Wednesday, May 03, 2006

Pop culture in the name of Islam

I came across this article which reflects what i've been feeling about the Muslim music scene for a long time. May Allah reward Yvonne for this great article:


Pop Culture in the Name of Islam
YVONNE RIDLEY
Monday, April 24, 2006

I FEEL very uncomfortable about the pop culture which is growing around some so-called Nasheed artists. Of course I use the term 'Nasheed artists' very lightly. Islamic 'boy bands' and Muslim 'popsters' would probably be more appropriate.

Eminent scholars throughout history have often opined that music is haram, and I don't recall reading anything about the Sahaba whooping it up to the sound of music. Don't get me wrong. I'm all for people letting off steam, but in a dignified manner and one which is appropriate to their surroundings.

The reason I am expressing concern is that just a few days ago at a venue in Central London, sisters went wild in the aisles as some form of pop-mania swept through the concert venue. And I'm not just talking about silly, little girls who don't know any better; I am talking about sisters in their 20's, 30's and 40's, who squealed, shouted, swayed and danced. Even the security guys who looked more like pipe cleaners than bulldozers were left looking dazed and confused as they tried to stop hijabi sisters from standing on their chairs. Of course the stage groupies did not help at all as they waved and encouraged the largely female Muslim crowd to "get up and sing along." (They're called 'Fluffers' in lap-dancing circles!)

The source of all this adulation was British-born Sami Yusuf, who is so proud of his claret-colored passport that he wants us all to wave the Union Jacks. I'm amazed he didn't encourage his fans to sing "Land of Hope and Glory." Brother Sami asked his audience to cheer if they were proud to be British ,and when they responded loudly, he said he couldn't hear them and asked them to cheer again.

How can anyone be proud to be British? Britain is the third most hated country in the world. The Union Jack is drenched in the blood of our brothers and sisters across Iraq, Afghanistan, and Palestine. Our history is steeped in the blood of colonialism, rooted in slavery, brutality, torture, and oppression. And we haven't had a decent game of soccer since we lifted the World Cup in 1966.

Apparently Sami also said one of the selling points of Brand UK was having Muslims in the Metropolitan Police Force! Astafur'Allah! Dude, these are the same cops who have a shoot-to-kill policy and would have gunned down a Muslim last year if they could tell the difference between a Bangladeshi and a Brazilian. This is the same police force that has raided more than 3000 Muslim homes in Britain since 9/11. What sort of life is there on Planet Sami, I wonder? If he is so proud to be British, why is he living in the great Middle Eastern democracy of Egypt?

Apparently the sort of hysteria Sami helped encourage is also in America, and if it is happening on both sides of the Atlantic, then it must be creeping around the globe and poisoning the masses. Islamic boy bands like 786 and Mecca 2 Medina are also the subject of the sort of female adulation you expect to see on American Pop Idol or the X-Factor. Surely Islamic events should be promoting restrained and more sedate behavior.

Do we blame the out-of-control sisters? Or do we blame the organizers for allowing this sort of excessive behavior which demeans Islam? Or do we blame the artists themselves?

Abu Ali and Abu Abdul Malik, struggling for their Deen, would certainly not try to whip up this sort of hysteria. Neither would the anonymous heroic Nasheed artists who sing for freedom; check out Idhrib Ya Asad Fallujah, and you will know exactly what I mean.

Fallujah is now synonymous with the sort of heroic resistance that elevated the Palestinians of Jenin to the ranks of the resistance written about in the Paris Communeand the Siege of Leningrad. The US military has banned the playing of any Nasheeds about Fallujah because of the power and the passion it evokes.

If those Nasheeds had sisters running in the streets whooping and dancing, however, the Nasheeds may be encouraged because of haram activity surrounding them.

Quite frankly, I really don't know how anyone in the Ummah can really let go and scream and shout with joy at pleasure domes when there is so much brutality and suffering going on in the world today.

The rivers of blood flow freely from the veins of our brothers and sisters from across the Muslim world. Screaming and shouting the names of musical heroes drown out the screams coming from the dungeons of Uzbekistan where brothers and sisters are boiled alive in vats of water.

How many will jump up and down and wave their arms in the air, shouting wildly for justice for our kin in Kashmir, Afghanistan, Chechnya, Palestine, and Iraq? There are many more killing fields as well across the Asian and Arab world. Will you climb on theater chairs and express your rage over Guantanamo Bay and other gulags where our brothers and sisters are being tortured, raped, sodomized, beaten, and burned?

Or will you just switch off this concerned sister and switch on to the likes of Sami Yusuf because he can sell you a pipe dream with his soothing words and melodic voice?

Oh, Muslims, wake up! The Ummah is not bleeding; it is hemorrhaging. Listen not to what is haram. Listen to the pain of your global family.

8 comments:

Mansur said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Nuralhuda said...

I've never seen such weak points made in an article - and she's actually a journalist.

anywhoo - article refutation
here.

K3 said...

Although I agree with the sentiment of the article, some of her reasoning seems a little like playground arguments. I think more people of knowledge must take on this new pop culture in Islam.

The article refutation was similar in its reasoning + plenty of scholars have disagreed with the use of musical instruments etc..

Mansur said...

thank you for the article refutation...i appreciate that...i was so stuck for words...i didnt want to come across as angry which the article made me..but nuralhuda gives a good link to the refutation to this somewhat slanted article...

mansur

DXB_Muslim said...

I'm actually impressed by the article !

You actually agree with Muslim women throwing their dignity aside and screaming in cheer?

Or maybe it's the other points in the article..?

Tariq Nelson said...

I too was impressed with the article (I have to put "Islamic boy bands" in my mental rolodex) and had concerns with us going too far with this.

I do think that we need to reach out to people on their level, but I don't think that we should go to the point of complete imitation

MusaHabib said...

Yvonne Ridley is our sister yes, but truly her words are not to be taken seriously? I mean, come on, she converted a few uears ago and now she feels it’s her duty to teach us about Islam and what the Ummah should be doing?? Come on. Honestly, I believe the only reason why people are taking her ‘HT’ and ‘Muhajirooni’ comments seriously is because she’s white and a convert - pure and simple! We are such a sad ummah! What is so different about her and Zarqawi OR other finatics?? I mean she openly and blatatnly supported Zarqawi! Extremism is extremism. Whether it’s from Wahabism or Atheism!

Kashif said...

I actually agreed with what she said too. In the long term i'm not sure about the benefits that nasheed singers bring to islamic revival.

Musa, just because she's a revert doesn't mean she can't advise. And why is it that her mentioning of serious issues such as Fallujah makes you think that she is HT/Muhajiroun/wahabi influenced?