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Wednesday, December 23, 2015

‘Moderate Islam’ Isn’t Working

Over the past decade, the prevailing thinking has been that radical Islam is most effectively countered by moderate Islam. The goal was to find religious leaders and scholars and community ‘influencers’—to use the lingo of the counter-radicalization specialists—who could explain to their followers and to any misguided young people that Islam is a religion of peace, that the term jihad refers mainly to the individual’s personal struggle against temptation and for moral betterment, and that tolerance and interfaith cooperation should prevail. The presence of local Muslim luminaries, taking the lectern to announce that what had just happened bore no relation to true Islam, has become part of the ritual following any terrorist incident in a Western country.

As director of the RAND Initiative for Middle Eastern Youth, I was an early proponent of this approach. It assumed two things: first, that because of a lack of education, or poverty or other handicaps, many Muslims had developed an incomplete or incorrect understanding of their own religion; and second, that the extremists were so much louder and had backing from various maleficent sources, and therefore were gaining larger audiences. The task therefore was to help moderate Muslims spread the word. Multiple and expensive programs were launched to fund religious instruction, radio and television shows, community outreach efforts and more.

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6 comments:

  1. NO such thing as a moderate muslim read the koran.

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  2. Moderate Muslims are a lame Stream Media creation. They are in reality potential terrorists in training as they read their book of hate and worship their god of murder.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. And why they are out breeding everyone 8/1.

      Delete
  3. "Moderate" Islam is like being "slightly" pregnant. It just does not exist.

    ReplyDelete
  4. dittos 3:23, 3:36 and 3:50...

    ReplyDelete

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