"Brother, brother," a young man called out to me, as I hurriedly left a lecture hall in a community centre in Durban, South Africa. This happened at the height of the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, after all efforts at stopping the ferocious US-Western military drives against these two countries had failed.
The young man was dressed in traditional Afghani-Pashtun attire, and accompanied by a friend of his. With palpable nervousness, he asked a question that seemed completely extraneous to my lecture, which was on the use of popular history to understand protracted historical phenomena. I used Palestine as a model.
“Brother, do you believe that there is hope for the Muslim ummah?” He inquired about the future of a nation to which he believed we both belonged. He waited waited anxiously for a reply that would put his evident worries at ease.
Perhaps more startling than his question is the fact that I was not surprised in the least. His is an intergenerational question that Muslim youth have been asking even before the decline and final collapse of the Ottoman empire, the last standing caliphate, by the end of the first world war.
Despite major historical tumults, the caliphate has remained in existence since the Rashidun caliphs (the “rightly guided” caliphs) starting with Abu Bakr in 632 CE, following the death of Prophet Mohammed.
The young man’s questions evoked so much history and a multitude of meanings. Few Western historians and “experts” (especially those who try to understand Islam for their own political and military purposes) can possibly fathom the emotional weight of that question.
The role of the Muslim ummah
“Ummah” in the young man’s question doesn’t exactly mean “nation” in the relatively modern nationalistic sense. Muslims are not a race, but come from all races; they don’t share a skin colour, or a lifestyle per se, or a common language - even if Arabic is the original language of the Holy Quran. Ummah is a “nation” which is predicated on a set of timeless moral values. It originated in the Quran, was epitomised through the teachings and legacy (sunnah) of the Prophet Muhammad, and guided by ijtihad (diligence) - explained as the independent reasoning - of Muslim scholars (ulama) based on the Quran and sunnah.
Naturally, the collapse of the caliphate created a crisis of many dimensions. There was the geographic collapse of the Muslim ummah, which despite the cultural and linguistic uniqueness of the various groups of that “nation”, the ummah always possessed overriding value-based political and societal frameworks. Based on that old, but constantly revived legacy (thus ijtihad), Muslims possessed their own equivalence of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Geneva conventions, civil codes and much more starting nearly 14 centuries ago.
Of more significance than the geographic disintegration of the ummah was the collapse of the very fabric of society, the unravelling of laws that governed every individual or collective relationship, every commercial transaction, rules regarding the environment, charity, the law of war, and so on. Another dissolution also took place: that of the authentic and organic moral values which allowed the ummah to persist as many empires failed, and flourish while others decayed. The organic, self-propelled system was replaced by alternatives that have each in turn crumbled.
And that is where the roots of the “angry Muslim” began.
The ummah continues to live as an ideal that transcends time and place. It persists despite the fact that the last century had taken an incredible toll on all Muslim nations, without exception. Even the success of many nations to gain their independence from the very colonial powers that brought the caliphate down didn’t in any way tackle the original crisis of the once predominant, all-encompassing Muslim ummah. Colonised Muslim societies eventually adopted the rules and laws of its former colonisers, and continued to vacillate within their sphere of influence.
Post-independence Muslim nations were a hideous mix of tribalism and cronyism, with a self-serving interpretation of Islam and western laws and civil codes that were all tailored so very carefully to ensure the survival of an utterly corrupt status quo; where local rulers ensure supremacy over defeated, disoriented collectives, and Western powers sustain their interests by all means necessary.
Expectedly, such a status quo couldn’t possibly be sustained. A strong and cohesive civil society had no chance of survival under oppressive regimes, and with the lack of education or opportunity, or both, generations of Muslims endured in utter despair.
Rally cry
As an escape from their immediate woes, many Muslims sought inspiration elsewhere. They saw in Palestine a rally cry. In the ongoing resistance to foreign occupation, there was a symbolic indication of a collective pulse. The wide support that Hezbollah (a Shia group) received among Sunni Muslims for its resistance to Israel was an indication that sectarian divides could be transcended by the need for the Muslim ummah to regroup around principles such as justice, thus reclaiming even an iota of its past glory.
But it was the US-led Western invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq that drew the battle lines like never before. When Baghdad fell in April 2003, and as American soldiers so conceitedly drowned the former capital of the Abbasid caliphate with their flags, many Muslims felt that their ummah had reached the lowest depths of humiliation. And while Iraqi men and women were being tortured, raped, and filmed dead or naked by smirking US soldiers in Baghdad’s prisons, a whole new nation of angry Muslim youth was born.
Western wars in Afghanistan and Iraq were not the exclusive harbinger of Muslim youth anger, humiliation and the current violence under way in Syria, Iraq, and other Muslim countries. The wars were the catalyst. Picture a group of “foreign jihadists” as they are called, sharing a meal between battles somewhere near northern Iraq and imagine what they possibly have in common: an Iraq tortured in Bucca, a Lebanese who fought the Israelis in south Lebanon, a Syrian whose family had been killed in Aleppo, and so on. But it is not only a Middle Eastern question. The alienation and constant targeting of French and British Muslim immigrants, their mosques, their cultures, languages, their very identity, when coupled with the plight of Muslims everywhere, could too have its own violent manifestation as well.
Western influence
British Prime Minister David Cameron is worried about the threat to the national security of his country as a result of the ongoing strife in Iraq, instigated by territorial gains of the Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL). He doesn’t seem to understand his country’s role in the violence.
US President Barack Obama continues to preach from the White House about violence and the moral responsibility of his country as if the destructive and leading role played by Washington in the Middle East is completely removed from the state of hopelessness and humiliation felt by a generation of Muslim youth. It is as if war, foreign occupation and the systematic destruction of an entire civilisation - still referred to by many Muslims as an “ummah” - will come at no price, aside from fluctuating oil prices.
Who are these jihadists? Many continue to ask and persistently attempt to offer answers. CIA agents? Gulf-funded terrorist groups? Misguided youth ushered in by an Iranian conspiracy to justify its appetite for regional hegemony? Foreign jihadists fighting against the Assad regime in Syria? Or perhaps with the Assad regime against his opposition? Conspiracy theories thrive in time of great mysteries.
However, the alienated “angry” Muslim youth is hardly a mystery, but a fully comprehensible historical inevitability. For many of them, even if they insist otherwise, the ummah and caliphate is more of incorporeal spaces than actual geographical boundaries. It is an escape to history, from poverty, alienation, oppression and foreign occupations. To understand that is to truly tackle the roots of violence. Ignoring it cannot possibly be an option.
- Ramzy Baroud is a PhD scholar in People's History at the University of Exeter. He is the Managing Editor of Middle East Eye. Baroud is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
Photo credit: Palestinian protestors hold national and Arab flags and banners during a Hamas rally calling for national reconciliation (Flickr/Mustafa Hassona)