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What is Political
Islam?
Charles Hirschkind
Many scholars have argued that "political Islam" involves an illegitimate
extension of the Islamic tradition outside of the properly religious
domain it has historically occupied. Few, however, have explored
this trend in relation to the contemporaneous expansion of state
power and concern into vast domains of social life previously outside
its purview- -including that of religion.
Over the last few
decades, Islam has become a central point of reference for a wide
range of political activities, arguments and opposition movements.
The term "political Islam" has been adopted by many scholars in order
to identify this seemingly unprecedented irruption of Islamic religion
into the secular domain of politics and thus to distinguish these
practices from the forms of personal piety, belief, and ritual conventionally
subsumed in Western scholarship under the unmarked category "Islam."
In the brief comments the follow, I suggest why we might need to rethink
this basic framework.
The claim
that contemporary Muslim activists are putting Islam to use for
political purposes seems, at least in some instances, to be warranted.
Political parties such as Hizb al-'Amal in Egypt or the Islamic
Salvation Front (FIS) in Algeria that base their appeal on their
Islamic credentials appear to exemplify this instrumental relation
to religion. Yet a problem remains, even in such seemingly obvious
examples: in what way does the distinction between the political
and nonpolitical domains of social life hold today? Many scholars
have argued that "political Islam" involves an illegitimate extension
of the Islamic tradition outside of the properly religious domain
it has historically occupied. Few, however, have explored this
trend in relation to the contemporaneous expansion of state power
and concern into vast domains of social life previously outside
its purview--including that of religion.
As we know,
through this ongoing process central to modern nation building,
such institutions as education, worship, social welfare and family
have been incorporated to varying degrees within the regulatory
apparatuses of the modernizing state. Whether in entering into
business contracts, selling wares on the street, disciplining
children, adding a room to a house, in all births, marriages,
deaths--at each juncture the state is present as overseer or guarantor,
defining limits, procedures and necessary preconditions.
As a consequence,
modern politics and the forms of power it deploys have become
a condition for the practice of many personal activities. As for
religion, to the extent that the institutions enabling the cultivation
of religious virtue become subsumed within (and transformed by)
legal and administrative structures linked to the state, the (traditional)
project of preserving those virtues will necessarily be "political"
if it is to succeed. Within both public and private schools in
Egypt, for example, the curriculum is mandated by the state: those
wishing to promote or maintain Islamic pedagogical practices necessarily
have to engage political power.
This does
not mean that all forms of contemporary Islamic activism involve
trying to "capture the state." The vast majority of these movements
involve preaching and other da'wa (missionary) activities,
alms-giving, providing medical care, mosque building, publishing
and generally promoting what is considered in the society to be
public virtue through community action. Nonetheless, these activities
engage the domain we call the political both in the sense that
they are subject to restrictions imposed by the state (licensing,
etc.), and in so much as they must often compete with state or
state-supported institutions (pedagogic, confessional, medical)
promoting Western models of family, worship, leisure, social responsibility,
etc. The success of even a conservative project to preserve a
traditional form of personal piety will depend on its ability
to engage with the legal, bureaucratic, disciplinary and technological
resources of modern power that shape contemporary societies.
This argument
diverges from the common one that Islam fuses religion and politics,
din wa dawla, in a way incompatible with Western analytical
categories. It is worth noting, however, that this frequently
heard claim does not deny the fact that Muslim thinkers draw distinctions
between din and dawla; only that the specific domains
designated by these terms, and the structure of their interrelations
do not mirror the situation in Europe in regard to European states
and the Church. Moreover, this leaves aside the fact that the
division between religious and political domains even in Western
societies has always been far more porous than was previously
assumed, as much recent work has made clear.1
Indeed, as Tocqueville long ago observed, Protestant Christianity
plays an extremely important role in US politics in setting the
moral boundaries and concerns within which political discussion
unfolds, and hence can be considered the premiere political institution
in some sense. I do not refer here to the lobbying efforts of
church groups and other religious advocacy associations, but rather
to the way a pervasive Christianity has been to varying degrees
a constitutive element of Western political institutions. What
is clear, in any case, is that greater recognition must be given
to the way Western concepts (religion, political, secular, temporal)
reflect specific historical developments, and cannot be applied
as a set of universal categories or natural domains.
Lastly,
although discussions of political motivation or class interest
should continue to be important parts of accounts of contemporary
Islam, they are not necessarily germane to a description of every
problem the analyst poses. Statements like the following have
too long been de rigeur in accounts of the Islamic sahwa
(awakening): "Marginalized male elites experience socioeconomic
disparities as cultural loss, and they are drawn to participate
in fundamentalist cadres in order to militate against nationalist
structures that they deplore as un-Islamic because they are, above
all, ineffective."2 Such analyses reduce the
movements to an expression of the socioeconomic conditions which
gave rise to them. The "marginalized male elites" speak nothing
new to us, as their arguments and projects, once properly translated
into the language of political economy, seem entirely familiar.
Lost, in other words, is any sense of the specificity of the claims
and reasoning of the actors. This is brushed aside as we reiterate
what we already know about the universal operation of socioeconomic
disparities.
Grasping
such complexity will require a much more subtle approach than
one grounded in a simple distinction between (modern) political
goals and (traditional) religious ones. Terms such as "political
Islam" are inadequate here as they frame our inquiries around
a posited distortion or corruption of properly religious practice.
In this way, the disruptive intrusions or outright destruction
enacted upon society by the modernizing state never even figure
in the analysis. In contrast, the various attempts of religious
people to respond to that disruption are rendered suspect, with
almost no attempt to distinguish those instances where such a
critical stance is warranted from those where it is not. It is
not surprising, in this light, that militant violence and public
intolerance have become the central issues of so many studies
of al-sahwa al-islamiyya (Islamic awakening), while the
extensive coercion and torture practiced by governments get relegated
to a footnote.
Charles Hirschkind
is a PhD candidate in anthropology at Johns Hopkins University.
Author's
note: I wish to thank Talal Asad, Saba Mahmood, Hussein Agrama,
Steve Niva and Lisa Hajjar for their comments and suggestions
on this brief article. Its shortcomings are my responsibility
alone.
Endnotes
1
See William Connolly, The Ethos of Pluralization (Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press, 1995).
2
Bruce Lawrence, The Defenders of God: The Fundamentalist Revolt
Against the Modern Age (Columbia, South Carolina: University
of South Carolina Press, 1995), p. 226.

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