Ask Haviv Anything - Episode 30: How the Middle East broke, a conversation with Hussein Aboubakr Mansour

Episode Date: July 21, 2025

Hussein Aboubakr Mansour was born and raised in Egypt before fleeing to the United States and dedicating his life to understanding how the Arab world came to be defined by state failure, religious ext...remism and all the rest of the region's many crises.His conclusions, laid out in a recent essay in the magazine Mosaic, are an extraordinarily innovative new path. It isn't a crisis of internal Islamic failure, as conservative thinkers argue, nor a crisis forged and sustained purely by Western imperialism, colonialism, capitalism and the other nefarious isms of the left-wing lexicon.It is something stranger and more interesting: An imbibing into Islamic form and language of European romantic ideas about nation, history and revolution that went so deep as to almost replace (Hussein speaks of a kind of forgetting) the traditional Islamic sense of what Islamic and Arab culture once were.In this longer-than-usual episode, we take a deep dive into Hussein's thesis, and then we try to apply it to the Jews.This episode was co-sponsored by Tovit and Mike on behalf of their son Rafi and his unit, Battalion 202 of the Paratroopers and all of our brave IDF soldiers protecting our country and fighting our enemies.“This episode was also co-sponsored by the family of Larry from Encino, California in in honor of his birthday. They asked to dedicate the episode to the IDF’s reservist pilots, who 10 -- even 20 -- years out of active service, with families and full-time jobs, continue to serve with incredible selflessness. Their achievements during the Iran war were nothing short of heroic.Please join me on Patreon to support this project: ⁠www.patreon.com/AskHavivAnything⁠.If you would like to sponsor an episode, please email us at haviv@askhavivanything.com⁠.Musical intro by Adam Ben Amitai.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:04 Hello, everybody. Welcome to a special new episode of Ask Haviv Anything. I think I've called every single one of these episodes special, but this one I've really been waiting for for a while. I'm going to be talking today to Hussein Abu Bakr Mansour, one of the most interesting writers on the Middle East, on Islam, on the West, on Israel, on Jews that I know. He comes at it seemingly from an outsider's perspective in every single one of the arenas in which he swims. I'm going to be asking him about that. And we're going to be tackling this conversation as an extension of things that anyone who's listened to this podcast or any of my talks online has already heard a lot about, which is the theological lineage, the ideological lineage, the ideological lineage of groups like Hamas, like al-Qaeda. What is the source of the great crises that afflict the Arab world, the instability is the extremism? How we should understand it all. The podcast will be divided into two parts. The first part, we're going to talk about Arab ideological development, how we got to where we are today, what it all means. The second part, We are going to talk about Zionism and Jews, where the analysis is once again fascinating, interesting, and new, in a sense, certainly new to me.
Starting point is 00:01:14 And so I'm very excited about this conversation. Let's get to it. Hussain is a researcher at Iskap, the Institute for the Study of Global Anti-Semitism and Policy, a fellow at the Jerusalem Center for Foreign Affairs, and the author of the extraordinary Abrahamic Metacritique substack. Very high-falutant words in there, a little bit of an academic viewpoint. I forgive him for it because what he says is actually original and deeply serious, which is not true of a great many people who have adopted, you know, academic vocabulary. So he has the Kaviv stamp of approval, if that helps.
Starting point is 00:01:48 I don't know Hussein if that's going to help. But on the assumption that that brings a couple of people. Before we get into it, I want to just tell you that this episode is co-sponsored by Tovite and Mike, on behalf of their son Rafi and his unit, Battalion 202 of the paratroopers, and all of our brave IDF soldiers protecting our country and fighting our enemies. And it was also co-sponsored by the family of Larry from Encino, California, in honor of his birthday. They asked to dedicate the episode to the IDF's reservist pilots, who 10, even 20 years out of active service with families and full-time jobs,
Starting point is 00:02:26 continue to serve with incredible selflessness. Their achievements during the Iran War were nothing short of, heroic folks we're all going through this together this has become a community thank you for these sponsorships obviously and thank you for these dedications which i think mean mean a lot let's get to it hussein how are you i'm good thank you for having me it's a great pleasure yeah well now i've talked you up right and the problem with starting a talk having been talked up like that is you can only fail uh where do you go from being talked up that way at the very beginning um i want to i want to I want to dive right in. You have this extraordinary essay in Mosaic magazine,
Starting point is 00:03:06 which is, I think Mosaicmagizant.com is the address. And it's an essay that I can't, honestly, I finished it. I didn't know if it was coming in from the left, from the right. It made, it threw everything up in the air and everything fell down a little bit in new ways. Let me let you tell the story. So I'll just, I'll just set up the shot with one question. The Middle East feels to many people for generations now, like a deeply broken place. Failed states, countries at civil war, ideologies of horrific, unbelievable extremism. The caliphate has a bad name now. You know, it's not, if early Rashid Rida in the 1890s mentioned the word caliphate as some kind of enlightened thing that would build universities, by the end of
Starting point is 00:03:55 Rashid Rida's own career, that's not how he was talking. But also today, certainly nobody who said caliphate in the last 30 years meant that. Why is it so broken? Why does Syria look like it looks? Why have we seen so much extremism in this region? We're talking about 150 years of what, by any measure that any serious person would adopt, I think, you would count as failure, cultural failure, intellectual failure, even religious failure. What is the source of that? And just to tee it up, you take a very different tack to the great Bernard Lewis.
Starting point is 00:04:27 Right. Well, of course, first of all, thank you for the question. Of course, that is actually the question, as you said, and it has been the question for quite some time. And the evidence scholar Bernard Lewis is known to have mastered a formulation of one answer of this question. Most notably in his essay, what went wrong, which was published immediately after 9-11. So, of course, there was a lot of pressure, truly, a lot of curiosity about the answer to this question. So there are, as you said, the question is real. Obviously, that region is broken.
Starting point is 00:05:08 I myself came to the United States originally as an asylum seeker from Egypt exactly because of that brokenness of that region. We've seen what happened in the Syrian Civil War, waves of refugees, massacres, ISIS, not just destabilizing the region, but disavizing the whole world. European politics are still in shambles today to a large extent, thanks to what happened in the Arab Spring, the waves of refugees, migration, so on and so forth. So, of course, the question is real. And as we said, there are multiple answers. Bern-Luiss is one of the major articulations. Each of the answers available became a world on its own.
Starting point is 00:05:52 That is, became a huge intellectual industry. institutionalized. So you have a lift-wing answer that primarily, for example, blames it all on capitalism and imperialism, the United States, Zionism, so on and so forth. This one now became the most dominant answer, especially because of the radical takeover of the academy. So basically, yes, the region is broken, lack of democracy, lack of freedom, all of these atrocities, but ultimately it's the United States and Israel who are to blame for that. Let's pause on that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:27 Make it, make it, make it sound reasonable. Make it sound reasonable. Okay. Reasonable would be, well, the Middle East has been strategically important for Western powers and for global capitalism, primarily because of the energy resources in the region. So capitalism always had an interest to ensure direct immediate access to all the resources and the strategic geography of the Middle East. And the only way to do that is to ensure that no major power rises in the Middle East,
Starting point is 00:07:04 and the West dominates the Middle East indefinitely. And the way that they do that is through establishing a forward operating base that's called Israel, basically Zionism. And for the Jews, basically they made some sort of a Faustian deal. They needed a solution for their anti-Semitism. So basically the imperialism gave them that solution. You're going to act as our agent in the Middle East. We'll give you weapons to protect yourself.
Starting point is 00:07:33 So it's almost a tragic. I'm here, by the way, also, this is the most charitable radical reading for the situation of the Jews. Like, basically a tragic figure that in order to solve their own problem, had to become the malevolent agent of all the world evil. And by establishing Israel in the Middle East, Israel can go ahead and ensure that no major power rises, destroying Nazarism, for example, shaking Syrian power when Assad was in power, bombing Saddam Hussein, as you remember, and then finally Iran, right? Because all of these supposedly would potentially,
Starting point is 00:08:11 these would have been potentially revolutionary projects that nationalize the resources of the Middle East and basically help to overcome capitalism. I hope that I made it somewhat reasonable within that worldview. Right. And there's a lot of talk there about how the very fact that the British and French drew a lot of the lines in the Middle East keeps the Arabs down. And Nasser's project was the unification across those borders and they created the United Arab Republic and all that stuff. The historical narrative usually starts from Sykes-Pico, agreement post-World War I. That's considered kind of the fall, the original kind of smoking gun of this colonial hand that then was inherited by American imperialism.
Starting point is 00:08:51 Right. where the French and British divide their sections of power in the Middle East. And then we have the Bernard Lewis analysis, which is a sense that there's this civiliz, a sense of rises among the Arabs, beginning maybe with Napoleon's arrival in Egypt, that there's this civilizational weakness in the face of insane European strength and scientific advance. And that creates, or I guess tell us the Bernard Lewis theory. So the Bernalius theory, which, is major
Starting point is 00:09:22 it had its own major moment. Now, first of all, of course, it's a pariah in the university, which is considered Orientalism, racism, so on and so forth. However,
Starting point is 00:09:32 it's actually popular in the Middle East, unlike many people, many people would think. A lot of Arab intellectuals, secular Arab intellectuals, definitely embrace it. I myself consider,
Starting point is 00:09:44 despite that I start from critiquing Bernard Lewis, I actually consider myself standing on his side, because I think it's much more, despite that I find the thesis very flawed, but I think it's much more respectful of the agency and the humanity of these societies. Bernard Lewis's thesis basically is civilizational. It follows a certain 19th century cultural historicist methodology that basically sees history as the unfolding of those individualities. So you have historical individualities that are called civilizations.
Starting point is 00:10:18 You have Western civilization. You have Chinese civilization. And then you have something called Islamic civilization. These civilizations are, they start from an initial moment of articulation of a decision and a worldview. Basically a series of yeses and noes, you know, yes to freedom, no to oppression, or vice versa, so on and so forth. And that kind of DNA that was written at the founding moment of a civilization then gets articulated or kind of unfolds throughout history and gives that. civilization, all of its characteristics, so all of its manifestations. So ultimately, Bernard Lewis's thesis is that Islamic civilization was deeply flawed. These flaws came really, became self-conscious with basically the meeting with the modern
Starting point is 00:11:08 West, kind of served as a mirror in which Muslim societies saw their own failures. They decided to try to modernize and secularize in order to compete and not be dominated with the West. this project failed. And this failure ultimately caused, there are two ways to see this. Either a regression to the kind of violent origins of this civilization. So that's a more of a psychoanalytic take. There are intellectuals who frame it that way.
Starting point is 00:11:40 Or basically the explosion of wrath and anger. And of course he has his famous Atlantic essay, I think it came in maybe in the 90s, Muslim rage, right? The origins of or the roots of Muslim rage, that basically this anger and rage of the Muslim world against the West is about their own failure to ultimately self-realize in modern society and modern and modern states. And that's, and from out of that rage came Al-Qaeda, 9-11, all of this terrorism and the anti-Semitism that, that characterizes much of Muslim societies. I interpreted that as a cultural question. You used very sophisticated words that, by the way, all have bookshelves written about them and are important.
Starting point is 00:12:26 But in other words, Islam has a self-awareness. There is such a thing as an Islamic world in the view of the vast majority of Muslims. And Islam has a sense of its own history and self and where it comes from and where it's headed. And they're written into, whether it's the canonical text or it's the historical development and text. and everything that has happened essentially since the beginning of the collapse, the slow collapse of the Ottomans in what, the 18th century, everything that has happened since seems to fly in the face of that necessary religious theological progress of Islam and therefore there is this sense of urgency and rage that it's failing and this deep need to overcome Islamic weakness. And by the way, hatred of Zionism because it is the weakest thing to have pushed Islam back, which is something mentioned. by some of these, you know, heirs of Rida, et cetera. So there's this, I don't know if this is, if I'm on, like, exactly on Bernard Lewis.
Starting point is 00:13:26 I think I took a couple ideas of Bernard Lewis that helped me explain what I was seeing around me. But it's this basic idea that there is this civilizational weakness and the response to that weakness built a lot of what we see. There's this self-awareness of weakness, and that's a lot of what we see in Islam today. Islam is a huge word. Indonesia and Egypt are very different places. but nevertheless, just so that we can talk, we'll use these words a little bit loosely. And so we have the liberal sense
Starting point is 00:13:55 that this is Western nefariousness trying to dominate the Middle East, mainly because of its resources, mainly because that's how empires generally behave. And then there is this, we'll call it a conservative view, that says that the story is actually an internal Islamic, Arab story about responding to discovering their own weakness after 400 years of Ottoman rule.
Starting point is 00:14:14 And then what other options are? there. Where should we be looking? Well, first, of course, that latter thesis also became huge after 9-11 because of a lot of, also after the Cold War in general. I mean, they had, Bernard Lewis used that term clash of civilization that then Sam Huntington made it into a whole book and a whole worldview that I think was very important for liberal societies after Cold War, after the end of that polar ideological battle between freedom and unfreatment of communism.
Starting point is 00:14:44 and after that was over, kind of that was a necessary new worldview to kind of organize, organize the world. Well, there are, I think those are the two actually major, major answers. There are other, I would say, most post, post-modern answers, which basically denied that there's a problem altogether. So there is nothing actually cohesive in any of this. All of these, these observations are really just ideological projections. then the Middle East is just, and these societies are just like any other societies.
Starting point is 00:15:19 So that's obviously a complete denial that there are any issues. I personally don't engage with these. I just don't find them respectful. We can't even start a conversation if we don't agree what was going on. So the Middle East is not really. Yeah. How do these people, I mean, you have a world that produces ISIS where states collapse routinely where the Yemeni catastrophe just happened.
Starting point is 00:15:39 Not that anyone in the West noticed or cared, but that's too far. I apologize. But not enough in the West noticed. cared to a quarter million people starving to death. But that is a Sunni-Shiya war instigated by Iran, fought by Saudi. You know, it's all of this, and that's nothing. There's nothing to know there. The only thing to know there is that it's just civilizations pottering along, doing their thing. Societies, yeah, political conflict because of political interest. It's just a, it's nothing to worry about. Certainly some Arab regimes like to adopt this because, you know, for, for
Starting point is 00:16:08 clear political reason. I mean, it's probably the most, the most politically helpful, helpful narrative, because it really leaves, and I don't blame them for that, because it's really all of this ideological, so all of the attempt to find the meaning and the history, and these are endless questions that have really, I would say they play no role in practical politics. So that's why also kind of Arab regimes like to fund or push this kind of view that doesn't actually deal with these issues at all,
Starting point is 00:16:37 part of it because they don't want to deal with it, for kind of, for their, own non-democratic reasons. But there is a part actually that I agree with, which is when you are dealing with practical questions, it doesn't matter really these answers. But these are basically, I think the two answers, the lift-wing answer of colonialism and imperialism and the problems of Islam as a problems of Islam, those are the two main established answers. And the ones that you're going to see today in the media, social media, definitely, that most people are familiar or were subscribed either one or the other.
Starting point is 00:17:12 Either Islam is a deep problematic religion and civilization. That's the problem itself. Or, no, the West is the problem. Which is, by the way, there are two, almost two sides of the same coin. Okay. So I take a very empathetic view of the first. Now, there is a deep problem in Arab society, in Islamic society, focused on the Arab world. Again, Islam is a huge word.
Starting point is 00:17:35 I don't talk about Islam. I thought, but the Islamic part of Arab culture around me is what I usually talk about when I say the word Islam. So that is, but it comes from deep, serious, profound, good places, some of it. The reformist impulses of the 19th century, of Al-Afghani, of Rita's teachers talked about building liberalism out in the Arab world. Now, I then read your essay, and it blew my hair back. And that's very difficult to do ever since in the army that you showed me those buzzers and that's been my haircut for the last 25 years. And you argued and, you know, forgive me for but it's just again to set it up for you to explain it to us. You argued that it is neither. It is not deep dysfunction within Islam or not just. That's not the beginning and end of the story. It is not Europeans coming in. It is something much more interesting, which is Arab Muslim world reaching into Europe, pulling out of Europe, the deepest, profoundest ideas and trends then animating and reconstructing Europe, adopting it with a whole new
Starting point is 00:18:49 kind of Arabic discourse and language and vocabulary into Arab solution building for the Arab modern crisis of modernity, and building out a lot of really bad things at the same time that Europeans using these ideas were building out a lot of really bad things. It's almost entirely Europeanisms. And the deepest civilizational debates in the Arab world are actually debates between French Enlightenment were romanticism and German historicist romanticism. It all makes sense if you read the essay. By the way, you cover a lot of academic ground very clearly in like 10 paragraphs and then people can really get into the story. So I really, really recommend this essay. The bad, the broken, the destructive, these are Arab borrowings from
Starting point is 00:19:35 Europe. And that was fascinating. So tell us that story. Go as far back as you can. This is a podcast for nerds who enjoy an hour-long lecture on history. I know I just lost half of them just the second. Stay with us, people. That is a badge of honor. Tell us this story. Okay. Wonderful. Well, first of all, just I, I, I, I don't insist on being academic or is an academic language, but I think now everybody knowing the problems of the universities and what they are, people who we thought they knew that they were doing,
Starting point is 00:20:09 turned out a lot of them actually had no idea what they're doing. So this is why I expect everyone to at least get to know and struggle a little bit to learn some of this stuff because you actually need it. The people who are supposedly in charge actually are not there. So we all have to be responsible for how we think. So the essay basically suggests, as you said, it's neither. Actually, what happened is a hypermodernization,
Starting point is 00:20:34 a hypermodernization in a particular modern discourse. First of all, we assume that the timeless stability of something called Islam, that these Muslim societies know who they are, and they've always known who they are and know what they are doing, it's actually just a fantasy. It's a Western fantasy, usually projected as a self-critique of the West, You know, we don't know who we are anymore. We're unlike those Muslims who are very firm in their society.
Starting point is 00:21:02 It's really just a fantasy because no humans are like this. Muslim societies are just like any other society. When the 19th century happened, this long century of all of its innovations and changes, it is very naive to expect people in the Middle East to see this new innovations and be immune to it, whether the seduction of the new ideologies, romantic nationalism, romanticism, Marxism, atheism, Darwinism, because they somehow have a local immunity system that prevents them. That's just not true. They find these things as fascinating as any other.
Starting point is 00:21:41 And this is the case. If you really lift all of the ideological filters and you look at the Middle East City, look at normal Arab society, you will see that they are on TikTok today. They are following all the trends. All of the COVID conspiracy theories that start here or any other conspiracy theories will immediately travel in the Middle East, be translated, be circulated with enthusiasm, just like anywhere else. If you go to an Arab wedding in Damascus or Cairo, you will discover the groom wears a black suit and the bride wears this very big white dress. I mean, these things came from certain places. and they celebrate their wedding by cutting something called a cake. And then they go home to this French Baroque 19th century style furniture,
Starting point is 00:22:30 you know, that big gold thing, things that people sit on. If you actually lift all of these ideological filters and look at how these people live, you'll discover that their entire life is shaped by the modern world like anybody else. However, maybe in a different composition than or a different articulation of it, than most other people. Now, the story that I'm telling is that, no, they adopted the modern world very enthusiastically, but we have a very limited understanding of what the modern world offer. If you're a liberal who live in a democratic country, so let's say in, like Bernard Lewis was, your understanding of the term modernity is almost necessarily positive, and it means one
Starting point is 00:23:15 specific thing. Modernity means freedom, democracy, liberalism, free market, human rights. So when you say that somebody's rejecting modernity, you imagine somebody who's backward, against secularism, against freedom, against women, so on and so forth. But here's the problem. That's only one meaning of modernity. And it's a meaning that was triumphant for the longest time. But there were also alternative meetings for modernity. Notably, the strongest of them were actually articulated in 19th century Germany. And it's a different meaning that is revolutionary, that is profoundly anti-Semitic, deeply and almost irreversibly anti-Semitic, totalitarian in aspiration. And by the way, it's even more modern than liberalism. That is,
Starting point is 00:24:05 liberalism is actually a much older worldview than these 19th century new ideologies saw themselves as post-liberal. They are the new edge, a kind of thought. And they produce these totalitarian fascinating systems that, of course, received its articulations in the world's most powerful two German ideologies. There are actually many, but there are two that became politically extremely potent, and that's basically communism or Marxism and fascism. Those also are modern answers. They have their own epistemology, and they see the world in a very certain way.
Starting point is 00:24:41 And they have actually a philosophical tradition, I would say, is much richer, much more complex, and much more seductive that anything came from the liberal worldview, whether from the French or from the Anglo-American world. And why is that? Wait, just one thing. Why is that? I mean, you wrote some of this, but fascism gives you the insane power of this idea that the collective is redemptive. Right, right.
Starting point is 00:25:07 Which satisfies so much in the modern age of identities that have been broken away from their localities and became mass societies. And communism gives you another kind of redemption arc. In other words, the very thing that religion. is seductive about religion, is seductive about these. And then when you go over to, I don't know what, Anglophone liberalism, that's all missing. What redemption is available to you in Anglophone liberalism? You're trying to buy a house and raise some kids, right? That's a huge part of the answer, right? It's that basically liberalism doesn't offer you any answer to any existential question because, or at least it didn't used to be like that. I think one of the crisis of recent crisis of liberalism is that it actually got affected by this originally Germanic way of things. and now wants to be a religion and anthropology and the theology, and ultimately that led to it because that's not originally what it could provide. It could provide very limited things that has to do with the management of everyday practical life and your needs.
Starting point is 00:26:06 As you said, fascism can only offer much more, they offer primarily a religious vision, and this causes them to be superior in many aspects. People forget that fascism and communism were aesthetically superior in every possible way to the world of liberalism. That is, if you look at the seductiveness of early century communist and fascist aesthetics, whether in their posters, in their works of art, in their writing, I mean, they produced much better writers, for instance, and most like committed liberals, they don't produce good writers.
Starting point is 00:26:45 All the good writers who came from liberal societies were not liberal. They didn't identify with T.S. Eliot for instance. instance. They were not liberal themselves because if you're a liberal, you can't write it well. Because if you're truly a liberal, your writing has to be safe. Because it's about safety. You can't injure anybody or anything. If you're not injuring anybody or anything, you write very nice, kind of cold, dead and deadening writing. Where would you put Mark Twain or Christopher Hitchens on something like that? Unsafe but liberal. Unsafe, but, well, Hitchens was militant. I mean, he was not very liberal.
Starting point is 00:27:21 So maybe not liberal. He had an enemy, like Islam and so on, and that kind of animates. When you have something you write against, when you have something that you want to injure, that's when you write interesting things. But this is just an observation why these ideological systems are seductive. But this is on the intellectual side. On the practical side, they were also very seductive for many reasons. A lot of the German thought is animated by deep hatred or from the 19th century.
Starting point is 00:27:48 I have nothing against the German people. Studying Germany deeply made me like them and their culture deeply as well. But just historically speaking, German philosophy was animated by a deep hatred for the French and the English, for various historical reasons. Obviously, this resonated with the colonial world for multiple reasons because they primarily were dominated by the English and the French. The liberal positivist thought is primarily reformist.
Starting point is 00:28:17 Well, in order to reform, you have to have something to reform. You have to have stable institutions. A lot of the countries or societies, the post-colonials or the colonial societies, they didn't even have these institutions. They had to start from zero. German revolutionary thought offers you an opportunity of a sudden, violent rupture, a break with a bad past and the beginning of a glorious future. The idea of the revolution.
Starting point is 00:28:43 Walk us through that. Walk us through that as if people have not been in those classes. So you talked about the basically the aspiration, the beginning of the aspiration of Arab reform, which was 19th century, extended till the beginning of the 20th century. The basically there was, the influence primarily was French intellectually and these societies. They were translating French thought. They were translating French concept. And they definitely talked about reform in that way. That is, we're going to reform society, the existing society to make it better.
Starting point is 00:29:17 By World War I, the basis for this thought was gone, because World War I was a rapture in Europe itself. A lot of, almost all the world empires, old empires got destroyed, including the Ottoman Empire. And then all of a sudden you have societies that never existed before. You have all of these new countries that are becoming independent, actor under colonial rule. So basically, you're just, this is a fundamentally different socio-economic reality and an intellectual reality then the one that liberal reformist thought supposes. This is something that's brand new. You're talking about a complete break.
Starting point is 00:29:55 Now, added to this, that the interwar year was really the time or the moment when you got the first post-colonial generation that basically looks like me. What do I mean post-like me? Looks like me. So in the Middle East, you basically got the first generation of Arabs who would be much closer, culturally, in taste, educationally, temperamentally, to the English officer, to that, rather to their own grandparent. And this has happened, not just in the Middle East, this happened in China.
Starting point is 00:30:30 For example, so the interwar year was a generation that really did post-colonial modernity all over the globe. In China, that's the generation of Mao. In Vietnam, that's the generation of Ho Chi Minh. In the Middle East, that was a generation that really founded. Arab nationalism, that founded Islamism, that founded all the ideologies that will continue with us today. And that generation was extremely modern. I mean, by that time, there were no madrasas. They didn't go to madrasas and mosques. No, they actually went to schools, ran by the government,
Starting point is 00:31:02 modeled after European educational systems. They were constantly translating European literature. One last factor I'll put in that in the interest, War year themselves, that was also the explosion of the popularity of both communism and fascism in Europe. As we all know, World War II happened basically out of that explosion. Linenism, or the Russian Revolution, caused this huge explosion of popular. It transformed Marxism immensely from merely a kind of an exercise for a lot of intellectuals. Lenin basically transformed it into a real world power, into a possibility. You can actually have a revolution this caused a major popularity of Marxism in Europe.
Starting point is 00:31:49 What came to be known as critical theory or the Frankfurt School was actually established as a response basically in Germany to that success of Marxism. Now, everybody's exploring Marxism in new ways, as well, of course, that with itself. The other poll is fascism itself. Arabs were deeply engaged in Europe. They were affected with these ideas. And then they started to try to articulate themselves in this new fascist or totalitarian political aspiration that really can't be called secular. I mean, whether fascism or communism, we have to remember that they don't really make any room for any separation of any areas of life.
Starting point is 00:32:36 There's no inner, there's no outer, there's no private, there's no public. it's really a total conception of man, a total conception of society, so on and so forth. And out of that fruit, for instance, out of that, the fruit of this inspiration was the beginning of the Muslim Brotherhood or what became the Muslim Brotherhood. So during the interwar years, and I'll stop here, what I want to say is that this modern epistemological base that was established throughout a century prior of French reformist thought was actually eroded and replaced with these German philosophical totalitarian concepts. And just to satisfy the left-wing view, in case any angry academics are listening to us,
Starting point is 00:33:22 you do write there this beautifully succinct couple of sentences, the devastation of World War I had discredited enlightenment ideals for Europeans and Arabs alike. In other words, there was also a reason that enlightenment ideals sank, and what was that reason. For one, it was the devastation of World War I. For the latter, moreover, meaning for Arabs, the fracturing of the Ottoman system, as well as the punitive logic of colonialism,
Starting point is 00:33:46 the British colonialist project and the holding onto Iraq and the Levant and, you know, building out a nationalist project with the Ottoman, with the Saudis, but actually it's all puppets of the British Empire. All of that stuff, that control that oppression, that imperialist project entail, in the Middle East, and intensifying social disintegration, all made the promise of gradual progress
Starting point is 00:34:10 appear naive, if not obscene. So the Western imperialist entry and oppression in the region helped to replace the French Enlightenment or Anglophone kinds of ideas that maybe some of them were susceptible toward these anti-enlightenment Germanic ideas. Arabs had gone from ruled by the Ottomans to rule by the Christians. One of the really fascinating things for me was to think of the Arab intellectuals anti-Western rage when it comes up and it comes up in many places, especially in Islamism, as Western. Right. Saeed Kutib as a German romanticist.
Starting point is 00:34:56 That's new to me. Now, is that a total innovation? It suddenly fits because Hassan al-Bannahouse was tremendously the founder. the Muslim Brother was tremendously influenced by German ideas. Can you walk us a little bit through the anti-Westernism of, for example, Islamism in the Muslim Brotherhood model, which is everything we're familiar with today? Can you walk us through how much that is dependent on borrowers from European anti-Westernism? There are many people who alluded to this, but I didn't think a lot of people actually try to look into it in details
Starting point is 00:35:29 and try to reconstruct it historically throughout the text and cultural history of how did this happen. But definitely, if you actually look at texts, and that's a bigger project that hopefully will see the light in the future, so people can actually follow those who are interested to kind of get to the nitty-gritty details. If you follow even just the history of language, I mean, let's take an Arabic word and they're going to trace its meaning from the late 18th century, year by year, publication, publication to see what it ended up meaning in the middle of 20th century, you will see that gradual shifts in the meaning of force to become a lot violent, conspiratorial, many times, very anti-Western. I can give you an example. The word conspiracy didn't exist in Arabic before the 19th century. So we all know that Arab public or political, public propaganda is shaped entirely almost by conspiracies,
Starting point is 00:36:27 and conspiracy theories. They didn't even have a word for conspiracy before in the 19th century. Passages in the Quran that says, you know, God has his wrath against, or maybe may God deliver us from the fate of those he has his wrath upon, gets almost exclusively interpreted as the Jews. That's what meant by this. Then you go to the 19th century and 18th century, you discover that this was not really the interpretation of the text. This was one out of 40 options. So you had 40 possible interpretations. So what happened really in the last century
Starting point is 00:37:03 that a single one was selected, the one against the Jews to serve an ideological need, obviously, and then canonized as the meaning of this part of the text. So you see these gradual shifts that's happening everywhere. Anti-Westernism is one of the most important Western. exports to the whole world. One of the most unique things, and I don't know how much, how much of it can be said to be that unique, but one of the most unique things about the modern West is that it mastered
Starting point is 00:37:39 also its own self-hatred discourse. It's really hard to say that about many other, many other cultures or cultural histories. The West since the 18th century, and it really started with somebody like Crusoe, started to develop, or Western thinkers started to develop this very strong hatred for the post-Christian West itself, for modern society, for capitalism that was made into a metaphysical entity that is crushing all of us and we need to alter fight. From this came all the fantasies about the noble savage, for instance, that somewhere there's some brown savage sitting on a branch of a tree and he's much more nobler than any of us. And this idea is
Starting point is 00:38:26 is continue for today. Think about the vision of society and the world that exists in the Avatar movies, right? You know, this Western technologically superior society that is deeply corrupt and decadent and violent and really inhumane. And you have this primitive blue people, these primitive blue people who are very noble. They don't even need democracy because they are free. They are ruled by this benevolent matriarch. They are in so much peace with nature. They quite or literally hook up with the animals. You know, they organically connect with the animal. I mean, you don't get more naturalism than this.
Starting point is 00:39:04 And that's the heart of romanticism in many ways. That's the heart of romanticism. That's where it always goes. Right. And this is, and this is recent. Gozgan and. Exactly. Wakanda is the same thing.
Starting point is 00:39:14 And this is, I'm talking about things that are happening now. I'm not even talking about it. But so much of, but so much of this turns the, it's, I mean, that's what's deeply orientalist about it. So much of it turns the Arab into the noble. into the authentic. So much right now of the far-right discourse in the West about Hamas admires the organic naturalness of the brutality, as opposed to the somehow artificial stilted
Starting point is 00:39:39 brutality of the Jews, which is bad brutality. That's a good brutality. It's this whole discourse on how do Arabs build out that idea? That's the thing. You can't be the noble savage in your own hatred, right? Or I guess if you can hate the West, you can be the noble savage. Yes, you can be. I mean, we imagine, first of all, the fact, when the Europeans started to develop these, these ideas, and as you get post-colonial intellectuals, that is, as you come, you have natives who can understand these ideas, I think it would be very naive to imagine that they wouldn't like these ideas. I mean, it ultimately makes them saviors. It makes them heroes. And that's, by the way, post-colonial theory entirely is based on this.
Starting point is 00:40:21 It's now the post-colonian who's going to liberate the entire world, including the West itself. from its own oppression, from its own capitalism, and so on and so forth, you'll find this in intellectual Palestinian discourse, that basically the Palestinian fighter is not just liberate the Palestinians, is not going to liberate the Palestinians. They are also going to liberate the Jews. I don't know if he ever came across a kind of this articulation, but basically because of Zionism, remember, Zionism is a tragedy.
Starting point is 00:40:45 It's a Faustian bargain with imperialism. So by destroying Zionism, this Palestinian masculine hero, It's not just going to liberate himself, but it's going to liberate you, Kaviv, from also the need to be an Israeli, the need to be this malevolent, human-hating evil person. So, as I said, these ideas were also very attractive, and then add on top of this that they were quite literally woven into this extremely powerful German ideologies, whether Marxism took some time to have it, but then you have. have it witted to fascism. That's really a lot of the blood and soil third world nationalism is a kind of a hybrid mix of those. So think about it as a, as one of the liberatory briborries of the modern world.
Starting point is 00:41:41 I mean, that's kind of one of the things about the modern world or modern society that it bribes people with false promises of making them idols or gods and saviors of the world. You know, the women are going to be the savior of men from the historical evil of patriarchy. At one point, the Jews were promised that they're going to be after World War two, they are going to be the saviors from, from, you know, a Christian or Western tyranny. This idea was adopted by a lot of kind of the radical Jewish intellectuals. And then Ida Suid basically came and articulated it for the Palestinians, kind of pulling the rug from underneath
Starting point is 00:42:17 Jewish radicals. No, now the Palestinian is going to have the promise. So it's kind of this liberatory promise that was offered. And then it was adopted by a lot of, lot of these post-colonial intellectuals. So the short answer to the Russian question, yes, anti-Westernism itself is deep, is deep and profound and extremely sophisticated Western intellectual universe of its own that has been popular around the world. So today's Arab societies, to quote you, are not the product of a mass reconversion to Islam, as I have told the story.
Starting point is 00:42:54 as Islam has told the story. Islamic discourse itself has told the story, but the mass conversion from Islam to very European ways of thinking and feeling. And you write where Lewis focused on cultural resistance to modernity, that's how he framed it, that's how I've grown up understanding it, not just from Bernard Lewis.
Starting point is 00:43:14 I studied at Hebrew University. I read a lot of Americans and English writers. Modern Arab intellectuals grew enchanted by the most dangerous metaphysical structures of post-modernity. Right. The left Islamist alliance that we're seeing
Starting point is 00:43:30 in protests in various cities around the world over the Gaza War and everybody's very surprised. What the heck is Queers for Palestine?
Starting point is 00:43:38 Any queer person can be for Palestine. Any queer person can support Hamas. But as a movement to define itself as the queer agenda supporting Hamas is awfully weird.
Starting point is 00:43:50 And yet it's not. They are born in the same fundamental over 75, 80, 100 years, same fundamental kind of postmodern resistance to modern liberalism rooted in very similar things that they've borrowed from each other. There is no civilizational gap here. There is just some pieces of Westernism.
Starting point is 00:44:15 Islam is brought into Western discourse in this way of thinking. Islam is entirely modernism, contemporary Islam. That's a thing. When we say Islam today, we're talking about something new that is entirely shaped by Western discourse. And by the way, this is not another victim and victimhood narrative. Oh, my God, even their self-destruction is because of the West. No, no, not at all. Muslim societies did this very willingly.
Starting point is 00:44:40 Muslim elites, they are the ones who did this willingly. There is complete agency in this story. But yes, the... That is profound, but it's a profound change. You had one comment on Rita that I also... will save that. It's a long essay. I promise everyone I'm not reading any more of it, except for this one little paragraph. Herein lies the paradox of Rida. Anyone who has read me has been told to go read Rida many times. Rida, his circle and his spiritual heirs, including the Muslim
Starting point is 00:45:09 Brotherhood, obviously. On the one hand, they wanted to create an Islamic revival. On the other hand, they completely transformed the meaning of Islam, shifting its center of gravity from law and revelation to man history and the world. Man history and the world understood as European and philosophical ideas. Yeah. Yeah. It's a profound re-envisioning of everything. It's a, yeah, it's a complete transformation.
Starting point is 00:45:32 That's why I'm saying the Islam that exists is a modern philosophical, really a modern philosophical hybrid that is articulated through outwardly Islamic symbols. Jihad is, you see jihad, and that's something from the world of Islam in Islamic history. You see Quran, you see Sharia. But the ideological content of these symbols is actually a modern philosophical abstract post-enlightenment idea. And that's what happened. Ultimately, you get a whole cohesive, total understanding of something called Islam that is very, very close to what fascism is. I mean, this is something that people knew, but people assumed that somehow Muhammad in the 7th century invented fascism before fascism or invented Leninism before Leninism.
Starting point is 00:46:17 I mean, this similarity that people see between modern Islamic thought and modern Islamic movements, and fascism and communism are actually real. You are 100% right. But this is because of the major transformation that happened to the meaning of Islam, in which basically it's not a return of tradition, but the continuation of the worst revolutionary thought that is deeply anti-Semitic and deeply Western that came out of Germany under religious guise. And this, once you understand this, you go back and read somebody like side code, you discover you're not reading something about the Quran. Then you see that basically this is a symbolic reading of basically the world as text. It's a very German romantic, aesthetic view of the world and of politics, married to a Leninist structure of a vanguard revolution, that basically transforms the meaning of the world, transform the meaning of the Quran, forms a meaning of Islam. Islam itself becomes this idealist force. It's something that marshes in history, a symbolic text that demands worldly actualization. And these are profoundly different
Starting point is 00:47:27 worldviews than the traditional worldview that, by the way, that is very close to rabbinical worldview. I mean, people are very secular, find it very pedantic and pity and legalistic and like the minute details about life and doesn't care about the grand things of politics and history and destiny, but that's exactly what these traditional orthodoxies were. Man, destiny, history, those are new abstraction, and probably the key one of them is history. That is, because history itself, the idea of history, that there's something called history, and the history has meaning, and it's discoverable through historians or philosophers who organize material in order to give us a view of history, that then actualizes itself in a concrete
Starting point is 00:48:13 political outcome today, this is a modern philosophical, philosophical and sadly that completely replaced any theological worldview that once underpinned Islamic knowledge. I'll tell you why this essay got me excited, because I really felt like I'd landed on a little piece of treasure. The vocabulary, Shaib and Ummma, which are words for nation in various ways. If you understand it as the German folk, a lot of pieces fall into place. Jihad. Jihad
Starting point is 00:48:47 understood as the German Kamp, as the fascist idea of Kampf, suddenly it all falls into place. And it just got me thinking of this frustration that I have listening to Muslim apologetics in the West. I have a profound respect for Islam, maybe rooted in my
Starting point is 00:49:03 very growing up essentially on medieval Jewish philosophy. I have a tremendous respect for Islam. But people keep saying in the last 50 years or so that Islam is a religion of peace. That's like one of the sort of catechisms you have to accept if you're going to be a modern, decent person. And Islam is obviously not a religion of peace. It's not a religion that sets peace as its highest goal. It's not a religion that defines itself by peace.
Starting point is 00:49:25 It's not a religion. It's not a religion. And I've always wondered, what do Muslims mean? If they're saying something you know to be wrong, then they're saying something else using this vocabulary. So what are they saying when they're saying Islam is a religion of peace? And it occurred to me that that old Islam is a religion of order, not of peace. Islam is profoundly a religion of social order. And then you can come to it with critiques about the social hierarchy that it establishes gender and Muslims and non-Muslim and all of that.
Starting point is 00:49:52 But it's a religion of absolute order. And order brings a kind of peace. Now, all of these new Islam. Exactly. All the new Islam is where you take the vocabularies and you layer them as the veneer to sell essentially European. and ideological structures are revolutionary, are the opposite of order and therefore have produced the opposite of peace. And so the collapse of Islam is the inhaling into Islam of everything that collapsed Europe up until World War II. You summarized it, you summarized it perfectly.
Starting point is 00:50:29 Historically, there have been, of course, many Islam. I mean, it's a long historical phenomena, a big part of the world, various empires, but that's the key. It's always been empires. And that means that Islam throughout its history was truly shaped by this order-driven mentality. Some order societies that were, order societies that were extremely diverse, religiously diverse, ethnically diverse, linguistically diverse. As you said, of course, it was not liberal. Of course, there was a social hierarchy. There are a lot of oppression and injustice that we can, and we should critique in Islamic history.
Starting point is 00:51:04 slavery was was permitted. Jews and non-Muslims were second, third, and class citizens with episodic episodes of of persecution. So all of this, all of this is true. But ultimately, it was driven exactly, as you said, by making and establishing a stable social order. And that's exactly not the Islam of the second half of the 20th century. The second of half, a song of the 20th century is radical, subversive,
Starting point is 00:51:34 destabilizing whether in the Middle East, as you see it, in Europe, I mean, for a lot of people who say Islam and they almost, they get goosebumps because of just how destabilizing, just the very presence of Islam is understood to be. And what I'm saying is that this is actually true. So, Bern-Luze, half of his answer is right. Yes, our observation is right. Our eyes are not lying. This is how it is. But this is not some eternal inherent nature of Islam. It happened exactly, as you said, through the complete inhalation and internalization of European ideologies that we know in the nihilism. So the kind of the rock bottom of ISIS and all of this nihilistic violence, it completely makes sense and eroding whatever meaning a lot of the Islamic texts
Starting point is 00:52:20 had and replacing it with this revolutionary meaning. And this happened, by the way, this happened in a lot of other places. But my suggestion is also this was remarkably more successful in the Middle East than many others. For example, there's something called liberal theology. So liberation, no, liberation. Liberation theology does the same for Catholicism specifically. It came from Latin America. It's an atheistic theology. I think it's one of the most hideous things in the world because it's exactly does that, but to Christianity. But liberal theology did not take over Catholicism. Imagine that liberal theology takes over the Catholic Church.
Starting point is 00:52:58 The Catholic Church, to the extent that the Catholic Church has an amnesia of what Catholicism ever meant, or even Christianity ever meant away from revolution against capitalism and the West and so on and so forth. This happened also to some, even
Starting point is 00:53:12 to Judaism to various degrees. And it still exists. For example, you have battles amongst different Jewish secular groups, trying to redefine the meaning of Jewish symbols either as progressive activism, Well, Judaism really means social justice and social activism and so on. But imagine that this process happened in the Middle East with only one meaning.
Starting point is 00:53:37 So you had only one faction who's really was determining the meaning of this modern Islam, which was revolutionary, and then completely succeeding in doing so. And that's basically what you get in this or the modern Middle East as we get it today. Now, another reason I'm trying to tell the story, this story is not just about the Middle East. And I tried to do that in the end of the essay, that I tried to make the story into a mirror for the Western reader. Because these ideologies, the World War II, was not the end of that way of thinking, or these post-Christian philosophies. They continued in various degrees. And what's happening today in American University, that basically developments out of this, very,
Starting point is 00:54:24 same philosophical ground. As you said, that this, you know, then you see why the radical left and Islamism defined so much in common. And they took over a Western high culture. The humanities, for instance, are completely gone. They are totally defined today by theories that are basically downstream from a lot of these very same ideas on which the Muslim brotherhood was built, on which Arab nationalism was built, on which the Palestinian nationalism also was built. American liberal Jews who know almost nothing at all about Judaism, but know the 15 words of Judaism you need to be a good Democrat and use Jewish and give it Jewish labels have done a kind of version of that. There's 15 Zionisms and some of them are
Starting point is 00:55:14 absolutely taking in, I mean, openly Marxist and socialist and communist and and various kinds of romanticist and nationalist and they absolutely have been. done that and tried to apply Jewish ideas and a sense of Jewish deep sort of past and history to those kinds of modern European ideas. And there's on a much smaller scale, a Sephardi intellectual project of that sort that happens over the course of the 20th century. Long story short, everybody, everybody's mental framework was scrambled in the 20th century. And Arabs were not immune and Muslims were not immune and Jews were not immune. And getting to that sense, it just feels like a such more serious, realistic, and deeply humanizing place to stand than standing, you know, apart from the Arab world, looking at Syria falling apart, looking at ISIS, looking at the Yemen war and saying,
Starting point is 00:56:06 ew, yuck, why are Arabs so violent? Which, you know, there's, I'll finish with this tiny little rant, and then I want to talk about your Substack article very briefly. at the beginning of, and I think I mentioned this on this podcast, at the beginning of guns, germs, and steel, Jared Diamond talks about walking on the beach in I believe it was Papua New Guinea and talking with a local politician named Yali, I think was his name.
Starting point is 00:56:33 And the local politician says, how come white people have so much cargo? And cargo was a word in Papua New Guinea for just literally the stuff, commodities. I mean, just literally what modern economies produce. And it was a fascinating question. And one of the first realizations that Jared Diamond had was, why don't we ask the question? Why don't we ask this fundamental question of why Western European society built this modern world and created so much advance and prosperity?
Starting point is 00:57:01 And maybe we don't ask the question because we're afraid that the answer is racist, that nature is racist, that Europeans are superior intellectually or superior in some otherwise. And he says to the things you can't ask questions about are the deep secret. anxieties that we all have to dance around. And so he's going to ask the question. And don't worry, you should read the book. I want to pull a surprise. Its answer is not racist. He thinks there are good reasons why it happened in Europe and not in, you know, the Aztecs or whatever. And they're environmental and all these other things. But that was such a fascinating moment for me. People who will not ask the question why the Arab world so much of it, not all of it, obviously, but so much of it looks the way it looks, are racist. That is a racist proposition that we don't
Starting point is 00:57:45 look at them and apply to them the same standards we would apply to ourselves. They're people. They are three-dimensional human beings, as I said. And so I feel like after reading your essay, and I haven't fully digested it, and I'm going to be thinking about it. And if I have complaints, I'll email you about them. But I feel like I'm standing on firmer ground in that regard. And so it really is one of these eye-opening moments. And I urge everybody to go to Mosaic magazine and read that essay. And then, of course, yell about it angrily on Twitter, where it will get more traffic and people will read Hussein's ideas. You wrote a piece on substack. You have an excellent substack, which everyone can subscribe to. Why not? And you argue that Zionism has become, this is usually said as a bad thing, homeless. It used to be a darling of leftist ideology and intellectual thought. And then it was a darling of the right. And now it's not really a darling of anybody or the people it's still a darling for a fading of.
Starting point is 00:58:45 way as an older generation and it's homeless. And that's not such a bad thing for Zionism. Can you walk us through that argument and we're going to, we're going to finish off here because you can do to Jews what you did to Arabs. What do you mean by Zionism is homeless and why is that a good thing? It is a good thing. I actually tried to help. And I wrote another issue also much longer about the issue. I tried to help my Jewish reader to say good riddance. So the problem, the The process that happened to Arab and Muslim societies obviously happened also at a much earlier level to Jews, because they were at the heart of Europe, I'm talking about European Jewish specifically. They were really at the heart of all of these Enlightenment developments as they were happening. And also they had a lot of stakes in them because the question of emancipation, the question of Jewish freedom from oppression and political marginalization, so on, was also hinged on a lot of these, you know, abstract discreet.
Starting point is 00:59:46 course of philosophies. And this completely transformed a Jewish self-understanding. The way it transformed Arab and Muslim self-understanding, maybe not exactly in the same way. Actually, I would say Jews ended up being much more diverse in the way they approached these issues. He didn't have that diversity. He had only the one revolutionary answer that then became institutionalized into this new post-colonial state that shaped all of these societies. But Jews, no, he had You had people who wanted to assimilate into the liberal, liberal establishment. You have people who were disillusioned with it, and they wanted some sort of modern orthodox living in the margin of the city. And then you had the Zionist propositions.
Starting point is 01:00:32 They themselves had a lot of diversity in them. But regardless of all of these attempts, which a lot of them continue with us on different forms, you know, whether liberal reformed Judaism in the United States, Zionism and its various iterations, all of them ultimately rest on a philosophical justification that naturally appeals to one of these modern philosophies, and which all of them are universal and abstract. So you either are appealing for legitimacy, for your legitimacy of your existence as a Jew and as an Israeli, you always appeal to one of those universal criteria that were established by the Enlightenment. So either you appear to nationalism and national rights and so on and so forth
Starting point is 01:01:19 as an abstract principle. You appeal to justice and democracy and so on and so forth. Now, in the moment that we're living in, this is kind of, we're living at the consummation of a postmodern century that kind of roughly started with Nietzsche, in which all of the major ideologies now are collapsing. So Marxism collapsed, fascism collapsed. And then liberalism kind of lasted for a long time, and now liberalism, everybody's seeing intellectually, philosophically, liberalism is over. No one can make an argument to justify anything using liberal principle anymore. I mean, people do that, but I'm talking about serious thinkers.
Starting point is 01:01:59 No one thinks that liberalism really can justify anything anymore. Give us a couple more sentences about that to people who just feel liberal. Right. What does that mean? Well, you can be liberal. It doesn't mean that you can't be liberal. Yeah, that liberalism is a universal idea that comes at the end of history, right? You have Francis Fukuyama, for example, at the early 90s, kind of the end, the logical and
Starting point is 01:02:25 rational end of all human political striving consummates itself on liberalism. That liberalism is rational and rests on some self-evident principles. All of this, of course, is gone because in the, you know, after, after two centuries, basically all of the post-enlightment development, which is basically radical atheism coupled with constant skepticism, ultimately means that there is no actually, there's nothing self-evident, there's nothing you can prove. The idea of the human itself is a Western invention. So liberalism has no rational ground. That doesn't mean that you can't choose it. And that's basically what some post-modern, for example, one of the main postmodern liberal thinkers, Rorty, already said that in the 80s.
Starting point is 01:03:08 He celebrated postmodernism. He celebrated the destruction of reason and the destruction of philosophy as liberating, because now we don't have to pretend anymore that there are binding things. We just like liberalism because we want it. So it's just will, right? I will to live this way. I will to be liberal. And that's what somebody like John Gray from a different angle also started saying in the 80s and the 90s.
Starting point is 01:03:33 You see, all of this has already been happening in the academy for a long time. It's kind of there is a relay between. then it's kind of you feel it in the actual street. Everybody's living it too. John Gray was a British liberal philosopher. He said basically that liberalism now it's just a cultural heritage. You know, we don't have the, there's nothing universal about liberalism. There's nothing rational.
Starting point is 01:03:53 But we can live it as our own cultural heritage. This is who we are as Western societies. We're just liberal. So basically, all of these major philosophies that used to justify things, Marxism used to justify things in the name of social justice. or the name of their revolution. Fascism used to justify things in the name of the Volk and the nation and historical authenticity, so on and so forth.
Starting point is 01:04:19 Liberalism used to justify things in the name of humanity. Intellectually speaking, all of these things collapsed in the postmodern age. So when the Zionists appeal or when you appeal, Zionism can no longer appeal to one of those many a post-enlightment philosophies for legitimacy, because none of them give legitimacy even to their own societies. I hope this idea is clear. Yeah, you wrote the liberal order once needed Israel to affirm its values because Israel was a democracy in a region that was Soviet-backed and non-democratic. And then, you know, Zionism is now finding an ally on the political right. As leftist internationalism turned hostile, Israel's struggle against terrorism,
Starting point is 01:05:09 its national identity, its unapologetic defense of sovereignty, appeal to conservative movements. But that era, too, may be fading the right that once defended Israel as a natural nationalist project is now no longer a coherent force. Today's right is fragmented, oscillating between different and often contradictory instincts, isolationism, populism, traditionalism, a reactionary impulse against the old conservative establishment that once embraced Israel. So Zionism is losing the intellectual frameworks it had used to explain itself and justify itself because the West that it was justifying itself too no longer has these intellectual frameworks, as the overriding, abiding sort of ways of understanding Western
Starting point is 01:05:50 existence. You summarized my essay better than I ever could. If you want to come out. I'm a summarizer. It's my profession. And so where does Zionism now? find itself. That's the, that's the, in the wilderness. That's basically, I use a lot of biblical imagery to understand the world and I think they're very helpful more than anything actually. And I invite everybody to do the same. They're out of Egypt. They are exactly, they are in the wilderness. It's just all of, all of the gods failed, all of the idols collapsed, the twilight of the idol to quote one of my least favorite people. It's, it's, yeah, the idols are gone. You can, you can cry as much as possible. And they say a lot of Jews doing this. It's natural.
Starting point is 01:06:32 right, kicking and screaming. No, no, no, no, don't kick me out of the temple. I belong here. You don't understand the temple itself is collapsing. It's not just that you were being kicked out, but the idols themselves are now fragmenting. And the idols themselves were fragments of fragments. I mean, if you think about the Enlightenment as a tower, then collapsed into these fragments that became different ideological idols. Now, even those different ideological idols are fragmenting now more to all of these contradictory, incohesive, postmodern world that we live in, you can kick and scream as much as you want, but there is nothing to hold you whole anymore. And that leaves, and this is why I said, Good Redens, that leaves then Jews in this historical
Starting point is 01:07:12 opportunity to then rediscover themselves. And this is something also, by the way, that I hope that will happen to Muslims and Arabs. I mean, if what I say is true, if modern Muslims are really these amnesic post-Christians who really think they are, you know, they are continuing historical historicalists. somewhere, they actually destroyed it very, very long time ago. My hope is now is the time to wake up from this nightmare and actually try to rediscover and re-articulate who is it that they are without relying on all of these fantasies of the last two centuries.
Starting point is 01:07:48 This is what I want to, I hope to see it too. I see to see now Jews also doing the same thing. Now we're not going to define ourselves according to the needs of the Western power centers to gain legitimacy, we're going to actually try to see who we think we are from our own selves. That's kind of, and this is not an appeal to authenticity. And ultimately, whatever your articulate is going to be your own reinvention, your own reading. But there's a difference than it being your own and being actually a script that was written by others that we just have, had to fit into in order for life to go on. What I liked about,
Starting point is 01:08:30 it exactly was that it's not an appeal to authenticity because authenticity runs dangerously close to romanticism and and so you're afraid of it and and it is i read it as an appeal to humility and everything the judaism has always been to me and in that sense i think i had a fairly traditional sense of what judaism is growing up has always been humility my monody's path of negation we cannot know truth we cannot know god but we can identify lies and then we throw them overboard, and then we're slowly proceeding toward truth, a place we can never get to, a path of negation that is at its heart, maybe even scientific method. I don't know, but it's a kind of sense of, I can know something that approaches closer to the truth than what I knew before.
Starting point is 01:09:16 That is the limit of knowledge, and then, of course, the Jewish argument, that is enough. And so you have, and maybe I'll end with this, you have a line that says Zionism has been forced back onto its fundamental premise because it doesn't have all these other, because the West doesn't believe in the things Zionism used to explain itself with, that the Jewish people, as a historical community extending back centuries, sought to reestablish sovereignty in the land from which they had been exiled. The central claim does not align, and no matter how much Jewish magician stride, will not align with the modern world's emphasis on fluid identities and suspicion toward fixity, nor does it easily fit the post-colonial narrative that condemns power asymmetries wherever they appear.
Starting point is 01:09:58 By choosing self-determination within a specific territory, Zionism represents a stubborn exception to the prevailing sensibilities that favor boundary blurring and universal identities. And so with these usual pillars of ideological support withdrawn, Zionism has an opportunity, some would say a necessity, to articulate its own foundations without leaning on other ideologies. It's not merely an offshoot of 19th century European nationalism, nor is it solely the result of late 20th, century geopolitics, but originates the enduring beliefs of the Jewish people about the cosmos and their place in it. Your vision of Islam, and the reason I wanted to bring these two together, your vision of where Islam went wrong, which is, you say you stand next to Bernard Lewis in the sense that Muslims built their world, not Westerners.
Starting point is 01:10:42 But what the Muslims did in order to build their current world was to lean on everybody else, to define themselves by others. The Europeans came in, not just with better tech. Europeans came in with an entire intellectual epistemological world that the Arabs found themselves totally at sea in trying to match. And so they imbibed. And they defined themselves by someone else's mental world for too long. And that is everything that is broken in them. And the Jews, in a different way, in a different reasoning, defined themselves for they're just because they're small, because they have to explain themselves to the world, because they're so small, did that as well. And you're telling the, the Jews, just be yourself. And you maybe solve a lot of these ideological dependencies that create a lot of the discourses that come after, not maybe they'll still come after us because anti-Semitism is what it is, but, but you don't need them. And maybe that's a precursor for you then telling the Arabs, and you talk about this in the essay, find your own voice. You're not going to
Starting point is 01:11:47 shed a century of thought, a century of culture, a century of assumptions about the world, but you can't just be 1920s Germans because that's not a healthy place to be. And so there's a kind of, is this your intellectual project writ large? Is to find where these things happen and how you're, I hate to say it, there's a little bit of a leftist element here of finding a non-Western path away from the westernized overwhelming of all these other peoples? Actually, actually not. I mean, that's what it seems.
Starting point is 01:12:24 But it really, I mean, I'm very Western myself. Look at how I'm speaking and how I'm thinking. I mean, not the old West is bad. But basically, it's over. We're all Western. I mean, I think that the embrace of who we are at the moment. I mean, that's going to be our starting point. You're not going to negate fighting against reality is a losing game.
Starting point is 01:12:43 That is, even for Arabs to start moving on, they have to recognize that they are 1920s Germans, right? This is actually who we are. If you're going to go rediscover your tradition and your history, you're going to go rediscover it from that point. There is no other, right? And only that self-awareness, by the way, can actually help you because then you can look for something different or go try to look beyond or pass that point. But we're all Western.
Starting point is 01:13:12 First of all, there's nothing to be ashamed of. It's just history happens the way it happens. I don't have any grand narratives about history or, theories and I don't want history to be in a certain way. It just things happen the way they happen. This is where we are today, whether Jews or Arabs. And we just have to accept that. And now we are at a juncture that gives us an immense opportunity.
Starting point is 01:13:33 That is, even with the chaos, what I write is actually immensely hopeful at the end, because I'm saying that all of this collapse is good, because it's finally cracking out of these epistemological and philosophical prisons that we have been, we've been in prison in. And now we can go past them and do other things and and actually be who we are without pretending that we're the liberators of humanity or the liberators of mankind or to fit in the script of certain people. So it's my project, but it's not left. It's as a matter of fact, I am redeeming or trying to redeem very, very humbly. Things that the historical left, philosophically back two centuries ago,
Starting point is 01:14:21 asurbed from the Judeo-Christian tradition. And this is, by the way, why I call my substack the Abrahamic Mitha Critique. And Abrahamic here is a hearkening to a midrash, a very famous midrash, that also made its way in the Quran. So it exists
Starting point is 01:14:36 actually in the text of the Quran as well. That's a Talmudic. A midrass is a Talmudic homily. It's a part of Talmudic text that is not or Talmudic-era text that is not law. Yes. Right. And it's a story about Abraham and his father was an idol maker. So he used to carve idols and people would come by them.
Starting point is 01:14:54 And that story, funny enough, that the sequence is that that's immediately after the tower. So, you know, the tower collapsed. Let's assume the tar collapsed. And then the boulders became idols, really. I mean, it's plausible that Abraham's father took some of those sitting boulders from the fallen tower and made idols out of them.
Starting point is 01:15:13 And people would buy them and worship them. And Abraham, one day, takes an answer, and he goes and hacks the idols to show people that these idols are fake. And then they, you know, he makes up these funny stories about how they destroyed each other and people don't believe them. And their own answer is a proof that these idols are nothing. And that's basically why I'm, you know, why I named my sub-stack the Abrahamic metacritic is that we've all worshipped these idols of all of these lofty ideas that are now falling.
Starting point is 01:15:45 And it's time to see that good riddance. These idols are falling. We don't need to worship revolution anymore. We don't need to worship social justice, all of these. That doesn't mean that behind the idols, there are no concepts that are important socially, but there's a difference between something practical socially, and then an idol that we sacrifice our life. We sacrifice who we are, we sacrifice other people,
Starting point is 01:16:11 which literally sacrifice our children at their feet, whether that's Palestine or freedom or honor and so on and so forth. So, yeah. The Abraham Accords in that sense is almost entirely anti-ideological, unideological, and driven by forces in the Muslim world and the Arab Muslim world, that this was explained to me once by someone from the Gulf. And I said, I don't understand why your people don't hate me. I mean, that's been the sort of archetype.
Starting point is 01:16:45 And they said, it's not that we don't, it's not that we want to reconcile an end the Arab Jewish enmity in the Middle East. It's that the obsession with Jews correlates perfectly to the self-destruction of Arab society. So we want to get over you. We want to forget about you. We want to know you only as people shopping in Dubai's malls. That's what we want from you. And people will fight over politics and interests. That sounds like the promised land.
Starting point is 01:17:12 Right. No? People will fight over. there always be conflict between humans. That's just the norm of human history. It will always, Iran and the Arabs, even if the Islamic Republic falls tomorrow, we'll always have conflicts because you always compete over resources, we live next to each other, neighbors have issues, especially if they are states.
Starting point is 01:17:30 Same thing with Arabs and Jews. But we want to get passed over for these conflicts to be these world-determining world views, right? The conflict itself is my philosophy of existence. That's the tragedy of the Arab-Israeli conflict historically. It's not that the conflict is not real. Of course the conflict is real. Of course, there is land at issue.
Starting point is 01:17:52 There are people homes. But what made it what it is, is that the conflict itself became a worldview, a self-contained, self-sustaining, a worldview with its own moral systems, with its old saints, with its own church. And, of course, again, that comes from the philosophical history that we, that we discussed. And that's actually we have an opportunity to go over. So we're going to have our conflict, but the conflict is not
Starting point is 01:18:18 going to determine who you are. It's not going to determine who I am. And by the way, when this happens, then you'll find practicality comes in. And this is why the Abraham Accords, you're right. This is why the Abraham Accords matters, because it exactly tries to achieve that. Hussein,
Starting point is 01:18:34 Abu Bakker, Mansour, thank you so much for joining me. People can find you, first of all, the wonderful essay at Mosaic Magazine, which is currently its lead essay on the website and your wonderful substack which the abrahamic meta critique they can also find it just by searching your name which will be in the show notes and wherever you are consuming this episode thank you so much for joining me thank you

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.