
By Ida
Lichter, M.D
26 March, 2015
Western leaders who deny the religious foundation of
the jihadist group Islamic State are blind to its raison d'être, which is
firmly grounded in Islamic texts and the concept of offensive jihad.
Furthermore, models for militias such as Islamic State can be found in historic
and contemporary jihads.
Foot soldiers of the Islamic State (IS, also known as
ISIS or ISIL) may not be schooled in theology but their leaders have been
rigorous in their observance of Sharia law based on religious texts. Shared by
all Sunni Muslims, these texts have provided IS and other jihadist groups with
much of the inspiration to wage imperialist war. Their campaign of territorial
expansion aims to restore transnational hegemony and Sharia law structured on
the ancient Muslim caliphate, and led by a ruler who claims ancestry from the
Prophet.
Another major influence is attributed to Egyptian
Sayyid Qutb, the foremost modern theorist of jihad. Qutb did not view jihad
primarily as a defensive or spiritual struggle, but as an offensive assault
that would spread Islam and unseat Muslim governments not committed to
implementing sharia. He also advocated divine, rather than secular laws, and
Islamic supremacism. Qutb's views were shaped by medieval theologian Ibn
Taymiyyah, who advocated a return to early Islam, and jihad waged against
Muslims deemed unworthy or dissident.
Qutb was executed by Nasser's regime in 1996 but his
ideology has endured in the development of modern radical Islam, transforming
the grasshopper of domestic worship into the locust of politicized religion.
Wherever IS fighters migrate, they bring carnage and
restrictions. Dissident Muslims have been executed. IS has enslaved infidel
women, and enforced stoning, amputations, and punishments for homosexuality,
apostasy, selling alcohol, wearing Western clothes and more. The militia
persecutes religious minorities, including Shiite Muslims. Christians in Mosul
were faced with three choices: conversion to Islam, execution, or payment of a
high jizya tax, reserved for the dhimmi underclass. Christian homes in Mosul
were marked with the Arabic letter N for Nasara, a historical term for
Christians, and over 125,000 fled in fear. In Libya, IS recently beheaded 21
Coptic Christian hostages, causing thousands of Egyptian Copts to flee.
Apocalyptic ideas are part of the IS canon and are
founded on Sunni texts that expound the looming End of Days. This era is
thought to herald the advent of the messianic Mahdi, ordained to ensure triumph
for Muslims. Luring the West into a conflagration would hasten his much
anticipated arrival.
The uncompromising interpretation of IS might be fundamentalist
and medieval but their exegesis has not been systematically and convincingly
repudiated by religious scholars. Indeed, such authorities would risk being
charged with apostasy.
History is replete with examples of violent jihads
that aimed to extend Muslim sovereignty through conquest. These started with
multiple military campaigns during the early centuries of Islam. Much later,
jihads were aroused by European colonialism in North Africa, India and the
Caucasus.
The medieval Order of the Assassins has provided the
origin of the current word 'assassin' to describe a killer, and refers to a
group that pursued a jihadist movement for about two hundred years. Formed
toward the end of the 11th century and operating in various regions of Syria
and Persia, they fought as jihadist warriors for supremacy amongst Muslims.
Although a secret organization and a Shiite Ismaili sect, the Assassins, like
IS, aimed to instill terror and gain submission through public executions.
In modern times, many Islamist militias have carried
out jihadist insurgencies.
In Algeria, the government feared emergence of an
elected Islamist regime in 1991, and cancelled further polls after the first
round. A bloody civil war followed throughout the 1990s, when rebels allied to
the Islamist Salvation Front maintained a jihad responsible for around 100,000
civilian deaths.
During the Sudanese civil wars, jihadi rhetoric and
action have provided politically expedient instruments for the Islamist
government to rule and oppress non-Muslims and dissident Muslims. Wars between
the Muslim North and the Christian and animist South in 1955-72 and 1983-2005,
claimed two million lives and displaced four million people.
In 1992, Bashir government forces attacked Muslim
communities in the rebel-held Nuba Mountains of Kordofan and reportedly
kidnapped and enslaved thousands as religiously sanctioned spoils of war.
During the conflict in Darfur, the same government has used Islamic ideology to
justify an onslaught against non-Arab Muslims, who accused the regime of
oppression. The ongoing war has caused thousands of deaths, widespread rape and
displacement.
Al Qaeda affiliate, al-Shabaab, is a Somali militia
that imposes strict sharia in areas under its control. Since the early 1990s,
activists in Somalia have raised funds in Western diaspora communities for
jihadist propaganda and activity. Their profit from poaching elephants has been
labeled "the white gold of jihad."
From 2012, Northern Mali was in the grip of Islamist
militia Ansar Dine and several smaller groups, which enacted harsh sharia law.
A coalition of forces led by France assisted the Malian army in ending most of
the conflict in 2013, although jihadist attacks have continued.
According to researchers at Kings College London and
the BBC, 16 jihadi groups were responsible for over 5,000 deaths in the month
of November 2014. IS was responsible for 44 percent; the rest were carried out
by Boko Haram in Nigeria, the Taliban in Afghanistan and Pakistan, Al-Qaida in
the Arabian Peninsula, Al-Shabaab in Somalia and Kenya, and others, such as
Jabhat al-Nusra, a rival of IS, in Syria. In this cauldron of violence, the
number of new, competing jihadi groups continually rises, and some merge with
others.
The connection between Islamist ideology and jihad
follows a paradigm in line with previous onslaughts. Not recognizing the
ideological association can lead to a false perception of Islamist militias as
organizations of ignorant criminals, instead of acknowledging their successful
military and economic strategies, stimulated by religious zeal. A notable IS
achievement is evident in their recruitment of over 20,000 foreign fighters.
Another folly is the belief in a purely military
solution to obliterate IS. This conviction ignores the self-righteous rage, religious
fervor and anti-Westernization that inflames the region today, and find origins
in the ideology of Sayyid Qutb, Abul Ala Maududi and the Muslim Brotherhood.
Religion may help raise the flag of battle by Islamic
State but it is not a precondition. In sectarian rivalry, Shia militias, some
backed by Iran, have besieged Sunni villages in Iraq. These militias are poised
to fill the vacuum if Sunni jihadists are overpowered. And Iraqi military
units, some trained by the U.S., stand accused of human rights violations,
after committing the same sort of atrocities as IS.
Ida Lichter, MD (Surry
Hills, NSW, Australia), is a psychiatrist and writer in the UK and Australia.
She is the author of Muslim Women Reformers: Inspiring Voices Against
Oppression, published by Prometheus Books.
Source:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ida-lichter-md/follies-of-denial-jihad-and-the-islamic-state_b_6928122.html?ir=India
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-terrorism-jihad/follies-denial-jihad-islamic-state/d/102132