Lack of Space Technology Is Not the Muslim World's Problem
Lack of Space Technology Is
Not the Muslim World's Problem [M. Zuhdi Jasser]
The Obama administration decided to dispatch
Charles Bolden, head of NASA, to do "public diplomacy" on
Al Jazeera, where he said that President Obama
wanted him to "find a way to reach out to the Muslim world and
engage much more with dominantly Muslim nations to help them feel
good about their historic contribution to science, math, and
engineering." He then announced that our deficit-ridden U.S.
government will begin a new fund "to support technological
development in Muslim-majority countries."
The 57 OIC countries include some of the wealthiest in the world,
yet many are human-rights offenders. Handing them our technology
and funds could end up strengthening theocrats and monarchs,
further preventing real reform.
Consider the words of Dr. Ahmed Zewail, this administration's first
science envoy to the Middle East and appointee to the President's
Council of Advisors on Science and Technology. After Obama's
Cairo speech last June, Zewail wrote
a very revealing op-ed in the Boston Globe,
in which he professed that the way for Obama to stimulate an
"Islamic Renaissance" would be to provide "investment in education"
with a "new emphasis on science and technology." This ignores the
fact that many militant Islamist leaders, from bin Laden to
Zawahiri to most of the heads of the Muslim Brotherhood, are very
scientifically educated. In fact, the Brotherhood (Ikhwan) is sometimes pejoratively referred to as the
"Brotherhood of Engineers."
Zewail goes on to write: "Most Westerners today are unaware of the
extent to which Nasser's regime promoted education as the vital
engine of progress." How insulting: Gamal Abdel Nasser's legendary
fascism, pan-Arabism, and socialism have become "engines of
progress." Nasser infected the Middle East with a deeply corrupt
ideology, yet Obama's science envoy is apologizing for the Egyptian
despot.
The challenge is not science and technology.
Real Muslim reform will only come from modernization of thought in
the political sciences, liberal arts, free markets, theology, and
philosophy. Theocratic Islamist movements are the primary obstacles
to Muslim enlightenment - not the absence of
space technology.
- M. Zuhdi Jasser, MD, is the founder and president of the
American
Islamic Forum for Democracy based in
Phoenix, Arizona.
