The Conflict Within
An excerpt from my book, “The Conflict Within:
Expressing Religion Through Politics”; Chapter “Muslims in Conflict”, pub.
iUniverse, Inc., Bloomington, IN; 2011.   
 Despite the
tragedy of September 11, and the subsequent terrorist acts against Western
targets throughout the world, despite the clash-of-civilizations mentality that
has seized the globe, despite the blatant religious rhetoric resonating
throughout the halls of governments, there is one thing that cannot be
overemphasized.  What is taking place now
in the Muslim world is an internal conflict among Muslims, not an external
battle between Islam and the West.  The
West is merely a bystander—an unwary yet complicit casualty of a rivalry that
is raging in Islam over who will write the next chapter in its story. This
internal struggle is taking place not in the deserts of the Arabian Peninsula,
but in the developing capitals of the Muslim world—Tehran, Cairo, Damascus,
Baghdad, Islamabad and Jakarta—and in the cosmopolitan capitals of Europe and
the united States—New York, London, Paris, and Berlin—where that message is
being redefined by scores of first-and-second generation Muslim immigrants. By
merging the Islamic values of their ancestors with the democratic ideals of
their new homes, these Muslims have formed what Tariq Ramadan (the Swiss-born intellectual and grandson of Hasan al-Banna) has termed the
“mobilizing force” for the Islamic Reformation. 
      All great
religions have grappled with these issues. 
One need only recall the Europe’s massively destructive Thirty Years’
War (1618-48) between the forces of the Protestant Union and those of the
Catholic League to recognize the ferocity with which interreligious conflicts
have been fought in Christian history. The awful war during which nearly a
third of the population of Germany perished was a gradual progression in
Christian theology from the doctrinal absolutism to the doctrinal pluralism of
the early modern period, and ultimately, to the doctrinal relativism of the
Enlightenment.  This remarkable evolution
in Christianity from its inception to its Reformation took fifteen bloody
centuries.
      Some
fourteen hundred years of rabid debate over what it means to be a Muslim; of
passionate arguments over the interpretation of the Quran and the application
of Islamic law; of trying to reconcile a fractured community through appeals to
Divine Unity; of tribal feuds, crusades, and world wars—Islam has finally begun
its fifteenth century.
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