Andrew G. Bostom: Islamism or Islam, Islamist or Islamic?

Fourth in a four-part series

Turkey’s current Prime Minister Erdogan, commenting in August, 2007 on the term “moderate Islam,” frequently used in the West to describe his ruling political party, the AKP, stated, “These descriptions are very ugly, it is offensive and an insult to our religion. There is no moderate or immoderate Islam. Islam is Islam and that’s it.”

Erdogan’s displeasure is ironic, even somewhat humorous, given the contemporary Western apologetic obsession to recast the terms “Islamism,” and “Islamist,” to denote, exclusively, “radical” or “immoderate” Islam, and its adherents.

Through the early 20th century, “Islamism” and “Islam” were synonymous, and meant to be equivalent to “Catholicism,” “Protestantism,” and “Judaism”–not to “radical” or “fundamentalist” sects of any of these religions. Moreover, through at least the mid-1950s, scholars devoted to the formal study of Islamic doctrine and history were still referred to as “Islamists.”

But the irony of Erdogan’s ire aside, artificial distinctions between “Islamism” and Islam, “Islamist” and Islamic are logically incoherent, obfuscating irrefragable truths about living Islamic dogma, and its modern manifestations.

The 1990 Cairo Declaration, or “Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Islam“–not Islamism–was drafted and ratified by all the Muslim member nations of the Organization of the Islamic–not Islamist–Conference (OIC), a 57 state collective including every Islamic nation on earth. The OIC thus represents the entire Muslim ummah (or global community), and is the largest single voting bloc in the United Nations.

Its preamble and concluding articles (24 and 25) make plain that the OIC’s Cairo Declaration is designed to supersede Western conceptions of human rights as enunciated, for example, in the U.S. Bill of Rights.

The preamble repeats a Koranic injunction affirming Islamic supremacism, (Koran 3:110): “Reaffirming the civilizing and historical role of the Islamic Ummah which Allah made the best nation…”

The gravely negative implications of this Islamic Law (Shari’a)-based document (“There shall be no crime or punishment except as provided for in the Shari’a”) are most apparent in its transparent rejection of freedom of conscience in Article 10.

Articles 19 and 22 reiterate Shari’a principles, stated throughout the document, which clearly apply to the “punishment”–death–for so-called “apostates” from Islam.

The Cairo Declaration–entirely consistent with Islamic Law–also introduces unacceptable discrimination against non-Muslims and women, while sanctioning the legitimacy of dehumanizing, Shari’a-compliant punishments such as flogging, amputation, and stoning.

And polling data from a rigorously conducted WorldPublicOpinion.org survey released in April 2007 demonstrate the Cairo Declaration’s Islamic Law principles–antithetical to Western formulations of human rights–are embraced by the preponderance of the world’s Muslims.

Fully two-thirds of a representative sample of 4,400 Muslims from Morocco, Egypt, Pakistan, and Indonesia desired the ultimate jihad conquest imperatives – to re-create a unified supra-national Islamic state, or Caliphate, ruled by “strict application of Shari’a.”

These quintessential goals of jihad were repeated by the mass murdering jihadist psychiatrist Nidal Hasan as part of an erstwhile “medical grand rounds” given on June 27, 2007. Although Hasan merely reiterates salient aspects of classical jihad theory, this reality is understandably “shocking” to our willfully uninformed elites in the media, military, and government.

Nidal Hasan’s presentation concludes, in full accord with classical Islamic doctrine regarding jihad war: “Fighting to establish an Islamic State to please Allah, even by force is condoned by (sic) Islam.”

Unapologetic observations from 1950 by a great 20th century “Islamist” scholar of the Shari’a, G.H. Bousquet, contextualize these ominous trends. Bousquet described Islam itself as “as a doubly totalitarian system,” which, “claimed to impose itself on the whole world and it claimed also, by the divinely appointed Muhammadan law…to regulate down to the smallest details the whole life of the Islamic community, and of every individual believer.”

Andrew Bostom, MD (www.andrewbostom.org ) is the author of the The Legacy of Jihad, and The Legacy of Islamic Antisemitism.//www.andrewbostom.org>

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