Religious Dimensions in Contemporary Conflict
Maryam Sakeenah
The strains of evangelism in religion can fire the zest for 'spreading the cult', which often involves coercion and imposition. An example is the effort to impose Christianity on subjugated nations that led to the European 'mission' of colonization. Groups deny others the opportunity to practice their faith, which leads to the growth of religious hostility and hatred, a sense of being discriminated against, fanning the sentiment for seeking redress. Suppression of Islam in China is a contemporary example of religious conflict emanating from state suppression of religion. It is the lack of tolerance of religious difference, and lack of respect for faith wherein lie the seeds of religious conflict. This lack of respect for religion, deliberate suppression or discrimination against religion creates extremist interpretation of religious ideology that can legitimize the use of violence on non combatants.
Following the escalation of the Arab-Israeli conflict since the 1967 war and more recently after the rise of the second Intefada as a response to continued Israeli encroachment and routine brutality, Islamic movements with militant credentials in the region have gained strength. Popular Islamic movements exist in almost every Muslim territory, and many have been successful despite state suppression in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and elsewhere in the Middle East as well as in Indonesia and even in the Philippines. The Taliban, facing ire and fire still survive, owing largely to loyalty and support by tribesmen along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border who see the movement as heroically pitted against an illegitimate foreign occupation; committed strongly to principles that are rooted deeply in local culture; and promising return to living by the Law of Islam that holds the key to the establishment of a long-awaited veritable justice system. The Union of Islamic Courts in Somalia won a popular electoral victory before being ousted through external intervention, and the Hamas in Palestine have attracted support and gained successes despite the refusal to recognize their right to rule by the international community.
The rise of popular support to religious revivalist militant movements among Muslims out of a sense of injustice is understandable. It is fuelled by genuine social, religious, and economic grievances in many of the Muslim countries: autocratic, authoritarian and unscrupulous political leaders backed by the democratic West; millions of stateless Palestinian refugees, extreme poverty for most of the public; human rights abuse by the state and suppression of religious expression; and the West's support to it all, alongwith its strong prejudice and bias against the Muslims amply expressed through the powerful media. The lingering Israeli-Palestinian conflict which has lasted over five decades and defies resolution owing to lack of a genuine commitment to peacemaking by the actors involved, fuels much of the anger, instability, unrest, distrust, hostility, and feelings of victimization in the region. The U.S's support to Israel has not gone unnoticed. After all, the US gives over three billion dollars a year in military and economic aid to Israel. The continuing expansion of Jewish settlements in occupied lands, the status of the Dome of the Rock and the Al Aqsa Mosque -the second most sacred spot in Islam- and the status of the Muslim section of the city of Jerusalem are major flash points. Anti-American feelings run high because of the invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan, the world's inaction in the face of genocide in Chechnya, brutal occupation of Muslim Kashmir, illegitimate intervention in Somalia and several other ongoing crises victimizing Muslim populations all over the world.
The rule of thumb, like in Newtonian physics, is the inevitability of reaction. The frequently used label of 'terrorism' becomes understandable here. It is simply a violent expression of reactionary sentiment to victimization. It does not grow out of religious doctrine, but out of the psychology of the 'victim refusing to be victim.' (Arundhati Roy). Tragically, however, the deep-seated root-causes are never inquired into.
A lot is wrong with the way the ongoing conflicts involving religion are perceived and portrayed in the media monopolized by the West. This is important because this lack of sympathy and refusal to understand is what in turn fans religious sensitivities and reinforces the sense of being victimized and stigmatized, making us go farther away from resolution and peacemaking. Eric Brahm writes, "Popular portrayals of religion often reinforce the view of religion being conflictual. The global media has paid significant attention to religion and conflict, but not the ways in which religion has played a powerful peacemaking role. This excessive emphasis on the negative side of religion and the actions of religious extremists generates interfaith fear and hostility. What is more, media portrayals of religious conflict have tended to do so in such a way so as to confuse rather than inform, thereby exacerbating polarization." The tendency to throw around the terms 'fundamentalist' and 'extremist' is reckless and irresponsible. According to Karen Armstrong, "We constantly produce new stereotypes to express our apparently ingrained hatred of 'Islam'. The West must bear some measure of responsibility for why today many people in the Islamic world reject the West as ungodly, unjust, and decadent. . ."
The 'Clash of Civilizations' theory suggests the future larger role of religious conflicts generated by 'a clash between civilizations.' The theory however has been criticized for reasserting differences between civilizations. Edward Said argues that Huntington's categorization of the world's fixed "civilizations" omits the dynamic interdependency and interaction of culture based not on harmony but on the clash or conflict between worlds. The presentation of the world in a certain way legitimizes certain politics. Interventionist and aggressive, the concept of civilizational clash is aimed at maintaining a war time status in the minds of the West. Pope John Paul II observed: "A clash ensues only when Islam or Christianity is misconstrued or manipulated for political or ideological ends."
Secularism, especially in the context of contemporary politics, has assumed the form of an extremist 'ism' strongly opposed to religious belief and practice. The relentless imposition of Secularist principles by liberal regimes has often been offensive to religious sensitivities which have continued to live on as prized individual sentiment. According to Kosmin, "the hard secularist considers religious propositions to be illegitimate, warranted by neither rationality nor experience." An example is the banning of all religious expression in Secular France, including the Muslim headscarf. Secular Communism in China has brutally suppressed religious sentiment in Muslim Xinjiang province. The ruthless imposition of Secularism, therefore, has often exacerbated the sense of being unfairly treated by religious communities, fuelling tension and hostility in which lie seeds of conflict.
Today, with the West spearheading the liberal ideology and enjoying its zenith of power and influence, liberalism with its attendant ideologies of secularism and democracy have emerged as the de facto 'standard' ideological premise, de-legitimizing alternative ideologies rooted in Oriental tradition. The zeal with which the West imposes and exports its 'superior' brand of ideology has worked to alienate the Third world and non-Western communities whose indigenous alternative ideologies are undermined and slighted, and prevented from political expression. This is an underlying cause of disaffection and discontent within the non Western world. The West's ideological arrogance and a sort of ideological 'imperialism' that allows it to 'export' secular, liberal democracy all over the world through political interventionism lies at the base of ongoing conflict in Iraq and Afghanistan and numerous other global crises. According to Joshua Goldstein, "Democracies and non democracies may increasingly find themselves in conflict with each other if this trend continues."
The 'ideologization' of the War on Terror has eclipsed the true ground realities and the actual root causes of the conflict, turning attention away from them. This has made a resolution of the conflict more elusive than ever. Particularly regrettable is the inability to understand terrorism as a desperate reaction by the socially outcast, economically deprived and politically oppressed. Terrorism, in fact, is a tactic used by disaffected individuals and communities, not an ideology. Instead, terrorism is seen as an opposing, challenging, hostile and 'barbaric' 'ideology' opposed to all that the West stands for and believes in. This is extremely misguided and helps divide the world into opposing ideological camps, lending strength to the dangerous 'clash of civilizations' thesis.
George W. Bush expressed the grandiosity of this 'clash of ideologies' in a statement:
"We've entered a great ideological conflict we did nothing to invite." Margie Burns comments on this: "This statement should sound alarm bells for the nation and the world. What does Bush mean by an "ideological conflict"? All previous grandiose Bush pronouncements on global conflict have focused on terrorism and the "war on terror."
Bush is trying to present terrorism as an "ideology," in an us-or-them global conflict, with Terrorism replacing Communism. Every thinking person knows that terrorism is not an "ideology." Terrorist acts are a tactic. We know by now exactly who uses them, too: individuals and small groups use guerrilla tactics when other tactics are not available to them, against a much stronger governmental power or foreign power. So, regardless how much expense is poured into making Terrorism the new Communism, it may not fly.
When Bush mentions our ideological opponents, he is again referring to the "radical Islamists". This is inaccurate and dangerously uninsightful (as well as religiously prejudiced). Bush is referring to all of Islam, at least implicitly. There is enough ill will and bad faith out there for the hot-button buzzwords to produce campaign contributions, to pay lobbyists, and to distract the press from actual governance. This may be the scariest possibility, although admittedly it's a hard call."
All of the conflicts in the world today with a death toll of over a 1000 annually, are either ethnic, religious or ideological in nature. The following table of conflicts in the world has been taken from Wikipedia Encyclopedia and is reproduced below:
Start of Conflict |
War/Conflict |
Location |
Cumulative fatalities |
1983 |
Sri Lankan Civil War |
Sri Lanka |
~70,000 |
1998 |
Second Congo War, Kivu conflict |
Kivu, Democratic Republic of the Congo (Congo-Kinshasa) |
~5,400,000 |
2001 |
War in Afghanistan |
Afghanistan |
~6,600 in 2007 alone ~19,856 in total |
2003 |
War in Darfur |
Sudan |
200,000 - 400,000 |
2003 |
Iraq War |
Iraq |
100,000 - 1,124,303
|
2006 |
War in Somalia |
Somalia |
~8,225+ |
2008 |
War in South Ossetia |
Russia Georgia |
~2,500 |
1947 war, 1920 riots |
Israeli-Palestinian conflict |
Palestine Israel |
Unknown |
1947 |
Kashmir conflict |
Kashmir, India |
40,000"“80,000 |
1948 |
Internal conflict in Burma |
Burma |
over 9,000 |
1964 |
Colombian Armed Conflict |
Colombia |
Unknown |
1969 |
Communist and Islamic Insurgency in the Philippines (including OEF-P) |
Philippines |
est. 160,000 |
1975 |
Conflict in Laos involving the Hmong |
Laos |
2,000 "“ 3,000 |
1980 |
Internal conflict in Peru |
Peru |
~70,000
|
1984 |
Turkey-PKK conflict |
Kurdistan and Turkey |
~37,000 |
1987 |
Second Ugandan Civil War |
Uganda |
~12,000 |
1988 |
Somali Civil War (including 2006 War in Somalia) |
Somalia |
300,000 - 400,000 |
1990 |
Casamance Conflict |
Senegal |
Unknown |
1992 |
Conflict in the Niger Delta (including Nigerian Oil Crisis) |
Nigeria |
Unknown |
1993 |
Ethnic conflict in Nagaland |
Nagaland, India |
Unknown |
1994 |
Insurgency in Ogaden |
Ethiopia |
Unknown |
1999 |
Second Chechen War |
North Caucasus, Russia |
est. 25,000 "“ 100,000
|
2002 |
Insurgency in the Maghreb (2002"“present) |
Algeria, Mauritania, and Morocco (parts of the Maghreb) |
~6000 |
2003 |
Islamic insurgency in Saudi Arabia |
Saudi Arabia |
326 |
2004 |
War in North-West Pakistan |
Pakistan |
5000+ |
2004 |
Balochistan conflict |
Balochistan, Pakistan |
Unknown |
2004 |
Iran-PJAK conflict |
Iran |
Unknown |
2004 |
Sa'dah insurgency |
Sa'dah Governorate, Yemen |
720+ |
2004 |
South Thailand insurgency |
Pattani, Thailand |
~2,500 |
2004 |
Naxalite (Maoist) insurgency in India |
Certain parts of India including Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra, Orissa and West Bengal |
Unknown |
2005 |
War in Chad |
Chad |
~1,400 |
2006 |
Mexican Drug War |
Mexico |
~4100 |
2006 |
Mount Elgon insurgency |
Western Kenya |
~600 |
2006 |
Fatah-Hamas conflict |
Gaza Strip, West Bank |
265 |
2007 |
Second Tuareg Rebellion |
North Niger and Mali |
56 |
|
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The statistics are appalling and underscore the urgency of peaceful conflict resolution. For this purpose it is important to be able to reach down into the root causes of conflict. In case of conflicts based on intangible factors, the causes are deep-buried into the recesses of human psychology, beliefs, perceptions and ideas.
The solution is to create awareness of the positive peace building and reconciliatory role of religion. It is important to fight ignorance of the true spirit of the Islamic faith and the ignorance of non Western cultures that leads to stereotyping and prejudices. Interfaith and intercultural dialogue has the potential to build the much-needed bridges of understanding. Learning about other religions, cultures and civilizations would be a powerful step forward. Communicating in a spirit of humility and self-criticism can also be helpful.
Every single human being needs to be recognised as an individual with a unique identity; everyone needs security and the freedom to be themselves. If these rights are withheld, people protest_ be they black, white, Muslim, non Muslim or whatever_ and this discontentment leads to rebellion and violence.
Cultures and values must not be exclusivist, and should not create 'otherness' for those that may be different. The cleavages of 'us and them' and the use of the language of discrimination, intolerance and hate must be rejected. Human beings need to create a society that does not see natural differences and human diversity as problematic but as valuable for social growth. The human race needs to redefine identitiy on the basis of a single, common humanity and universal values we all share as human beings. The focus should be shifted from differences to commonalities.
The Quran gives this necessary insight into conflict resolution through reinstating the singularity of humanity: "O Mankind! We created you from a single male and a female and divided you into nations and tribes so that you may identify one another." The Prophet of Islam (SAW) said in his Last Sermon: "(In the light of this verse), no Arab has a superiority over a non Arab, nor does a non Arab have any superiority over an Arab; and a black does not have any superiority over a white, nor is a white superior to a black, except by one thing: righteousness. Remember, all human beings are the sons and daughters of Adam (A.S), and Adam (A.S) was made from dust."
On the necessity of finding and holding on to the common essence, the Quran says: "And come to common terms, to that which is common between us and you, that is, we worship none but the One God"¦" (Surah Aal e Imran)
The return to the simplicity of this clear message is the need of the hour. We need to reach for the common essence, to respect the colours and shades of humanity as the Sign of the One Divine Being. This can help erase the false artificial divisions and make the barriers fall. It is only through following these universal directives that men can find the way out of the morass of hostility, hatred, prejudice, injustice, conflict and violence, in order to create a unified human brotherhood on the basis of a single Idea for the benefit of all creatures of the One Master.
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