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

Asif - You are an Indian and you really should know your own history, so here's some of the non-existant massacres your evil ancestors carried out.

Sind 700s - It took the Muslim invaders three days to wipe out the population of Debal. This is what the Arab commander Hajjaj ordered : "You should not be so fond of showing mercy, as to nullify the virtue of the act. Henceforth grant pardon to no one of the enemy and spare none of them or else all will consider you a weak-minded man." And he quoted Surrah 47:4 which as a Muslim you should be well aquainted with - "O true believers, when you encounter the unbelievers, strike off their heads."
Massacres in Syria - Christians, Jews and Samaritans butchered in 634. Mesopotamia 635 and 642 massacres and forced conversions. Egypt - according to the Bishop of Nikiu, "whoever gave himself up to them was massacred, they spared neither the old, nor the women or children."
Morocco - in1033, 6000 Jews massacred in Fez. Spain - 1066, 4000 Jews massacred at Granada.

Do I need to go on, when everywhere the Muslims dominate, there have undeniably been massacres. Ask the Armenians or take a look at Dafur.

Read up on Mahmud of Ghazni and come back and tell us again that there were no massacres in India. Your knowledge of history is as lamentable as your knowledge of geography. Your brain appears to have been addled by Islam - either that or you are deliberately lying.
"Wherever Muslim went, they have localized themselves, nurtured local culture and customs, encouraged arts and education" - now that is either a very sick joke or a very flimsy and obvious lie as Muslims have obliterated the superior culture, art, traditions and in many cases, even the languages of the nations they have over-run.

Your name sums you up perfectly. As if!

Will Singh's picture

As a person of mixed Indian-English descent, Asif Iqbal's position reminds me of the kind of rubbish I had to listen to as child from one or two of my more violently insecure Indian relatives.
"We invented civilisation. We were living in cities with grid plans and plumbing when you (meaning my English relatives) were living in caves."
While they had a point – India’s contribution to human advancement is enormous - it didn't take me too long to figure out that the shoe was now pretty clearly on the other foot.
It's the same with all this "Muslims and Jews lived in harmony" cant.
That they did so successfully for centuries is historical fact, despite the periodic and bloody outbursts of sectarian violence.
But what does that long history mean when in the modern-day Middle East, most Arab Jews have been expelled from their homelands and with the (partial) exception of Lebanon, Arab Christians have been so politically and economically marginalised - and in contemporary Iraq, attacked - that most have chosen to migrate?
Similarly, to say that Jews 'thrive' in today's Iran is a stretch, given the suffocating grip the Iranian regime maintains on their ever-dwindling community and only an advertising executive could tout the 26,000-odd Jews who remain in Turkey, a country of 74 million, as proof of that country’s dynamic multiculturalism.
Yes, Mr. Iqbal, Islam had its often overlooked and most glorious Golden Age (one which was ended by the Mongols, not the Crusaders, despite your obvious and ahistorical fixation) but even you have to admit that by drawing attention to how tolerant the Islamic polity was until the 14th Century, you highlight how intolerant it has become today.

Asif Iqbal's picture

@Will Singh: Well, Mr. Singh if you care to check fact before writing then you will see that during the time of Crusades, Europe was in a phase described as Dark Age by the very same Europeans. I Asif Iqbal has not invented that. I only mentioned Turkey and Iran because these two country has got very large number of Jewish believers. And where did you get the fact that Jew has been expelled from whole of Arabia??? Apart from Saudi Arabia every nation in the Maghreb and Middle East has got percentage of population whose belief is Judaism. And if you care to know then Bahrain got a Jewish women as its ambassador in Washington D.C. The sectarian strife that is occuring in Iraq is only the result of US invasion. There was no such thing as sectarian violence before 2003. And no, I have not stated that the Crusaders ended Islamic state, but the have not even succeded in holding Jerusalem and were fought back and expelled by Arab Jew and Muslim. Similarlyn the Mongols brought upon destruction but hasn't been able todestroy the Islamic Golden age. India was ruled by the Mughals until 18th century. The Ottoman rules existed until 1918 even though it became stagnant before it demise. You can't show me a single historical fact where it show that Muslim has massacared Jew or for that matter Hindu or Sikh. If your subtle message about intolerance in Middle East is about Israel, then the fact is that the problem lie with European colonialism not Judaism as evidence point to the fact that only handful of Arab jews are in prominent position within the state of Israel. It is full of European colonialist and this is the main point of resentmnet not their belief. If you understand too much then its not my problem. I have only pointed to the historical facts to EnragedBrit because of his/her comment.

munazir ahamed's picture

the world muslims are equal islam is not teachings the terrorism islam good taught bring the world people.allahu akbar.

Dr. Claude Harb's picture

It is really sad how our most intelligent professors, authors and writers are misinterpreting what's happening in the Middle East and North Africa. Even Olivier Roy, whom I greatly respect didn't see what's being planned. The truth of the matter is that there are 2 islamic revolutions occuring at the same time trying to capture as much political power as they could without appearing as if they were doing that for religious reason, The Sunite Front led by Sunnis around the Middle East (excluding Ben Ladin, for now), and the Shiite Group, led by Iran and Hizbullah. I have dozens of evidences that will highlight the truth about what's happening and will definitely make you change your mind and opinion about the current situation. What you wrote is exactly what they want you to see, think and believe.

Asif Iqbal's picture

@Snark: Oh really??? What Jerusalem had to do with imperialism which was part of Arabia? Crusaders were simply religious zealots bent on greed and inhumanity. If you are so proud to proclaim about Magna Carta then just check on Wikipedia when it was proclaimed. Its your European historians who has proclaimed that time period until late 15th century as the Dark Age of Europe. Its not secterian or revisionist rant but just historical fact and in no way Muslim are responsible for branding that. Truth is very bitter!

MuadDib's picture

The article is full of nonsense.

The situation, as it stands now, is that most Egyptians want an end to the peace agreement with Israel.

Obviously, the so-called "dictatorships" in the Arab world worked best for us and pretty fine for the Arabs as well. Iraq under the Ba'ath party made unparalleled progress in promoting human rights, in comparison with all its neigbouring countries, except Turkey.
In fact, the pan-Arab socialism has proven itself as the most successful ideology. If there was an emancipation movement, it was exactly this.
"Taming" those countries only wretched them.

Really, where is Egypt, today's popular destination of Western tourists and yesterday's leader of the Non-aligned movement, where Egypt stands now? Its people living in poverty, its geopolitical status is now only a joke.

Well, the party (=the so-called "revolution") is over, but the dawn of a better future is nowhere near, with the army in firm grip of the country, the prospects are unclear.

As I said, the party is over... and more and more people begin to realize that there will be no cakes dropping into their mouths.

Anyway, the author is jumping at conclusions, the situation in Tunisia has been quite special and quite different from the others, as the author at least correctly recognizes, but so far we have seen no real change in Egypt, much less a sign of tangible progress.

And if you think that "revolution" means "business-as-usual after a few weeks", than I suspect that you have no clue whatsoever about what "revolution" means.

terence patrick hewett1's picture

The issue is all rather academic since Islam knows full well that when technology replaces oil as a means of energy they will be a busted flush. They will then be obliged to go out in the world and earn their living like the rest of us: but as that time approaches and they get increasingly desperate we must look forward to some real nastiness. Let us hope they don't run out of virgins.

Axmed's picture

I always have difficulties to recognise any facts when western claim expertise on the Middle East. We must be careful who we should believe when it comes to the history. We should recognise the academic imperialism. Olivier claims he is a scholar on Islamic politics but he really knows little or nothing about it. One can find his faulty assumptions when one examines this article and his work. He fails to recognise the war on Iraq. Which was about Al Qaeda connection and WMD among others. I have good reasons to doubt his analysis is flaw.

Adil Abdalla's picture

This was very insightful analysis, despite comments and noises.. Always Egypt is the plus for Arab/Muslim nations, therefore, they are not only influenced by its developments, but indirectly play roles in accumulating the Egyptian critical mass.. Most of Arabs/Muslims has personal and cultural ties with Egypt, which unconsciously trade their own sociopolitics breakdowns with the Egyptian ones.. While, the major historical characteristic of Egypt; is its mysterious inability to sustain any political achievements.. As historical cycles of suppression, revolt, change, then dictatorship and so-on, are frequent and systematically typical.. The continuously imported syndromes from the surroundings had unnoticed fed Egyptian moods. On parallel, Egyptian public was never part of the driving forces, but fuel and audiences.. Therefore, no wonder the events of Jan 2011 did not have a leadership, and probably will not conceive one.. Why?? Egyptian political powers, including MB; had always maintained that gap between the rulers and the commons.. Educated aiming-high Egyptians will consume all their skills not to cross the economic gap, but the political one.. Egyptian modern-time events in 1986, 1919, 1936, and 1952 were quickly seized by dynasties or newly-formed dynasties.. Sometimes, you can feel that Egypt never lost the 7000 years feudalism as a main cultural and political pattern.. Maybe this is why the nation is torn between its heavy political heritage and the new enthusiastic aspirations..
http://adilsud.blogspot.com/2011/02/rebuilding-nation.html#comments

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