| What
is Jihad
New York Post
December 31, 2002
What does the Arabic
word "jihad" mean?
One answer came last week, when Saddam Hussein had his Islamic leaders
appeal to Muslims worldwide to join his jihad to defeat the "wicked
Americans" should they attack Iraq; then he himself threatened the
United States with jihad.
As this suggests, jihad is "holy war." Or, more precisely: It
means the legal, compulsory, communal effort to expand the territories
ruled by Muslims at the expense of territories ruled by non-Muslims.
The purpose of jihad, in other words, is not directly to spread the Islamic
faith but to extend sovereign Muslim power (faith, of course, often follows
the flag). Jihad is thus unabashedly offensive in nature, with the eventual
goal of achieving Muslim dominion over the entire globe.
Jihad did have two variant meanings through the centuries, one more radical,
one less so. The first holds that Muslims who interpret their faith differently
are infidels and therefore legitimate targets of jihad. (This is why Algerians,
Egyptians and Afghans have found themselves, like Americans and Israelis,
so often the victims of jihadist aggression.) The second meaning, associated
with mystics, rejects the legal definition of jihad as armed conflict
and tells Muslims to withdraw from the worldly concerns to achieve spiritual
depth.
Jihad in the sense of territorial expansion has always been a central
aspect of Muslim life. That's how Muslims came to rule much of the Arabian
Peninsula by the time of the Prophet Muhammad's death in 632. It's how,
a century later, Muslims had conquered a region from Afghanistan to Spain.
Subsequently, jihad spurred and justified Muslim conquests of such territories
as India, Sudan, Anatolia, and the Balkans.
Today, jihad is the world's foremost source of terrorism, inspiring a
worldwide campaign of violence by self-proclaimed jihadist groups:
* The International Islamic Front for the Jihad Against Jews and
Crusaders: Osama bin Laden's organization;
* Laskar Jihad: responsible for the murder of more than
10,000 Christians in Indonesia;
* Harakat ul-Jihad-i-Islami: a leading cause of violence
in Kashmir;
* Palestinian Islamic Jihad: the most vicious anti-Israel
terrorist group of them all;
* Egyptian Islamic Jihad: killed Anwar El-Sadat in 1981,
many others since, and
* Yemeni Islamic Jihad: killed three American missionaries
on Monday.
But jihad's most ghastly present reality is in Sudan, where until recently
the ruling party bore the slogan "Jihad, Victory and Martyrdom."
For two decades, under government auspices, jihadists there have physically
attacked non-Muslims, looted their belongings and killed their males.
Jihadists then enslaved tens of thousands of females and children, forced
them to convert to Islam, sent them on forced marches, beat them and set
them to hard labor. The women and older girls also suffered ritual gang-rape,
genital mutilation and a life of sexual servitude.
Sudan's state-sponsored jihad has caused about 2 million deaths and the
displacement of another 4 million - making it the greatest humanitarian
catastrophe of our era.
Despite jihad's record as a leading source of conflict for 14 centuries,
causing untold human suffering, academic and Islamic apologists claim
it permits only defensive fighting, or even that it is entirely non-violent.
Three American professors of Islamic studies colorfully make the latter
point, explaining jihad as:
* An "effort against evil in the self and every manifestation of
evil in society" (Ibrahim Abu-Rabi, Hartford Seminary);
* "Resisting apartheid or working for women's rights" (Farid
Eseck, Auburn Seminary), and
* "Being a better student, a better colleague, a better business
partner. Above all, to control one's anger" (Bruce Lawrence, Duke
University).
It would be wonderful were jihad to evolve into nothing more aggressive
than controlling one's anger, but that will not happen simply by wishing
away a gruesome reality. To the contrary, the pretense of a benign jihad
obstructs serious efforts at self-criticism and reinterpretation.
The path away from terrorism, conquest and enslavement lies in Muslims
forthrightly acknowledging jihad's historic role, followed by apologies
to jihad's victims, developing an Islamic basis for nonviolent jihad and
(the hardest part) actually ceasing to wage violent jihad.
Unfortunately, such a process of redemption is not now under way; violent
jihad will probably continue until it is crushed by a superior military
force (Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, please take note). Only when
jihad is defeated will moderate Muslims finally find their voice and truly
begin the hard work of modernizing Islam.
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