Taliban
religious police beating a woman in Kabul filmed by RAWA on August 26, 2001.
This article reevaluates the April 2013 PEW data on “The
World’s Muslims” covering 23 countries and comprising at least 56.6 percent of
the total global Muslim population. It presents population-weighted estimates
of the 18 PEW indicators for the entire adult Muslim population in these 23
countries. The article also presents a UNDP type Index of Muslim Tolerance
(Index of the emancipation of Muslim publics from authoritarian and Islamist
thought patterns), which is based on 18 sub-indicators of the PEW study.
Kazakhstan, Albania, and Bosnia are the best performers, while Afghanistan,
Egypt, and the Palestinian territories are at the bottom. Gender issues and
human rights should receive a top priority regarding the EU membership
perspectives for Albania, Bosnia, Kosovo, and Turkey.
In 2005, on
the pages of this journal, Hayat Alvi[1]
maintained that there was considerable evidence of trends in regressive social
transformation regarding the situation of women in Arab countries. One such
manifestation, Alvi quite correctly said at that time was “the prevailing
attitudes and social policies that continue to deny women their fundamental
human rights and freedoms.” Alvi already predicted “cultural and nationalistic
attitudes, which engender a degree of suspicion towards, and perhaps outright
rejection in principle of, anything perceived as Western-modeled human
development programs.” Traditions, the author maintained, were deeply
entrenched, and “[w]hat the traditional Islamic establishment calls for today
is more reminiscent of the patriarchal attitudes, practices, and beliefs that
actually predate Islam, in many cases rendering to contemporary Islamic
societies an anachronistic medieval aura, totally incompatible with modernity.”
In 2004,
France, as mentioned by Alvi, expelled five Muslim clerics spreading extremist
interpretations of Islam. In one case, Abdelkader Bouziane was deported for
advocating wife beating, stoning, and other views at odds with what the
competent authorities of the French Republic interpreted as the principles of
the modern French state.[2]
Unfortunately many Western publics, including liberal and secular political
forces, seem to look the other way when such issues emerge or when such issues
are debated. In April 2013, however, the Opinion Research Center PEW presented
its report on “The World’s Muslims: Religion, Politics and Society.”[3]
This report
was a real watershed in the hitherto existing debate about mass support for
authoritarian and Islamist thought patterns among Muslim publics in
predominantly Muslim societies. For the first time, contentious issues–such as
the acceptability rate of honor killings, stoning as a punishment for adultery,
and rejections of mixed marriages–were included in the questionnaire for the
representative samples of the Muslim populations in 23 countries, comprising at
least 56.6 percent of the global Muslim population, now estimated to be 1.486
billion people. Of course, the present author holds the view with most scholars
who have written extensively on the subject that honor killings, stoning as a
punishment for adultery, and rejections of mixed marriages are an outcome of
extreme cultural practices, which deceive many into believing that “Islam as
such” (“der Islam an sich”) is at
fault. In fact, though, these extreme regimes and extreme authoritarian thought
patterns do contradict the beliefs spelled out by the Koran.[4]
Laudable, as
earlier successive relevant studies and statistical data sets by the World
Values Survey,[5]
the Arab Barometer,[6]
as well as the Arab Opinion Index[7]
might have been, it is a fact that in their questionnaires, they still excluded
some of these customs, which indeed can be “hard” cultural and political issues
of “integration,” especially in the countries of the European Union. However,
not to analyze possible existing support for such structures, and to look the
other way, is unacceptable and undermines the very Enlightenment traditions and
liberal values, on which democracy is built.
The data,
presented by the PEW Institute, render themselves for further impartial
statistical analysis, which is the single principle aim of this article. Such a
statistical secondary analysis is necessary, because the results shown in the
PEW report sometimes imply a rejection of, even consent to practices as
stoning, honor killings, polygamy, and the like. Presented below are the
formulations of the PEW questions, which would make a real final comparison of
the results possible. In addition, the current study constructs an Index of the
emancipation of Muslim publics from authoritarian and Islamist thought
patterns.
The current
study’s Index of Muslim Tolerance (Index of the emancipation of Muslim publics
from authoritarian and Islamist thought patterns) is of the type of other
indices developed by the United Nations Human Development Program (such as the
Human Development Index)[8]
and is based on 18 sub-indicators. The percentage results for each country are
standardized on a scale, ranging from 0-1 for all countries under scrutiny
here. Presented here below are the formulations that were used to calculate the
Index:
- Honor Killings permissible: male offender (reject)
- Honor Killings permissible: female offender (reject)
- Wife must obey husband (reject)
- Islam alone leads to heaven (reject)
- % not worried by Muslim extremists (reject)
- Suicide bombing justified (reject)
- % favor making Shari’a the law of the country (reject)
- Shari’a should apply for all citizens, not Muslims only (reject)
- Stoning adequate punishment for adultery (reject)
- Death penalty for leaving Islam (reject)
- Gender bias in accepting honor killings (high gender bias a phenomenon not compatible with a tolerant society)
- Polygamy morally acceptable (reject)
- Converting others is a religious duty (reject)
- No knowledge about Christianity (reject = i.e. knowledge about Christianity)
- Islam and Christianity are very different (reject)
- Not comfortable with son marrying a Christian (reject)
- Not comfortable with daughter marrying a Christian (reject)
- Gender bias being uncomfortable with religiously mixed marriage (high gender bias a phenomenon not compatible with a tolerant society)
The
standardization presupposes the well-known UNDP formula: Subtract the value of
worst performing country of the group considered from the value of the country
currently under investigation, then divide this value by the difference between
best and the worst performing country. The resulting indicators will always be
between 1.0 (best index value) and 0.0 (worst index value).
The PEW sample
included representative samples (sample sizes from around 1.000 to 1.800
interview partners) of Muslims in the following countries:
- Kazakhstan
- Albania
- Bosnia
- Kosovo
- Turkey
- Russia
- Azerbaijan
- Kyrgyzstan
- Lebanon
- Indonesia
- Tajikistan
- Tunisia
- Uzbekistan
- Morocco
- Thailand
- Iraq
- Bangladesh
- Malaysia
- Pakistan
- Jordan
- Palestinian territories
- Egypt
- Afghanistan
The following
insight into the true mass support for Islamism and authoritarian thought
patterns in the Muslim world was obtained by applying appropriate population
weights[9]:
Percent of total Muslims
in the world saying or of the opinion (population weighted results)
|
|
Not
comfortable with daughter marrying a
Christian
|
92.29%
|
No
knowledge about Christianity
|
87.63%
|
Wife
must obey husband
|
86.14%
|
Islam
alone leads to heaven
|
85.58%
|
Not
comfortable with son marrying a
Christian
|
85.56%
|
%
favor making sharia the law of the country
|
70.08%
|
Islam
and Christianity are very
different
|
68.65%
|
%
not worried by Muslim extremists
|
65.45%
|
Converting
others is a religious duty
|
60.32%
|
Stoning
adequate punishment for adultery
|
45.37%
|
Honor
killings permissible: female offender
|
45.15%
|
Honor
killings permissible: male offender
|
42.65%
|
Death
penalty for leaving Islam
|
34.82%
|
Polygamy
morally acceptable
|
31.86%
|
Shari’a
should apply for all citizens, not Muslims only
|
31.48%
|
Suicide
bombing justified
|
15.25%
|
Also, the
country results for the different indicators of the PEW study are rendering
themselves for further scholarly reflections in the fields of sociology,
political science, and economics. Two examples are the acceptability of honor
killings (offender of the honor code: female) and the acceptability of stoning
as an adequate punishment for adultery:
% acceptability of honor
killings (offender of the honor code: female) among the total Muslim
population of the country
|
|
Kazakhstan
|
16.00%
|
Azerbaijan
|
18.00%
|
Indonesia
|
18.00%
|
Bosnia
|
21.00%
|
Turkey
|
32.00%
|
Albania
|
33.00%
|
Morocco
|
35.00%
|
Kosovo
|
39.00%
|
Russia
|
40.00%
|
Uzbekistan
|
40.00%
|
Malaysia
|
41.00%
|
Kyrgyzstan
|
42.00%
|
Tunisia
|
43.00%
|
Thailand
|
48.00%
|
Tajikistan
|
51.00%
|
Lebanon
|
55.00%
|
Pakistan
|
55.00%
|
Palestinian
territories
|
56.00%
|
Jordan
|
66.00%
|
Bangladesh
|
66.00%
|
Egypt
|
69.00%
|
Afghanistan
|
76.00%
|
Iraq
|
78.00%
|
% acceptability of
stoning as an adequate punishment for adultery among the total Muslim
population of the country
|
|
Albania
|
3.00%
|
Kazakhstan
|
3.10%
|
Bosnia
|
3.15%
|
Turkey
|
3.48%
|
Kosovo
|
5.00%
|
Russia
|
10.92%
|
Lebanon
|
13.34%
|
Kyrgyzstan
|
13.65%
|
Tajikistan
|
13.77%
|
Tunisia
|
24.64%
|
Indonesia
|
34.56%
|
Thailand
|
39.27%
|
Bangladesh
|
45.10%
|
Jordan
|
47.57%
|
Malaysia
|
51.60%
|
Iraq
|
52.78%
|
Egypt
|
59.94%
|
Pakistan
|
74.76%
|
Palestinian
territories
|
74.76%
|
Afghanistan
|
84.15%
|
If one follows
the mentioned United Nations Human Development Program standard statistical
practice and projects the results of all the 18 indicators of this study onto a
single scale, ranging from 0 to 1, one finally gets the final values for the
study’s Index of Muslim Tolerance (Index of the emancipation of Muslim publics
from authoritarian and Islamist thought patterns), which ranges from 0 to 1
(all 18 indicators contribute equally to the final index):[10]
An Index of Muslim
Tolerance (Index of the emancipation of Muslim publics from authoritarian and
Islamist thought patterns), based on the 18 indicators of the PEW Study
|
|
Kazakhstan
|
0.817
|
Albania
|
0.809
|
Bosnia
|
0.783
|
Kosovo
|
0.678
|
Turkey
|
0.649
|
Russia
|
0.622
|
Azerbaijan
|
0.579
|
Kyrgyzstan
|
0.577
|
Lebanon
|
0.533
|
Indonesia
|
0.515
|
Tajikistan
|
0.491
|
Tunisia
|
0.456
|
Uzbekistan
|
0.428
|
Morocco
|
0.399
|
Thailand
|
0.391
|
Iraq
|
0.357
|
Bangladesh
|
0.343
|
Malaysia
|
0.324
|
Pakistan
|
0.312
|
Jordan
|
0.300
|
Palestinian
territories
|
0.278
|
Egypt
|
0.233
|
Afghanistan
|
0.135
|
Arab Muslims
in Lebanon, Tunisia, and Morocco show the best-practice models with the highest
values on our Index for the other Arab countries to follow.
Compared to
other societal experiences around the globe, which all reflect the truth of the
classic hypothesis by Bernard Lewis that Islam as a religion and as a culture
should not be blamed for the customs of some of the peoples who adopted it,
indeed one can say that the other Arab countries in the sample–Iraq, Jordan,
the Palestinian territories, and Egypt–severely lack a liberal civil society.
Therefore, prospects for democracy in the region (with the exceptions of
Lebanon, Tunisia, and Morocco) are rather bad. Preliminary multivariate
analyses, whose details are beyond the scope of this article, have shown that
with development levels and past Soviet or Communist rule constant, “social
Keynesian variables” like social security expenditure per GDP, comparative
price levels (US=1.00), the UNDP education index, the Human Development Index
(HDI), and the World Economic Forum scores of closing of the gender gap are
among the most significant positive predictors of the current study’s Indicator
performance (emancipation of Muslim publics from authoritarian and Islamist
thought patterns), i.e., good and decent social policies indeed can increase
the amount of tolerance in a country.[11]
In addition, the application of standard multivariate factor analysis with the
statistical program IBM-SPSS XXI yielded practically the same results as those
shown above.[12]
In the detailed tables of this article, some of the real existing problems of
the possible south-eastward enlargement of the European Union in the years to
come are also highlighted.[13]
With Albania, Bosnia, Kosovo, and Turkey not too distantly away from the entry
gates of the European Union, the acceptability rates of honor killings in these
possible future full-member states of the European Union will amount up to
one-third of their entire Muslim population, and the acceptability rates of
terrorist suicide bombings will be as high as one-sixth of their entire Muslim
population.
Table 1: The country percentage original results, based on
the PEW data (percentages per total Muslim population of the country or
territory) (countries on the trajectory to future EU-membership are highlighted
in gray)
|
Honor killings
permissible: male offender
|
Honor killings
permissible: female offender
|
Wife must obey husband
|
Islam alone leads to
heaven
|
% not worried by Muslim
extremists
|
Suicide bombing justified
|
% favor making Shari’a
the law of the country
|
Shari’a should apply for
all citizens, not Muslims only
|
Stoning adequate
punishment for adultery
|
Death penalty for leaving
Islam
|
Gender bias in accepting
honor killings
|
Kazakhstan
|
16.00
|
16.00
|
51.00
|
29.00
|
54.00
|
2.00
|
10.00
|
1.90
|
3.10
|
0.40
|
0.00
|
Albania
|
32.00
|
33.00
|
40.00
|
37.00
|
91.00
|
6.00
|
12.00
|
2.88
|
3.00
|
0.96
|
1.00
|
Bosnia
|
21.00
|
21.00
|
45.00
|
58.00
|
73.00
|
3.00
|
15.00
|
4.35
|
3.15
|
2.25
|
0.00
|
Kosovo
|
40.00
|
39.00
|
34.00
|
59.00
|
78.00
|
11.00
|
20.00
|
6.20
|
5.00
|
2.20
|
-1.00
|
Turkey
|
32.00
|
32.00
|
65.00
|
74.00
|
77.00
|
15.00
|
12.00
|
5.16
|
3.48
|
2.04
|
0.00
|
Russia
|
33.00
|
40.00
|
69.00
|
52.00
|
80.00
|
4.00
|
42.00
|
9.24
|
10.92
|
6.30
|
7.00
|
Azerbaijan
|
14.00
|
18.00
|
58.00
|
63.00
|
99.00
|
1.00
|
8.00
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
4.00
|
Kyrgyzstan
|
45.00
|
42.00
|
75.00
|
69.00
|
68.00
|
10.00
|
35.00
|
21.70
|
13.65
|
4.90
|
-3.00
|
Lebanon
|
45.00
|
55.00
|
74.00
|
66.00
|
81.00
|
xx
|
29.00
|
13.92
|
13.34
|
13.34
|
10.00
|
Indonesia
|
18.00
|
18.00
|
93.00
|
87.00
|
47.00
|
7.00
|
72.00
|
36.00
|
34.56
|
12.96
|
0.00
|
Tajikistan
|
51.00
|
51.00
|
89.00
|
84.00
|
76.00
|
3.00
|
27.00
|
7.83
|
13.77
|
5.94
|
0.00
|
Tunisia
|
38.00
|
43.00
|
93.00
|
72.00
|
75.00
|
12.00
|
56.00
|
22.40
|
24.64
|
16.24
|
5.00
|
Uzbekistan
|
54.00
|
40.00
|
84.00
|
66.00
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
-14.00
|
Morocco
|
36.00
|
35.00
|
92.00
|
94.00
|
80.00
|
9.00
|
83.00
|
24.07
|
xx
|
xx
|
-1.00
|
Thailand
|
50.00
|
48.00
|
89.00
|
87.00
|
xx
|
xx
|
77.00
|
18.48
|
39.27
|
20.79
|
-2.00
|
Iraq
|
67.00
|
78.00
|
92.00
|
95.00
|
55.00
|
7.00
|
91.00
|
34.58
|
52.78
|
38.22
|
11.00
|
Bangladesh
|
62.00
|
66.00
|
88.00
|
88.00
|
78.00
|
26.00
|
82.00
|
31.98
|
45.10
|
36.08
|
4.00
|
Malaysia
|
41.00
|
41.00
|
96.00
|
93.00
|
92.00
|
18.00
|
86.00
|
35.26
|
51.60
|
53.32
|
0.00
|
Pakistan
|
52.00
|
55.00
|
88.00
|
92.00
|
60.00
|
13.00
|
84.00
|
28.56
|
74.76
|
63.84
|
3.00
|
Jordan
|
19.00
|
66.00
|
80.00
|
96.00
|
80.00
|
15.00
|
71.00
|
41.18
|
47.57
|
58.22
|
47.00
|
Palestinian
territories
|
54.00
|
56.00
|
87.00
|
89.00
|
78.00
|
40.00
|
89.00
|
39.16
|
74.76
|
58.74
|
2.00
|
Egypt
|
59.00
|
69.00
|
85.00
|
96.00
|
78.00
|
29.00
|
74.00
|
54.76
|
59.94
|
63.64
|
10.00
|
Afghanistan
|
76.00
|
76.00
|
94.00
|
xx
|
xx
|
39.00
|
99.00
|
60.39
|
84.15
|
78.21
|
0.00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Worst performance value
|
76.00
|
78.00
|
96.00
|
96.00
|
99.00
|
40.00
|
99.00
|
60.39
|
84.15
|
78.21
|
47.00
|
Best performance value
|
14.00
|
16.00
|
34.00
|
29.00
|
47.00
|
1.00
|
8.00
|
1.90
|
3.00
|
0.40
|
-14.00
|
Table 1 (continued): Country percentage original results,
based on the PEW data (percentages per total Muslim population of the country
or territory) (countries on the trajectory to future EU-membership are
highlighted in gray)
|
Polygamy morally
acceptable
|
Converting others is a
religious duty
|
No knowledge about
Christianity
|
Islam and Christianity
are very different
|
Not comfortable with son
marrying a Christian
|
Not comfortable with
daughter marrying a Christian
|
Gender bias being
uncomfortable with religiously mixed marriage
|
Index of Muslim Tolerance
(Index of the emancipation of Muslim publics from authoritarian and Islamist
thought patterns)
|
Kazakhstan
|
18.00
|
15.00
|
85.00
|
35.00
|
64.00
|
68.00
|
4.00
|
0.817
|
Albania
|
10.00
|
16.00
|
83.00
|
52.00
|
23.00
|
25.00
|
2.00
|
0.809
|
Bosnia
|
4.00
|
33.00
|
49.00
|
36.00
|
84.00
|
86.00
|
2.00
|
0.783
|
Kosovo
|
21.00
|
26.00
|
89.00
|
50.00
|
76.00
|
78.00
|
2.00
|
0.678
|
Turkey
|
13.00
|
39.00
|
79.00
|
54.00
|
75.00
|
80.00
|
5.00
|
0.649
|
Russia
|
37.00
|
40.00
|
85.00
|
35.00
|
48.00
|
61.00
|
13.00
|
0.622
|
Azerbaijan
|
4.00
|
42.00
|
91.00
|
65.00
|
92.00
|
97.00
|
5.00
|
0.579
|
Kyrgyzstan
|
31.00
|
36.00
|
88.00
|
54.00
|
76.00
|
81.00
|
5.00
|
0.577
|
Lebanon
|
45.00
|
52.00
|
62.00
|
57.00
|
70.00
|
79.00
|
9.00
|
0.533
|
Indonesia
|
30.00
|
31.00
|
88.00
|
87.00
|
94.00
|
98.00
|
4.00
|
0.515
|
Tajikistan
|
12.00
|
69.00
|
87.00
|
60.00
|
77.00
|
94.00
|
17.00
|
0.491
|
Tunisia
|
28.00
|
73.00
|
90.00
|
44.00
|
70.00
|
87.00
|
17.00
|
0.456
|
Uzbekistan
|
xx
|
xx
|
90.00
|
52.00
|
84.00
|
89.00
|
5.00
|
0.428
|
Morocco
|
xx
|
63.00
|
91.00
|
49.00
|
74.00
|
86.00
|
12.00
|
0.399
|
Thailand
|
66.00
|
74.00
|
85.00
|
60.00
|
80.00
|
85.00
|
5.00
|
0.391
|
Iraq
|
46.00
|
66.00
|
89.00
|
16.00
|
87.00
|
96.00
|
9.00
|
0.357
|
Bangladesh
|
32.00
|
69.00
|
90.00
|
68.00
|
86.00
|
90.00
|
4.00
|
0.343
|
Malaysia
|
49.00
|
79.00
|
85.00
|
83.00
|
83.00
|
88.00
|
5.00
|
0.324
|
Pakistan
|
37.00
|
85.00
|
94.00
|
81.00
|
91.00
|
97.00
|
6.00
|
0.312
|
Jordan
|
41.00
|
92.00
|
75.00
|
60.00
|
88.00
|
100.00
|
12.00
|
0.300
|
Palestinian
territories
|
48.00
|
83.00
|
84.00
|
39.00
|
86.00
|
95.00
|
9.00
|
0.278
|
Egypt
|
41.00
|
88.00
|
78.00
|
56.00
|
83.00
|
100.00
|
17.00
|
0.233
|
Afghanistan
|
27.00
|
96.00
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
0.135
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Worst performance value
|
66.00
|
96.00
|
94.00
|
87.00
|
94.00
|
100.00
|
17.00
|
|
Best performance value
|
4.00
|
15.00
|
49.00
|
16.00
|
23.00
|
25.00
|
2.00
|
|
Table 2: Country UNDP type indicator component results, based on the PEW data
|
Rejecting: Honor killings
permissible: male offender
|
Rejecting: Honor killings
permissible: female offender
|
Rejecting: Wife must obey
husband
|
Rejecting: Islam alone
leads to heaven
|
Rejecting: % not worried
by Muslim extremists
|
Rejecting: Suicide
bombing justified
|
Rejecting: % favor making
Shari’a the law of the country
|
Rejecting: Shari’a should
apply for all citizens, not Muslims only
|
Rejecting: Stoning
adequate punishment for adultery
|
Rejecting: Death penalty
for leaving Islam
|
Gender bias in accepting
honor killings (high gender bias a phenomenon not compatible with a tolerant
society)
|
Kazakhstan
|
0.968
|
1.000
|
0.726
|
1.000
|
0.865
|
0.974
|
0.978
|
1.000
|
0.999
|
1.000
|
0.770
|
Albania
|
0.710
|
0.726
|
0.903
|
0.881
|
0.154
|
0.872
|
0.956
|
0.983
|
1.000
|
0.993
|
0.754
|
Bosnia
|
0.887
|
0.919
|
0.823
|
0.567
|
0.500
|
0.949
|
0.923
|
0.958
|
0.998
|
0.976
|
0.770
|
Kosovo
|
0.581
|
0.629
|
1.000
|
0.552
|
0.404
|
0.744
|
0.868
|
0.926
|
0.975
|
0.977
|
0.787
|
Turkey
|
0.710
|
0.742
|
0.500
|
0.328
|
0.423
|
0.641
|
0.956
|
0.944
|
0.994
|
0.979
|
0.770
|
Russia
|
0.694
|
0.613
|
0.435
|
0.657
|
0.365
|
0.923
|
0.626
|
0.875
|
0.902
|
0.924
|
0.656
|
Azerbaijan
|
1.000
|
0.968
|
0.613
|
0.493
|
0.000
|
1.000
|
1.000
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
0.705
|
Kyrgyzstan
|
0.500
|
0.581
|
0.339
|
0.403
|
0.596
|
0.769
|
0.703
|
0.661
|
0.869
|
0.942
|
0.820
|
Lebanon
|
0.500
|
0.371
|
0.355
|
0.448
|
0.346
|
xx
|
0.769
|
0.794
|
0.873
|
0.834
|
0.607
|
Indonesia
|
0.935
|
0.968
|
0.048
|
0.134
|
1.000
|
0.846
|
0.297
|
0.417
|
0.611
|
0.839
|
0.770
|
Tajikistan
|
0.403
|
0.435
|
0.113
|
0.179
|
0.442
|
0.949
|
0.791
|
0.899
|
0.867
|
0.929
|
0.770
|
Tunisia
|
0.613
|
0.565
|
0.048
|
0.358
|
0.462
|
0.718
|
0.473
|
0.650
|
0.733
|
0.796
|
0.689
|
Uzbekistan
|
0.355
|
0.613
|
0.194
|
0.448
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
1.000
|
Morocco
|
0.645
|
0.694
|
0.065
|
0.030
|
0.365
|
0.795
|
0.176
|
0.621
|
xx
|
xx
|
0.787
|
Thailand
|
0.419
|
0.484
|
0.113
|
0.134
|
xx
|
xx
|
0.242
|
0.717
|
0.553
|
0.738
|
0.803
|
Iraq
|
0.145
|
0.000
|
0.065
|
0.015
|
0.846
|
0.846
|
0.088
|
0.441
|
0.387
|
0.514
|
0.590
|
Bangladesh
|
0.226
|
0.194
|
0.129
|
0.119
|
0.404
|
0.359
|
0.187
|
0.486
|
0.481
|
0.541
|
0.705
|
Malaysia
|
0.565
|
0.597
|
0.000
|
0.045
|
0.135
|
0.564
|
0.143
|
0.430
|
0.401
|
0.320
|
0.770
|
Pakistan
|
0.387
|
0.371
|
0.129
|
0.060
|
0.750
|
0.692
|
0.165
|
0.544
|
0.116
|
0.185
|
0.721
|
Jordan
|
0.919
|
0.194
|
0.258
|
0.000
|
0.365
|
0.641
|
0.308
|
0.328
|
0.451
|
0.257
|
0.000
|
Palestinian
territories
|
0.355
|
0.355
|
0.145
|
0.104
|
0.404
|
0.000
|
0.110
|
0.363
|
0.116
|
0.250
|
0.738
|
Egypt
|
0.274
|
0.145
|
0.177
|
0.000
|
0.404
|
0.282
|
0.275
|
0.096
|
0.298
|
0.187
|
0.607
|
Afghanistan
|
0.000
|
0.032
|
0.032
|
xx
|
xx
|
0.026
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
0.770
|
Table 2 (continued): Country UNDP type indicator component
results, based on the PEW data
|
Rejecting: Polygamy
morally acceptable
|
Rejecting: Converting
others is a religious duty
|
Knowledge about
Christianity
|
Rejecting: Islam and
Christianity are very different
|
Rejecting: Not
comfortable with son marrying a Christian
|
Rejecting: Not
comfortable with daughter marrying a Christian
|
Gender bias being
uncomfortable with religiously mixed marriage (high gender bias a phenomenon
not compatible with a tolerant society)
|
Index of Muslim Tolerance
(Index of the emancipation of Muslim publics from authoritarian and Islamist
thought patterns)
|
Kazakhstan
|
0.774
|
1.000
|
0.200
|
0.732
|
0.423
|
0.427
|
0.867
|
0.817
|
Albania
|
0.903
|
0.988
|
0.244
|
0.493
|
1.000
|
1.000
|
1.000
|
0.809
|
Bosnia
|
1.000
|
0.778
|
1.000
|
0.718
|
0.141
|
0.187
|
1.000
|
0.783
|
Kosovo
|
0.726
|
0.864
|
0.111
|
0.521
|
0.254
|
0.293
|
1.000
|
0.678
|
Turkey
|
0.855
|
0.704
|
0.333
|
0.465
|
0.268
|
0.267
|
0.800
|
0.649
|
Russia
|
0.468
|
0.691
|
0.200
|
0.732
|
0.648
|
0.520
|
0.267
|
0.622
|
Azerbaijan
|
1.000
|
0.667
|
0.067
|
0.310
|
0.028
|
0.040
|
0.800
|
0.579
|
Kyrgyzstan
|
0.565
|
0.741
|
0.133
|
0.465
|
0.254
|
0.253
|
0.800
|
0.577
|
Lebanon
|
0.339
|
0.543
|
0.711
|
0.423
|
0.338
|
0.280
|
0.533
|
0.533
|
Indonesia
|
0.581
|
0.802
|
0.133
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
0.027
|
0.867
|
0.515
|
Tajikistan
|
0.871
|
0.333
|
0.156
|
0.380
|
0.239
|
0.080
|
0.000
|
0.491
|
Tunisia
|
0.613
|
0.284
|
0.089
|
0.606
|
0.338
|
0.173
|
0.000
|
0.456
|
Uzbekistan
|
xx
|
xx
|
0.089
|
0.493
|
0.141
|
0.147
|
0.800
|
0.428
|
Morocco
|
xx
|
0.407
|
0.067
|
0.535
|
0.282
|
0.187
|
0.333
|
0.399
|
Thailand
|
0.000
|
0.272
|
0.200
|
0.380
|
0.197
|
0.200
|
0.800
|
0.391
|
Iraq
|
0.323
|
0.370
|
0.111
|
1.000
|
0.099
|
0.053
|
0.533
|
0.357
|
Bangladesh
|
0.548
|
0.333
|
0.089
|
0.268
|
0.113
|
0.133
|
0.867
|
0.343
|
Malaysia
|
0.274
|
0.210
|
0.200
|
0.056
|
0.155
|
0.160
|
0.800
|
0.324
|
Pakistan
|
0.468
|
0.136
|
0.000
|
0.085
|
0.042
|
0.040
|
0.733
|
0.312
|
Jordan
|
0.403
|
0.049
|
0.422
|
0.380
|
0.085
|
0.000
|
0.333
|
0.300
|
Palestinian
territories
|
0.290
|
0.160
|
0.222
|
0.676
|
0.113
|
0.067
|
0.533
|
0.278
|
Egypt
|
0.403
|
0.099
|
0.356
|
0.437
|
0.155
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
0.233
|
Afghanistan
|
0.629
|
0.000
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
0.135
|
CONCLUSION
This article
has shown again weak points in the structures of civil society and the weight
of traditionalist customs and authoritarian thought patterns in many Muslim
countries of the world. The weak societal tolerance performance in the
Palestinian territories and in Egypt especially bode ill for a full-fledged
democratic future there. With societal structures being as they are, the way
out for the secular and anti-Islamist forces in Egypt will be difficult, but
nevertheless must be attempted:
Egypt – Muslim
population; percentages from the PEW study
|
|
Suicide
bombing justified
|
29.00
|
Polygamy
morally acceptable
|
41.00
|
Shari’a
should apply for all citizens, not Muslims only
|
54.76
|
Islam
and Christianity are very different
|
56.00
|
Honor
killings permissible: Male offender
|
59.00
|
Stoning
adequate punishment for adultery
|
59.94
|
Death
penalty for leaving Islam
|
63.64
|
Honor
killings permissible: Female offender
|
69.00
|
%
favor making Shari’a the law of the country
|
74.00
|
%
not worried by Muslim extremists
|
78.00
|
No
knowledge about Christianity
|
78.00
|
Not
comfortable with son marrying a Christian
|
83.00
|
Wife
must obey husband
|
85.00
|
Converting
others is a religious duty
|
88.00
|
Islam
alone leads to heaven
|
96.00
|
Not
comfortable with daughter marrying a Christian
|
100.00
|
It is to be
hoped that the PEW Institute repeats the survey so that intertemporal shifts
can be estimated, and also, access to the original anonymized survey results
would be necessary to run multivariate analyses of the drivers of such opinion
patterns.
Most of the
other implications of this article must be left to the reader, but it is
certain that a current high acceptability of such phenomena as honor killings,
stoning, and suicide bombing by a third or even more of the entire population
in current EU-candidates and potential future EU-candidates makes a mockery of
the very fundamentals of the European Union, which state that:
The Union is
founded on the values of respect for human dignity, freedom, democracy,
equality, the rule of law and respect for human rights, including the rights of
persons belonging to minorities. These values are common to the Member States
in a society in which pluralism, non-discrimination, tolerance, justice,
solidarity and equality between women and men prevail[14]
The
decisionmakers of the European Union would do well not to sweep such issues
under the carpet. In a society based on tolerance there can be no place for
stoning and honor killings.
*Arno Tausch is Associate Professor of Economics at Corvinus
University Budapest, Hungary, and Adjunct Professor of Political Science at
Innsbruck University, Austria. He is author of, among others, What
1.3 Billion Muslims Really Think: An Answer to a Recent Gallup Study, Based on
the ‘World Values Survey (Hauppauge, NY:
Nova Science Publishers, 2009).
NOTES
[1]
Hayat Alvi, “The Human Rights of Women and Social Transformation in the Arab
Middle East,” Middle East Review of
International Affairs (MERIA) Journal,
Vol. 9, No. 2 (June 2005), http://www.gloria-center.org/2005/06/alvi-2005-06-08/.
[2]
Ibid, quoted above.
[3]
“The World’s Muslims: Religion, Politics and Society,” PEW Research Center,
Religion & Public Life Project, April 30, 2013, http://www.pewforum.org/2013/04/30/the-worlds-muslims-religion-politics-society-overview/
(accessed March 6, 2014).
[4]
With Bernard Lewis and a host of other scholars, the present author believes
that Islam as a religion and as a culture should not be blamed for the customs
of some of the peoples who adopted it. See Bernard Lewis and Buntzie Ellis
Churchill, Islam: The Religion and the
People (Indianapolis: Wharton Press, 2009). See also Kathleen Miller, “The
Other Side of the Coin: A Look at Islamic Law as Compared to Anglo-American Law
— Do Muslim Women Really Have Fewer Rights than American Women?” New York International Law Review, Vol.
16 (2003), p. 65, http://ssrn.com/abstract=1459040
(accessed March 6, 2014) and Kathleen Miller, “Who Says Muslim Women Don’t Have
the Right to Divorce? – A Comparison Between Anglo-American Law and Islamic
Law,” New York International Law Review, Vol. 22 (August 2009), p. 201, http://ssrn.com/abstract=1459062
(accessed March 6, 2014). For another interesting analysis, featuring Turkey,
see Kemal Yildirim, “Social Changes and Their Impact on Women in Turkey and Its
Membership to the EU,” Journal of Women’s
Entrepreneurship and Education, No. 3-4, (2010), pp. 80-93, http://www.ien.bg.ac.rs/images/stories/Izdavastvo/Casopis%20JWE/2010/10_jwe_3-4_7.pdf
(accessed March 6, 2014).
[5]
World Values Survey, http://www.wvsevsdb.com/wvs/WVSAnalize.jsp
(accessed March 6, 2014).
[6]
Arab Barometer, http://www.arabbarometer.org/
(accessed March 6, 2014).
[7]
The Arab Opinion Project: The Arab
Opinion Index, Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies, April 29, 2012,
http://english.dohainstitute.org/release/5083cf8e-38f8-4e4a-8bc5-fc91660608b0
(accessed March 6, 2014).
[8]
UNDP, Human Development Index, http://hdr.undp.org/en/statistics/hdi/
(accessed March 6, 2014).
[9]
“Muslim Population: Countries Compared,” Nation Master, http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/rel_isl_pop-religion-islam-population
(accessed March 6, 2014) and United States Department of State, Kosovo 2012 International Religious Freedom
Report, www.state.gov/documents/organization/208542.pdf (accessed March 6, 2014).
[10]
UNDP, Human Development Reports, http://hdr.undp.org/en/statistics/
(accessed March 6, 2014).
[11]
IBM-SPSS 21 calculations (partial correlations) based on the freely available
data collection, “Dataset for ‘Globalization, the Human Condition and
Sustainable Development in the 21st Century,” Middle East Studies Online Journal, October 12, 2010, http://www.social-sciences-and-humanities.com/journal/?p=3402
(accessed March 6, 2014). As to such global development comparisons, see Arno
Tausch, Almas Heshmati, and Ulrich Brand, Globalization,
the Human Condition and Sustainable Development in the 21st Century
Cross-national Perspectives and European Implications. (London, New York
and Delhi: Anthem Press, 2012).
[12]
IBM SPSS 21 calculations, based on IBM-SPSS Promax factor analysis. The country
factors scores for the calculation of the final index were used with reverted
signs and weighted by the percentage of the total variance, each factor
explains. The country value factor loadings suggest to call the five factors:
longing for the Middle Ages; against intermarriage; gender bias in accepting
honor killings; no knowledge of Christianity; and doctrinal differences
emphasized. The five countries or territories with the highest incidence of
Islamism, understood as the combination of these five component factors were:
Egypt, Pakistan, Jordan, Palestinian territories, and Iraq. The UNDP type
index, based on the unweighted means of the component indices, and the factor
analytical index have almost 97 percent of variance in common. It will be
interesting to calculate the factor analytical results at the individual level
once the PEW releases its original survey results with tens of thousands of
interview partners, in SPSS or SAS format.
[13]European
Commission Enlargement, http://ec.europa.eu/enlargement/
(accessed March 6, 2014).
[14]
Amendments to the Treaty on European
Union and to the Treaty Establishing the European Community, Article 1,
Preamble, http://eur-lex.europa.eu/en/treaties/dat/12007L/htm/C2007306EN.01001001.htm.
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