The attacks on the United States of
September 11, 2001, prompted the West to launch a massive appeal to
Muslims around the world to reflect on their religion and culture.
American President George W. Bush, British Prime Minister Tony Blair,
and numerous other leaders in the West asked Muslim organizations in
their countries to distance themselves from Islam as preached by these
nineteen terrorists. This plea was met with indignation from Muslims
who thought it was inappropriate to hold them responsible for the
criminal conduct of nineteen young men. Yet the fact that the people
who committed the attacks on September 11 were Muslims, and the fact
that before this date Muslims in many parts of the world were already
harboring feelings of immense resentment toward the United States in
particular, have urged me to investigate whether the roots of evil can
be traced to the faith I grew up with: was the aggression, the hatred
inherent in Islam itself?
My parents brought me up to be a Muslim --
a good Muslim. Islam dominated the lives of our family and relations
down to the smallest detail. It was our ideology, our political
conviction, our moral standard, our law, and our identity. We were
first and foremost Muslim and only then Somali. Muslims, as we were
taught the meaning of the name, are people who submit themselves to
Allah's will, which is found in the Koran and the Hadith, a collection
of sayings ascribed to the Prophet Muhammad. I was taught that Islam
sets us apart from the rest of the world, the world of non-Muslims. We
Muslims are chosen by God. They, the others, the kaffirs, the
unbelievers, are antisocial, impure, barbaric, not circumcised,
immoral, unscrupulous, and above all, obscene; they have no respect
for women; their girls and women are whores; many of the men are
homosexual; men and women have sex without being married. The
unfaithful are cursed, and God will punish them most atrociously in
the hereafter.
When my sister and I were small, we would
occasionally make remarks about nice people who were not Muslim, but
my mother and grandmother would always say, "No, they are not
good people. They know about the Koran and the Prophet and Allah, and
yet they haven't come to see that the only thing a person can be is
Muslim. They are blind. If they were such nice and good people, they
would have become Muslims and then Allah would protect them against
evil. But it is up to them. If they become Muslims, they will go to
paradise."
There are also Christians and Jews who
raise their children in the belief that they are God's chosen people,
but among Muslims the feeling that God has granted them special
salvation goes further.
About twelve years ago, at age twenty-two,
I arrived in Western Europe, on the run from an arranged marriage. I
soon learned that God and His truth had been humanized here. For
Muslims life on earth is merely a transitory stage before the
hereafter; but here people are also allowed to invest in their lives
as mortals. What is more, hell seems no longer to exist, and God is a
god of love rather than a cruel ruler who metes out punishments. I
began to take a more critical look at my faith and discovered three
important elements of Islam that had not particularly struck me
before.
The first of these is that a Muslim's
relationship with his God is one of fear. A Muslim's conception of God
is absolute. Our God demands total submission. He rewards you if you
follow His rules meticulously. He punishes you cruelly if you break
His rules, both on earth, with illness and natural disasters, and in
the hereafter, with hellfire.
The second element is that Islam knows only
one moral source: the Prophet Muhammad. Muhammad is infallible. You
would almost believe he is himself a god, but the Koran says
explicitly that Muhammad is a human being; he is a supreme human
being, though, the most perfect human being. We must live our lives
according to his example. What is written in the Koran is what God
said as it was heard by Muhammad. The thousands of hadiths -- accounts
of what Muhammad said and did, and the advice he gave, which survives
in weighty books -- tell us exactly how a Muslim was supposed to live
in the seventh century. Devout Muslims consult these works daily to
answer questions about life in the twenty-first century.
The third element is that Islam is strongly
dominated by a sexual morality derived from tribal Arab values dating
from the time the Prophet received his instructions from Allah, a
culture in which women were the property of their fathers, brothers,
uncles, grandfathers, or guardians. The essence of a woman is reduced
to her hymen. Her veil functions as a constant reminder to the outside
world of this stifling morality that makes Muslim men the owners of
women and obliges them to prevent their mothers, sisters, aunts,
sisters-in-law, cousins, nieces, and wives from having sexual contact.
And we are not just talking about cohabitation. It is an offense if a
woman glances in the direction of a man, brushes past his arm, or
shakes his hand. A man's reputation and honor depend entirely on the
respectable, obedient behavior of the female members of his family.
These three elements explain largely why
Muslim nations are lagging behind the West and, more recently, also
lagging behind Asia. In order to break through the mental bars of this
trinity, behind which the majority of Muslims are restrained, we must
begin with a critical self-examination. But any Muslim who asks
critical questions about Islam is immediately branded a
"deserter." A Muslim who advocates the exploration of
sources for morality, in addition to those of the Prophet Muhammad,
will be threatened with death, and a woman who withdraws from the
virgins' cage is branded a whore.
Through my personal experiences, through
reading a great deal and speaking to others, I have come to realize
that the existence of Allah, of angels, demons, and a life after
death, is at the very least disputable. If Allah exists at all, we
must not regard His word as absolute, but challenge it. I once wrote
about my doubts regarding my faith in the hope of starting a
discussion. I was immediately confronted by zealous Muslims, men and
women who wanted to have me excommunicated. They even went so far as
to say that I deserved to die because I had dared to call into
question the absolute truth of Allah's word. They took me to court to
prevent me from criticizing the faith I had been born into, from
asking questions about the regulations and gods that Allah's messenger
has imposed upon us. An Islamic fundamentalist murdered Theo van Gogh,
the Dutch filmmaker who helped me make Submission: Part I, a film
about the relationship between the individual and God, in particular
about the individual woman and God. And he threatened to kill me, too,
a threat that others have also pledged to fulfill.
Like other thinking people, I like to tap
into sources of wisdom, morality, and imagination other than religious
texts -- other books besides the Koran and accounts of the Prophet --
and I would like other Muslims to tap into them, too. Just because
Spinoza, Voltaire, John Stuart Mill, Kant, or Bertrand Russell are not
Islamic and have no Islamic counterparts does not mean that Muslims
should steer clear of these and other Western philosophers. Yet, at
present, reading works by Western thinkers is regarded as
disrespectful to the Prophet and Allah's message. This is a serious
misconception. Why should it not be permitted to abide by all the good
things Muhammad has urged us to do (such as his advice to be
charitable toward the poor and orphans), while at the same time adding
to our lives and outlook the ideas of other moral philosophers? After
all, the fact that the Wright brothers were not Islamic has not
stopped Muslims from traveling by air. By adopting the technical
inventions of the West without its courage to think independently, we
perpetuate the mental stagnation in Islamic culture, passing it on
from one generation to the next.
The most important explanation for the
mental and material backlog we Muslims find ourselves in should
probably be sought in the sexual morality that we are force-fed from
birth (see chapter 3, "The Virgins' Cage"). I would like to
invite all people like me who had an Islamic upbringing to compare and
contrast J. S. Mill's essay "On the Subjection of Women"
(1869) with what the Prophet Muhammad has to say on the subject of
women. Both were undeniably interested in the role of women, but there
is a vast difference between Muhammad and Mill. For instance, Mill
considered his beloved wife an intellectual equal; Muhammad was a
polygamist and wrote that men have authority over women because God
made one superior to the other. Mill, a model of calm reason in the
face of contentious issues, argued that if freedom is good for men, it
is good for women, a position that today most of the modern world
considers unassailable.
Yet any investigation into the Islamic
trinity by a Muslim is thought to be an act of complete betrayal of
the religion and the Prophet. It is extremely painful for a believer
to try to question. And it is extremely painful for a believer to hear
that other Muslims are questioning the Islamic trinity. Muslim's
strong emotions and condemnations of people who do question the
trinity impress outsiders, myself included, especially when they are
expressed on a massive scale by entire communities and even nations,
as has happened in Egypt, Iran, and Indonesia…