Read Once Were Radicals Online
Authors: Irfan Yusuf
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Irfan Yusuf is a lawyer and freelance commentator who regularly writes for Australian and New Zealand newspapers and online media on political, legal, cultural and faith issues.
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ONCE WERE
RADICALS
My years as a teenage Islamo-fascist
IRFAN YUSUF
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First published in 2009
Copyright © Irfan Yusuf 2009
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. The
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Without meaning to give too much of the story away, I flirted with and ultimately rejected the political Islam of my mother's extremely generous aunt, who supplied our family with a huge amount of English-language literature. Most of these books were purely religious and devotional, but a fair wack had very strong political overtones. Naani Amma (as I was taught to call her) passed away late last year. This book is dedicated to her memory, and would never have been possible without her.
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This book is also dedicated to the memory of my late
murshid
(Sufi teacher), Professor Mahmud Esad Cosan. Professor Cosan encouraged Muslims to de-ghettoise themselves and settle in other cities and in regional towns. I knew nothing of his own politics in Turkey, which he never sought to impose on his non-Turkish students in any event. He died in February 2001 on the outskirts of Dubbo, soon after establishing a small Sufi hospice there.
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May God fill both of their graves with His Light and show them mercy on the day when we'll all need God's mercy in bucket loads.
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1
Cultural Islam and spicy pilgrimages
3
Jewish brothers and Bollywood love
6
The Islamic industry and the Holy Trinity
8
The three non-Anglican musketeers
9
Becoming and unbecoming a hijab messenger
11
Putting political Islam into practice ⦠well, sort of
12
Final flirtations with political Islam
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Believe it or not, the first person I'd like to thank is former US President George W. Bush for popularising the clumsy term âIslamo-fascist'. This delightfully hysterical label has joined an awesome array of spontaneous phrases we have come to know (and mostly love) as âBushisms'. Indeed, these days the term has been adopted by an incredible array of whackos and fruitloops who clearly aren't (in Bush's words) among our âbreast and brightest' nor have more pressing concerns such as âputting food on their families'.
I'd also like to thank Hassan Butt, a UK-based alleged ex-jihadi who became a darling of certain sections of the media after claiming he'd radicalised many British Muslim youth and channelled them into al-Qaeda and the Taliban. Butt also justified and vindicated that minority of prejudiced pundits who used national security as a tool with which to spread hatred against ordinary citizens who happen to be Muslim. Butt recently admitted to a UK court that he had lied all along, happily accepting hundreds of thousands of dollars from media outlets in return for imbecilic spin on how the problem isn't with terrorists but rather with Islam itself. Until his admission before a UK court, Butt was writing his own exciting action-packed memoir which would have made my own
memoir sound like a song from The Wiggles. I look forward to the publication of what will now probably be Butt's debut novel.
This book has been published thanks to the generosity of Allen & Unwin who decided to hand me the Iremonger Award for Public Affairs Writing at their 2007 Christmas party. They did this for reasons beyond my understanding and perhaps even theirs, and in this respect I'm grateful to whoever spiked the relevant decision makers' drinks at the party. In the unlikely event I was actually
meant
to get this gong, I'd like to thank the award judgesâmy publisher Elizabeth Weiss,
Sydney Morning Herald
economics editor Ross Gittins and Kate Crawford. I'd also like to thank my fabulous editor Alexandra Nahlous for her editorial ruthlessness.
Malcolm Knox spent some of his precious time and expertise during the early stages of this project. Hanifa Deen, a phenomenal Australian writer of South Asian Aussie Muslim heritage, kept pestering me to stop blogging and start writing a book. Apart from also pushing me to write this book, my mother and Bilal Cleland pestered me to get off my backside and shed some kilos so I'd more closely resemble the body on the front cover.
I was fortunate to be surrounded by people who recognised both the benefits and detriments of various strains of Islamic thought, and who shared with me a passion for collecting and devouring just about any book with even the most tenuous relation with the faith. Most prominent among them was Mahmud Kurkcu, who has for some time led the Melbourne-based Young Muslims of Australia (YMA). Mahmud was and remains one of the pioneers in communicating mainstream Islam to young Australians.
A number of people have helped and encouraged me along in my journey as something resembling a writer. Among them is my old school buddy, Don. Don and I are the closest thing to those two old men sitting up on the balcony of the
Muppet Show
, laughing at everyone on stage when we aren't laughing at each other.
A number of Australian imams and scholars have been influential in correcting and shaping my views over the years, some without even knowing it. Most needn't be named, probably not wanting to be put in the spotlight, and I'm grateful to them for keeping Aussie Muslims out of more unnecessary spotlight. I'd like to make special mention of Dr Abdurrahman Asaroglu of the Centre for Excellence in Islamic Studies and Imam Muammer Gulmez.
Special thanks also to Shahed Amanullah and the awesome team at
AltMuslim.com
.
Also thanks to all those loyal friends and colleagues who contributed to my writing this book in ways too numerous to mention: Jose Borghino, David Drennan, Nurudeen Lemu, Giovanna Wakila Volpe, the entire Kassem clan, Dado Shakoor, Professor Anthony Johns, Randa Abdel Fattah, Dr Stephen Mutch, the Kearns family and Nazeem Hussein.
I want to especially thank Shakira Hussein, her daughter Adalya Nash Hussein, and their family for their support. Last, but definitely not least, I want to thank my familyâmy parents (from whom I inherited my sense of humour), my nephews (who inherited my good looks), and my sisters and their husbands (from whom I doubt I'll inherit anything).
Before I reached my teens, I never had much interest in exactly how or why I ended up carrying the label of âMuslim'. I just knew that I did. It never occurred to me that being Muslim made me any different to anyone else having my combination of skin colour, ethnic and cultural background, let alone any of the other kids I grew up with. Well, apart from the refusing to eat pork. And getting inebriated just by inhaling alcohol fumes, a skill I honed at university parties and political functions of the Young Liberals.
Being Muslim wasn't such a bad âdifference' ⦠until September 11, 2001. That was when two planes hit the World Trade Center, a third plane hit the Pentagon and a fourth crashed onto a field in Pennsylvania as it headed for the White House. Ever since, ordinary Muslim citizens have been held personally responsible for the actions of a handful of madmen. It didn't matter that Muslims were among the people who died on September 11. It didn't
matter that the perpetrators regard ordinary Muslims as just as âinfidelic' as their non-Muslim countrymen and women. It didn't matter that, for years and in years to come, more Muslims would be killed by these terrorists than non-Muslims. We were blamed and hated and pilloried to intolerable degrees.
Every ordinary person who ticked the âMuslim' box on their census form felt it. So did many people who might âlook' Muslim. The first victim of a hate-crime after September 11 was an American Sikh man who was planting flowers in the garden of his family's business. After the 2005 London bombings, many British Sikh men sporting beards and turbans started wearing badges that said: âDon't freak, I'm a Sikh!' Arab churches across the Western world were spray-painted with graffiti and even firebombed just as mosques were. Orthodox Jewish men in beards and women in headscarves were subjected to abuse just as were orthodox Muslim men and women.
In this environment of hysteria, the Australian government released TV advertisements about terrorism, asking us to âbe alert but not alarmed'. But politicians from the same government, together with their allies on talkback radio and in the media were creating an environment where we were all too alarmed to be alert. Irresponsible Muslim spokespeople and imams also did not help the situation.
It seemed like all Muslims were suddenly on trial. I personally felt it. I may well believe in liberal democracy; I might have a track record of service to the broader community and even to a mainstream political party; I may be committed to Australia and never have held any other citizenship or nationality. But, because my names are âIrfan'
and âYusuf', anything I do will, naturally, be presumed to be some kind of deception or cover. I am part of some giant conspiracy to destroy the West, one of Osama bin Ladin's henchmen. I am part of the âMuslim question'.
The first time I heard the term âMuslim question' was in December 2006 during a seminar at Parliament House, NSW, on âThe Journalist and Islam'. There, a conservative opinion editor of a broadsheet newspaper talked about Australia's need to âresolve its Muslim question'. He wasn't very happy when I asked him what he proposed would be the âFinal Solution', and he certainly didn't have an answer.
But before you start making up your mind about me, let me tell you, this book is no âpoor Muslim' story. I simply refuse to be a victim, but I also refuse to be described as a âproblem' or a âquestion' or a âchallenge'. I also refuse to see cultural Muslims pretending to understand what I have gone through. I am part of the broad and varied Australian landscape, even though I once dabbled and experimented in an ideology that could have seen me having tea, or even carrying arms in solidarity, with others who didn't grow out of that ideology, many of whom found themselves fighting on the same side as Osama bin Ladin.