Challenges facing Muslims in post apartheid South Africa

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Imam Rashied Omar

Challenges facing Muslims in post-apartheid South Africa CENTRE4MUSLIMSTUDIES Al-Qalam Lecture Series

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Imam Rashied Omar

Challenges facing Muslims in post-apartheid South Africa

CENTRE4MUSLIMSTUDIES Al-Qalam Lecture Series

Talk delivered on Thursday 8th October 2009 Senate Chamber - UKZN Westville Campus 2


CENTRE4MUSLIMSTUDIES Al-Qalam Lecture Series

This publication is made possible by Al Qalam’s Muslim Sudies Research Programme in association with the ISLAMIC FORUM

Printed by: Paperspace +27 31 263 2490 October 2009 - Shawwal 1430

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Introductory Remarks Imraan Buccus Editor of Al Qalam and co-ordinator of the Muslims Studies Research Programme We are pleased to bring you yet another lecture in a series of lectures that began in 2005. The Lecture Series, a part of Al Qalam’s recently launched Muslim Studies Research Programme, aims to provide a platform for scholars, activists and communities to engage critically in a friendly and open space. We believe that, in the context in which we live, such a space is needed – where people can come together to discuss and debate a range of issues, especially the situation of Muslims in a contemporary context. Among others, we have thus far hosted Prof Marwez Mansour, founding chairperson of the Swedish Muslim Federation, Prof Ebrahim Moosa of Duke University (US), Dr Farish Noor of the Berlin based think tank, ZMO and Oxford based Prof Tariq Ramadan. The Lecture Series is part of our Muslim Studies Research Programme, a research unit that came into existence as a result of the recognition that much about Muslims in South Africa remains under-researched and unrecorded. There are many narratives of what it means to be a Muslim in South Africa, especially in a context where rapid socio-political changes have swept across the country. Thus, the Muslim Studies Research Programme will include research that looks at a historical and contemporary understanding of South African Muslims, their role and contributions, underscored by the dynamics of race, class, history, politics and gender. A related goal of the Muslim Studies Research Programme would be to hold regular lectures and seminars that focus on the intellectual production of the programme, thus providing a space for critique, discussion and debate.

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In line with this, we are particularly pleased to host Dr Rashied Omar, someone who is no stranger to this Durban audience. Dr Omar is the Imam of the Claremont Main Road Mosque in Cape Town and is attached to the IPSA’s Institute for the Study of Current Islam, a unit that our research outfit has been interacting with closely in the recent past. He is also linked to the Kroc Institute for Peace Studies at the University of Notre Dame in the US and holds a PhD from the University of Cape Town (UCT). We believe that his focus for this lecture on ‘The Challenges facing Muslims in a post-apartheid SA’ is a critically needed one as there hasn’t been a sufficient debate about where Muslims locate themselves in a post-apartheid context. We look forward to an intellectually stimulating treat and Al Qalam’s Muslim Studies Research Programme hopes to bring you more of these initiatives as we march ahead.

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Challenges Facing Muslims in Post-Apartheid South Africa Imam Dr. A. Rashied Omar In April 2009 South Africans successfully staged and participated in only their fourth democratic national elections. This historic milestone marked fifteen years since the advent of non-racial democratic rule in South Africa. Fifteen years later South African Muslims are basking in the freedoms of post-apartheid South African democracy. Muslims are recognised as equal citizens and partners in the shaping of the destiny of our new nation. Islam has been given recognition and respect like never before in the history of our country. In this sense the Muslim minority in South Africa is unique in the world. This has been confirmed by many international Islamic scholars, including one of the foremost Muslim public intellectuals in the West, Dr. Tariq Ramadan. There is no other Muslim minority, which enjoys the kind of space and opportunities we have in this country, for the practice, expression, and articulation of Islam. The concept of religious freedom, both theoretically and practically, experienced by Muslims in South Africa is indeed unique. This unique experience is the fruits and results of many courageous people within our midst. These were Muslim activists who understood the message of Islam correctly and did not see their role in narrow sectarian terms, but rather as contributing towards the development and empowerment of all the people of our land, Muslim as well as non-Muslim. It was this progressive Islamic ethos that helped to propel an influential section of the Muslim community to the forefront of the anti-apartheid struggle. Today, Muslims have assumed a role in post-apartheid South Africa that far outweighs their minority demographic status in the country. Muslims occupy significant positions in parliament, provincial legislatures, national government and other state structures, as well as businesses. Frankly speaking however, South African Muslims have not used their strategic leverage to effectively influence the moral ethos, public policy and legislation in democratic South Africa. There are a number of reasons for this. We need to address these debilitating causes to enable us to clear 6


the way for more effective Muslim participation in the affairs of our nation. The previously disenfranchised masses of our country, of which the Muslim community constitutes an integral part, have been powerless for a very long time and they have internalised this sense of despair. We need to encourage and support and build confidence, and remind ourselves that small and modest contributions can have great and lasting impacts. The key challenge facing Muslims in post-apartheid South Africa is to build on its anti-apartheid legacy by encouraging the nurturing and formation of a new crop of progressive Muslim leaders whose Islamic praxis is not exclusively focused on seeking patronage with government but more importantly propels them to strengthen and reinvigorate the grassroots social movement in post-apartheid South Africa. It is my view that the Muslim community’s engagement with the democratic process in South Africa during the past fifteen years has been robust but limited and short-sighted. I would like to support my contention with the following brief overview. During the 1994, 1999, 2004 and 2009 national elections, Muslims not only voted in large numbers, but a number of Muslim candidates were elected as members of the South African Parliament, representing all of the major political parties. The apex of Muslim presence on the political stage was the appointment in 2005 of the Call of Islam leader, Ebrahim Rasool, as premier of the Western Cape. This is the province in which close to half the Muslim population of under a million lives. Rasool was since unceremoniously removed from the post by his party in 2008, largely due to political in-fighting in the province. Judging from the enthusiastic manner in which the Muslim community participated in South Africa’s four democratic general elections it would seem that by and large they are engaging the South African democratic process positively. Notwithstanding this positive engagement of the democratic process in South Africa, it appears that large sections of the Muslim community continue to be disillusioned with and alienated from the political process in South Africa. In this regard there appears to be a dissonance and a gaping chasm between the Muslim leadership and their support base, the Muslim masses. This is underscored by the Muslim Attitudes Survey, conducted in 7


Cape Town in April 2008 by the International Peace University of South Africa (IPSA). The survey suggests that Muslims on the ground have a substantially more negative view of the government than the leadership does. The IPSA survey found that there are sharp divides as to whether the government protects Muslim interests. 67% of those interviewed disagreed that the government protects the Muslim community’s interests. They cited the fact that Muslim marriages are not yet legalized, that many rights and provisions in the South African constitution opposed the Shari`ah and that the South African government was becoming increasingly more Islamophobic. Of those who disagreed with government policies Muslim women outnumbered their men. Even more instructive is the fact that post election analysis of the 2009 general elections indicated that even though the Muslim Judicial Council as well as other national ‘ulama bodies, tried to persuade Muslim voters to cast their vote for the ruling party, the African National Congress, the Muslim masses particularly in the Western Cape chose something different. In the Western Cape, in voting districts with significant concentrations of Muslims, the DA got overwhelming support of up to 70% of the Muslim electorate. This is an alarming statistic. It may indicate that the Muslim leadership might be out of touch and not adequately reflecting Muslim public opinion. In light of this perceived dissonance between the Muslim leadership and its support base it is vital that the IPSA research findings be verified. The IPSA research findings need to be tested on a larger scale both provincially as well as nationally. However, besides voting, Muslims as a grouping have not fully utilised the many opportunities that the new democratic dispensation affords them in strategically accessing the various institutions for the advancement of matters peculiar to them. To fully participate in our democracy, beyond mere voting, I would like to make two proposals. The first is to endorse the existing proposal for the establishment of a Muslim Parliamentary Liaison Office (MPLO). And the second, is to reiterate a proposal that I have been articulating for close to a decade now, what I have called a paradigm shift; a shift in thinking and action from our obsession with seeking solutions exclusively through the apparatus of the state, to that of leveraging the power for social change resulting from a vibrant civil society and vigorous social movements. 8


Beyond the Politics of Patronage It is my considered view that the role of the Muslim community and in particular its leadership should not be focused exclusively on seeking patronage with political power. Rather, it should seek to become an integral and vibrant part of the broader civil society and non-governmental organizations. The Muslim leadership needs to resist temptations of merely being apologists for the political authorities, of simply getting co-opted by government or powerful political parties in serving their expedient agendas. The role of the Muslim community should be that of a moral conscience of our nation alongside other organizations in civil society. Muslims have a duty to exhort and challenge government whenever we perceive them to be failing in their political mandate. They are elected by us and we have a political right and obligation to censure and criticize them. At the same time we also have a responsibility to support and collaborate with government in areas of mutual concern and benefit. Endorsing the proposal for the establishment of a MPLO I believe that the establishment of a MPLO, independent of any political party, will allow Muslims to contribute to the legislative framework in a structured and co-ordinated manner. The main aim of the MPLO should be to serve as a conduit of communication and dialogue between Muslims in South Africa, their parliament and the government. Through the MPLO, Muslims will be able to contribute to issues directly affecting them as citizens. The role of the MPLO would be to engage in advocacy work, distribute information, conduct public workshops and build and maintain effective networks with the Muslim community and other civil society organizations around issues of mutual concern. Through these consultative processes, the MPLO will be in a position not only to lobby parliamentarians and ministers, with the aim of ensuring that its aims and objectives are achieved, but also to facilitate oral and written submissions to relevant portfolio committees, by Muslim organisations and members of the public. Through information sharing, Muslims, as part of the broader civil society, will be able to enrich debates on issues of public policy and the common good as well as in areas of education, political, economic, religious, cultural and social concern. In this way Muslims have the potential to play a positive role in shaping policy and legislation. This is not to suggest that Muslims 9


retreat into a laager mentality and serve only their self-interests, but rather that Muslims become active citizens concerned with the rights and empowerment of all the marginalised and underprivileged in society. Genuine support and critical distance should not be opposed positions in our relationship with the state. Such a position is complex and demanding but it is free of the expediencies and political opportunism of opposition politics. This approach to our public interest is derived from none other than divine guidance itself. In Surah Al-Ma’idah, Chapter 5, verse 2, Allah the Sublime declares:

And help one another in the promotion of goodness and piety, and do not assist one another in sin and rancour. However, I want to propose that we go even further this, and embrace a paradigm shift in our thinking and action. A Paradigm Shift: Beyond the Idolatry of the State The pervasive power of the modern state has disempowered the masses and led to their political marginalisation. Real people become a faceless electorate and mere statistics devoid of the ability to act in the modern state. The modern state has bred in individuals and groups, low social and political ambitions and inertia. In democratic South Africa this has become an even greater problem since the state has taken over the role of the vibrant civil society that existed during the apartheid era. The national civic structures have collapsed and the trade union movement has been considerably weakened as a result of funding crises and its dynamic leadership being drawn in by the state. What is desperately needed is to rid ourselves of the ill-founded obsession with 10


patronage and power and reliance on the state for our fate. What I refer to as shirk al-dawlah – the idolatry of the State. We need to focus our energies and resources away from the state in our search for solutions to our myriad of societal problems. The only real guarantee for a healthy democracy is that of a strong civil society that can hold those in power accountable for their moral and political mandate. I am encouraged by what appears to be the re-emergence of a strong civil society. The launching of Social Justice Networks by the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC), the ongoing challenging of alleged paybacks in the arms deal and the current backroom amnesty provisions, is a positive development that needs to be supported by the Muslim community. All of these campaigns provide opportunities for Muslims to become part of civil society initiatives that are concerned with social justice issues for all. It is about Muslims embracing their rights and social responsibilities as citizens, and ‘bearing witness’ to the values of Islam. It is about a commitment by Muslims to strengthen our democracy and not to act only out of narrow self –interests. It is ordinary citizens of the country who must seize this new opportunity and hold those in office accountable for their promises of hope, change and transformation. The lesson is that the critical motor of social change does not lie in the support for this or that political party, or this or that politician, but rather in the commitment of civil society and social movements for such change. The challenge facing us at this critical juncture in the history of our beloved country is how do we build on and sustain the revitalized civil society in our city and across our country. I would like to urge each and everyone one of us to join and support our nongovernment organizations, community institutions and social movements that are striving for a better world and the upliftment of the downtrodden. Beyond the Politics of Patronage - Heeding the Advice of Abu Hamid AlGhazali I conclude with the nasiha/advice by perhaps one of the greatest Islamic scholars that ever lived, Abu Hamid Al-Ghazali (d.1111). Imam Ghazali was concerned about the lack of intellectual independence, integrity and critical distance from the state that the Muslim scholars of his time had established. He laments this in his book, Ayyuhal Walad, in which he advises his young disciples to get neither too close to the princes and sultans, nor to praise 11


and commend them excessively. But even more than that, Ghazali warns his young followers not to accept generous gifts and presents from them, even though it may be permissible. “Coveting things from the rulers and those in power will spoil and corrupt your din/religion, since there is born from it flattery and “kowtowing” to those in power and unwise approval of their policies.” Dr. Ebrahim Moosa, in his widely acclaimed book on Al-Ghazali, has eloquently summarized Ghazali’s strong critique of Muslim scholars and the political posturing of his time in the following manner: “Most scholars are sycophants, groveling at the feet of political leaders, displaying egotistical behaviour, driven by insatiable materialism”. Ghazali is particularly wellplaced to dispense this advice since he himself was a victim of state cooption when he briefly served in the educational service of the Saljuk sultan in Nisapur. Ghazali’s vexing experience and his critical advice should be heeded by us in today’s post-Apartheid South African political context.

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Rashied Omar earned an M.A. and Ph.D. in religious studies from the University of Cape Town and an M.A. in peace studies from the Kroc Institute at the University of Notre Dame. He also completed study programs in Islamic religious education in South Africa, Sudan, Pakistan, and Malaysia. Omar’s research and teaching focuses on religion, violence, and peacebuilding, especially the Islamic ethics of war and peace and interreligious dialogue. He is a contributor to the Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World (Macmillan Reference USA, 2003) and author of Tolerance, Civil Society and Renaissance in Post-Apartheid South Africa . He is completing a book manuscript on religion, violence, and state terror and collaborating with two international scholars as co-editor of A Dictionary of Christian-Muslim Relations, forthcoming from Cambridge University Press. Omar serves as the coordinating Imam at the Claremont Main Road Mosque, international trustee of the Council for a Parliament of the World’s Religions, and international advisor to the Dutch- based Knowledge Forum on Religion and Development. He is also attached to IPSA’s Institute for the Study of Current Islam. Dr Omar was the president of the Muslim Youth Movement (MYM) of South Africa in the late eighties.

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