September 2, 2009

Muhammad Asad: The Story of a Story

The following is an excerpt from Muhammad Asad's book, The Road to Mecca. Despite the fact that this book was published back in 1954, I believe Asad's theory regarding the West's hatred for Islam (that it poses a significant challenge to Western concepts of spiritual and social life) rings very true, even today, 55 years later.

Conceptually, Islam is too close for comfort for a lot of Westerners. We believe in the same God, the same prophets (pbut) and angels and message. But, compared to most (but certainly not all) Westerners, we take religion more seriously (actually, a lot more seriously) than they do, and we may be a little more disciplined in applying religious principles to our daily lives. (One of the benefits of fasting during Ramadan, in my opinion.) And that, I think, scares Westerners the most, the thought that if they became Muslim, these Westerners would lose their party world: no more booze, no more pork, a lot less ogling of naked or nearly naked women in public, and a refocusing of their lives on prayer and spirituality. Westerners (especially whites) may not feel as threatened when darker-skinned Westerners become Muslim, but many are threatened at the thought of white Muslims (such as myself) because we don't fit into their notions of racial behavior. In the Westerners' racist view, Islam isn't and can't become acceptable for white people to join. Because once they see the tide beginning to turn against them, then all is lost from their narrow perspective.

“And this appeared very strange to most of my Western friends. They could not quite picture to themselves how a man of Western birth and upbringing could have so fully, and apparently with no mental reservations whatever, identified himself with the Muslim world; how it had been possible for him to exchange his Western cultural heritage for that of Islam; and what it was that had made him accept a religious and social ideology which – they seemed to take for granted – was vastly inferior to all European concepts.

“Now why, I asked myself, should my Western friends take this so readily for granted? Had any of them ever really bothered to gain a direct insight into Islam – or were their opinions based merely on the handful of clichés and distorted notions that had been handed down to them from previous generations? Could it perhaps be that the old Graeco-Roman mode of thought which divided the world into Greeks and Romans on one side and ‘barbarians’ on the other was still so thoroughly ingrained in the Western mind that it was unable to concede, even theoretically, positive value to anything that lay outside its own cultural orbit?

“Ever since Greek and Roman times, European thinkers and historians have been prone to contemplate the history of the world from the standpoint and in terms of European history and Western cultural experiences alone. Non-Western civilizations enter the picture only in so far as their existence, or particular movements within them, have or had a direct influence on the destinies of Western man; and thus, in Western eyes, the history of the world and its various cultures amounts in the last resort to little more than an expanded history of the West.

“Naturally, such a narrowed angle of vision is bound to produce a distorted perspective. Accustomed as he is to writings which depict the culture or discuss the problems of his own civilization in great detail and in vivid colors, with little more than side glances here and there at the rest of the world, the average European or American easily succumbs to the illusion that the cultural experiences of the West are not merely superior but out of all proportion to those of the rest of the world; and thus, that the Western way of life is the only valid norm by which other ways of life could be adjudged – implying, of course, that every intellectual concept, social institution or ethical valuation that disagrees with the Western ‘norm’ belongs eo ipso to a lower grade of existence. Following in the footsteps of the Greeks and Romans, the Occidental likes to think that all those ‘other’ civilizations are or were only so many stumbling experiments on the path of progress so unerringly pursued by the West; or, at best (as in the case of the ‘ancestor’ civilizations which preceded that of the modern West in a direct line), no more than consecutive chapters in one and the same book, of which Western civilization is, of course, the final chapter.

“When I expounded this view to an American friend of mine – a man of considerable intellectual attainments and a scholarly bent of mind – he was somewhat skeptical at first.

“‘Granted,’ he said, ‘the ancient Greeks and Romans were limited in their approach to foreign civilizations: but was not this limitation the inevitable result of difficulties of communication between them and the rest of the world? And has not this difficulty been largely overcome in modern times? After all, we Westerners do concern ourselves nowadays with what is going on outside our cultural orbit. Aren’t you forgetting the many books about Oriental art and philosophy that have been published in Europe and America during the last quarter-century…about the political ideas that preoccupy the minds of Eastern peoples? Surely one could not with justice overlook this desire on the part of Westerners to understand what other cultures might have to offer?’

“‘To some extent you may be right,’ I replied. ‘There is little doubt that the primitive Graeco-Roman outlook is no longer fully operative these days. Its harshness has been considerably blunted – if for no other reason, because the more mature among Western thinkers have grown disillusioned and skeptical about many aspects of their own civilization and now begin to look to other parts of the world for cultural inspiration. Upon some of them it is dawning that there may be not only one book and one story of human progress, but many: simply because mankind, in the historical sense, is not a homogeneous entity, but rather a variety of groups with widely divergent ideas as to the meaning and purpose of human life. Still, I do not feel that the West has really become less condescending toward foreign cultures than the Greeks and Romans were: it has only become more tolerant. Mind you, not toward Islam – only toward certain other Eastern cultures, which offer some sort of spiritual attraction to the spirit-hungry West and are, at the same time, too distant from the Western world-view to constitute any real challenge to its values.’

“‘What do you mean by that?’

“‘Well,’ I answered, ‘when a Westerner discusses, say, Hinduism or Buddhism, he is always conscious of the fundamental differences between these ideologies and his own. He may admire this or that of their ideas, but would naturally never consider the possibility of substituting them for his own. Because he a priori admits this impossibility, he is able to contemplate such really alien cultures with equanimity and often with sympathetic appreciation. But when it comes to Islam – which is by no means as alien to Western values as Hindu or Buddhist philosophy – this Western equanimity is almost invariably disturbed by an emotional bias. It is perhaps, I sometimes wonder, because the values of Islam are close enough to those of the West to constitute a potential challenge to many Western concepts of spiritual and social life?’

“And I went on to tell him of a theory which I had conceived some years ago – a theory that might perhaps help one to understand better the deep-seated prejudice against Islam so often to be found in Western literature and contemporary thought.

“‘To find a truly convincing explanation of this prejudice,’ I said, ‘one has to look far backward into history and try to comprehend the psychological background of the earliest relations between the Western and the Muslim worlds. What Occidentals think and feel about Islam today is rooted in impressions that were born during the Crusades.’

“‘The Crusades!’ exclaimed my friend. ‘You don’t mean to say that what happened nearly a thousand years ago could still have an effect on people of the twentieth century?’

“‘But it does! I know it sounds incredible; but don’t you remember the incredulity which greeted the early discoveries of the psychoanalysts when they tried to show that much of the emotional life of a mature person – and most of those seemingly unaccountable leanings, tastes and prejudices comprised in the term “idiosyncrasies” – can be traced back to the experiences of his most formative age, his early childhood? Well, are nations and civilizations anything but collective individuals? Their development also is bound up with the experiences of their early childhood. As with children, those experiences may have been pleasant or unpleasant; they may have been perfectly rational or, alternatively, due to the child’s naïve misinterpretation of an event: the moulding effect of every such experience depends primarily on its original intensity. The century immediately preceding the Crusades, that is, the end of the first millennium of the Christian era, might well be described as the early childhood of Western civilization…’

“I proceeded to remind my friend – himself an historian – that this had been the age when, for the first time since the dark centuries that followed the breakup of Imperial Rome, Europe was beginning to see its own cultural way. Independently of the almost forgotten Roman heritage, new literatures were just then coming into existence in the European vernaculars; inspired by the religious experience of Western Christianity, fine arts were slowly awakening from the lethargy caused by the warlike migrations of the Goths, Huns and Avars; out of the crude conditions of the early Middle Ages, a new cultural world was emerging. It was at that critical, extremely sensitive stage of its development that Europe received its most formidable shock – in modern parlance, a ‘trauma’ – in the shape of the Crusades.

“The Crusades were the strongest collective impression on a civilization that had just begun to be conscious of itself. Historically speaking, they represented Europe’s earliest – and entirely successful – attempt to view itself under the aspect of cultural unity. Nothing that Europe has experienced before or after could compare with the enthusiasm which the First Crusade brought into being. A wave of intoxication swept over the Continent, an elation which for the first time overstepped the barriers between states and tribes and classes. Before then, there had been Franks and Saxons and Germans, Burgundians and Sicilians, Normans and Lombards – a medley of tribes and races with scarcely anything in common but the fact that most of their feudal kingdoms and principalities were remnants of the Roman Empire and that all of them professed the Christian faith: but in the Crusades, and through them, the religious bond was elevated to a new plane, a cause common to all Europeans alike – the politico-religious concept of ‘Christendom,’ which in its turn gave birth to the cultural concept of ‘Europe.’ When, in his famous speech at Clermont, in November, 1095, Pope Urban II exhorted the Christians to make war upon the ‘wicked race’ that held the Holy Land, he enunciated – probably without knowing it himself – the charter of Western civilization.

“The traumatic experience of the Crusades gave Europe its cultural awareness and its unity; but this same experience was destined henceforth also to provide the false color in which Islam was to appear to Western eyes. Not simply because the Crusades meant war and bloodshed. So many wars have been waged between nations and subsequently forgotten, and so many animosities which in their time seemed ineradicable have later turned into friendships. The damage caused by the Crusades was not restricted to a clash of weapons: it was, first and foremost, an intellectual damage – the poisoning of the Western mind against the Muslim world through a deliberate misrepresentation of the teachings and ideals of Islam. For, if the call for a crusade was to maintain its validity, the Prophet of the Muslims had, of necessity, to be stamped as the Anti-Christ and his religion depicted in the most lurid terms as a fount of immorality and perversion. It was at the time of the Crusades that the ludicrous notion that Islam was a religion of crude sensualism and brutal violence, of an observance of ritual instead of a purification of the heart, entered the Western mind and remained there; and it was then that the name of the Prophet Muhammad – the same Muhammad who had insisted that his own followers respect the prophets of other religions – was contemptuously transformed by Europeans into ‘Mahound.’ The age when the spirit of independent inquiry could raise its head was as yet far distant in Europe; it was easy for the powers-that-were to sow the dark seeds of hatred for a religion and civilization that was so different from the religion and civilization of the West. Thus it was no accident that the fiery Chanson de Roland, which describes the legendary victory of Christendom over the Muslim ‘heathen’ in southern France, was composed not at the time of those battles but three centuries later – to wit, shortly before the First Crusade – immediately to become a kind of ‘national anthem’ of Europe; and it is no accident, either, that this warlike epic marks the beginning of a European literature, as distinct from the earlier, localized literatures: for hostility toward Islam stood over the cradle of European civilization.

“It would seem an irony of history that the age-old Western resentment against Islam, which was religious in origin, should still persist subconsciously at a time when religion has lost most of its hold on the imagination of Western man. This, however, is not really surprising. We know that a person may completely lose the religious beliefs imparted to him in his childhood while, nevertheless, some particular emotion connected with those beliefs remains, irrationally, in force throughout his later life –

“‘ – and this,’ I concluded, ‘is precisely what happened to that collective personality, Western civilization. The shadow of the Crusades hovers over the West to this day; and all its reactions toward Islam and the Muslim world bear distinct traces of that die-hard ghost…’”

pp. 2-7

4 comments:

bambam said...

Sorry for the long reply.
Thank you so much for the interesting read, but here is where we see things differently.
while the whities fear of islam might be true - if we confide it to europe and especially germany, france - it is more a fear of becoming a minority than anything else.
Your idea about islam is that of the universally pure kind, an islam that was starting to develop after the turn of last century that attempted to purify islam out of its true reality and history.
Case in point, the victorians were appalled by the debauchery and rudeness of the denizens of the middle east and with colonialism they managed to change a lot of the morality of muslims in that part of the world because it didn't align. The booze and the women always existed in the arab world, and perhaps the parties were even more scandalous but the idea is that no one is allowed to talk about it and everyone leads a double life. that is still true for men of the region to this day.
I think the religious west, i.e the USA fears the non religious a lot more than they fear the muslims because they don't want to end up like europe where religion, of any sort doesn't have a place in the public life. That idea of the second coming of the crusades only exists in the evangelical and arab muslim mind.
on another note you as an american should know best that the monolithic western thought that muslims and easterns believe in doesn't exist in reality since Europe and the USA don't see eye to eye on pretty much anything. The idea that the crusades united Europe is laughable and at worst is an historically deceit.
To end this, i don't think the west is all that concerned with islam as an ideological adversary it just happens that islam is present in an area that is rich in an important natural resource so its to their benefit to have control over, and islam is just a good wedge for people in the opposition.

JDsg said...

BamBam:

Interesting comment.

while the whities fear of islam might be true - if we confide it to europe and especially germany, france - it is more a fear of becoming a minority than anything else.

There are some people in the US who are like that too (the political commentator Pat Buchanan comes to mind). But the problem with the "fear of becoming a minority" argument is that, as addressed several months ago in the numerous responses to the Muslim Demographics video, there's no guarantee that Muslim populations will out-breed native populations at any time in the near or far future. Current trends are only that - current - and statistics like fertility rates change yearly, going both up and down. I think the real fear here is that some people have a more difficult time coming to grips with seeing ethnic and religious minorities in their communities (i.e., it's more of a racial/racist issue).

The booze and the women always existed in the arab world, and perhaps the parties were even more scandalous but the idea is that no one is allowed to talk about it and everyone leads a double life. that is still true for men of the region to this day.

That may be true, but I also want to reiterate that when I write about Islam or Muslim society that I'm not always discussing the Arab world. Yes, I probably focus more on the "universally pure" Islam, as you called it, but most of my experiences as a Muslim have been with Malay and Indian Muslims here in SE Asia. I suspect that there are some differences between how the Arabs, Malays and Indians approach an Islamic lifestyle. For example, the double life you talk of regarding Arab men is virtually non-existent in the Malay/Indian Muslim communities here that I've observed.

I think the religious west, i.e the USA fears the non religious a lot more than they fear the muslims because they don't want to end up like europe where religion, of any sort doesn't have a place in the public life. That idea of the second coming of the crusades only exists in the evangelical and arab muslim mind.

Generally speaking, I would agree with both of these. The religious West, of course, has multiple agendas, as do everyone else. Still, as an American Muslim, I don't like what I see coming out of my country and out of Europe with respect to how Muslims are being treated and talked about. I hate to say, my country has a lot of growing up to do still.

on another note you as an american should know best that the monolithic western thought that muslims and easterns believe in doesn't exist in reality since Europe and the USA don't see eye to eye on pretty much anything.

Oh, I wouldn't agree with that at all. Americans and Europeans may not perfectly align on a lot of issues, but their level of agreement on most issues is very similar, especially between the US and the UK. If not, all of the numerous international organizations these countries work through wouldn't be nearly as effective as they are.

The idea that the crusades united Europe is laughable and at worst is an historically deceit.

I disagree with this completely. Try reading Thomas Asbridge's book, The First Crusade.

To end this, i don't think the west is all that concerned with islam as an ideological adversary it just happens that islam is present in an area that is rich in an important natural resource so its to their benefit to have control over, and islam is just a good wedge for people in the opposition.

To a degree this is true. But my concern is with those Westerners who are concerned with Islam as an ideological adversary. On a societal level, you're probably right; I'm concerned with the individual level.

Ramadan mubarak!

bambam said...

oh you were better than me, ramadam mubarak to you and your family and i'll have to check the link and come back later :)

Anonymous said...

Conceptually, Islam is too close for comfort for a lot of Westerners.

Do you think many Westerners look longingly towards their civilization's Christian past (while knowing they could not endure taking Christianity that seriously) and hate Islam because they feel inferior next to the Muslims?

I've read a similar argument for why Kemalist women in Turkey hate hijabis so much.

It makes more sense to me than any talk about the Crusades, because Crusader rhetoric and modern Islamophobic rhetoric are polar opposites in some respects. To name one example, Crusaders viewed Islam as insufficiently anti-sex, while contemporary Islamophobes find Islam's intolerance of fornication and homosexuality to be barbarous.

Westerners (especially whites) may not feel as threatened when darker-skinned Westerners become Muslim, but many are threatened at the thought of white Muslims (such as myself) because we don't fit into their notions of racial behavior. In the Westerners' racist view, Islam isn't and can't become acceptable for white people to join.

Was it the Spanish Inquisition which "racialized" Western Islamophobia?