Who
Was Osama Bin Laden? His Legacies Versus Obama Politics -
The Beginning Of The Struggle
05 May 2011
By Karin Friedemann
Whoever the poor soul was, whom the US
assassination team "buried at sea," it most certainly
was not Osama bin Laden. Still, now would not be a bad
time to lay to rest our questions about the
Grandfather of Islamic Internationalism. The FBI
admits that they have no evidence that bin Laden had
anything to do with the 9/11 attack. There is also no
clear evidence that he was involved in earlier
bombings in East Africa. He left Sudan because the US
threatened to bomb if they did not expel him.
Why were the Powers-That-Be so afraid of bin Laden?
The US was afraid that he might unite more people
around the world with his humanitarian projects and
ability to internationalize causes by addressing "the
Ummah." This was an entirely new approach to
fundraising at that time. Osama was owner of a
construction company. He rebuilt war torn and
underdeveloped countries. He was in Sudan at his own
expense, building infrastructure for the poor and
oppressed, with government permission.
It is important to understand this great historical
figure and his jihad mission. Osama bin Laden was a
close associate and student of respected Palestinian
theologian, Abdullah Azzam, who coined the term "al-Qaeda."
Azzam's work elaborated upon the ideas of Sayed Qutb,
the Egyptian founder of modern Arab-Islamic political
religious thought. Qutb is comparable to John Locke in
Western political development. Both Azzam and Qutb
were serious men of exceptional integrity and honor.
Qutb predicted that the struggle between Islam and
materialism would define the modern world. He embraced
martyrdom in 1966 in rejection of Arab socialist
politics. Drawing upon Qutb's ideas, Azzam preached
mutual responsibility for each other among all Muslims
worldwide. Azzam successfully organized an
international volunteer effort to defend Afghanistan
from the Soviet Union throughout the 1980s under the
banner of Islam and with the US as an ally. He was
killed in 1989.
The 1980s and 90s were a magical time for Muslims.
Invigorated by this new philosophical international
unity of Islamic causes, and with America's blessing,
an international financial system of Islamic charity
was created. All of us who were alive at that time
remember how we cried for the Afghanis and opened our
wallets, we cried for the Palestinians and opened our
wallets. We cried for the Bosnians and opened our
wallets. Some of our husbands even left us to become
martyrs. The nationalist boundaries between Muslims
were erased. Foreign Muslims and Black American
Muslims were educating each other about politics and
history. On an international scale, Muslims were
competing with Jews over the international financial
system and the outcome of world events. A true
pan-Islamic internationalism was created. We were the
kings and queens of the world, to quote the Titanic.
A new, multicultural Islamic culture was born in
America. When Malcolm X was assassinated in 1965, he
left behind the hope of multicultural, international
Muslim unity. As long as American Blacks remained
isolated, they would still think like oppressed
people. But when they went to Mecca and prayed side by
side with a world community, they came in contact with
all of human civilization. During the 1970s, Islam
took a stronghold in America. Halal meat shops were
opened, Islamic schools were created. As more foreign
students came to America for education they mingled
with each other and with the locals. African Americans
adopted the Arabian style niqab and the Pakistani
shalwar kameez. Pakistanis adopted the Arab style
hijab and jilbab, while others adopted the Euro-Turk
skirt with blazer look. Because Islam was such a fun
social unifier in college, young people brought their
enthusiasm to their cousins back home, who then
started to cover more and pray more. We all wanted to
make huge personal sacrifices to save the world.
To a large extent it was America's support of the
Mujahideen in Afghanistan that created the spiritual
fire behind the Islamic Renaissance of the 1980s. In
the Battle of Jaji in May 1987, Osama's Muhajideen
army of only 50 members resisted 200 Soviet and
Soviet-backed Afghan troops for one week, taking 12
losses. Under the watch of the Arab media, the
Mujahideen protected their complex system of tunnels
and caves near the Pakistani border, named al-Masada,
from Soviet capture. Osama bin Laden became an
internationally respected war hero, while the Afghan
freedom fighters became revered in America as "the
bravest men in the world," according to former CIA
agent and author, Eric Margolis. Every Muslim in the
world, it seemed, wished they too could die for the
sake of Allah. Every girl wished she could marry Osama
bin Laden, even if he was already quite busy.
In 2001, the US used napalm and oxygen-sucking bombs
to "smoke out" Osama's "Lion's Nest" of tunnels. They
even sprayed acid from the sky to disfigure the faces
of the martyrs afterward.
Hundreds of pilgrims visit Kandahar's Arab cemetery
daily, believing that the graves of those massacred in
the 2001 US bombing of Afghanistan possess miraculous
healing powers.
2001 was not the end of the Muslims, but it was the
end of a glorious era, where martyrs competed with one
another for bravery and ordinary people competed with
each other with charity. We were going to defeat evil
in this world today, we thought. Now we know this is
only the beginning of the struggle.