Treading the Beaten Path
Freedom and the Disconnect
The late Aliya Izetbegovic
related a conversation he had with Dr. Sali Berisha who was the first
democratically elected president of Albania. Albania had joined the other
Eastern nations of Europe riding the winds of change which brought down the old
communist regimes. With the demise of the paranoid isolationist and iron fisted
dictator Enver Hoxha, freedom did not fully provide the aspired results of
change. Berisha described it as treading a beaten path and he himself is
accused of being complicit. A quarter-century after Hoxha’s death and two
decades after the fall of communism, Albania is still struggling to complete
its democratic transition. It is this debilitating road to transformation that makes
the common people wonder aloud whether things were not better during those
authoritarian days.
Anwar Ibrahim cautioned this
phenomenon which he described as a disconnect. Political ideals and postulations
may not become realities on the ground leading to such disconnect. It does not reflect the hopes and wishes of
the people. Therefore there is the need for serious discourse in upholding
principles expounding knowledge and illuminating liberating education. There
has to be a juxtaposition of values and ideas. There is disillusionment with
capitalism, the immorality with the complicity of the rich with elite
politicians. Markets that only measure growth without justice cannot be
accepted anymore. It is how freedom and
justice can be translated into caring and socially conscious market economies
which remain true to acknowledging the people’s suffering, that is prerequisite. Change in this aspect means that it cannot be
regarded as business as usual anymore.
Freedom and Empowerment
Egypt’s first freely elected
president Dr Morsi faces a huge task in translating liberation which carried a
heavy price in lives and sacrifices into meaningful deliverables. The old paranoiac
facade of the regime may have collapsed but its corrupt remnants are engaged in
strong and powerful rearguard action. What prevents and stands in the way of a
coup or an army takeover is the people’s resistance and great resolve to
protect their newfound freedom. The people have had enough of dictatorship.
Egypt’s new leaders as well as others
in the aftermath of the Arab Spring or the People’s Revolution have to remain
resolute on freedom, liberation, enlightenment and to bring the people to
empower themselves, to recover the people’s self esteem, to set them free from
holding themselves in contempt anymore. Never to be fooled again by the cunning
ways of the old regime and its benefactors. In the past and in recent history
many great revolutions were hijacked by scoundrels and impostors posing as
agents of change coming from the same regime as had happened in the miserably
corrupt Central Asian countries.
The Children of Israel long under
the enslaving spell of Pharoah, manifests the loss of human dignity, low self
respect, loss of nerve and no fighting spirit until they accept as perfectly
natural the state of slavery generation after generation sheepishly. This
adverse condition comes from corruption of faith causing amnesia,
forgetfulness, then turns man into being arrogant, tyrannical, brutal and a
transgressor unleashed. Man puts his selfish desire as his devotion. From self
corruption (fasad al nufus) it
extends into social corruption (fasad al
mujtama). Relationships between people are broken; a loss of mutual
respect, brotherhood, altruism, togetherness and cooperation. On the other
hand, mutual hatred, self interest and eternal enmity become the norm. Those
derailed from the limits of humanity, some becoming like demigods while others
are weak slaves to be exploited and manipulated.
So it was for Prophet Musa a.s.
in facing the intransigence of the Children of Israel. For 40 years they were
made to wander in diaspora in the desert trying to survive harsh conditions. Hearts and minds should not be self destructed
by stagnation and self contempt (al fikr
al mumit) or that of hopelessly possessed slave ('abdan mamlukan). The
fighting spirit is part of a nation’s character. It does not develop in an
instant especially after much rot and decay over generations. Devoid of profound
awareness, thoughtfulness and absence of a fighting spirit, communities quickly
degenerate being afflicted by corruption of the self (fasad al nufus) to become cowards (al jubn) infected with the excessive love of the material world and
the fear of death (al wahn). We can
never imagine the situation of a generation of Muslims who are forced to accept
Islam devoid of the dimension of jihad.
Dhul Qarnayn showed
transformational leadership in changing the way of a nation which was beset by
the threat of terror from Yajuj Majuj.
Dhul Qarnayn was a towering global leader exemplary in governance. In
one of his adventures, he encountered an ignorant, lazy and weak nation facing
imminent danger. The people offered to pay him tributes as reward but Dhul
Qarnayn refused to exploit the meek and the weak. He did not ask for his
services to the nation to be recompensed. In empowering them, he engaged them
to participate in the defence project. By doing so, it was an educative-sharing
process which raises their own potential to perform. Together they built an
engineering solution, resolving their inherent weaknesses and countering their
external threat.
Freedom and the Moral High Ground
There was an online debate
between two friends concerning Somalia. One advocated peace between the warring
parties, to come to terms with each other, to act on the urgent need to save
people suffering severe malnutrition and to hold off a grave humanitarian
disaster. The other simply towed the hard Shabab
line to fight to victory or death no matter how much the population suffers. In
his banter, he ridiculed and belittled the Rice for the Needy Campaign
undertaken by the local Islamic movement as if it was not worth it. The problem
here is a huge contrast between killing and saving lives. Shabab’s struggle seems to be about taking lives but the local
agenda here is to save lives. It is so distant and surreal. In order to follow
the footsteps of the Prophet s.a.w., then it is not only about dying in the
path of Allah s.w.t. but also to lead a life living the path of Allah s.w.t. – al mawtu fi sabilillah and al hayatu fi sabilillah. There is a
major concern that if unchecked the radical young may be hijacked by extremism
in the aftermath of freedom.
The scholars are influential in
winning the hearts and minds of the masses, as well being important opinion
makers even as symbols in the corridors of power and authority. Many have been
principled and outspoken, some of them have been mute while there those who
seem to be working towards maintaining the old corrupt regime’s status quo.
There are those who pronounce rulings and support for dictatorship, tyranny and
blind loyalty based on their religious understanding. They seem to choose to
abdicate the truth. Professor Yusuf al Qaradawi has come out strongly against
this deviation of perceiving fiqh –
religious comprehension - and he has assailed such compromising opinions. He
made clear Muslims can never be associated with evil, immorality and injustice.
Islam can never side with tyranny and the oppressor. Again, following the
footsteps of the Prophet clearly shows that there can be no loyalty or trust
due to wrongdoers and the corrupt. Dr Wan Salim Mohd Noor has backed this position
in the context of democracy by referring to the freedom and ability to choose a
moral and just leadership instead of the immoral and the unjust, a choice which
is only natural and definitely Islamic.
In what is supposed to be the
exemplary cultural Muslim ethos of peace and justice, there are internal
challenges and threats leading to such divergence in understanding and
positions. In order to bridge the disconnect, Muslims have to retake the high
moral ground where their centre, the principles and their ethics rise and
thrive nobly above the clamour of error and confusion.
Freedom and Democracy
Some observers and skeptics seem
eager to portray Islam in a bad light, to ignore or to dismiss its role in the
emergence of freedom and the fledgling democracy. The term post Islamism has
again coined up to intellectualize the discourse in such a manner which is
highly debatable.
Professor Tariq Ramadan stresses
that it would be a mistake to overlook or downplay the impact that Islam has as
a source of political inspiration and mobilization in Muslim countries. The
question therein is not if Islam is present in politics. Rather it is how Islam
is interpreted and positioned to match challenging times.
We need not only celebrate democratic
principles but look for a new model – where duties and rights of citizens
matter, for economic and strategic reasons, models for societies in politics
and in freedom. Without economic parameters, of stability and economic
independence, there is no democracy. Without economic autonomy, there is no
freedom. It is democracy under control and this is a disconnect.
This means there is no dignity in
decision making and policies. It adds complexities to social justice because without
freedom of opportunity, there is no social justice which is an economic
reality. We have democratic principles but are not consistent in the daily
realities and experiences of the people.
Dr Ramadan suggested several
critical democratic principles be implemented. Education is of prime importance
because ignorance and illiteracy are not possible for a thriving democracy. More
is needed in education, to generate dignified citizens and not only to produce
efficient workers for there has to be know how as well as dignity. Nations
impoverished by war, poverty, neglect and ethnic repression fail miserably in
meeting even the basic educational needs. Whilst the richer countries which
fail to raise their educational standards remain mediocre at best being merely
poor carbon copies of the advanced nations.
Concerning the cultural dimension,
the globalization of culture rather presumptuously assumes the universalization
of Western, more precisely American social order and value-systems. It
considers history has ended and there are no more ideological evolutions. Other
civilizations or cultures which are seen supposedly to be in the way of
homogeneity are rashly predicted to be headed towards clashing with Western and
US dominance. Islam is regarded as the unwitting adversary against a higher
world order.
To subscribe to this narrow cultural
hegemony would be to betray humanity which can be seen from the loss and crisis
of values, immorality, the demeaning and degrading of the status of common man.
There is no democracy without cultural independence. To have intellectual
independence is to resist such global culture. It should not be seen only as
protective culture because having a defensive culture is opposite to that of
having a free mind.
Freedom of speech and freedom of
expression based on principles and ethics shall provide check and balances to
the well being of the state. They represent avenues for people to pose views
and opinions freely with responsibility. They would keep tyranny and corruption
at bay. Freedom should not infringe on the rights or others or to force the
adoption of deviation from human norms, family values and the quality of life.
Stifling freedom would curb creativity and exploration.
More are for changing the present
economy because markets do not
have intrinsic morality. It is the men in governance who preserve the good in
society. Finance has become detached from public interests. Instead, banks and
the like pursue self interests resulting in regulatory capture whereby banking
and regulators interests are aligned at the public’s expense.
A just economy is not a rehash of the old neo-lib model
but faith and value based, favouring common man, committed to equitability and
distribution – a fair share of the nation’s cake and with the goal of achieving
sufficiency and free from fear of insecurity. What is desired is not
liberalization but equity and balance – tawazun
– of the markets, government regulators and the people.
Endnote
These are only some of the
strands of challenges and sprouts of ideas brought by newly acquired freedom
and change. The path of the old regime has been so trodden on and so damaging
that those reformers who follow risk being dragged by blights in the remnants
of the past.
Leaders need to be steadfast,
attain higher competence and remain credible, and the people need to maintain
their strong faith and transform themselves to sustain support for the movement
for change and attain the goals of the revolution. Human transformation is
achievable but remains an enormous task.
Trends and internal forces of
radicalism tend to cloud and agitate the situation. Pliant regime scholars send
out contrary messages to the masses adding to the seemingly endless confusion.
Foreign forces lay in the background deep in intrigue and menacing. There is no
room for complacency.
To embark upon democracy means to
be able articulate the rightful and meaningful positioning of Islam. Democracy should
ensure justice and a life of quality for all.
A new and just economy should
safeguard equity, manage scarcity and achieve freedom from fear of want.
Those activists and fighters for
freedom in their fight in sustaining achievements may also result in another
disconnect. Freedom activists and leaders can become problematic agitators if
they neglect the spiritual dimension which is a potential ruinous deficiency.
It comes back to a balance of things – reforming themselves internally and
enjoining others externally - and a commitment to persistence and self
actualization.
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