The
movement is dead. Long live the movement! It is too late in the day to
meander around certain issues. One of them is what kind of modus operandi
we as Muslims living in the West adopt in order to ensure our survival,
prosperity and relevancy. Two years after the traumatic events of 9/11
and decades of existence in a state of limbo it is time we made a critical
assessment of our situation: the condition we are in, how we got here and
where we need to go.
This process
has to begin with a honest appraisal. We have to start with an understanding
that we, as a community, are in a mess. And that unless things change fundamentally
it will continue to get messier.
Our story so
far has been one of missed and squandered opportunities. Over the years
we have allowed ourselves to be victims of our own narrow understanding
of Islam and our role in society. If anything we have done an amazing job
of reducing the great teachings of this faith to suit our own idiosyncrasies.
We have projected so much of our neurosis on Islam that for the majority
of people the deen has little context out of discussions on beards, scarves,
khilafah and halal meat. But perhaps the worst crime we have committed
is turn Islam, this great gift to mankind, into some kind of tribal emblem
that assembles all those who are angry, violent and consumed with hatred
to justify equally inhuman, barbaric and un-Islamic behaviour and actions.
Our young people
lack role models other than those provided by the hostile media surrounding
us. They are brought up on a shallow textbook understanding of Islam that
teaches them neither humility nor love. Caught in the dialectics of the
race industry and attracted by the blame culture behind most of the reasoning
behind Islamophobia, they are loudest when it comes to rights but negligent
when it comes to responsibilities.
We turn a blind
eye to those among us who cheat the welfare system and yet expect to be
taken seriously when we condemn corrupt rulers in our countries; we demand
pluralism and transparency overseas while we run our organisations like
family heirlooms with no sense of accountability or responsibility to both
man or God.
Our young are
adept at shouting cheap political slogans but struggle with simple dhikrs.
Most have hardly mastered the art of performing ghusl properly yet feel
qualified in discussing complex religious matters that are of no immediate
benefit to anybody. Hundreds turn out to demonstrate outside an embassy
or government building in the cold but few are prepared to man soup kitchens
for the homeless or offer their services to orphanages or the elderly.
We lack original
thinking and most of our ‘writers’ and ‘intellectuals’ are pastiche artists.
Others attain greatness by writing introductions and prefaces to old political
tracts. Nothing is more sad than seeing our young people pumping themselves
up with ideas and understandings forged in 30s Egypt, 40s subcontinent
and 50s Lebanon.
Our organisations
are structured like medieval clubs; our ‘leaders’ don’t even represent
their shadows. We suppress and resent diversity and dissent within our
own ranks yet are champions for them everywhere. Merit is never a consideration
when choosing our leaders but subservience and mediocrity seem to be.
We are gender
fascists: we patronise women and give them little value other than what
is tokenistic. We hate the rebellious young, the intelligent other and
those who refuse to be part of the herd.
We must change,
or face the consequences. Whether we want it or not this revolution is
already taking place. We must understand that the future lies with those
institutions and individuals who are relevant to the struggle to establish
Islam here in the UK. And that our success in this world would be measured
by the state of Islam we can inject in our lives and those of our relatives,
friends and neighbours and not in the creation of some utopian Islamic
state.
Finally, it
is wise in our modern times that we don’t indulge in doublespeak: we must
say in public what we say in private. And that we all know that it is a
lie for any group of people to suggest that they have a strategy for our
salvation that is ‘secret’ and in the custodian of only a few chosen ones.
If anybody
has a magic formula to get us out of the abyss we are in it is their duty,
nay, their obligatory duty (fard) not only to make it public but accessible
to all.
Out there at
the moment, believe us, their is no movement: only signs to a cul de sac.