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Book Review Tariq Ramadan. Western Muslims and the Future of Islam. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004. Traditionally, the discourse on the relationship between the West and Islam was primarily focused on mere being two separate and sometimes isolated worlds with distinct identities. However, globalization, waves of Muslim immigrants to the West, and the attacks of September 11, 2001 have introduced some novel approaches as well as serious challenges to complicate this intellectual discourse. It is no longer about two separate worlds or identities of the Christian West and Islam per se, but it becomes more focused on Islam in the Western hemisphere. These developments urged many intellectuals and scholars to broaden their scopes and thus view the encounter between the West and Islam in new terms. In his work, The Clash of Civilizations, Samuel Huntington suggests that the dominant characteristic of the post-Cold War world is violence between different ethnic and religious groups. If one agrees with Huntington’s thesis that the world’s religious traditions are inherently and inevitably in conflict with each other, then conflicts will not be conducted in the battlefields of remote deserts, but in the streets of our cities. In the aftermath of September 11, 2001 many Westerners, particularly Americans, found out that Islam and Muslims did not exist in remote and exotic parts of the world ranging from Cairo to Jakarta, but they are indeed present in the midst of their cities and towns: in Paris, New York, London, Amsterdam, and Munich. This reality seemed to vindicate a conviction that “the enemy is at home now.” The post-September 11th world made Muslims’ presence in the Europe and the U.S. more conspicuous and in many respects more alarming to their Western neighbors. These developments occurred when increasing Muslim communities in the West were seeking recognition and visibility. Many mosques, Islamic schools, and Islamic centers embodied this visibility, but the hopes for integration and engagement seemed to be diminished with the rise of Islamphobia and the spread of a culture of fear and exclusion in many Western communities. These new, sad realities added salt to the wound and consquently brought daunting challenges to the dilemmas of Western Muslims, both as individuals and communities. Tariq Ramadan is a Western Muslim scholar and theologian living in Switzerland who has been genuinely seeking to address these dilemmas and concerns of Western Muslims. His theology responds to challenges and issues facing Western Muslims in the aftermath of the September 11th attacks. In his book, Western Muslims and the Future of Islam, he seeks to provide answers to the multifaceted challenges and concerns of Western Muslims. Ramadan points out that his book is mainly written to a Western Muslim audience that is struggling on a daily basis with the many challenges of integration, engagement, absorption, and assimilation. Many of these Western Muslims also want to maintain a sincere faithfulness and commitment to their Islamic traditions and values. The daunting questions for these Western Muslims are: What is their identity as Western Muslims? How can they maintain two identities of being both Western and Muslim, which seems to be contradictory and conflicting? How can they apply Islamic theology to their Western lifestyles? In other words: How can they live Islam in a non-Muslim land? In response to all these questions and others, Ramadan mentions that his intellectual and theological approach in addressing all these challenges and concerns facing Western Muslims is “anchored in the Islamic tradition and amplified from within: in the sense it is both deeply classical and radically new” (3). Ramadan’s approach is to bring classic Islamic theology into dialogue with the contexts of Western Muslims. Reaching that objective for Ramadan is not a question of relativizing the universal “Principles of Islam” in order to give the impression that Western Muslims are integrating themselves into the rational Western order (6). But the main goal, he argues, is to find out how classic universal Islamic principles accept and respect “pluralism and the belief of the others,” (6) and, consequently, enable Western Muslims to live peacefully and securely in the West. On this basis, Ramadan boldly declares that the theological outlooks that he seeks to develop is only one step towards building the Muslim personality in the West and in the modern era, too (7). In relation to that, he points out that the “Path of Faithfulness” for Western Muslims should be deeply grounded in a true understanding of the universality of the message of the Islamic faith. This message highlights and illuminates the means that enable Western Muslims to live in the West with respect for themselves, their faith, as well as their Western countries (3). To reach that end, Ramadan immerses himself in a close reading and recontextualization of the classical Islamic theological sources (i.e. القرأن الكريم والسنة: the Qur’an and the Sunna) in the light of the Western Muslim context. Beginning with the message of Islam and its universal principles and values, he proceeds to articulate what he calls “a movement of reform and integration for Western Muslims” (5). This movement has its ultimate objective in providing an authentic and realistic Western Islamic theology that is both derivative from the true foundations of the Islamic faith (from the Islamic terms of reference such as the Qur’an, the Sunna, the early Muslim Fathers, etc.) and the experiences of Western Muslims. The first part of the book is essentially a theoretical study of the fundamental principles of “universal Islam” and the tools that Western Muslims have available to confront diversity and change, whether historical, geographical, or cultural in the West. The second part suggests a number of concrete responses to questions and concerns raised by Western Muslims in arenas such as education, the economy, interfaith dialogue, society, culture, and women’s participation. Ramadan believes that Western Muslims should go back to the foundations of Islam, because they are undergoing the experience of becoming established in new Western societies. Consequently, Western Muslims should study their points of reference in order to distinguish what, in Islam, is unchangeable from what is subject to change (9). This intellectual and theological endeavor suggested by Ramadan would eventually urge Western Muslims “to measure, from the inside the faith, what they have achieved, and what they have lost by being in the West” (9). In the first part of the book, Ramadan discusses the six dominant tendencies of Islam that are prevailing among Western Muslims: Scholastic Traditionalism, Salafi Literalism, Salafi Reformism, Political Literalist Salafism, Liberal or Rationalist Reformism, and Sufism. He concludes that these six major tendencies have failed to respond to the real theological needs and concerns of Western Muslims. He thoroughly explains the pitfalls of these six tendencies as well as their failures to address the challenges facing Western Muslims. These six tendencies are mainly bounded to specific experiences and realities of Muslims in the Middle East, North Africa, or Southeast Asia. They all fail to capture the many dimensions and complexities of the Muslims in a Western context. Worse still, their rigidity has led to many negative implications on the lives of Western Muslims such as the emergence of “a minority mentality complex” with bore alienation, lack of participation, and religious extremism. Ramadan argues that what is truly needed is “a new form of Western Muslim Islam” that is both grounded in the classic sources of the Qur’an and the Sunna as well as the experiences of Western Muslims. For Ramadan, the realm of Islamic faith necessarily calls on the human intellect to be creative and innovative. Therefore, he explains that the Qur’an and the Sunna call on the human intellect to determine the categories, methodologies, and rules for reading and deduction, allowing it to identify first the absolute and universal and then to establish the specifics of religious practices (36). Employing this innovative approach will open up vast areas of rational investigation and inquiry. Thus, in order to remain faithful to their religion, Western Muslims “must be creative in the matter of relations with the societies and cultures within which and upon which it is working” (36). For those Western Muslims who may perceive Ramadan’s approach with suspicion and skepticism, he adamantly insists that his approach of renewal is not a modification of the Islamic sources, but “a transformation of the mind and eyes that read them, which are indeed naturally influenced by the new social, political, and scientific environment in which Western Muslims live” (38) (italics added). So, between the ghetto and dissolution, Ramadan claims that the Western Muslims’ paths toward faithfulness must be constructed on solid, consistent, and coherent foundation. This should be based on a double dialectical approach, encompassing both the contextualized study of the Islamic texts and more importantly the study of the context in the light of the texts (63). Ramadan finds that in the comprehensive character of Islam, the universality of its message is the way to promote the principles of integration and solidarity. He invites Western Muslims “to integrate everything that is positive, to move forward selectively, and to act from within, as full members in the society,” in order to promote what is good, to work against injustices and discrimination, and to develop alternatives that do not restrict Muslim theology in the West to a narrow minded thinking of itself but as an inclusive vision of integration and solidarity” (55). Ramadan’s industrious attempts to provide Western Muslims with new rational and authentic judgments guided by the Qur’an and Sunna ()القرأن الكريم والسنة lead him to carry out a deep, thorough, and detailed study of some foundational Islamic theological concepts and principles. For example, he thoroughly explains the meanings of the Islamic concept of Al-maslaha (المصلحة: the common good). This is an Islamic legal term which means that Muslims are always seek something beneficial and avoid anything harmful. He also explores the theological meanings of the Islamic concept of Ijitihad ()االجتهاد, which is both the source and the legal instrument that allows a dynamism to be set in motion at the heart of the Islamic law and jurisprudence. Ijtihad is defined by Ramadan as the total expenditure of effort made by a jurist in order to infer, with a degree of probability, the rules of Sharia (الشريعة: Islamic Law) from their detailed evidence in the sources. Ramadan emphasizes that the Ijtihad remains the most important instrument that the Muslim Ulama (العلماء: theologians) have “at their disposal to fulfill the universal vocation of Islam, through a constant dynamic of adaptation in response to the time and the context” (48). For Ramadan, an authentic understanding, and contextualization of the Islamic concepts of Al-maslaha and Ijtihad will broaden the horizons of Western Muslims by providing a perspective of inclusion, flexibility, participation, citizenship, and solidarity. In addition, a contextualization of this “theological understanding” will urge Western Muslims to perceive the West neither as an “Abode of Islam” or an “Abode of War.” On the basis of this theological perspective, the West becomes for Western Muslims Dar Al Shahada (دارالشهادة: Abode of Testimony). Ramadan points out that the concept of Dar Al Shahada means to be entrusted as a Western Muslim with “a pledge that gives meaning to life: it is to be indwelt and pregnant with a comprehensive perception of life, death, and destiny, guided by faith in One Creator” (93). Ramadan also adds that for Western Muslims living in this state of Dar Al Shahada, they have to balance between the Western laws they have decided to accept, and at the same time they have to find “a way between the sometimes constraining nature of these laws and their Islamic sources,” in which they may “live at peace with their conscience as Western citizens as well as their commitment to their Islamic faith” (99). Ramadan insists that the Islamic faith calls for a certain way of being in the world. One should contemplate it while being aware of one’s memory, time, body, behavior and actions, and trying as much as possible to live with God as one sees Him and with the Prophet Muhammad as if one were in his company. Therefore, he points out that his theological approach cannot be complete without exploring the main tenets of Islamic spirituality (122). Ramadan observes that Islamic spirituality touches all dimensions and aspects of a human’s life and consquently Islamic spirituality makes Western Muslims open to human universality. Ramadan mentions that the nature of Islamic spirituality can create bridges with women and men of other faiths—and even with all the humanists, agnostics, and atheists who are concerned about human values, ethics, and respect for the universe (124). Thus, Islamic spirituality can be a path to promote inclusion, harmony, peace, and coexistence. In the second part of the book, Ramadan proposes some concrete steps in order to help Western Muslims in the process of integration and coexistence with their Western communities. First, he highlights the importance and value of the “awareness of citizenship” in all the countries where Western Muslims live, notably France, the UK, and the US. This awareness of citizenship, Ramadan argues, should lead to a strong participation and engagement of Western Muslim women and men in the process of reappropriation and affirmation of the Western identity. A true challenge to this awareness of citizenship is that many Western Muslims still have “a minority consciousness,” Ramadan warns (110). Ramadan observes that many Western Muslims continue to consider themselves as an alienated minority of the defensive. To address this problem, he urges Western Muslims to get rid of this “destructive” mentality and to participate as equal citizens in their respective contexts. Engagement can be a remedy for alienation and exclusion. For Ramadan, the first area of engagement must “take place inwardly” for Western Muslims since “there can be no harmony with the environment without a search for inner peace” (114). Second, Western Muslims should pay an attention to education as a mean for integration, coexistence, and solidarity. Ramadan says the first objective of education for Western Muslims is the education of the heart, which links consciousness with God and should awaken in Western Muslims an awareness of their responsibilities toward themselves, their bodies, their relatives, their communities, and the human family at large (129). The second objective is the education of mind, which should be able to understand the message of the Islamic scriptural sources and develop a knowledge of the environment as well as the human beings who live in it (129). This type of education by necessity and choice should promote integration and coexistence. This would, consequently, enhance Western Muslims’ participation because this vision echoes the practicability of the universality of Islam as well as its comprehensive human message. Third, Western Muslims who want to remain faithful to their Islamic terms of reference are called to develop “a civic awareness” founded on their sense of moral responsibility as well as the universality of Islam. This promotion of an ethic of responsibility, Ramadan argues, can take place with partners of other religions, ecological groups, alternative movements, etc. (156). Ramadan says that for Western Muslims the “way of faithfulness” is a way that leads towards justice, peace, coexistence, and civil as well as political involvement in their societies (164). Fourth, Western Muslims should work towards a sincere interfaith dialogue. The Qur’an, Ramadan mentions, calls for the promotion of an interfaith dialogue in which the form is not a mere exchange of information, but it should also be a way of being and of speaking, an attitude (204). “Difference might naturally lead to conflict,” Ramadan points out, “therefore it is the responsibility of humankind to make use of difference by establishing a relationship based on excelling one another in doing good…” (203). Ramadan again insists that Western Muslims can normalize their presence in the West without trivializing its means. This can be achieved, he explains, through insisting that Western Muslims develop a sense of belonging and a solid commitment to their Western societies in general (169). For Ramadan, the talents of Western Muslims scholars and intellectuals should express and eventually produce original and authentic works inspired by their perceptions and their ethics and at the same time maintain an authentically European or American quality, style, and taste (221). This is the challenge for the present as well as upcoming generations of Western Muslims who will determine the directions their destiny and identity are heading in the West. Ramadan’s book is a very important contribution to the narrative and intellectual discourse on Western Muslims. This book provides a genuine intellectual and theological attempt to establish a comprehensive proposal with specific guidelines for Western Muslims on how to balance the demands of their Islamic faith as well as the requirements for Western citizenship, coexistence, and integration. Certainly, there is no magical recipe for the challenges and dilemmas facing many Western Muslims. However, Ramadan’s intellectual contribution is a sign of hope that we are witnessing the emergence of some intellectual voices that earnestly endeavor to address the needs and concerns of this growing and conspicuous community in the Western hemisphere. Ramadan’s book supplies these signals of hope and light from a Western Muslim perspective so that Western Muslims can be accepted and treated as equal citizens, not as potentials threats. Western Muslims’ choices are between the culture of fear and exclusion or the positive spirits of inclusion and engagement. Ramadan’s book suggests taking the second road. Western Muslims are a minority in the West, but hopefully not with minor human rights and, certainly, not of minor contribution to the Western civilization, Insha Allahu.