By Fethullah
Gülen
WORDS fall short to truly express
my deep sadness and revolt in the face of the carnage perpetrated by terrorist
groups such as the so-called Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).
I share profound frustration with
a billion- and-a-half Muslims around the world at the fact that such groups
commit terrorism while dressing up their perverted ideologies as religion. We
Muslims have a special responsibility to not only join hands with fellow human
beings to save our world from the scourge of terrorism and violent extremism,
but also to help repair the tarnished image of our faith.
It is easy to proclaim a certain
identity in the abstract with words and symbols. The sincerity of such claims,
however, can only be measured by comparing our actions with the core values of
our self-proclaimed identities. The true test of belief is not slogans or
dressing up in a certain way; the true test of our beliefs is in living up to
core principles shared by all major world faiths such as upholding the sanctity
of life and respecting the dignity of all humans.
We must categorically condemn the
ideology propagated by terrorists and instead pro- mote a pluralistic mindset
with clarity and confidence. After all, before our ethnic, national or
religious identity comes our common humanity, which suffers a setback each time
a barbaric act is committed. French citizens who lost their lives in Paris,
Shiite Muslim Lebanese citizens who lost their lives in Beirut a day earlier
and scores of Sunni Muslims in Iraq who lost their lives at the hands of the
same terrorists are first and foremost human beings. Our civilization will not
progress until we treat the suffering of humans regardless of their religious
or ethnic identity as equally tragic in our empathy and respond with the same
determination.
Muslims must also reject and
avoid conspiracy theories, which have so far only helped us avoid facing our
social problems. Instead, we must tackle the real questions: Do our communities
provide recruitment grounds for groups with totalitarian mindsets due to
unrecognized authoritarianism within ourselves, domestic physical abuse,
neglect of youth and lack of balanced education? Did our failure to establish
basic human rights and freedoms, supremacy of the rule of law and pluralist
mindsets in our communities lead those who are struggling to seek alternative
paths?
The recent tragedy in Paris is
yet another reminder for both theologians and ordinary Muslims to strongly
reject and condemn barbaric acts perpetrated in the name of our religion.
However, at this juncture, rejection and condemnation are not enough; terrorist
recruitment within Muslim communities must be fought and countered by an
effective collaboration of state authorities, religious leaders and civil
society ac- tors. We must organize community-wide efforts to address all
factors that aid terrorist recruitment.
We need to work with our
community to set up the necessary framework for identifying at-risk youth,
preventing them from seeking self-destructive paths, assisting families with
counseling and other support services. We must promote a proactive, positive
government engagement so that engaged Muslim citizens can sit at the table
where counter terrorism measures are planned and share their ideas.
Our youth should be taught ways
of expressing support and dissent within democratic means. Incorporating
democratic values into school curricula early on is crucial for inculcating a
culture of democracy in young minds.
In the aftermath of such
tragedies, historically strong reactions have surfaced. Anti-Muslim and
anti-religious sentiment as well as security-driven treatment of Muslim
citizens by governments would be counter-productive.
The Muslim citizens of Europe
want to live in peace and tranquility. Despite the negative climate, they
should strive to engage more with their local and national governments to help
work toward more inclusive policies that better integrate their community into
the larger society.
It is also important for us
Muslims to critically review our understanding and practice of Islam in the
light of the conditions and requirements of our age and the clarifications
provided by our collective historic experiences.
This does not mean a rupture from
the cumulative Islamic tradition but rather, an intelligent questioning so we
can confirm the true teachings of the Quran and the Prophetic tradition that
our Muslim predecessors attempted to reveal.
We must proactively marginalize
decontextualized reading of our religious sources that have been employed in
the service of perverted ideologies. Muslim thinkers and intellectuals should
encourage a holistic approach and reconsider jurisprudential verdicts of the
Middle Ages that were issued under perpetual conflict where religious
affiliation often coincided with political affiliation.
Having core beliefs should be
distinguished from dogmatism. It is possible, indeed absolute- ly necessary, to
revive the spirit of freedom of thought that gave birth to a renaissance of
Islam while staying true to the ethos of the religion. Only in such an
atmosphere can Muslims effectively combat incivility and violent extremism.
In the aftermath of the recent
events I am witnessing, with chagrin, the revival of the thesis of the clash of
civilizations. I do not know whether those who first put out such a hypothesis
did so out of vision or desire.
What is certain is that today,
the revival of this rhetoric simply serves the recruitment efforts of the
terrorist networks. I want to state clearly that what we are witnessing is not
a clash of civilizations but rather the clash of humanity with barbarity in our
common civilization.
Our responsibility as Muslim
citizens is to be part of the solution despite our grievances. If we want to
defend the life and civil liberties of Muslims around the world and the peace
and tranquility of every human regardless of their faith, we must act now to
tackle the violent ex- tremism problem in all its dimensions: political,
economic, social and religious.
By setting virtuous examples
through our lives, by discrediting and marginalizing the extremist
interpretations of religious sources, by staying vigilant toward their impact
on our youth, and by incorporating democratic values early in education, we can
counter violence and terrorism as well as totalitarian ideologies that lead to
them.
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