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Islam in “Cyberia”

By Prof. Shahul Hameed

21/07/2004

The computer, as we have come to realize, has become an extension of our central nervous system. Software substitutes most hardware, and we now live in a world where the dividing line between virtual reality and physical reality is fast disappearing.

The Internet spans the globe in all languages and cultures, bringing spatially distant individuals virtually close together. Millions are now online. Almost everyone in the developed countries is wired and connected, and the rest of the world is expected to reach the same level of information-rich existence: Virtual reality is slowly supplanting the real reality.


Virtual reality is slowly supplanting the real reality.


And the digital gurus now feel that we need much more than the present cyberspace, so they are planning Internet-2. Once this is realized, you will be able to check your e-mails over a high-speed Internet connection while waiting for the bus, or chat with your friends using high-definition television. You will even be able to inject a chip the size of a grain of rice under your skin, that will help others track you wherever you are, check your credit card details, and so on and so forth.[1]

A Florida-based manufacturer has already made a chip with “a variety of security, defense and secure-access applications, such as government and private sector facilities.” It is very small and sits dormant under your skin until a scanner is passed over it, sending out a low-range radio frequency. The chip responds to the signal and supplies the scanner with its unique ID number. How that number is used depends on the database the scanner is hooked up to. A beach club in Barcelona has already introduced it to its VIP members, according to reports.[2]


We cannot draw demarcating lines around the “Digital Us.” As we gradually adjust our lives to the latest digital experiences, we stray further and further from the world of here and now.


We have reached a stage where we cannot distinguish the real elements of our thoughts and feelings from the virtual ones. We cannot draw demarcating lines around the “Digital Us.” As we gradually adjust our lives to the latest digital experiences, we stray further and further from the world of here and now, and that world becomes less and less satisfying. Once we’re wired for a virtual world, the present world goes dim and fails to satisfy our digitized needs. This is the situation the world is coming to.

The Internet, unlike television or newspapers, provides interaction. Everyone contributes in some way to its organization. We may call it a huge dream machine. We know we are likely to fall asleep anywhere, and on the Internet we are prone to spiritual sleep. But probably the Internet is less sleep-inducing than TV because surfing the Web is a relatively proactive pursuit.


Speed is basically injurious to the spirit. We need time to pray, to meditate. And a mad rush is not likely to yield any spiritual benefit.


The problem with high tech is that it tends to impede spiritual growth. No doubt, superhighways facilitate speed. But speed is basically injurious to the spirit. We need time to pray, to meditate. And a mad rush is not likely to yield any spiritual benefit.

Bandwidth generates a profusion of information, a multiplicity of interests; indeed, it provides an extremely perplexing maze of pathways. It was the 19th- century English poet Matthew Arnold who spoke of “the sick hurry and divided aims” as the disease of modern man. Struggling to disentangle from the web of confusion, a surfer often loses the way and follows the wrong lead.


The 19th-century English poet Matthew Arnold spoke of “the sick hurry and divided aims” as the disease of modern man.


Probably the most serious shortcoming of the Net is its divorce from nature, as it means a divorce from the body, which is our primary anchor to reality as also to spiritual energies. Certainly, many people go to the Net to escape, to abandon themselves to a make-believe world, even a world of Technicolor dreams. The result is that those who are constrained to spend much time in cyberspace will learn to cherish the natural world. After spending hours on end staring at a computer monitor, there is nothing like the scent of a flower or the push of the wind against your face.

Religion on the Net


Certainly, many people go to the Net to escape, to abandon themselves to a make-believe world, even a world of Technicolor dreams.


People often try out multiple selves in some of the activities and games available on the Net. They deliberately indulge in a sort of consensual hallucination. This allows them to explore their shadow selves, as it were. The projected “me” need not be the real “me.” One thing people do on the Internet is to project their shadow selves into cyberspace and create online characters for role playing. Cyberspace helps them to overstep the barriers of their physical presence. They get more insights into themselves if they integrate all these shadow selves into who they are.


On the Internet people project their shadow selves into cyberspace and create online characters for role playing.


Traditionally we posit two kinds of space: the material world in which our bodies exist, and a spiritual world where our souls dwell. We can think of cyberspace as existing somewhere in between: a world that shares some of the qualities of the material world, such as space and time; and some of the qualities of the spiritual world, such as interacting with thousands of souls at thousands of locations at once. 

This takes us to the social, as well as to the spiritual, implications of the Internet: The Net offers us an opportunity for a new community life, and it can create in us a new interest in religious pursuits or even open before us hitherto unexplored areas of spiritual awakening. This is the positive aspect of it.

The downside is that the Net can also tempt us to further and further social isolation. As I engage in more and more online activities, I can avoid face-to-face human interaction, except for the select few with whom I really want to be. This leads to a new elitism. But we can never substitute Internet interaction for flesh- and-blood contact because we are corporeal beings, because cyberlife will never be the same as looking into one another’s eyes as we share our joys and concerns.

So, the increasing “cyberization” of our lives makes real-life interaction ever more crucial to keep ourselves human. We can allow our shadow selves to be in cyberspace, but we must not lose our souls in cyberspace. In the process of cyberizing Isalm, we must see what happens to Islam.

Islam on the Internet


The Net offers us an opportunity for a new community life, and it can create in us a new interest in religious pursuits or even open before us hitherto unexplored areas of spiritual awakening.


We have said that the increased speed of communication and information transmission has altered perceptions of time and space, bringing people together. This is a positive thing about the Internet: People who wouldn’t talk to each other are coming together in cyberspace. Thus, people from distant places can be on a single platform to discuss and debate a wide range of topics and ideas. And for this reason, religion and culture will never be the same again. It certainly has a positive effect on the Muslim peoples, as this becomes a step towards the unity of the Ummah. We may compare the virtual Ummah to the real Ummah who gather at Makkah every year for Hajj: They represent all colors, shades, and nuances of the diversity of the Islamic world.

Around 15 million Muslims all over the world surf the Net. This is a little above one percent of the total world Muslim population, and only a fraction of those who watch TV channels. Gary Bunt, in his pioneering work, Islam in the Digital Age, explores how the application of electronic media has affected Islam and Muslims.[3] Bunt explores the whole new life of cyberjihad, cyberimams, and online Muslim communities. He defines the themes that characterize the Islamic lane on the cyberhighway.

Bunt says that before September 11, there were e-jihad sites that encouraged Muslims to fight the oppression faced by Muslims in different parts of the world such as Palestine, Chechnya, Afghanistan, and Kashmir. Many of the Web sites contained graphic images of victims of oppression as a means of gearing support.

After September 11, the American government began to crack down on all these forms of open resistance, which they deemed as “terrorist in nature.” The United States has “intensified its scrutiny of websites and is moving to intercept any email traffic generated by the websites. Western intelligence agencies are also routinely snooping on visitors to extremist Muslim websites.”[4]

Online activism in the name of Islam is an area in which tensions might escalate as Internet technology has become more widely available and accessible. Muslims were forced to wage cyberwarfare with hackers from rival groups based in the United States and Israel. The result was more “protective hacking” and peaceful measures like signing petitions and the like. 


People from distant places can be on a single platform to discuss and debate a wide range of topics and ideas. And for this reason, religion and culture will never be the same again.


A lot of positive work like e-da`wah is done on the Internet now, which merits more attention than it now gets. In fact there are hundreds of sites designed to educate the user about Islam and Muslims. They also provide an interconnectivity between reverts and other Muslims, giving them a channel to share views and concerns. Another advantage is the facility for online fatwa. Young people in particular access these facilities now, as they need not personally go to an imam or a scholar to get a doubt cleared or a problem solved. E-fatwas save a lot of time and trouble, while maintaining the questioner’s anonymity, as any topic is fair game online. At times the legitimacy or authenticity of the e-muftis is questioned, and it is not unusual for them to hide under the anonymity provided by the Internet. There can be an online fiqh council to authenticate or invalidate the fatwas given, wherever necessary.

We know that the Internet is a Western product reflecting the freedom and even lawlessness typical of an open society. There is no doubt that freedom has different definitions in different societies and polities. And often the repressive regimes in some of the “Islamic” countries put forth the view that freedom is injurious to Islam.[5]

And what about the people of the Land of the Free, the United States of America? They, too, have discovered that freedom cannot be completely free! The American unease with Muslim presence is made clear in a book entitled The War on Islam by Enver Masud.[6]

Information Overload and Portals of Knowledge

The Internet—with a far more pervasive influence than any mass medium in the history of human expression—is a double-edged sword, but Muslims seem to have come of age here. Consequently, they use this medium quite effectively to spread the message of Islam.

Another point is that there are a number of sites for Muslim women or managed by Muslim women. Samer Hathout, cofounder of the Muslim Women’s League in Los Angeles, says, “I think for the first time for a lot of Muslim women they can be equal partners in a discussion on anything…. Nobody knows who you are. They don’t know if you are a woman or a man.”[7]

These sites encourage women to study and seek jobs and have a more visible role in social development. Naturally enough, most of the women sites focus on health, family, and beauty. Particularly noteworthy is the emergence of an Islamic feminism in a good number of these sites.


At times the legitimacy or authenticity of the e-muftis is questioned, and it is not unusual for them to hide under the anonymity provided by the Internet. There can be an online fiqh council to authenticate or invalidate the fatwas given, wherever necessary.


One of the advantages of the Islamic Internet is the fact that more and more worldwide debates and discussions are going on about different topics in Islam. I think this openness and freedom lead to greater consensus on controversial issues. Over the Internet, Muslims are engaged in a global conversation no longer limited to a single country or group.

A recent poll conducted by the ABC News and Beliefnet showed that those Americans who knew more about the religion were more positive. “Americans who feel they’re familiar with the basic tenets of Islam are much more likely than others to call it peaceful, to say it teaches respect for non-Mulsims and to view it favorably overall,” says Gary Langer, director of polling for ABC News.[8]

Perhaps because they are not sure what to think, Americans are inquiring more directly about the faith, prompting a big increase in sales of books about Islam. According to Publishers Weekly, before September 11, not one of the top 1,000 religion books on Amazon dealt with Islam. Today, among the top 10 titles in religion, four deal in part or entirely with Islam. According to a December survey by the Pew Internet and American Life Project, during the same time period, 23 percent of Internet users turned to online sources to get information about Islam, according to a December survey by the Pew Internet and American Life Project.

There is no doubt that even before September 11, Islam was well on its way to becoming a mainstream American religion. In the 1940s, politicians felt comfortable talking about Christian beliefs. In the 1950s, they started to refer to Judeo-Christian values. Now, they include Islam as one of the “Big Three,” as Bush did during the 2000 presidential campaign when he talked regularly about the beneficial activities of “churches, synagogues, and mosques.”


One of the advantages of the Islamic Internet is the fact that more and more worldwide debates and discussions are going on about different topics in Islam.


Comments by Franklin Graham, son of Billy Graham, that Islam is an “evil” faith drew support from big pockets of evangelicals—and there were evangelicals who resented President Bush’s statement “Islam is a peaceful religion.”

One point about American Muslims is that they are growing their own style of Islamic activity.

In the last two decades, immigrant Muslims have built mosques all across the country and turned them into vibrant Islamic community centers—in a way that is unheard of in their home countries. Their children have shed the ways of the old countries and now, coming of age in the late 1990s, they have begun grappling with issues such as gender equality, reconciling democracy and Islam, throwing off anti-Semitism, and embracing interfaith dialogue, among other issues. Meanwhile, African-American Muslims, who make up about one-third of all Muslims in this country, have been quietly and ever-more-forcefully asserting themselves as leaders on the path toward a truly American style of Islam. [9]


Certainly the chief concern of Muslims is with the news and features that daily spew forth from Western media sources to tarnish the image of Islam and Muslims. This is the major challenge that Muslims have to tackle diligently and rationally.


After September 11 Muslims in America and other Western countries have recognized a need to get out of their cocoons and get involved in the socio-political life of the country of their adoption. So there is the chance that within a decade, despite all odds, Islam may become a mainstream Western religion. And in this evolution, Cyber-Islam has a crucial role, as is becoming more and more evident.

Certainly the chief concern of Muslims is with the news and features that daily spew forth from Western media sources to tarnish the image of Islam and Muslims. This is the major challenge that Muslims have to tackle diligently and rationally.

And the prospects are good, as many Muslims in the field have proved themselves capable of taking the bull by the horns. And in sha’ Allah, Islam on the Internet is poised to have a good impact on the souls that inhabit “Cyberia.”


* Prof. Shahul Hameed is a prolific writer and a poet specialized in Islamic topics and comparative religion. He is also a consultant to Ask About Islam.

[1] “The Internet of Things,” The Guardian, Oct. 9, 2003. http://www.guardian.co.uk/online/story/0,3605,1058506,00.html

[2] “I’ve Got You Under My Skin,” The Guardian, June 10, 2004. http://www.guardian.co.uk/online/story/ 0%2C3605%2C1234827%2C00.html  
[3] Gary R. Bunt, Islam in the Digital Age: E-Jihad, Online Fatwas and Cyber Islamic Environments (London and Sterling, VA: Pluto Press, 2003).

[4] A review of Islam in the Digital Age, on www.salaam.co.uk at http://www.salaam.co.uk/bookshelf/review.php?option=24

[5] See “Islam and the Internet” by Abdalla Uba Adamu, available at http://www.kanoonline.com/publications/islam_and_the_internet.htm

[6] Enver Masud, The War on Islam, 3rd ed. (Arlington, VA: Madrasah Books, 2003). The book is available online in Adobe format at http://www.twf.org/Library?woi2edL.pdf

[7] “Islam on the Internet—Part I: Building Islamic Communities Online,” March 16, 2002: http://www.npr.org/programs/watc/cyberislam /community.html  

[8] Steven Waldman and Deborah Caldwell, “Americans’ Surprising Take on Islam.” Based on a new ABC News/Beliefnet poll. http://www.beliefnet.com/story/97/story_9732.html

[9] Ibid.


The works posted on this page reflect solely the opinions of the authors.

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