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
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. |
This might explain the appeal that Islam has among the Black underclass. It reinforces the fatalistic world-view that was already present among them
Fatalism is integral to the Islamic world-view. When a Muslim makes a statement about doing something in the future, he always seems to append "inshallah" (God willing). The idea that a man can shape his own future, and is responsible for his own condition seems to be absent from Muslim culture
Islam is a culture of conquest. It's Golden Age was during its period of expansion and conquest. It absorbed Persia and Babylon and Byzantium, Roman colonies in North Africa, and parts of India.
In the process, it absorbed people who understood how to run a civilization. While such people were being absorbed, Islamic civilization functioned. But for existing Muslims, there was no respect for learning that was not related to the Koran. When Islam stopped conquering existing civilizations, and the inflow of people stopped, Islam went into decline.
Don't bet on it.
I'm having a very hard time making a sell.
"You know, Bin Laden is more mainstream than you think."
"Oh, come on. They're not all like that."
"No. Not all. I'm sure most of them do their jobs and go home and watch TV. The problem is, none of this stuff is against their religion. Most of them probably don't even know it. You wouldn't believe the stuff that's in the Koran. Did you know that when Mohammed was 50 he married a nine-year-old?..."
"Oh come on. There's crazy stuff in every religion..."
Anyone else having a similar experience?
BUMP
It has much to do with the religion. Muslim men are supposed to have 4 wives and they are all to be breeders, but no man who must work for a living can support 4 wives and 40 children, the women aren't supposed to work so they can't contribute financially so obviously most except the oil men will be impoverished. Islam supports the buying of wives, an older man can buy a 12 year old and keep her having babies, then he dies and leaves a jobless young widos. Also women are not supposed to be educated. Obviously a man with 40 kids isn't going to be spending any time with any of them, the women can't read books or teach their children so the culture promotes ignorance. Then there's the problem of the 3 out 4 men who don't have wives, they have no purpose but to die for the religion.
They don't merit philosophical musings -- They deserve prompt retribution.
The Chinese experienced a similar lock in time. They were very advanced many thousands of years ago long before the other civilizations but something happened. They were forging and casting various metals very early on. Whatever it was basically stopped all innovation and locked their history.
Isn't this how the Democrats set up the House Bank?
definitely
We will soon see just how peaceful and tolerant Islam really is.
Stay wel _ Stay safe - Stay armed - Yorktown
Once the Western food and medicine and machine parts stop flowing into the islamic nations, they will slide into warlordism, civil war, anarchy, starvation and disease. In ten years, they will resemble Kabul or Mogadishu.
Precisely why I think that our military policy should be to let them stew and quietly eliminate those who plan to export a violent manifest of internal frustration.
In the ancient world, conquest of land was considered a hallmark of civilization and by that count, Islam was remarkably successful until about the time of the European Renaissance. But other than some geometric art and some modern scientists (who live in the west), the Islamic world has produced very little for civilization. In fact, innovation is actively discouraged by most Muslim nations even though some very creative and intelligent people do break through -- especially in the modern era.
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