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Towards a Sufi
Anarch:
The
Role of Islamic Mysticism
Against Modernist Decay

By Sean Jobst
9-21-10
Islam is
the world’s fastest growing faith, spreading even into regions where
it had not been very widespread before. This has become cause of
alarm for certain individuals and organizations with a certain
political agenda. The foremost mistake they make is to view Islam
monolithically, rather than recognizing its inherent diversity.
Islam is not one-dimensional, but multi-dimensional.
This spread
of Islam is partly due to the arrival of Muslim immigrants into the
West, however this immigration is due primarily to economic factors
and beyond the scope of this current article. But another factor is
that increasing number of Westerners are adopting Islam as their
faith, including the current author. What made a former Catholic of
Swabian German, Castilian Spanish, and Flemish descent adopt Islam
and become a Sufi? The true question is whether Islam is compatible
with Indo-European tribal and cultural traditions, and what it means
to the struggle against the dominant consumerist debt-ridden social
order.
Islam
cannot be understood without examining the Qur’an, which Muslims
believe to be nothing less than the revealed Word of Allah, an
Arabic word for the Creator which is translated as “the God.” All
creation was created for a purpose (44:36-39), which is to worship
the Creator (56:60). We were created with the same origin, but were
made into tribes and nations so we may come to know each other
(49:13). Hence, the spiritual foundations of human nature remain the
same and the distinct cultures, races, and languages are expressions
of the Divine Will.
The various
world spiritual traditions are outer manifestations of an inner
primordial faith that is actually instinctive to human beings
through the din al-fitra, or the way of natural disposition. It is
an innate spiritual nature coming from the Creator (32:5-8). This
creative process was expressed in a primordial event called the
Covenant of Alast, described in the Qur’an (7:172).
Our souls –
and it is essential here to recognize we are essentially spiritual
beings with a human experience, and Sufis describe their struggle as
one to suppress the nafs, the self or the ego, and raise the ruh, or
the soul – were assembled before the presence of the Creator. We
were asked to testify that He is indeed our Lord, Who is the One
deserving of worship. The result of this is a Sacred Trust, or
Amana, of natural laws to govern ourselves (33:72).
As time
passed human beings became ungrateful and strayed from their
primordial origin. So to call them back to this origin, every nation
or tribe was sent a prophet (10:47, 14:4, 16:36), some were
mentioned by name while others were not (40:77). Their exact number
is unknown, but one popular tradition of the Prophet Muhammad (peace
be upon him) identifies it as 124,000.
The central
message of all these prophets was the same (21:91), based as it was
on worship of the One Creator. Yet only their specific paths were
distinct, each adapted to reflect the distinct cultural traditions
of their people. The well-known Sufi Junayd al-Baghdadi explains it
as “water takes on the colour of the container.” Any differences
were relatively minor ones, as they each shared the reality of the
Divine Unity.
“The
Islamic doctrine is formal on the point that all the Divine
Messengers have brought essentially the same message and that all
the traditions are in essence one,” writes the Romanian
traditionalist and Sufi Michel Valsan. “As regards the Islamic form
of the tradition this is in any case originally and essentially
based on the doctrine of Supreme Identity.” (1)
At the core
of Islamic doctrine is this distinction between Islam as the final
revealed form which is bounded within time and place, and the
“islam” as the din al-fitra which is instinctive to us and hence
beyond constraints of time and place (22:76, 30:29). Divine Unity
has remained constant, even while the different expressions have
altered. For this Divine Unity is unique and real, while all else is
essentially an illusion except what is known to us via the
revelations or intellect – and that is limited to human nature.
“The proper
meaning of the word Islam is ‘submission to the Divine Will,’”
writes the French traditionalist and Muslim René Guénon, “Hence it
is said, in certain esoteric teachings, that every being is Muslim,
in the sense that there is clearly none who can elude that Will, and
accordingly each necessarily occupies the place allotted to him in
the Universe as a whole.”(2)
The great
German poet and philosopher, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, was
well-known for his esoteric and Gnostic views. It was exactly these
views that brought him close to Islam, in such a manner of awe and
reverence that he wrote in 1816: “The poet does not refuse the
suspicion that he himself is a Muslim.” (3) Similar statements can
be found throughout his works. (4)
For this
reason, it would be a monumental deception to dismiss Islam as
something “foreign.” It has repeatedly shown itself very capable of
adapting itself to various cultures without changing its essential
nature. The only guideline is that these cultural traditions do not
violate the precepts of Islamic belief or practice, but such
incidences are more the exception than the norm.
“In
history, Islam showed itself to be culturally friendly and, in that
regard, has been likened to a crystal clear river. Its waters
(Islam) are pure, sweet, and life-giving but – having no color of
their own – reflect the bedrock (indigenous culture) over which they
flow. In China, Islam looked Chinese; in Mali, it looked African.
Sustained cultural relevance to distinct peoples, diverse places,
and different times underlay Islam’s long success as a global
civilization.” (5)
The reason
for this flexibility is because Islam is a universal message,
containing within itself the messages of all the previous prophets.
The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) is regarded as the last of
all these prophets and his revelation as the culmination of all the
previous messages. In this view Islam is the completion of the
sophia perennis, or primordial eternal wisdom.
Islam is
about reviving the best of one’s own traditions and responding to a
present urgent need. The river of Islam flows throughout the world,
providing sustenance and life and reflecting those cultural
distinctions of people on its shore. As the great Scottish Sufi
master, Shaykh Abdalqadir as-Sufi, said: “Islam is not a culture.
Islam is a filter for culture; it keeps the good and leaves out the
bad.”
Each form
has an inner and outer teaching that are complementary to each
other. It is the task of the Gnostics to rediscover the inner
meaning of the message. The same process characterized all the
previous messages and Islam as the culmination is no exception.
Tasawwuf, or Sufism, is the inner mystic essence of Islam. The basis
of Sufism is Divine Love and service to the creation for the Sake of
the Creator.
Sufism is
based on initiation and it is exactly this that any return to
Tradition needs. According to the Sufis, there are four stations of
spiritual perfection. The first is Shari’a, which is adherence to
the Prophetic Way and specifically the outer form of Islam. The
emphasis here is on the external meanings and this is where the
majority of Muslims stop. However, the Sufi has a much broader
spiritual awareness that the Shari’a is only an outer shell for an
inner consciousness.
The second
station is tariqa, or a spiritual path which has transmitted the
inner message of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) to seekers
through a proven chain of initiation. Most tariqas are transmitted
through the Imams from the Prophetic Household, as they were
carriers of the spiritual authority. The goal of all tariqas is the
same, but the specific practices and methods is unique to the shaykh.
The third
station is haqiqa, which is the spiritual gifts that comes from
closeness to the Creator. The Sufi is always aware of an ongoing
push-and-pull struggle that every effort to get closer to the
Beloved is also accompanied with certain internal and external
factors keeping the seeker away from this higher consciousness. It
is their task to kill the ego to enliven the spirit.
These four
enemies are the self or ego, lowly desires, temptations or the
devil, and the illusions of this worldly life. The great Sufi mystic
Ibn al-Arabi identified the Wali or Friend of Allah, as the one who
successfully triumphs over these enemies. The Sufi is also aware
that the external enemies have no effect on him or her, without the
internal enemies. Defeat the latter and you will inevitably triumph
over the former.
The final
station is marifa (gnosis). This is the ultimate objective of every
mystic and the noble task to which they dedicate their life. Marifa
is the deeper knowledge upon which all other forms of knowledge
rest. Such knowledge illuminates the knower and for this reason
perhaps wisdom is a better description. Achieving such a state is
truly a return to our origins, because to know God is to know
ourselves. We have to close the bodily eye before the spiritual eyes
can awaken.
One of the
manifestations of modernism is the perversion of true spirituality.
This is based on the tendency to compartmentalize knowledge and
place it in a superior position over wisdom. Such anti-Traditional
currents lack the necessary chain of initiation. Traditionalists
always emphasized orthodoxy and they lived it by their adherence to
an outer spiritual form. In the case of the Sufis it can be seen
through their following the Shari’a and specifically one of the
schools of the Law.
Running
through the Western current are remnants of this Primordial
Tradition. In our day and age it has become concealed under
materialism and various counter-initiatory currents that lack the
transmission from an orthodox tradition. “Traditional esotericism is
at one and the same time doctrine and practice,” writes French
neo-Cathar author Raymond Abellio. “It implies for the whole of the
being, body, soul and spirit, a fundamentally different way of
existence.” (6)
The tribal
nations of Europe had a deep spirituality that connected them to
this primordial origin, even if it survived through remnants. The
“divine law and human law were still closely joined” and ethics were
“a fragment of the universal divine order.” (7) The Celtic, Germanic
and Iberian tribes were outwardly pagan, but at their core was a
deeply embedded belief in one Creator. They lived in a more holistic
way with the natural world, making them feel the presence of the
Divine.
Such tribes
were often exhibited by a moral code that stressed virtuous and
honorable behavior. This contrasted them with the dominant
hedonistic and materialist lifestyle of ancient Greece and Rome. For
the former were more attuned to the spiritual, whereas the latter
had long undergone a process of decline that brought them to the
level of “civilisation.”
It should
be little wonder then that these tribes adopted the message of Jesus
(peace be upon him) quite rapidly. A new outer faith taps deep
within the inner spirituality of a people among whom it becomes
rooted. Thomas Carlyle said no religion disappears fully until its
benefits for people are transferred over to the new faith. In the
case of the tribal nations of Europe, their tendency toward the
ethereal and otherworldly naturally drew them to a faith that
stressed the afterlife and fought against the dominant materialist
social order.
The true
expression of the message of Jesus (peace be upon him) was that he
is a prophet and not the “Son of God” or part of a Trinity,
doctrines which came later and actually ran contrary to his
teachings. The earliest Christians indeed denied the alleged
divinity of Jesus and believed strictly in the Divine Unity.
These
earliest expressions of the original Nicene Creed found a receptive
audience among the pagan peoples it encountered, for it tapped into
the deep primordial spirituality they felt within their hearts. The
vibrant Gnostic communities in North Africa that came into contact
with Islam took to it and specifically its mystical expressions,
“due to the fact that [they were called] to a contemporary version
of their old beliefs, now clothed in the form of the newly dominant
religion.” (8)
There were
various Gnostic groups in Europe who held to the Unitarian creed.
“Some Unitarian Christians did make their way up into Europe – where
they were known as the Ebionites, the Paulicians, the Goths, the
Illumnists, the Cathari – but were finally wiped out by the
Mediaeval Inquisition which was instituted specifically for that
purpose.” (9) Another of these groups were the Bogumils, who
survived to come into contact with Islam and felt so close to it
spiritually they became the Bosnian Muslims. (10)
The current
author found that among his own tribal ancestors, including the
Suebi, Celt-Iberians, and Visigoths, the Unitarian Creed of Arian
was particularly prevalent. It was more compatible with their
nature, or rather the remnants of the primordial. But the
Trinitarian Creed was literally forced upon the tribes upon the
combined weight of the Church and State.
The entire
process was inherently imperialist, as it meant the imposition of
Roman culture and rule upon the tribes. However, it was also
leveling and conformist since it meant tying them into the dominant
social order and away from their pristine culture. Along with the
Trinitarian creed came the seeds of the corruption of Christianity
through the Hellenization of its doctrines and the Romanization of
its institutions. (11)
The
clerical hierarchy of the Catholic Church suppressed other
expressions of Christianity as “heretical,” while political leaders
such as Charlemagne saw their opportunity to slaughter their
opponents, like what he did with the Saxons at Verdun. In fact, at
the same time the Church embarked on a Crusade against the Muslims
there were simultaneously Crusades against the pagan and Gnostic
Christian groups. (12)
Nevertheless, underground Gnostic communities continued to survive
in Europe. The French poet and historian Gerard de Nerval, whose
translations of Goethe’s works won the lavish approval of the German
master himself, believed secret Islamic mystic communities had been
responsible for transmitting ancient wisdom to Europe through their
influence on Gnostic groups. (13)
This
synthesis was especially present through the character of the
Hohenstaufen Frederick II, King of the Holy Roman Empire and Sicily,
who was called “Stupor mundi” or “wonder of the world.” He was a
fierce opponent of the Church due to his friendship with Al-Kamil,
the Sultan of Egypt and nephew of the great mujahid (wager of jihad)
Salah al-Din al-Ayyubi (Saladin). He allowed the Muslims to freely
implement their faith in his kingdom and defiantly entered into an
agreement with Al-Kamil concerning Jerusalem, during which he made
very favorable statements about Islam at the height of the Crusades.
(14)
“With
Charlemagne, the Holy Roman Empire unified the space comprising the
land between the North Sea and the Mediterranean, the Ebro and the
Adriatic. With Frederick II, ‘the genius among the German emperors’
(Nietzsche), the Emperor who spoke Latin and German, Greek and
Arabic, and wrote poetry in Italian, the Holy Empire took the first
step in the direction of an Eurasian synthesis: after he entered in
possession of Jerusalem thanks to a program of ‘peace and friendship
with Islam’ (Nietzsche) the great Hohenstaufen re-united in his own
person the characters of a Roman Emperor and a Germanic Koenig, a
Byzantine Basileus and a Muslim Sultan.” (15)
“‘War to
the knife with Rome! Peace and friendship with Islam!’: this was the
feeling, this was the act, of that great free spirit, that genius
among German emperors, Frederick II. What! must a German first be a
genius, a free spirit, before he can feel decently? I can’t make out
how a German could ever feel Christian.” (16)
Friedrich
II was an ally of the Cathars and frequently sent messengers in
solidarity with their revolt against the Church and the French
kingdom. Because he repeatedly refused to join the Crusade against
either the Muslims or the Cathars, Pope Gregory IX excommunicated
him in 1227. There are even some reports he was initiated into a
Sufi order and also met with elements of the Ismaili Assassins.
After visiting Masjid al-Aqsa in Jerusalem, he was so impressed with
its architecture that he was inspired to build Castle del Monte from
1240 to 1250. The castle was a symbol of balance and justice, the
meeting of East and West. (17)
This policy
of friendship and affinity with Islam remained prevalent within
esoteric and Gnostic currents. The German pagan Unitarian author
Sigrid Hunke wrote highly of Islam and was even made Honorary Member
of the Supreme Court for Islamic Affairs in Cairo. She expressed her
view that “the influence exerted by the Arabs on the West was the
first step in freeing Europe from Christianity.” (18)
It was the
Islamic obligation to seek knowledge that maintained and passed onto
the West the Greek and other texts that would have otherwise been
lost to history. It was the permeation of Islamic values to all
sectors of society – intellectual, social, economic and cultural –
that allowed for this great flowering of knowledge and advancements
in all fields. These advancements are beyond the scope of the
current article, but we shall look at poetry as an example.
Metaphors
are a powerful medium of transmitting sacred spiritual knowledge to
the seekers of the Beloved. This is often conveyed through love and
other symbols meant to touch the heart. Our task is to reconnect
with our primordial origin through the esoteric heart that remains
untapped, searching for that outer form which best corresponds to
our deepest yearnings. “We do not idolize the past,” says Iranian
traditionalist Professor Seyyed Hossein Nasr. “We idealize a past
which was imbued with the presence of the sacred.”
Such is the
purpose of these poetic metaphors. One particularly common one was
the rose, which was taken as symbolizing the Divine Perfection. The
great Sufi Rumi often used it in his poetry and among the Western
Gnostics it referred to the chakras, especially the third eye from
which one can transcend to the other realms of existence.
Francis
Bacon, who is regarded as the real author of many of Shakespeare’s
works, inserted many Sufi ideas into the playwright’s works. He took
Divine Love as representing the evolution of the human
consciousness. The most notable example of Sufi influence in
Shakespeare’s works is The Taming of the Shrew. Its main character,
Christopher Sly, is taken as possessing the qualities of a Sufi. At
first he thinks he is asleep and dreaming, but eventually realizes
he is very awake. (19)
Our purpose
on earth is to set out on the path from slumber to becoming awake.
By transcending our limited self, we strive to a greater awareness.
What we believe to be real is so often merely an illusory existence.
As Rumi wrote, “The mind sees things inside-out. What it takes to be
life is really death, and what it takes to be death is really life.”
To become
awake on a spiritual level is also to become awakened on a social
and cultural level. The implications of belief in the Divine Unity
inevitably affect every sphere of human existence, which is itself a
revolutionary notion in our modernist age where religion has become
reduced to a personal moralism devoid of any higher meaning. Much of
our social problems result from the overturning of the Christian
prohibition against usury, leaving the way open for the secular
State with its central banks and paper money system.
“In the
same way that a living body stays alive only when a soul is present
to govern it, so every social organization not rooted in a spiritual
reality is outward and transitory, unable to remain healthy and
retain its identity in the struggle of the various forces; it is not
really an organism, but more aptly something thrown together, an
aggregate.
“The true
cause for the decline of the political idea in the West today is to
be found in the fact that the spiritual values that once permeated
the social order have been lost, without any successful efforts to
put something better in their place. The problem has been lowered to
the plane of economic, industrial, military, governmental, or even
more sentimental factors, without considering that all this is
nothing more than matter: necessary if you like, but never enough by
itself, and unable to create a healthy and reasonable social order.”
(20)
Goethe
warned about the ills of Newtonian scientific deconstruction, at a
time when materialism was first making its presence felt in the
West. He was the ultimate well-wisher to the human as compared to
the person, who was characterized by material identity. Goethe broke
radically from the trend in his time and envisioned a cosmopolitan
society beyond such limitations. “The actual, only and most profound
theme of world and human history, the theme under which all others
are subsumed, remains the conflict between non-belief and belief.”
(21)
Our world
is characterized by the polarization between the universalism of
syncretist globalism and the emerging financial World State, and the
self-assertion of exclusivist tribalism with its negative identity
factors such as racism, nationalism and fundamentalism or nihilism.
Both are extremes that lead to the primacy of the illusory material
being over the real spiritual being. It would seek to level all to
the lowest common denominator, whether this be their economic worth
or materialist biological factors.
It is a
mistake made by some who lash out against globalism to propose the
other extreme. How can racism possibly allow for human
transcendence? For it accepts the fallacy that human beings can
achieve the elusive perfection through blood and race, just as
globalism proposes people can achieve it through technology. In both
extremes the human being is viewed in the same sense as a
domesticated animal.
The
distinct culture soul of a given people is just that – raising the
soul and not the biological. It is expressed in the Qur’an that we
were created and made into different tribes and nations so as to
know each other (49:13), not to throw ourselves into a downward
spiral of self-destruction. Jesus (peace be upon him) recognized the
essential difference: “The flesh profits nothing, it is the Spirit
that gives, the words I speak unto you are Spirit, and they are
Life.” (John 6:63)
We must put
at rest once and for all this materialist myth that biological
factors are the ultimate measure of human worth or the means towards
perfection. We must accept our limitations, for there is profound
knowledge itself in this realization. To delude ourselves into
thinking we are superior would only magnify those very inferiorities
that lead to our current situation. Perfection can be achieved
through spiritual activity; each of us has the potential of what the
Sufis call the Insan al-Kamil, or the Perfect Man.
There is no
problem in recognizing one’s roots and heritage, unless it reaches
to the level where it merely becomes a justification to regard
oneself as “superior” to others. For to be truly proud of one’s
heritage would mean having a healthy and natural respect for that
same right in others. That would require recognizing materialism is
to be opposed an all levels. To regain the cultural soul, it is
first necessary to kill the Western worldview that continues to
stifle it. In other words, we must kill the Westerner within
ourselves so that our true heritage and identity can be reborn.
A good
starting point would be to look back to those models of Islam within
Europe, the foremost being Andalusia. Ibn al-‘Arabi, the Spanish
Muslim scholar and the great Sufi known as “Shaykh al-Akbar” (the
greatest shaykh), regarded culture and language to be the real
measure of identity. European philosophers and poets were impressed
with this society and saw it as a model for their contemporary
society to emulate:
“If Islam
despises Christianity, it has a thousandfold right to do so: Islam
at least assumes that it is dealing with men….Christianity destroyed
for us the whole harvest of ancient civilization, and later it also
destroyed for us the whole harvest of Mohammedan [sic] civilization.
The wonderful culture of the Moors in Spain, which was fundamentally
nearer to us and appealed more to our senses and tastes than that of
Rome and Greece, was trampled down (--I do not say by what sort of
feet--) Why? Because it had to thank noble and manly instincts for
its origin--because it said yes to life, even to the rare and
refined luxuriousness of Moorish life!...The crusaders later made
war on something before which it would have been more fitting for
them to have groveled in the dust--a civilization beside which even
that of our nineteenth century seems very poor and very
‘senile.’--What they wanted, of course, was booty: the orient was
rich…. Let us put aside our prejudices! The crusades were a higher
form of piracy, nothing more!” (22)
The
Andalusian society was a perfect expression of the Muslim’s
spiritual and social duties, just as it is an indigenous model for
Islam in Europe. Ibn Rushd discussed the social and economic
responsibilities, proposing Islamic trade as the perfect solution to
usury. He was coming from an Islamic perspective but was also
carrying on the tradition of Europeans who had opposed usury, from
Aristotle onwards. He perceived in usury outward enslavement, while
Ibn al-‘Arabi viewed the inner enslavement to Allah as real freedom.
(23)
One of
those who instinctively felt this was the German composer Richard
Wagner. He believed strongly in the truth of divine illumination,
which is the central experience of his dramas. (24) He identified
“the Ring” as the mechanism at the heart of the banking system. The
new usury born out of paper-money is like a drug, able to blur the
senses but eventually destroys those who hold its illusory power.
The protagonist Siegmund was able to fight and win against everybody
except the one who made the weapon. (25)
The global
financial elite has subjugated the masses through four monopolies:
money (usury), land (capitalist views of land ownership), tariffs
(stifling true competition and replacing it with corporate
dominance), and patents (the source of much of the corporations’
power). Benjamin Tucker, the American individualist anarchist, added
a postscript to his essay “State Socialism and Anarchism” in 1926:
“Today the
way is not so clear. The four monopolies, unhindered, have made
possible the modern development of the trust, and the trust is now a
monster which I fear, even the freest banking, could it be
instituted, would be unable to destroy….If this be true, then
monopoly, which can be controlled permanently only for economic
forces, has passed for the moment beyond their reach, and must be
grappled with for a time solely by forces political or
revolutionary.” (26)
In the face
of the rampant leveling process of consumerism and social
conformity, the task of any intellectual elite is inevitably
spiritual in nature. They are called in this struggle to radically
assert the primacy of spirit over the material, a recognition that
more exists than the material world. To the Muslim, the power that
would seek to blind people with these illusions is kufr, for the
word itself means to cover up.
The
greatest illusion of today is certainly the economic system, with
its dogmas such as usury, paper money, and central banks. One of
those who recognized the subjugation of the State to the economic
order was the French anarchist Joseph Proudhon, who also considered
the economists to be a new religious sect and warned about the
danger of political movements with no immediate political agenda.
(27) As Nietzsche said, “Nihilism means not having any goals.”
Capitalism
was condemned by German existentialist Martin Heidegger as an all
encompassing structure in which the individual loses their political
sovereignty and freedom through economic subjugation. The much
praised enlightenment has excluded the deep irrationality of
economic institutions from any argument, creating new dogmas. (28)
The solution is not contained in any thinking within metaphysical
foundations, as metaphysics has ended. (29)
The masses
of people are so much enthralled of this myth of “progress” they
fail to see the signs of its inevitable collapse. The prevalent
consumer-oriented modern civilization is based on a series of
illusions and requires keeping people ignorant about their own
reality. As Guenon wrote, “If everyone understood what the modern
world was, it would immediately cease to exist.”
The modern
“civilization” presupposes that material advancement is the goal of
the person, but those who can see with the higher spiritual eye
recognize the individual actually needs spirituality and not the
material for the ultimate balance. Neither can they explain why the
ancients had no need for this term “civilization,” for it was once a
reality without a name and is replaced now with a name without the
reality.
“It is
curious to note how promptly and successfully certain ideas come to
spread and impose themselves, provided, of course, that they
correspond to the general tendencies of the particular environment
and epoch; it is so with these ideas of ‘civilization’ and
‘progress’ which so many people willingly believe universal and
necessary, whereas in reality they have been quite recently invented
and even to-day, at least three-quarters of mankind persist either
in being ignorant of them or in considering them quite neglible.”
(30)
Neither is
the solution to be found in more Statism or central economic
planning. For Capitalism itself is nothing but the intervention of
the State into the market to benefit corporate interests. It creates
various market distortions to uphold the corporate-dominated
economic order. (31) The systems of capitalism and communism are
instruments to expand the State and perpetuate the Corporate order,
albeit in different forms and despite all claims to the contrary.
Each are unable to “replace” the other, for they are “metaphysically
one and the same” as Heidegger observed. (32)
Islam
already provides the perfect means to address the financial
problems, replacing it with the goals of the Islamic muamalat, or
trade and commercial transactions. Usury is categorically to be
opposed and replaced with trade. In the place of the modern
capitalistic method of distribution in the form of the corporation,
is a return to the guild structure of true freedom. Finally, to
protect against the paper money that tends towards deflation and
inflation and is the source of strength in the hands of the banking
elite, is a return to true commodities which is foremost gold and
silver.
“Europe and
Islam have in common their principal enemy….the usurocratic Finance.
If she wishes to recover her autonomy, Europe ought to look for her
inspiration and guide in the Divine Law, that which has been
conserved in the book of Allah.” (33)
At the root
of the emerging World State is to cover up this inner reality. Jean
Baudrillard, the French post-modernist, identified the true purpose
of globalism: “The establishment of a global system is the result of
an intense jealousy. It is the jealousy of an indifferent and
low-definition culture against cultures with higher definition, of a
disenchanted and de-intensified system against high intensity
cultural environments, and of a de-sacralized society against
sacrificial forms. According to this dominant system, any
reactionary form is virtually terrorist.” (34)
Our
societies, because they have lost a higher purpose, seem to be
living but not existing. The entire structural apparatus permeating
all realms has both created the illusions governing society and
become dependent on these illusions for its own survival. Technology
is not limitless, but rather depends on the complacency of the
masses.
Ernst
Jünger recognized that modern man was under the control of
technology, even while he deluded himself into thinking the contrary
was true. He envisioned how this Technik forces “the trusts and
monopolies of the state in order to prepare for an imperial unity.”
He also wrote, “One does not simply transform into the subject of
the technical processes, one becomes at the same time their object.
Technik is never only a neutral power.”
We have
reached a stage where participation in the State is illusory. The
entire political process is a charade when the politicians are
stewards of the financial interests. Democracy is an illusion.
Rather than expressing the will of the masses, it is actually the
manufacture of their consent through massive media manipulation and
their conformity within the dominant culture. Hence, any solution
again cannot be purely political.
The Muslim,
whenever encountered with this, will never submit to this power
which he or she recognizes as an illusion. The Muslim knows the true
strength is within themselves and that the “will to power” is
elusive. All power rests with the Creator and He is the one who has
given the means with the end. Rumi recognized that whatever is halal
or permissible, is possible to achieve. We have been shown the means
with the end.
Islam is
the middle ground that tends to neither extreme. There is no
modernism or puritanism except that they are perversions of Islam.
This recognition that Islam is neither “left” nor “right” can
possibly explain why numerous revolutionaries from “left” and
“right” alike have embraced Islam. (35) Neither cowardice nor
nihilism have any place in our metapolitical program.
Metapolitics is a revolutionary struggle against the financial
system (in so much as the political is merely an expression of the
economic), waged in the cultural realm. It is a struggle to reorient
the dominant worldview to a return to our primordial origin. The
Italian theorist Antonio Gramsci recognized how the State is not
confined to politics, but rather based on a psychological support
from the masses. One cannot capture any political power without
first gaining cultural power.
We must
address this leveling of the masses into mere consumers if we are to
live as sovereign individuals. We have to extend what Jünger called
“the Anarch” to the social sphere so as to free “the Arbeiter”
within ourselves. The way has already been shown to us by Islam. For
it is these precepts that are already deeply embedded within Islam.
It was a
Muslim, Ibn Khaldun, who first recognized the fact of the decline of
civilization in his monumental work Muqaddima. And it continues to
be the dedicated vanguard of Westerners who become Sufis and strive
in the social, political and economic sphere, who have addressed the
roots of our spiritual crisis.
This way is
to recognize the Divine Love and to serve the creation through our
love for this Creator. We strive to reverse the roots of our decline
as a people and society, as the outward manifestation of our inner
spiritual struggle of the ego against the soul. Know the Creator and
you know yourself – and through this self-awareness you become awake
to the means that are right in front of you, ready for the willing
to wield in this struggle.
Sean
Jobst is an independent writer and aspiring journalist, based in the
United States. He has written on such array of issues as cultural
decline, political theories, economics, foreign policy, and the
rights of Indigenous people. Most of his work has been
self-published for the time being. He can be contacted at:
SJobst1985@gmail.com .
FOOTNOTES:
(1) Michel
Valsan, L’Islam et la Fonction de René Guénon, Paris: Editions de
l'Oeuvre, 1984.
(2) René
Guénon, Symbolism of the Cross.
(3) Johann
von Goethe, Notes and Essays to the West-östlicher Diwan, WA I, 41,
86.
(4) See the
article by Shaykh Abdalqadir Al-Murabit, "Goethe Embraced Islam,"
Weimar, 19th December 1995.
(5) Dr.
Umar Faruq Abd-Allah, "Islam and the Cultural Imperative," Cross
Currents (New York: Association for Religion and Intellectual Life),
Fall 2006, Vol. 56, No. 3, p. 357.
(6) Raymond
Abellio, The End of Esotericism, 1973.
(7) Dr.
Johannes von Leers, Blut und Rasse in der Gesetzgebung, 1936, p. 6.
(8) Cyril
Glasse, The Concise Encyclopedia of Islam.
(9) Ahmad
Thomson, The Next World Order, Beirut: Al-Aqsa Press, 1415/1994, pp.
4-5.
(10) See
the article by Shaykh Mehmed Handzic al-Bosnawi, "The Primary Cause
of the Bogumils' Conversion to Islam," 15th May 2006.
(11) See
the essay by Neal Robinson, "From Marxism to Islam: The
Philosophical Itinerary of Roger Garaudy."
(12) See
Eric Christiansen, The Northern Crusades, London: Penguin Books,
1997.
(13) Life
Science Fellowship, "Secret Tradition of Islam," New Dawn Magazine
(Melbourne, Australia), No. 48, July-August 1998.
(14) Amin
Maalouf, The Crusades Through Arab Eyes, New York: Schocken Books,
1989, pp. 225-230.
(15)
"Interview with Claudio Mutti," Junges Forum, No. 3, January 2005.
(16)
Friedrich Nietzsche, Der Antichrist, 60.
(17)
"Friedrich II Von Hohenstauffen: The Bloodless Crusader," New Dawn
Magazine, No. 26, August-September 1994.
(18) Sigrid
Hunke, Allahs Sonne über dem Abendland, Stuttgart: Unser arabisches
Erbe, 1960.
(19) See
the essay by Mather Walker, "The Sufi Basis of The Taming of The
Shrew."
(20) Julius
Evola, Imperialismo Pagano, 1928.
(21)
Goethe, op. cit.
(22)
Nietzsche, op. cit., 59-60.
(23) See
the transcript of the lecture by Abu Bakr Rieger, "Islam in Europe,"
Granada, 2003.
(24) Shaykh
Abdalqadir as-Sufi, The New Wagnerian, p. 159.
(25) Umar
Ibrahim Vadillo, The Esoteric Deviation in Islam, Cape Town: Madinah
Press, 2003, pp. 219, 309, 912.
(26)
Benjamin Tucker, Individual Liberty, Vanguard Press, 1926.
(27)
Vadillo, op. cit., pp. 138, 333, 534.
(28) Rieger,
op. cit.
(29) See
the essay by Umar Vadillo, "Heidegger for Muslims."
(30) René
Guénon, East and West, 1924, p. 27.
(31) See
the essay by Kevin Preston, "Free Enterprise: The Antidote to
Corporate Plutocracy."
(32) Slavoj
Žižek, "Attempts to Escape the Logic of Capitalism," The London
Review of Books, Vol. 21, No. 21, 28th October 1999.
(33)
Claudio Mutti, Il musulmano, January-February 1994.
(34) Jean
Baudrillard, The Violence of the Global, Paris: Galilee, 2002, p. 3.
(35) See
the hostile, but useful, article by Alexandre Del Valle, "The Reds,
The Browns and the Greens."
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