-The Bangladesh terror attack gives the lie to the befuddling assertion that terror knows no religion. Of course it does.
-Wahhabism has now become the dominant strand of Islam around the world. To deny this is to live in a fool’s paradise.
-Terror has a name, and it is Wahhabi Islam.
Jaideep Mazumdar is a journalist with many years of experience in The Times Of India, Open, The Outlook, The Hindustan Times, The Pioneer and some other news organizations. He has reported on politics, society and many other subjects from North, East and North East India as well as Nepal and Bangladesh.
Courtesy: Swarajya
-Wahhabism has now become the dominant strand of Islam around the world. To deny this is to live in a fool’s paradise.
-Terror has a name, and it is Wahhabi Islam.
The common refrain of most people, including Indian politicians, who condemned Friday evening’s attack on an upscale cafe in Dhaka’s tony Gulshan neighbourhood was that terror does not have any religion.
Behind
this refrain lies a very convoluted logic: that acute poverty,
unemployment and lack of development drives Muslims to become
terrorists. But the revelation
that all but one of the perpetrators of the terror attack in Dhaka were
from well-to-do families and were schooled in Dhaka’s elite
institutions exposes the vacuousness of this veiled justification of
Islamic terrorism.
And, also, it gives the lie to the befuddling
assertion that terror knows no religion. Of course it does, because the
young Bangladeshi men carried out the attack in the name of, and for
they believed was the cause of, Islam.
The attackers, while
entering the cafe and indulging in the senseless violence, shouted
“Allahu-Akbar” (God is great). They separated the Muslims from
non-Muslims and spared those who could quote or recite verses from the
Quran. Some of them posted radical and intolerant statements in social
media calling for jihad against the Sheikh Hasina government and the
establishment of a caliphate in Bangladesh. They all believed in the
ultimate goal of Islam: to make the entire world an Islamic state by all
means, including violence.
Islam, it is said, is a religion of peace and love. But the dominant strand of Islam is Wahhabism that
is fuelled by petro-dollars at the hands of the Saudis. This
ultra-conservative, puritanical and fundamentalist brand of Islam is
finding an increasing number of takers around the world and is the
biggest threat to peace, democracy and freedom in the world today.
Wahhabism,
which roots for beheading of infidels or kafirs, and recommends
barbaric punishments like stoning to death for adultery and chopping off
hands for theft, has been propagated around the world since the 1970s
by the House of Saud, the ruling royal family of Saudi Arabia, a country where barbaric punishments, including beheadings, are meted out, where women face weird restrictions (including buying a Barbie doll!), where religious minorities and sexual minorities face severe discrimination and whose human rights record is one of the worst in the world.
The
Saudis have been propagating their extreme form of Islam for the past
four-and-half decades and have been funding madrasahs, mosques and
Islamic seminaries in many countries of the world, including Bangladesh
and India. Wahhabi clerics funded by Saudi Arabia have been preaching
hatred, intolerance and violence around the world. And Wahhabism has now
become the dominant strand of Islam. To deny this would amount to
living in a fool’s paradise.
It is counter-productive and,
indeed, suicidal, for the world to be squeamish about pronouncing loudly
that Wahhabism, or Salafism as many would term this disgusting form of
Islam, is the gravest threat to the world today and needs to be
defeated.
Wahhabism is the fount of all Islamic terror groups, including the Al Qaeda, the Islamic State,
and myriad Islamic terror groups in Pakistan, India, Bangladesh and
around the world. Terror has a name, and it is Wahhabi Islam. And
Wahhabi Islam is finding an increasing number of followers across the
world, including India where Saudis are pumping in billions of rupees to set up Wahhabi mosques, seminaries and universities.
There is a rich body of evidence on increasing radicalisation of Indian Muslims, and many Muslim publications, including this article in the widely respected The Muslim Times,
have sounded alarms over this. But Indian politicians continue to
ignore the grave threat of Wahhabi Islam and mouth meaningless
platitudes about Islam being a religion of peace and love. To their
assertion that “no religion preaches terror”, the resounding answer
ought to be: “YES, WAHHABI ISLAM PREACHES TERROR”.
But the
so-called secular cabal would bristle with indignant rage and point out
that members of many terror groups around the world belonged to other
religions as well. Yes, members of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) were Hindus, and members of the Irish Republican Army
(IRA) were Catholics, but neither the LTTE or the IRA indulged in
terror acts in the name of Hinduism or Christianity. Their aims were not
to spread Hinduism or Christianity around the world, and they did not
kill infidels.
Tibetans have, for long, been struggling for
sovereignty and many Buddhists there have carried out individual terror
attacks on the Chinese. But they haven’t done so in the name of
religion. No non-Muslim terror group or individual terrorist claims to
commit terror acts in the name of religion, only Islamic ones do.
And
all these Islamic terror groups, save the ones funded by the Shia
regime in Iran and Shia organisations in some other countries (but there
is an essential difference between Shia and Sunni terror groups, the
primary being that Shia terror groups operate in only a couple of Muslim
countries and don’t have the agenda of spreading Shia Islam around the
world or killing infidels), are Wahhabi terror groups. It is high time
India, and the world, realises this, condemns Wahhabism unequivocally
and takes steps to root out this form of Islam.
By Jaideep Mazumdar
Jaideep Mazumdar is a journalist with many years of experience in The Times Of India, Open, The Outlook, The Hindustan Times, The Pioneer and some other news organizations. He has reported on politics, society and many other subjects from North, East and North East India as well as Nepal and Bangladesh.
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