All posts by MPF

Revisiting Highway 61

Revisiting Highway 61
by Dr. Mazeni Alwi

The Hajj season came and went. In today’s fast-paced life with its glittering infotainment and distractions, it passed with the slightest of notice for many. In an age where organized religion has to constantly adapt and make concessions to modernity, some secular observers may find it is a fascinating spectacle, that such a religious rite has managed to survive the uniformizing banality of consumerist materialism. To others, it is simply the most visible anachronism of the modern age – God commanded his prophet to sacrifice his son, what could be more absurd than that? At this time of the year, newspapers and television seldom fail to show pictures of muslims slaughtering sacrificial animals and working away at their carcasses in commemoration of that sacrifice, too bloody and uncivilized for our sanitized view of things that animal lovers like Brigitte Bardot could hardly conceal their disgust.

This year, Hajj, the other “Hari Raya” that is finding itself increasingly relegated to insignificance came not long after a natural disaster that have left many shocked by the scale of its death and destruction as much as by its unexpectedness, and on top of that, the extraordinarily wide extent of its geographical impact. It also happened that the vast majority of those who perished were muslims. We have of course heard of the various positions held – a purely geological phenomenon that has nothing to do with God whatever one’s idea of Him might be, whereas at the other end of the argument, it is explained purely as divine retribution on a wayward humanity to beat us back into a life of virtuous religiousity. But whatever position one takes, of all the major tragedies, either natural disasters or those that result from human folly, we have never seen such a universal outpouring of concern and generosity for those who have suffered and lost.

For the first time perhaps, amid the distractions and a secure sense of hubris we accept that life is indeed fragile – almost in a flash, vast widespread destruction can be wreaked by something which is very much part of our environment, a source of livelihood and a place of leisure that has suddenly turned into awesome walls of crashing waters, destroying everything in its path. Was it is just a freak accident of nature or was it a foretaste of the infinite power of God, or wether that has altered our world-view at all, it must have been in the thought of many in our quieter, private moments.

In this secular age where organized religion, at least its ritualistic forms, is merely a cultural heritage and an identity thing that one readily jettisons as something nonsensical as one becomes a thinking mature person, the sense of life’s fragility may have jolted some of us back into accepting God into our consciousness and world view.

For the muslim believer Hajj does evoke that similar sense of human fragility and smallness in the face of God’s awesome presence – in the way that one feels vulnerable, dependent, and utterly alone when in actual fact one is among a sea of people all dressed in white on the plains of Arafat.

The central theme of Hajj is the commemoration of the drama in the encounter between man and God, as muslim pilgrims retrace the steps and re-live the saga of prophet Abraham and his family. The objective of reliving the drama is to re-affirm Abraham’s message of uncompromising monotheism (tauhid) and wholehearted submission to the one God (needless to say the muslims’ belief in this drama is purely rooted in faith in the scripture and prophetic tradition as this was all before recorded history).

In this post modern age whose temper is one of skepticism and cynicism towards sacred traditions, re-inforced by a sensibility that has seen too much images of death and violence, and in an age where we consume filet mignon and foie gras without having to make the connection with the slaughter of animals, the drama that Hajj re-lives each year may seem absurd- that God could have commanded his prophet to sacrifice a beloved son.

Today, with the hold of religion in the west is greatly weakened and the rest of the world rapidly secularizing, such anachronism may be peculiar to muslims. But generations ago, when the presence of God still loomed large in man’s consciousness, such notions of sacrifice was also current in the Christian world although the details may differ. Rembrandt immortalized the drama in his 1636 painting “Abraham’s Sacrifice” based on the story as narrated in the Book of Genesis. At the most crucial moment, as the son’s lithe youthful body lay stretched on the alter and his head covered in cloth, an angel pins Abraham’s arm, and the knife drops from his hand. In the Christian narrative, the son that God had commanded to be sacrificed was Isaac, “Then they came to the place of which God had told him. And Abraham built an alter there and placed the wood in order, and he bound Isaac his son and laid him on the alter, upon the wood. And Abraham stretched out his hand and took the knife to slay his son. But the Angel of the Lord called to him from heaven and said “Abraham, Abraham!” And he said, “Here I am”. And He said “Do not lay your hand on the lad, or do anything to him, for now I know that you fear God, since you have not withheld your son, your only son, from Me”. Then Abraham lifted his eyes and looked, and there behind him was a ram caught in a thicket by its horn. So Abraham went and took the ram, and offered it up for a burnt offering instead of his son. In the muslim tradition, the son in question was not Isaac but Ishmael, the son of his younger wife, Hagar. In the Quranic narrative the anguished and agonizing Abraham disclosed his predicament to his son, whom, to his surprise, readily submitted, “My son, I see in a dream that I shall sacrifice thee”. “My father, dost as thou art bidden, thou shalt find me among the steadfast”. As in other narrations of earlier prophets, the muslim scripture and tradition is silent on the details, but it parallels the Christian version in that Ishmael was saved by Abraham’s sincere devotion and obedience to God. In the end it was a sheep that was sacrificed and Ishmael went on to become a great prophet like his father. That was the basis for the sacrifice of animals during Eidul Adha.

In both the muslim and christian narratives, the moral of Abraham’s sacrifice is really about testing the limits faith and submission to God, for, it would be unthinkable that God would ask for a human sacrifice from his loyal servant. But still, such a notion must be profoundly unsettling if not illogical to the cultivated cynicism of the modern age such that it is fair game for someone like Dylan to write in his 1965 song, “Highway 61 revisited”, “God said to Abraham, “Kill me a son”, Abe said, “Man, you must be puttin’ me on” …. “well, where do you want this killin’ done?” “Out on highway 61”.

Even if Dylan later in his life were to embrace Catholicism and then convert to Judaism, the irreverent lines from the song pretty much sums up post-modernism’s posture towards the sacred. For Christianity, the lesson from Abraham’s sacrifice perhaps does not occupy a central place in its theology, hence it is spared much questioning, Dylan’s song not withstanding. But for Islam, the story of Abraham has become its principal message, the uncompromising belief and submission to one God (tauhid), such that it Islamized the rites of Hajj from pre-Islamic Arabia, incorporates it into one of the five pillars of Islamic worship, and it is celebrated as a major festival by muslims the world over. Everyday, muslims pay salutations to Abraham, the father of monotheism in their five daily prayers.

In today’s information age, Hajj is perhaps the most visible of Islam’s ritualistic devotions. The swirling sea of men and women clad in white around the Kaaba, the gathering on Arafat, etc may fascinate some observers. But I guess to many others, it is probably seen more in a negative light. We have long become familiar with criticisms from animal lovers like Ms Bardot, but it is the recurring tragedy like the scores of pilgrims crushed to death every now and then in stampedes while performing these rites that are most unsettling, and one may be forgiven for making the connection with the notion of Abraham’s sacrifice. Is the use of human sacrifice on September 11 in New York and subsequent terror acts in other parts of the world also part this notion?

Given that the muslim world is a world of poverty, disease, corruption, lack of civilized norms and behaviour, violence and bloodshed, dysfunctional societies and institutions – is Hajj the ultimate proof that violence and irrationality are in Islam’s DNA? May be it is time for some very serious introspection – has the edifying lessons of Hajj been lost on us because we are unable to penetrate into the heart of its symbolic rites?

The recent tragedy from the Tsunami disaster has thrown up some unpleasant things, apart from the enormous death toll. The most embarrassing for us was to learn that the oil-rich muslim states were the most miserly in terms of extending financial aid to the victims of the tragedy. This may not accurately represent the muslim character as individuals but the fact that it is widely reported in the international media leaves us something to chew on.

Hajj is really about the individual and one of the lessons from Abraham’s sacrifice is the taming of our ego, our pretentiousness and unbridled ambitions, our unchecked desires for wealth and power. These are our “Ishmaels”, those things we hold dear that we have to learn to “sacrifice” or purity. While Islam does not advocate excessive ascetism and the negation of the material world, one nevertheless should not be a slave to wealth and power. The pursuit of our ambitions and wealth must be within the parameters of ethics and not trample on the rights of others. With modern air travel and growing prosperity among some of us, might we risk turning Hajj or Umra (minor pilgrimage) into the most ironical symbol of conspicuous consumption when it is meant to be a once in a life time obligation? To cater for the demands of the well-heeled among us who bring along our appetites for KFC and Burger King to the Holy Land, already luxury, hotels and shopping malls are mushrooming around the Masjidil Haram, displacing convenient lodgings for the poorer pilgrims and what used to be waqf accommodations for students from around the world who came to study at the Grand Mosque.

If Hajj is about reaffirming the Oneness of God (tauhid) and mortal man’s relation to his Creator, its parallel message is how man should relate to his fellow beings, of treating others with respect and dignity. This message is imparted in the way all distinctions of race, skin colour and social class are abolished as the pilgrims gather at Arafat (wukuf) and circumambulate the Kaaba (tawaf). That great lesson of Hajj had a profound and transforming effect on the charismatic Black Muslim, Malcolm X. During his pilgrimage, he saw the true brotherhood of Islam and repudiated the reverse-racism of the Nation of Islam of America’s black muslims. The great humbling experience of Hajj is laying everything bare except for the 2 pieces of unsewn cloth, and being dissolved in a sea of people of all nationalities, and of seeing poor pilgrims from Africa or the subcontinent absorbed in their devotion despite their bare financial means and spartan existence.

Another of Rembrandt’s work from the same period that was inspired by the biblical narrative was “Abraham casting out Hagar and Ishmael”, showing Hajar being sent forth into the wilderness at the behest of Sarah, Abraham’s older and infertile wife. Ishmael was the little boy at her side, while Sarah was observing their departure from her window.

In the muslim traditions, Abraham was commanded by God to take Hagar to go and settle in the barren and uninhabited valley of Bakka (Makkah). This was the beginning of a series of what may seem as illogical commandments that culminated in the “sacrifice” of Ishmael. After Ishmael was born, Abraham was commanded to leave the mother and infant in that barren valley. With Ishmael crying of thirst, Hagar ran back and forth between the hillocks of Safa and Marwa in search of water. When she returned despairingly to her infant, she found gushing water in the sand where Ishmael had dug his heels as he was crying- this became the well of Zam-zam, the eternal spring that drew traders and settlers to the valley of Bakka, to worship at the house of God that Abraham and Ishmael later constructed. One of the obligatory rites of Hajj is Sa’ie, briskly walking between Safa and Marwa, the re-enactment of Hagar’s search for water for her thirsty infant. An insightful explanation as to its significance was given by the Iranian scholar Ali Shariati, all the more relevant given the stagnation and decay of the muslim world today. To him it symbolizes the need for man to utilize his intellectual faculty and physical ability, to strive to the utmost in meeting the demands of the worldly existence, while one’s faith in God is a source of hope and strength, as opposed to a fatalism that later crept into muslim culture.

These are the important lessons of Hajj that perhaps in our earnestness in fulfilling the physical rites, we may have overlooked the spiritual message behind its symbolism. Some introspection is perhaps in order. That muslim society today is characterized by poverty and decay, corruption, oppression of our own people, being dependent on others for knowledge and progress cannot be wholly blamed on history. It is as much a reflection of our failure to internalize the central message of Islam, of which Hajj has a lot to teach, especially on the relation between man and his Creator, on how we should behave among fellow man, and the dignified place of human effort alongside faith in God.

A Weekend Seminar with Dr. Azzam Tamimi: Islamic Political Theory

A WEEKEND SEMINAR
WITH
DR. AZZAM TAMIMI


THEME : ISLAMIC POLITICAL THEORY

DATE : 2 – 3 April 2005 ( Sat & Sun )

TIME : 9AM – 6PM

VENUE :
MNI Twin Towers, Kuala Lumpur
(Opposite Mandarin Oriental Hotel )

CO-ORGANISERS :
Muslim Professionals Forum (MPF)
Jamaah Islah Malaysia (JIM)
Malaysia National Insurance (MNI)

RSVP :
Azra Banu 019 282 4500
Asnah Ahmad 012 210 0577
Ustaz Maszlee 012 236 0189
Mimi Musa 012 372 3135

Dr. Azzam Tamimi Islamic Political Theory brochure

MPF Lecture Series: Modern Science Finds God

MPF Lecture Series

‘MODERN SCIENCE FINDS GOD’

by

Dr. Muhammad Al Mahdi

Date : Saturday, 5th February, 2005

Time : 3.00 p.m. to 5.00 p.m.

Place : MNI Twin Towers, Jalan Pinang,
Kuala Lumpur (opposite Mandarin Oriental Hotel)

Booking :

Mimi Musa 012 372 3135
Asnah Ahmad 012 210 0577
Dr Mazeni Alwi 019 357 5192
Dr. Joe Bux 019 334 8325
by 3rd February, 2005

Entry : Minimum contribution of RM 10.00

Free Admission for students with valid student ID

The MPF lecture series
The lecture series is intended to be one of MPF’s major regular activities, in line with our objectives of knowledge dissemination, intellectual engagement and dialogue on issues related Islam and Muslims in the context of Malaysia’s plural society and an increasing interdependent world. Islam as a universal faith that is embraced by diverse peoples of the world has made significant, lasting contributions to human civilization, and continues to influence world events and political trends today. This lecture series intends to bring scholars and experts to enlighten the Malaysian public at an introductory level on the various aspects of Islam and the Muslim world- politics and philosophy, art and architecture, history and culture, economics, science and technology, knowledge and spirituality and etc. It is hoped that this will further stimulate in depth reading and study on these subjects in those who have more than a passing interest in Islam. The speakers largely consist of Malaysia based experts and scholars. The lectures are held bimonthly.

About Dr. Al Mahdi
I spent over half my life as one of the most committed atheists you could ever imagine. I was totally convinced of the rightness of secular philosophies and materialist science. I spent over thirteen years as a full time university student. These long years of study included three Ph.D. programs. My early studies were in theoretical physics and my later studies were in child and clinical psychology.

I had never expected in my wildest imaginings that I would ever be a believer in God, and even more unexpected, that I would become a Muslim. About 30 years ago I decided that if I wanted to be honest as a scientist I would have to accept that the findings of modern science, particularly theoretical physics and cosmology, led undeniably to the conclusion that God did indeed exist.

I have now been a Muslim for about 25 years and have studied Islam with the same objective scrutiny I applied to any other subject. These years of study have only served to further establish the deep truth and rightness of the glorious religion given to us by Allah as our way of life. The theology and metaphysics of Islamic revelation and the enlightened interpretation of the early great Muslim scholars is now almost daily being further confirmed by the findings of modern empirical science and logic.

Dr. Muhammad is the founder of Khalifah Institute. He now spends his full time promoting The Khalifah Method toward the ultimate goal of achieving a fully and truly Islamic world.

Forthcoming lectures
26th, March, 2005 – Human Cloning and Stem Cell Research….. An International Impasse by Dr. Musa Nordin
21st May, 2005 – Human Rights – Mismatch of Ideals and Realities (speaker to be confirmed)

A Pawn In The Game

A Pawn In The Game
by Dr. Mazeni Alwi

“No!” Naphta continued. “The mystery and precept of the age is not liberation and the development of the ego. What our age needs, what it demands, and what it will create for itself, is – terror”.

(from “the Magic Mountain” by Thomas Mann, 1924)

The first time I met Tourson, a muslim from Xinjiang, I had no inkling of the terrible fate that he had just escaped from. He sat patiently outside my clinic as he waited for me to finish seeing those with regular appointments. He was a gentle, relatively big man who easily broke into a smile, I guess partly to make up for his inadequate English at that time. He was still a little weak and drained from a major operation soon after his arrival in Kuala Lumpur. He had been recommended to me by an old friend who had been instrumental in providing his passage to Malaysia. The circumstances of his situation and his long term plan were not disclosed to me. Tourson had come to ask a favour from me, something so small that I had thought nothing of it. I have written many such letters before – asking for children with heart disease to be exempted from sports, recommending their families walk-up flats on the first floor or explaining why their parents should not be transferred to a place where medical access is difficult. I only became aware how much it meant to him when his family was about to leave Malaysia for Canada some months ago for a final resettlement as “political” refugees.

On that first visit, Tourson showed me a medical report of his little boy named Maimate (he told me this is how “Muhammad” is pronounced and spelled in China) who was still in Urumqi with his wife and 2 older children. The report was mainly in Mandarin but it has enough information in english to give me an idea of his medical condition. At his request, I duly wrote a simple letter stating that his son’s medical condition, a form of a hole in the heart, can be treated at our institution in Kuala Lumpur. He told me that the letter, simple as it may sound, was needed for the authorities in Urumqi to allow his family to leave and join him in Malaysia. I did not know at that time that he could practically never return to Xinjiang. More than 6 months later Tourson came back to my clinic, this time with his family in tow, profusely grateful, his english and bahasa much improved. He seemed to me a keen learner of languages from the progress that he had made, using his time well and taking the opportunity that his new environment provided. What evaded me at that time was the sense of relief from the terrible anguish over the possibility that he might never see his wife and children again. Tourson, with his sparse goatee beard, has more Chinese features, but his wife, with her skin complexion and facial features typical of Central Asian of women of Turkic stock, looked distinctively non Chinese, especially with her muslim dress and head scarf. As for Maimate, the subject of my professional concern, his hole in the heart was fortunately not big, obviating any need for urgent treatment.

I followed them up for nearly 2 years or so after that first visit, making sure that the hole in the heart was not interfering with his growth and physical activities. As his real reason for coming to Malaysia in the first place never crossed my mind, I did not probe too much into his personal background, trying to keep my relationship with him strictly professional. Still, we talked quite a bit about Xinjiang, Urumqi and Islam in China. Having watched a BBC series many years ago made by travel writer Colin Thubron about travels in exotic, remote parts of the world which included his homeland, I have some knowledge of it and harbour a faint wish of visiting. One episode in the series was about the famed Silk Road whose towns and cities owed their existence and importance to that ancient trade route, notably Kashgar, Turfan and Urumqi, which today remain culturally distinct even as westward, forced migration of the Chinese during the cultural revolution has diluted its muslim, central asian character. What I did not know was that despite Tourson’s pride in his city, his people and their Islamic heritage, he could no longer remain there and will not likely see it again. In the climate of post September 11, the “war on terror” has given despots and authoritarian governments a more stretchable excuse to persecute their muslim citizens without having to look over their shoulder. It could even earn them brownie points from the warriors of the war on terror. The peace and security of the world is hardly the objective, much less “the liberation and development of the ego”. To be simply a devout muslim in these times in these places can be a dangerous thing. Getting caught in this very fine net cast by the “war on terror by terror” (coined by Fred Halliday, opendemocracy contributor and professor of international relations at the London School of Economics) sums up Tourson’s sudden change of fortune and exile from his beloved homeland, at least as I had understood it. One reads of stories on human right abuses, unlawful detentions, of families being separated, of wives rendered widows and children orphans, simply because they are muslims who take their faith a bit more seriously, making them a fair game in the war on terror, but seeing them in front of me as they try to piece together their broken lives again is very sad and unsettling.

The realization that Tourson was one such pawn in the game came to me when he requested another letter, this time for the Canadian Embassy. Until that point I did not know that he was a “political” exile, and that Malaysia was only a temporary place of refuge. I duly wrote the letter, stating that Maimate’s heart condition will not be a huge burden to the canadian tax payers. That concern on the part of the Canadian government is quite understandable as some children with complex cardiac problems require multiple, major operations.

In Urumqi, Tourson taught Islamic studies at the university. Coming from a religious family, the love of his faith and his desire to see the young people remain faithful to their religion and cultural traditions beyond the scope of his tightly restricted professional duties unfortunately drew the attention of the authorities in these security – sensitive times. For his religious activism beyond what is officially sanctioned by the state, he was imprisoned, part of which in solitary confinement, and was subjected to physical torture. I was told that the abdominal surgery that he underwent upon arriving in Malaysia was a consequence of this. Xinjiang is one of those restive regions where the Chinese authorities has been trying to quel ethnic separatist tendencies, at times using heavy handed and violent means. It might have been true that some of the more extreme groups may have been emboldened and inspired by the Al Qaeda ideology but the blank cheque for the use of coercive means is perhaps less aimed at these tiny extremist bands but more for those people like Tourson who wish to practice their faith more fully than what is officially sanctioned, thus becoming irritants to a state power with deep distrust for religions of whatever persuasion.

When approval was finally given by the Canadian authorities, he invited my family and our mutual friend for dinner at his humble dwelling. He was living in a low cost flat located off the busy Jalan Gombak. Typical of such dwellings, the flat was small, poorly ventilated and constructed from poor quality materials, and the block having the overall look of being poorly maintained. To top all that, it is in an area where a malay kampung has been reluctantly dragged into the 21st century – haphazard planning, uncollected rubbish and the incessant din of traffic squeezing thru roads under perpetual state of being repaired. He must be quite glad to escape all this. In Malaysia, he was barely making ends meet, teaching mandarin at private Islamic schools among other things. I imagine that he is very anxious to get his eldest boy into the educational mainstream, having been out of it for nearly 2 years. He has turned into a handsome and tall teenager, drawing the mischievous attention of the girls in the block who slipped their phone numbers and messages through the window panes even while we were having dinner. I imagine Tourson must be quite desperate to settle down somewhere, anywhere for the sake of his children. At the same time, he must have been heavy-hearted to leave for a place where the lure of its youth culture and erosion of his children’s Islamic identity and cultural pride will be very difficult to resist, if what he has seen among Kuala Lumpur’s youth is but a prelude. After all, instilling this cultural awareness and religious practice among the youths of his home city was his life’s mission that led him to exile in the first place.

It must be a great relief for him that all those uncertainties were finally coming to an end. He told us that they were going to be settled in Quebec and they have even found him a job in a halal butcher’s shop to help him start life anew in Canada. To prepare them for life in that French speaking part of Canada, the embassy sent a French teacher to their humble dwelling every week for a number of months already to teach the whole family the rudiments of communication in that language. I thought that was awesome, and some of those shameful incidents in the way we had treated the Vietnamese boat people and more recently, the Rohingya refugees flashed in my mind.

Anyway, upon learning this, I switched into French in the middle of our conversation and I could see Tourson’s face lighted up as he struggled to do the same.

At the end of the evening, as we were saying our good byes and wishing each other well, standing at the doorway with Maimate in his arms, I could see a tinge of sadness in Tourson’s eyes behind his wistful smile. Much as he looked forward to finally settle down in Canada for the sake of his children’s future, he is leaving behind friends and a society to which at least he has some religious bonds. Not that things in his homeland are going to improve anytime soon, but at least here the geographical distance is not so daunting. It will be a totally alien society that he and his family would have to now re-adapt. More difficult than surviving Canada’s long frozen winters would be keeping the right balance and having his children reconcile their Islamic faith with life in the post-modern west. That would be his real test.

MPF & MERCY Charity Sale

WOULD YOU LIKE TO HELP?

MPF & MERCY CHARITY SALE

The Muslim Professionals Forum Bhd (MPF) in collaboration with MERCY

Malaysia, will be organising a Charity Bazaar, on

Date : Monday, February 1, 2005
Time : 10 am – 4 pm
Venue : COURTYARD, PLAZA MONT KIARA, 2 JALAN KIARA, MONT KIARA.

The proceeds of this Bazaar will go to MERCY Malaysia Tsunami Disaster Fund.

Items to be sold (and the persons in charge) are:

Clothes

Handbags

Shoes

Accessories

Toys, CDs & VCDs

Books and Magazines

Food

Household Items

Bangsar

Damansara Heights

Ukay Heights

Taman Tun Dr Ismail

Mont Kiara

Taman Tun Dr Ismail

Damansara Heights

Ampang Jaya

Bangsar

Bandar Sri Damansara

Melawati

Siti Jamilah

Shahnaz

Asnah

Dr Sarah

Ruhana

Zai

Aida

Azra

Elya

Mimi

Rohana

0123718518

0163327799

0122100577

0122985920

0192368722

0178722968

0133459738

0192824500

0122122357

0123723135

0133465624

Farah (0162445405) is our Chief Coordinator.

We seek your cooperation and kind contribution, please. If you have any of these items in good condition, functional & saleable, and wish to give them away, please contact anyone of us or the persons in charge. As for food and drinks, if you wish to bake or cook or know of anyone who would like to contribute or sponsor, please contact Azra and Elya.

Items can be sent to the respective person in charge, or if you have various items, you may send to the person nearest to you. Please call to ask for address or for any enquiries.

Thank you for your kindness & generosity.

The Organising Committee
Charity Sale
MPF & MERCY Malaysia

The Right to Rule Ourselves

The Right to Rule Ourselves
by Dr. Azzam Tamimi

For nearly a century, democracy has been denied to the Arabs by the west. There is little sign of that changing

Azzam Tamimi
Friday January 7, 2005
The Guardian

Arabic-speaking peoples from the Atlantic Ocean to the Persian Gulf suffer one common chronic ailment, namely oppressive despotism. Most of the states that stretch between the two water basins came into being less than a century ago; many were former colonies of one or other of the European powers. France and Britain in particular were instrumental after the first world war in shaping the entire map of what is today the Middle East and North Africa. These two ageing imperial powers were also responsible for creating and, until the US took over, maintaining systems of governance in these newly emerging entities – providing ruling elites with moral, material and military support. Little has changed since then, apart from the imperialist master and the fact that the advance in technological warfare has enabled this master, so far, to maintain the status quo with ever greater vigour.

Unlike other parts of the world, and in contrast even to the norm in some neighbouring states, the Arab peoples ruled by these regimes have had very little say, if any, in the manner in which their affairs are run. While some analysts find it convenient to blame Arab or Muslim culture for this lack of democracy, I would argue that it is only the stringent control imposed from outside that denies to the peoples of this region what has readily been recognised as a basic human right elsewhere in the world.

The Algerian example of 1991-92 has been carved in the memory of Arabs and Muslims across the globe. Democracy is not on offer to whoever wishes to have it, and the Arabs – many Muslims too, for that matter – do not qualify to join the privileged club. More than 10 years ago France was horrified at the prospect of an Islamic government in its closest former colony, Algeria. The rest of the western world agreed and coalesced to abort the democratic process before it delivered the reins of power to the FIS (Islamic Salvation Front).

The Iraqi people suffered all forms of repression at the hands of the (until 1990) pro-western Ba’athist regime of Saddam Hussein. But it was far from being a unique despotic regime in the region. As far as the democratic powers of the west were concerned, it did not matter what any of those despots did to their own people, so long as their regimes posed no threat to what were seen as western interests – namely oil and Israel – and still better so long as these regimes were loyal allies.

Preparations are now under way for elections in Iraq. But few in Iraq or the region believe these elections are aimed at producing a truly representative government. The US did not invade and occupy Iraq to allow a genuinely free election that risked producing a government that might tell the Americans to leave. The purpose of the Iraqi elections is simply to try to bestow some spurious legitimacy on a regime that is as unrepresentative and as oppressive as Saddam’s.

Does anyone really believe that former Ba’athist Ayad Allawi, America’s stooge in Baghdad, who gave the orders for the total destruction of Falluja, has the interests of Iraqis at heart? How different is this from what Syria’s President Hafez al-Assad did to the city of Hama in the early 80s or from what Saddam himself did to the Kurds or the Marsh Arabs?

This weekend the Palestinians are to be given the right to elect a new leader, they say, for a change. However, if peace-making is to be resumed and if Israel is to agree to talk to the Palestinians, they can only choose Mahmoud Abbas – hence the international pressure to eliminate the popular Marwan Barghouti from the race. The fact that many Palestinians do not see Abbas as representative of their aspirations or willing to defend their rights does not matter to Israel or its western allies. Nor is it of any concern to the US and the EU that Hamas has increasingly strong support among Palestinians (as highlighted by their recent performance in municipal elections); they still will not talk to its representatives. It is fully acceptable for Israelis to elect whomever they deem fit to lead them, even a war criminal like Ariel Sharon. No Arab people are allowed the same luxury.

Who would free Arabs be likely to choose to speak for them? President Mubarak of Egypt is reported to have said to some western guests “don’t talk to me about democracy; through democracy the Muslim Brotherhood will rule Egypt”. The Arabs have experienced all sorts of political and ideological groups over the past century. But there is little doubt that if free elections were held today in the Middle East, Islamic movements would reap the fruits. It is not of course that these Islamists are anything like the media usually portray them: fundamentalist, backward or even terrorists. It is simply that they are honest, serious and more interested in the public good than personal interests. Thus democracy is denied to the Arabs.

And who is the real victim in all of this? It is none other than democracy itself, whose name has been tarnished and whose values are increasingly associated in the minds of many Arabs and Muslims with military invasion to replace one corrupt despotic secular regime with another more willing to bend the knee to US and western diktat.

· Azzam Tamimi is spokesman of the Muslim Association of Britain and director of the Institute of Islamic Political Thought