More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
HuffPost Social Reading
Parvez Ahmed

GET UPDATES FROM Parvez Ahmed
 

Religious Right and Politics -- From Iowa to Cairo

Posted: 12/16/2011 1:47 pm

Guess where in the world candidates for political office are pandering to religious conservatives, using religious imagery in political advertisement and participating in political forums in houses of worship? Where some voters are unwilling to support candidates because they do not belong to the majority faith, dismissing a candidate because they are women, and using religious purity as a litmus test for eligibility? If you said Iowa, USA you will be correct. Cairo, Egypt also qualifies as the correct answer.

The nexus between politics and religion has been on the rise globally for quite some time now. It is an irony that it is the religious right in each country that often expresses the most misgivings about the rise of the religious right in other countries. In America, Republican presidential candidates, with support from the religious right, are the most vocal in their criticism of Islamist politics. On the other hand, Islamists are quick to conflate American hegemony in their region with a war against Islam. The mutual paranoia is palpable.

Elections are underway in Egypt for a new parliament. Openly vying for seats are political parties from the puritanical Salafis, to the conservative Ikhwanis (Muslim Brotherhood) and a plethora of smaller secular groups. After the first round of voting it appears that the religious right, Salafis and the Brotherhood together, will have majority control of the parliament. Similar Islamist victories in Tunisia and Morocco portend an unmistakable trend of increased intertwining of religion and politics in the region.

A recent Pew Research Center poll showed that while a majority of Muslims prefer a significant role for Islam in their politics, substantive differences persist across regions. Majorities in Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan and Nigeria favor changing current laws to allow religiously sanctioned capital punishment for adultery, stealing and apostasy. In contrast, Muslims living under secular democracies in Turkey or Lebanon overwhelmingly reject fundamentalism and self-identify themselves as modernists, even when actively practicing their faith.

As politics face a rightward religious tug across the globe, it will be hasty to stereotype the trend. In the U.S., although the Christian right exerts an enormous influence in politics the state remains neutral towards religion, the occasional display of Christmas trees in government buildings notwithstanding. Such institutional separation between state and religion is lacking across the Middle East, most disconcertingly in Saudi Arabia and Iran. Will the wave of popular opinions that favor a greater role for Islam in politics inevitably lead to a theocratization of the nascent Middle Eastern democracies? Chances are good that the new democracies in Tunisia or Egypt are unlikely to resemble Saudi Arabia or Iran, but neither will they be Jeffersonian.

Reformist scholars of Islam have asserted that Sharia ought not to be codified as state law. The reasons are tantalizingly simple. A state is a political institution, not a religious authority. A state has to be neutral and beneficial towards all its citizens, not just those who belong to the majority. The Muslim belief in the divineness of Sharia is obviously not shared by people of other faiths. Moreover, the interpretation of Sharia is a fallible human endeavor, often leading to conflicting juristic opinions, which then leaves unanswered the question of whose Islam should the state endorse.

While public policy may reflect the values of the citizenry, it should not be promulgated in the name of any one religion. Even when religious values inform a certain policy, the primary reason for enacting public policy must be secular. A wall separating religion from statecraft is good for both religion and state. Once a state begins to enforce the laws of any religion then the coercive power of the state becomes the primary factor in the determining how religion gets practiced. The state loses credibility and faith loses spirituality. The Quran unequivocally states that there is no compulsion in matters related to religion.

Even in the rough and tumble world of Middle Eastern politics there are faint signs of hope. The Islamist leaders in Tunisia have spoken about the secular democracy of Turkey as their aspiring model. A New York Times report quoted a conservative party leader in Egypt saying, "We don't accept tyranny in the name of religion any more than we accept tyranny in the name of the military." The yearning for freedom may ultimately overcome parochial religiosity in politics. From Iowa to Cairo, the world watches with trepidation.

 
Guess where in the world candidates for political office are pandering to religious conservatives, using religious imagery in political advertisement and participating in political forums in houses of...
Guess where in the world candidates for political office are pandering to religious conservatives, using religious imagery in political advertisement and participating in political forums in houses of...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 10
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
l78lancer
Wisdom is the principal thing
09:49 PM on 12/18/2011
The title of the article as well as it's underlying premise are important. While I appreciate the information and explanation of the changes that are occurring in the middle eastern couintries, I believe that this article would have been more effective if it drew more parallels and comparisons between the developing democracies in the middle east and democracy in the US and how religion is shapping politics and policy in both parts of the world. The perception that many hold about the rightwings of the United States and of many of the countries in the Arab world is that the right has a strong desire - and intent - to push their countries further to the right towards strict theocracies. And, Christian theocracy is no less troubling than Islamic theocracy. There appear to be more similarities and differences even if the peoples and governments from the two regions don't want to acknowledge that.

I hope that there will be a follow up to this article that will go into the subject matter in much greater detail.
photo
Opposition Research
Studying the enemies of civil liberty for 20 years
01:14 PM on 12/18/2011
FTA: " It is an irony that it is the religious right in each country that often expresses the most misgivings about the rise of the religious right in other countries. In America, Republican presidential candidates, with support from the religious right, are the most vocal in their criticism of Islamist politics."

They see themselves in the mirror, dressed in the "enemy's" uniform.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eliasasm
11:54 AM on 12/18/2011
"We establish no religion in this country, we command no worship, we mandate no belief. Nor will we ever. Church and state are, and must remain, separate. All are free to believe or not believe, all are free to practice a faith or not, and those who believe are free and should be free, to speak of and act on their belief. At the same time as our constitution prohibits state religion, establishment of it protects the free exercise of all religions. And walking this fine line requires government to be strictly neutral".

Ronald Reagan
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RC Hindle
"Power isn't all that money buys"
07:05 AM on 12/18/2011
Separation of church and state. A basic principle of good government. We know it, and so does the rest of the world. Unfortunately, there are people (not just politicians) willing to use religion as a wedge to drive the populace apart, insert themselves into positions of power, and generally re-make the world into their vision of what it should be. When religious leaders insert themselves into the political arena, almost exclusively bad things happen. This is not to say that government can't learn from religion, and vice versa. Such as in the area of being compassionate toward those who are having trouble procuring basic necessities. But, religious "law" has the basic inherent fault of being administered by humans. Humans with human frailties.

Religion is religion and government is government and they should never be intertwined. Both are hurt by that.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sheldon archer
Our facebook is Yuyun Archer
07:06 PM on 12/17/2011
Wherever religions run the government, you have repression. If the Christians controlled and ran the US under their Bible, as they are wont to do, the US would be as bad as any Islamic country.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ColleenHarper
Actions always have unintended consequences
06:18 PM on 12/17/2011
"We don't accept tyranny in the name of religion any more than we accept tyranny in the name of the military."

Nor should we, the United States, accept tyranny in the name of any conservative political party, or for that matter, any liberal political party. We are a representative democracy where ideas are weighed and measured, from all sides of the political spectrum. We don't arbitrarily reject ideas simply because they were presented by the (left/right). They should be accepted or rejected based on evaluations that they do or don't work.

... Just as we can conclusively show that "trickle down" economics don't work, because they don't trickle down to benefit everyone.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
04:01 AM on 12/17/2011
Time to overthrow the US miIitary dictatorsh­­­­­­­­­­­­­­i­p of Egypt. Sadat betrayed the Egyptian peoIe. lt is weIl past time to overthrow the US supported miIitary dictatorsh­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­i­p of Egypt by the new democratic­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­a­II­­y elected ParIiament of Egypt. So caIIed "isreaI is stoIen PaIestine. JerusaIem beIongs to the PaIestinia­­­­­­­­­­­­­­n­s­. The treaty with the entity shouId be canceIed, and close the Suez canaI to the entity.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ken Roberts
Fighting for fairness
05:44 AM on 12/18/2011
Wow, still trying to understand what point you're trying to make.