An ancient Jewish hermeneutical principle teaches that the
“mashal” is not like the “nimshal” an
analogy never completely matches that which is being analogized. The semanticist Alfred Korzybski expressed
this with the words “The map is not the territory.” When we analogize two things we can expect
significant overlap but not perfect correspondence. Here too in this meme (as
many have pointed) the correspondence is not perfect. Still I think the overlap is worth exploring
and meaningful.
People have asked, “Is it really fair to compare the KKK, a tiny fringe group who define themselves by attitudes to race to ISIS which is enjoys wide popularity in the Muslim world and represents a legitimized, albeit repugnant to some, interpretation of Islam?” Beneath this question are some problematic assumptions. The KKK while now quite small was a major force in the reconstruction south. They were mainstream and politically powerful. The KKK, even today, links its racist attitudes to Christianity. In fact, nearly all racist groups in America including the KKK espouse what scholars of American religion call “The Christian Identity Movement” which roots their racism solidly in Christianity. To this day, the KKK uses the symbols of Christianity, the crusader cross on the uniform and the flaming crosses. The Christian Identity Christianity claims not just to be an authentic interpretation of Christianity but THE authentic interpretation of Christianity. The ADL estimates that there are 25,000-50,000 people who openly identify with this movement primarily in the US and Britain http://archive.adl.org/learn/ext_us/christian_identity.html According to the ADL, they are heavily involved in criminal activity ranging from hate crimes so terrorism. The CIA estimates that ISIS fighters number something less than 40,000. So even the numbers are not so incomparable.
People have asked, “Is it really fair to compare the KKK, a tiny fringe group who define themselves by attitudes to race to ISIS which is enjoys wide popularity in the Muslim world and represents a legitimized, albeit repugnant to some, interpretation of Islam?” Beneath this question are some problematic assumptions. The KKK while now quite small was a major force in the reconstruction south. They were mainstream and politically powerful. The KKK, even today, links its racist attitudes to Christianity. In fact, nearly all racist groups in America including the KKK espouse what scholars of American religion call “The Christian Identity Movement” which roots their racism solidly in Christianity. To this day, the KKK uses the symbols of Christianity, the crusader cross on the uniform and the flaming crosses. The Christian Identity Christianity claims not just to be an authentic interpretation of Christianity but THE authentic interpretation of Christianity. The ADL estimates that there are 25,000-50,000 people who openly identify with this movement primarily in the US and Britain http://archive.adl.org/learn/ext_us/christian_identity.html According to the ADL, they are heavily involved in criminal activity ranging from hate crimes so terrorism. The CIA estimates that ISIS fighters number something less than 40,000. So even the numbers are not so incomparable.
But OK, so
a bunch of hicks and skinheads believe some weird kind of Christianity but
every one knows THIS is not Christianity.
Our Christian neighbors don’t believe this stuff but I am not so sure
about the Muslims. Get real, ISIS IS
Islam.
Muslim scholar
after Muslim scholar says it isn’t.
(Here are links to a few http://www.beliefnet.com/columnists/commonwordcommonlord/2014/08/think-muslims-havent-condemned-isis-think-again.html) Like Judaism, the parameters of the
religion are not decided by popular vote
but by scholarly convention. If every
major thinker in Islam says its not Islam it is not Islam. Non-Muslims need to get the pain that Muslims
feel at seeing their religion dragged in the mud and represented by a sheer
brutality that Muslims reject.
But do they really?
It is true
that Muslim organization after organization has completely condemned ISIS, but don’t people really support them? What
about the Al Jazeera poll? 81% of Al
Jazeera readers said they supported the victories of ISIS. Wow, that is scary.
It would be if it were in any way a representative sample of anything. The Al
Jazeera poll only appeared on the Arabic service (the English service has a very different,
wider audience and seems to have more autonomy than the Arabic service.) It represents a very small sample even of the
Arab world focused in the gulf states and Egypt. Al Jazeera Arabic is regarded
as a propaganda arm of the Qatari leadership, suspected of being the bank
rollers of ISIS. Reporters involved in the poll have resigned claiming that the
poll was falsified. So the Al Jazeera poll is most likely tells us a lot about
the anti-Shia hatred of a small powerful Sunni elite rather than some broad
base of support for ISIS.
So the analogy is fair in the sense
that both the KKK (and the Christian Identity Movement) and ISIS represent
themselves as THE authentic representatives of their faith. In both cases this
is a claim that is widely rejected by scholars of that faith. In neither case
is their wide popular support.
When it comes to
the potential danger of these two movements the analogy reaches its limits. The
KKK and its allied groups appeal to a world of white privilege that has largely
been dismantled by the civil rights movement and largely made irrelevant. Christian Identity will attract a small number of the
disgruntled white working class in the US
and Britain but its appeal is very limited. ISIS may have a broader appeal. ISIS pitches
it’s call to action in two directions. It pitches to those in the Middle East
who have faced the hopelessness, poverty and oppression of colonialism followed
by tyrannical despotism. To them this vision of a “Just” Islamic state may
seem a plausible alternative to the politics of power and privilege. The other
appeal is to the Muslim youth of the West conflicted by the seeming emptiness and
rootlessness of Western civilization. Teens in the West are barraged with
messages of empty despair about themselves.
One can never be beautiful enough. One can never own enough. Intuiting the utter bankruptcy of this view
of the world, youth may look for meaning in a cause. ISIS and its allies stand at the ready, to
recruit young people to what they describe as a life of meaning and heroic
purpose.
The take-home message here?
We need to get that it is as painful for Muslims to see their religion represented by the ISIS as it would be for most Christians if the KKK or Skinhead churches were said to represent Christianity. That news agencies and other “officializing” media insist that ISIS is somehow a legitimate take on Islam feels unfair and hatefully discriminatory to Muslims. The meme reminds us that we can legitimately see ISIS both as a band of religious crazies who, like the KKK, cloak their politics and their hatred in a perversion of faith.
We need to get that it is as painful for Muslims to see their religion represented by the ISIS as it would be for most Christians if the KKK or Skinhead churches were said to represent Christianity. That news agencies and other “officializing” media insist that ISIS is somehow a legitimate take on Islam feels unfair and hatefully discriminatory to Muslims. The meme reminds us that we can legitimately see ISIS both as a band of religious crazies who, like the KKK, cloak their politics and their hatred in a perversion of faith.
We need to think very deeply about the ways that media uses ISIS
to consistently dehumanize and indeed, demonize all Muslims. What are the implications of these attitudes
for our policies and actions as individuals, communities and nations.
Lastly, should we take ISIS seriously? YES, VERY SERIOUSLY. To do that we also need to think about the ground on which ISIS grows. We need to examine our role in supporting a culture of despotism and hopelessness in the Middle East. We need to look at the ways in which we foster a culture of meaninglessness in the West.
Rebbe Nachman of Breslov taught, “If you believe you can destroy, then believe you can fix.”
Lastly, should we take ISIS seriously? YES, VERY SERIOUSLY. To do that we also need to think about the ground on which ISIS grows. We need to examine our role in supporting a culture of despotism and hopelessness in the Middle East. We need to look at the ways in which we foster a culture of meaninglessness in the West.
Rebbe Nachman of Breslov taught, “If you believe you can destroy, then believe you can fix.”
The threat of ISIS is an invitation to fix the world, to
create a world in which people seek heroism in doing acts of kindness in which
people find meaning in service to humanity not the raw pursuit of power. ISIS
sells false idealism and false hope. We need to sell real idealism and real
hope.