About us | Advertising | Contact | Get Home Delivery | Archive
Feb 09, 2010 Homepage
News
Business
Interviews
Columnists
Op-Ed
Arts & Culture
Expat Zone
Features
Travel
Leisure
Life
Cartoons
Women
Health Briefs
Weird But True
Sports
Turkish Press Review
Today's think tanks

Turkey in Foreign Press



istanbul hotels

Columnists
İBRAHİM KALIN i.kalin@todayszaman.com Columnists

Political Islam and Muslim hip hop


There is much talk about political Islam and its future these days. The ascendancy of political movements with clear Islamic agendas is being watched closely from Egypt and Lebanon to North Africa.

Today's interactive toolbox
Bookmark and Share
Video Photo Audio
Send to print Send to my friend
Post your comments
Read comments
While many see Islamic political parties as a threat to democracy and human rights, some are saying it's time to talk to them. What is the point in political dialogue and engagement if we are willing to talk only to those we consider to be the good guys?

This is a point of contention in all dialogue initiatives. Islamic political movements are seen with suspicion because their charts, agendas and political statements reinforce the perception that once they come to power, they will change the system and turn it into an oppressive and authoritarian regime. Do the Islamists provide convincing arguments to the contrary? This is a question they have to answer.

The problem is that many analysts, including the Islamists themselves, miss the fact that Islamic political parties, just like other political movements, will be tested more on grounds of issues and services than on ideology. Yes, identity politics plays a role. A new political imagination is key for social mobilization. Political activism thrives on responsible policies. But none of these by itself is sufficient or has much meaning. When it comes to the ballot box, where the will of the people shows up, it is services, good governance, economy, health, education, infrastructure, development, rule of law and transparency that matter.

The failure of authoritarian Arab regimes, supported by Western powers, is as much a failure of political ideology as it is a failure of good governance and services. Ordinary people are not in the game of world visions, global systems, international orders or power balances. They go by the practical wisdom of life, and much of it is grounded in meeting simple needs in simple ways. In other words, the debate about political Islam cannot just be about what a particular Islamist group says or does concerning grand political and ideological issues.

I witnessed a good example of this at a major social event in London this week. The event, called Islam Expo, was organized by British Muslims in cooperation with a number of other British institutions. While we were discussing the future of political Islam on the sidelines, thousands of Muslims of various ethnic and cultural backgrounds were flocking to the event itself. Of course, they were not coming to listen to what the "experts" had to say about this party or that country or issue. They were coming to treat themselves and their families to all sorts of "worldly" things, including cooking contests, art exhibitions, graffiti lessons, face painting, sports events, concerts, theaters, poetry recitations, bank loans, real estate  presentations and numerous other things.

They were "political" to the extent to which any of these things was political. They were the real events of the day, not the expert talks. This is an example from a European capital. Are things any different in Muslim capitals? How about the countryside? The desert? The high-tech cities of the Gulf?

Political Islam was a reaction to the aggressive expansionism of modernity and the rapid decline of political power in Muslim lands. Its ideological mindset was shaped by a desire to seek and gain political power. Its main target was to take over the state. But the nation-state turned out to be the curse of all political parties in the 20th century. Leftist, nationalist, liberal or Islamist, all political movements had to deal with the problem of the nation-state, what kind of a narrow social imagery it presented and how it attempted to obfuscate and kill the creative energy of the individual and the community in the name of protecting the state. Those who sought to take over the nation-state and sit on it failed miserably in terms of both political vision and good services. The modern nation-state remains the central problem of all political movements and social activism in the Muslim world and elsewhere.

What about Muslim hip hop? Well, in the same venue where real people carried on with their real lives, there was a concert of the famous Muslim hip hop group Outlandish. The concert was attended by several thousand people in the middle of London. All theories of global world order, power struggle, etc., faded into sound bites and lyrics with hundreds of listeners singing and joining the hip hop frenzy.

And I was left wondering who had really captured their imagination.

17 July 2008, Thursday
İBRAHİM KALIN
   
Articles of Today
The reason for disgrace
EKREM DUMANLI
Political means versus military measures
LALE KEMAL
Medine was running with boys
NICOLE POPE
The islands of stability
ANDREW FINKEL
Modernity’s instruments
ALİ BULAÇ
Turkish decision-makers’ perceptions about think tanks
HASAN KANBOLAT
The root causes of Turkey’s Kurdish challenge
ÖMER TAŞPINAR
Herding cats
PAT YALE
Reasons of AK Party-MHP row
FATMA DİŞLİ ZIBAK

Other Articles of the Columnist

  Political Islam and Muslim hip hop
  Turkey and the Middle East: What is so exciting?
  Habermas, post-secular society and Turkish secularism
  Turks are back with a little scar
  Target Iran!
  The end of the reform era in Turkey?
  AK Party and the Kurdish issue: a new beginning?
  A new global power structure rising?
  A bleak picture of Turkish youth
  Turkey’s smart power (II)
  Turkey’s smart power
  Whatever happened to left of center?
  CHP congress and Turkey’s secular conservatism
  Ready to share power?
  Turbulent times ahead
  Turkey needs democratic resolve now
  ‘Who speaks for Islam?’
  Goal of judicial coup PM Erdoğan, not AK Party
  Getting closer to a solution
  Iraq, violence and the triumph of modernity
Columnists
ABDULHAMİT BİLİCİ
ABDULLAH BOZKURT
ALİ BULAÇ
ALİ H. ASLAN
AMANDA PAUL
ANDREW FINKEL
ASIM ERDİLEK
AYŞE KARABAT
BEJAN MATUR
BERİL DEDEOĞLU
BERK ÇEKTİR
BÜLENT KENEŞ
BÜLENT KORUCU
CHARLOTTE MCPHERSON
DOĞU ERGİL
EKREM DUMANLI
EMRE USLU
ETYEN MAHÇUPYAN
FATMA DİŞLİ ZIBAK
FİKRET ERTAN
GÜRKAN ZENGİN
HASAN KANBOLAT
HÜSEYİN GÜLERCE
İBRAHİM KALIN
İBRAHİM ÖZTÜRK
İHSAN DAĞI
İHSAN YILMAZ
KATHY HAMILTON
KERİM BALCI
KLAUS JURGENS
LALE KEMAL
MEHMET KAMIŞ
MICHAEL KUSER
MUHAMMED ÇETİN
MÜMTAZER TÜRKÖNE
NICOLE POPE
ÖMER TAŞPINAR
ORHAN KEMAL CENGİZ
PAT YALE
ŞAHİN ALPAY
SELÇUK GÜLTAŞLI
SUAT KINIKLIOĞLU
YAVUZ BAYDAR