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MUSTAFA AKYOL > Mali: Totalitarian vs. liberal Islamists

I’ll be honest, I am certainly not an expert on African politics. When it comes to Mali, I would even plead total ignorance, because, until a few weeks ago, I would probably have had a hard time even finding this West African nation on a map. Yet still, since the beginning of the French military operation earlier this month, I have become a curious Mali observer.

It is not that easy, though, to understand what is really happening in this poor and landlocked African country. In the Turkish press, most commentators readily speak of a “neo-colonial” plot by France, aiming at nothing but more plundering the natural resources of the continent. In the Western media, on the other hand, most narratives rather focus on the threat coming from the “Islamists” of Mali, who have dominated northern part of the country and established oppressive rule. The Islamist group called Ansar Dine (“Helpers of Religion”), for example, reportedly banned Malian and Western music, bars, video games and even football. This Taliban-like tyranny, in other words, seems to be the only thing people have in mind when they speak of “the Islamists of Mali.”

However, a recent piece in the New York Times by Hannah Armstrong, an Africa-based fellow of the Institute of Current World Affairs, shows that facts are more nuanced. Titled, “A Tale of Two Islamisms,” Armstrong explains that the Taliban-like totalitarianism of Ansar Dine and its ilk is only one face of Islam in Mali. The other one, which is no less pious, is led by the High Council of Islam (HCI), which, in the words of Armstrong, is an “Islamist civil society organization, which provides social services and education through a network of 165 NGOs.”

This HCI, Armstrong also notes, represents “a republican form of Islamism [that] is peacefully conquering the south of Mali.” It trains imams and promotes religious values. But it rejects both the violent tactics and the oppressive measures of the Islamists in the north. “I am a moderate Islamist and a republican,” Moussa Boubacar Bah, a Sufi jurist and one of the leaders of the HCI, tells Armstrong. “I will not destroy a bar,” he explains. “I will convince the people not to drink.”

Given that people have the right to remain unconvinced, this would be a sort of Islamism that I would call “liberal” – liberal in the sense that it respects people’s liberty to choose between Islam and non-Islam, between piety and vice. (It is no accident that the Sufis of HCI are inclined to think this way, for Sufis are interested mainly in individual piety, and thus often realize that it can only be based on free choice, whereas oppression leads only to hypocrisy.)

This division among the Islamists of Mali – totalitarian versus liberal – seems to be a serious one with important political consequences. Armstrong notes that while the HCI tries to be an “interlocutor with the extremists in the north,” it also supports the French intervention in the country “to stop a fresh offensive from the north.” The liberals’ attitude toward the West, in other words, is not black and white.

Moreover, the same division between the two forms of Islamism exists not only in Mali, but in fact the whole Muslim world. It would be only naïve to consider them as a single force, as some Westerners and Muslim secularists crudely do. It would rather be wise to help the liberals win over the totalitarians.

January/30/2013

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Blue Dotterel

2/1/2013 9:07:11 AM

Agnes, Genital mutilation is not from Islam, it is a part of African culture (mostly north and east African). Even Africans converted to Christianity have practiced it. True, Islam within these cultures has been influenced by it, but it is not widespread in the Muslim world outside Africa. Genital mutilation in these areas is pre-Islamic.

mara mcglothin

2/1/2013 1:22:53 AM

SNPAGE There are many degrees of the followers of Islam. On this very site we have heard Muslims debate the wearing of the headscarf, hijab and other issues. The difference to me between an "Islamist" and a "Muslim" is their thirst to spill the blood of others in the name of their religious beliefs, and sometimes that blood is that of other Muslims. Surely you must see the difference in the majority of Muslims in Turkey and the Taliban? or do you?

Agnes Smith

1/31/2013 7:20:44 PM

Try the thought - 'I’ll be honest, I am certainly not an expert on African politics.'And it seems not their faith either. Read 'The Touareg' by Cengiz Aktar for some background knowledge.Other than that female genital mutilation may be a subject for your next article. My god - the Christians are guillty of horrific things - but put bring Islam to Africa and they cut - How do you sort that one?

Blue Dotterel

1/31/2013 11:00:49 AM

Johanna, of Mali, France and Mali's uranium reserves: "Is the French Invasion of Mali tied to a Colonial War for Uranium?" by Saeed Shabazz at Global Research. Just so that you can be informed of reality.

Hasan Kutlay

1/31/2013 5:40:58 AM

Regular islamists pursue the islamization of a country, with the discourse and belief: 'the more islam, the better for society'. But by this they unconsciously fuel fanaticism (becoz the discourse is 'the more islam, the better'), and afterwards they have difficulty handling the fanatics among themselves who give islam a bad image. That's the paradox of islamization.

Safiyah Noor Page

1/30/2013 6:51:00 PM

There is no such thing as totalitarian Islam or liberal Islam. There is just Islam which is both easy while at the same time being as complex as a person can handle. A false dichotomy where the Muslims' right of self determination and self protection is negated and delegitimized( referred to as totalitarianism) while a fringe view of Islam-Sufism-(liberalism) is presented as the true Islam can't be serving any purpose but the destruction of Islam itself. The majority of the Ulema reject this.

Aslam Benli

1/30/2013 6:17:46 PM

MUSTAFA AKYOL does not know much about Mali, neither he does about Turkey. Sultan Erdogan is taking piece by piece our secular Turkiye and replacing it with a non-secular one. Our Sultan will close the bars. He already put religion courses in our schools and is removing the science-related ones. Wait for the new constitution to come out. That's why I left my country. I want to be able to pray, and drink when I please, not in a Sharia-like country where even what you read or say might be a crime.

Blue Dotterel

1/30/2013 5:28:47 PM

Johanna, the topic of MA article is Mali and the fanatical ("totalitarian") Islamists helping to terrorize it. The Malian military is accused of even worse atrocities, so much so that the Tuareg will not let it into areas they have retaken from the Islamists. It is a fact that the Islamists in Mali receive financial support from US allies, just as LIFG does in Libya, and Al Nusra does in Syria. All of this is coincidence to you Iran is developing nuclear weapons conspiracy theorists.

Blue Dotterel

1/30/2013 5:22:13 PM

Johanna, controlling resources does not necessarily mean that you have to use them. It means you can restrict their use by others, for example, China. Why would you not think that Western corporate gold mining operations would not want to tap the third largest reserves in Africa. Most of the resources I cited are unexploited, and the US would like to keep China from doing so. So you do not think France (or the US) would not be interested in Mali's uranium? Interesting.

Jon Goodfellow

1/30/2013 4:40:43 PM

Did not know about HCI Sufis. Thanks to Mr. Akyol for giving a more nuanced picture of Mali than Press does. Unlike some here, I am not offended by the social and spiritual reform initiative they take. Wish they could send a few to my US and Canada homeland to combat growing degeneracy here. God knows our Christian Taliban is ineffectual for same reasons as Islamic version. Liberal vs. Illiberal Islam isn't in precepts, but how you live it and convince others.
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