Islam and Liberal Democracy
Is Islam by its very nature antithetical to the development of
democratic institutions? A distinguished historian contemplates this difficult question,
one whose answer is fraught with consequence for several troubled regions of the world
by Bernard Lewis
The Atlantic Monthly | February 1993
.....
There has been much discussion of late, both inside
and outside the Islamic world, about those elements in the Islamic past and those factors
in the Muslim present that are favorable and unfavorable to the development of liberal
democracy. From a historical perspective it would seem that of all the non-Western
civilizations in the world, Islam offers the best prospects for Western-style democracy.
Historically, culturally, religiously, it is the closest to the West, sharing
muchthough by no means allof the Judeo-Christian and Greco-Roman heritage that
helped to form our modern civilization.
From a political perspective, however, Islam seems to offer the
worst prospects for liberal democracy. Of the forty-six sovereign states that make up the
international Islamic Conference, only one, the Turkish Republic, can be described as a
democracy in Western terms, and even there the path to freedom has been beset by
obstacles. Of the remainder, some have never tried democracy; others have tried it and
failed; a few, more recently, have experimented with the idea of sharing, though not of
relinquishing, power.
Can liberal democracy work in a society inspired by Islamic beliefs and
principles and shaped by Islamic experience and tradition? It is of course for Muslims,
primarily and perhaps exclusively, to interpret and reinterpret the pristine original
message of their faith, and to decide how much to retain, and in what form, of the rich
accumulated heritage of fourteen centuries of Islamic history and culture. Not all Muslims
give the same answers to the question posed above, but much will depend on the answer that
prevails.
The Prod of Weakness
On December 14, 1909, the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed V, in a
speech from the throne delivered to the Ottoman parliament, spoke of the commitment of his
administration to "constitutional and consultative government ... the way of security
and salvation prescribed by the noble shari'a and by both reason and
tradition." The content of the speech and the manner of its delivery reflected the
new situation after the Young Turk Revolution of 1908 and the suppression of the
counterrevolutionary mutiny in the spring of 1909. Under the restored constitution the
Ottoman Empire had become a constitutional monarchy, and the speech that the Sultan
presented, British-style, to his parliament was written for him by his ministers, whose
policies it expressed. The language used is interesting and revealing.
"Constitution" is mesrutiyet, a term coined in the nineteenth century to
denote a new procedure; "consultation" is mesveret, an old term with many
associations derived from both Ottoman political usage and Islamic political literature.
The Islamic association implied by the use of this term is made explicit by the citation
of "the noble shari'a" and of "reason and tradition," akl
ve-nakl, a formula commonly used by Muslim theologians.
The desire to borrow or imitate Western institutions
perceived as useful, and to present them as somehow representing a return to authentic and
original Islamic principles, is characteristic of most nineteenth-century and some
twentieth-century Islamic reformers. The desire for such change arose in the main from a
growing awareness of Western strength and wealth contrasted with Muslim weakness and
poverty. The discovery or invention of Islamic antecedents was seen as necessary to make
such political changes acceptable to the people of a proud and deeply conservative society
with old and strong religio-political traditions of its ownthese last including a
profound contempt for the unbeliever and all his ways. It is not easy to accept
instruction in matters as fundamental as the conduct of state from those one has long been
accustomed to regard as benighted and unenlightened.
Muslim awareness of weakness and defeat first achieved significant
expression in the early eighteenth century, following the disastrous failure of the second
siege of Vienna (1683) and the Treaty of Karlowitz (1699), the first imposed by a
victorious enemy on a defeated Ottoman government. There had been earlier defeats and
setbacksthe final expulsion of the Moors from Spain, the ending of the Tatar yoke in
Russia, the establishment of the Western European maritime powers in the Muslim lands of
South and Southeast Asia. But all these were in a sense peripheral and seem to have had
little impact on the heartlands of Islam and the Middle East, where the Ottoman Empire,
the last and in many ways the greatest of the Muslim military empires, continued to
perform its task as the sword and shield of Islam in the long struggle against
Christendom.
For a while the awareness of weakness was in the main
limited to the Ottoman governing elite, the first to bear the brunt of the changed balance
of forces, while the rest of the population was still protected from both invasion and
reality by the armed might of the Ottoman state, even in its decline a formidable military
power. The terms of the discussion were similarly limited to military matters, to weapons
and training and military organization, since for some time it was in these alone that
Muslims experienced the growing superiority of the West. The events of the late eighteenth
centuriesthe Russians in the Black Sea, the French in Egyptmade European
superiority painfully obvious. This succession of military defeats was the more galling to
the people of a religious society with a long history of political and military triumph,
starting in the lifetime of its founder, and with a proud awareness of that sacred
history.
In time there arose some among the reformers who argued that European
military superiority derived from nonmilitary causes, and two in particularone
economic, the other political. Some identified the sources of Western power more
specifically as industrialization and constitutional government. The Arab failures in the
struggle against Israel, particularly in 1948 and in 1967, revived the great debate on
what is wrong with Arab and, more broadly, Islamic society, and what can be done to put it
right. Like the Turks after their failure to capture Vienna, so the Arabs after their
failure to capture Jerusalem began by seeing this as a primarily military problem for
which there was a military solution: bigger and better armies with bigger and better
weapons. And when these bigger and better armies also failed, there was a growing
willingness to listen to those who sought deeper causes and offered more-radical
solutions.
Fundamentalists and Democrats
There are many who see no need for any such change and
would prefer to retain the existing systems, whether radical dictatorships or traditional
autocracies, with perhaps some improvement in the latter. This preference for things as
they are is obviously shared by those who rule under the present system and those who
otherwise benefit, including foreign powers who are willing to accept and even support
existing regimes as long as their own interests are safeguarded. But there are others who
feel that the present systems are both evil and doomed and that new institutions must be
devised and installed.
Proponents of radical change fall into two main groupsthe Islamic fundamentalists
and the democrats. Each group includes a wide range of sometimes contending ideologies.
The term "fundamentalism" derives from a series of Protestant
tracts, The Fundamentals, published in the United States around 1910, and was used
first in America and then in other predominantly Protestant countries to designate certain
groups that diverge from the mainstream churches in their rejection of liberal theology
and biblical criticism and their insistence on the literal divinity and inerrancy of the
biblical text. The use of the term to designate Muslim movements is therefore at best a
loose analogy and can be very misleading. Reformist theology has at times in the past been
an issue among Muslims; it is not now, and it is very far from the primary concerns of
those who are called Muslim fundamentalists.
Those concerns are less with scripture and theology than with society,
law, and government. As the Muslim fundamentalists see it, the community of Islam has been
led into error by foreign infidels and Muslim apostates, the latter being the more
dangerous and destructive. Under their guidance or constraint Muslims abandoned the laws
and principles of their faith and instead adopted secularthat is to say,
paganlaws and values. All the foreign ideologiesliberalism, socialism, even
nationalismthat set Muslim against Muslim are evil, and the Muslim world is now
suffering the inevitable consequences of forsaking the God-given law and way of life that
were vouchsafed to it. The answer is the old Muslim obligation of jihad: to wage holy war
first at home, against the pseudo-Muslim apostates who rule, and then, having ousted them
and re-Islamized society, to resume the greater role of Islam in the world. The return to
roots, to authenticity, will always be attractive. It will be doubly appealing to those
who daily suffer the consequences of the failed foreign innovations that were foisted on
them.
For Islamic fundamentalists, democracy is obviously an irrelevance, and
unlike the communist totalitarians, they rarely use or even misuse the word. They are,
however, willing to demand and exploit the opportunities that a self-proclaimed democratic
system by its own logic is bound to offer them. At the same time, they make no secret of
their contempt for democratic political procedures and their intention to govern by
Islamic rules if they gain power. Their attitude toward democratic elections has been
summed up as "one man, one vote, once." This is not entirely accurate, at least
not for the Iranians. The Islamic Republic of Iran holds contested elections and allows
more freedom of debate and criticism in the press and in its parliament than is usual in
most Muslim countries, but there are exacting and strictly enforced limitations on who may
be a candidate, what groups may be formed, and what ideas may be expressed. It goes
without saying that no questioning of the basic principles of the Islamic revolution or
the republic is permitted.
Those who plead or fight for democratic reform in the Arab and other
Islamic lands claim to represent a more effective, more authentic democracy than that of
their failed predecessors, not restricted or distorted by some intrusive adjective, not
nullified by a priori religious or ideological imperatives, not misappropriated by
regional or sectarian or other sectional interests. In part their movement is an extension
to the Middle East of the wave of democratic change that has already transformed the
governments of many countries in Southern Europe and Latin America; in part it is a
response to the collapse of the Soviet Union and the new affirmation of democratic
superiority through victory in the Cold War. To no small extent it is also a consequence
of the growing impact of the U.S. democracy and of American popular culture in the Islamic
lands.
For some time America was seen merely as an extension of Western
Europepart of the same civilization, speaking the same language as the greatest of
the empires, professing the same religion, damned by the same fatal flaws. Closer
acquaintance revealed profound differences between American and Western European
democracy, giving the former an attraction that the latter never possessed.
There is, of course, the obvious difference that the United States has
never exercised imperial authority over Arab lands. A consequence of this is the less
obvious but in the long run vastly more important difference that Americans in
generalalbeit with some well-known exceptionshave not developed the imperial
attitude that colored, and to some extent still colors, human relations between Britons
and Frenchmen on the one hand and the peoples of their former possessions on the other.
This has made possible for Americans the kind of informal, equal, person-to-person
relationships with Middle Easterners that were, and to some extent still are, rarely
possible for Europeans.
American popular culture and mores have penetrated far more deeply and
widely in Middle Eastern society than was ever possible for the elitist cultures of
Britain and France. This kind of relationship is further encouraged by westward migration.
There are now millions of Britons of South Asian, and Frenchmen of North African, origin.
But it will probably be a long time before they achieve the level of integration and
acceptance already achieved by new Americans from the Middle East. These have already
become an important part of the American political process; they may yet find a role in
the political processes of their countries of origin.
It is precisely the catholicity, the assimilative power and attraction,
of American culture that make it an object of fear and hatred among the self-proclaimed
custodians of pristine, authentic Islam. For such as they, it is a far more deadly threat
than any of its predecessors to the old values that they hold dear and to the power and
influence those values give them. In the last chapter of the Koran, which ranks with the
first among the best known and most frequently cited, the believer is urged to seek refuge
with God "from the mischief of the insidious Whisperer who whispers in people's
hearts..." Satan in the Koran is the adversary, the deceiver, above all the inciter
and tempter who seeks to entice mankind away from the true faith. It is surely in this
sense that the Ayatollah Khomeini called America the great Satan: Satan as enemy,
butmore especially and certainly more plausibly for his peoplealso as source
of enticement and temptation.
In these times of discontent and disappointment, of anger and
frustration, the older appeals of nationalism and socialism and national
socialismthe gifts of nineteenth-and twentieth-century Europehave lost much of
their power. Today only the democrats and the Islamic fundamentalists appeal to something
more than personal or sectional loyalties. Both have achieved some limited success, partly
by infiltrating the existing regimes, more often by frightening them into making some
preemptive concessions. Successes have in the main been limited to the more traditional
authoritarian regimes, which have made some symbolic gestures toward the democrats or the
fundamentalists or both. Even the radical dictatorships, while admitting no compromise
with liberal democracy, have in times of stress tried to appease and even to use Islamic
sentiment.
There is an agonizing question at the heart of the present debate about
democracy in the Islamic world: Is liberal democracy basically compatible with Islam, or
is some measure of respect for law, some tolerance of criticism, the most that can be
expected from autocratic governments? The democratic world contains many different forms
of governmentrepublics and monarchies, presidential and parliamentary regimes,
secular states and established churches, and a wide range of electoral systemsbut
all of them share certain basic assumptions and practices that mark the distinction
between democratic and undemocratic governments. Is it possible for the Islamic peoples to
evolve a form of government that will be compatible with their own historical, cultural,
and religious traditions and yet will bring individual freedom and human rights to the
governed as these terms are understood in the free societies of the West?
No one, least of all the Islamic fundamentalists themselves, will
dispute that their creed and political program are not compatible with liberal democracy.
But Islamic fundamentalism is just one stream among many. In the fourteen centuries that
have passed since the mission of the Prophet, there have been several such
movementsfanatical, intolerant, aggressive, and violent. Led by charismatic
religious figures from outside the establishment, they have usually begun by denouncing
the perversion of the faith and the corruption of society by the false and evil Muslim
rulers and leaders of their time. Sometimes these movements have been halted and
suppressed by the ruling establishment. At other times they have gained power and used it
to wage holy war, first at home, against those whom they saw as backsliders and apostates,
and then abroad against the other enemies of the true faith. In time these regimes have
been either ousted or, if they have survived, transformedusually in a fairly short
periodinto something not noticeably better, and in some ways rather worse, than the
old establishments that they had overthrown. Something of this kind is already visibly
happening in the Islamic Republic of Iran.
The question, therefore, is not whether liberal democracy is compatible
with Islamic fundamentalismclearly it is notbut whether it is compatible with
Islam itself. Liberal democracy, however far it may have traveled, however much it may
have been transformed, is in its origins a product of the Westshaped by a thousand
years of European history, and beyond that by Europe's double heritage: Judeo-Christian
religion and ethics; Greco-Roman statecraft and law. No such system has originated in any
other cultural tradition; it remains to be seen whether such a system, transplanted and
adapted in another culture, can long survive.
Leaving aside the polemical and apologetic argumentsthat Islam,
not Western liberalism, is the true democracy, or that Western liberalism itself derives
from Islamic rootsthe debate about Islam and liberal democracy has focused on a few
major points.
God's Polity
Every civilization formulates its own idea of good government, and
creates institutions through which it endeavors to put that idea into effect. Since
classical antiquity these institutions in the West have usually included some form of
council or assembly, through which qualified members of the polity participate in the
formation, conduct, and, on occasion, replacement of the government. The polity may be
variously defined; so, too, may be the qualifications that entitle a member of the polity
to participate in its governance. Sometimes, as in the ancient Greek city, the
participation of citizens may be direct. More often qualified participants will, by some
agreed-upon and recurring procedure, choose some from among their own numbers to represent
them. These assemblies are of many different kinds, with differently defined electorates
and functions, often with some role in the making of decisions, the enactment of laws, and
the levying of taxes.
The effective functioning of such bodies was made possible by the
principle embodied in Roman law, and in systems derived from it, of the legal
personthat is to say, a corporate entity that for legal purposes is treated as an
individual, able to own, buy, or sell property, enter into contracts and obligations, and
appear as either plaintiff or defendant in both civil and criminal proceedings. There are
signs that such bodies existed in pre-Islamic Arabia. They disappeared with the advent of
Islam, and from the time of the Prophet until the first introduction of Western
institutions in the Islamic world there was no equivalent among the Muslim peoples of the
Athenian boule, the Roman Senate, or the Jewish Sanhedrin, of the Icelandic Althing or the
Anglo-Saxon witenagemot, or of any of the innumerable parliaments, councils, synods,
diets, chambers, and assemblies of every kind that flourished all over Christendom.
One obstacle to the emergence of such bodies was the absence of any
legal recognition of corporate persons. There were some limited moves in the direction of
recognition. Islamic commercial law recognizes various forms of partnership for limited
business purposes. A waqf, a pious foundation, once settled is independent of its
settlor, and can in theory continue indefinitely, with the right to own, acquire, and
alienate property. But these never developed beyond their original purposes, and at no
point reached anything resembling the governmental, ecclesiastical, and private corporate
entities of the West.
Thus almost all aspects of Muslim government have an intensely personal
character. In principle, at least, there is no state, but only a ruler; no court, but only
a judge. There is not even a city with defined powers, limits, and functions, but
only an assemblage of neighborhoods, mostly defined by family, tribal, ethnic, or
religious criteria, and governed by officials, usually military, appointed by the
sovereign. Even the famous Ottoman imperial divanthe divan-i humayundescribed
by many Western visitors as a council, could more accurately be described as a meeting, on
fixed days during the week, of high political, administrative, judicial, financial, and
military officers, presided over in earlier times by the Sultan, in later times by the
Grand Vizier. Matters brought before the meeting were referred to the relevant member of
the divan, who might make a recommendation. The final responsibility and decision lay with
the Sultan or the Grand Vizier.
One of the major functions of such bodies in the West, increasingly
through the centuries, was legislation. According to Muslim doctrine, there was no
legislative function in the Islamic state, and therefore no need for legislative
institutions. The Islamic state was in principle a theocracynot in the Western sense
of a state ruled by the Church and the clergy, since neither existed in the Islamic world,
but in the more literal sense of a polity ruled by God. For believing Muslims, legitimate
authority comes from God alone, and the ruler derives his power not from the people, nor
yet from his ancestors, but from God and the holy law. In practice, and in defiance of
these beliefs, dynastic succession became the norm, but it was never given the sanction of
the holy law. Rulers made rules, but these were considered, theoretically, as elaborations
or interpretations of the only valid lawthat of God, promulgated by revelation. In
principle the state was God's state, ruling over God's people; the law was God's law; the
army was God's army; and the enemy, of course, was God's enemy.
Without legislative or any other kind of corporate bodies, there was no
need for any principle of representation or any procedure for choosing representatives.
There was no occasion for collective decision, and no need therefore for any procedure for
achieving and expressing it, other than consensus. Such central issues of Western
political development as the conduct of elections and the definition and extension of the
franchise therefore had no place in Islamic political evolution.
Not surprisingly, in view of these differences, the history of the
Islamic states is one of almost unrelieved autocracy. The Muslim subject owed obedience to
a legitimate Muslim ruler as a religious duty. That is to say, disobedience was a sin as
well as a crime.
Modernization in the nineteenth century, and still more in the
twentieth, far from reducing this autocracy, substantially increased it. On the one hand,
modern technology, communications, and weaponry greatly reinforced the rulers' powers of
surveillance, indoctrination, and repression. On the other hand, social and economic
modernization enfeebled or abrogated the religious constraints and intermediate powers
that had in various ways limited earlier autocracies. No Arab Caliph or Turkish Sultan of
the past could ever have achieved the arbitrary and pervasive power wielded by even the
pettiest of present-day dictators.
Money and Power
The impediments to the development of liberal institutions were not
merely political. The small-scale autocracy of the home, especially the upper-class home,
founded on polygamy, concubinage, and slavery, was preparation for an adult life of
domination and acquiescence, and a barrier to the entry of liberal ideas.
Womenparticularly the mothers, sisters, wives, and daughters of rulershave
played a much more important role in Muslim history than is usually conceded by
historians. But they were until very recently precluded from contributing to the
development of their society in the way that a succession of remarkable women have
contributed to the flowering of the West.
The economic basis of Western-style liberal democracy was early
recognized in the West. British, American, and French democrats alike insisted on the
right to property as one of the basic human rights that safeguard and are safeguarded by
free institutions. It also forms an essential component of civil society as conceived by
European thinkers. For some time the rise of socialist ideas, parties, and governments
weakened the belief in private property as a liberal value. Recent events have done much
to restore that belief.
Islamic law unequivocally recognizes the sanctity of private property,
but Islamic history reveals a somewhat different picture, in which even a rich man's
enjoyment of his property has never been safe from seizure or sequestration by the state.
This chronic insecurity is symbolized in the architecture of the traditional Muslim city,
in which neighborhoods, and even the houses of the wealthy, are turned inward, surrounded
by high blank walls. Marx and Engels themselves recognized that their canonical sequence
of ruling classes defined by production relationships might not apply to non-Western
societies. They sketched the theory of what they called "the Asiatic mode of
production," in which there was no effective private ownership of land, and
consequently no class warjust a simple opposition between the terrorized mass of the
population and the all-encompassing state power, bureaucratic and military.
Like many of their other insights, this is a caricature, not a
portrait, but also like their other insights, it is not without some basis in reality.
Comparing the relationship between property and power in the modern American and classical
Middle Eastern systems, one might put the difference this way: in America one uses money
to buy power, while in the Middle East one uses power to acquire money. That is obviously
an oversimplification, and there are significant exceptions on both sides. The misuse of
public office for financial gain is not unknown in the United States; the use of money to
buy into the political process is not unfamiliar in the traditional Middle East. But these
are marginal, in the main small-scale departures from the norm. In the vast American
political and economic system the money made through the actual exercise of power is
relatively unimportantno more than small-time peculation. In the Middle East money
can buy only the power of intrigue, not of command.
Perhaps the most striking manifestation of this difference between the
two systems is in the merchant class, and its place in the society and polity. Muslim
societies, both medieval and early modern, often included a rich and varied industrial and
commercial life, and evolved a wealthy and cultivated merchant class. But with brief and
insignificant exceptionsas, for example, in a disputed borderland between rival
states, or in an interregnum between the collapse of one regime and the consolidation of
anotherthey were never able to match the achievement of the rising European
bourgeoisie in the creation of the modern West. One reason is that a large proportion of
them were non-Muslims, principally Christians and Jews, and therefore precluded from any
decisive role in the political process. But far more important was the chronic, permanent
insecurity, the sequence of upheavals and invasions, the ever-present threat of
expropriation or destruction.
These traditional obstacles to democracy have in many ways been
reinforced by the processes of modernization, and by recent developments in the region. As
already observed, the power of the state to dominate and terrorize the people has been
vastly increased by modern methods. The philosophy of authoritarian rule has been
sharpened and strengthened by imported totalitarian ideologies, which have served a double
purposeto sanctify rulers and leaders and to fanaticize their subjects and
followers. The so-called Islamic fundamentalists are no exception in this respect.
Self-criticism in the Westa procedure until recently rarely
practiced and little understood in the Middle Eastprovided useful ammunition. This
use of the West against itself is particularly striking among the fundamentalists. Western
democracy for them is part of the hated West, and that hatred is central to the ideas by
which they define themselves, as in the past the free world defined itself first against
Nazism and then against communism.
The changes wrought by modernization are by no means entirely negative.
Some, indeed, are extremely positive. One such improvement is the emancipation of women.
Though this still has a long way to go before it reaches Western levels, irreversible
changes have already taken place. These changes are indispensable: a society can hardly
aspire realistically to create and operate free institutions as long as it keeps half its
members in a state of permanent subordination and the other half see themselves as
domestic autocrats. Economic and social development has also brought new economic and
social elements of profound importancea literate middle class, commercial,
managerial, and professional, that is very different from the military, bureaucratic, and
religious elites that between them dominated the old order. These new groups are creating
their own associations and organizations, and modifying the law to accommodate them. They
are an indispensable component of civil societypreviously lacking, yet essential to
any kind of democratic polity.
There are also older elements in the Islamic tradition, older factors
in Middle Eastern history, that are not hostile to democracy and that, in favorable
circumstances, could even help in its development. Of special importance among these is
the classical Islamic concept of supreme sovereigntyelective, contractual, in a
sense even consensual and revocable. The Islamic caliphate, as prescribed and regulated by
the holy law, may be an autocracy; it is in no sense a despotism. According to Sunni
doctrine, the Caliph was to be elected by those qualified to make a choice. The electorate
was never defined, nor was any procedure of election ever devised or operated, but the
elective principle remains central to Sunni religious jurisprudence, and that is not
unimportant.
Again according to Sunni doctrine, the relationship between the Caliph
and his subjects is contractual. The word bay'a, denoting the ceremony at the
inauguration of a new Caliph, is sometimes translated as "homage" or
"allegiance." Such translations, though no doubt reflecting the facts, do not
accurately represent the principle. The word comes from an Arabic root meaning "to
barter," hence "to buy and to sell," and originally referring to the
clasping or slapping of hands with which in ancient Arabia a deal was normally concluded.
The bay'a was thus conceived as a contract by which the subjects undertook to obey
and the Caliph in return undertook to perform certain duties specified by the jurists. If
a Caliph failed in those dutiesand Islamic history shows that this was by no means a
purely theoretical pointhe could, subject to certain conditions, be removed from
office.
This doctrine marks one of the essential differences between Islamic
and other autocracies. An Islamic ruler is not above the law. He is subject to it, no less
than the humblest of his servants. If he commands something that is contrary to the law,
the duty of obedience lapses, and is replaced not by the right but by the duty of
disobedience.
Muslim spokesmen, particularly those who sought to find Islamic roots
for Western practices, made much of the Islamic principle of consultation, according to
which a ruler should not make arbitrary decisions by himself but should act only after
consulting with suitably qualified advisers. This principle rests on two somewhat
enigmatic passages in the Koran and on a number of treatises, mainly by ulama and
statesmen, urging consultation with ulama or with statesmen. This principle has never been
institutionalized, nor even formulated in the treatises of the holy law, though naturally
rulers have from time to time consulted with their senior officials, more particularly in
Ottoman times.
Of far greater importance was the acceptance of pluralism in Islamic
law and practice. Almost from the beginning the Islamic world has shown an astonishing
diversity. Extending over three continents, it embraced a wide variety of races, creeds,
and cultures, which lived side by side in reasonable if intermittent harmony. Sectarian
strife and religious persecution are not unknown in Islamic history, but they are rare and
atypical, and never reached the level of intensity of the great religious wars and
persecutions in Christendom.
Traditional Islam has no doctrine of human rights, the very notion of
which might seem an impiety. Only God has rightshuman beings have duties. But in
practice the duty owed by one human being to anothermore specifically, by a ruler to
his subjectsmay amount to what Westerners would call a right, particularly when the
discharge of this duty is a requirement of holy law.
Two Temptations
It may beand has beenargued that these legal and religious
principles have scant effect. The doctrine of elective and contractual sovereignty has
been tacitly ignored since the days of the early caliphate. The supremacy of the law has
been flouted. Tolerance of pluralism and diversity has dwindled or disappeared in an age
of heightened religious, ethnic, and social tensions. Consultation, as far as it ever
existed, is restricted to the ruler and his inner circle, while personal dignity has been
degraded by tyrants who feel that they must torture and humiliate, not just kill, their
opponents.
And yet, despite all these difficulties and obstacles, the democratic
ideal is steadily gaining force in the region, and increasing numbers of Arabs have come
to the conclusion that it is the best, perhaps the only, hope for the solution of their
economic, social, and political problems.
What can we in the democratic world do to encourage the development of
democracy in the Islamic Middle Eastand what should we do to avoid impeding or
subverting it? There are two temptations to which Western governments have all too often
succumbed, with damaging results. They might be called the temptation of the right and the
temptation of the left. The temptation of the right is to accept, and even to embrace, the
most odious of dictatorships as long as they are acquiescent in our own requirements, and
as long as their policies seem to accord with the protection of our own national
interests. The spectacle of the great democracies of the West in comfortable association
with tyrants and dictators can only discourage and demoralize the democratic opposition in
these countries.
The more insidious temptation, that of the left, is to press Muslim
regimes for concessions on human rights and related matters. Since ruthless dictatorships
are impervious to such pressures, and are indeed rarely subjected to them, the brunt of
such well-intentioned intervention falls on the more moderate autocracies, which are often
in the process of reforming themselves in a manner and at a pace determined by their own
conditions and needs. The pressure for premature democratization can fatally weaken such
regimes and lead to their overthrow, not by democratic opposition but by other forces that
then proceed to establish a more ferocious and determined dictatorship.
All in all, considering the difficulties that Middle Eastern countries
have inherited and the problems that they confront, the prospects for Middle Eastern
democracy are not good. But they are better than they have ever been before. Most of these
countries face grave economic problems. If they fail to cope with these problems, then the
existing regimes, both dictatorial and authoritarian, are likely to be overthrown and
replaced, probably by one variety or another of Islamic fundamentalists. It has been
remarked in more than one country that the fundamentalists are popular because they are
out of power and cannot be held responsible for the present troubles. If they acquired
power, and with it responsibility, they would soon lose that popularity. But this would
not matter to them, since once in power they would not need popularity to stay there, and
would continue to governsome with and some without oil revenues to mitigate the
economic consequences of their methods. In time even the fundamentalist regimes, despite
their ruthless hold on power, would be either transformed or overthrown, but by then they
would have done immense, perhaps irreversible, damage to the cause of freedom.
But their victory is by no means inevitable. There is always the
possibility that democrats may form governments, or governments learn democracy. The
increasing desire for freedom, and the better understanding of what it means, are hopeful
signs. Now that the Cold War has ended and the Middle East is no longer a battlefield for
rival power blocs, the peoples of the Middle East will have the chanceif they can
take itto make their own decisions and find their own solutions. No one else will
have the ability or even the desire to do it for them. Todayfor the first time in
centuriesthe choice is their own.