This is not an Islamic revolution

The uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia show that Islam is now less potent politically, even as its socia

In Europe, the popular uprisings in North Africa and the Middle East have been interpreted using a model that is more than 30 years old: the 1979 Islamic revolution in Iran. Commentators have been expecting to see Islamist groups - the Muslim Brotherhood and their local equivalents - either at the head of the movement or lying in wait, ready to seize power. But the discretion of the Muslim Brotherhood has surprised and disconcerted them: where have the Islamists gone?

Look at those involved in the uprisings, and it is clear that we are dealing with a post-Islamist generation. For them, the great revolutionary movements of the 1970s and 1980s are ancient history, their parents' affair. The members of this young generation aren't interested in ideology: their slogans are pragmatic and concrete - "Erhal!" or "Go now!". Unlike their predecessors in Algeria in the 1980s, they make no appeal to Islam; rather, they are rejecting corrupt dictatorships and calling for democracy. This is not to say that the demonstrators are secular; but they are operating in a secular political space, and they do not see in Islam an ideology capable of creating a better world.

The same goes for other ideologies: they are nationalist (look at all the flag-waving) without advocating nationalism. Particularly striking is the abandonment of conspiracy theories. The United States and Israel - or France, in the case of Tunisia - are no longer identified as the cause of all the misery in the Arab world. The slogans of pan-Arabism have been largely absent, too, even if the copycat effect that brought Egyptians and Yemenis into the streets following the events in Tunis shows that the "Arab world" is a political reality.

This generation is pluralist, undoubtedly because it is also individualist. Sociological studies show that it is better educated than previous generations, better informed, often with access to modern means of communication that allow individuals to connect with one another without the mediation of political parties - which in any case are banned. These young people know that Islamist regimes have become dictatorships; neither Iran nor Saudi Arabia holds any fascination for them. Indeed, those who have been demonstrating in Egypt are the same kinds of people as those who poured on to the streets to oppose Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2009. (For propaganda reasons, the regime in Tehran has declared its support for the opposition movement in Egypt, though this is little more than a settling of scores with Hosni Mubarak.) Many of them are religious believers, but they keep their faith separate from their political demands. In this sense, the movement is "secular". Religious observance has been individualised.

Above all, people have been dem­onstrating for dignity and "respect", a watchword that emerged in Algeria in the late 1990s. And the values to which they are laying claim are universal. But the "democracy" that is being called for is not foreign, and therein lies the difference from the Bush administration's attempt to promote democracy in Iraq in 2003. That did not work, because it lacked political legitimacy and was associated with a military intervention. Today, paradoxically, it is the waning of US influence in the Middle East, together with the pragmatism of the Obama administration, that has allowed a native and fully legitimate demand for democracy to be expressed.

That said, a revolt is not a revolution. The new popular movement has no leaders, no structure and no political parties, which will make the task of anchoring democracy in these former dictatorships difficult. It is unlikely that the collapse of the old regimes will automatically lead to the establishment in their place of liberal democracies, as Washington once hoped would happen in Iraq.

What of the Islamists, those who see in Islam a political ideology capable of solving all of society's problems? They have not disappeared, but they have changed. The most radical of them have left to wage international jihad; they are in the desert with al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, in Pakistan or the suburbs of London. They have no social or political base. Indeed, global jihad is completely detached from social movements and national struggles. Al-Qaeda tries to present itself as the vanguard of the global Muslim "umma" in its battle against western oppression, but without success. Al-Qaeda recruits deracinated young jihadists who have cut themselves off entirely from their families and communities. It remains stuck in the logic of the "propaganda of the deed" and has never bothered to try to build political structures inside Muslim societies.

Because al-Qaeda tends to concentrate its activities in the west or aims at so-called western targets elsewhere, its actual impact is next to nil.
It is a mistake, therefore, to link the re-Islam­isation that has taken place in the Arab world over the past 30 years with political radicalism. If Arab societies are more visibly Islamic than they were 30 or 40 years ago, what explains the absence of Islamic slogans from the current demonstrations? The paradox of Islamisation is that it has largely depoliticised Islam. Social and cultural re-Islamisation - the wearing of the hijab and niqab, an increase in the number of mosques, the proliferation of preachers and Muslim television channels - has happened without the intervention of militant Islamists and has in fact opened up a "religious market", over which no one enjoys a monopoly. In short, the Islamists have lost the stranglehold on religious expression in the public sphere that they enjoyed in the 1980s.

Dictatorships in the Arab world, though not in Tunisia, have often favoured a conservative Islam that is highly visible but not especially political, and that is obsessed with controlling public morals. (The wearing of the hijab, for instance, has become commonplace.) This has meshed with the "Salafist" movement, which emphasises the re-Islamisation of individuals rather than the development of social movements. What has been perceived in the west as a great, green wave of re-Islamisation is in fact nothing but a trivialisation of Islam: everything has become Islamic, from fast food to women's fashion. The forms and structures of piety, however, have become individualised, so now one constructs one's own faith, seeking out the preacher who speaks of self-realisation, such as the Egyptian Amr Khaled, and abandoning all interest in the utopia of an Islamic state. The Salafists concentrate on the preservation of religious values and have no political programme. Moreover, other religious currents until now regarded as being in decline, such as Sufism, are flourishing once more. This growing diversity of faith goes even beyond the confines of Islam, as in the cases of Algeria and Iran, where there has been a wave of conversions to Christianity.

It is also a mistake to see the dictatorships as defending secularism against religious fanaticism. With the exception of Tunisia, authoritarian regimes in the Arab world have not made their societies secular; on the contrary, they have reached an accommodation with a neofundamentalist form of re-Islamisation in which the imposition of sharia law is called for without any discussion of the nature of political power. Everywhere, official Muslim institutions, based on an austere conservative theology, have been co-opted by the state. This has become so effective that the traditional clerics trained at al-Azhar University in Cairo no longer have anything to say about the main social and political questions of the day. They have nothing to offer a younger generation looking for ways of living their faith in a more open world.

These developments have also affected Islamist political movements, as is exemplified by the changing face of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and al-Nahda, the "renaissance party", in Tunisia. The Muslim Brotherhood has changed in response to troubling events, as much in what seemed like success (the Islamic Revolution in Iran) as in defeat (the repression that has been meted out to it everywhere). A new generation of militants has drawn lessons from this, as have such veterans as Rachid Ghannouchi, founder of al-Nahda. They have understood that seeking to take power in the wake of a revolution leads either to civil war or to dictatorship. And in their struggle against repression, they have come into contact with other political forces and formations. Knowing their own societies well, they are aware that ideology carries little weight within them. They have also learned lessons from Turkey, where Recep Tayyip Erdogan and the AK party have succeeded in reconciling democracy, electoral success, economic development and national independence with the promotion of values that are, if not Islamic, at least "authentic".

Above all, the Muslim Brotherhood no longer advocates an alternative economic and social model. The Brothers have become conservative with regard to morality and liberal on the economy. This is without doubt the most striking evolution in their outlook, because, in the 1980s, Islamists claimed to defend the interests of the oppressed classes and called for state ownership of the economy and redistribution of wealth. Today, the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt endorses Mubarak's agricultural counter-reforms, which have returned to landowners the right to raise prices and sack tenant farmers. So complete has this transformation been that Islamists are now wholly absent from the social movements active in the Nile Delta, where there has been a resurgence of the "left", particularly of trade union militancy.

However, the embourgeoisement of the Islamists is at the same time an asset for democracy, because it pushes them towards reconciliation and compromise, and into alliances with other political forces. It is no longer a question, therefore, of attempting to establish whether or not dictatorships are the most effective bulwark against Islamism; Islamists have become players in the democratic game. Naturally, they will try to exert control over public morality, but, lacking the kind of repressive apparatus that exists in Iran, or a religious police on the Saudi model, they will have to reckon with a demand for liberty that doesn't stop with the right to elect a parliament. In short, the Islamists will either identify themselves with the conventional, Salafist tradition, abandoning in the process any pretence to reconceive Islam's place in modernity, or else they will make an effort to rethink their understanding of the relationship between religion and politics.

In Egypt, the Muslim Brotherhood will play a central role in the coming changes as long as the revolt remains largely apolitical. For the moment, this is still the politics of protest; it is not the dawn of a new type of regime. Moreover, Arab societies remain somewhat conservative. The middle classes that developed following the period of economic liberalisation want political stability. They are protesting, above all, against the predatory nature of dictatorship. Here, a comparison between Tunisia and Egypt is illuminating. In Tunisia, the extended Ben Ali clan weakened all its potential allies by refusing to share not only power, but wealth, too. The business class was swindled by the ruling family and the army marginalised both politically and financially. The Tunisian army was poor, and thus had a corporate interest in seeing the advent of a democratic regime that would give it a bigger budget.

In Egypt, by contrast, the regime has had a much larger social base, and the army was involved not just in shoring up political power but also in the administration of the economy, with all the benefits that flowed from that. In this respect, that country is typical of the Arab world. Democratic movements throughout the region will therefore come up against deeply rooted networks of clientelism. Is the demand for democracy capable of overcoming complex arrangements of allegiance and belonging, in the army, among tribes and among the political elite? To what extent will regimes be able to exploit old allegiances - among the Bedouins in Jordan, say, or the tribes of Yemen? Conversely, can such groups themselves become actors in the movement for democratic change? And how will religion adapt to the new situation?

The process of change will undoubtedly be long and chaotic, but one thing is certain: the age of Arab-Muslim exceptionalism is over. Recent events point to profound transformations in Arab societies which have been under way for some time, but which until now have been obscured by the distorting optic of western attitudes towards the Middle East. What the convulsions in Egypt and Tunisia show is that people in those countries have drawn the lessons of their own history. We have not finished with Islam, that is for sure, nor is liberal democracy the "end of history", but we must at least learn to think of Islam in relation to an "Arabic-Muslim" culture that today is no longer closed in on itself - if it ever was.

Olivier Roy is professor of social and political theory at the European University Institute in Florence. His most recent book is "Holy Ignorance: When Religion and Culture Part Ways" (C Hurst & Co, £20)

This essay, written exclusively for the New Statesman, was translated from the French by Jonathan Derbyshire

83 comments

EnragedBrit's picture

Yes, I've seen this discredited Muslim propaganda many times before. Just because it was in the Indie does not make it true. In any case, I did say "produced in the past 300 years," didn't I?
The only parasites we come across here in good old Blighty are the 50% of adult Muslim males and 75% of adult Muslimettes who are sponging off our benefit system.

Now, let's all have a laugh while you tell us about the djinns who lurk around toilets and whether or not you believe that Islam allows djinns to marry humans. Come on, tell us all about it.

Asif Iqbal's picture

@EnragedBrit: Oh dear! Oh dear! Was and is Jerusalem in Europe then? Protestant Reformation started at the end of 15th century. I didn't made that up. Blame your ill education rather than me. The dates you have quoted make me wish that the prophet Mohammed lived that long to see his message has been spread to so many corner of the world. The men of the Banu Qurayzah were beheaded and their women and children expelled because they sided with the Meccan at the Battle of Trench against the covenant which they made with the Muslim of Madina. Mesopotamia long ceased to exist even before the birth of Mohammed and it was part of the Persian Empire. Massacare in Egypt and Syria???!!! haa! haa! haa! If you care to find out then you"ll find that Misr or Egypt as you know it and Sham which is now known as Syria actually provided sanctuary to Muslim who fled persecution from the Quraish of Makka. And horrific massacres in Spain? Why then all the Jewish population of Europe migrated there while the Muslim were ruling? And India? Well both this nation should be 100% or at least 90% Muslim now, shouldn't they? Out of 1 billion population, India only got 160 million muslim. I as an Indian can categorically say that wherever Muslim went, they have localized themselves, nurtured local culture and customs, encouraged arts and education, unlike the European who wherever they went, stole and destroyed and branding people of ancient civilizations as uncivilised, uncultured and tried to impose their will. The most recent example is Iraq and Afghanistan. Check your brain before calling other as nutter.

insha allah's picture

My dear muslim brothers do not argue with these fools resulting in waste of time. The final victory is ours.Strengthen your beliefs and sacrifice for islam and our brothers. They can never survive if america get back from asia. The surprising thing is that american economy is getting verse.
Thy can never survive in afgnistan. Taliban will be restored soon

snark's picture

@Asif
The Crusades were a response to Islamic Imperialism, for which you are apparently a cheerleader. It continues today, in the violent neo-Colonialist rantings of AQ, to the more 'moderate' calls to the restoration of the Caliphate by HuT.

The 'meme' about the Dark Ages conveniently forgets the establishment of civic society in many EU countries and all kinds of political and cultural breakthroughs from the Magna Carta to Durham Cathedral...

That it suits Islamists to claim that Christian Europe was a quagmire during the glory days of the Moorish Empire, or wherever else, is of course a post-hoc justification of Islamic Imperium and at best, a sectarian and revisionist rant of scant historical validity.

And to bring us up to the present - the footfall from Muslim to Christian countries tells you all you need to know about the successes of the former as opposed to the latter.

Canadianmike's picture

With all due respect to all of the above comments, it makes me wonder:

What difference does it make what all those people did so many years ago? (Aside from the obvious geo-political legacies we have inherited.) I mean what difference does it make today that some tribe in the distant past hated some other tribe, and they all did bad things to each other.... so what. You are talking about our great-great (etc.) ancestors. They are all DEAD.

All that ( - insert atrocity here - ) that was done by those people had nothing to do with me, or my children (or you, or your children). Why should I have to worry about taking an airplane, or the subway, or going to a football game because some fanatic wants to get revenge for something I DIDN'T DO.

As long as there are groups today who refuse to be tolerant of others' beliefs (or lack thereof), we are only doomed to keep repeating the mistakes of the past.

We should all be more concerned with how we behave and treat each other today, and how can we make this a better world now. Why can we not forgive the transgressions of the past, and accept each other for our differences in hopes of a better future together?

Anyone with an open mind will see that the only hope we have is to find a way to live together in peace. There will always be groups with different opinions and beliefs, but where we differ we must agree to disagree, and try to set the better example for those we wish to enlighten (without the threat of violence).

So I ask you, what do you think we need to do to make it a better world, and what are you willing to do to help us get there?

Asif Iqbal's picture

@Asifisasucka, @Anon Well your language show the depth of your knowledge. For people like you and snark wikipedia is the best source of information when you do not even know your own history or are in denial about history.

Canadianmike's picture

Enraged Brit:

I see at least one of your posts was removed, but I did get a chance to see your comment about Jack Nicholson in ‘Mars Attacks’, “Why can’t we all just...get along?”
Yeah, I know, that’s about it. (I’m also afraid I know the answer.)
But thank you for invoking that scene! I got a good laugh thinking about it.

Asif:

I have not been to any Islamic countries, not yet. So I can only form my opinions based on the information I have available to me (including this forum). No doubt that any given media source may be biased, but we do often get the impression here that Muslims have little tolerance for Christians, or Jews, or Hindus, or pretty much anyone who is not Muslim. I know that a lot of it is sensationalism, but it does often seem like it is Islam vs. the world.

I must with all due respect say that I am positive that Steven Harper has NEVER said we should bomb Iran to the ground. Beside the fact that there are no votes to be had with that sort of talk here in Canada (where I’m sure we have a large ex-pat Iranian community), that is just not his style. If anything I’m sure he said that the people of Iran deserve to have free and fair elections.

AND (though I get that you were just making an example) you must also know that people do not spit on Muslim ladies or attack folks for wearing a turban here. Canada (fortunately) is a society which values women and men equally, and which welcomes people from all places around the world.

Anyway, Asif, I agree with you. Your religion for you, and mine for me. Peace.

Perhaps there is hope that one day we might all just...get along.

Ali's picture

Many of you comments have a breakthrough view to the us, Muslims. But i guess that many of us(Muslims) are very far a way from the Islamic principles, and some are trying to stick to these principles but by their own point of view, and behave accordingly.
Al-Jihad belongs to the Islamic Brotherhood in Egypt and their concern is politically, in spite that Islam tells us that " do not seek judgment, power or authority but let it come to you, and never go after them". As for Al-Qaeda they are attacking unarmed and innocent people and this not from the Islam, because the Islam tells us to protect people even those who are not Muslims, and secure their lives, and only attack who is trying to attack us. But they call this Jihad fie Sabil Allah, Fighting for god's sake, but it is not.
so, i shall comment on the author's "they do not see in Islam an ideology capable of creating a better world."
But on the contrary we do, and believe it better to us all, the Christian before the Muslim to implement the real doctrine of Islam on behalf of the implemented human rules, even Islam provided us with a doctrine from god himself but we are still sticking to those who are human-made.
thanks,
Ali, Egypt

Mr Woogy's picture

@Asif Iqbal
23 February 2011 at 19:47
Asif, David vinter is giving you the truth as a brother. It is a bitter pill for you to swallow but this is the reason why muslims are abject failures!

Asif Iqbal's picture

@EnragedBrit: I am not here to write my doctoral thesis that I have to be extremely careful about paragraph, colon and semicolon and plural and singular use of word and you are not my Phd supervisor. I at least can write in your language but can you in my Tamil? I am very well aware that NS is a British publication and its readers are almost exclusively British. What made me wonder is that even in this age there are people like you with closed brain! So you think you are not a racist? Good Lord! In one hand, you are saying you are attacking Islam as an ideology, and then again you are attacking people who follow Islam regardless of their creed, culture and nationality. As far as of today, I knew that you all lazy couch potatoes blamed all the immigrants for "sponging off" your welfare system but it became news to me that only "Muslim are sponging off" your benefits system as you have mentioned! Oh dear! We Muslim consider ourself as one Ummah, from Arabia to Indonesia, from Japan to Germany regardless of the colour of our skin or language or culture. And you are feeling enraged that you are being called a racist. Well, you thick head moron, now days war is not fought on battlefield but with tank, aircraft, cruise and ballistic missiles. So how can anyone hit the head of their enemy when a single missile can obliterate a whole neighbourhood. Its the like of Bush, Cheney and Blair who are spreader of mischief and for them the verse 5:32 of Quran is applicable, not intentionally ignorant bigoted idiot like you. I have never tried to propagate that everything was and is topsy turvy in the Muslim world, whether be it in Arabia or Indonesia or Bosnia. I am calling a herring as herring. I am not diverting attention but been merely pointing to the atrocities being carried out by your compatriots in Iraq and Afghanistan as well as in other secret war in response to your BS about atrocities carried out by Muslim in Morocco, Egypt and Syria in 11th Century. You could not even provide date or place of these attrocites. You are shifting your ground rather than me. You set about teaching me the history of my own country. Then you tried to teach me about destruction of civilisations by the Muslim. Now you are telling me that Muslim have obliterated the language of other nations. I don't speak Arabic but Tamil but I am a Muslim. Please enlighten us by your superior knowledge which language the Muslim have obliterated, how and where. The madrassa system was invented by your racist colonial forefathers in the Indian subcontinent in order to keep the restive Muslim population in check which subsequently was introduced in other part of the world where your forefathers imposed their colonial rule. Muslim of Iberian peninsula established an University in Cordoba where enlightened European studied maths and science, medicine and philosophy. You can laugh as much as you like but there is no such entity as the West nor there was. Now you are asking me to name something done by any Muslim in last 300 years that has benefited humanity. We Muslim hasn't done anything. Does that make you happy? Computer and internet nasty western invention? I tell you what, stop using 123 as they are Arabic numeral and try to invent some other means of counting. Invent a computer not based on algorithm as it is also an Arabic computation. Oh by the way, there are 57 Muslim majority countries in the World and I the Muslim is from India, a land bigger than the size of whole of Europe with 52 language and people of different culture, faith and races.

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