Islamic Indoctrination 101 | thebereancall.org

TBC Staff

A personal testimony of what your kids are learning in College.

In the late 1990s, I was beginning the second semester of my freshman year at a small liberal arts college in Virginia. At this particular school, all first-year students were required to take a “freshman seminar.” This was a smaller class than the introductory “survey” classes that students typically took before declaring a major. Graded on the basis of in-class discussion and papers rather than exams, these were intended to provide students with an opportunity to focus in greater depth on a narrow topic and to hone their skills in research and writing. There weren’t too many options for such classes when I registered, but I managed to get a spot in a freshman seminar on the promising topic of “Music in Religion.” I wasn’t thinking of majoring in either field, but I’d been a Christian all my life and was interested in other religions. I’d also studied music theory and performance (voice and piano) for many years, so it seemed like a good fit.

There were six of us enrolled in the class. On the first day of class, we met the professor, an ethnomusicologist originally from Bosnia, and received the syllabus. We’d be studying music within two religious traditions – Islam, during the first half of the course, and then Christianity in the latter half.

We were told to think of ourselves as “participant-observers” during our fieldwork, which is a methodological concept used within the field of anthropology. The idea was that we should be loosely participating in religious services in order simultaneously to make mental observations of those rituals and practices. Several of us (including me) had some concerns about this and asked the professor questions about the ethics involved in “pretending” to be part of a congregation in order to place that group of people and their practices under an academic microscope. The professor assured us that this was perfectly normal and ethical, and that it was moreover part of being intellectually serious with respect to the subject of the course. As it turned out, about half of us students were Christians, so we realized that we wouldn’t actually be “pretending” in participating in Christian worship services; we would just need to be “observing” our own churches or else find another church to attend and observe for a few weeks to complete the “fieldwork” component. The remainder of the students were atheists or agnostics – the ones who would potentially have had the most reason to object to being required to participate in Christian services – but they decided that they didn’t have enough of a problem with this to drop the course or press the point.

The first few weeks of the semester were dedicated to giving us a foundational understanding of Islam, so that we could understand the role played by music within that religion. We learned that Islam is a monotheistic religion, and that it belonged to the same tradition as Judaism and Christianity, worshiping the same God. It was begun by Muhammed – a seventh-century prophet born from Arabia who believed he’d received revelations from the angel Gabriel, which were recorded in the Islamic holy book, the Qur’an (which we were never required or even encouraged to read). We learned that the word “Islam” meant “submission [to God],” that it is cognate with the Arabic word for “peace” (salaam). It is, accordingly, a religion of peace with a long, beautiful tradition that was largely unappreciated in the West. At the least, we knew that Islam was deeply admired by our professor, who said he was himself a Christian but also felt very comfortable identifying as a Muslim and participating in Islamic practices. According to him, there was no real or significant incompatibility between the two faiths; Jesus and all of the prophets of the Christian Old Testament were revered within Islam as virtuous and obedient to God.

And, based purely on the exposition of the Five Pillars of Islam that we received, one might even find this claim plausible. The sorts of things that comprise the Five Pillars are also features (if not necessary components) of Christianity; they only seem to differ in their particulars.

But we didn’t only learn the Five Pillars of Islam; we also learned the Sixth Pillar – jihad, or “holy war.” The professor told us that this was a bit more controversial than the other five, but that it was authentic and important as well. As our professor explained it, it sounded like jihad encompassed primarily an internal struggle against sin or apologetic debate or evangelism – the same sorts of things found within Christianity. However, he was also clear that jihad could mean actual warfare against non-Muslims, who regularly pursued unwarranted and persecutory armed conflicts against Muslims both in the past (e.g., the Crusades) and in the present (e.g., the war waged by Serbs and Croats against Bosnian Muslims in our professor’s land of origin that was going on at the time).

This was about as much as we were taught about Islam – and, incidentally, about Christianity as well. Most of the class sessions consisted not of the sort of discussion you’d expect in a seminar (although we were allowed to ask questions), but rather of lectures and demonstrations from the professor and “recitations” from the rest of us.

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