
GLOBALIZATION AND EMERGING CHALLENGES TO ISLAM IN ASIA
By
Asghar Ali Engineer
Globalization is posing
challenges in almost all the
fields - economic, political,
cultural and religious. Ideally
speaking every change brings its
own challenges which have to be
faced either by conserving what
has been inherited leading to
increased orthodoxy resulting in
more conflict or creatively
accommodating change and
synthesizing it with what is
inherited.
In fact colonial period in 18-19
centuries and early twentieth
century was also a period of
struggle between orthodoxy and
change and that also gave rise
to many new challenges. In that
sense globalization is not
something entirely new. Even
pre-colonial period also
involved elements of
globalization, if globalization
is all about connectivity. In
pre-colonial period too, there
was worldwide trade. The silk
route is famous in history.
International trade has always
been a link between various
civilizations. Globalization is
nothing, if not about
connectivity.
However, there is a qualitative
difference between pre-colonial,
post-colonial and connectivity
in the globalized world today.
Pre-colonial coming together of
civilizations was based on free
exchanges of trade and cultural
values. No country or
civilization enjoyed hegemony
neither there was dictation of
terms by any power. Hegemonic
relationship started with the
colonial period. And in
globalized world, which now
happens to be uni-polar world
this relationship has become
totally hegemonic. It is
globalization on the terms and
conditions set by USA and the
military-industrial combine
within USA.
There is yet one more difference
between the colonial and
post-colonial globalized world:
revolution in information
technology. The information
technology holds overwhelming
power today. Communication has
become instantaneous. Any
information emanating from one
part of the world can spread
instantaneously in all parts of
the world. It is this
information technology (or
information industry), which is
crucial to what we call
globalization.
Thus we can say that hegemonic
relationship and information
technology are defining elements
of globalization. We can also
add fast spreading consumerism
to these defining elements. The
emerging challenges in Asia and
Africa due to intensification of
process of globalization has to
be understood in this
background. The Western hegemony
in cultural field being total is
causing identity crisis among
religious and cultural
communities in Asia and much
more so among Muslim
communities.
What is called the phenomenon of
'fundamentalism' in Islamic
world is result of
globalization. But it is not
true to maintain, as the
American media does, that it is
Islam and Islamic world, which
is responsible for it. Firstly,
phenomenon of fundamentalism is
not confined to Islamic world
alone. One can hardly ignore
Christian fundamentalism in
America today. Rightwing
Christians or born again
Christians are controlling US
politics and have played great
role in election of George Bush
Jr. to the President's post. It
is these right wing Christians
who not only advise President
Bush but also influence his
security policies. They have
been instrumental in war on
Afghanistan and Iraq and are
posing threat to Iran and Syria.
They have their own powerful TV
channels and think tanks. They
evolve policies and accordingly
advise the President.
Also, US consumerism has totally
commercialized culture and
marginalized Asian and African
cultures has left hardly any
space for them. This bulldozing
of all other cultural identities
is causing great deal of turmoil
among the marginalized cultural
communities. As a reaction to
this neo-orthodoxies are
becoming more and more powerful.
Islamic resurgence in many Asian
countries is basically due to
neo-imperialist domination on
one hand, and, complete
commercialization of culture, on
the other. Continued American
aggression in the idle East is
causing emergence of Islamic
fundamentalism and Islamic
militancy also termed as
'Islamic terrorists'.
Any threat to American ruling
class, though basically a result
of its own coercive policies in
Middle East, is blamed on
'militant Islam'. America
supported the Shah of Iran to
the hilt causing great deal of
anger among people of Iran and
when people of Iran overthrew
the Shah under the leadership of
Ayatollah Khomeini, American
media put entire blame on
Islamic fundamentalism. Iran,
after the Islamic revolution,
became a threat for US rulers.
The Muslims in Iran could only
be mobilized through their
religious identity. There was
hardly any way. Ali Shariati's
speeches, articles and books are
best example of this
mobilization. Ali Shariati, a
modern Islamic thinker, and not
a fundamentalist in any sense of
the word used by American media,
influenced thousands of Iranian
youth who were instrumental in
making Islamic revolution. Ali
Shariati and his followers were
reacting to American hegemonic
policies in Iran. Ayatullah
Khomeini could also throw
challenge to American policies
by mobilizing Iranian people
appealing to their Islamic
identity. Nothing else could
work more effectively.
Islam, throughout ages has
provided Muslims with a sense of
unity and has deeply influenced
their way of life, their
weltanschaaung and has shaped
their outlook. Also, there has
been no secular movement of the
kind, which arose in Europe and
no consumerist culture of the
type, which swept the west to
make them indifferent to
religion and, religion remains
integral part of their psyche.
Thus people in Asia in general,
and Muslims in particular, can
be mobilized only through
religious appeal. When they feel
threatened or face aggression
from American rulers, they react
by asserting their religious
identity.
This then is perceived as
religious fundamentalism by
Western media. Its genesis is
never studied impartially and
objectively. It is denounced
most vociferously and with
missionary zeal. It is, in a way
zealotry in the reverse. One
cannot fight 'fundamentalist
forces without tracing its
genesis in American policies.
President Bush has greatly
aggravated Islamic militancy in
Asia.
However, it will be wrong to
establish straight-line
relationship between American
policies and developments in
Islamic world. Globalization,
like any other socio-economic
phenomenon, works in complex
ways. Colonialism too, had
contradictory impact on the
Islamic world. It also brings
awareness for change and reform.
Colonialism resulted in
producing major Islamic thinkers
like Mohammad Abduh in Egypt and
Sir Syed Ahmed Khan in India.
Globalization too, is not a
one-way street. It has adverse
impact in as much as western
hegemonic policies creates
resentment but also is
instrumental in producing modern
Muslim thinkers. These modern
Islamic thinkers are working
hard to bring modern changes in
Islamic world and rescue it from
the clutches of orthodoxy. Of
course their impact is limited
compared to orthodox thinkers.
The reasons are not far to seek.
There is widespread poverty and
illiteracy in the Muslim world.
And in oil rich Saudi Arabia
there is vice-like tight grip of
conservative rulers who fear any
change.
These rulers, unable to deliver
on governance, want to keep
conservative Ulama happy and
placated. It is interesting to
note that Saudi Arabia is
reeling under very complex
response to forces of
globalization. The American
policies in Middle-East create
lot of anger among the Saudi
youth and they resort to
terrorism and want to reinforce
orthodox Islam. But, on the
other hand, a new awareness is
fast spreading among Saudi
people, particularly women, and
they are demanding changes and
reform in age old laws and
practices. The Saudi rulers have
to respond to this complex
situation and have to do tight
rope walking.
If they do not respond to this
new awareness, they face
problems and if they do too
rapidly they face resentment
from the conservative forces. A
section of people of Saudi
Arabia feel that Wahabi Islam is
intolerant of other sects of
Islam as well as other religions
and breeds hatred and violence
and hence they are demanding
changes in educational
institutions and introduction of
more tolerant version of Islam.
The Saudi rulers are responding
cautiously. They would not like
to displease the Ulama with whom
they have age-old understanding.
In view of terrorist attacks in
Riyadh and other places, Saudis
were forced to hold an
international conference against
terrorism and proposed an
international Centre to fight
terrorism. They are also now
trying to establish dialogue
with the youth on one hand, and,
with women, on the other. Three
rounds of dialogue have taken
place with women already though
these dialogues have yet not
conceded much to women. But the
very fact of holding such
dialogues is very significant
and acceptance of need for
change.
Recently Saudi rulers were
forced to hold municipal
elections though women were not
allowed to vote and elections
were held only for fifty percent
of the seats and other fifty
percent will be filled in by
nomination. Appears too little
and too late but nevertheless in
the ultra conservative Saudi
society strictly controlled by
the ruling Saudi family it is
too late but not too little
after all.
These winds of change are
blowing in all Muslim countries.
Recently Kuwaiti rulers also had
to concede right to vote to
women. The Kuwaiti women were
demanding right to vote for
quite some time and fought very
hard to gain this right and they
did gain it. However, it is not
all. Soon they will demand
elective offices too. They are
facing tough opposition from
orthodox Ulama but it has not
stopped their forward march.
Now Amina Wadud of America has
announced that she would lead
Juma prayers which has caused
lot of stir among conservatives.
A lively debate has started on
networks. This is the benefit of
globalization that informative
debates can take place on
websites and e-mail postings.
While some are fiercely opposing
a woman leading men in prayer
others are quite supportive.
It has been pointed out that one
Ghazala (a Kharijite woman?) led
men in prayer in Kufa and that
she recited two long surahs
(chapters) from Qur'an while
leading the prayer. It has also
been pointed out that the Holy
Prophet (PBUH) permitted a woman
companion called Umm Waraqah to
lead her family members in
prayer including the male
members. Imam Taymiyyah has also
opined that a woman could lead
men in prayers especially in
tarawih prayers during Ramadan.
Tabari also held that a woman
could lead both the genders in
prayer on the basis of Umm
Waraqah hadith narrated in Abu
Dawud.
In Indian subcontinent women are
not even allowed to enter
mosques, let alone being
permitted to lead both the
genders in prayer. It caused
quite a stir a few years ago
when an Imam in Kerala issued
fatwa allowing women to enter
the mosque and pray along with
men although in a separate
enclosure. The Sunni youth of
Kerala demonstrated against the
imam for issuing such a fatwa.
However, things are changing
fast now and something happening
in one corner of the world
spreads to other parts with
lightening speed.
There is another vexed question
of hijab causing lot of
controversy. The French
Government recently banned
wearing any religious symbols in
Government schools including
hijab by young girls. It created
great deal of stir not only
among the Muslims in France but
also in other Muslim countries.
Before we comment on this
question we would like to point
out one more problem, which is a
direct result of the process of
globalization.
Large number of people from Asia
and Africa are migrating to the
Western countries, especially to
the USA and Canada, apart from
Europe for better economic
prospects. This economic
migration has changed the whole
religious, cultural and national
scene. The diaspora has created
problems both for host countries
and for the migrants. Some
political theorists are now
talking of imagined national
communities as in this
globalized world national
boundaries are breaking down as
people of the different
nationalities live in another
country of entirely different
nationhood.
The main problem is of
alienation and feeling of loss
of identity for the migrants
from Asia and Africa. These
migrants become intensely
conscious of their cultural or
religious identities back home
and take highly conservative
positions in cultural and
religious issues be they Hindus,
Muslims or Arabs or Indians. The
Hindu migrants from India
(excepting those committed to
secularism) have become
enthusiastic supporters of
Hindutva, the ideology of
rightwing Hindu nationalists in
India. These members of diaspora
tend to be much more
conservative than their
counterparts at home.
These migrants crave for visible
symbols of identity. The Muslims
in general and, Arabs in
Particular enforce hijab on
their women as a visible part of
identity. Men themselves do not
adopt such symbols of visible
identity and take to western
dresses making themselves
indistinguisible from others but
insist on their women wearing
hijab including school going
girls. They enforce hijab as
part of Shariah.
The Qur'an does not use the word
hijab for all women but it has
used only for wives of the Holy
Prophet. This verse on hijab
(33:53) is very clear in its
intent and context. Hijab for
all women is a post-Qura’nic
usage. Qur'an requires women to
wear dignified dress rather than
veil themselves from head to
toe. The concerned verse on
displaying adornment or sexual
charms (zeenah) is from Chapter
24, verse number 31 and this
verse leaves lot of space by
saying except what appears
thereof (illa ma zahara minha)
for displaying certain parts of
women's body (like face, hands
etc). However, this verse was
interpreted by the 'Ulama in a
way to impose more restrictions
on women than required and Arab
cultural dress for women became
a requirement of Shariah law.
Any way this is not the place to
discuss this problem here.
Suffice it may to say that hijab
is controversial issue and needs
to be discussed separately.
Here what is important for us is
its significance as part of
visible identity for culturally
alienated Muslim minorities in
Western diaspora. However, the
westerners identify veil more as
sign of Islamic fundamentalism
than need for cultural or
religious identity. It is for
this reason that the French
Government banned wearing of
hijab in government schools as
violation of secularism. In a
democratic country it is not
proper for the government to ban
wearing of particular dress in
schools. School authorities
doing it is a different matter.
This measure, not only divided
Muslims in France but also
French society itself. There was
heated debate among French
writers, journalists and
intellectuals whether ban on
hijab is justified.
Hijab, as pointed out above, has
become an identity symbol rather
than religious requirement per
se. While any woman should be
free to wear hijab, if she wants
to but she, at the same time,
should not be coerced into
wearing one. In Muslim societies
women are often considered
subservient either to parents or
to husbands and are coerced, in
the name of Islam, to observe
strict dress code. It amounts to
violation of her human rights.
It is also a fact that in the
globalized consumer society
women are used extensively in
advertising industry to sell
products. Thus woman has become
the market and she is being
shamelessly exploited by major
companies selling their
products. They are often
scantily dressed and sometimes
only in bras and panties. This
is result of boundless
consumerism and in Asia evokes
strong reaction. The
conservatives then enforce
strict dress code as a reaction.
All those committed to women's
rights and dignity must fight
against such shameless
projection of women in
advertisement. While she has
full right to enjoy complete
freedom, it should be with full
dignity and sense of
responsibility.
It should also be pointed out
that there has been much greater
awareness today among people of
their rights thanks to
information revolution. This is
a positive side of
globalization. Yet, in Asia and
particularly among Muslim
majority countries, there is
woeful lack of political
freedom. Most of the rulers are
authoritarian and suppress human
rights and indulge in torturing
their opponents. No fair
elections are held and no free
debates can take lace in these
Muslim countries.
The Muslim youth because of lack
of freedom and inhuman
suppression takes recourse to
violence, which is then dubbed
as 'Islamic terrorism'. The
Saudi society which is highly
suppressive in nature is
experiencing 'terrorist
violence'. As a result it has
now initiated dialogues at
various levels. In Bangla Desh
too right wing religious
violence is spreading and
attempts are being made to
assassinate the political
opponents.
The USA government gets the
opportunity to export
'democracy' at gun-point as it
did in Afghanistan and Iraq
giving further boost to
terrorist violence. This
violence continues in Iraq even
after so called democratic
elections. Scores of people are
dying everyday in suicide
bombing. The only remedy is to
develop democratic institutions
in these countries.
Unfortunately the rulers invoke
Islam to deny democratic rights
to their people and perpetuate
authoritarian regime. While no
one should tolerate American
intervention in any other
country's internal matters, the
Muslim countries should
democratize themselves.
Globalization has irretrievably
ushered in an era of information
technology, no country can do
without promoting information
and knowledge. It is undoubtedly
and age of knowledge. The Muslim
countries lack far behind in
this respect though Islam was
the first religion to make
acquisition of knowledge
obligatory both on Muslim man
and woman, even if available in
far off place like China. Muslim
women, more than men, lack
behind in literacy and their
survival in globalized world
depends very much on knowledge.
The Islamic world must make up
as fast as it can to improve
quality of its existence in this
world
The Qur'an lays great stress on
values like justice, equality,
compassion and peace apart from
knowledge and wisdom. Thus
Islamic countries ideally
speaking should have been the
model for the world in these
maters. However they are lagging
far behind instead. It is for
the Muslim intellectuals, if not
orthodox 'Ulama to seriously
reflect on this and evolve
better alternatives. The World
Social Forum (WSF) promoted by
any Nos and others fighting for
social justice have given a
slogan "other world is
possible'. Should Islamic
countries not take lead in
making such a world possible by
setting up norms of justice,
compassion and wisdom in
promoting non-exploitative
world? However, there are no
such signs at all. The Islamic
world is full of tyranny and
darkness of ignorance.
Also, the Qur'an has laid so
much emphasis on diversity and
dialogue. Diversity is Allah's
creation (see 30:22, 5:48 etc.)
and for dialogue see 3:63 etc.
And in the age of globalization
diversity has increased due to
economic migration and one must
promote dialogue between diverse
groups and diverse
civilizations. President Khatami
of Iran rightly proposed that we
should promote dialogue of
civilizations in the modern
world to avoid clashes between
them. While an Asian proposed
dialogue of civilizations the
American Professor Huntington
talked of "clash of
civilizations.
Thus numerous challenges are
emerging in our world and Asia
has to measure up to those
challenges in the globalized
world. These challenges are
extremely complex and difficult.
It requires great deal of wisdom
on the part of Asian people and
their rulers to respond
creatively to these challenges
and the emerging problems.
Asia's success will depend on
how it measures up to these
emerging problems.