| Experiments with an Islamic Netroots | |
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by Ali Eteraz, September 13, 2007
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All across the Muslim world, blogging is on fire. Malaysia and Iran are leading states where the political structures are constantly challenged by bloggers. Egypt often has to arrest and jail its dissident bloggers. Other Arab nations are slowly coming to grips with blogging as a check on state power.
By this time, in October, my personal blog was humming along quite nicely, making its way through all kinds of mainstream left and right wing blogs. In that time I had also gotten my hits-whoredom out of the way, and had started to focus on real world issues, most particularly, stonings in Iran, the Women’s Protection Bill in Pakistan, and the prevalence of Wahhabi literature among American Muslims. Looking at the Daily Kos method of dealing with things i.e. turning into a virtual community, I made an offer to a few of the traditionalist-salafist-moderate bloggers to join forces and come together at a place called States of Islam where the pre-eminent goal would be to make real world challenges against injustices committed in the name of Islam while also creating a positive narrative which would demonstrate that liberal and conservative Muslims could work together to improve the religion. We made it a closed community, put it on the Scoop system, and soon were being referred to as “the Daily Kos of the Islamsphere.” Just like Kos, it had a place for reader diaries and frontpagers.
The first few months were an astounding success in terms of exposure and hits, and we were covered by MSNBC, Salon, and a few other places. The blogosphere was all over us – Instapundit from one side, Crooks and Liars from the other. I was also able to make a working partnership with Soros’ Avaaz.Org and we were connected to international political activism. Hundreds of users registered and became members.
Our reader diaries were able to lure some of the best and brightest among Western Muslims. Professor Fadel, an Islamic jurist from the University of Toronto, wrote regularly on the site, as did Yahya Birt, a well-respected British-Muslim thinker. The Guardian wanted to do a story on us. Our correspondent in Egypt broke two stories before anyone else in the West: about Al-Azhar University declaring female genital mutilation impermissible in Islam, and the creation of a jihadist news-station in Iraq.
One of our registered users was able to get in touch with the Afghan government and have them assure to us via email that they would protect one of their most outspoken female MP’s. When an Iranian cleric issued a death fatwa against an Azeri editor for publishing the Muhammad cartoon, we challenged him utilizing Shi'i Law. When an Indian cleric called for taking the law into his own hand we challenged him utilizing Deobandi Sunni Law. When Irshad Manji wanted to start doing affirmative reform activities – instead of mere critique – she came and made reader diaries. One of our frontpagers began a interviewing high-minded scholars of jihadism (starting with the excellent Feisal Devji). We were invited to give speeches at universities and top ten schools of law. We engaged in debates where we were able to expose Islamophobes and rehabilitating the names of people they smeared. We were getting opportunities to come on small radio stations across the country. One of our registered users, an international barrister, acquired a copy of Pakistan’s Women’s Protection Bill – which then got us cited by Harvard trained lawyers. These were the minor successes. We launched a Quran Distribution Project – with the aim of raising $30,000 to distribute a better quality (and non-Wahhabi) translation of the Quran to American mosques and Islamic schools. I dreamt up a Muslim Legislation Project – a live database of reformist legislation in major Muslim countries, translated and transmitted, which would eventually link itself up with a Western university.
The third realization was that even though there were offers for help from certain shall-we-say, conservative-leaning personalities, we could not accept Islamic reform becoming appropriated by anyone. It had to be an utterly and conclusively Muslim thing, and if it couldn’t survive being that, then it wasn’t meant to be. The last thing I wanted was to be used by someone with ulterior political motives.
The fourth problem was an emotional one. Reformist work – constant hands on activism, which is a mixture of diplomacy and aggression – sucks the living spirituality out of you. As a Muslim my first predilection is toward mysticism, and as a humanist, towards literature. Being a polemicist is immensely difficult for me, and that was true for the other people involved in the site as well.
The final problem was that of universality – there seemed to be a sudden realization among a significant part of the States of Islam community, that bad things, evil things, inhuman things, needed to be condemned not just when they occurred to Muslims, but when they occurred to anyone. In other words, if Islam taught us to love humanity – instead of just Muslims – then why was our focus just on Muslims? I remember it was the shooting at Virginia Tech which really hammered this home. One reader came by and wrote a diary asking the community to pray for the slain Muslims in the shooting. Suddenly myself and a few others wondered why our prayers were so limited? At that moment I knew States of Islam was done (though it lingered a bit longer). See, the issue was that we weren’t reformists because we hated conservative or extremist Muslims for the sake of hating them. I think if the site’s organizing principle had been to hate X or Y, and do anything to oppose X or Y, we would still be humming along. No, we were reformists because we wanted to advance harmony and reconciliation and love (though in a tough minded way, I confess). There was actually a moment when, on the phone, I asked one of the frontpagers: “should we create an ‘other’; should we demonize someone?” We both knew the answer, and as such, the site was retired.
A very interesting case study that warned me about the dangers of demonizing was Little Green Footballs, which is now considered one of the most rabid anti-Muslim blogs. At one point, Charles Johnson was an independent. He had very acute, critical and interesting things to say about George Bush. Then, after his site hit a sort of lull there was a sudden explosion of anti-Muslim and anti-CAIR rhetoric. Update: I don't mean to imply that Islam and CAIR are interchangeable as I have criticized CAIR on this point previously. To some extent, a number of left-wing sites started out in the middle and then moved progressively towards dogmatic partisanship. I for one simply do not believe that one advances liberal thinking through sheer stubborn aggression.
Here is an archive of all the reader diaries produced on the site.
Here is an archive of frontpager Willow's writings.
Here is an archive of my writings.
When navigating through the site, don't hit the header, because of a glitch it will take you to another website.
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Ali Eteraz, 27, is a columnist for Jewcy, a politics and culture magazine. He also contributes regularly to the
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Anonymous
LGF is anti-jihadist, not anti-Muslim
Your conflation of the two speaks volumes about your take on the subject. Demonization of the anti-jihadist movement as "racist" or "islamophobic" is one of the great weapons of the jihadists and their fellow travelers. And claiming that to be anti-CAIR is to be anti-Muslim is also a falsehood. CAIR was, of course, founded by Hamas supporters and was named as an unindicted co-conspirator by the US govt in the HLF trials in Texas. By claiming that CAIR is "off limits" for criticism, you are trying to immunize an Islamist front group from any kind of scrutiny. But we are waking up to this type of disingenuous crap. Good luck elsewhere with your Muslim "reform" movement.
Ali Eteraz
nice
so now i am a jihadist "fellow traveler."
nice.
i dont make cair off-limits for criticism. no one is off limits. i have repeatedly asked cair to disavow support of hizbollah and hamas, feel free to look it up at my blog.
nice thread-jacking though.
having said that as a lawyer i don't really accept the validity of the unindicted co-conspirator idiocy in any situation. it was dumb when it was applied to nixon, l. ron hubbard, in the whitewater case, and now. in the hlf case its being applied to 300(!) people and organizations. if the prosecutor believes he/she has a good case, he wouldn't need to cast such a vast net. even logically, the term doesn't make sense: you can't be co-conspirator unless you're convicted, and you can't be convicted unless you're indicted.
if you want me to pay for you to sit in a basic crim law class, let me know.
Muse
well
it was fun while it lasted.
Muse
one more thing
i was down with understanding the other problems, but the last one i dont get.
"In other words, if Islam taught us to love humanity – instead of just Muslims – then why was our focus just on Muslims?"
because we are Muslims, and bad things are being done in our name. does defining ourselves automatically necessitate creating an "other" whom we cant relate to or empathize with? the fact that you are posting this on a blog called "jewcy.com" is proof enough that this is not the case (props to them for recognizing this). who were we (you) demonizing simply by calling yourselves "states of islam"? to my recollection, all were welcome, and we had a diverse bunch working towards the same goal.
Danial
LGF
"At one point, Charles Johnson was an independent. He had very acute, critical and interesting things to say about George Bush. Then, after his site hit a sort of lull there was a sudden explosion of anti-Muslim and anti-CAIR rhetoric."
Ali, he was an independent before 9/11. It was after 9/11 that changed him and put him into another position, which would foresee the worst in him.
Anonymous, people like you continue to whine about Hamas supporters, yet where is the criticism towards Irish Americans who supported the IRA openly for years? Why condemn one extreme while staying on the other? It's no secret that Gerry Adams has been to NYC a few times to raise funds for the IRA.
As for LGF, yes they ARE anti-Muslim because they tar all Muslims with the same brush (except for those sell-outs who bend over for these cronies). There have comments on the site that advocate forced deportation and even sending them to Auschwitz a la the Holocaust!
Anonymous
CAIR
When a "Muslim reformist" defends CAIR, which was founded by Hamas supporters, keeps on having its leaders arrested for terror support, and was named as the government as an unindicted terrorist co-conspirator, it's just too much. Why spread this type of propaganda on a Jewish site? Are the Jihadist sites all full-up with this type of deceit?
I'm sorry that "anti-Cair" rhetoric offends you. I am offended by Muslim apologists that equate anti-Jihadists with bigotry, and defends terror front groups. I'm offended that a so-called Muslim civil rights group is attempting to sue passengers trying to protect themselves from terrorists, never can, by name, condemn Hamas and Hezbollah, and basically acts as an arm of the Jihadist project.
It's a nice song and dance routine tho, Ali.
Ali Eteraz
thanks
i dance for you, master
Anonymous
CAIR links
Cair affiliated with Hamas
http://counterterrorismblog.org/2007/09/hlf_prosecution_cair_affiliate.p...
CAIR revealed
http://ibdeditorial.com/IBDArticles.aspx?id=273453355481549
Anonymous
Ali Eteraz torn up by Robert Spencer
Ali's tendentiousness revealed here
http://www.jihadwatch.org/archives/015486.php
Ali Eteraz
torn up? really?
are u kidding me? that christian supremacist? i used to take him seriously until i realized he's a christian polemicist and not a philosopher. his last book was revealing wasn't it? whats it called? how Christianity is better than everything? Even conservative secularists don't take him seriously anymore (and christian traditionalits like d'souza call him an islamophobe.). but im glad you mentioned him here so we could air it all out. good job.
maybe you should consider the following:
Robert Spencer, Confused By Islamic Reformer [Ghamidi]Calls Him Inauthentic; Abuses Me Again
As to Spencer maligning me:
Despite complaining about how much I abuse him, Spencer keeps misrepresenting me. In the post at issue, I am called a "highly disingenuous Islamic apologist."
Yeah Robert, real apologetic when I call for the separation of mosque and state, and argue for the abolition of the death penalty for apostasy.
Ali Eteraz
torn up? really?
are u kidding me? that christian supremacist? i used to take him seriously until i realized he's a christian polemicist and not a philosopher. his last book was revealing wasn't it? whats it called? how Christianity is better than everything? Even conservative secularists don't take him seriously anymore (and christian traditionalits like d'souza already called him an islamophobe.). but im glad you mentioned him here so we could air it all out. good job.
maybe you should consider the following:
Robert Spencer, Confused By Islamic Reformer [Ghamidi]Calls Him Inauthentic; Abuses Me Again
As to Spencer maligning me:
Despite complaining about how much I abuse him, Spencer keeps misrepresenting me. In the post at issue, I am called a "highly disingenuous Islamic apologist."
Yeah Robert, real apologetic when I call for the separation of mosque and state, and argue for the abolition of the death penalty for apostasy.
Ali Eteraz
apostasy link is broken
http://archive.eteraz.org/story/2007/3/18/9426/53820
David Kelsey
Ali, don't take the bait
Ali,
Just wanted to know that I have really enjoyed your posts these past few days, and think it was quite brilliant of Jewcy to have you guest post.
There are those in our community who will try to reduce the conversation. Don't let them.
Everyone, Ali has really put himself out there by visiting Jewcy, and he has tremendous knowledge on subjects many of us would like to understand better. Do not let the Zealots shut him down! Ali, don't let them pull you back to The Conflict.
AdmiralAdama
Doing the jihadists' work by
Anonymous
Ali
Unfortunately when you attack you utilize ad hominem to attack your critics, you lose the argument my friend. I think you can do better than "Christian Polemicist" as a rhetorical argument.
AdmiralAdama
It's what happens
when one loses an argument, they resort to name-calling. Ali already lost the argument with Robert Spencer, who of course is not a bigot but merely speaks of the textual, legal, and ethical tradition of Jihad within Islam itself.
Anonymous
AdiralAbama, the same retard
AdiralAbama, the same retard that spams Digg with LGF entries? lmao you are one to talk faggot.