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Does Affluence Cause Jihad? by Zachary Constantino FrontPage Magazine August 5, 2004 http://frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=14503 Militant Islam is an ideology embraced by political and economic elites, including those who hold American passports. Unfortunately, much of the academy refuses to acknowledge this fact, championing instead "hopeless poverty" and "economic deprivation" as "root causes" of violence committed by Islamist terrorists. Some examples: · Karen Armstrong, a faculty member at London's Leo Baeck College Center for Jewish Education, writes, "fundamentalist extremism has risen in nearly every cultural tradition where there are pronounced inequalities of wealth, power, and status."[i] · John Voll, Georgetown University Professor of Islamic History, argues, "Part of the appeal of bin Laden is that he can look people in the eye and say: "I know you live in a police state, I know you're living in poverty so come join my holy war"."[ii] · Frances Stewart, Oxford University Professor of Development Economics, maintains, "It is a question not only of horizontal inequality but also of poverty and, particularly, unemployment, which provide a fertile ground for al-Qaeda's mobilizing support."[iii] But the evidence reveals that the relationship between poverty and religiously motivated violence is weak. Radicals and revolutionaries historically have emerged from the middle to upper classes of society. After a critical examination of the supposed connection between poverty and terrorism, Princeton University econmics professor Alan B. Krueger and Middle East specialist Jitka Maleckova concluded, terrorism is less like property crime and more like a violent form of political engagement. More-educated people from privileged backgrounds are more likely to participate in politics, probably in part because political involvement requires some minimum level of interest, expertise all of which are more likely if people are educated enough and prosperous enough to concern themselves with more than economic subsistence.[iv] The spread of Islamist radicalism in the United States, where demographic surveys indicate that 66% of American Muslims earn over $50,000 per year, confirms this thesis.[v] Moreover, the top ten Muslim occupations in America include engineering, medicine, and corporate management.[vi] Daniel Pipes, a scholar of Islam, notes, "In socioeconomic terms, certainly, Muslims can find little fault with America. They boast among the highest rates of education of any group in the countrya whopping 52 percent appear to hold graduate degreesand this translates into a pattern of prestigious and remunerative employment."[vii] However, in keeping with Krueger and Maleckova, this progress has hardly insulated America's Muslim community from extremism. In 1999, at a forum sponsored by the State Department, Sheikh Mohammed Hisham Kabbani, a courageous Sufi cleric and opponent of Wahhabi Islam, argued that 80 percent of all mosques and Muslim charities in the United States had come under the influence of radical Islamic agents. For this statement, Sheikh Kabbani endured severe criticism and even a death threat.[viii] Other Muslim scholars, like Khalid Duran and Tashbih Sayyed have also received death threats for their criticisms of Islamist radicalism. Sayyed warns, "Militant Islamist organizations in the US have created the perception that they are the sole voices of Muslims in the US, making their opposition [to] US efforts to eradicate fascist and totalitarian Islamist regimes a popular Muslim trait."[ix] Other troubling examples of the affluence of American-based Islamic militancy: Socially advantaged Americans join the jihadist ranks.
Consider the case of former Taliban fighter John Walker Lindh. According
to The New York Times, Lindh grew up in an "old, moneyed Marin
County suburb" and his father is a "corporate-lawyer."[x]
The Boston Globe described the place of Lindh's upbringing as a "comfortable
home" located in a county prominent as "an address for millionaires."[xi]
Like Lindh, Mike Hawash, recently sentenced to seven years in prison
on "charges of conspiring to wage war against the United States"[xii]
enjoyed affluence as a software engineer for Intel.[xiii] Zachary Constantino is a student research associate with Campus Watch. He is presently pursuing a B.A. in political science with a minor in international politics at American University in Washington, DC. Notes: [i] Karen Armstrong, "Our role in the terror: The
west must accept its share of the blame for the growth of fundamentalist
violence," The Guardian, September 18, 2003. |
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