Muslims and Liberals

Myriad East-West interactions renewing religious and secular values

The price tag of alliance with the US

Dawn – EditorialAugust 26, 2005 IN HIS Independence Day message President Pervez Musharraf reiterated his vow to defeat terrorists and extremists. He took that vow after the United States began its war against “Islamic terrorism.” On July 18 Benazir Bhutto accused him again of not “doing enough to combat terrorism.” The message: She can do...

Have a moderate Islamist over for coffee

The Daily Star – LebanonAugust 26, 2005 My wife was griping about having to pay $2.58 a gallon to fill up her gas tank. The significance of her complaint began to sink in when I heard about the rocket attack against U.S. warships at Jordan’s Aqaba port and then received a phone call from a...

The Problem is Occupation, not Islamic Ideology

The Daily Star – LebanonAugust 1, 2005 British Prime Minister Tony Blair has waged quite a campaign against a so-called “evil ideology” and the Pakistani madrasas, or Muslim religious schools, which supposedly teach it. In the course of his efforts, British special police have killed an innocent Brazilian electrician who probably looked to them like...

No god but God: The Origins, Evolution, and Future of Islam

Middle East PolicySummer 2005 This book is a sociohistorical narrative of Islam in which author Reza Aslan debunks many Orientalist myths about the faith. Then he argues that the uplift of Muslim societies calls for their democratization and “the interpretation of Islam that yields to the reality of democracy” (pp. 265-66)–which leaves you wondering what...

Muslim Europeans find their place

The RecordMarch 15, 2005 Earlier this month, a 31-year-old Moroccan-born immigrant to Belgium quit her job at a prepared foods factory in the small town of Ledegem. Her decision was the result of several months of intimidation, beginning in November when her employer, Rik Remmery, received an anonymous letter. It claimed to be his “death...

A Woman’s Head Scarf, a Continent’s Discomfort

The Washington PostMarch 13, 2005 Ten days ago, a 31-year-old Moroccan-born immigrant to Belgium quit her job at a prepared foods factory in the small town of Ledegem. Her decision was the result of several months of intimidation, beginning in November when her employer, Rik Remmery, received an anonymous letter. It claimed to be his...

Iraq’s elections and the paradoxes of Arab reform

The Daily Star – LebanonJanuary 11, 2005 The foreign ministers of several Arab regimes met in Jordan recently and issued a call to Iraq’s Sunni Arabs to participate in the January 30 parliamentary elections. Turkey and a reluctant Iran signed on to the appeal. The Sunni Arabs in Iraq have threatened to boycott the vote...

Whose war is it now?

Boston GlobeDecember 23, 2004 WASHINGTON – A TIGER killed a fawn and began munching on it, according to a popular Bangladeshi folk tale. A hungry bear jumped on the tiger to snatch the carcass away. The two fought until both lay mortally wounded, unable to move. A fox, which was watching the fight from a...

Sectarian electoral maneuvers may break Iraq apart

The Daily Star – LebanonNovember 27, 2004 In Iraq they are comparing it to Hulagu Khan’s carnage. In the past year, following the U.S.-led war and the mayhem that followed, about 200,000 Iraqis have perished, according to a survey by the Johns Hopkins University’s Bloomberg school of public health. Fallujah lies in ruins, while death,...

The Case for Islamo-Christian Civilization

Middle East Policy2004 What went wrong in Iraq? Bernard Lewis, the author of the book What Went Wrong? and other promoters of the Iraq war got it all wrong when they thought that Muslim societies need to be and can be remade in the Western image. Few American intellectuals have argued this point as forcefully...