and other Asians to do much of their work. Large American and European
engineering firms build their airports and palaces and desalinization plants. Filipinos do much of the
menial work, including domestic service and construction. It is hardly a long-term formula for a vibrant
economy, and that fact hasn’t escaped notice within Muslim and Near Eastern circles.

One way of conveying something of the sense of perplexity and despair that many thinking Muslims now
feel is to compare it to a hypothetical case among Latter-day Saints. We are accustomed to hearing
reports of the continued growth of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It has been steady
almost from the beginning, and even spectacular. We see ourselves as fulfilling Daniel’s prophecy of the
stone cut out of the mountain without hands, which will eventually come to fill the whole earth (see
Daniel 2). We expect to grow, and we look confidently forward to the triumph of the cause in which we
are engaged. How would it be, though, if we were to enter a prolonged period when the growth
ceased—when, in fact, we began to lose members, and found ourselves forced to sell chapels off by the
score, and perhaps even close down a few temples because we no longer had the resources to maintain
them?
Some members of the Church of Jesus Christ, I’m sure, would conclude that the gospel must not be true.
In their view, the prophecies would have been proven false and their faith misplaced. Likewise, some
Muslims, in the face of Western dominance and influenced by secularized Western thought, have given
up their belief in Muhammad, the Qur’an, and even God. For the most part, though, they have remained
prudently silent.

Some members of the Church, when faced with declining success, would suggest that we simply needed
to improve our methods and practices. With a little tinkering here and there, they would say, and
perhaps after borrowing a few ideas from successful organizations, our missionary program would be up
and running again, and we would be back on the prophesied path. This would be very much the same
kind of response that we saw among the Ottomans, when they looked to European models to improve
their military practices and civil administration.

Still other members of the Church, however, would suggest that we needed to get “back to basics,” that
our real problem was to be more faithful, to read the scriptures more and more deeply, to live the
gospel more vibrantly, to be better disciples. And that, in a nutshell, despite the cultural differences and
the occasionally appalling form that the “back to basics” movement has taken among some Muslims, is
essentially what Islamic fundamentalism seeks to do. Of course, not all committed Muslims are
fundamentalists, and not all fundamentalists are terrorists. And many of their criticisms of the
immorality of the West are not wildly different from those that will be heard from the pulpit at any
given conference of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. One of the most obvious and
substantial differences between Latter-day Saints and Islamic fundamentalists in this regard, though,
emerges from our different views of human freedom. Although the Qur’an expressly declares that there
should be “no coercion in religion” (la ikraha fi al-din), [19] Islamic societies have typically tended
toward control rather than freedom. Proper behavior should be imposed by strong social constraints
and, in some cases, by force. The Wahhabi movement that provided ideological support for the
establishment of the kingdom Saudi Arabia in 1932was a harbinger of the future for the rest of the
Islamic world in calling for a return to simplicity and Islamic seriousness; and, backed by Saudi oil wealth,
the Wahhabis have in fact been pivotal in the spread of fundamentalism among Muslims around the
world.

A Return to Their Roots

The humiliating disaster of the Six-Day or 1967 War was a crucial turning point in the history of both the
Near East in particular and the Islamic world in general. Since everything else had clearly failed, those
who had been saying all along that, as one popular bumper sticker among American Muslims has it,
“Islam is the Answer!” now began to receive a hearing. They could point out, with some plausibility, that
all of the cures heretofore proposed for the malaise of the Islamic world—enhanced military technology,
improved administrative techniques, parliamentary democracy, nationalism, even socialism and
Marxism—had been based upon foreign, Western ideas. Why not go back to Islamic roots? The Muslims
had been spectacularly successful in previous centuries on the basis of their own traditions and religious
practices, without borrowing from Western culture. [20]

A good illustration of the rising demand that Muslims return to their own roots rather than seeking
salvation in the West might be a 1962 book by Jalal Al-e Ahmad (Iranian, d. 1969) entitled Gharbzadegi.
Its Persian title might be translated, roughly, as “Westtoxification” or “Occidentosis,” and it argues,
passionately, that Iran in particular needed to escape what its author saw as the near-total political and
cultural dominance of the West. Another illustration, even more powerful, is the changed character of
the Arab-Israeli conflict as it was manifested in the 1973 War. Whereas the disastrous 1967 War had
been fueled by Nasserite secular nationalism, Nasser had now departed the scene via a 1970 heart
attack, and the new Egyptian leader, Anwar al-Sadat, turned to Islamic symbolism to label the next
military effort the “Ramadan War.” And it was lost on nobody, on the Muslim side, that, for the first
time in many years, Arab armies enjoyed at least some limited success during a war conducted under
the aegis of Islam.

At the same time, the famous Arab oil embargo filled the Arabs and Muslims generally with renewed
confidence, and believers began to suspect that it was not merely by chance that God had given
petroleum—”the oil weapon”—in such vast quantities specifically to the “holy land” of the Muslims, the
Arabian peninsula.

Then in 1977–78, the Islamic Revolution overthrew one of the secular West’s most important Near
Eastern allies, Mohammed Reza Pahlevi, the Shah of Iran. Once again, Muslim observers noted the
power of Islam, or what some Western political analysts had initially dismissed as a ragtag bunch of
mullahs and religious fanatics.

In 1989, the Afghan mujahidin drove the army of the mighty Soviet Union out of their country. Was it
mere coincidence that the Berlin Wall came down during the same year and that, late in 1991, the Union
of Soviet Socialist Republics broke up? After years of increasing frustration and apparent powerlessness,
the strength of Islam had been made manifest and vindicated. The tide had clearly turned, many
believers thought, and the future was now bright with assurance. In 1992, Afghanistan was declared an
Islamic state.
The name most commonly given by outsiders to this surge of interest in getting back to the roots and in
living more Islamically was “Islamic fundamentalism.” The term is, however, more than a little
problematic. It originated, apparently, with the publication of a series of conservative Protestant
Christian tracts called the Fundamentals, published between 1910 and 1915. Yet though Protestant
fundamentalism is parallel in certain ways with Islamic “fundamentalism,” they are certainly not the
same thing. For many years, in fact, no word equivalent to English fundamentalism even existed in
Arabic and other Muslim languages. And scholars prefer, on the whole, to refer to “Islamism” and
“Islamists,” so as to avoid undesirable and even misleading connotations. For example, fundamentalism
seems to connote ignorance and backwardness. But many prominent Islamist leaders are quite well
educated and are neither backward nor provincial. Osama bin Ladin was trained as an engineer. His
chief lieutenant, Ayman al-Zawahiri, was schooled as a physician in Egypt where, as in much of the Near
East, physicians and engineers are at the very top of the educational ladder. Ironically, though, the word
fundamentalism has now been adopted by journalists and other writers in the Islamic world itself, to
denote a movement that, on the whole, rejects cultural borrowings from the West.

Islamic fundamentalism is dedicated to the purification and reformation of beliefs and practices in
accordance with the “fundamentals” of the Islamic faith. As such, it is part of a general world
phenomenon dedicated to restoring lost values, truths, and practices, or to what some scholars like to
call, in a fancy but insightful word, “repristinizing” religious faiths that have grown old, sloppy, and lax.
Parallel movements (all of them troubled by certain developments in the modern world, some of which
truly are troubling by almost any standard) occur not merely among Muslims and Christians, but also
among Jews, Sikhs, Hindus, and other large religious traditions. Fundamentalists are reluctant to adapt
to what they see as the evil features of modernity. They repudiate compromises and “sell-outs.”

In the Islamic context, fundamentalists are often hostile to official clergy on the government payroll.
More broadly, religious reform in Islam necessarily involves political reform. “Church” and state are not
separate in Islam for the simple and sufficient reason that they were never separate in the life of
Muhammad, the model Muslim. Some fundamentalists call for the return of the caliphate, which was
abolished in 1924 by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey. Most if not all call for a
restoration of the shari’a, which, they argue with considerable justification, is just as sophisticated and
complex as any code of law in the West.

Pan-Islamism, it seems, has virtually replaced nationalism as a driving force in the Islamic world. The
more or less secular Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) now finds itself rivaled by the even more
militant Hamas, an explicitly Islamic movement that has transformed the conflict from one between
Arabs and Israelis into one pitting Muslims against Jews. A few years ago, sensing the way the wind was
blowing, even Saddam Hussein, whose Arab Ba’th party has always been a quintessentially secular
nationalistic and socialistic product of an earlier period, discovered the “fact” that he is a descendant of
the prophet Muhammad and placed the traditional Islamic cry Allahu akbar! (“God is most great!”) on
the Iraqi flag.

Islamic regimes now control Iran and the Sudan and, until they were recently overthrown by American
military force, dominated Afghanistan. The precise details of their programs are often rather vague,
apart from a promise to return to ostensibly Islamic ways of doing things. But they have been able to
agree on their hostility toward the West and, specifically, toward the United States of America. They
resent American economic hegemony (called by one wit, in India, “Cocacolonization”), but their
attention is focused on the United States primarily because America is now the world’s only true
superpower. This is, of course, rather ironic, since it can certainly be argued that British and especially
French colonialism were far more deliberately injurious to Islamic interests than American foreign policy
has been and that recent Russian behavior toward the Islamic world has been straightforwardly brutal.
And it is doubly ironic, since Islamists tend to use Western devices—cassette tapes, for example—to
spread their messages. When the Ayatollah Khomeini returned from his exile in France to a triumphant
welcome in the streets of Tehran, he flew back in a Boeing jetliner and rode into the city in a Chevrolet.
In fact, even the elaborate Shi’ite hierarchy in Iran, with its “ayatollahs” and “hujjatulislams,” can be
viewed as something that developed under Western influence.

Why is much Muslim hostility so focused upon the United States? I believe that a bit of psychohistory
may be appropriate here, although I generally abhor such an approach. It seems to me that the United
States has an effect upon many Muslims that is simultaneously both repulsive and seductive. This was
brought home to me during the last months of my residency in Cairo, Egypt. Soviet troops had invaded
Afghanistan and were openly bombing and killing Muslims throughout that country. Yet nothing
happened to Soviet embassies. Then came a disturbance at the Great Mosque in Mecca. A rumor
circulated that the Americans had been involved, and United States embassies across the Islamic world
were attacked. I began to ponder why the mere rumor of an American misdeed provoked violence in
several different Muslim countries, while open and brutal injuries done by the Soviets to thousands of
Muslims in Afghanistan drew virtually no public response.

Americans are the heirs of the resentment that Muslims feel about all of the colonialism and imperialism
and oppression that they have endured or—and the difference is not especially important—that they
feel they have endured at the hands of the West. They perceive a deep hypocrisy in American attitudes.
While, for example, Americans seem to care about Israeli Jewish suffering, they turn a blind eye (at least
in much Arab and Muslim opinion) to the suffering of Palestinian Muslims. [21] Americans seem, too, to
be continuing the hypocrisy of imperialist predecessors in the sense that, while supporting democracy at
home, they seem perfectly comfortable with repression abroad. Earlier colonialists were themselves
repressive; American foreign policy, in pursuit of its objectives of containing international communism
and assuring the stability of oil and other markets, has often found itself supporting undemocratic
regimes. And, of course, blaming others—the Zionists, Israel’s Mossad, the CIA—serves the interests of
more than a few failed governments in the Islamic world: it distracts popular attention from the poverty
and tyranny that characterize the region. (The image of the Jews in the Muslim world has changed
dramatically since the establishment of Israel in 1948. Where the Jews were once held in rather benign
contempt, they are now commonly held in bitter awe as a race of malicious supermen.)

Many Muslims today live in a state of mind that must be much like that of Europeans in the medieval
Age of Faith—even, alas, to the point, at least figuratively, of seeing malevolent demons behind the
actions of their enemies. Islam has undergone no Reformation. Muslims have not yet learned, within
their own societies, to live alongside adherents of other faiths as full equals—as Europeans were
gradually forced, very reluctantly, to do. Their culture has not assumed the skeptical stance that, for
both good and ill, has characterized Western civilization since the Enlightenment. Islamic civilization was
once the greatest of its day and among the greatest in human history. The seeds of its decay were sown
internally, and the steps that must be taken to restore it to its historic place in world culture must be
taken by the Muslims themselves.

Notes

[1] I offer a longer and somewhat more complete survey in Daniel C. Peterson, Abraham Divided: An LDS
Perspective on the Middle East, 2d ed. (Salt Lake City: Aspen Books, 1995). I might note here,
incidentally, that, although their meanings were originally somewhat distinct, the terms Middle East and
Near East are currently used as synonyms by virtually all specialists in the field.

[2] Most scholars believe that they did not take their pagan religion very seriously. I tend to believe that
their religiosity has been underestimated. But this is not the place to argue that point.

[3] See Lynn M. Hilton and Hope Hilton, In Search of Lehi’s Trail (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1976);
Hugh Nibley, Lehi in the Desert/The World of the Jaredites/There Were Jaredites (Salt Lake City: Deseret
Book and FARMS, 1988), 1–149; Warren P.Aston and Michaela Knoth Aston, In the Footsteps of Lehi:
New Evidence for Lehi’s Journey across Arabia to Bountiful (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1994); Noel B.
Reynolds, “Lehi’s Arabian Journey Updated,” in Book of Mormon Authorship Revisited: The Evidence for
Ancient Origins, ed. Noel B. Reynolds (Provo: FARMS, 1997),379–89.

[4] There are many biographies of the prophet Muhammad, and many of them are quite good. I offer an
approach of my own to the subject in Daniel C. Peterson, “Muhammad” in David Noel Freedman and
Michael J. McClymond, eds., The Rivers of Paradise: Moses, Buddha, Confucius, Jesus, and Muhammad
as Religious Founders (Grand Rapids and Cambridge: William B. Eerdmans, 2001), 457–612.

[5] As a matter of fact, the chapters are in roughly reverse chronological order.

[6] Qur’an 2:190. Presumably, Osama bin Ladin’s justification for his actions against American targets
was that, in his view, he was simply fighting a defensive struggle to combat ongoing American
aggression against the Islamic world. That might eliminate the need for prior warning of a war since,
from his point of view, the war was already under way. And he avoided the prohibition against targeting
noncombatants by redefining all participants in the economy of the United States as, effectively,
facilitators of American military and economic hegemony. Under such reasoning, of course, no serious
distinction between combatants and noncombatants would ever be possible—taxpayers support
armies, mothers feed future soldiers—and the humane provisions of Islamic law would be easily evaded.

[7] Qur’an 2:195.

[8] Precisely like the Greek word martyros, the Arabic term means both “martyr” (in the English sense)
and “witness.”

[9] Qur’an 112.

[10] See Journal of Discourses 3:28–42.

[11] This portion of the present essay was heavily influenced by Bernard Lewis, What Went Wrong?
Western Impact and Middle Eastern Response (New York: Oxford University Press, 2002).

[12] Ancient Greeks, Persians, and Chinese adopted the same attitude at various points in their history.
In fact, our word barbaric derives from Greek, and, more particularly, from the Greeks’ unflattering
imitation of the way non-Greek languages sounded to them: bar-bar-bar-bar-or, in other words, pure
gibberish.
[13] By the same token, the Ottoman Islamic threat to the east probably helped to dissuade Charles V,
the Holy Roman Emperor, from sending his troops to crush the Lutheran Reformation in northern
Europe. History moves in mysterious ways.

[14] Lewis, What Went Wrong? 50.

[15] Cited by Lewis, What Went Wrong? 17.

[16] Interestingly, many years later, Iran’s Ayatollah Khomeini, while rejecting most forms of music as
decadent and immoral, was to make an exception for martial music. His views on the subject may have
been influenced not only by his reading of Islamic principles but by his understanding of Books 2 and 3
of Plato’s Republic. He is said to have been a student and admirer of Plato.

[17] It has to be said, of course, that—very much like several of the warlords of Lebanon—he was a
Christian in pretty much the same sense that a Mafia don is a Christian.

[18] See Lewis, What Went Wrong? 47.

[19] Qur’an 2:256.

[20] Actually, of course, this is not precisely accurate. With their rapid expansion and their systematic
efforts to translate Western and other books on medicine, science, philosophy, and many other subjects
into Arabic, Muslims in the first centuries were quite open in many ways to cultural influences from the
outside. The books published in Brigham Young University’s new Graeco-Arabic Sciences and Philosophy
series will illustrate that openness very clearly.

[21] U.S. intervention on behalf of Muslim Kuwait, following Iraq’s invasion of that small nation, is
dismissed merely as an expression of our interest in oil. And U.S. intervention on behalf of Muslims in
the Balkan states tends simply to be dismissed or forgotten.

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