May 18,
2005
Current
Trends in Islamist Ideology
The
Penetration of Islamist Ideology in Britain
Michael
Whine
https://www.hudson.org/national-security-defense/the-penetration-of-islamist-ideology-in-britain
Public
Islamist activity in Britain can be dated to the publication of Salman
Rushdie’s Satanic Verses in January, 1989. Its appearance was marked by public
burnings of the book and wide demonstrations in Britain’s northern urban
centers, starting in Bradford, a city to which large numbers of Pakistanis had
migrated during the 1960s to man the cotton industry located there. Muslim
community leaders subsequently sought a religious ruling on the book from
Ayatollah Khomeini, and his fatwa, issued one month later, led to death threats
against Rushdie that contributed to severely strained diplomatic relations
between the European Union and Iran.
The
effect of this episode on the British Muslim community was profound. Up until
that point, British Muslims had largely been politically and religiously
quiescent. But the common outrage toward what was perceived as an attack on
Islam led over the course of the following months to the establishment of
several Muslim advocacy groups. Out of these emerged the U.K. Action Committee
on Islamic Affairs and several prominent leaders, some of whom went on to
establish the Muslim Council of Britain, which is today regarded as the U.K.’s
primary Muslim representative body.
Following
the Rushdie Affair, foreign countries and organizations increased their
investment in the British Muslim community, aiming to capitalize on new
opportunities for Muslim political and communal organization, as well as to
provide new financial support for religious services and mosques.As a result,
new ideological influences from abroad began to have significant impact on the
political and religious life of the British Muslim community.
British
Islam
To
analyze the nature and extent of Islamist ideological penetration in Britain,
it is important to understand the demographic features of British Islam.
Britain did not measure religion until the 2001 Census, and even then one’s
religious affiliation was only a voluntary question. Britain did however
measure migrants’ countries of origin and from these figures it is thought that
the 1991 Muslim population was around 1.25 million. The 2001 Census indicated
that 1.6 million people in England and Wales and just over 42,000 in Scotland
identified themselves as Muslim. The voluntary nature of the question is likely
to have led to a low figure and it is now thought that there are around 2
million.
The
sudden rise in Muslim migration to Britain in the 1960s was caused by the
prospect of legislation that would restrict entry. The Commonwealth Immigrants
Act of 1962 was a response to growing concern over large-scale immigration. The
fear that Britain would close its doors resulted in a massive increase in
immigration, and especially from the Indian subcontinent. Over two-thirds of
Britain’s estimated two million Muslims are from the Indian subcontinent.
Importantly, the settlers came only from a limited number of areas: Indian
Muslims primarily from Gujarat; Pakistanis from the Mirpur district of southern
Kashmir and the Cambellpur district of northeast Punjab; and Bangladeshis from
Sylhet and Chittagong.
Successive
waves of migrants have come from Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh after the
Pakistani invasion of East Bengal. Other smaller waves of Indian subcontinent
nationals came as refugees in the 1970s from Uganda and Kenya. Political
disruption in East Africa in turn led to yet another wave of migrants from
Somalia in the 1980s and 1990s, and again from North Africa, fleeing political
tensions in the 1990s.1
Britain’s
Arab communities are small and often transient, composed of students and
businessmen who temporarily locate to Britain during the summer to escape the
intense heat of the Middle East. However, the Lebanese civil war and political
turmoil in some Arab states has led to the relocation of many Arab media
outlets to London, which now serves as a major Arab language news publishing
center.
Another
discreet group of Muslim migrants were the Turkish Cypriots, who fled the civil
war in Cyprus in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Finally, a small number of
Muslims fleeing civil war in the former Yugoslavia came to Britain in the late
1990s.
The
nature of Muslim migration, with young men coming to work and then women
joining them later, has ensured that the Muslim population is both more
youthful and growing faster than the norm. The 2001 Census showed that almost
55% of Pakistanis and over 46% of Bangladeshis were born in the U.K. Overall,
the Muslim population is among the youngest in the country, with one-third aged
50 and under, and a further 20% aged between 16 and 24.
Settlement
has been geographically uneven: almost half live in the London area and the
West Midlands. Yorkshire and the greater Manchester area account for almost
two-thirds of the rest. Within the West Midlands, three quarters live in the
greater Birmingham area. Turkish Cypriot Muslims live almost exclusively in
northeast and east London, where more than half the Bangladeshis are also
concentrated. The Arab community also lives almost exclusively in the London
area.
Conversion
to Islam in Britain is almost negligible in comparison with other countries.
One commentator suggests 10,000 persons as the upper limit with the majority of
these coming from the Afro-Caribbean community.2
Save for
the established Church of England, there is no legal framework for religious
communities. The other traditional Christian communities and the Jewish
community are recognized in law and have historical privileges but the status
of legal recognition common in continental Europe does not exist in Britain.
Technically therefore, a religious community can establish itself without any
form of registration or legal recognition. If, however, it desires a
not-for-profit status it must register as a charity, which provides tax
exemption and reduced local property taxation. As a consequence, virtually all
mosques and Muslim organizations in Britain are registered charities and this
provides a measure of their growth. In 1963, 13 mosques were registered in Britain;
from 1966 they began to register at an annual rate of nearly 7%; this increased
to 18 from the mid-1970s. The last published list, for 1999, gives a total of
584 mosques in England and Wales.
Foreign
Influences
Among the
most active foreign ideological influences on British Islam is the
Jamaat-e-Islami, the main Islamist opposition movement in Pakistan. In 1963 it
established the U.K. Islamic Mission, in 1990 the Islamic Foundation in
Leicester, and in 2000 the Markfield Institute as a seat of higher learning.
These institutions have provided the basis for one of the ideological streams
that have now emerged in British Islam. A second stream of Islamist ideology
now in Britain originates within the Ikhwan al Islami or Muslim Brotherhood
founded by Hasan Al Banna in 1928 in Egypt. In alliance with the
Jamaat-e-Islami, the Muslim Brotherhood now provides a major influence on the
Muslim community.
These
streams of Islamist ideology have deeply penetrated the traditionalist and
heretofore moderate Muslim communities of Britain, and are expressed in
recruitment and fundraising activities for foreign Islamist projects. The major
traditions within Britain’s Muslim communities are the Deobandi and Barelwi,
which both originated in the Indian subcontinent. The revivalist Tablighi
Jimaat, which originated in India in 1927, serves both communities. The Ahle
Hadith (Followers of Hadith) also spans the Indian and Pakistani communities
and propagates a policy of separation from non-Muslim society.
The
Pakistani invasion of East Bengal exacerbated tensions between Britain’s two
main Muslim communities, and in 1976 the Bangladeshi community established the
Dawatul-Islam which, like the (Pakistani-centered) U.K.Islamic Mission,
provides teaching facilities within state schools and links mosques. These two
organizations exercise the most influence within British Islam at a religious
level and are traditional rather than political or Islamist.
The
Saudi-funded, and therefore Wahhabi-influenced, Muslim World League was also
established in London during the 1970s and although its influence has grown
since, it is still limited. The Muslim World League assisted in the
establishment of the Council of Mosques U.K. and Eire in 1984, and Egyptian
influence is reflected in the Council of Imams and Mosques, likewise
established in 1984.
Arab
Muslim in.uences are seen most strongly among a range of overlapping
organizations. The Federation of Student Islamic Societies (FOSIS) has a close
association with the Muslim Brotherhood, and tends to be active among foreign
national Arab students studying in Britain. Its penetration within British
Muslim student circles has waxed and waned over the years, but its members have
been active at recent National Union of Students annual conferences.
The
Muslim Institute was established during the 1980s and reflected Iranian
influence. It was out of this Institute that the Muslim Parliament, under the
leadership of the late Kalim Siddiqui, grew. This more than any other entity
represented Iranian interests in Britain. Although it gave the appearance of a
democratically elected body, it was no such thing. Its leadership was bedeviled
by accusations of financial impropriety, and in the end it ceased to function
after Siddiqui died while on a visit to South Africa. Although it achieved
considerable publicity and some notoriety it nevertheless failed to make much
of an impression on the British Muslim community.
Sufi
tradition is also strongly represented in Britain, and is seen as antipathetic
to the Islamist groups. Sufism is particularly strong in the Indian
subcontinent and therefore has been one of the important countervailing forces
against Arab, and particularly Saudi, influences.
Islamist
Campaigning Issues
A range
of issues has confronted the British Muslim community since large-scale
migration began in the 1960s. Some of these are national and internal and
concern the nature, practices and development of the community; others concern
Muslims abroad. Initially, among the early migrant communities, there was
severe strife between the Bangladeshi community and the Pakistani community,
which in some senses could be described as running counter to the present-day
Islamist ethos of the unity of Islam. Thereafter, Kashmir, which has also been
regarded as an India-Pakistan territorial issue, as well as a Muslim-Hindu
religious one, has provided a major platform for Islamist campaigning that has
worked to unify the nationally and ethnically disparate Muslim communities of
Britain. Since many of the migrants come from the northwest provinces of India
which abut the southeastern provinces of Pakistan, the situation in Kashmir
provides a focus for campaigning along sectarian lines. Indeed, Britain has
become a center for fundraising for Kashmiri Islamist groups.
The
foreign jihadi-centered campaigns in Afghanistan, Bosnia, and Chechnya have
also provided a focus for Islamist recruitment in Britain and indeed it is
around these issues that the most visible and highly publicized campaigning has
been centered. Saudi Arabia, Yemen, and Iraq have also provided the focus for
Islamist campaigning and recruitment and are among those which have provided
the most media coverage. Palestine provides another focal point for political
agitation in Britain and although much of this campaigning has been by and on
behalf of Palestinian secular groups, the Palestinian Islamist groups have a
growing presence, which is evident through growing fundraising, propaganda
activity and political agitation.
While
foreign policy issues have attracted the most media attention, they are not
necessarily the most important ones facilitating Islamist penetration. The most
important of the internal issues concerns the nature of education for children
within the Muslim community. This has assumed a paramount importance given that
it is a comparatively youthful community.
Before
the twentieth century the majority of Britain’s schools were Church-funded, and
taught Christianity as a core value. Post-Second World War developments led to
a national educational system which was multi-cultural, non-denominational and
taught appreciation of all religions, but from a generally secular standpoint.
Secondary schools, the majority of which were single-sex, also became
co-educational.
These
trends clashed with the views of traditionalist Muslim parents who wanted Islam
taught within the school system, rather than as an after school add-on. Their
growing political influence, particularly in northern cities, led to increasing
demands for state provision of religious education. The private Muslim schools
that had been established were seen as underperforming in comparison to state
schools, and this gave added impetus to these demands.
Through
the 1980s and 1990s Muslim educationalists campaigned for state funding for
Muslim schools and this goal was only achieved when the Islamia Schools
achieved this status. These schools were founded by Yusuf Islam, the former pop
singer Cat Stevens, and have become noteworthy in recent years for the high
academic achievements of their pupils.
An
interesting by-product of this campaign has been that increasing numbers of
Muslim parents send their children to the Jewish King David Schools in
Birmingham and Liverpool, which had falling rolls as those cities’ Jewish
communities declined.
However,
separate education for Muslim children has now given rise to growing concern
over Muslim separatism, a development that is encouraged by various Islamist
ideological forces. As Britain enters the twenty-first century there are
important voices calling for the return of a system which teaches British civic
core-values. These include Trevor Philips, the chairman of the Commission for
Racial Equality, the government agency dedicated to improving race relations,
but due shortly to expand its remit to become the unitary human rights agency.
A linked
issue concerning Muslim separatism is the recent demand by Muslim parents for
their daughters to wear the hijab at school. Unlike France or Germany, where
secularism is state policy, this has not previously been much of an issue in
the U.K. However, a Muslim pupil lost her case to wear the full-length jilbab
when she took it to the High Court in July 2004. Moreover, the London Borough
of Tower Hamlets, which has Britain’s largest concentration of Muslims, has
recently ordered an exclusion policy in its schools for girls seeking to wear
the jilbab.
A second
major campaigning issue has been that of religious discrimination.The race
relations legislation of 1964 and 1976 outlawed discrimination on racial
grounds, and the Public Order Act of 1986 allowed for the prosecution of
incitement to racial hatred. An Appeal Court case (Mandla v. Dowell-Lee, 1983)
recognized that the Sikh and Jewish communities were to be regarded as racial
groups, and therefore were protected by this legislation. However, Muslims,
Hindus and others were unprotected by primary legislation, although cases
settled by the courts had afforded them a measure of protection. The Muslim
community has spearheaded demands for primary legislation that would ban
discrimination on religious grounds as well as incitement. The current Labour
government has sought to enact such legislation but failed, initially, to do so
on the back of the anti-terrorism legislation in 2001. The government, however,
has recognized the imbalance in its anti-discrimination policies and has
reintroduced legislation, again within the framework of new police powers.
Islamist
Influences
It is
among the most overtly political organizations that one sees Islamist
influences most clearly, for obvious reasons. Hizb ut-Tahrir (Islamic
Liberation Party—HT), established in Britain around 1990, was the first of the
groups to publicly adopt a confrontational and anti-Western perspective. Shaykh
Taqi Uddin al-Nabahani, a Shariah court judge from what was then East
Jerusalem, founded HT in the 1950s. He had been a devotee of Sayyid Qutb, the
post-war Muslim Brotherhood leader, and of the late Haj Amin al-Husseini, the
Mufti of Jerusalem. The founder of HT in Britain was Omar Bakri Mohammed, a
Syrian émigré and former Muslim Brotherhood member who had fled his native
Syria. In Britain, Bakri Mohammed tirelessly preached and recruited members in
the manner of the Brotherhood by establishing small discussion groups under the
leadership of an experienced member. HT originated in the colleges of London
University, primarily at Imperial College and Queen Mary College, and fairly
rapidly gained notoriety for its anti-Jewish, anti-Hindu, anti-Sikh and
homophobic views.
The
group’s confrontational style and Bakri Mohammed’s self-seeking publicity
stunts rapidly led to the group being banned by the National Union of Students
and by several universities. In 1996, Bakri Mohammed was removed from office by
the Middle East-based HT leadership, who appeared to have preferred the
traditional, rather more covert approach adopted in Arab societies. In turn,
Bakri Mohammed founded Al-Muhajiroun (The Emigrants—AM). In establishing AM,
Bakri Mohammed teamed up with Mohammed Al Mas’ari, a Saudi exile who had been a
co-founder of the Committee for Defence of Legitimate Rights, a Saudi Islamist
opposition group, and the translator into English of Osama bin Laden’s first
declaration of war against the United States. A year before, Mas’ari had been
the subject of an extradition attempt by the government, which failed to get
him deported from Britain.
The
ideology of AM differs little from that of HT. The ideology of both groups is
extremely anti-Semitic, anti-Western, and separatist; and both focus on
recruiting students and young people. Bakri Mohammed has, however, failed to
move beyond a small group of devotees partly because the ideology of recreating
the Caliphate has little appeal for British Muslims. However, AM has managed to
radicalize numbers of disaffected Muslim youth who have gone on to jihadi
terrorism in Afghanistan, Pakistan and elsewhere. The suicide bombers of the
Mike’s Place Bar in Tel Aviv in 2002 are known to have attended both HT and AM
meetings in Britain, although the extent of their involvement with the groups
is unlikely now to be revealed. Omar Ahmed Shaikh, the British Muslim behind
the murder of Daniel Pearl, is also thought to have been radicalized by HT
before embarking on a humanitarian mission to Bosnia, from where he went on to
Afghanistan and ultimately Pakistan.
In recent
years, however, HT has reverted to traditional modes of activity by recruiting
in a quieter manner. It has also changed its target audience to middle-class
professionals and its current promotional literature and the nature of its
meetings reflect this clearly. However, HT members in other countries almost
certainly have a close involvement with terrorism, particularly in the central
Asian republics of the former Soviet Union.
Iranian
influences are now most clearly reflected in the Islamic Human Rights
Commission led by Massoud Shadjareh, whose high profile campaigning on a range
of issues has achieved much publicity. Again, this organization has failed to
grow beyond the small founding group, despite its attractive title. Among its
public activities is the organization of the annual Quds Day Parade in London,
initiated internationally by the late Ayatollah Khomeini to mark Muslim claims
on Al Quds (Jerusalem).
In
opposition to AM and HT stands the Muslim Public Affairs Committee (MPAC), a
small group with a more public profile than its actual size would warrant. Like
AM and HT, MPAC promotes anti-Semitism and Holocaust denial. But unlike them,
MPAC campaigns for inclusion within the general political process, rather than
separation from it. Its most active campaigns are focused on attacking Members
of Parliament who they deem to be pro-Israel and/or anti-Muslim.
The
emerging dominant Islamist ideological influence in Britain now is that of the
Muslim Brotherhood, through the Muslim Association of Britain (MAB). Although
founded and led by former Hamas and Brotherhood leaders from Jordan, Egypt and
Iraq, it promotes itself as a mainstream body.
MAB’s
involvement with anti-Iraq war campaigning, defense of the right to wear the
hijab, Palestine, and its close association with the revolutionary leftist
Respect political party founded by former Labour MP George Galloway, provide it
with opportunities to influence discourse within the Muslim community,
particularly among the young. It has used this influence to exert a malign
influence on what had been growing Muslim-Jewish contacts in Britain prior to
9/11.
Looking
forward, it seems likely that Islamist ideological influences will grow as a
consequence of, and a reaction to, growing anti-Muslim sympathies within the
population as a whole. The violence that followed the Islamist murder of Theo
Van Gogh in Holland and a reaction to Muslim demands for separatism on the one
hand, and campaigns for greater inclusion on the other, has worried governments
of those countries with large Muslim minorities.Similar concerns are also
growing in Britain. While Britain has always pursued inclusionary social
policies and is now doing much to ensure that legislation provides equal
protection to all religious minorities, there are additional factors which may
mitigate these moves and further alienate the Muslim community.
Political
scientist Shamit Saggar recently noted that there were three factors causing
isolation and potential radicalism amongst British Muslims. First, the Muslim
communities are characterized by patterns of social and economic exclusion;
earnings are lower among Pakistani and Bangladeshi communities, and their
children achieve less in school. Second, these communities experience high
levels of social isolation, particularly in the northern industrial towns.
These contribute to an inward-looking posture that is reluctant to promote
interaction with the outside community. Third, British Muslims have begun to
embrace the ideology of victimhood, and a clear oppositional culture can be
discerned.
Professor
Saggar notes that there is a lack of certainty about which levers can be pulled
to counter these trends, and with what results. The government has backed
initiatives to increase the training of British-born Imams, thereby promoting a
home-grown version of Islam, but he notes that there is no evidence that
younger religious leaders are likely to be less influenced by radical ideology
than their older foreign-born peers. One option employed by the government has
been to pressure Muslim leaders, and particularly the Muslim Council of
Britain, to write to individual mosques reminding them of their responsibility
to counter the teaching of violence or violent conspiracy.He suggests that
centrally-directed efforts should lead to reducing intolerance and that
combined with tackling the three sets of obstacles to achievement, should
provide the pragmatic answer to dealing with a potential “clash of
civilizations” in Britain.2
Keywords:
Britain, Islam, radical ideology, Hizb ut-Tahrir, British Muslims, Pakistanis

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