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                <text>Madison Area Peace Coalition E-mails</text>
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                <text>The Madison Area Peace Coalition (MAPC) formed fourteen days after the September 11 attacks to oppose (among other goals) the use of U.S. military, economic, or political force – whether direct or proxy, overt or covert -- "that violates the sovereignty or human rights of any nation or people." The Archive has assembled here e-mails exchanges from MAPC dating from the group's founding until late November 2001.</text>
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            <text> This article from NYTimes.com
 has been sent to you by x


 hi there special ones,

 i don't know if you all had a chance to read the sunday times-- so i'm
 e-mailing this article-- please pass it on to people if you think they might
 be interested.

xxoo
- x


 
 This Is a Religious War

 October 7, 2001

 By ANDREW SULLIVAN




 Perhaps the most admirable part of the response to the
 conflict that began on Sept. 11 has been a general
 reluctance to call it a religious war. Officials and
 commentators have rightly stressed that this is not a
 battle between the Muslim world and the West, that the
 murderers are not representative of Islam. President Bush
 went to the Islamic Center in Washington to reinforce the
 point. At prayer meetings across the United States and
 throughout the world, Muslim leaders have been included
 alongside Christians, Jews and Buddhists.

 The only problem with this otherwise laudable effort is
 that it doesn't hold up under inspection. The religious
 dimension of this conflict is central to its meaning. The
 words of Osama bin Laden are saturated with religious
 argument and theological language. Whatever else the
 Taliban regime is in Afghanistan, it is fanatically
 religious. Although some Muslim leaders have criticized the
 terrorists, and even Saudi Arabia's rulers have distanced
 themselves from the militants, other Muslims in the Middle
 East and elsewhere have not denounced these acts, have been
 conspicuously silent or have indeed celebrated them. The
 terrorists' strain of Islam is clearly not shared by most
 Muslims and is deeply unrepresentative of Islam's glorious,
 civilized and peaceful past. But it surely represents a
 part of Islam -- a radical, fundamentalist part -- that
 simply cannot be ignored or denied.

 In that sense, this surely is a religious war -- but not of
 Islam versus Christianity and Judaism. Rather, it is a war
 of fundamentalism against faiths of all kinds that are at
 peace with freedom and modernity. This war even has far
 gentler echoes in America's own religious conflicts --
 between newer, more virulent strands of Christian
 fundamentalism and mainstream Protestantism and
 Catholicism. These conflicts have ancient roots, but they
 seem to be gaining new force as modernity spreads and
 deepens. They are our new wars of religion -- and their
 victims are in all likelihood going to mount with each
 passing year.

 Osama bin Laden himself couldn't be clearer about the
 religious underpinnings of his campaign of terror. In 1998,
 he told his followers, ''The call to wage war against
 America was made because America has spearheaded the
 crusade against the Islamic nation, sending tens of
 thousands of its troops to the land of the two holy mosques
 over and above its meddling in its affairs and its politics
 and its support of the oppressive, corrupt and tyrannical
 regime that is in control.'' Notice the use of the word
 ''crusade,'' an explicitly religious term, and one that
 simply ignores the fact that the last few major American
 interventions abroad -- in Kuwait, Somalia and the Balkans
 -- were all conducted in defense of Muslims.

 Notice also that as bin Laden understands it, the
 ''crusade'' America is alleged to be leading is not against
 Arabs but against the Islamic nation, which spans many
 ethnicities. This nation knows no nation-states as they
 actually exist in the region -- which is why this form of
 Islamic fundamentalism is also so worrying to the rulers of
 many Middle Eastern states. Notice also that bin Laden's
 beef is with American troops defiling the land of Saudi
 Arabia -- the land of the two holy mosques,'' in Mecca and
 Medina. In 1998, he also told followers that his terrorism
 was ''of the commendable kind, for it is directed at the
 tyrants and the aggressors and the enemies of Allah.'' He
 has a litany of grievances against Israel as well, but his
 concerns are not primarily territorial or procedural. ''Our
 religion is under attack,'' he said baldly. The attackers
 are Christians and Jews. When asked to sum up his message
 to the people of the West, bin Laden couldn't have been
 clearer: ''Our call is the call of Islam that was revealed
 to Muhammad. It is a call to all mankind. We have been
 entrusted with good cause to follow in the footsteps of the
 messenger and to communicate his message to all nations.''

 This is a religious war against ''unbelief and
 unbelievers,'' in bin Laden's words. Are these cynical
 words designed merely to use Islam for nefarious ends? We
 cannot know the precise motives of bin Laden, but we can
 know that he would not use these words if he did not think
 they had salience among the people he wishes to inspire and
 provoke. This form of Islam is not restricted to bin Laden
 alone.

 Its roots lie in an extreme and violent strain in Islam
 that emerged in the 18th century in opposition to what was
 seen by some Muslims as Ottoman decadence but has gained
 greater strength in the 20th. For the past two decades,
 this form of Islamic fundamentalism has racked the Middle
 East. It has targeted almost every regime in the region
 and, as it failed to make progress, has extended its
 hostility into the West. From the assassination of Anwar
 Sadat to the fatwa against Salman Rushdie to the decadelong
 campaign of bin Laden to the destruction of ancient
 Buddhist statues and the hideous persecution of women and
 homosexuals by the Taliban to the World Trade Center
 massacre, there is a single line. That line is a
 fundamentalist, religious one. And it is an Islamic one.

 Most interpreters of the Koran find no arguments in it for
 the murder of innocents. But it would be naive to ignore in
 Islam a deep thread of intolerance toward unbelievers,
 especially if those unbelievers are believed to be a threat
 to the Islamic world. There are many passages in the Koran
 urging mercy toward others, tolerance, respect for life and
 so on. But there are also passages as violent as this:
 ''And when the sacred months are passed, kill those who
 join other gods with God wherever ye shall find them; and
 seize them, besiege them, and lay wait for them with every
 kind of ambush.'' And this: ''Believers! Wage war against
 such of the infidels as are your neighbors, and let them
 find you rigorous.'' Bernard Lewis, the great scholar of
 Islam, writes of the dissonance within Islam: ''There is
 something in the religious culture of Islam which inspired,
 in even the humblest peasant or peddler, a dignity and a
 courtesy toward others never exceeded and rarely equaled in
 other civilizations. And yet, in moments of upheaval and
 disruption, when the deeper passions are stirred, this
 dignity and courtesy toward others can give way to an
 explosive mixture of rage and hatred which impels even the
 government of an ancient and civilized country -- even the
 spokesman of a great spiritual and ethical religion -- to
 espouse kidnapping and assassination, and try to find, in
 the life of their prophet, approval and indeed precedent
 for such actions.'' Since Muhammad was, unlike many other
 religious leaders, not simply a sage or a prophet but a
 ruler in his own right, this exploitation of his politics
 is not as great a stretch as some would argue.

 This use of religion for extreme repression, and even
 terror, is not of course restricted to Islam. For most of
 its history, Christianity has had a worse record. From the
 Crusades to the Inquisition to the bloody religious wars of
 the 16th and 17th centuries, Europe saw far more blood
 spilled for religion's sake than the Muslim world did. And
 given how expressly nonviolent the teachings of the Gospels
 are, the perversion of Christianity in this respect was
 arguably greater than bin Laden's selective use of Islam.
 But it is there nonetheless. It seems almost as if there is
 something inherent in religious monotheism that lends
 itself to this kind of terrorist temptation. And our bland
 attempts to ignore this -- to speak of this violence as if
 it did not have religious roots -- is some kind of denial.
 We don't want to denigrate religion as such, and so we deny
 that religion is at the heart of this. But we would
 understand this conflict better, perhaps, if we first
 acknowledged that religion is responsible in some way, and
 then figured out how and why.

 The first mistake is surely to condescend to
 fundamentalism. We may disagree with it, but it has
 attracted millions of adherents for centuries, and for a
 good reason. It elevates and comforts. It provides a sense
 of meaning and direction to those lost in a disorienting
 world. The blind recourse to texts embraced as literal
 truth, the injunction to follow the commandments of God
 before anything else, the subjugation of reason and
 judgment and even conscience to the dictates of dogma:
 these can be exhilarating and transformative. They have led
 human beings to perform extraordinary acts of both good and
 evil. And they have an internal logic to them. If you
 believe that there is an eternal afterlife and that endless
 indescribable torture awaits those who disobey God's law,
 then it requires no huge stretch of imagination to make
 sure that you not only conform to each diktat but that you
 also encourage and, if necessary, coerce others to do the
 same. The logic behind this is impeccable. Sin begets sin.
 The sin of others can corrupt you as well. The only
 solution is to construct a world in which such sin is
 outlawed and punished and constantly purged -- by force if
 necessary. It is not crazy to act this way if you believe
 these things strongly enough. In some ways, it's crazier to
 believe these things and not act this way.

 In a world of absolute truth, in matters graver than life
 and death, there is no room for dissent and no room for
 theological doubt. Hence the reliance on literal
 interpretations of texts -- because interpretation can lead
 to error, and error can lead to damnation. Hence also the
 ancient Catholic insistence on absolute church authority.
 Without infallibility, there can be no guarantee of truth.
 Without such a guarantee, confusion can lead to hell.

 Dostoyevsky's Grand Inquisitor makes the case perhaps as
 well as anyone. In the story told by Ivan Karamazov in
 ''The Brothers Karamazov,'' Jesus returns to earth during
 the Spanish Inquisition. On a day when hundreds have been
 burned at the stake for heresy, Jesus performs miracles.
 Alarmed, the Inquisitor arrests Jesus and imprisons him
 with the intent of burning him at the stake as well. What
 follows is a conversation between the Inquisitor and Jesus.
 Except it isn't a conversation because Jesus says nothing.
 It is really a dialogue between two modes of religion, an
 exploration of the tension between the extraordinary,
 transcendent claims of religion and human beings' inability
 to live up to them, or even fully believe them.

 According to the Inquisitor, Jesus' crime was revealing
 that salvation was possible but still allowing humans the
 freedom to refuse it. And this, to the Inquisitor, was a
 form of cruelty. When the truth involves the most important
 things imaginable -- the meaning of life, the fate of one's
 eternal soul, the difference between good and evil -- it is
 not enough to premise it on the capacity of human choice.
 That is too great a burden. Choice leads to unbelief or
 distraction or negligence or despair. What human beings
 really need is the certainty of truth, and they need to see
 it reflected in everything around them -- in the cultures
 in which they live, enveloping them in a seamless fabric of
 faith that helps them resist the terror of choice and the
 abyss of unbelief. This need is what the Inquisitor calls
 the ''fundamental secret of human nature.'' He explains:
 ''These pitiful creatures are concerned not only to find
 what one or the other can worship, but to find something
 that all would believe in and worship; what is essential is
 that all may be together in it. This craving for community
 of worship is the chief misery of every man individually
 and of all humanity since the beginning of time.''

 This is the voice of fundamentalism. Faith cannot exist
 alone in a single person. Indeed, faith needs others for it
 to survive -- and the more complete the culture of faith,
 the wider it is, and the more total its infiltration of the
 world, the better. It is hard for us to wrap our minds
 around this today, but it is quite clear from the accounts
 of the Inquisition and, indeed, of the religious wars that
 continued to rage in Europe for nearly three centuries,
 that many of the fanatics who burned human beings at the
 stake were acting out of what they genuinely thought were
 the best interests of the victims. With the power of the
 state, they used fire, as opposed to simple execution,
 because it was thought to be spiritually cleansing. A few
 minutes of hideous torture on earth were deemed a small
 price to pay for helping such souls avoid eternal torture
 in the afterlife. Moreover, the example of such
 government-sponsored executions helped create a culture in
 which certain truths were reinforced and in which it was
 easier for more weak people to find faith. The burden of
 this duty to uphold the faith lay on the men required to
 torture, persecute and murder the unfaithful. And many of
 them believed, as no doubt some Islamic fundamentalists
 believe, that they were acting out of mercy and godliness.

 This is the authentic voice of the Taliban. It also finds
 itself replicated in secular form. What, after all, were
 the totalitarian societies of Nazi Germany or Soviet Russia
 if not an exact replica of this kind of fusion of politics
 and ultimate meaning? Under Lenin's and Stalin's rules, the
 imminence of salvation through revolutionary consciousness
 was in perpetual danger of being undermined by those too
 weak to have faith -- the bourgeois or the kulaks or the
 intellectuals. So they had to be liquidated or purged.
 Similarly, it is easy for us to dismiss the Nazis as evil,
 as they surely were. It is harder for us to understand that
 in some twisted fashion, they truly believed that they were
 creating a new dawn for humanity, a place where all the
 doubts that freedom brings could be dispelled in a rapture
 of racial purity and destiny. Hence the destruction of all
 dissidents and the Jews -- carried out by fire as the
 Inquisitors had before, an act of purification different
 merely in its scale, efficiency and Godlessness.

 Perhaps the most important thing for us to realize today is
 that the defeat of each of these fundamentalisms required a
 long and arduous effort. The conflict with Islamic
 fundamentalism is likely to take as long. For unlike
 Europe's religious wars, which taught Christians the
 futility of fighting to the death over something beyond
 human understanding and so immune to any definitive
 resolution, there has been no such educative conflict in
 the Muslim world. Only Iran and Afghanistan have
 experienced the full horror of revolutionary
 fundamentalism, and only Iran has so far seen reason to
 moderate to some extent. From everything we see, the
 lessons Europe learned in its bloody history have yet to be
 absorbed within the Muslim world. There, as in 16th-century
 Europe, the promise of purity and salvation seems far more
 enticing than the mundane allure of mere peace. That means
 that we are not at the end of this conflict but in its very
 early stages.

 America is not a neophyte in this struggle. the United
 States has seen several waves of religious fervor since its
 founding. But American evangelicalism has always kept its
 distance from governmental power. The Christian separation
 between what is God's and what is Caesar's -- drawn from
 the Gospels -- helped restrain the fundamentalist
 temptation. The last few decades have proved an exception,
 however. As modernity advanced, and the certitudes of
 fundamentalist faith seemed mocked by an increasingly
 liberal society, evangelicals mobilized and entered
 politics. Their faith sharpened, their zeal intensified,
 the temptation to fuse political and religious authority
 beckoned more insistently.

 Mercifully, violence has not been a significant feature of
 this trend -- but it has not been absent. The murders of
 abortion providers show what such zeal can lead to. And
 indeed, if people truly believe that abortion is the same
 as mass murder, then you can see the awful logic of the
 terrorism it has spawned. This is the same logic as bin
 Laden's. If faith is that strong, and it dictates a choice
 between action or eternal damnation, then violence can
 easily be justified. In retrospect, we should be amazed not
 that violence has occurred -- but that it hasn't occurred
 more often.

 The critical link between Western and Middle Eastern
 fundamentalism is surely the pace of social change. If you
 take your beliefs from books written more than a thousand
 years ago, and you believe in these texts literally, then
 the appearance of the modern world must truly terrify. If
 you believe that women should be consigned to polygamous,
 concealed servitude, then Manhattan must appear like
 Gomorrah. If you believe that homosexuality is a crime
 punishable by death, as both fundamentalist Islam and the
 Bible dictate, then a world of same-sex marriage is surely
 Sodom. It is not a big step to argue that such centers of
 evil should be destroyed or undermined, as bin Laden does,
 or to believe that their destruction is somehow a
 consequence of their sin, as Jerry Falwell argued. Look
 again at Falwell's now infamous words in the wake of Sept.
 11: ''I really believe that the pagans, and the
 abortionists, and the feminists, and the gays and lesbians
 who are actively trying to make that an alternative
 lifestyle, the A.C.L.U., People for the American Way -- all
 of them who have tried to secularize America -- I point the
 finger in their face and say, 'You helped this happen.'''

 And why wouldn't he believe that? He has subsequently
 apologized for the insensitivity of the remark but not for
 its theological underpinning. He cannot repudiate the
 theology -- because it is the essence of what he believes
 in and must believe in for his faith to remain alive.

 The other critical aspect of this kind of faith is
 insecurity. American fundamentalists know they are losing
 the culture war. They are terrified of failure and of the
 Godless world they believe is about to engulf or crush
 them. They speak and think defensively. They talk about
 renewal, but in their private discourse they expect
 damnation for an America that has lost sight of the
 fundamentalist notion of God.

 Similarly, Muslims know that the era of Islam's imperial
 triumph has long since gone. For many centuries, the
 civilization of Islam was the center of the world. It
 eclipsed Europe in the Dark Ages, fostered great learning
 and expanded territorially well into Europe and Asia. But
 it has all been downhill from there. From the collapse of
 the Ottoman Empire onward, it has been on the losing side
 of history. The response to this has been an intermittent
 flirtation with Westernization but far more emphatically a
 reaffirmation of the most irredentist and extreme forms of
 the culture under threat. Hence the odd phenomenon of
 Islamic extremism beginning in earnest only in the last 200
 years.

 With Islam, this has worse implications than for other
 cultures that have had rises and falls. For Islam's
 religious tolerance has always been premised on its own
 power. It was tolerant when it controlled the territory and
 called the shots. When it lost territory and saw itself
 eclipsed by the West in power and civilization, tolerance
 evaporated. To cite Lewis again on Islam: ''What is truly
 evil and unacceptable is the domination of infidels over
 true believers. For true believers to rule misbelievers is
 proper and natural, since this provides for the maintenance
 of the holy law and gives the misbelievers both the
 opportunity and the incentive to embrace the true faith.
 But for misbelievers to rule over true believers is
 blasphemous and unnatural, since it leads to the corruption
 of religion and morality in society and to the flouting or
 even the abrogation of God's law.''

 Thus the horror at the establishment of the State of
 Israel, an infidel country in Muslim lands, a bitter
 reminder of the eclipse of Islam in the modern world. Thus
 also the revulsion at American bases in Saudi Arabia. While
 colonialism of different degrees is merely political
 oppression for some cultures, for Islam it was far worse.
 It was blasphemy that had to be avenged and countered.

 I cannot help thinking of this defensiveness when I read
 stories of the suicide bombers sitting poolside in Florida
 or racking up a $48 vodka tab in an American restaurant. We
 tend to think that this assimilation into the West might
 bring Islamic fundamentalists around somewhat, temper their
 zeal. But in fact, the opposite is the case. The temptation
 of American and Western culture -- indeed, the very allure
 of such culture -- may well require a repression all the
 more brutal if it is to be overcome. The transmission of
 American culture into the heart of what bin Laden calls the
 Islamic nation requires only two responses -- capitulation
 to unbelief or a radical strike against it. There is little
 room in the fundamentalist psyche for a moderate
 accommodation. The very psychological dynamics that lead
 repressed homosexuals to be viciously homophobic or that
 entice sexually tempted preachers to inveigh against
 immorality are the very dynamics that lead vodka-drinking
 fundamentalists to steer planes into buildings. It is not
 designed to achieve anything, construct anything, argue
 anything. It is a violent acting out of internal conflict.

 And America is the perfect arena for such acting out. For
 the question of religious fundamentalism was not only
 familiar to the founding fathers. In many ways, it was the
 central question that led to America's existence. The first
 American immigrants, after all, were refugees from the
 religious wars that engulfed England and that intensified
 under England's Taliban, Oliver Cromwell. One central
 influence on the founders' political thought was John
 Locke, the English liberal who wrote the now famous
 ''Letter on Toleration.'' In it, Locke argued that true
 salvation could not be a result of coercion, that faith had
 to be freely chosen to be genuine and that any other
 interpretation was counter to the Gospels. Following Locke,
 the founders established as a central element of the new
 American order a stark separation of church and state,
 ensuring that no single religion could use political means
 to enforce its own orthodoxies.

 We cite this as a platitude today without absorbing or even
 realizing its radical nature in human history -- and the
 deep human predicament it was designed to solve. It was an
 attempt to answer the eternal human question of how to
 pursue the goal of religious salvation for ourselves and
 others and yet also maintain civil peace. What the founders
 and Locke were saying was that the ultimate claims of
 religion should simply not be allowed to interfere with
 political and religious freedom. They did this to preserve
 peace above all -- but also to preserve true religion
 itself.

 The security against an American Taliban is therefore
 relatively simple: it's the Constitution. And the
 surprising consequence of this separation is not that it
 led to a collapse of religious faith in America -- as weak
 human beings found themselves unable to believe without
 social and political reinforcement -- but that it led to
 one of the most vibrantly religious civil societies on
 earth. No other country has achieved this. And it is this
 achievement that the Taliban and bin Laden have now decided
 to challenge. It is a living, tangible rebuke to everything
 they believe in.

 That is why this coming conflict is indeed as momentous and
 as grave as the last major conflicts, against Nazism and
 Communism, and why it is not hyperbole to see it in these
 epic terms. What is at stake is yet another battle against
 a religion that is succumbing to the temptation Jesus
 refused in the desert -- to rule by force. The difference
 is that this conflict is against a more formidable enemy
 than Nazism or Communism. The secular totalitarianisms of
 the 20th century were, in President Bush's memorable words,
 ''discarded lies.'' They were fundamentalisms built on the
 very weak intellectual conceits of a master race and a
 Communist revolution.

 But Islamic fundamentalism is based on a glorious
 civilization and a great faith. It can harness and co-opt
 and corrupt true and good believers if it has a propitious
 and toxic enough environment. It has a more powerful logic
 than either Stalin's or Hitler's Godless ideology, and it
 can serve as a focal point for all the other societies in
 the world, whose resentment of Western success and
 civilization comes more easily than the arduous task of
 accommodation to modernity. We have to somehow defeat this
 without defeating or even opposing a great religion that is
 nonetheless extremely inexperienced in the toleration of
 other ascendant and more powerful faiths. It is hard to
 underestimate the extreme delicacy and difficulty of this
 task.

 In this sense, the symbol of this conflict should not be
 Old Glory, however stirring it is. What is really at issue
 here is the simple but immensely difficult principle of the
 separation of politics and religion. We are fighting not
 for our country as such or for our flag. We are fighting
 for the universal principles of our Constitution -- and the
 possibility of free religious faith it guarantees. We are
 fighting for religion against one of the deepest strains in
 religion there is. And not only our lives but our souls are
 at stake.

 Andrew Sullivan is a contributing writer for the
 magazine.

 http://www.nytimes.com/2001/10/07/magazine/07RELIGION.html?ex=1003644909&amp;ei=1&amp;
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              <text>email</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="59">
          <name>Created by Author</name>
          <description>Whether the author created this item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="11027">
              <text>yes</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="60">
          <name>Described by Author</name>
          <description>Whether the description of this item was submitted by the author.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="11028">
              <text>no</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="61">
          <name>Date Entered</name>
          <description>The date this item was entered into the archive.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="11029">
              <text>1969-12-31</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
