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The Closing of the Islamic Mind
The Daily Standard ^ | 10/11/2001 | David Brooks

Posted on 10/14/2001 11:53:36 PM PDT by Dan Day

The Closing of the Islamic Mind
A decade ago, Nobel Prize winner V.S. Naipaul knew the dangers of a backward-looking Islam.
by David Brooks
10/11/2001


David Brooks, senior editor

TWO OF THE MOST BRILLIANT EXPLANATIONS of Osama bin Laden were written 11 years ago. The first is an essay that appeared in the September 1990 issue of the Atlantic Monthly by Bernard Lewis called "The Roots of Muslim Rage." The second is a lecture delivered by V.S. Naipaul as part of the Manhattan Institute's annual Wriston Lecture series on October 30, 1990. Lewis is one of the great intellectuals of our age, but Naipaul won the Nobel Prize for literature today, so let's review his thinking.

The lecture was called "Our Universal Civilization," but it is really about time and perceptions of time. Those who believe that almost all fundamental political disputes are really arguments between theories of history will find much to their liking.

Naipaul starts by describing a young man he met in Java who wanted to become a poet. Not a lot of money in that, but Naipaul asked him, "Isn't your mother secretly proud you are a poet?" The young man replied, "She wouldn't have even a sense of what being a poet is." In her worldview, all poetry had been written. It was passed down through the ages. Having her son come up and tell her that he wanted to be a poet was akin to having him tell her he wanted to grow up and rewrite the Bible. This woman's conception of history was static, whereas her son had moved into a different culture.

When Naipaul used the phrase Universal Civilization, he was talking about that civilization that believes in the future, in progress, in the unfolding of human accomplishment. That civilization started in Europe, and once had racialist overtones, but it has spread.

It has enemies, however. Naipaul goes on to describe his journeys through non-Arab Muslim lands. What was striking about these places was that they were not originally Islamic. They had been something else. But that pre-Islamic past was everywhere denounced and erased. In the virulent form of Islam that Naipaul found in, say, Iran, the glories of Persia were being denied and abolished. In the beginning was error, apostasy, disgrace. Then came Islam and truth. End of story. "Faith abolished the past," Naipaul reported.

The style of religion he found was a complete way of life. "To possess the faith was to possess the only truth; and possession of this truth set many things on its head. To believe that the time before the coming of the faith was a time of error distorted more than an idea of history. What lay within the faith was to be judged one way; what lay outside of it was to be in another."

Naipaul was born in Trinidad to a Hindu family. At 18 he won a scholarship to Oxford, and he has lived in England since. In other words, he has many different cultures in his heritage, many histories flowing through his veins: Trinidad, India, England, the culture of the global intellectual class.

But the Islamicists he met in his travels repressed all their histories but one. The Taliban recently destroyed a 1,500 year old Buddhist shrine, but the Islamic radicals commit the same sort of vandalism within themselves. They destroy all their inheritances but Islamic fundamentalism.

And when they face a world in which they confront the pluralism of histories, they grow disoriented. Naipaul calls it "philosophical hysteria."

During his trip though Iran, Naipaul met a newspaper editor who had been at the center of the 1979 revolution. Seven months later his son was trying to get a visa to study in the United States, but the hostage crisis was underway and he couldn't get in. This man, who had supported the Khomeini revolution, was lamenting his son's predicament. "It's his future," he said. The father in him could not quite accept that his son would live as a slave to the past.

All of this really helps us understand bin Laden. He and his followers have mutilated themselves, by destroying all but one of their cultural inheritances. They believe in only one history, and it was defined and perfected long ago. Everything since is decline. In bin Laden's crackpot version of history, everything since the decline of the Ottoman empire and its alleged greatness is an additional outrage and insult to God.

In this worldview the future is not especially important (so why not go blow yourself up in a plane?). In fact, the concept of an unknown and desirable future is something of an insult. America stands for the future. It's the land of promise. More than anywhere else, it is a country with a multiplicity of histories intertwining. It's the place where the different pasts of the world come together to bring human freedom to fruition. In Lincoln's words, it's the "last best hope of earth." The emphasis in that phrase is on "last." It's hard to imagine a time when America settles back into the realm of unimportant middle rank nations, because America is about chasing the future fastest, whatever that future is. That's what the phrase, "the pursuit of happiness" means, a phrase Naipaul dissects in his speech.

So America's conception of history is the antithesis of bin Laden's. He recognizes an enemy when he sees one.

David Brooks is a senior editor at The Weekly Standard.



TOPICS: Editorial; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: clashofcivilizatio
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This is an excellent article, and the two linked essays are superb reading as well.
1 posted on 10/14/2001 11:53:36 PM PDT by Dan Day
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To: Dan Day
Thanks. Great stuff.

BOOKMARKED.
BUMP.

2 posted on 10/15/2001 12:00:39 AM PDT by ppaul
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To: Dan Day

Click above banner to go to site.

3 posted on 10/15/2001 12:02:56 AM PDT by ppaul
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To: StoneColdGOP; dubyaismypresident; rockchalkjayhawk; 2Jedismom; beowolf; TheOtherOne; dennisw...
Bookmarked and Bumped! Please read the linked essays.
4 posted on 10/15/2001 12:28:21 AM PDT by Cool Guy
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To: Dan Day
A bump except for the title. They don't have 'minds'. Why do you think they pray so much? They need to get their regular fixes of demonic instruction. The Islamic mind is just a machine operated by a ghost. Another ghost.
5 posted on 10/15/2001 12:37:21 AM PDT by mercy
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To: Cool Guy; FITZ; Manny Festo; Lent; patent; dennisw; harpseal
Great essay!
6 posted on 10/15/2001 12:39:59 AM PDT by Travis McGee
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To: Travis McGee
The truth about Jihadist Islam is exposed more and more to the sunlight. Many threads on FreeRepublic are doing so.
7 posted on 10/15/2001 12:43:03 AM PDT by dennisw
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To: Dan Day
Islamic Mind = Oxymoron

So much writing going on, trying to find a reason for their cultural, moral, human failures. It is, in a word, mindless.

8 posted on 10/15/2001 12:44:31 AM PDT by truth_seeker
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To: Lent
btttttttttttttt
9 posted on 10/15/2001 12:45:14 AM PDT by dennisw
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To: Cool Guy
I like Naipaul. Great writer. A truth teller.
10 posted on 10/15/2001 12:47:59 AM PDT by dennisw
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To: dennisw
I hope the truth is spreading far beyond FR.
11 posted on 10/15/2001 12:51:31 AM PDT by Travis McGee
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To: Dan Day
One of the main things that must drive Muslims crazy is that the only Islamic countries which are not in poverty are the ones with oil, that Islam does not work in a modern, technological society. The concepts of "future" and "progress" may have something to do with this.
12 posted on 10/15/2001 12:59:22 AM PDT by SauronOfMordor
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To: Cool Guy
BTTT
13 posted on 10/15/2001 1:21:35 AM PDT by 2Trievers
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To: Travis McGee
I hope the truth is spreading far beyond FR.

Don't bet on it.

14 posted on 10/15/2001 1:25:04 AM PDT by KayEyeDoubleDee
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To: SauronOfMordor
One of the main things that must drive Muslims crazy is that the only Islamic countries which are not in poverty are the ones with oil, that Islam does not work in a modern, technological society. The concepts of "future" and "progress" may have something to do with this.

I think it is pretty clear that Islamic culture is economically oppressive, as by you observation, although this may have as much to do with the whim of the ruling elites as the religion.

However, it is my understanding that Islamic teaching actually prohibits profiting from sales. I could be wrong about this and a more informed freeper might be able to shed some light.

15 posted on 10/15/2001 1:32:37 AM PDT by KayEyeDoubleDee
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To: SauronOfMordor
I don't think that's an accident. The only Islamic country to successfully master modernity separated Islam from the state and adopted wholesale Western law, customs, and even the Latin alphabet! Kemal Ataturk's revolution in Turkey was extraordinary and his acceptance that his country's identity and future lay with the West was and is unique in the Islamic world. Its interesting Ataturk's reforms weren't copied elsewhere and that perhaps is the key to the misery and stagnation that's engulfed the rest of Islam ever since. And the failure of other Islamic countries to turn modernity into an asset has led to a rejection of the idea that progress is a necessary and inevitable outcome of the human condition. In particular Islamist Nazis have taken this victimhood mentality by blaming the West for Islam's backwardedness and in an ironic twist have used the West's own instruments of progress to destroy the advertised superiority of a culture and way of life they find completely unbearable. The West is faced then with people who view themselves as a failure and who seek to validate that view by taking down those they believe are responsible for that condition. What is particular striking about this point of view about Islamic man as articulated by Islamist Nazis is how much it shares in common with the self-hatred of leftist Western intellectuals for the success of the West. This is not a state of mind the West can address or cure; it will have to simply defend itself from both its external and internal enemies the best it can. Whether the Islamic world is capable of surmounting its victim condition and stop hating the West and become an adult and accept that it alone can change the state to which it has condemned itself is the issue that will define the rest of the 21st century and perhaps decide the fate of the world itself.
16 posted on 10/15/2001 1:32:46 AM PDT by goldstategop
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To: goldstategop
A perceptive assessment. One of the best I have seen. Thanks.
17 posted on 10/15/2001 2:09:20 AM PDT by beekeeper
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To: Dan Day
bump for later reading
18 posted on 10/15/2001 5:03:36 AM PDT by Centurion2000
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To: KayEyeDoubleDee
However, it is my understanding that Islamic teaching actually prohibits profiting from sales.

Islam is against the charging of interest on loans. This makes banking and credit more complicated. My understanding of Islamic banks is that they're more like mutual funds with check-writing priviliges

19 posted on 10/15/2001 5:10:04 AM PDT by SauronOfMordor
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To: goldstategop
The weird thing is that a thousand years ago the Islamic world was at the forefront of culture and innovation. In fact, the ancient Roman and Greek texts came to us because they were translated into Arabic and then re-translated back again. Something happened in the Islamic world in the last few centuries to cause their world to remain in the past while the West vastly surpassed them. Perhaps they couldn't adapt to the Industrial Revolution.
20 posted on 10/15/2001 5:12:53 AM PDT by PJ-Comix
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