Showing posts with label Islam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Islam. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Islam will dominate the World ........Allahu Akbar

200,000 Hispanic Americans alone accept Islam each year

Publication time: 11 January 2011, 15:48

According to U.S. media outlets, Islam is spreading rapidly among all the sections of the American society.

Islam is most actively spreading among Puerto Ricans, Dominicans, Mexicans, Cubans and Spaniards, who make about 35% of newly-converted Muslims in an Islamic center in North Hudson, New Jersey, Tanseerel news agency reports.

Last weekend, The New York Timeshttp://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/09/nyregion/09muslims.html reported that there were as many as 200,000 Hispanic converts to Islam in the US. Among them was Musa Franco, a Colombian who converted at the age of 13.


The newspaper also mentioned the name of Miriam Celeste, who converted to Islam in 2002, as well as Muslimah Rodriguez, who after embracing Islam in 2009, started wearing a veil known as niqab.

More than 7 million Muslims were living in the United States according to official figures for 2003. However, in subsequent years, the U.S. authorities were not publishing official statistics on the number of Muslims.

Moreover, the Zionist mainstream media began to spread lies that the number of Muslims in America is no more than 3 million people. They began to write lies in 2007, when Muslim organizations in the U.S. said the number of followers of Islam in this country increased in 2007 to 12 million.

In turn, the U.S. Home Security indicated in a report to Congress in 2008 that there were 4 million Muslims living in the country. In June 2010, the Congregation of Christians of America challenged the US Home Security false data. According to its estimates, at least 5.5 million Muslims were lived in the U.S. in early 2010, and the total population of the United States, according to Congress, was 304 million people.

Despite the attempts to understate the number of Muslims in the US, almost all media outlets point out that mass adoption of Islam by Americans is a real miracle, because there is an intentional harassment of Muslims and massive propaganda against Islam in the US as in most other Western countries.

Western and Zionist media are trying to present Islam as something foreign to the "Western soul". However, the result of this anti-Islamic propaganda is exactly the opposite. A growing number of Americans are embracing Islam and returning to their Lord.

Alhumdu lilaahi Rabil Alaimeen

Courtesy kavkazcentre

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Announcement from IslamPolicy.com - on transfer from RevolutionMuslim





:السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته

I am saddened to announce that revolutionmuslim.com has been shut down due to an alleged, reckless post that has now been the cause of the incarceration of one of our brothers (May Allah hasten his release). We have seen a few arrests of late, with alleged ties to Revolution Muslim, and while most of what the media reports is distorted to say the least the blogs and forums have also been abuzz with imaginative and hypothetical speculation (as usual), most of which has assumed the worst and been representative of lies.  

I want to express my great apology for being inactive and for remaining silent for the past few months.  I have been going through some personal alterations with regard to physical, mental and spiritual space and was eager to alter some of the approach I had been being informed of when this recent spate of bad news hit.  Perhaps prematurely, this post is to announce the initiation of IslamPolicy.com, the new home of Revolution Muslim.

Firstly, I would like to say that we pray and anticipate the best for our brothers and sisters all over the globe who are incarcerated at this time.  We know that acts in Islam are based on intention, and that one is only granted the reward of what they intended. Some of our brothers and sisters, no matter how they may be perceived by others, were acting out of what we consider to be a pure intention. It has been narrated from Ibn Umar (ra) that Abu Bakr (ra) dispatched Yazeed ibn Abu Sufyan (ra) to Syria and that Abu Bakr (ra) walked along with him for about two miles when they said to him (ra), “O, Khalifah of the Messenger of Allah would you not go back?” and that he said, “No, for I have heard the Messenger of Allah (saws) saying that, “he whose feet are covered with dust in the path of Allah, Allah will save him from the fire.”  Indeed our brothers and sisters may have taken the words, “O you who believe why do say that which you do not do?” to heart and so we ask that they are rewarded for their intentions and that they are rewarded the same as if they had attained their lofty goals. 

Still recent events should serve as reminders.  We live in an age where intention is not enough.  We live in an age where we need increased knowledge and understanding as well, and so we set forth continuing on a path hoping to please Allah.  It is imperative at this juncture that we redefine our mission, advance our platform, and improve our position.  Inshallah, this Eid al Adha marks the end of our two year plan of action entitled By All Means Necessary (link). This plan outlined the objectives that Revolution Muslim held and was a guide for my decisions.  However, few of our affiliates read it and so perhaps misunderstood the purpose of our organization. In retrospect the document should be read by those that seek a greater understanding of our call, but for brevity I will highlight the closing paragraphs here.  By All Means Necessary concluded two years ago by stating that,

We have learned a great deal over the last few years. Osama Bin Laden is still alive and Al-Qaeda is plotting attacks that “outdo by far” September 11. According to a former senior Yemeni Al-Qaeda operative, Al-Qaeda has reinforced training camps across the globe. Victory is recognizable in Afghanistan, more may occur in Iraq with recent developments and the prospect of an attack by Israel on Iran. The Shabaab in Somalia are getting closer to regaining Mogadishu as the Ethiopian forces look poised to withdrawal at the end of the year. The incoming American Administration looks destined to be a mule of the international financiers and may be reverting towards a protectionism that will create discord between China and the U.S. and destroy the value of the dollar. Chaos abounds in international markets. The mujahedeen are still waging a successful jihad, but the majority of Muslims cannot foresee the justice of an Islamic State. They are largely unaware of the effect the corporatacracy has on their lives, largely afraid of the rulers the corporatocracy defends. We must pose and become the solution to this paradigmatic problem. It is the best we can do. Revolution Muslim issues a challenge to Muslims across the globe to accept a role in working toward the establishment of the state. Say Somalia would be taken tomorrow. We have problems with piracy, drinking water, health care and political divisions. The world would pose an economic barricade with no foreign investment. The State has oil, resources, agricultural capabilities and a strategic location and the right crew with the right connections could come in with some serious policy recommendations, community organizing and etcetera and protect the State. However, there may not be an internet connection for quite some time and there is little use chatting when the whole world gathers around to destroy you. This is a bold challenge but one that can be met. These are our objectives for the following two years; call it a strategic plan for advancing the objectives outlined in the Mission Statement of Revolution Muslim. Inshallah by the completion of two years heijra will be possible. May Allah make it soon!!!

Having passed two years, much of it remains true, our predictions about the Obama Administration and friction between West and East were accurate, the lands of jihad are spreading, and the ummah still has little clear understanding about what the Islamic State would look like were it established.  Thus, the next two years will, inshallah, concentrate on the solution that is the establishment of the state, defining its specifics, enhancing the sophistication of calls for it, and helping prepare and advance progress, while maintaining support for brothers and sisters working for it across the globe.

In order to attain that objective, modification is necessary.  Inshallah, on the Eid, IslamPolicy.com will release its methodology which will clarify the next stage of our struggle and at that time we will be setting forth a very idealistic set of lofty goals.  The only way they will ever be attained is if we get the help of fellow Muslims. And so please watch IslamPolicy.com for the platform, pass this message and the accompanying videos around the web via email, posting on forums, blogs, websites, facebook, twitter and etcetera so that people know of the change in sites.   

Of course we will include all the brothers and sisters that are willing to aid and abide in the effort but would like to make some alterations having observed that they are due.  The video above highlights the principles that will drive these changes.  Please feel free to comment or criticize. 

Inshallah, we will be back soon, founding an online radio show, magazine, extensive blog and other activities, while keeping the ummah connected to the sincere callers to Islam.  Because his words are so much more beneficial than mine I depart for now with a selection from Ibn Qayyim’s book The Path to Guidance:

There are matters to which he (the sincere servant) has been guided but he is in need of further guidance with respect to them since guidance to the path is one thing, but guidance upon the path is something else. Do we not see that a man knows the path to a certain city, that the path is such and such? However, he is not capable of traversing this path because traversing it requires specific guidance in the journey itself, such as travelling at a certain time as opposed to another, taking a certain amount of water in such and such a desert, resting at this place as opposed to that one. All of this is guidance upon the journey. The one who (merely) knows that this is the path neglects all of this, perishes and is cut off from the desired goal 

We ask Allah, having guided us to the path to place us upon it and I close with this from the Quran praying that it is the sincere reality of my intention:

أُرِيدُ إِلاَّ الإِصْلاَحَ مَا اسْتَطَعْتُ وَمَا تَوْفِيقِي إِلاَّ بِاللّهِ عَلَيْهِ تَوَكَّلْتُ وَإِلَيْهِ أُنِيبُ

I only desire (your) betterment to the best of my power; and my success (in my task) can only come from Allah. In Him I trust, and unto Him I look.

It is truly a pleasure to be back in contact with you all.  I look forward to hearing the ideas of all: old friends and new.  Welcome to IslamPolicy.com, where the revolution in Islam continues inshallah!

~Younus Abdullah Muhammad

Monday, November 8, 2010

East Meets West: Implications of the Growing Asian Presence in the Middle East – Prelude to War or Pathway to Peace?


Geoffrey Kemp, Director of Regional Strategic Programs at The Nixon Center, recently released a book entitled East Meets West: India, China, and Asia’s Growing Presence in the Middle East (LINK).  Its content may help to initiate a turning point of recognition amongst influential policy planners that the military expenses dedicated to protecting the West’s predominant control over the oil-rich Middle East are not benefiting Western powers and that Western policy must make an immediate alteration. The work also emphasizes the rise of Eastern Asian powers in the region, and largely in a way that documents two competing spheres and forms of influence.  Mr. Kemp does a great deal to call attention to the fact that, if processes continue at their present rate, Eastern powers will take over predominant influence of the region in the near term. These points direct an all too important conversation about the end of empire, albeit a conversation powers in history have oftentimes not handled well. The variables correlate significantly to the situation of the Middle East prior to World War I, when two imperialist powers, then Britain and Germany, also split the region in two and came to competition that eventually sparked worldwide conflict. Today the risk is similar, but there are alternatives that would leave all better off. These solutions would necessitate the end of the American era, but usher in a new, multi-polar era with reverberating consequences that would have positive effects on the state of the world.  

Mr. Kemp is presently traveling around universities and institutions displaying his findings and communicating with fellow policy planners (see HERE).  His efforts will certainly amplify a discussion amongst the intelligentsia in America that was temporarily put on hold with the election of Barack Obama, but that has resurfaced as of late: Is America entering a point where the expense of maintaining vast military prowess is superseding its benefit? The present American military presence is superfluous in Iraq, the Arab Sheikhdoms, Pakistan, Afghanistan, the Straight of Hormuz, the Gulf, everywhere except Iran (and that may change soon).  Of course, as is typical of all establishment discussion, America is not mentioned as being an empire seeking only personal gain at the expense of others, its intentions are considered benign without exception, and the conclusion that will certainly be drawn in conversation is not that its military footprint should be decreased but rather that Asian powers must ultimately share more of the burden in protecting what is typically referred to as ‘security’ in the region.

It is important to recognize that questions are never seriously pondered about whether the political autocracies and networks of privilege existent in the Middle East, protected and promoted by aid (both humanitarian and arms) and the military presence are desirable and, in fact, even necessary. Instead, the attitude is that the Americans are providing stability and security while the Asians reap the benefits and if the Asian powers do not kowtow to this interpretation there will certainly be war and continuous breakdown of the international arena.   

It is time for a conversation about why the Middle East is kept dependent on foreign powers in the first place, about how the undemocratic, authoritarian regimes have squandered the resource wealth, and thereby the potential for indigenous development, by expropriating proceeds from oil and gas in ways that preserve their unjust political and economic control and form the basis upon which contemporary indirect colonization has reigned. Should not the natural resource wealth of a nation be utilized to develop the sophistication of internal industrial, engineering, cultural and other productive capacities?  The answer has, up to this point, flatly been no. The governments of the Middle East are oligarchies, across the broad, and by portraying this as a cultural rather than externally imposed phenomena, the politicized rhetoric and culture talk of imperialism provides a justification that makes the oppressor a liberating force. Oligarchies necessitate that the general population is left undeveloped, or else they become unsustainable and at the very worst rise to challenge the regime. Whereas the primary commodity of any nation is its people, oligarchies and imperialist subordinates’ greatest crime is in their conscious prevention of cultivation not of the terrain, or of economic infrastructure, but of the human minds that inhabit these nations, the creative capacities of their indigenous populations.

The cultivation of the human being inside the nation must be of primary import in order that a society may coagulate and flourish holistically. Otherwise, no matter the structure of governance, there can only be oppression. This is true in a democracy as well as an authoritarian regime. This is why the methodology of Islam cultivates an awareness of communal purpose and direction that drives individual actions into conformity with a social movement for collective improvement and prosperity. It is also why the theoretical Islamic system, when understood, propagated, and practiced correctly, is antithetical to imperialism and oligarchy, and why a conscious project of preventing Islamic governance from returning to the Middle East has underlined much of Western policy since the fall of the last Ottoman, Islamic regime.

 

It is important to recognize that the discussions of policy planners in the West heavily influence their respective governmental and private institutions; many of these institutions heavily influence Middle Eastern regimes, and the interests of all these entities are best served by guaranteeing that the discussion remains about what, who, when and how external entities will obtain or retain control. Never, is the discussion to turn into one of how the people of the Middle East may establish influence over their resources, governments, and general lives. It is for that reason, that policy conversations like these must be broadened in a way that includes this ‘public option’ and must in fact be broadened by a coalition of individuals representing the people of the Middle East. In order to facilitate and contribute to discourse in that direction, this article will correlate the phenomena marked within East Meets West to a Middle East on the cusp of losing its last indigenous imperial power during the build up to the First World War. 

As the tale is commonly told, World War I was started by Germany, and they bore the brunt for it by being forced to pay reparations that eventually contributed greatly to also sparking fascism and World War II. In reality however, World War I was initiated not so much by German aggression but because of the construction of the Berlin to Baghdad Railroad, financed by the Germans but made politically feasible by the Ottoman Empire. The Ottomans were attempting to reclaim Arabia and wrest it from the control of the Anglo-imperialist parasite of that era, the British Empire.  This partnership between the Ottomans and Germany was based on infrastructure development and could have given Germany access to oil and trade with the Middle East, but would have also resuscitated the waning Ottoman Empire, by then known as the sick man of Europe. The British were all too worried that their monopoly on trade from the Orient and especially from its precursor to today’s multinational corporation, the British East India Company, would be jeopardized.
Map of Proposed Berlin to Baghdad Railroad 

The development of a railroad between Berlin and Baghdad could have erased the strategic control the British held over the Middle East via extraction points at the Suez Canal and the Arab Emirate States. These docks created an advantage as Britain could loot not only India but the Middle East as a whole from these control centers.  It is also the threat of development that led Britain and France to ally with Arab parties as British proxies against the Ottomans, and to then create colonial states after the war that would preserve Western Europe’s control over the Middle East up unto the present.  Policy in the Middle East has continuously tried to prevent the types of development that are implied by such a development program as a trans-regional railroad. Instead, Western powers have maintained a process of extraction of the oil resource by deliberately preventing any type of true development to occur.


The situation then, was similar to today. Egyptian, Sudanese, and African resources, needed by industry and for development at home, were extracted to Europe via the Suez and the looted goods of India and China made their way through the Arab Gulf due to the alliances the British were forming in the region. Preventing development of the landed region of the Middle East made certain that the monopoly of maritime trade preserved the British Empire. While this system was established other coincident developments contributed to exasperating the importance of the region: the British replaced its Navy’s energy source from coal to oil and a German report from 1901 suggested Iraq may lie on a sea of petroleum. Thus the oil wars were initiated then and the region has remained a hotbed of conflict since, with foreign powers propping up loyal regimes largely in order to secure the flow of oil and resources abroad and to prevent any type of indigenous political, economic, and social advance that may pose a threat to the system of plunder.

What the reporting within East Meets West establishes without ever explicitly stating is that the state of the region is returning to a point similar to that which existed on the eve of World War I. Just like today, two versions of imperialism then competed for control over the Middle East. The British model, focused on colonial extraction and prevented indigenous development of the region in much the same way the complete destruction of Iraq is advantageous to American ambitions to replicate that model today. The German model then promoted a form of imperialism based on trade and industry and would have actually afforded the opportunity that the political conflict then raging in the region be resolved. The Ottomans would have been able to reconnect themselves to Arabia, reclaimed and developed Iraq and Persia and reconnected the Middle East economically, politically, and perhaps even culturally in the process.  In reality, that same vision is made possible by the approach taken by the eastern, Asian powers today, especially China’s approach of development and cooperation setting aside the notion that they should influence a country’s politics or occupy it militarily.

It is not a surprise that this similarity has not been identified by academics, the press or government officials. The American academic community’s approach is no different than that of the British beforetime. The British Foreign Office was instrumental in concocting the Islamist threat as a justification for attacking the Ottomans calls of Abdul Hamid for regional cooperation and resistance to imperialist plunder. Their Foreign Office, like the CIA and State Department today, grew nearly obsessed with the idea that Pan-Islamism could restore a sense of autonomy in the Middle East and were all the more upset by the notion that Germany may want to assist in reviving such an endeavor.  

It is also important to note that the Young Turk Movement, largely a European project, temporarily disrupted construction of the railroad during the interval they held power before the outbreak of World War I. In similar ways, the United States has propped up proxies in the region preventing development as well; setting up the petrodollar scheme in 1971 through its proxy in Riyadh has allowed the United States to prevent the worst nightmare scenario where resources of the Middle East will be used to the benefit of the people. The economic development modeled under Washington Consensus terms during the 80’s and 90’s only encouraged booming industrial cities and mass urbanizations alongside the dismantlement of industrial agricultural developments and internal infrastructure projects that could have developed a skilled labor force inside Middle Eastern countries. Instead the Aramco model of slave plantations and lucrative contracts for Western multinationals became and remains the preferred model.

As much as an end of colonialism was pronounced in the post World War II era, the system of control and subjugation has remained largely the same.  Today, as America finds itself confronted with an unsustainable policy at present and the rising influence of Asian powers in the region it is faced with the choice of retreating from the process of imperialism or struggling to maintain control. The inevitable outcome could very well lead to the outbreak of World War III.

Look at the following map from Mr. Kemp’s book:


        Notice the energy ellipse running north to south. This is where all the oil and gas lies, from the Caspian Sea region in the north to the super rich Gulf States of the south  The horizontal ellipsis, properly termed here as “The War Zone,” overstretches Iraq in the west, runs through Iran and ends on the east in Afghanistan. It is from here that Western powers deploy their neo-colonialist control mechanisms. Iraq has been destroyed and is still occupied, Iran is on harsh sanctions, and Afghanistan has been destroyed and is occupied as well with an increasing military presence in Pakistan. However, contrary to initial ideas about the ease with which America would expand its military presence in the Middle East thereby assuming absolute control over entry and exit points, much of the military efforts have come at severe economic and political consequence, and there is an increasing awareness that America’s power and influence in the region is dwindling fast. The book by Mr. Kemp will certainly add to that increasing awareness, leading to discussions that will shortly influence government and the mainstream. The reaction will be based upon a conglomerate of variable reactions and is impossible to predict. The worst fear is that, like the British Empire previously, this awareness could lead factions of power to conclude it best to advocate for all-out war.

As tensions mount in Iran, Iraq stands ready to reignite, political discord prevails in Lebanon, Syria and the Levant generally and Turkey and Saudi Arabia expand their influence in the region, it is apparent that an Arab block is forming around the Israeli State and that pressures in the region are building for a change of course. Iran has gone on-line with the regions first nuclear reactor and other nations are following suit either in reaction or in agreement that it is a productive energy source. While Saudi Arabia continues to commit to its unwritten exchange with the U.S., oil for power, and seems stable, each of the other Middle Eastern States contain variables of unpredictability, resistance to the status quo and radically altering public opinions, that  may force a move further from passively accepting outside interference that extracts more than it provides in exchange. 

Prolonged American presence has created a nightmare that may prove to have long term political and economic consequence. The only contracts that have gone to Western corporations as of late are private security firms, part and parcel of the military presence. With no sign of domestic economic improvements at home and little chance alternatives to American dependencies on oil will be developed, the conditions across the board seem ripe for conflict, and with Asian nations increasingly dependent on Middle East exports and development contracts, the entire world holds a vested stake in outcomes as it has grave implications for global trade.

Conversations about policy in the Middle East never include a discussion of the potential for an alternative course being taken in the Middle East. It is assumed, a priori, that the Middle East must remain a region of oligarchs. In Egypt, Hosni Mubarak is courted and loved by Washington for the very fact that he keeps Egypt in the hands of an elite. Similarly, the House of Saud in Saudi Arabia serves as the contemporary twin power through which Western influence has reigned. Israel sits in the middle of a region strategically preventing any sort of cooperative and cohesive indigenous development and so, despite having much of the world’s most covetous resources, the Middle East remains largely behind in its capacity to develop itself. It is imagined that Asian powers prefer the Middle Eastern status quo and that this is why they say little about American militarism.  In similar ways, Germany was serving its own interests by building the Berlin to Baghdad Railroad, but development is quite distinct from imperialism and therefore the Asian model of development is certainly preferable today.

The British won World War I, and cast the region into what its planners perceived to be permanent peonage.  The United States took over continuing this policy after World War II. Up unto the present, the policy of extraction through maritime plunder has remained and has effectively driven the Middle East to the lowest levels of development indicators lagging far behind in political and economic freedoms, educational levels, and health and human prosperity indicators across the board. The policy is simply a set of practices derived from the axiom that the region’s rich natural resources must not be used for actual internal development. Instead, they must be extracted, at prices acceptable to the neo-colonialist masters. In order to guarantee that no such idea as the Berlin-Baghdad Railroad would ever be deemed feasible again, the British dismantled the Ottoman Empire after World War I, and used the Sykes-Picot betrayal to create a series of nation states that would produce the types of conflict that prevent development through industry and trade up unto today.  

And so, the present conversation of the Middle East centers again around two outlooks eerily reminiscent of the circumstances existent in the era before the First World War. Firstly, the western model of control and development geared toward creating dependency and secondly, the rising influence of the Eastern Asian powers based largely on mutually rewarding trade and industrial advance. The US State Department is already producing reports that criticize China as an ambiguous military power. The Chinese continue to emphasize that they are pursuing self interests through trade. The newly published book, East Meets West, will only heighten western fears. However, there will certainly be little mention of this background in the political commentary of coming years. We are still to believe that World War I was sparked simply with the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand. Few circles accurately attribute World War I, or the latest War in Iraq for that matter, on oil and imperialist control.  So too, academics in the West will never portray the United States present as an imperialist power. Its military presence is imagined to be utilized only for security and peace-keeping, despite that it has promoted nothing of the sort and increasingly fails to accomplish those ends as times goes on. 
What is certain is that there needs to be a discussion about western military presence in the Middle East. Mr. Kemp argues that China is all too willing to have U.S. military force remain and actually prefers they stay. In reality, it seems that the only thing it is producing is conflict, destabilization and prevention of autonomous control. It is a shame that the peoples of the Middle East cannot wrest themselves from the domination of governments that care not about promoting the actual development of the region for all and that instead are part and parcel protectors of the present system.  

One possible answer that could potentially make everyone happy, including an America retreating from its imperialist role, is the reinvigorated discussion of constructing railways and infrastructure throughout the Middle East. The Berlin to Baghdad Railway, much of the line still existent and operational, could be enhanced and lines may be expanded that could connect the ellipsis of oil, from the Caspian to Gulf, to points in Europe and then off into Africa and Asia.  The details of such a plan must be developed in other reports and series of discussions on region wide development, but it is important to recognize that there is no mention in the dialogue of Western powers that entails greater autonomy, less military presence and an alternative model of foreign influence similar to what was promoted by Germany in the Middle East prior to World War I.  That is not necessarily the case, however, with regard to Chinese, Asian, and Indian influence today. Southeast Asian populations represent the largest populace of Muslims on the planet. China is most concerned with its internal developments and maintaining the resource capacity necessary to maintain them.  The authoritarian regimes of the Middle East, for the most part, may prefer only that they retain oligarchic control over their respective nations, but inserting an understanding of real development and trade as a means of promoting effective relations and advancement for all would benefit the whole world and presents a solution for the peoples suffering daily at the hands of the processes of imperialism.

Military intervention has done nothing to create security or peace. It is time that this is recognized. A comprehensive development plan, the likes of the Berlin to Baghdad Railroad could revolutionize the planet and mark a discontinuation of finance capitalism that has extracted the possibility of true advancement, maintained unjust political modes, and permitted the continuous neglect of human capital in the Middle East. The multiplier effect could birth a new wave of entrepreneurial spirit and cultural advancement, increase scientific awareness and create perhaps millions of additional jobs and opportunities for cooperation in the region over both the short and long term. Additionally, political frictions could be resolved and political power would be spread over greater levels of the populace. While development represents a win-win for parties across the board, there are many factions that benefit from preservation of the status quo.

While the content of East Meets West and similar discussions increasingly being held do nothing to recognize the need for immediate breaks from traditional policy, they do present an opportunity to erase the notion that there is no imperialist force in the world today and to create a call for systems that counter the notion of empire altogether by calling to its antithesis: sovereign development. Citizens of the world must move forward despite the drumbeats of war. This will take nothing less than collective action and the initiation of a conversation that poses solutions and represents true change. In the end, if it can be achieved, destruction may be averted and the idea of empire can be put in the annals of history where it properly belongs.


~Postcript: For an informative and interesting breakdown of the Oil Wars please see the video below:    

Monday, September 13, 2010

Christiana Ampour - "This Week" - Imam Rauf and Islam in America

Panel responds to Imam Rauf's assertions made HERE

AMANPOUR: Tell me about your plans for the Islamic center.  Are you going to keep it at Park 51, where you proposed?

RAUF: The decisions that I will make -- that we will make -- will be predicated on what is best for everybody.

AMANPOUR: How do you decide that?

RAUF: That's been very difficult and very challenging, because, unfortunately, the -- the discourse has been, to a certain extent, hijacked by the radicals. The radicals on both sides, the radicals in the United States and the radicals in the Muslim world, feed off each other. And to a certain extent, the attention that they've been able to get by the media has even aggravated the problem.

AMANPOUR: 71 percent of New Yorkers say it should be moved. What is your main reason for not wanting to move it?

RAUF: My major concern with moving it is that the headline in the Muslim world will be Islam is under attack in America, this will strengthen the radicals in the Muslim world, help their recruitment, this will put our people -- our soldiers, our troops, our embassies, our citizens -- under attack in the Muslim world and we have expanded and given and fueled terrorism.

AMANPOUR: Do you think that is a legitimate reason not to move it?

RAUF: It is an extremely important consideration.

AMANPOUR: . People are saying that because you intimated that it would cause great anger in Muslim countries around the world, it could threaten the United States. And people are saying that you made a threat.

Is that -- was that your intention?

RAUF: I have never made a threat. I've never made a threat, never expressed a threat, never -- I've never -- I would never threaten violence ever, because I am a man of peace, dedicated to peace.

We have two audiences. We have the American audience and we have the Muslim audience. And this issue has riveted the attention of the whole Muslim world. And whatever we do and whatever say and how we move and the discourse about it is being watched very, very closely. And if we make the wrong move, it will only expand and strengthen the voice of the radicals and the extremists.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Video Review: How Corporations Destroyed Democracy - Chris Hedges

REVIEW: 
Chris Hedges begins this lecture with a great quote, “In celebrity culture we destroy what we worship.” He goes onto describe the impact of corporatist structures on modern culture, properly identifying the pagan and idolatrous cornerstone of secular society today, an intellectualized materialism based on the same precepts and sensorial metaphysical underpinnings of all pagan societies before it, there is an applicable analogy here that marks a series of concepts not foreign from the dominant norms of Muslim societies and Muslim households as well. Unfortunately, the majority of us have long given up on the belief that Islam serves a greater social purpose. Instead, the shopping malls, complexes, and corporate advertising campaigns that represent the idols of consumerist culture so too represent an equivalent reality of the Muslim world.  Therefore, much of what is said applies to Muslims and Muslim nations as well.  
  
The principles underlying corporatist structures deem impossible any “greater good” from coming about. Free market adherents would argue that pursuit of selfish interest indirectly contributes to a greater good, but corporations are totalitarian and cannot produce anything productive for society other than profit; a axiom of principality that makes acquiring profit a religion and thereby reduces the human experience to financial gain. As institutions they swallow belief in a greater good and by their very underlying conceptions exist only to produce positive returns for shareholders and vested interests. Therefore, such institutions cannot act on any other principle regardless of the occasional good-intentioned individual found inside their corporate conclaves.  Therefore, the lecture is about the byproduct of these principles on real human beings, about the corporatization of human beings.

The critical mind must realize that we have so-too corporatized the religion of Islam, over hundreds of years we have added and subtracted from the preserved message and principles included in the Quran. Defining our success based on the status we have attained, looking for conformal acceptance in a world of norms that contradict the tenants of our religion, and stuck in between a historical context of immigration for freedom of economic gain while oftentimes ignoring and feeling unaccountable for a reality of authoritarianism and oppression at home. It the sense of accountability to all of humanity that make non-Muslims like Chris Hedges important voices for us to hear.

The principles of Islam have been corporatized: Ramadan is now less about restraint than consumption, Hajj a voyage commoditized as part of the tourism industry, seeking knowledge a pathway to marketing one’s self in ways that guarantee acceptance by the mainstream but only if one is willing to necessarily ignore some of the most important concepts of Islam. The list goes on, but most remain ignorant and ill-concerned with standing up to this increasing reality and adoption of pagan concepts in the norms of our societies, As if we can so too, separate religion from state, we seek to maintain the ritualization of religion while ignoring the substance of simplicity in worldly dabbling in exchange for depth of contemplation and development of the soul and mind, something that is impossible when interacting with the corporate machine.

Hedges goes through the transformation of democratic society as ‘Inverted totalitarianism’ – represented by a massive public relations campaign as statist propaganda – Similarly, our monks and rabbis call to the same simple expression of purpose in life. The science of objectives of the shariah (ilm-maqaasid-al shariah) is adulterated in order to hearken the call to conformity to what has become normal in a secular world. The principle of maslaha (or seeking the greater good) is misunderstood and invoked by leaders to designate “the believers” as part and parcel participants in the corporatist model and mandating consent to the corporatist wars that just happen to be waged on Muslim soil these days via silence. It is this silence that is that is also part and parcel of what the corporate machine desires. American Islam increasingly represents the commoditization of our religion, a path of altering the tenets of Islam so that they are suitable to Western norms and desires while ignoring the very many problems of the contemporary order, the hypocrisy of the theorized values of western, secular society. In reality, this modern, “American Islam” is marketed in the same way Gap sells jeans manufactured in sweat shops to ignorant consumers. With the rhetoric of the powerful trying to convince people that the US is not at war with Islam, few realize that for that to be true they have got to create an Islam suitable to their needs, a version of our religion that accepts the same corporatist, pagan norms dominate our economies, that we accept despots and dictators loyal to multinational firms and preventing true freedom of choice and expression from asserting themselves in Muslim societies.

A quote that is particularly profound can be hear near the end. Hedges, who lost his job at the NY Times for speaking against the Iraq War at a college graduation ceremony explains,    

“Totalitarianism, George Orwell pointed out is not so much an age of faith but an age of schizophrenia, a society becomes totalitarian when its structure becomes flagrantly artificial, Orwell wrote. That is when its ruling class has lost its function but succeeds in clinging to power by force or fraud and force is soon all the elites will have left. We can march in Copenhagen, we can join Bill McKiven’s worldwide day of climate protests, we can compost in our backyard, and hang our laundry out to dry. We can write letters to our elected officials, and vote for Obama and chant ‘Yes We Can’, but the power elite is impervious to the charade of democratic participation. Power is in the hands of moral and intellectual trolls who are ruthlessly creating a system of neo-feudalism and killing the ecosystem that sustains life, and appealing to their better nature or seeking to influence the internal levels of power will no longer work. Yet, in the face of this catastrophe mass culture assures us that if we close our eyes, if we visualize what we want, if we have faith in ourselves, if we tell God that we believe in miracles, if we tap into our inner strength, if we grasp that we are truly exceptional, if we focus on happiness, our lives will be harmonious and complete. This cultural retreat into illusion, whether peddled by positive psychologists, Hollywood, Oprah or Christian preachers is a form of magical thinking. It turns worthless mortgages and debt into wealth. It turns the destruction of our manufacturing base into an opportunity for growth. It turns alienation and anxiety into a cheerful conformity, and it turns a nation that wages illegal wars, and administers offshore penal colonies where it administers torture into the greatest democracy on Earth.” 
  
While we spend the majority of our time concentrating on separating ourselves from the kuffar, while at the same time imitating them in their blind ignorance and allegiance to the falsified notions and oppressive, dominant norms of the day. We would do better to recognize that we have adopted many of the same views. We would also do better were we to attempt to revive some of the critical thought and sensible critique that is evident in discussions like these. We need Muslim speakers, authors and activists that attempt to correlate the responsibility to act for justice and truth to a moral obligation mandatory on us all.

At one point Hedges says that, “America’s most dangerous enemies are not Islamic Radicals but those that sold us the perverted ideology of free market capitalism and globalization.” Likewise we suffer from an internal hypocrisy that seems to dominate the age. It is time we join the conversation and opposition to corporate globalization, but first we must seek to understand the principles that challenge its existence. They are the principles we read every time we pick up the Quran, the principles we glaze over and ignore as we separate knowledge from implementation.  In conclusion, Mr. Hedges remarks about the importance of acting with a moral imperativeness that this system must be fought even if the outcome looks bleak… indeed this is the condition of humanity at large – the lacking sense of moral responsibility plagues us all. The sense of complacency and lack of courage to formulate alternatives and fight for the cause of justice haunts us as well. We should all become activists and voices like Chris Hedges, concerned and caring, yet rational and tactful in how approach the obstacles. 

This video gets 4/5 stars and is definitely recommended. Feel free to comment about your own interpretations by clicking on the comment button below. 

Friday, September 3, 2010

Zakat - 3rd Pillar of Islam and Cornerstone of Islamic Policy

As Ramadan comes to an end, many Muslims choose to pay their Zakat, a tax levied on wealth and distributed to others each year. After believing in Allah and the Prophet Muhammad and offering 5 daily prayers, it is interesting to note that Zakah, an economic principle, forms the next most important pillar of Islam. No Muslim can be Muslim without believing it and it is a miraculous system that distributes excess wealth in a majestic way. Unfortunately, there is limited scholarship on this area in a contemporary world without a real, functioning Islam State. Because it has been that way for some time, it is hard to make sense of a contemporary economy in lieu of understandings shed by classical ulama writing before many modern industrial, technological and economic innovations. Nevertheless, studying zakah and elaborating on it in relation to a contemporary economy not only would help to explain to Muslims how to complete their obligations to Allah, but would also pose very real solutions to contemporary social and economic issues.

At- Tabarani (260-360A.H.) related in al-Awsat and As-Saghir, on the authority of Ali, that the Prophet (saws) said, "Allah has enjoined upon rich Muslims a due to be taken from their properties corresponding to the needs of the poor among them.  The poor will never suffer from starvation or lack of clothes unless the rich neglect their due. If they do so, Allah wi surely hold them accountable and punish them severely."  Accroding to at-Tabarani: "It was reported only by Thabit ibn Muhammad ibn Zahid." Of Thabit's credibility, al-Hafiz in turn says: "Thabit was honest and trustworthy. Al Bukhari and others related from him, and the rest of the narrators in the chain are considered as accepted authorities."

Alijah 'Ali Izetbegovic in his book Islam Between East and West relates,
Every social solution must include a human solution. It should change not only economic relations, but also the relations between men. It should bring about the just distribution of goods as well as proper upbringing, love, and sympathy.
Poverty is a problem, but it is also a social sin. It is not solved only through a shift in the ownership of goods, but also through personal striving, aim, and goodwill.  Nothing would be done in the true sense of the word if there were change in the ownership of goods, but hatred, exploitation, and subjugation remained in men's souls. This is the reason for the failure of Christian religious revolts and socialist revolutions. 
Today many millions are destitute while global wealth rests in the hands of a few.  Because the final ten days of Ramadan usually involve contemplation on lessons learned during the month, alongside plans to alter behavior and maintain improved worship into the future, not to mention a time when brothers and sisters sit down to calculate and determine zakat amounts owed (usually with great difficulty), we wanted offer a resource in English that does a great deal to connect the personal obligations of salat to the community and in a way that analyzes the contemporary reality. While many people do not agree with Shaikh Yusef Qaradawi in many issues, few would argue that his book Fiqh al-Zakah is superbly well researched and thought through. In order to facilitate and revive increased discussions around zakah and its implications on policy and society in general, we have posted Dr. Qaradawi's book in English below. Readers may use it to calculate their dues or read from a chapter or two in these final days of Ramadan in order to get a better grasp on the communal nature of worship in Islam.

Fiqh al Zakah vol.1 Yusef al Qaradawi

Monday, August 23, 2010

Perspective and Perception is Everything in Weighing Competence - A tale of Imam Bukhari

Ibn ‘Adiyy said, “I heard a number of Shaykhs relating that when Muhammad ibn Ismaa’eel came to Baghdaad and the companions of hadeeth heard of him, they gathered together and (as a test) they took a hundred hadeeth and they mixed up their chains of narrations and texts, giving the text of one the chain of narration of another, and the chain of narration of one a different text. Then they divided them between ten people for them to ask al-Bukhaaree about them in the gathering. So the people gathered, and one of them began by asking al-Bukhaaree about one of his ten hadeeth, so he replied, ‘I do not know it,’ and he asked him about another and he said, ‘I do not know it,’ this continued until he completed the ten. So, the people of knowledge began looking at one another and saying, ‘The man understands well.’ But the people who did not know thought that al-Bukhaaree was incapable. Then the second began and did the same as the first and al-Bukhaaree kept saying, ‘I do not know it.’ Then the third and so on until all ten
had asked him, and he did not say anything more than, ‘I do not know it.’
Then when he knew that they had finished he turned to the first
of them and said, ‘As for your first hadeeth then it should be
like this, and the second like this, and the third like this...’ right
up to the tenth, restoring each text to its true chain of
narration. He did the same with all of the others, so the people
attested to his memorization.”

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Reflections on Ramadan: Month of Consumption, Battleground of War, Solution for Civilization???

August 11, 2010 marked the beginning of Ramadan for Muslims throughout the world. It also marked the nine year anniversary of the Global War on Islamic Extremism. It is becoming apparent that this war is now as much about ideology as it is about military engagement. As a result, it seems everybody, Muslim and non-Muslim alike, has an interpretation of the Muslim holy book, the Quran. The press coverage surrounding this year’s Ramadan highlights the politicization of an entire religion immersed in an ongoing battle for hearts and minds as competing fields of narrative continue prolonging the contemporary clash of civilizations. No less than the future of makeup and identity in the world is at stake. However, while people of power attempt to utilize a month-long holiday practiced by over a billion people in the world to preserve domination, and thereby adulterate the holy month, a reflection on the intention, essence, and tenets of Ramadan offers a potential counter to an increasingly authoritarian world.

The War on Terror, as expressed by politicians, press and pundit today, is to represent a clash of culture between Islam and Secularism. The notion that indigenous Muslims would embrace the “liberation” of lands invaded as part of this clash has now passed by as myth, yet today a bifurcation of the Muslim village leads many to internalize the ideological war as geographic in terms of Eastern versus Western, or more typically in ways coincident to the rhetoric associated with imperialisms of the past, where the subjects of invasion that embrace the domination of the invader are acknowledged positively and any who oppose are branded barbarian and backwards.  

It is in this manner that the process of globalization has become neo-imperialism with the term ‘rule of law’ as slang for secularization; meaning in reality financier and corporate occupation in developing territories. Where there is resistance to that ‘rule of law’, then there is the opportunity to smash with the contemporary ‘iron fist’, a set of nations and transnational institutions, led by the military might of the United States that will destroy any province that even harbors those expressing defiance to its system, first by embargo then by occupation. This was true of Iraq and Afghanistan, and is true of Iran and other countries like it today.  In its clash with this system, Ramadan itself, has become a representative exemplary expression of this filed of conflict as well, a parcel of the ideological confrontation, and an indicator of how easy it is to become an unknowing participant in the folly of empire.
 
Take the lands under military occupation: In Afghanistan ISAF forces explain that on the first day of Ramadan the Taliban had attacked a mosque. "It is sad that these insurgents have total disregard for their own brothers and holy places during this especially sacred time of the year," said U.S. Navy Cmdr. Mark Edwards, Provincial Reconstruction Team Kunar commander. Elsewhere, 300 Afghans inaugurated the holy month by shouting ‘Death to America’ in the streets after three civilians were killed in yet another ‘Coalition’ attack that obviously has the best interests of Afghans in mind.

On the other primary front of perpetual war, Iraqis kicked off their Ramadan in much the same manner. As recent attacks have spiked and government failure continues, the U.S. prepares for a false draw down of combat troops (50,000 troops and over 100,000 private contractors will remain on 14 permanent military bases), and prepares to claim a false victory.  On the eve of Ramadan, military spokesman Lieutenant General Robert W. Cone attempted to perform the same sort of ideological manipulation. Describing attacks in Basra that killed many civilians, he explained, "Traditionally we've seen an increase in attacks in the early part and just preceding Ramadan," predicting that insurgents will pick up their efforts of wanton violence in a supposed month of spirituality. In both Iraq and Afghanistan the new democratic regimes, imposed at gunpoint by the iron fist, will share the honor of congratulations from western diplomats for the holy month, but the rhetoric of these proceedings will include statements honoring the spiritual principles of passivity and acceptance into global norms that promote and protect injustice.
   
Away from the frontiers of empire, President Obama released a press statement congratulating Muslims and reminding that, "the world we want to build - and the changes that we want to make - must begin in our own hearts, and our own communities,” this a far cry from the Ramadan presentation from Obama in 2009 when, with approval ratings high and just off from speeches in Ankara and Cairo, the President gave a video speech, widely publicized, to usher in what was to represent a continued break from Bush policy.  The annual Zogby Arab Public Opinion Poll released only a few days ago explains the rationale for Obama’s choice to largely remain silent. Last year 51 percent of those polled expressed optimism that Obama would bring change; this year’s results produced a dismal 16 percent expressing hope, while a majority of 63 percent were discouraged. Everywhere the rulers of the world extended their hand to Muslims on the first day of Ramadan, seeking to garner political points in their recognition. Even Benjamin Netanyahu, Prime Minister of Israel, joined the act exclaiming to Muslims living under Israeli occupation that, “I ask for your support both in prayers and in any other joint effort to really create a peaceful and harmonious coexistence,” this as Ambassador Michael Oren and several prominent Rabbis refused an invitation from Barack Obama to celebrate Eid al Fitr, the holiday held at the end of Ramadan, at the White House, many prominent Muslim leaders will attend. Everywhere the general sentiment is that there is an invitation to Muslims for peace and prosperity, that is if they are able to overlook reality altogether and accept domination.

It should therefore be little wonder that many Muslims citing these realities and seeing through the rhetorical manipulation and politicization of their culture denounce the West as the source of all trouble. However, a real analysis of what Ramadan represents in lands largely unaffected by direct occupation reveals a perhaps even greater hypocrisy of rhetoric. Looking at domestic realities leads to a realization that the practice of Ramadan has itself become politicized and that the commoditization of the spiritual practices associated with the month have rendered its actual intention practically null and void. It is this component of an ideological struggle that shows the source of defeat and occupation stems from internal adulterations as much as it does from extraneous impositions. 

In Saudi Arabia, the spiritual center of Islam, the House of Saud unveiled the world’s largest clock in Mecca to initiate the holy month. It took tens of millions, 90 million pieces of colored glass mosaic to cover the clock's tower and two million digital lights to illuminate its crown. While the House of Saud, or oil wealth of the nation, foots the bill of course, a group of German engineers designed it.  A day after its unveiling, King Abdullah restricted the issuance of religious verdicts (fatawa) to senior clerics thereby making it all the more easy for the state to control ideological interpretations of Islam and further suppressing dissident speech against the oppressive state.  Still, the dominant story was Saudi efforts to ‘steal time’ and consume during Ramadan. 

This set of realities represents an apt metaphor for the shortcomings of Ramadan as practiced today. A month devoted to abstinence, simplicity, contemplation, and sacrifice perhaps should not be inaugurated with such proliferate display and repression as the substance and vigor of a deep intellectual tradition, another representation of the intended Ramadan spirit, is further suppressed and a holy month is utilized as a political screen. Perhaps because it is Ramadan, there is very little denunciation of any of these decisions. 

Saudi Arabia is part of the greater Arab Gulf territories, and perhaps paradoxically, spending and consumption increases drastically during the month. Hotel chains this year are preparing to offer special, deluxe tents for people to socialize under through the night and the people tune in by day to watch their favorite religious leaders speak about piety, sandwiched in between advertising that vies for the attention of viewers that increase consumption three fold. In fact, Ramadan is the month of highest consumption throughout the Muslim world. In the Gulf region generally, Ramadan has become synonymous with shopping at the array of malls and metroplexes that have come to burst up amidst the revenue generated by oil proceeds. Companies target consumers during Ramadan no different than marketing increases during holidays in the West; think of it is Super Bowl Sunday for thirty days. In this way, the bifurcation of Muslims is made easy.  Muslims commenting and attempting to alter these hypocrisies must be the allies of extremists, the complacent and complicit follower is acknowledged as a courageous, modern reformer.

In Egypt, spending during the month likewise gives way to an exponential increase in consumption levels and, in turn, to rampant inflation. In a country, subject to poverty and riots due to food prices the rest of the year, the government in Egypt explains that this rise in demand is good for the economy and that they have announced measures that will prevent rampant inflation. John Salevurakis, economics professor at the American University in Cairo argues that, “Given the reality that those price increases have not corrected due to the global crisis, it seems counterproductive to assert that rising demand for food products might be remotely good for an economy.” He admits that it appears somewhat contradictory that a month dedicated to fasting actually results in higher levels of consumption but explains Egyptian circumstances away declaring, “This is not a unique phenomenon, of course, and is quite common elsewhere in the world.” Egyptian sociologist Said Sadek explains that, "We have 30 days of Christmas Eve full of banquets and food," and adds in commenting on the state of the people that, "They are semi-drugged by media, by food, banquets that are being held because religion advises that it is better that people eat together."  Or is it because a compliant set of religious leaders help a statist elite turn a month of piety, moderation and charity into one of excess and burdensome extravagance?

Indeed this condition persists elsewhere. In Bangladesh edible oil prices skyrocket as consumption increases many fold. In Indonesia the government decided to crack down on pornography, but only during Ramadan. “Some 80 percent of porn sites had been blocked by the government”, said Communication and Information Technology Minister Tifatul Sembiring. In Turkey banks have started Ramadan campaigns that promote low-interest rates for the holidays, interest happens to forbidden altogether in Islamic finance. In all Muslim countries the holy month of Ramadan is adulterated as people race to outdo each other in gestures of avarice, and the poor take out loans to satisfy Ramadan norms. 

In Gaza, thanks to a combination of the efforts of the flotilla wave and the utter failure of the Israeli siege, there is an abundance of food and supplies.  Hamas, struggling to pay its bills with the economic embargo will usher in the month by selling some of its government cars, cars are one item that the Israeli blockade prevents Gazans from owning and so are rare commodities. Even in Gaza, where there are the day to day realizations of life under occupation, the practice of Ramadan has become synonymous with consumption.

In Pakistan, the Taliban agreed to a ceasefire due to torrential flooding while President Zardari was traveling around Europe criticizing the incapacity of the West to win in the struggle for hearts and minds. In his absence, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced that the U.S. would increase food aid and flood assistance as long as the United States flag remained strategically posted on all offerings. This comes alongside her contribution to Obama’s rhetorical campaign to mold Islam to U.S. likings.  In a speech that unveiled Obama’s new National Security Strategy last month in front of the Brookings Institute, Clinton explained that, “we are at a race between the forces of integration and disintegration and we see that everyday,” so, “we are no less powerful but we need to apply our power in different ways, we are shifting from moving direct application of power to a more sophisticated and difficult use of indirect power, influence, smart power.” This smart power encompasses the objective of transforming opposition of U.S. interests intelligently into strategic assets and while most would believe it is something new, it is merely an attempt to return the U.S. to a situation similar to that which prevailed prior to the War on Terror, where occupation didn’t require expensive physical presence, but where institutions and financiers could control the country through a loyal elite all too willing to do their bidding.

Pakistan is perhaps the best example of the failure of this approach in the contemporary world. Recent polling suggests Pakistanis prefer Al-Qaeda to Barack Obama, nevertheless the ideological war wages on. Promoting an interpretation of Ramadan, its merits and meanings, in a way coincident to the broader struggle in the world represents a component of such “smart power,” and many of the world’s Muslims are all to quick to adhere directly to that call.  “I urge the countrymen to make full use of the holy month in seeking forgiveness for their sins and in submitting to the will of Allah and also to help generously the people who have been devastated by floods and acts of militancy,” President Zardari stated as he made sure to blame militants for natural disaster and neglected to acknowledge that the Pakistani military had spent the last year destroying Swat Valley and Waziristan, regions largely affected by the flooding, on command from U.S. dictate.

Ramadan may be lost in essence but not in practice, one poll from Jordan shows that 96 percent report that they will fast in Ramadan and that nearly all of those fasting will finish reading the Quran.  The ideological war to define the religion is internal as well and the internal battleground seems to be content mutating a month of piety into one of pleasure and indulgence, coincident of course to the desires of the powers without. This is applicable to other tenants of the religion as well and confirms a continuation of culture clash as policy spillover from the Bush era. It also highlight the importance that Muslims engage in the necessary endeavor of offering an ideological counter to this politicization, a call to make Ramadan representative of everything that breaks away from what has become normal: life dedicated to competition and consumption, the hedonist pursuit of pleasure, and individualism over community concern.  
      
     The rhetoric employed in the post-Bush, Obama era has actually done little to create any actual difference in either the practical or ideological realm. In essence, the Islamic religion continues to be politicized and, in turn, the cultural practice of Islam employed to divide, conquer and deploy ancient colonialist tactics. Shortly after 9-11, amidst an academic class that was contributing to the polarizing paradigm of black and white, Columbia University professor Mahmoud Mamadani began a critique of the political language then that went by largely unrecognized. His book Good Muslim, Bad Muslim: America, the Cold War and the Roots of Terror alongside several pontificating critiques and elaborations in other academic articles described what he referenced as ‘culture talk,’ rhetoric devised to allow the West to steer clear from any discussion that would place the blame of terrorism on its own foreign policy. In his book he explained,
“Culture Talk assumes that every culture has a tangible essence that defines it, and it then explains politics as a consequence of that essence. Culture Talk after 9/11, for example, qualified and explained the practice of "terrorism" as "Islamic." "Islamic terrorism" is thus offered as both description and explanation of the events of 9/11. It is no longer the market, (capitalism) nor the state, (democracy) but culture (modernity) that is said to be the dividing line between those in favor of a peaceful, civic existence and those inclined to terror.”
Thus the essence of Ramadan fits into this framework. When practiced in such hypocritical way, ‘culture talk’ quite craftily brandishes Muslims as backwards. This creates another component of the dividing line that continues to be cast globally as today Muslims across the world continue to be split into two very simplistic camps: good, modern Muslims that adopt to democratic values and ignore the reality that neither the market nor the state adhere to them whether in the East or West while bad, fundamentalist Muslims misunderstand altogether the benign nature of Western dictate, their call for sovereignty is reconfigured to imply barbaric efforts to impose premodernity, and in ways not altogether different from colonialist practices of the past.

The mechanisms associated with the process of sifting one camp from the other are evident in the narratives addressed previously with regard to Ramadan. Good Muslims, adopt the view of the elite, that Ramadan is a lax holiday, a cultural display with no deeper meaning than abstinence during the day in order to celebrate at night. Bad Muslims step away from these celebratory deviations and contradictions and some go so far as to call to the principles associated with the onset of the tradition, thus becoming labeled as ‘fundamentalists’.  Today there is little speech associated with democratizing the Middle East; instead the rhetoric seeks to preserve the authoritarian structures existent there for decades, and ‘culture talk’ continues to reign supreme.

     Vali Nasr, author of the recent publication Forces of Fortune: The Rise of the New Muslim Middle Class and What It will Mean for Our World explains in an article in Foreign Policy that Ramadan is, “not all about pious asceticism. Ramadan is a world-moving force in its own right -- an unpredictable rampant consumerism, surprising conflict, and political skullduggery.” This assessment of what Ramadan has become is essentially correct and thereby Muslims miss the point. Ramadan need not be understood in terms of simple worldly versus other worldly dimensions that allow its most vehement critics and indigenous enemies to point to this apparent contradiction. Were Ramadan to be understood and embodied, in a way coincident with its spiritual intentions, the proper practice of it could create a very tangible ‘world moving force’ with the potential to alter the disastrous circumstances, poles of power, and general norms across the globe. A world where GDP growth was not a measure of absolute success and where there was more meaning to life than the acquisition of transitory material gain.  

Ramadan and the concepts and practices associated with it actually present an opportunity, not only for Muslims, but for people worldwide to understand the root cause of imbalance and conflict in the world. In a reality of radically different circumstances between developed and developing, rich and poor, have and have-nots, the principles of sacrifice, charity, prayer, and simplicity in living represent a departure from an understanding of human nature and purpose that has plagued the age of secularism, a solution that taps at the root of suffering in the world and attacks the philosophical assumption of human nature that mar the secular age.
On the first day of the month of Ramadan in the majority of Muslim countries, Michelle Obama wrapped up an exotic six day trip to Spain that will cost U.S. taxpayers at least $400,000. Meanwhile, her husband, President in Chief cut $11.6 billion from the federal food stamp program that same day.  This occurring simultaneous to the Federal Reserve’s admittance that the trillions of taxpayer dollars it spent bailing out the banks over the past year and a half are not fixing the holes in the economy, that "the pace of recovery in output and employment has slowed," and thus that up to an additional $200 billion of taxpayer money would now be used to buy securitized debt that was built on an American system that helped create a society with 70% of GDP representative of domestic consumption, and a situation where Americans, less than five percent of global population were consuming forty percent of global resources.

Today the American consumer is bankrupt and more than 30 million Americans are on food stamps. Still, one wonders in awe as the government spent all of 2009-10 bailing out the elite and has now started calling for budget restraints with regard to the poor.   For anyone that is familiar with the structural adjustment policies and mechanisms of looting that accompany financial globalization, it is apparent that American consumers have become expendable. For anyone living in the developing world, it also becomes apparent that the megaprojects easily recognized in every city, represent a transition where patterns will be reproduced as demand is stimulated in foreign lands after the death of the western consumer. In the Muslim world the month of Ramadan has potential to become a corporate dream, a month of celebration and consumption, a month long Christmas of materialism and greed.

Financiers and corporations across the globe certainly see a potential in the month of Ramadan, the potential to commoditize it and turn it into a holiday where spending extravagantly becomes the essence of the days.  One need only look at Christmas in the west to comprehend a similitude, and to see the direction the Islamic holy month is heading; a day, held to be the birth of Christ, a man who commanded the one who wanted to get into heaven to sell everything he owned and walk a path of piety has been transformed into the biggest expression of materialism on the planet.

These concepts represent globalization, as presently practiced, in its proper light as neo-imperialism, a system that prioritizes the interest of global elite over everyday man, a system that knows it is bound to encounter and spur violent reactions to its conquest and deceit, a system that therefore must take the sacred and manipulate it according to its own needs, a system that holds no loyalty to any nation state, collective of people, no adherence to moral law, a system that is everywhere and effects everyone, a system that is winning the war. 

So then what is there to cover but the rhetoric of politicians, and the increased consumption and lavish spending that occurs during the month of self restraint? This contemporary ‘culture war’ has become much more nuanced, but is not all that different from the justifications for imperialism of old. There are still good and bad Muslims, the good Muslims are those that are just like “us”, those that spend and celebrate life with little or no critical thought about the reality around them, the bad Muslims are those that refuse to allow the holy tradition to be adulterated in such demeanor, the isolated violent reaction against the appalling conditions is to prove that all Bad Muslims are the same, if today they are shunning corporatism and occupation tomorrow they will be blowing themselves up in the marketplace.

This Ramadan presents an opportunity to counter these trends. Westerners so too are suffering, and are slowly themselves becoming the victim of imperialist globalization, as demand curves rise in developing countries and the machine of globalist corporatism wreaks its havoc abroad, the behavior recorded of Muslims in Ramadan lets them know Muslims are open for exploitation.  A month like Ramadan, which includes abstaining from food, drink and sex with marital partners from sun up to sundown, recommends contemplation, delving into the literary majesty of the Holy Quran and contemplating its many verses that command awareness and action in a very real struggle between truth and falsehood, could pose a system of principled opposition to the ideological mutation that is the world order of the day. Unfortunately, Muslims are unable to see that the corporate logos are contemporary idols, that the educated consumer would trace all the world’s brand names back to the same elite cartels, that delving into rampant consumerism during a month of abstinence defies and rejects the essence of the message of Islam, and thereby allows the argument of bipolarity, West versus East, good Muslim versus bad Muslim to deter attention from a set of norms and culture of barbarism that today dominates the globe. When reactionary Muslims contemplate ‘Death to America’ do they include in that abstract conglomerate the millions of poor and oppressed Americans suffering at the hands of this system as well? Do they realize that the fall of America leaves behind the authoritarian regimes that dominate what were once the lands of Islam? Do they realize that many preserve the outward practice of fasting Ramadan while rejecting the reality that in a world where consumption is God, they have adopted the idolatry of the day? 

The essence of the month of Ramadan is giving, self sacrifice, gratitude, and drawing closer to the God of all Abrahamic traditions, were any to attain that realization and make headway into a call of transformation in self and society, they would be branded ‘Bad Muslims,’ unwilling participants in the process of religion as opiate of the mass.  Ramadan is beginning to look a lot like Christmas, but were Muslims able to recognize that external and internal threats have merged, then responsibility for plight and disorder would be shared and personalized. Action, seeking to recognize Ramadan for the essence of revolutionary alteration it represents, could be used to empower and embolden a conscious movement against the direction toward Armageddon the world seems to be heading.  Personal and communal actions dedicated to erasing internal hypocrisies and contradictions could lead to release from external domination. Let us allow this Ramadan to be a month of simplicity and abstinence for humans everywhere and a means of getting back to understanding the basics of human existence. Let us mobilize around Ramadan’s true principles and call others to do the same, let us mount victory in the battle for hearts and minds, let us thereby free others that are oppressed and work towards building a better world for all.  Ramadan Kareem!