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CHAPTER I
PATTERNS OF RELATIONSHIP BETWEN RELIGION AND POLITICS
Herberg Will, while writing on American religious life
in the wake of rise of Neo-Orthodox movement in the fifties,
remarked, "every aspect of contemporary religious life
reflects the paradox pervasive secularism and mounting
religiosity, the strengthening of the religiosity, the
structure in spite of increasing secularization. III "The
current revivalist trend throughout the greater part of the
world has confirmed Herberg's paradox - atleast for those who
predic~ed that the onward march of science and the process
of secularization will diminish the influence of religion in
public sphere and its potential to challange the rationale
for secular authority. Thus, Smith noted - "while religion, a
mass phenomenon in traditional societies, can play a useful
role in transitional secieties in making p~litics meaningful
to the apolitical masses, the general forces of
secularization of culture and society will in the long run
erode its political effectiveness". 2 Similarly, Daniel
Lerner" in the context of Islam, declared, "Whether from East
or West, modernization poses the same basic challenge - the
infusion of a rationalist and positivist spirit against
which Islam is absolutely defenseless. 3 These and other
1. Herberg Will, Protestant - Catholic - Jew: An Essay in American Religious Sociology (New York, 1955), p.l.4 ..
2. Donald Eugene Smith, ed, Religion. Politics and Social Change in the Third World (New York, 1971), p.4.
3. Daniel Lerner, The Passing of Traditional Society (USA, 1958), p.45.
1
statements sum up the dominant mood of Western 'Modernist
School' on the complex issue of relationship between religion
and politics.
However, the emergence of phenomenon like Islamic
revivalism in Muslim populated region, Liberation Theology in
Latin America, the growing Hindu revivalism in Indian sub-
continent and fundamentalist trend in whole of South Asia,
* the NRM (New Religious Movement) in the industrialised West,
the religious resurgence in the earstwhile communist states
of the Soviet Union and East Europe. etc. have clearly
exposed the fallacies of the much acclaimed theory of social
change based upon the Modernization Model. This model has
been widely employed to understand, analyse and explain the
process of socio-cultural change and political development in
the Third World countries in post Second World War period.
The modernization theory operates on the assumption that the
society moves from 'traditional' to 'modern'. Secularization
is pre-requisite of modernization. It treats religion purely
as a reactionary force, a ritualistic dogma, a legitimising
instrument of the political system and as an anathema to
socio-economic development and political modernization.
Among the criteria that are generally employed to judge the
"degree" of modernity of any nation are the level of
industrialization, literacy, scope of the education system,
urban density, employment ratio, the administrative capacity
of the state ""and commitment to Western liberal democratic
* S~e, James A. Backford; New Religious Movement and Rapid Social Change (London, 1986)
2
values which include such factors as universalization of
political participation, rationalization of authority,
cul tural secularization and the structural differentiation.
Failing to reach these standards, a country's socio-
political- sturcture might be dubbed as static, oppressive,
monolithic and finally pre-modern. It was this theoritical
construct which led Hisham Sharabi, an orientalist, to
conclude that "the authentic modernity is only of Western
origin. 4
Scholars belonging to the modernization shcool have
tried to interpret the religious upsurge mostly in terms of
legitimacy crisis, identity crisis, cultural dualism or the
natural reaction of conservative forces to the modernizing
process in the period of transition. This is true atleast in
the context of Islamic revivalism. The theory lays great
emphasis on rural migrationS and views the phenomenon of
Islamic resurgence as a petty-bourgeois phenomenon-
symptomatic of productive urban middle class. Thus, Eric
Davis has remarked in the context of Egypt, "beyound the
urban middle class, it is difficult to see Islamic radicalism
extending to the industrial working class and peasantry which
4. Hisham Sharabi, "The Dialecties of Patriarchy", in Samih K. Farsoun, ed, Arab Society Countinuity and Change (London, 1985), pp.85-89.
5. Between 1960 and 1975 the rate of increase in the urban popultaion exceeded the grwoth of the industrial labour force in Egypt by 2%, Iran by 3%, Iraq by 8%, Jordan by 18%, Kuwait by 14%, Lebanon by 3%, Morocco by 10%, Saudi Arabia by 11%, Syria by 3% and South Yemen by 13%. See James P. Piscatori, Islam in a World of Nation States (Cambridge, 1986), p.27.
3
has traditionally ignored its appeal. ,,6 It treats religion
merely as a psychological device or spiritual niche towards
which an individual helplessly turns failing to cope with the
stress and strains of multiple crisis viz political
suppression, economic oppression and cultural regression
(losing of collective Islamic identity due to breakdown of
traditional values)- generated by the uneven process of
modernization that the Third World contries are undergoing.
Reactions to the modernization model are many and varied
especially on its emphasis on secularism as a pre-requisite
for a modern state. Eisenstadt has characterized the
literature on political modernization as ahistorical,
Western-centered, and poorly supported by the available
evidence - and tried to construct alternative models of the
modern state. 7 Dawa Norbu, in his significant study on
, Third World Nationalism' has strongly objected to the'
validity of Western concept to explain the non-Western
realities and demonstrated the positive role of tradition and
culture in evolution of Third World nationalism. 8 Nash came
6. Eric Davis, ." Islamic Radicalism in Modern Egypt" in Said Amir Arjoman'd, ed., From Nationalism to Revolutionary Islam (London, 1984), p.1S3.
7.
8 .
S.N. Eisenstadt, "Varieties of in S. N. Eisenstadt and Stein states and Nations. (Beverly p.41-48.
Political Development," Bakkan, ed., Building
Hills, 1973), Vol. I,
Culture and the Politics of Third World Dawa Norbu, nationalism and Ch-S.
(London & New York, 1992), specially Ch- I
4
to a similar conclusion about the role of Buddism in Burma,9
and William argued that Roman Catholicism is now a positive
factor in nation building in Latin America. 10
More recently a number of authors have reacted to the
widely discussed "Islamic revival" by arguing that Islam does
not act as a general obstacle to modernization in the Middle
East. 11 Much before, Maxim Rodinson showed that Islam did not
act as cultural obstacle in the development of capitalism. 12
Carroll has convincingly demonstrated that there is no
necessary relationsip between secularization and a
development of a modern state which implies the capacity to
undertake a range of large, complex tasks on a regular and
c.ontinuing basis and not to be confused with the liberal
democratic values of the West. 13 This definition of modern
state is applicable to all kind of its varities - Liberal,
pluralistic Marxist, Social democartic and Conservative. In
fact depending upon the religion of the people and the
9. Manning Nash, "Buddhist Revitalization in the Nation State' : The Burmese Experience," in Robert F. Spencer, ed, Religion and Change in Contemporary Asia (Minneapolic, 1971), pp.l0S-22.
10. Edward J. Williams Nation-State and Comparative Politics 1974), pp.261-77.
"The Emergence of the Secular Latin American Catholicism" , (New York), Vol. 12, no. 5 (Jan,
11. John L. Esposito, ed, Islam and Development : Religion and Socio-Political Change (Syracuse, 1980).
12. Maxim Rodinson, Islam and Capitalism (London, 1966).
13. Terrance G. Carroll, "Secularization And States of Modernity", World Politics (Princeton, N.J.), Vol. 36, no. 8 (April, 1984), pp. 362-82.
5
ideological character of the state elite, a modern state may
give primary importance to religion, it may be essentially
secular, or it may be at any point between these extremes. 14
Perhaps much of the failure of modernization school
stems from its understanding of secularism in terms of
'ideal' seperation of church from state as to be found in the
advanc~d industrial societies of the West. But as Glasner
has noted that ideal types are too often confused with
reality and has identified many of the different and
sometimes contradictory meanings to the concept of
secularization. 15 He concluded that religion does not play
the role assigned to it in the ideal-type traditional system
in any exisiting society as depicted by Smith, nor is any
existing society as completely secularized as the ideal-type
modern state. 16 In fact a cross-cultural study of pattern of
secula~ization process in diferent societies reveals that it
may take differnt forms in differnt countries depending upon
the nature of polity and socio-economy formation. As one
scholar noted, "Secularization is a many sided
phenomenon affecting different aspects of the social and
cuI tural structures of society in diverse ways and in
different sequences. 17 Majid Khadduri has noted the
14. Ibid, p. 363.
15. Peter E. Glasner, The Sociology of Secularization Critique of a Concept (New Delhi, 1977).
1~. Glasner, n. 15, pp.67-76
A
17. Jeffry Haynes, Religion in Third World Politics (Buckingham, 1993), p. 27. ,
6
possibility of four forms of secularization in the Islamic
co~text. These include the adoption of measures which have
little or nothing to do with Islam, the adoption of measures
which are in principle consistent with Islam but are not
dealt with in such detail as would fit existing conditions,
the adoption of measures which may substitute certain aspects
of Islam that have become obsolete and, finally, the
seperation of religion from the state. 18 Smith also opined
that "the dominance of poli ty over religious beliefs,
practices and ecclesiastical structures in itself is a form
of secularism. 19
A closer analysis of working of the ~merican political
system denies the principle of actual seperation of church
from state, though it exists in the legal form. The mutual
influence of religion and government in the United States can
be shown by a simple listing of some of the ways in which
they affect each other such as church interest and influence
in marriage and divorce laws and in birth control
legislation, the concern of many church groups with "social
legislation-child labour, social security etc., the interest
of some churches with processes in the courts and prisons;
government chaplainies and religous services in the armed
forces; required oaths, blasphemy laws; Sunday observance
laws; government observance of special religious days and
18. Majid ~adduri, Political Trends In The Arab World ,(Balitimore 1972) I p.2l4.
19. Dona 1 d Euge ne Smi t h , ~R:.::.e"-,l",-",=i..::g"""i"-,o=n,------,a=n:.::.d~_P~o,-"l:...,,l.,,,-· -=t~i:...:c""a~l Development (Boston, 1970),p.86.
7
occassions; concern of the churches over the "Bill of
Rights", which includes religious freedom and involves the
problem of censorship; Church interest in radio and
television, the protection of religion in progranuning and
granting of time to religous groups, inpart by legal
requirement. 20
It is notable that the supereme court has given it an
official sanction by declaring (in 1892 and at other times)
that the United States is a Christian nation in the broad
sense that christian principles underlie its laws and
values. 21 On the other hand one can find the widespread use
of religious values and symbols to try to win various kinds
of political struggles. Groups such as the Christian Front
and Spiritual Mobilization on the right and the Fellowship of
Christian Socialists on the left, are quite active in
claiming a religous mandate for various political policies.
In fact the roster of lobbyists in Washington working for
churches and other religious organizations is an extensive
one. 22
Hence Samuel Krislov, an American legal scholar,
expressed Skepticism on the point and remarked, "Seperation
20. See Stokes, in Myron J, Aronoff, ed., Religion and Politics (New Brunswick, 1984), pp. 52-62.
21. J. Milton Yinger, Religion. Society and Individual: An Introduction to the Sociologyof Religion (New York, 1957), p. 244.
22. Luke E. Ebersole, "Church Cap i tal" , ""'S-"'o=c=i""'a:..:l"--..... A....,c"""t""l.=:.· "",o=n pp.5-35.
8
Lobbying (London) ,
in the Vol. 22
Nation's (1981) ,
of church and state is an artificial concept not really
capable of easy implementation or logical achievment".23 Or,
as N.J. Demerath has put it, "The separation of chruch and
state is a construct of political theory rather than a
description of governing reality. ,,24 He also showed that
separation is a functional necessity of any modern state.
His case study of religious state such as Pakistan,
Indonesia, Thailand and Sweden, showed that they all share
more functional seperation of religion and government than
either their politics or their legal structure would
suggest. 25 United States of America is not unique in this
aspect.
While commenting on the concept of secularism Tamara
sonn also opined, "it is not an ideology, as such, or a claim
that the separation of the two orders religious and
polit:i,cal' is based on a metaphysical division or
compromise of divine unity or sovereignty. It is rather, a
practical response to the socio economic reality of
geographically limited states. Secularism developed out of 'a
need to find political legitimacy consistent with limited
geographical claims unlike the claims of the church. Once
23. Samuel Krislov, "Alternatives to Seperation of Church and State in Countries outside the United States," in James E. Wood, Jr; ed., Reli'gion and the State (Waco,
'Tex, 1985), p.56 .
24. . N.J. Demerath, Religions: Cross the Seperation (Cambridge), Vol.
25. Ibid, pp. 21-40
"Religious Capital and Capital - Cultural and Non-Legal Factors in of Church and State", Daedalus 120, no. 3 (Summer 1991), p.22
9
the separation had been articulated, a democratic and
therefore limited political legitimacy was substituted for
religous, potentially unlimited political legitimacy. And in
the exposition of democracy came development of secularism. 26
Max Weber, too, much before the present debate began, had
ruled out the the possibility of actual separation of church
from state and delineated three maj or types of relations
between ecclesiastic and secular power hierocratic,
theocratic and Caesaropapist. 27 In the first, secular power
is dominant but cloaked in religious legitimacy; in the
second, ecclesiastic authority is pre-eminent, and in the
third, secular power holds sway over religion itself.
Thus, it seems possible to conclude that in some cases
the ecclesiastical structure may be the dominant one while in
other cases political authority will dominate the Church,
but in either case Church and state will not be seperate.
Because the relationship between religion and politics are
imbedded in a whole social structure and will vary with
variat·ions in that sturcture. The nature of reconciliation
vary widely depending on the location of' political power, the
sturcture of the ecclesiastical organization, the needs of
the individual involved and the distribution of economic
power.
26. Tamara Sonn, Between Quran and Crown; The Challenge of Political Ligitimacy in the Arab World. (Boulder, 1990) p.28. '.
27. Max Weber, Economy and Soci~ty, (Berkeley, 1978), Vol. 2, pp.1159-60.
10
Though the empirical evidence supports the closer nexus
between the lower income group people and religious
revivalism., 28 by reducing the latter to urban middle class
phenomena' or merly socio-economic anomic the modernization
school has not only ignored the mass character of the
religio-political movement (as evident from revolution in
Iran, Ikhwan in Egypt and Liberation Theology in Latin
America) but has failed to recognize the in-built potential
for political mobilization which religion keeps in its
capacity as historically evolved cultural systems, rather
than merely as an ideology in Western sense. 29 For there is
no reason to suppose that the Wahhabis in the eighteenth
century, were impelled to their enthusiam by Adam Smith and
·Karl Marx. 30 Ashis Nandy, a noted third World Scholar, has
also criticized the Western oriented secularist for treating
religion as an ideology in opposition to the ideology of
modern statecraft and, therefore, needs to pe contained. He
further said that the Western brand of secularism has little
to say about >cultures - it is definitionally ethnophobic and
frequently ethnocidal, unless, of course, cultures and those
28. See, Chrles Y Glock & Rodney Stark, Religion And Society in Tension (Oxford, 1985), Ch-10, also Saad Eddin Ibrahim, "Anatomy of Egypt Militant Islamic Group
Methodology Notes and Preliminary Finding," International Journal of Middle East Studies (London), Vol.12, n.4, (December 1980), pp. 438-9. Robert wuthnow, "Understanding Religion and Politics," Daedalus, 120, no. 3, Summer 1991, p.14.
29. For difference between culture and ideology, see Norbu, n. 8, p .. 7.1.
30. Earnest Gellener, ed, Islamic Dilemma : Reformers. Nationalists and Industralization : The Southern Shore of the Mediterranean (New York, 1985), p.14.
11
living by cultures are willing to show total subservience to
the modern nation - state and become ornament or adjuncts to
modern living. 31
The recognition to the cultural power of religion in the
wake of its emergence as political force has led to shift in
the approach to t.he meaning, role, status and position of
religion in the society. Traditionally the sociology of
religion has narrowly focussed on the positive and
integrative fuctions of religion for both individuals and
societies. The question of power orientation and conflict
potentials of any universal religion has recently come up.·32.
Now even the Marxists, who hitherto dismissed religion as
metaphysical, non-scientific, ideological mystification of
reality, false consciousness etc. have now recognized the
'relative autonomy' of religion and its capacity to influence
the course of economic and political change. As Althusser,
the noted structuralist Marxist remarked, "religion like all
ideologies, enjoys an existence in its own right and is,
therefore, as real as material forces.,,33
The cultural aspect of religion and its autonomous role
has gained prominence in the recent writings. Indeed from
31. Ashis Nandi; "The Poli tics of Sec;ularism and the Recovery of Religious Tolerance," Alternatives (England), Vol. 13 (1988), p.179.
32. See, J.A. Backford, "The Restoration of "Power" to the Sociol0S-Y of Religion, " Sociological Analysis (Washington, D.C.), Vol.44, nO.l, (1983), pp.11-31.
33. Quoted ·in James A. Backford, Religion and Advanced Industrial Society (London, 1989), p.138.
12
Max Weber to George Simmel each analysed religon as a
reposi tory of fundamental cuI tural meanings through which
both individuals and collectivities are able to interpret
their conditions of existence, to construct identity for
themselves and to attempt to impose order on their
environment. Religion is regarded, in this perspective, as a
largely symbolic resource or code in terms of which meaning
is continuously produced, transmitted and contested.
Essentially the term religion is a multi faceted
concept with three distinct, yet interrelated meanings. First
the term includes religious establishment (including priests
and officials) and groups sponsored by religious
organization. Second, spiritually the term pertains to models
of social and indi vidual behaviour that help to organize
everyday life, it .is to do with the idea of transcendence,
i.e., it is associated with supernatural realities,with
sacredness, i. e. as a system of language and practice that
organizes the world in terms of what is deemed sacred, and
finally, it is to do with ultimacy i. e .. religion relates
people to the ultimate condition of their existence. 34
The ' Cultural power' of a religion can be defined as
"the capacity to use cultural resources to affect political
outcomes. These resources include symbols, ideologies, moral
authori ty and cul tural meaning. They can be used to
34. G. Moyser, "Politics and Religion in the Modern World: An Overview", in G Moyser, ed., Politics and Religion in the Modern World (London, 1991), pp. 9-10.
13
legitimate or delegitimate political outcomes or actions, to
keep some issues public and political and others out of the
public eye altogether, and to frame the terms with which
issue are dicussed when they are public.,,35.
However, the capacity of religion (or religious
groups/organization/authority) to exercise its cultural-power
will differ from country to country depending upon the ethos
of religion, the organizational nature of religious authority
and also the degree to which the 'social ethos of a society
has been liberalized. The greater the liberal ethos of the
society the +ess the role for reI igion to play in the
political affairs of the society and vice-versa. It is
because of the liberal ethos of the advanced Western nations
that religion does not play the prominent role in the
country's political affairs. In other words Christianty has
adjusted and compromised its role to the "private affairs" in
accordance with the needs of the emerging liberal democratic
secular political order in the West. The value system of
Third World societies including Muslim have not been fully
liberalized and hence not secularized. Secularism in
any society derives its strength from the internal liberal
social ethos of that society. Therefore, manifestation of
secularization in countries with a tradition of more or less
coercive religions conformity (like Middle East countries)
will differ from those of countries such as the u. S.A. or
35. Demarath and Rhys William, Bridging of Faiths; Religion and Power in a New England City (Princeton, J.992).' p.27.
J.4
There~ore, religion along with the tribal value system,
remains the strongest basis of social and political life in
that country.
As compared to Egypt, the liberal social ethos is less
stronger in Iran, but more stronger in comparison to Saudi
Arabia. Unlike Egypt, Iran escaped the direct political
domination of the West. Moreover the pecularity of Iranian
Shiism such as the institutionalized hierarchy of mujtahid,
its identification with nationalism and its close association
with t;.he petty-bourgeois merchant cormnunity acted as a
powerful deterrent to the outside influence. The ulama' S
participation in the brief constitutional movement of Iranian
history was not guided by the high ideals of Western liberal
political values. As a consequence religion remains a
dominant force in Iran.
The subsequent chapters will show how religion plays
different roles in each of these three countries depending
upon the differences in the socio-cultural, economic and
political structure of these countries.
It is now becoming clear that religion can still convey
symbqls of newly' perceived social relities. It can serve as
a language for representing powerful inspiration,
perceptions, sufferings, and aspirations even though the
users of this language not easily associate with any
religious organization.
resource or form which may
challange, or conservation.
16
It remains a potent
act as the vechile
Even in the West
cultural
of change,
where the
processes of industrialization has undermined the communal,
familial and organizational bases of religion, the religious
forms of sentiment, belief and action have survived as
relatively autonomous resources.
Essentially the relationship of the state, society and
religion are triadic. Role of religion in politics is thus
influenced by the specific kind of relationship between the
state and the society that obtains in a given historical
conjuncture. Religion provides the moral basis of the
state's authority, as well as an institutional and
metaphysical structure for social transaction. In turn,
religion is affected
and changing social
introduced into the
by the disposition of temporal power
norms and attitudes, some of which are
arena from outside. In this sense,
religion is not a static system of symbols shared by merbers
of a group or society. Religious values are formed and t.heir
salience rearranged within the political arena. Furthezo the
specific role attributed to religion at a given time and
place depends primarily upon the status of religion in the
constitutional framework and the social meaning attached to
it. On the basis of constitutional position of religion,
following pattern of relationship can be obtained between
religion and the state in modern period
HEGEMONIC. In this pattern the hegemony of a partie ular
religion co-exists with toleration of other religions. The
society defines interpersonal relations in terms of cc·rmnon
law and market transaction and religion is left very much as
17
a matter of personal faith. The Uni ted Kingdom and the
Scandinavian contries (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and
Sweden) can be put under this category. In U. K . the law
requires its Head to be a member of the Church of England.
The state provides protection not extended to other religions ,
to the church through the laws of blaspnemy. Similarly in
all five scandinavian countries the Lutheran State Church
dominates the religious life of the society.
THEOCRATIC : - A theocracy exists within a society which
construes interpersonal relations in terms of a specific
religion and enjoins the state to promote this religion. Art
2 of the constitution of Islamic Republic of Iran clearly
acknowledges "the Divine Revelation and its fundamental role
in determining the laws. Art 12 further states "the official
religion of Iran is Islam of the Ja.fari twelve Imam sect and
this article is inalterable in perpetuity. For Saudi Arabia
the Our' an itself is the constitution. The country has
monarchial regime in alliance with Wahhabism.
SECULAR: :- It includes those states which share the common
attributes of a legal seperation between the state and the
Church. France, U.S.A., Turkey, and communist states like
former. U.S.S.R. and Peoples Republic of China are examples of
this type. All communist states deny the legitimacy of
relgion altogether and make an expiticit attempt to replace
the values and institutions of religion with those of
materialism, the state and the communist party.
18
NEUTRAL. States lkie India officially maintain a neutral or
hands off attitude to religion in principle, but in practice
concede the convergence of the sacred and the secular out of
deference to the wishes of society. The state disengages
itself from any formal links with religion.
Lastly there are many countries who have declared
state's religion but are not governed solely by religious
perception. Under this falls most of the Muslm states, Sri
lanka, Burma, etc. It is typical of the most of the Third
World nations which in their post-colonial phase, adopted the
policy of state's religion in order to butterss the
legitimacy for the state and moral under pining for those
roles, necessary to political objectives. As Apte"r has
remarked, "religiosity in the political sphere is used,
however, to create system of instrumental means and secular
objectives rather than theocratic ones. In this respect
political religion "is at least partly employed for non
religious objective.,,36
Van Moorseven and Van der Tan have summarised the
constitutional position of different religion based on the
survey of 142 national constitution -
According to that survey conducted in 1978, "Study of
written constitution indicated that forty three (or 30
percent) of those analyzable provided for a national religion
36. David A. Apter "Political Religion in the New Nations," in Clifford Geertz ed; Old Societies and New States (New Delhi, 1971), p.89.
19
and ninty-nine (or 70 percent) did not. Thirty-three
countries specified religion, mostly notably for the office
of religious minister. All but twenty had some reference to
church or rel igion. Sixty-one (or 43 percent) guaranteed
freedom of religion, while sixty-four (or 47 percent)
guaranteed both religious freedom and the right to be
affiliated religiously. Only ten (7%) have no constitutional
provision of this type. Provisions for freedom of religion
are much more common than provisions for freedom of thought
indeed the frequency is almost double that of
political freedoms.,,37
Thus, the legitimate role of religion, however, is by no
means a problem specific, except in the communist ruled
states. Every society has to work out an institutional
arrangement according to its cultural tradition and the
historical process within which it is placed. The experience
of the United Kingdom, France, Iran, Scandinavian Countries
and others suggest that the development of the triad of
state, society and religion is a continuous process in which
changes in the state structure and the social composotion are
eventually reflected by changes in or challenges to the
religious regime.
From the standpoint of the government, religion may be
both a source and an object of administration. It is a
37. Hen C. Van Moorseven and Ger Van Constitution: A Comparative Study 1978) .
20
der Tan, Written (Dobbes Ferry, N.Y.
source because it offers an institutional network whose
tentacles reach both deep and wide across the society. This
allows a variety of administrative efficiencies, ranging from
the Swedish census to Indonesia's golkar apparatus. Religion
may also be an administrative object when it represents a
potential base of counter mobilization which must be
dampened. As a cultural wild card in the frequently fixed
game of state politics, religion poses a threat to
established policies and policy makers. Perhaps, this is the
major reason why "state religions" are more common than
"religious states". Governments frequently "volunteer" their
offices and resources to "assist" with important religious
function, including religious publication and education,
pilgrimages such as the Islamic hajj to Mecca, and the
maintenance of churches, mosques and temples. Alliances
between government and religion frequently smack of.
cooptation, and religious .groups sometimes prefer to remain
outside of the political establishment and state apparatus to •
preserve their power potential. "j 6 7W~J ~ <1
h 1 · h' b 1" ~a 5""1" b T e re at~ons ~p etween re ~g~on an po ~t~cs ecomes
more complicated in socie.ties that are highly stratified and
have developed religious specialists. In isolated and
preliterate societies, where religious specialists have not
developed to an important degree there is close
identification of religious group with political group
membership. In such societies with fewer religious
specialist, there has been less development of a seperate
religious structure, a centre of power which might compete
THESIS 291.1787
AI117 Ro
1111111 II 111111 1111"1111 TH5792
21
with the political structure. And political authorities,
without such a system to manipulate, are themselves fully
circumscribed in their views by the beliefs of their own
society. Thus, they are ~nlikely to be able to use the
religious patterns to reinforce their own power beyond the
limits of the established norms. But in a developed and
stratified society, religion is looked upon as an instrument
of power. The political class sees in religion a means of
preserving order - an order that places them at the apex.
The political authorites may become so powerful that, rather
than having their use of coercive means limited and governed
by religious values, they may succeed in transforming the
religious institutions precisely into another instrument of
coercion. To the degree that this happens, religious belief
and practices become simply one manifestation of the
political situation, and their control over the phase of the
political problem' (preventing authorities from using their
power to their own advantage). This development implies a
change in the religious tradition and organisation, a
selective application of its doctrines, rites, and
structures, emphasizing those that enhance the power of the
rulers, denying or obscuring those that might restrain it. , The political use of religion makes it difficult to
distinguish between a situation in which religion reinforces
a stable social order and one in which religion is used by
those who possess political power to their own advantage in
violation of the norms of that order.
22
'.
On the other hand, there may develop a sharp tension
between religion and the political ·system. Religion may
exert power in state matters. Even where religion lacks
access to the political instruments of "structural power"
(whether coercion, votes, budgets, or networks of
influentials), it may wield considerable 'cultural power' as
defined earlier. The nature and the degree of the conflict
with the political authorities varies with the religious
tradition and with the structure of power in, society. The
religious instititution may themselves employ violence to
establish the supermacy of their claims over what they
consider to be merely political claims. This is not
uncommon, particularly in the history of Christianity and
l;slam. However, the degree of religious opposition to the
state authority also depends upon the authority of religious
structure itself. Thus within Christianity itself, there are
wide and obvious differences between "episcopal" top-down
structures, on the one hand and "congregational" bottom-up
models of local autonomy on the other. Within Islam, there
is a fundamental distinction between the more authoritatively
structured Shiites and the more locally autonomous Sunnis.
Hinduism is more centrally organized in Indonesia's Bali than
in India Budhism's Sangha in Thailand differs from
Buddhism's organizational form in Tibet, let alone withi-~
the "greater vehicle" of China or Japan. From the standpoi:nt I'
of sheer political potency, the combination with the great~st
potential is ethical prophecy embedded within and protecteJ
by a hierarchical ecclesiastical structure ·(for example
23
eighth-century Islam or pre-Reformation Catholicism)
Conversely the least likely source of political power is
emissary prophecy without organizational trappings (for
example, the Hindu guru). Ethical prophecy wi thout the
reinforcement of an organizational structure may amount to
spitting in the political wind. And an elaborate
ecclesiastical structure without an ethically prophetic spark
is particularly vulnerable to state cooptation. After all,
those who make it to the top of such ecclesiastical ladders
are selectively recruited, gradually socialized, and
generally rewarded for their loyalty to the political status
quo.
In a highly developed and stratified society the stage
is set for personal struggles for power between religious and
political leaders, for clashes in principle, for conflicts
between ecclesiastical and political organizations. These
struggles may be entirely political, involving only
disagreements over the use or distribution of secular power.
But they may represent the appearance of religious ideas that
are not. harmonious with the secular institutions, that
contradict their claims or values. Thus, the whole of
Islamic mass movements, be it in Egypt, Iran, Algeria,
Tunisia, Sudan and others and Liberation Theology movement
have strong power-orientation. They do aspire to capture the
political .power. Islamic opposition groups are products of
the very socio-political orders they oppose. At the same
time, those elites who attempt to buttress their own
legitimacy through reliance on institutional Islam are at
24
least as committed to political survival as they are to the
spritual values they so fervently espouse. Max Weber noted,
"the man who is concerned for the welfare of his soul and the
salvation of the souls of other does not seek these aims
along the path of politics. Politics has quite different
goals, which can only be achieved by force." 38 Though this
maximalist view may seem unduly cynical, the record of those
political elites in the ~ who rely on Islam for legitimacy
seem to verify Weber's insight. Can political leaders who
claim high levels of religiosity maintain the same level and
character of commitment to their core spiritual values while
in power? Certainly there are many in Saudi Arabia,
Pakistan, and the Islamic Republic of Iran who question the
II Islamicness" of their leaders. Khomeini the oppositionist
generated far more popular support in Iran and in the Umma
than does Khomeini the Head of state. Islamic doctrine in
the test tube is far better defined than is Islam as a guide
for state management. And Islam as an ideology becomes
significantly less important when it is confronted by the
imperatives of a state's national interest. As Weber has
pointed out lithe followers of a warrior of faith, once they
have achieved power, tend to degenerate into a thoroughly
commonplace class of office-holders. 39
38.
In fact, the religiopolitics is politics much like other
Max Weber, "Politics as a vocation," in W.G. Runciman, ed., Weber: Selection in Translation (New York, 1978), p. 223.
39. Ibid, p. 222
25
politics. The two influence one another, but claims by
religio-political activists to have some sort of special
mandata from God which raises them above politics tend not to
be persuasive. For as Weber also notes, "he who meddles with
politics, who in other words makes use of the instruments of
power and violence, concludes a pact with infernal powers".40
Religio-political actors generally exaggerate the religious
content of their actions, while denying the political
content. For instance, those trying to interpret the political
behaviour of Ayatollah Khomeini are subj ect to charges of
being anti-Islamic.
more difficult.
This make the task of secular somewhat
It is within this framework of power-struggle between
the religious organization and the political strucure that
the following propositions can be made for understanding and
comparing the role of religion in a variety of state
polities:
(1) Although religion is conventionally viewed as an element
of traditionalism, recent cases of religio-politics are often
the product of modernization and social change. They are
most likely to prosper during crisis of i~entity, ideology,
legitimacy and participation.
In societies undergoing rapid transformation, religion
frequently serves as a culturally authentic and spiritually
satisfying anchor to the familiar and the understood.
40. Ibid, p. 220.
26
Furthermore, " in light of the absence of conventional
participatory mechanisms, formalized religions organizations
can, and in the view of some religious leaders, should serve
as vehicles for improving the quality of life for their
adherents. ,,41 Such sentiments are recognized both by political
elites and counter elites.
(2) Religio-political is a common type of political
mobilization or countermobilization, not merely a theological
ritual. Thus Liberation Theology in Latin America, Islamic
movements in Muslim World, the Moral Majority in the United
states, Poland's Solidarity Movements etc are or were
inspired by religion with political belief being mediated
through man's spiritual relationship wi th God. Yet such a
mobilization is most definitely political mobilization for
the accomplishment of political goals.
Religion provides a particula.r perspective for
evaluating social, political and economic conditions. The
form of such politics is heavily influenced by religious
symbols, values and idioms. Thus religio-politics may be
analyzed in comparison or in contrast with other ideologies,
most of ,which are concerned with similar sorts of issues that
are perceived and addressed in different idioms.
Thus, religion is more than doctrine or liturgy and in a
political context functions as an ideology not unlike
secular ideologies. Religious activists are equally concerned
41. Jerrold D. Green, Revolution in Iran: The Politics of Counter-Mobilization (New York, 1982), p.150.
27
with social, economic, political and moral questions.
The political component of religio-politics becomes at
least as significant as the religious one as the goals of the
participants are not religious per se.
As religio-political activists increase their
involvement in the day-to-day political life of a polity, the
agenda of issues and problem with which they are confronted
is not; likely to be resolved on the basis of religious
doctrine alone. 42 Religious dogma provides guidance on
economic and political issues only in the most general terms.
Pursuit of the national interest is likely to supercede
strict adherence to religious canons. Religiopolitical
leaders, either consciously or subconsciously, will attempt
to 'obscure this exacerbation on the basis of the very
doctrinal factors on which they rely to enhance their
legitimacy. In a conflict between the profane and the
spiritual, particularly when questions of power and dominance
are at stake, the profane is likely to win, yet, in a fashion
that will be disguised, not highlighted.
Religio-politiCs redefines the criteria for and the
nature of elite legitimacy while changing the form more than
the context of governmental activity. Different symbols and
idioms are relied upon while the standards for elite
42. See, Charles E. Butterworth, "Prudence Versus· ~egitimacy: The Persistent Theme in Islamic Political Thought" in Ali. E. Hillal Dessouki, ed, Islamic Resurgence in the Arab World (New York, 1982), pp.84-144.
28
legitimacy will be modified. Yet, despite the emergence of a
new political elite, its appearance will differ for more than
will the context of its actions. Absolute religious
principles do not fit well in the "compromise" world of
actual governance. Theological constraints on state actions
do not sit well with elected officials who seek to preserve a
capacity for flexible policy responses to changing
circumstances. And,
law or state policy,
if religion must be incorporated into
most officials prefer very brief and
very general codifications which can be variously interpreted
as conditions warrant. Even where a nation's political
leadership is overtly religious, most governments depend upon
a sophisticated civil
unto i.tself, one that
cynical with respect
service that may become a
is frequently secular and
to its nation's traditional
conununity
sometimes
religious
pattern. As such, the problems confronting a society change
far less frequently than do the personnel managing it. The
rules of the political game may be transformed, but the game
remains basically the same.
Religio-politics brings an assortment of moral issues to
public life and then prpceeds to ignore many of them. Due to
the flexibility of religious doctrine and the complexity of
state management, the religio-political activist's stated
concern with moral issues are generally outstripped by his
eagerness to preserve his political power a power he
attributes to his moral superiori ty yet which is more
dependent on the use of force.
29
Religiopolitics is frequently an intense statement of
some form of nationalism and/or ethnicity. This proposition
is more applicable to the Third World Societies than to the
industrialized West. In the West,
basis of religious ideas and
systematically undermined and
the social and political
institutions had been
eroded by a series of
revolutionary changes since the sixteenth century, the
Renaissance, Enlightenment, Industrial Revolution, scientific
and rationalistic education etc. There the ground was much
better prepared for the rise of egalitarian politics, which
defined the main characteristic of Western nationalism.
Moreover, there were far fewer cases of imperialism, a
foriegn political system controlling various nationalities or
even nations in the West than in the Third World where
imperialism or colonialism became the maj or target of
nationalism. Whereas in the West the main issue before
nationalism was how to replace royal authority or monarchical
rule by various forms of popular mandate, in the Third World
colonies it was how to overthrow foreign colonial domination.
However, the Third World countries still face the challange
of Western imperialism in the field of economy and culture.
It is within these contexts that the relative absence of
religion eroding revolutionary changes in most of the Third
World countries meant that tradition was/ still is a live
social force that moved the hearts and minds of millions
which could be effectively manipulated for mobilization
purposes. That is why religion - induced culture has given
the basic orientation to Third World nationalism. The secret
30
of the Third World nationalism resides in this paradox :- the
politicization of the non-political (namely, culture) but
primarily for political ends -- the creation of the nation -
state, as the most efficacious instrument of defending and
promoting socially shared interest. 43
A pure World religion neither directly nor substantially
constitutes a national identity, it only provides the logical
framework within which national tradition is formed. Hence
pan-- religious statements and actions may seem to contradict
above proposition, all states, even those managed by clergy -.
politicians, feel that their interpretation of religion is
the best one and such interpretations become synonymous with
a particularistic ethnic or national interest.
In the context of Islam the rhetoric of pan- Islamism
has been used by various Muslim statesmen, leaders, regimes
arid opposition movements essentially to serve their own
specific political designs. The post Abbasid history of Islam
witnessed the political useof Caliphate especially to
legitimise the internal rule of various Muslim regimes. 44 It
was for this symbolic function that the Caliphate as an
institution was retained for many more years, despite the
destruction of the Abbasid Empire/Caliphate, until its formal
abolition by Kemal Ataturk in 1924. In modern times it was
deliberately used by Sultan Abdul Hamid II, the Ottoman
43. Norbu, n. 8, p.17.
44. IR. Thomas W. Arnold, The Caliphate (Oxford, 1934).
31
ruler, in order to enhance his prestig~ in the Muslim world
and also as a political strategy to deal with European powers
who were posing a serious threat to the territorial integrity
of the Ottoman Empire. Pan- Islami"sm also served as an
ideological instrument in the hands of Jamaleedin Afghani to
unite the Muslim population against European colonialism and
imperialism.
The aftermath of the abolition of Caliphate withnessed
the host of pan-Islamic activities ~ Sharif Husayn of Mecca
sponsored the Pilgrimage Congress in 1924 in Mecca to secure
the Muslim support to his 'caliphal' calims - a political move
aimed to counter the threat of Ibn-Saud and also to lay claim
to the sovereignty of Arabian peninsula. The Caliphate
Congress held in Cairo on 13 -19 May 1926 was meant to
strengthen the position of King Farouq in Egypt. Ibn Saud
organized the Islamic congress, held in Mecca on 7 June 1926,
in order to secure the recognition of his rule in the Arabian
Peninsula. The General Muslim Congress held in Jerusalem
in December 1951 under the auspices of Haji Amin al-Husayni,
the Mufti of Jerusalem, was aimed at meeting Mufti's
opposition among the Palestinians and also to mobilize the
Palestinian masses against the Zionists and the British
mandate. various nation- stat.es which emerged following the
collapse European colonialism indulged in the promotion of
pan- Islamic activities in order to gain the political
leadership of the Muslim world which also had the
implications of deriv·ing external Islamic leverage to
strengthen their domestic rule. The competition for political
32
/
leadership and the concern for Islamic legi·timacy has
traditionally formed the basis of what could be called 'the
intra-Islamic cold war/rivalry'which is also very much
apparent in the contemporary Muslim World. Thus, the pan-
Islamic activity has mostly been guided by the domestic
national consideration of the Muslim regimes. 45
45. Jacob M. Landau, The Politics of Pan-Islam: Ideology and Organization (Oxford, 1990)
33