Will Muslims remain prisoners of the Islamophobic narrative or can we reclaim our collective Muslim story? Could this missing Muslim narrative have revolutionary consequences for the cause of freedom, justice and equality for the Muslim Ummah?
We hear the same story told again and again in the media and from certain politicians – every time a group like ISIS commits an atrocity, every time there is a headline about halal meat, or Muslims taking over schools, or Shariah, or the niqab, or grooming gangs, or gender segregation… Whatever the issue, it’s the same dominant story – backward Muslims threatening our way of life. It is told with varying degrees of subtlety but this basic paradigm is increasingly the prism through which Muslims are seen.
Within this dominant narrative Muslims can never be victims. The so-called War on Terror leaves millions of Muslim civilians dead – but it is Muslims who are violent and a threat to the West. Muslim women are disproportionately the victims of violent hate crime – but it is the clothes they choose to wear that are the violation of women’s rights. Western governments prop up the most brutal dictators of the Muslim world – but it is Muslims who are the threat to freedom and democracy.
Reality has been turned upside down to the extent that a study found that most university students even think that it was the Palestinians who invaded Israel, and not the Israelis who drove the Palestinians out of their homes!
While Islam is portrayed as a threat to civilisation, the great contributions that Islamic civilisation gave to the world are left out of the history books. From the Greeks and the Romans to the sudden emergence of the European Renaissance there is a one thousand year gap in the history of civilisation – the so-called “Dark Ages.” This gap is, of course, our Islamic history – the golden age of Islamic civilisation. And the Renaissance of course did not miraculously appear out of nowhere; it was in fact built on the contributions of Muslim scholarship.
We are surrounded by negative stories about Muslims but have we told our own Muslim story?
How many Muslims can name the great Muslim scientists whose contributions to knowledge should rank just as highly as names like Isaac Newton or Albert Einstein? How many of us know that the syringe and many surgical instruments still in use today were invented by a Muslim surgeon called al-Zahrawi, who practised in 10th-century Cordoba? How many of us know that the original flying machine was built not by Leonardo Da Vinci or the Wright Brothers, but by a ninth-century inventor named Abbas Ibn Firnas?
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And it is not just the great achievements of our past which too many of us are unaware of. We are even ignorant of the pain and suffering of our more recent history. How many Muslims have heard of Omarska? And how about Auschwitz? We all know about Auschwitz and the genocide against Jews committed more than 60 years ago – and it’s right that we should. But how can so many of us have not learnt about the concentration camps that European Muslims were herded into just two decades ago?
Self hatred
The Islamophobic narrative is so pervasive and insidious that without a strong positive narrative of our own, the sub-conscious poison of self-hatred is starting to take effect on our community. Muslims are left feeling apologetic about their identity. We define ourselves in terms of the anti-Muslim ideas that surround us – desperate to prove that we do not conform to the negative stereotypes.
“I’m a Muslim but I’m also a loyal law-abiding citizen”. “I’m a Muslim woman but I’m not oppressed.” “I’m a Muslim but I condemn terrorism.” Our very humanity is called into question when we accept that we cannot expect others to assume we do not support the mass murder of innocent men, women and children unless we actually march down the street with a placard that says “Not in My Name!”
We have ended up seeing Muslim lives through the distorted lens of Islamophobia. It almost seems normal and inevitable that Muslims aren’t treated the same or given equal respect and rights. At worst, some Muslims turn on their own community. Or they simply distance themselves by saying, “Well yes, I am a Muslim, but I’m a moderate Muslim/a progressive Muslim”.
There are too many of us in our mostly comfortable lives in the West and in the “elite” of the Muslim world who are so desperate to set ourselves apart from the “backward” Muslim masses that we never truly identify as part of the same people, the same global family.
Ummah
The Ummah is a global family bound by faith: the word comes from the same Arabic root as “umm” – mother. Allah tells us in the Qur’an, “And truly this Ummah of yours is a single community, and I am your Lord and Cherisher: therefore keep your duty to Me.” (23.52)
Nu’man ibn Basheer reported: The Messenger of Allah, peace and blessings be upon him, said, “The parable of the believers in their affection, mercy and compassion for each other is that of a body. When any limb aches, the whole body reacts with sleeplessness and fever.” (Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhārī & Ṣaḥīḥ Muslim)
Yet in practise we have too often reverted to the tribalism of the Jahilliyah – nationalism, sectarianism and class divisions usurping our common Islamic identity and mutual concern.
Our sense of belonging to the Ummah may at times come to the forefront of consciousness. When – for instance – Gaza is attacked, Muslims are outraged about the murder of their brothers and sisters. Then the bombs stop for a while, the outrage dies down and the daily misery of the Palestinians continues. Every such flicker of the awakening of a global consciousness amongst the Muslim masses swiftly disappears into the vacuum left by the missing Muslim narrative.
The missing Muslim narrative
What is the missing Muslim narrative? In brief, it is the story of our Ummah which is suffering in so many places around the world today, it is the story of our great history as a people, and of our sacred duty to struggle against injustice and free the Ummah to achieve greatness once again – following the footsteps of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh), “a mercy for all creation” (Qur’an 21:107).
Having no strong unifying narrative of the Ummah means that we have an overwhelming myriad of separate causes: Palestine, the Rohingya, Kashmir, Islamophobia, Guantanamo, the list goes on… So even when Muslims do try to take some action in solidarity with their Muslim brothers and sisters, they are torn in different directions with these countless competing issues. No story of our Ummah means no unity behind a common overarching cause.
Only when we see ourselves as one people united by faith, one body, one Ummah, will we have a single unified cause: justice, equality and freedom for the entire Muslim Ummah.
Whatever part we play in that, we are part of the same struggle. Whether fighting the Apartheid Wall in Palestine, the Niqab ban in France or the Prevent Strategy in Britain, we are all part of the same struggle for justice for our Ummah. It is no longer solely about Islamophobia, no longer solely about Palestine, no longer solely about Syria, Kashmir, Myanmar, Yemen, Uzbekistan…this is about all of us.
Your average Muslim simply does not see themselves as part of an oppressed people worthy of better than their current situation. It is no wonder that they have therefore failed to demand their rights and those of their fellow Muslims.
When we look back at the great struggles for justice, equality and human rights throughout history we can see that consciousness of a positive identity, anchored in a strong collective narrative, has played a pivotal role – the black civil rights movement and the anti-Apartheid struggle are inspiring examples of this. When we examine our situation through a wider perspective it is no surprise that the vacuum left by the missing Muslim narrative has a cancerous effect on our community, ultimately ensuring that Muslims remain as passive victims.
Unity through action
Muslims may never agree with each other on the details of Islamic fiqh but every true Muslim can surely agree on opposing the murder, dispossession and oppression of our brothers and sisters, and the demonisation of Islam. Actively struggling for justice is central to who we are meant to be as Muslims. “We sent Our Messengers with Clear Signs and sent down the Book and the Balance with them so that mankind might establish justice.” (Qur’an 57.25)
There are many different ways that we as individuals can contribute to the cause of justice, not only for the Ummah but ultimately for humanity as a whole. The tools for political action and the means to spread consciousness of the missing Muslim narrative are there for those who care to look (and will be discussed in the next article in this “Ummah Awakening” series).
In order to successfully take up these tools and build a movement that can fight effectively for freedom, justice and equality we must break the shackles of the dominant anti-Muslim narrative and tell our own story. This story – this missing Muslim narrative – could transform our situation with revolutionary consequences. The missing Muslim narrative has the power to unite Muslims from every background in our common cause, striving for the Qur’anic ideal:
“You are indeed the best community that has ever been brought forth for [the good of] mankind: you enjoin the doing of what is right and forbid the doing of what is wrong, and you believe in God.” (Qur’an 3:11)
This article is part of MPACUK’s strategic analysis series “Ummah Awakening.” Previous articles include:
Genocide in Bosnia: A Warning for Western Muslims
Malcolm X, Mandela and the Power of Narrative