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Islam's heretic

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Susan Dominus
HERETIC: WHY ISLAM NEEDS A REFORMATION NOW
Author: Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Publisher: HarperCollins
Pages: 272
Price: $27.99

Following the events of the Arab Spring, Ayaan Hirsi Ali writes in her latest book, Heretic, she came to the conclusion that "ordinary Muslims are ready for change." Hirsi Ali has strong thoughts on what form that change should take for Muslims: a major overhaul of their religion. "Without fundamental alterations to some of Islam's core concepts," she says, "we shall not solve the burning and increasingly global problem of political violence carried out in the name of religion."

That may sound incendiary, but for Hirsi Ali, who has renounced her own Muslim faith, the idea that Islam should and could be reformed is practically conciliatory. Until recently, she tells us, she believed "the best thing for religious believers in Islam to do was to pick another god."

How Hirsi Ali came to denounce her faith was the basis for her earlier book, the global best seller Infidel, a sharp polemic against Islam nestled inside a rich literary memoir. That book transported readers to Somalia, where Hirsi Ali endured genital mutilation as a young girl, to Kenya, where, as an adolescent, she willingly wore a full hijab and supported the fatwa calling for Salman Rushdie's death, and to the Netherlands, where she re-evaluated her faith and collaborated with the director Theo Van Gogh on a film critical of Islam's treatment of women. Van Gogh was subsequently shot and stabbed in the street; his murderer pinned a note to his chest that promised Hirsi Ali would be next.

Now living in the United States, a fellow at Harvard's John F Kennedy School of Government, Hirsi Ali still requires heavy security; and she still agitates Muslims and non-Muslims alike by arguing, as she does in Heretic, that "Islamic violence is rooted not in social, economic or political conditions - or even in theological error - but rather in the foundational texts of Islam itself."

"Let me make my point in the simplest possible terms," she writes early on. "Islam is not a religion of peace." If some American political figures have bent over backward to decouple Islam from jihadist violence in West Asia, Hirsi Ali swings hard in the other direction, pointing to the prevalence of militant passages in the Quran and arguing that jihad is not "a problem of poverty, insufficient education or any other social precondition," but rather a "religious obligation." It is the belief in Muhammad's infallibility as a messenger of Islam, she suggests, that seals off the possibility of innovation within the faith, and encourages ISIS and other jihadists to read those militant passages in the Quran literally. (As Caner K Dagli, an Islamic scholar, put it recently in The Atlantic, if ISIS can reasonably claim to be faithfully following Islamic law, "this might lead a thoughtful reader to wonder what all the other Muslims are doing.")

In Heretic, Hirsi Ali forgoes autobiography for the most part in favour of an extended argument. But she has trouble making anyone else's religious history - even that of Muhammad himself, whose life story she recounts - as dramatic as she has made her own. And she loses the reader's trust with overblown rhetoric. Many Muslim immigrants in the West grapple with conflicted identities, she writes, leaving them longing for one extreme or another in the pursuit of certainty. She wonders: "Must all who question Islam end up leaving the faith, as I did, or embracing violent jihad?" (Probably not.) She tries to warn Americans about their naïvete in the face of encroaching Islamic influences, maintaining that officials and journalists, out of cultural sensitivity, sometimes play down the honour killings that occur in the West.

Unquestionably, Hirsi Ali poses challenging questions about whether American liberals should be fighting harder for the rights of Muslim women in countries where they are oppressed, and she is fearless in using shock tactics to jump-start a conversation. Blasphemy is an essential part of any religious reform, she argues, and defends her right to speak bluntly. "I have taken an enormous risk by answering the call for self-reflection," Hirsi Ali has said, in response to critics who find her tone abrasive. "I have been convinced more than ever that I must say it in my way only and have my criticism." There is no denying that her words are brave. Whether they are persuasive is another matter.
© The New York Times 2015
 

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First Published: Apr 11 2015 | 12:18 AM IST

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