Islamist discourse,
like any other political discourse, is full of plastic concepts and
ideas that are meant to serve politically utilitarian and instrumental
purposes. But what is important for us to remember is that the
instrumental use of such plastic concepts (including 'democracy', 'human
rights', 'justice', etc.) invariably leads to their contestation as
well, as they come to serve as tools for political mobilization.
The word 'Jihad' has now entered the space of international political
and media discourse, along with those other well-known favourites,
'Fatwa', 'Mullah' and 'Shariah'. Yet this entry has also been a
disabling one that has robbed the word of some of its meaning while
stretching the limits of its signification even further. 'Fatwa' for
instance, has now come to mean 'death penalty' thanks to the fatwa
against the British Muslim author Salman Rushdie. But those who have
some knowledge of Islamic jurisprudence will tell you that 'Fatwa'
really means 'judicial ruling'- and these rulings can range from grave
matters like the death penalty to mundane everyday concerns like the
proper price of sheep in the market. The latest casualty in the war over
meaning is the word 'Jihad'.
That the term 'Jihad' has become such a plastic concept is hardly
surprising. Plasticity is, after all, a normal feature of language and
signifiers invariably lose their roots as they find themselves
translated from one context to another.
But without falling into the trap of narrow essentialism, it is
nonetheless useful for us to get to grips with the concept of Jihad
itself and understand how it came into being - If only to see just how
far the term has been abused of late.
'Jihad' can be loosely translated as 'to struggle' or 'to expend effort'
towards a particular cause. The term was originally used to refer to
one's personal struggle against one's own mortal failings and
weaknesses, which would include battling against one's pride, fears,
anxieties and prejudices. The Prophet Muhammad himself was reported to
have described this personal existential struggle as the 'Jihad Akbar'
(Greater Jihad). Alongside this notion of the Jihad Akbar was the
concept of 'Jihad Asgar' or 'Lesser Jihad'. This refers to the struggle
for self-preservation and self-defence - which has always been regulated
by a host of ethical sanctions and prerogatives.
The Quran does stipulate clearly that Muslims have to engage in a Jihad
when they are under attack, but the conditions for such a jihad are
clearly laid out and are strictly defined within certain ethical
prerogatives. Muslims cannot engage in conflict for the sake of mere
territorial expansion for instance (which brings into question the legal
status of the early Arab conquests which were motivated mainly by
considerations of realpolitik). Muslims also cannot engage in acts of
terror and indiscriminate violence where civilians are targeted. (In
fact, numerous Muslim leaders like the early Caliphs even warned their
troops not to burn the fields of their enemies or kill their livestock).
A proper Jihad for the sake of self-defence was therefore a complicated
and highly regulated matter - and the rulers had to consult the jurists
as well as their own populations before such an enterprise was
undertaken.
But Islam, it must be remembered, also happens to be a faith that does
not possess a clerical class or a supreme leader like the Pope. On the
positive side this lends the creed an egalitarian outlook which puts all
Muslims on par with each other. But on the negative side the absence of
a centralised hierarchy also means that the Muslim world is full of
self-proclaimed 'leaders of the faith' like the Taliban and their
unwanted guest, Osama bin Laden.
It is this absence of a clerical order and the plasticity of religious
discourse that allows concepts like 'Jihad' to be hijacked by such
self-appointed defenders of orthodoxy. Coupled with this is the
predicament of a Muslim world that feels itself increasingly threatened
and marginalised by the forces of globalisation, leading to the
defensive posture being adopted by many Muslim leaders themselves.
'Jihad' has now been taken - by Muslims and non-Muslims alike - to refer
to an aggressive attitude that is rooted in a reactionary discourse of
authenticity and purity, giving it a militant edge that it did not
possess. While it is true that the international media has done some
damage to the understanding of 'Jihad', it is also important for Muslims
to realize that the term itself has been used and abused by the very
same people who have resorted to the use of violence in their name.
The task that lies before the Muslim community today is to reclaim the
concept of 'Jihad' and to invest it with other meanings different to
those imposed by the Mullahs and militants. Cognisant of the painful
realities that stand before the Muslim world at present, Muslim
intellectuals must jump into the fray and regain control of the
discourse of Islam which has for too long been regarded as the exclusive
purview of the dogmatic Mullahs. We have to break down the rigid
pedagogical structures that have kept Islamic discourse in such a static
mode by by-passing traditional institutions of learning and
indoctrination. Everything - from the universities to the media - will
have to be used as the new sites of Islamic thought and education, in
order for us to spread our message across to the wider public.
Muslim intellectuals need to show that our struggle in the present-day
has more to do with striving for economic development, modernisation and
the creation of civil society. Rather than thinking of 'Jihad' in
exclusive and defensive terms, we need to redefine the concept in
proactive terms that link it to the actual economic, social and cultural
needs of the Muslims of today. 'Jihad', we need to show, is useless
unless it brings us closer to a more prosperous, liberal and tolerant
society where Muslims are at ease with themselves and the Other. For
liberal and progressive Muslims at least, this Jihad has only just
begun.
Dr. Farish A. Noor is a
Malaysian political scientist and human rights activist. He has taught
at the Centre for Civilisational Dialogue, University of Malaya and the
Institute for Islamic Studies, Frie University of Berlin. He is
currently associate fellow at the
Institute for
Strategic and International Studies (ISIS), Malaysia.
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