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It is Written The religious foundations of suicide bombings By David Bukay
Suicide
terrorism has been the scourge of the last quarter century. A suicide bomb
attack on the US Marine barracks in Beirut compelled Ronald Reagan in 1983 to
withdrawal peacekeepers from Beirut. Palestinian leaders deploy suicide bombers
to force Israeli concessions, and Iraqi insurgents use suicide bombings to
derail the new political order. Al-Qaeda terrorists attacked the USS Cole in
Aden, Yemen, in 2000 and, on September 11, 2001, the World Trade Centre and the
Pentagon. While some scholars argue there is no religious component to suicide
bombing - often citing Sri Lanka’s Tamil Tigers, who are not Muslims - they are
wrong. All Muslim suicide bombers justify their actions with their religion
and, more specifically, with the concept of jihad.
What Is
Jihad?
Muslim
self-justification of suicide bombing lies in interpretation of jihad. While
Western scholars of late argue that jihad refers primarily to internal
struggle, Islamic writings feature jihad as physical warfare. Historian Bernard
Lewis finds that “the overwhelming majority of classical theologians, jurists
and traditionalists ... understood the obligation of jihad in a military
sense.”
Islamic
jurisprudence has distinguished four different ways in which a believer may
fulfil jihad obligations: 1) with faith in his heart; 2) by preaching and
proselytising with his tongue; 3) by good deeds with his hands; and 4) by
confronting unbelievers or enemies with the sword. In practice, the first three
are part of the da’wa (missionary activity), actions that support jihad by the sword.
Muslim
theologians were explicit in the combination of nonviolent and violent jihad to
spread Islam. Jihad is central to the Muslim perception of the world, dividing
it into dar al-Islam (abode of Islam) and dar al-harb (abode of war) which is destined to come under
Islamic rule. Jihad both purifies the dar al-Islam and is the tool to shrink and
eradicate the dar al-harb. As a doctrine, the aim of jihad is clear: to establish God’s rule on
earth by compelling non-Muslims to embrace Islam, or to force them to accept
second class status if not eradicate them altogether. Such an understanding
constituted one of the main ideological bases of the dynasties that ruled the
Islamic world from the late seventh century until Mongol hordes put an
effective end to their control in the thirteenth century.
A
comparison between the concept of martyrdom in Islam on one hand and in Judaism
and Christianity on the other illustrates the emphasis on violent jihad within
Islamic jurisprudence. In Islamic practice, the martyr is one killed in jihad.
He is entitled to special status in paradise and on Judgment Day. In Judaism
and Christianity, a martyr is someone who endures torture and death rather than
renounce his or her belief.
Jihad
against Unbelievers
All four
schools of Sunni Islam as well as mainstream Shi’ism consider idolatry (shirk), apostasy (irtidad), and hypocrisy (nifiq, munafaqah, or riya) to be capital offences. In each
case, jihad is a means to counter such threats and assert the predominance of
Islam.
There is
little tolerance for idolaters within Islam: the first article of faith is the
profession, la ilah illa-llah (there is no deity but God). Muslim jurisprudence considers shirk to be the worst form of disbelief.
The Koran commands Muslims to kill those who commit shirk and is replete with examples
calling for jihad against idolaters. For example, Sura (chapter) 9:5 reads,
“When the sacred months have passed, slay the idolaters whenever you find them,
and take them captive or besiege them.” Sura 8:39 reads, “So fight them so that
sedition might end and obedience is wholly Allah’s”; and Sura 9:123 states,
“Fight the unbelievers who are near to you, and let them find ruthlessness in
you.” Muslims living under the rule of idolaters are obliged to fight their
rulers. The Koran likewise commands believers to conduct jihad against
hypocrites, seize them, and do away with them. All infidels, unbelievers, and
hypocrites - those who commit blasphemy or treason - are relegated to hell.
Prominent Muslim
scholars consider the general jihad declaration against the unbelievers to be
crucial to Islamic success. Those who sacrifice their material comfort and
bodies for jihad win salvation. By their sacrifice, they obtain all the
pleasures of paradise, be they spiritual - the close presence of God - or
material. As an additional incentive, Muhammad promised those mujahideen who
fight in a jihad war a reward of virgins in paradise. Importantly, those
conducting suicide bombings do not consider themselves dead but rather living
with God. As Sura 2:154 explains, “Do not think that those who are killed in
the way of Allah are dead, for indeed they are alive, even though you are not
aware.” Therefore the prohibition on suicide need not apply to bus bombers or other
kamikaze jihadists.
Jihad in
the Hadith
The Hadith
collections, the second important source of Shari’a after the Koran, devote
considerable attention to jihad, most often in terms of military action against
non-believers. Indeed, most Islamic theologians in the classical period
(750-1258 C.E.) understood this obligation to jihad as military. There is a
whole genre of Hadith known as fada’il al-jihad (the merits of the holy war), based on the
nine-volume Hadith collection of Muhammad ibn Isma’il al-Bukhari (810-70) and
considered to be the most respected and authoritative collection. He dedicates
almost one-third of his fourth volume on jihad as physical holy war against
infidels. For example, he relates a Hadith of Muhammad commenting that there
are one hundred stages in paradise for those who fight for the way of God. Only
those who participate in jihad deserve paradise without any checks and
reservations. To exemplify this notion, Bukhari relates a story of a woman
asking Muhammad if her son, who was killed in the battle of Badr, is in
paradise, and he replied that her son is in a higher paradise.
Consistent
with the Koran, these hadith generally demonstrate the necessity for Muslims to
spare no means to spread Islam by force and strike terror into the hearts of
the enemies of God. The main motif of jihad in the hadith reinforces the
concept that death on the battleground in the cause of God leads to paradise
and receipt of a “sacred wedding” to black-eyed virgins. From among 262
traditions that are mentioned by Abdallah Ibn al-Mubarak (736-97), a renowned
Khorasani scholar who concentrated on jihad warfare as the most important
method to Islamic success, thirteen reinforce the concept of virgins in
paradise as a reward for martyrdom.
The Hadith
also emphasise the necessity for all believers, whenever called upon, to commit
to a jihad war. In one example, Bukhari cites Ibn Umar, one of the transmitters
of accounts about the Prophet traditionally accepted by Muslims, who relates,
“Muhammad said: ‘I have been ordered to fight against all the people until they
testify that there is no god but Allah and that Muhammad is Allah’s messenger,
and offer the prayers perfectly, and give the obligatory charity. So if they
perform all that, then they save their lives and property from me and their
reckoning will be done by Allah.’” And, in another, a transmitter narrated, “O
Allah, you know that there is nothing more beloved to me than to fight in your
cause against those who disbelieved your messenger.”
Just as in
the Koran, the Hadith give ample justification for those who would fight
heterodox interpretations of Islam within their own society. Muslim jurists in
four schools of law have agreed that the apostate should be given three days to
repent and, if he did not, he was to be killed by believer’s jihad. Bukhari
cites Abu Musa, another accepted transmitter, who related how “a man embraced
Islam and then reverted back to Judaism. Ibn al-Mu’azz, one of the Hadith story
tellers, said: ‘I will not sit down unless you kill him, as the verdict of
Allah and his messenger.’” In another Hadith, Ali bin Abu Talib, Muhammad’s
nephew and son-in-law, narrated, “I heard the Prophet saying ... whenever you
find the apostates, kill them, for there will be a reward on the Day of Resurrection.”
Contemporary
Jihad
Early
interpretations of jihad contributed a theological framework which proponents
of suicide bombing adopted. First was the idea that jihad was violent. It was a
tool not only to purify the domains of Islam and purge the heterodox but also
to defeat non-Muslims. Today, academics and scholars may argue that jihad is
peaceful and represents internal struggle, but they either obfuscate or
misunderstand that for most Islamic theologians and as described in detail by
Islamic historians, the first three nonviolent components of jihad form a
larger, more violent aggregate.
Those who
argue that jihad is peaceful base their assertions almost entirely on Koranic
verses from the Meccan period, in which Muhammad and his band of followers were
small and relatively weak and so prone to compromise. Islamists, though,
justify their violence with verses revealed to Muhammad after his December 623
expedition to Nakhlah. Prominent classical scholars acknowledged the principle
of nasikh wa-mansukh (abrogation) which placed greater emphasis on later Medinan verses of
violence and jihad. For contemporary Western scholars and journalists to down
play Medinan verses suggests a critical misunderstanding of Koranic studies.
Many
Islamists are unapologetic about violent jihad. They use Koranic interpretation
to justify terrorism, suicide bombings, and beheadings. They seek to emulate
the aggressive jihad waged by Muhammad and his successors from 626 to 740 in
their own struggle. These are the Islamic apocalyptic terrorist groups of today
who agree with the idea that jihad is so important that every believer must
accept it as a compulsory duty, even when unbelievers have not started
conflict.
While some
academics and commentators argue that jihad is restricted to religious wars,
from an Islamic perspective, all wars against non-Muslims (or Muslims redefined
by jihadists as non-Muslims) are religious. This is the reason why some Muslim
scholars regard jihad as the sixth pillar of Islam, as it is in Shi’ite
doctrine. The most influential Islamist thinkers of the twentieth century - Abu
al-A’la al-Mawdudi (1903-79), Hasan al-Banna (1906-49), and Sayyid Qutb
(1906-66) - have addressed the centrality of jihad at length. Activists such as
Muhammad Abd al-Salam Faraj, an Egyptian follower of Qutb, call it “the
neglected duty,” and interpret it to justify a fight against any ruler or
government that does not adhere to the Sharia.
Most recent
jihadists have relied on Qutb to justify their own theories of violent jihad.
Abdullah Yusuf Azzam (1941-89), a Palestinian who fled to Jordan after the
Six-Day War, adopted many elements of both Ibn Taymiya, an early fourteenth
century Islamic scholar who laid the philosophical groundwork for the Islamic
fundamentalism adopted by Saudi Arabia centuries later, and Qutb to promote the
belief in an inevitable clash of civilisations. He emphasised the necessity of
violent revolution through jihad against both secular governments in majority
Muslim states and against the West. He is credited with being the first Sunni
Islamic figure to instil the Islamic community with a divine myth of
invincibility of jihad and terrorism.
Azzam was a
major intellectual influence upon Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda. In his book Knights
under the Banner of the Prophet, bin Laden’s number two, Ayman al-Zawahiri, identified his
organisation’s goals as da’wa and violent jihad against both an “internal enemy”, i.e., existing Arab
infidel regimes, and an “external enemy” in areas not controlled by Muslims. To
Zawahiri, Muslims who accept Western values such as democracy and those who
renounce jihad as a means to establish the Islamic state are infidels deserving
of death. The Islamic nation, he maintained, would be established only through
jihad for the sake of God, compulsory duty vested upon all the Islamic
community.
Bin Laden
embraced similar logic. Beginning in August 1996, he used verses from the Koran
and the Hadith to argue that jihad was compulsory to expel non-Muslims and
Westerners from Saudi Arabia. On February 23, 1998, though, he expanded his
jihad when, with Zawahiri at his side, he announced the creation of the
International Islamic Front for Jihad against the Jews and Crusaders.
The
writings of Qutb also influenced Abu Mus’ab al-Zarqawi, the late leader of
al-Qaeda in Iraq. Zarqawi peppered his speeches and declarations with verses
from the Koran and Hadith to demonstrate God’s promise of the inevitability of
the creation of a pure Sunni Islamic state so long as Muslims fight jihad
against the enemies of Islam. Zarqawi called jihad “the crest of the summit of
Islam.”
In the
words of Rudolph Peters, an expert on contemporary Islam, the ultimate aim of
jihad is the subjection of the non-believers and the eradication of non-belief.
Islamic law is the ultimate solution, and it has full answers to all possible
situations and problems, present and future. This is why the fanatic Muslims of
today - religious, ideologists, and practitioners - denounce all the existing
political systems and demand their liquidation. The current Arab-Islamic system
represents a “new age of ignorance” and the Western political systems are “the
new Crusaderism”, all doomed to extermination by jihad warfare.
Jihad
becomes a binding duty on all Muslims as individuals. Abdulaziz A. Sachedina,
an Indian Muslim expert on the Shi’ites who lives in the West, explained “There
is no doubt that the Muslim jurists conceived jihad in the sense of engaging in
a war to increase the dar al-Islam as an integral part of Islamic faith ... with
the essential aim of uprooting unbelief and preparing the way for a creation of
Islamic order on earth.”
The
violence of contemporary jihad was also apparent in the reaction of Islamists
to cartoons published in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten. Muslim rioters and Arab and
Islamic governments seized upon the contention that it is against Islam to
depict the Prophet Muhammad and to argue that the apostates and non-believers
should be punished. Violence accompanied demonstrations in Europe and in Muslim
countries. By far the greatest number of fatalities was in Nigeria, which is
neither European nor Muslim. In London, protestors marched under banners
reading, “Slay those who insult Islam,” “Butcher those who mock Islam,” “Behead
those who insult Islam,” “Exterminate those who slander Islam,” “Massacre those
who insult Islam,” “Europe is the cancer, Islam is the answer,” “Europe take
lessons from 9/11,” “Europe you will pay. Your 9/11 is on its way,” “Be
prepared for the real holocaust,” and “Islam will dominate the world.” To many
jihadists, such threats are literal, not hyperbole. Suicide bombing becomes a
legitimate technique to carry them out.
The
Islamic Roots of Suicide Bombings
What is the
connection between religious sources of over a millennium ago to the suicide
bombings of today? There is a direct link between the jihadists of yesterday
and contemporary jihadists. Many jihadists cite the works of Taqi al-din Ahmad
Ibn Taymiya (1263-1328), an Islamic scholar born in Harran, in modern-day
Turkey, who wrote extensively on the need for jihad and exalted it even above
the Islamic obligations of fasting and pilgrimage (hajj). Modern jihadists have used his
fatwas commanding Muslims to fight the Mongols as precedents legitimising
suicide bombing. Mawdudi, Banna, and Qutb have also developed Ibn Taymiya’s
philosophy, writing extensively on jihad as the means to fight the re-emergence
of the age of ignorance, with its tribal savagery and anarchy. They also
suggested that the Islamic order can be maintained and protected, if not
expanded, through violence.
In recent
decades, the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas has embraced suicide bombings to
lethal effect. Its 1987 Charter shows its intellectual and theological
justifications. It cites the Koran to promote the idea of Muslim exclusivity
and Hadith from Bukhari and the Sahih Muslim calling for the murder of Jews to
hasten the Day of Judgment. More recent exegesis also influenced Hamas. The
Charter cites Banna’s call for Islam to obliterate Israel and is explicit about
the violent nature of jihad: Article 13 argues that there is no solution to the
Palestinian question but through jihad, and Article 15 declares the necessity
to instil jihad in the heart of the Muslim nation.
The 9/11
suicide attacks sparked significant debate in the Islamic world about the
merits of suicide attacks. Sheikh Muhammad Sa’id al-Tantawi, head of Cairo’s al-Azhar,
the most prestigious university for Sunni jurisprudence, declared that the
Shari’a rejects all attempts on taking human life, and Sheikh Muhammad bin
Abdallah al-Sabil, a member of the Saudi Council of Islamic Clerics and imam at
the Grand Mosque in Mecca, decried the suicide attacks on the basis that
Islamic law forbids killing civilians, suicide, and protects Jews and
Christians. But both Tantawi and Sabil sidestep the question of “martyrdom
operations.” Because preserving the life of dhimmis (Jews and Christians) is
conditional to their acceptance of Muslim rule, suicide attacks upon Israelis
or Jews and Christians outside majority Muslim countries may be permissible.
Indeed, other al-Azhar scholars, for example, Abd al-Azim al-Mit’ani, say it is
permissible to kill Israeli civilians in the cause of jihad.
Today’s
al-Qaeda splinter and successor groups and their fellow travellers use the
writings of Ibn Taymiya and those influenced by him. The linkage is concrete.
They often cite the same Koranic passages and Hadith that justified the violent
jihad of the seventh century. Religious clerics issue fatwas citing them.
Perhaps the most prominent of these is Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi, who has built
upon such interpretations to justify suicide bombing, other acts of terrorism,
and the murder of civilians, all in the cause of jihad. He has called suicide
bombing a supreme form of jihad for the sake of God and, therefore, religiously
legitimate. Those who object to his ideas he labels as agents of ignorance.
While he argues that the Koran does not allow attacks against the innocent, his
definition of innocence is so narrow as to obviate such assurances.
Suicide
bombing in the Muslim world cannot be separated from religion. Its perpetrators
believe jihad to be synonymous with war and mandate Muslims to strike not only
at non-Muslims but also at co-religionists deemed insufficiently loyal to their
radical cause. The ideological basis of such an interpretation has deep roots
in Islamic theology, but it came to prominence with the twentieth century rise
of Muslim Brotherhood theorists such as Banna and Qutb and was further
developed by their successors. While much of the exegesis developed out of
Sunni jurisprudence, the Islamic Republic in Iran encouraged the phenomenon.
Many of Teheran’s proxy groups embraced the tactic.
It is
fashionable among Western analysts and academics to explain away suicide
bombing with discussion of “root causes” that omit religion. Many cite a
history of exploitation by Western powers, Israel’s existence, government
oppression, poverty, lack of education, and alienation as reasons why desperate
individuals decide to blow themselves up to murder others. But attention to
suicide bombers’ own justifications suggest that, for them, Islam and its call
for jihad is the primary motivation.
David Bukay is a Lecturer in the School of Political Science at the University of Haifa. © Middle East Quarterly, reprinted by permission, all rights reserved. |
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