The idea that the Palestinian people have only been able to persist because of their religion is ridiculous to me. They are resisting because colonialism, apartheid and genocide are very bad things to which nobody would want to be subjected, not because of Islam. If Palestinians were atheists, is he suggesting that they wouldn’t have the strength or the will to resist? Would their lack of a belief in the supernatural turn them into doormats for Isn’treal?

I like Hakim’s content, but his position on religion is quite frustrating. He is a Muslim first and a Marxist second. Also, Joram van Klaveren is still a right-winger.

  • @AmarkuntheGatherer
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    6 months ago

    You know, for a man that’s so well read I have a feeling he hasn’t really touched much ex-muslim writings. That said I wouldn’t have written a word had I not seen so many defending him.

    I’m not being an edgy anti-theist. I know that any attempt to actively dissuade people of their religion is futile at best and often malicious. The issue is that he’s precribing something that’s not possible to reasonably back up.

    If his analysis is that Islam is more conducive to a liberation struggle, he should say so. It’d be easy to debunk mind you; liberation struggles, marxist and non-marxist, happen all over the world. West Asia isn’t close to being unique in this regard. Desire for liberty is quite inherent to all peoples of the world and fighting against subjugation doesn’t become something else done for different reasons because the people doing the fighting are attributing their struggle to something else.

    I feel this might not be quite clear, so I’ll try to elaborate. A people may struggle and they may attribute their will to fight to their God, their patriotism, or something else they believe in. This doesn’t make it true. If it were, we’d see a clear distinction between peoples of different religions or cultures, yet we don’t. People struggle whether they believe in Allah, Buddha or Wakan Tanka. What we do see is that people in similar material conditions react in similar ways. A people under siege, kicked from their homes, treated with disdain and contempt will fight back. Many, of different cultures and religions have. From this it should be easy to conclude that the initial claim would be chauvinistic, even if one isn’t impuning other beliefs.

    I’m thinking how one would write that and make those recommendations without a hint of chauvinism, I can’t really think of a way. He recommends books quite similar to books my haji grandfather gave me to read. He thought Islam was correct and that by reading, I’d come to the same conclusions and my faith would be stronger for it. It backfired spectacularly, but that’s not my point. He wasn’t trying to proselytise, in his mind he was doing no more than give a kid the tools he needed to find the truth. His best intentions didn’t make him less chauvinistic, and they wouldn’t Hakim. It doesn’t make them bad people, but it means their approach doesn’t have a sound material basis.

    Edit: I deleted the last part because it wasn’t helpful. I don’t begrudge people fighting for their lives their religion, if that’s what gets them through, all the power to them. All I’m saying is that these people aren’t holding onto religion because it gives them their will, it gives them their will because they’re believers holding onto it. Reading the life of the Prophet doesn’t inform the readers as would the words of Ho Chi Minh or the history of Palestine, which is why I took issue with the post and its defenders.

    I feel like an old man, I’m still having trouble with this website, pressing reply insread of edit.