Brother Tariq: The Doublespeak of Tariq Ramadan

BOOK: Brother Tariq: The Doublespeak of Tariq Ramadan
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BROTHER TARIQ
THE DOUBLESPEAK OF TARIQ RAMADAN
 
Brother Tariq
The Doublespeak of Tariq Ramadan

CAROLINE FOUREST

Translated into English by
Ioana Wieder and John Atherton

 
Contents

Foreword DENIS MACSHANE VII

Preface
xiii

Part 1 TARIQ RAMADAN: His RECORD AND BACKGROUND
I

I "Islarris Future" or the Future of 3 the Muslim Brotherhood?

2 The Heir
42

Part 2 DISCOURSE AND RHETORIC 109

3 A "Reformist" but a Fundamentalist
III

4 An "Islamic Feminist"137 but Puritanical and Patriarchal

5 Muslim and Citizen, but Muslim First!
166

6 Not a Clash but a Confrontation 196 between Civilizations

7 The West as the Land of "Collaborations"
226

Notes
235

Index
255

 
Foreword

Triq Ramadan is a global phenomenon, speaking and writing as he
does with such great fluency in French, Arabic, and English. Not for centuries has Switzerland had a native son who enjoyed such fame and impact as
a communicator. In Europe, he is the most quoted and circulated writer on
his religion, Islam, and on the issues related to the Muslim community in
Europe and further afield.

Despite being an author with several books to his name, and a regular
contributor to the opinion pages of the world's newspapers, it is at rallies in
France, or at Muslim gatherings in Africa, the Middle East, and elsewhere
that Tariq Ramadan makes many of the telling interventions that reveal his
thinking and his ambitions. Most are recorded, to be played later to a wider
audience, as guidance or as religious-political talks. Caroline Fourest has
done us a great service by listening to, transcribing, and translating Ramadan's words, since the picture on offer to those who only read his books or
columns in English, or who only hear him speak at conferences in Britain, is
necessarily limited. Ramadan grew up in a Francophone culture and spoke
Arabic from birth. His profile is very different in France and in Switzerland,
and for anyone who seeks to understand him, this biography is essential
reading.

In spite of having been born in Switzerland and educated in the Frenchspeaking part of that country (the question of his higher academic qualifications and the reasons that led him to quit his job as a schoolteacher make
interesting reading), Ramadan stresses his family background as the grandson of the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood and as the son of the main
propagator and propagandist of Muslim Brotherhood ideas beyond Egypt
after 1950.

For most of the twentieth century, the different currents of religious politics in the Muslim world were little known beyond a narrow circle of specialists in Europe's universities and research institutes. The politics of the Arab
world, particularly in the second half of the last century, saw a confusing mixture of regimes-some cast in a nationalist, socialist, fascistic, or authoritarian European mold, others based on absolute monarchies blessed with
unlimited oil wealth.

The interstices of ideology and religious belief are difficult to trace. The
abolition of the Caliphate and the rise of a proto-modern state, Turkey, with
its largely Muslim population, further complicate the picture-as indeed do
the quarrels between different branches of Islam, notably the Sunni-Shia
conflict.

A further twist of the kaleidoscope of political and religious identity in
the Arab world came from the issue of the Jewish right to create a state called
Israel in a part of the world that Jews had inhabited continuously for much
longer than Christians or Muslims had lived in lands that they claimed as
their own. Add to this the various struggles for national identity, as French
and British colonialisms were dismantled ...

The great movements of people and ideas over the past half century have
resulted in the development of major Muslim communities in Europe: in
Britain, with links to Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh; in France, with links
to the Mahgreb; and in Germany, with links to Turkey. The Islam of these
new communities has varied, but, as there turned out to be no easy solution
to the problems of social equality, acceptance in political and civil society, or
economic opportunity, the issue of religion/ideology and identity became
more pressing.

The development of Muslim communities in Europe coincided with
the last quarter of the twentieth century, when it seemed that the best values of Europe-those associated with the Renaissance and the rationality
of Galileo, with the Enlightenment appeal of Voltaire to drive out superstition, with the welcome liberation of women and gays, and with freedom of
expression-were starting to gain the upper hand over conservative religiosity and the dominance of women by men. Under the umbrella of the Euro pean Union, nations turned their backs on conflict, decided that disputes
should be resolved by secular and democratic rule of law, and that the right of
people to speak, travel, and live their sexuality free from religious constraints
should be upheld.

I first came across Tariq Ramadan when I was working in Geneva before
my election to the House ofCommons in 19 94. It was the early r 9 dos, and he
was involved in an attempt by Muslim activists in Geneva to stop the production of a play by Voltaire. It is certainly true that Voltaire managed to insult
all religions, and he was odious about Christians, Jews, and Muslims alike.
But he is also commonly held to have coined the immortal phrase about disagreeing with what a person has to say but defending that persons right to
say it-a concept that makes the difference between life worth living and life
lived under the orders of authority from on high.

John Stuart Mill described "the necessity to the mental well-being ofman-
kind (on which all their other well-being depends) offreedom of opinion, and
freedom of the expression of opinion." I was deeply disturbed when the city
of Geneva (near which Voltaire lived, so that he could, if necessary, escape the
heavy hand of the religious and absolutist ancien regime of eighteenth-century France) refused to support freedom of expression, and instead allowed
religious ideology to impose censorship. Ramadan argued that it was a question of decency, or good manners, not to insult Muslim identity by staging
the Voltaire play. Mill also deals with this objection in his famous essay on
freedom of thought and discussion, pointing out the "impossibility of fixing"
where the "bounds of fair discussion" should be placed. To place religious
belief beyond the bounds of polemic and intellectual assault is to deny all of
Europe's heritage and values.

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