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The Ugly History of Jihad
By Daniel Pipes
FrontPageMagazine.com
In his just-released, absorbing, and excellent book,
Understanding Jihad (University of California Press), David Cook
of Rice University dismisses the low-grade debate that has raged
since 9/11 over the nature of jihad -- whether it is a form of
offensive warfare or (more pleasantly) a type of moral
self-improvement.
Cook dismisses as "pathetic and laughable" John Esposito’s
contention that jihad refers to "the effort to lead a good
life." Throughout history and at present, Cook
definitively establishes, the term primarily means "warfare with
spiritual significance."
His achievement lies in tracing the evolution of jihad from
Muhammad to Osama, following how the concept has changed through
fourteen centuries. This summary does not do justice to
Cook’s extensive research, prolific examples, and thoughtful
analysis, but even a thumbnail sketch suggests jihad’s
evolution.
The Koran invites Muslims to give their lives in exchange for
assurances of paradise.
The Hadith (accounts of Muhammad’s actions and personal
statements) elaborate on the Koran, providing specific
injunctions about treaties, pay, booty, prisoners, tactics, and
much else. Muslim jurisprudents then wove these precepts
into a body of law.
Muhammad’s conquests: During his years in power, the prophet
engaged in an average of nine military campaigns a year, or one
every 5-6 weeks; thus did jihad help define Islam from its very
dawn. Conquering and humiliating non-Muslims was a main
feature of the prophet’s jihad.
During the Arab conquests and after, the first several centuries
of Islam, "the interpretation of jihad was unabashedly
aggressive and expansive." After the conquests subsided,
non-Muslims hardly threatened and Sufi notions of jihad as
self-improvement developed in complement to the martial meaning.
The Crusades, the centuries-long European effort to control the
Holy Land, gave jihad a new urgency and prompted what Cook calls
the "classical theory" of jihad. Finding themselves on the
defensive led to a hardening of Muslim attitudes.
The Mongol invasions of the thirteenth century subjugated much
of the Muslim world, a catastrophe only partially mitigated by
the Mongols’ nominal conversion to Islam. Some thinkers,
Ibn Taymiya (d. 1328) in particular, came to distinguish between
true and false Muslims; and to give jihad new prominence by
judging the validity of a person’s faith according to his
willingness to wage jihad.
Nineteenth century "purification jihads" took place in several
regions against fellow Muslims. The most radical and
consequential of these was the Wahhabis' jihad in Arabia.
Drawing on Ibn Taymiya, they condemned most non-Wahhabi Muslims
as infidels (kafirs) and waged jihad against them.
European imperialism inspired jihadi resistance efforts, notably
in India, the Caucasus, Somalia, Sudan, Algeria, and Morocco,
but all in the end failed. This disaster meant new
thinking was needed.
Islamist new thinking began in Egypt and India in the 1920s but
jihad acquired its contemporary quality of radical offensive
warfare only with the Egyptian thinker Sayyid Qutb (d. 1966).
Qutb developed Ibn Taymiya’s distinction between true and false
Muslims to deem non-Islamists to be non-Muslims and then declare
jihad on them. The group that assassinated Anwar El-Sadat
in 1981 then added the idea of jihad as the path to world
domination.
The anti-Soviet war in Afghanistan led to the final step (so
far) in this evolution. In Afghanistan, for the first
time, jihadis assembled from around the world to fight on behalf
of Islam. Abdullah Azzam, a Palestinian, became the
theorist of global jihad in the 1980s, giving it an unheard-of
central role, judging each Muslim exclusively by his
contribution to jihad, and making jihad the salvation of Muslims
and Islam. Out of this quickly came suicide terrorism and
bin Laden.
Cook’s erudite and timely study has many implications, including
these:
The current understanding of jihad is more extreme than at any
prior time in Islamic history.
This extremism suggests that the Muslim world is going through a
phase, one that must be endured and overcome, comparable to
analogously horrid periods in Germany, Russia, and China.
Jihad having evolved steadily until now, doubtless will continue
to do so in the future.

© copyright Beckwith 2007
all right reserved
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