The Muslim Brotherhood's Mohamed Morsi is Egypt's first democratically elected president.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Timothy Stanley: Many worry that Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood leader will bring theocracy
- But Stanley says historic and modern evidence shows Islamic societies can be democratic
- He says Mali, Bangladesh and Morocco seek balance between Islam and openness
- Stanley: Brotherhood (and military) in Egypt respecting democratic process so far
Editor's note: Timothy
Stanley is a historian at Oxford University and blogs for Britain's The
Daily Telegraph. He is the author of the new book "The Crusader: The Life and Times of Pat Buchanan."
(CNN) -- The West is understandably nervous about the election of Mohamed Morsi.
The president-elect of Egypt is taking charge of a febrile situation.
The economy is contracting and human rights abuses are rampant --
attacks on Coptic churches by Islamic groups have forced an estimated 100,000 Christians to flee the country.
Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood is philosophically committed to creating a state governed by Islamic law, and some say that his victory poses a threat to Israel. Now he wants to reach out to Iran.
But it would be wrong to conclude that Islamic democracy is a contradiction in terms.
Whatever new state emerges in Egypt almost certainly won't be
democratic in the liberal, European tradition, and there will be a
constant fight to protect the rights of women and religious minorities.
But the presumption that Morsi's political Islam is the vanguard of theocratic dictatorship
ignores historical and contemporary evidence to the contrary. Islam is
simply too complex to be stereotyped as the faith of tyrants.
Timothy Stanley
Early Muslim societies, romanticized by Islamists, were decentralized in nature and allowed for a large degree of self-government.
The first caliphs were elected by tribal councils, and their powers
were limited by legal scholars in a manner that approximates to
constitutionalism. Rulers could, theoretically, be impeached; religious
pluralism was tolerated.
When Umar Ibn al-Khattab conquered Jerusalem in 637, he permitted Christians and Jews
to remain in the holy city and worship freely in their own temples. The
Covenant of Umar is one of history's first examples of a state
guaranteeing religious freedom.
Alas, there are many more
examples across the Muslim world of dictatorships and parties
implacably committed to violent fundamentalism. Saudi Arabia, for
example, hasn't stopped the bankrolling of terrorism, forces its subjects to live by a strict reading of Sharia law and even tolerates beheadings for witchcraft.
But while the Islamic emphasis upon submission to religious authority might have hardened resistance to Enlightenment values
of pluralism and civil liberties, the legacy of Western imperialism
shares responsibility, too. Central Asian countries such as Turkmenistan
and Uzbekistan are former Soviet republics, Iran had its parliamentary democracy subverted by the West in the 1950s, and Saudi Arabian politics have been dominated by the international oil market.
In short, the spread of
democracy in the Islamic world has either been retarded by autocratic
practices imported from the West, or subverted by Cold War politics and
economic globalization. Pitted against these savage forces, Islam has
sometimes offered a rare vehicle for anti-authoritarian dissent -- from Algeria to China.
The fact that Islamic
parties, such as the Muslim Brotherhood, have emerged from dictatorships
bolstered by foreign arms has colored their politics -- to the degree
that they regard Western "democracy" as a byword for imperialism.
Nonetheless, there is some evidence
that the Brotherhood is a diverse, pragmatic movement more concerned
with reducing the influence of the secular state than erecting a
theocracy in its place.
The Brotherhood has certainly moderated its views in recent years to accommodate shifting domestic attitudes toward the veil, the presence of Westerners or alcohol.
An example of a more
temperate Islamism might be found in Morocco, where the appointment of
an Islamist prime minister, Abdelilah Benkirane, has shown signs of opening the country up.
He has promised transparency, a war on corruption and a fairer
distribution of wealth. Crucially, anything more radical that the prime
minister might try to do is tempered by Morocco's monarch and powerful
army. This arrangement sees Islamism expanding popular representation
while the political establishment safeguards secularism.
We see some of that careful balance in the new Egypt. The military still enjoys enormous power,
and it will effectively control the writing of a constitution. The army
might be motivated by venial desires to protect its power and
patronage, but the fact that Morsi is ultimately answerable
to Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, chairman of the Supreme
Council of the Armed Forces and defense minister, means his ability to
construct any kind of theocracy is severely limited.
Although Western unease
toward Morsi's Islamist politics is justified by recent experience, the
existence of historical and political variation offers hope that Egypt
won't become a new caliphate. On the contrary: In democracies, process
is all -- and so far the process has been respected by everyone
involved. The West's complaint that "the wrong man won" in Egypt mustn't
detract from the fact that the country is still undergoing a
remarkable, apparently progressive transition -- albeit at the cost of
many lives.
The people overthrew a
dictator and then elected a new leader in free and fair elections. The
very fact that the "wrong man" was even allowed to assume the presidency
suggests that Egypt is embracing a more humane politics. So far,
political Islam has facilitated, not hindered, the building of a
democratic country. So far.
Post a Comment
Click to see the code!
To insert emoticon you must added at least one space before the code.