The Eurocentric or, if you wish, Orientalist make that racist way of seeing the world through the prism of what the French, in
their colonial heyday, used to call la mission civilizatrice, has it that another peoples culture whose building blocks do not
conform to ones own is not a civilization at all.
At the time, one spoke openly of the civilized world and the uncivilized world, the one inhabited by the empowered peoples of the
West and the other by the colonized ones of the East. Sure, the paradigm was born out of bigotry, but the bigotry itself was born
out of the objective realities of the time the need by Europeans to delude themselves into believing that their exploitation of the
subjugated peoples was a moral good. The colonizers mission, really, scouts honor, was to civilize the natives and introduce them
to the superior ways of the European world.
Those were the days, my friend, thought theyd never end. Well, guess what? They havent. At least not in the US, where intellectual
sclerosis in the world of academe and the public discourse has not only insured the perpetuation of antiquated ideas about the
Islamic world and the wider Middle East, but has produced, particularly since Sept. 11, a bumper crop of wacky ideas about Islam itself.
Enter the noted scholars Peter Berkowitz and Michael McFaul, respectively of the Hoover institution and Stanford University, in a
long piece last week in the Washington Post, to bemoan the embarrassing fact that our universities (have) changed little to educate
our nation and train experts on the region and its faith. They write: For believers in a good liberal arts education, it has long
been a source of consternation that faculties in political science, history, economics and sociology lack scholars who know Arabic
or Persian and understand Islam. To be sure, theirs is not merely an emphasis on the Jeffersonian
notion of education as a social concern faith in knowledge as a crucial vehicle in personal independence and upward mobility but
also as a potent political issue. They insist that, yes, bolstering faculty and curriculum resources devoted to the Muslim Middle
East is obvious from an academic perspective, but in addition to that it has become clear that since Sept. 11, this abdication of
responsibility is more than an educational problem: It also poses a threat to our national security. There is no doubt about the
fact that for Americans who yet have to recognize their ignorance about the issue an intimate acquaintance with Islam will be
enriching not only for practical reasons of national security, as Berkowitz and McFaul suggest, but for intellectual reasons as
well. You get to know a peoples Religion, and you get to know that peoples expression of human
spirit, their inward preoccupations and archetypal concerns. After all, there are many junctures where Islam and Christianity
intersect, representing a basis for the unity of the two worlds they define. What divides Muslims and Christians in modern times
are not their religions which are not antithetical by any means but their politics.
What is even more enriching would be an equally intimate acquaintance with a communitys language and habits of semantic perception,
an asset guaranteed to open doors to that societys culture. Language, after all, is an embodiment of the consciousness of a
culture. Perhaps then Americans will come to realize, for example, that jihad (struggle by an individual, or collectively a
community, to transcend the limitations of the self through spiritual discipline) does not translate as holy war, that Allahu Akbar
(a call by a Muslim in a moment of crisis, or wonderment at the objective world, to assert that God is greater than the challenges
at hand) does not mean God is great, and that shahid (a fallen patriot who dies defending his holy cause) is not a martyr, a term
unique to Christian iconography denoting a person in early Christianity who refused to renounce his Religion and died defending it. (The late Michael Kelly, who won the Pulitzer Prize for his book Martyrs
Day, about the Arab world, preferred to mock the term rather than choose the correct title, Momorial Day.) And so on down the line
with the debasement of those verbal codes in Arab culture, whose rhetoric of vivid presentation not only articulates a social mood
but defines how a people see the world around them.
Alas, the list of writers who have had the astuteness to enlarge for their fellow Americans the compass of intellectual awareness
of what the Islamic, including the Arab, world is all about who have introduced a new or novel focus to the study of the Middle
East is very small. Fine, that is now off my chest. But what of the unutterable monotony of the debate by Arab critics about the
Euro-American world? We complain, often bitterly, as I have just done, about how little Westerners know about our societies. But in
the end, I have to say this: Despite their at times inescapable sense of triviality and dissimulation, American commentators,
analysts and academics still know more about the Arab world than their counterparts there know about the United States.
How many think-tanks are there in the Arab world that devotes themselves to the study of the American world? How many Arab
universities are there with American Studies departments? How many Arab researchers have written about the United States its
foreign policy, its social life, its popular culture, its history, its political system with penetrative grasp, with resolute
objectivity, a genuine focus on facts untainted by conspiracy theories and the rhetoric of the 1950s and 60s about darn American
imperialists lurking behind every single one of our lampposts? Berkowitz and Macfaul conclude: Dramatically increasing
opportunities for the study of Arabic, Persian, Turkish and Islam in our universities is the right thing to do, in order to advance
the cause of learning and Americas interest in training people who can contribute to the spread of liberty abroad. We owe it to our
universities to demand that they live up to their responsibilities.
Okay, Im on board.
Crisis of Islamic Studies in US
Permalink > United
States > Education > arabnews.com > 19 Apr 2005 > 6,197 characters > ref: 1967

