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I Had Not Gone Shopping for a New Religion by Michael Wolfe (American Writer :
PBS Channels)
After twenty-five years a writer in America, I wanted something to soften my
cynicism. I was searching for new terms by which to see. The way one is raised
establishes certain needs in this department. From a pluralist background, I
naturally placed great stress on the matters of racism and freedom. Then, in my
early twenties, I had gone to live in Africa for three years. During this time,
which was formative for me, I did rubbed shoulders with blacks of many different
tribes, with Arabs, Berbers, and even Europeans, who were Muslims. By and large
these people did not share the Western obsession with race as a social category.
In our encounters being oddly coloured rarely mattered. I was welcomed first and
judged on merit later. By contrast, Europeans and Americans, including many who
are free of racist notions, automatically class people racially. Muslims
classified people by their faith and their actions. I found this transcendent
and refreshing. Malcolm X saw his nation’s salvation in it. “America needs to
understand Islam,” he wrote, “because this is the one religion that erases from
its society the race problem”.
I was looking for an escape route, too, from the isolating terms of a
materialistic culture. I wanted access to a spiritual dimension, but the
conventional paths I had known as a boy were closed. My father had been a Jew;
my mother Christian. Because of my mongrel background, I had a foot in two
religious camps. Both faiths were undoubtedly profound. Yet the one that
emphasizes a chosen people I found insupportable; while the other, based in a
mystery, repelled me. A century before, my maternal great-great-grandmother’s
name had been set in stained glass at the high street Church of Christ in
Hamilton, Ohio. By the time I was twenty, this meant nothing to me.
These were the terms my early life provided. The more I thought about it now,
the more I returned to my experiences in Muslim Africa. After two return trips
to Morocco, in 1981 and 1985, I came to feel that Africa, the continent, had
little to do with the balanced life I found there. It was not, that is, a
continent I was after, nor an institution, either. I was looking for a framework
I could live with, a vocabulary of spiritual concepts applicable to the life I
was living now. I did not want to “trade in” my culture. I wanted access to new
meanings.
After a mid-Atlantic dinner I went to wash up in the bathroom. During my absence
a quorum of Hasidim lined up to pray outside the door. By the time I had
finished, they were too immersed to notice me. Emerging from the bathroom, I
could barely work the handle. Stepping into the aisle was out of the question.
I could only stand with my head thrust into the hallway, staring at the
congregation’s backs. Holding palm-size prayer books, they cut an impressive
figure, tapping the texts on their breastbones as they divined. Little by little
the movements grew erratic, like a mild, bobbing form of rock and roll. I
watched from the bathroom door until they were finished, then slipped back down
the aisle to my seat.
We landed together later that night in Brussels. Reboarding, I found a discarded
Yiddish newspaper on a food tray. When the plane took off for Morocco, they were
gone.
I do not mean to imply here that my life during this period conformed to any
grand design. In the beginning, around 1981, I was driven by curiosity and an
appetite for travel. My favorite place to go, when I had the money, was
Morocco. When I could not travel, there were books. This fascination brought me
into contact with a handful of writers driven to the exotic, authors capable of
sentences like this, by Freya Stark:
The perpetual charm of Arabia is that the traveler finds his level there simply
as a human being; the people’s directness, deadly to the sentimental or the
pedantic, like the less complicated virtues; and the pleasantness of being liked
for oneself might, I think, be added to the five reasons for travel given me by
Sayyid Abdulla, the watchmaker; “to leave one’s troubles behind one; to earn a
living; to acquire learning; to practice good manners; and to meet honorable
men”.
I could not have drawn up a list of demands, but I had a fair idea of what I was
after. The religion I wanted should be to metaphysics as metaphysics is to
science. It would not be confined by a narrow rationalism or traffic in mystery
to please its priests. There would be no priests, no separation between nature
and things sacred. There would be no war with the flesh, if I could help it. Sex
would be natural, not the seat of a curse upon the species. Finally, I did want
a ritual component, daily routine to sharpen the senses and discipline my mind.
Above all, I wanted clarity and freedom. I did not want to trade away reason
simply to be saddled with a dogma.
The more I learned about Islam, the more it appeared to conform to what I was
after.
Most of the educated Westerners I knew around this time regarded any strong
religious climate with suspicion. They classified religion as political
manipulation, or they dismissed it as a medieval concept, projecting upon it
notions from their European past.
It was not hard to find a source for their opinions. A thousand years of Western
history had left us plenty of fine reasons to regret a path that led through so
much ignorance and slaughter. From the Children’s Crusade and the Inquisition to
the transmogrified faiths of Nazism and communism during our century, whole
countries have been exhausted by belief. Nietzsche’s fear, that the modern
nation-state would become a substitute religion, have proved tragically
accurate. Our century, it seemed to me, was ending in an age beyond belief,
which believers inhabited as much as agnostics.
Regardless of church affiliation, secular humanism is the air westerners
breathe, the lens we gaze through. Like any world view, this outlook is
pervasive and transparent. It forms the basis of our broad identification with
democracy and with the pursuit of freedom in all its countless and beguiling
forms. Immersed in our shared preoccupations, one may easily forget that other
ways of life exist on the same planet.
At the time of my trip, for instance, 650 million Muslims with a majority
representation in forty-four countries adhered to the formal teachings of Islam.
In addition, about 400 million more were living as minorities in Europe, Asia
and the Americas. Assisted by postcolonial economics, Islam has become in a
matter of thirty years a major faith in Western Europe. Of the world’s great
religions, Islam alone was adding to its fold.
My politicized friends were dismayed by my new interest. They all but
universally confused Islam with the machinations of half a dozen middle eastern
tyrants. The books they read, the new broadcasts they viewed depicted the faith
as a set of political functions. Almost nothing was said of its spiritual
practice. I liked to quote Mae West to them: “Anytime you take religion for a
joke, the laugh’s on you”.
Historically a Muslim sees Islam as the final, matured expression of an original
religion reaching back to Adam. It is as resolutely monotheistic as Judaism,
whose major Prophets Islam reveres as links in a progressive chain, culminating
in Jesus and Muhammad. Essentially a message of renewal, Islam has done its part
on the world stage to return the forgotten taste of life’s lost sweetness to
millions of people. Its book, the Qur’an, caused Goethe to remark, “You see,
this teaching never fails; with all our systems, we cannot go, and generally
speaking no man can go, further”.
Traditional Islam is expressed through the practice of five pillars. Declaring
one’s faith, prayer, charity, and fasting are activities pursued repeatedly
throughout one’s life. Conditions permitting, each Muslim is additionally
charged with undertaking a pilgrimage to Mecca once in a lifetime. The Arabic
term for this fifth rite is Hadj. Scholars relate the word to the concept of
kasd, “aspiration,” and to the notion of men and women as travelers on earth.
In Western religions pilgrimage is a vestigial tradition, a quaint, folkloric
concept commonly reduced to metaphor. Among Muslims, on the other hand, the Hadj
embodies a vital experience for millions of new pilgrims every year. In spite of
the modern content of their lives, it remains an act of obedience, a profession
of belief, and the visible expression of a spiritual community. For a majority
of Muslims the Hadj is an ultimate goal, the trip of a lifetime.
As a convert I felt obliged to go to Makkah. As an addict to travel I could not
imagine a more compelling goal.
The annual, month-long fast of Ramadan precedes the Hadj by about one hundred
days. These two rites form a period of intensified awareness in Muslim society.
I wanted to put this period to use. I had read about Islam; I had joined a
Mosque near my home in California; I had started a practice. Now I hoped to
deepen what I was learning by submerging myself in a religion where Islam
infuses every aspect of existence.
I planned to begin in Morocco, because I knew that country well and because it
followed traditional Islam and was fairly stable. The last place I wanted to
start was in a backwater full of uproarious sectarians. I wanted to paddle the
mainstream, the broad, calm water.
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Copyright © 2003 |