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From the Caliphate to Khomeini


Article # : 13822 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 12 / 1988  4,169 Words
Author : Khalid Durán
Khalid Durán, the publisher of Trans Islam Magazine in Washington, D.C., has written frequently for The World & I on Islam and the Arab world.

       THE POLITICAL LANGUAGE OF ISLAM
       Bernard Lewis
       Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1988
       168 pp., $14.95
       
       In this slim, 168-page volume, Bernard Lewis speaks not only about the various body politics of the Muslim empires, but also about relations between the rulers and the ruled, and the Muslim understanding of war and peace. He does this within the context of a diplomatic history of the Islamic Orient. As such, it is a much needed corrective to the recent flood of literature on Islam and Middle Eastern politics, much of it confounded with exotic but imprecisely defined vocabulary. It is interesting to note that Muslim social scientists themselves are having difficulty reaching a consensus on the terminology to explain the advent and spread of so-called Islamic fundamentalism.
       
       Lewis' study is not a handbook, although it has many such characteristics. Neither is it an essay nor a dictionary nor a lexicon, although it resembles a series of lectures that could serve as the groundwork for an encyclopedia of Muslim political terms, together with elaborate footnotes, which quite a few students of Islamics are eagerly looking for.
       
       Fundamentalism and Islamism
       
       The author joins numerous scholars who are not happy with the use of the term "fundamentalist" to describe the radical Muslim activists presently so much in the news. It is, of course, correct that the term "fundamentalist" is of fairly recent coinage, having its origin in late nineteenth-century Protestant America. The particular brand of Muslims subsumed under this rubric has antecedents in the last century as well. Their claim to revive the "golden age" of early Islam in its "pristine purity" is a tall claim, too. In fact, there is an appreciable modernist strand in this Islamic fundamentalism, inasmuch as it castigates superstitious practices and certain unsavory excesses of popular religion such as worship of the saints and black magic. "Fundamentalist" Islamic movements advocate voluntarist ethics and disavow fatalistic quietism. They promote education, including sports, and venture into new economic activities. Some of them have a kind of Calvinist flair.
       
       While some of this "Islamic fundamentalism" has a pietist motivation and is partially akin to reformism, some of it is religious in name only. The latter is best defined as
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