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The Fall and Rise of the Veil: Leila Ahmed

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The Fall and Rise of the Veil: Leila Ahmed To be an American... is not to blindly accept America as it is (Sociology 156) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Fall and Rise of the Veil: Leila Ahmed


1
The Fall and Rise of the VeilLeila Ahmed
  • To be an American... is not to blindly accept
    America as it is
  • (Sociology 156)

2
State Repression
  • Across the 1990s, govt antiterrorism campaign
    degenerated into indiscriminate state
    repression. More than 20,000 Islamists were
    imprisoned . . . many of them had been detained
    without charges and subjected to torture.
  • Restrictions on press, military courts
  • Threat of imprisonment for association with any
    Islamist group, even if nonviolent
  • Especially the Brotherhood (151)
  • High levels of chronic coercion signals weak state

3
Why does Islamism grow in popularity in the face
of repression?
  • Unlike militant Islamism, not just against status
    quo but for a better alternative
  • Valuable social networks
  • Embodies many of the same hopes and aspirations
    for freedom from dictatorship and for social
    justice and public accountability that have
    inspired other movements
  • A form of empowerment for young people, who can
    critique their elders from a religious standpoint
  • Powerful forces of peer pressure powerful
    social coercion
  • Isnt it proper, following the path of the
    Prophet?
  • A demand for social political activism,
    political optimism
  • Contrasted with a politically quietist pessimism
    common among non-Islamists (150-156)
  • Webers active asceticism the believer as Gods
    tool

4
MSA
  • 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act
  • Abolished quotas that had prevented immigration
    from Africa, Asia, not-Europe to the US
  • Largest Muslim immigration
  • Overwhelming majority not Islamists, represent
    mainstream Muslims of their time
  • But some were, as repression in Nassers Egypt
    elsewhere leads to Islamist migration
  • 1963, Urbana, IL Muslim Student Association
    (MSA) founded by Islamist immigrants
  • Gutbi Ahmed Islam was seen as an ideology, a
    way of life, and a mission, and the organization
    was not considered simply a way to serve the
    community but as a means to create the ideal
    community and to serve Islam.
  • 1963 10 affiliated associations, 1968 105
    across US Canada
  • 1968 begin to draw funding from Muslim majority
    nations (ends in 90s) (158-163)

5
MSA
  • During the 1960s, the MSA begin to do outreach
    work
  • Mosques, Islamic centers, schools, summer camps,
    etc.
  • Mosques also function as social centers
  • Lectures, study groups
  • Congregationalization
  • Outreach conversion programs, especially active
    in prisons
  • Muslim immigrants turn to MSA for services,
    mosques function as institutions that facilitate
    assimilation
  • Like Latino Catholics in Putnam Campbell
  • As the MSA grew, its departments (financial,
    educational, etc.) each had its own head
  • Department heads each had a doctorate in the
    relevant field, included women (161-164)

6
MSA
  • Certain that they had arrived at the proper
    understanding of Islam, MSA members presented
    themselves as instructors and teachers of Islam
  • Despite the fact that scarcely any of the MSAs
    members had any formal training in Islamic
    scholarship
  • This is overwhelmingly the norm rather than the
    exception among Islamists, who, like Hassan
    al-Banna himself, were typically educated in
    secular rather than religious institutions.
    Often, moreover, their academic training was in
    the hard sciences.
  • Taught their own committed, activist, and deeply
    modern understanding of Islam.
  • Shaped by the assumptions of the supremacy of
    rationality and the irrelevance, for the most
    part, to a true understanding of the Quran, of
    the long Islamic tradition of what were, in the
    eyes of many Islamists, mere casuistry and
    interpretation.
  • The Quran as they saw it was essentially a
    transparent text that any rationally trained
    persona doctor, an engineer, a social
    scientistworking within the framework of
    Islamism could reasonably interpret for himself
    and others. (164-165)

7
ISNA
  • May initially have been dependent on Saudi Arabi
    for funding, and thus tended to promote Wahhabism
    and discourage criticism of SA
  • Would gradually diversify relations w/Muslim
    world, reflect a great diversity of Muslim belief
    opinion
  • 1981 MSA splits off the Islamic Society of North
    America (ISNA) to attend to the needs to a
    growing number of American Muslims
  • MSA returns to its focus on college students
    campuses
  • In response to internal criticisms that ISNA
    leadership had been too oriented toward their
    homeland, ISNA encourages Muslim Americans to be
    full participants activists in mainstream
    American politics (166-167)
  • Hassan Maher Hathout (ISNA members, former
    Muslim Brothers to be an American... is not to
    blindly accept America as it is, but to strive to
    make it cleaner and better by using the available
    freedom, the constitutional rights and the
    democratic process persistently and relentlessly
    towards reaching that goal. (165-168)

8
The Face of Islam in America
  • Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR),
    founded in 1994, focuses on the civil rights of
    Muslims in America
  • Devoted to particular causes, not a rival to ISNA
  • Together, ISNA and CAIR are the most prominent
    Muslim in America today
  • Often approached by media politicians to
    represent Islam, becoming the face of the faith
    in the US
  • Both have Sunni Islamist roots
  • Describe the hijab as religiously mandated
    covering for women

9
The Face of Islam in America
  • May be less than representative of American
    Muslims on the whole
  • Immigrants sometimes unaware of brand of Islam
    practiced by MSA ISNA-founded schools
  • Most Muslim immigrants not activists, do not see
    their faith as a political ideology, may be
    unwilling to ignore sectarian or national
    divisions
  • This majority has no organization, so goes
    unrepresented in national politics
  • Media tends to gesture at diversity of Islam, and
    then go on to generalize (168-71)

10
Islam African Americans
  • Sunni Islamist organizations have made gains
    among the African American community
  • Example Malcolm X after conversion to Sunni
    Islam going on hajj tens of thousands of
    pilgrims from all over the world. They were of
    all colors, from blue-eyed blonds to
    black-skinned Africans. But we were all
    participating in the same ritual, displaying a
    spirit of unity and brotherhood that my
    experiences in America had led me to believe
    never could exist between the white and the
    non-white.

11
Islam African Americans
  • Most African American Muslims are Sunnis
  • W.D. Mohammed, son of Elijah Mohammed, converts
    to Sunni Islam and took the larger part of the
    Nation of Islam with him
  • During the 1970s, Saudi govt gave many African
    Americans scholarships to study in Saudi Arabia
  • Salafist approach to Islam a staunchly
    protestant approach resonates with religious
    practices of many black Americans
  • There is a general tendency of Muslims in America
    to group into mosques based on ethnicity,
    language, and nationality (171-175)

12
The 1990s
  • Mujahedeen
  • Fawaz Gerges Tens of thousands of hardened
    fighters baptized into a culture of martyrdom
  • freedom fighters, trained equipped by CIA,
    funded by US Saudi Arabia
  • Staunch anti-communists
  • How could these warriors be demobilized and
    reintegrated back into their societies as
    law-abiding citizens? Could the genie be put back
    inside the bottle?
  • USA becomes fundraising location
  • Global network of militant Islamists emerges
  • Veterans of war against Soviets in Afghanistan
    had the training to deploy their skills against
    their own govts and the West
  • Blowback, Islamist terrorism in the US rises in
    the 1990s
  • Abdel Rahman, the blind sheik, Ayman
    al-Zawahiri both get visas to raise funds in the
    US (177-80)

13
The 1990s
  • While the response to terrorism in Egypt had
    resulted in negative attitudes toward Islamists,
    in the US the negativity was directed toward
    Muslims in general
  • 1993 WTC attack
  • Samuel Huntingtons The Clash of Civilizations
    becomes influential
  • Daniel Pipes
  • Militantly pro-Israel, anti-Muslim.
  • Post-9/11, creates Campus Watch list of
    academics whom he considered insufficiently loyal

14
The 1990s
  • Steven Emerson, anti-Muslim documentary maker
  • On Oklahoma City bombing This was done with the
    intent to inflict as many casualties as possible.
    That is a Middle Eastern trait. Blamed Hamas,
    because The hate democracy. They hate America.
  • Jennifer Rubin Norway mass shooting
  • In wake of OKC attack, harassment of Muslims
    rises
  • Also of Sikhs, because they wear turbans

15
The 1990s
  • Some Muslims, not sharing the Islamist goals,
    Sunni beliefs, or political agenda of ISNA the
    MSA, speak out against it as an extremist
    organization that facilitates terrorism
  • Khaled Abou El Fadl
  • Islamist puritans vs. true Muslim moderates
  • Sheikh Hisham Kabbani testifying at State Dept in
    1999
  • MSA ISNA had hijacked the mike
  • Says 80 of Islamic leaders in America extremists
  • ISNA, MSA, CAIR condemn Kabbani as enabling
    stereotypes of all Muslims as terrorists (185-187)

16
The 1990s
  • Operation Desert Storm
  • American troops in Saudi Arabia
  • Mecca Medina
  • Saddam Hussein appeals to religion for support,
    not very successful
  • Saudi Arabia Kuwait fund MSA ISNA, support
    the war
  • SA Kuwait demand that MSA ISNA do likewise,
    the organizations refuse, money dries up
  • As a result the organizations end up with greater
    financial political independence (186-189)
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