V011...1 Fueled By Despair slam Marches On W The Palestinian deportees are just one example of the fundamentalist Muslim ideology that is sweeping the Arab world. DOUGLAS DAVIS FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT hatever the fate of the Hamas ac- tivists on their freezing hillside in Lebanon, they will remain an emblem of the final decade of the 20th century and their message will dominate the international agenda well into the next. Of all the voices now demanding attention in the Middle East, none is more persistent or more per- suasive than the hypnotic chant of the muezzin calling worshipers to prayer. At a moment of profound despair throughout the Muslim world — when pan- Arabism is pronounced dead, when political elites are unable to meet the needs of their exploding populations, when fabulous wealth is in- different to grinding poverty — millions of Arabs are seeking solace in militant Islam. From Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia to the desolate wastes of Sudan and Somalia, from Egypt and Jordan to Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Yemen, tens of thousands of Islamic ac- tivists are leading tens of millions of followers to ques- tion molds that have failed to provide schools and hospitals, jobs and houses. They are questioning their secular legal systems, their secular political rulers, even the legitimacy of their secular states, which owe their existence — and their arbitrary boundaries — to the whims of departing colo- nial masters in the wake of World War I. Islamic fundamentalism is on the march with an ir- resistible message of spiri- tual succor and temporal support, replacing old mes- sages of Arab glory with new messages of Muslim em- pires. In Western minds, the Ira- nian-backed Hezbollah movement is associated with car-bombs, hijackings and kidnappings. But to the Muslim Shi'ite underclass of Lebanon, Hezbollah has sounded a quite different message as it assiduously translated its religious rhet- oric into practical aid. Iranian largess has in- cluded helping Hezbollah develop its political muscle based on a comprehensive social-support network — orphanages, schools, medical services, welfare centers — A group of the recent deportees at prayer. which the central Lebanese government, beset by 'civil war, was unable to provide. The pay-off came in last year's Lebanese elections when the Muslim Shi'ite beneficiaries helped Hez- bollah to a stunning triumph at the polls. More recently in Cairo, a calamitous earthquake not only destroyed scores of apartment blocks but also rocked the foundations of Hosni Mubarak's regime when the fundamentalists easily outstripped the government in the quality and quantity of aid it offered thousands of newly homeless, destitute Egyp- tians. The government's re- sponse was to order that all mosques be brought under state control, to send in the troops and round up 750 Islamic activists, and to outlaw the provision of wel- fare by the fundamentalists. The fundamentalists re- sponded, in turn, by attack- ing foreign visitors to undermine Egypt's impor- tant tourist industry. Algeria showed the hand of a less astute player when Saudi Arabia emerged as the principal benefactor of the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS), which decisively won the first round of last year's election. After the National Liberation Front (FLN), which has ruled Algeria since independence, realized that the march of the fun- damentalists was unstop- pable, it simply cancelled the second round and seized power. The Saudis were the first to recognize the FLN, an- other sign that Saudi Arabia, lynch pin of Western interests in the region, is playing all sides against the middle in a high-risk game of political opportunism. While demonstrating that it ultimately will back success, Saudi Arabia has Iran and Saudi Arabia — for different reasons are radical Islam's financial benefactors. accurately read the writing on the wall and, wherever possible, it is seeking to ap- pease the fundamentalists, of which it is itself a target. The Saudis have now join- ed Iran in throwing their weight and considerable fi- nancial resources behind Hamas, an odd decision for a regime that owes its exis- tence to the United States and ostensibly supports the Middle East peace process, which Hamas opposes. The association of re- ligious tradition with tem- poral power is not new to Islam. The mold was cast in the city of Medina 14 cen- turies ago when the Prophet Mohammed was accepted as political governor, military general and spiritual leader. The Islamic notion of politics as a natural extension of re- ligion is as powerful today as it was then, finding support in both the souks and the universities of the Islamic world. According to Ahmed Yusuf Ahmed, a specialist in social sciences at Cairo University, the central conflict in the Arab world is between the leaders who achieved power in the early 1960s and the newly emergent Islamic leaders. His prognosis pro- vides little solace for an in- dustrialized world that regards the future stability of the oil-rich region as a strategic necessity. "The ruling elites," he said bluntly, "have been unable to effectively counter the message of the religious movements. In the medium run, I would say these regimes are doomed." Egyptian political scientist Sa'ad Eddin Ibrahim adds that the headlong rush to Islam is indicative of a need to hold on to basic values in a world that is undergoing chaotic and unpredictable change. "Religion," he said, "has becomes the substitute ISLAM page 32