One reason for the 9/11 tragedy is the disconnect between religiously oriented societies and secular societies. This religious disconnect appeared years ago. An unforseen consequence of the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990’s was the loosening of ties between the United States and countries in the Middle East. We no longer shared a common atheist enemy.
The disconnect appeared even earlier, in the 1970’s, with the takeover of the U.S. embassy in Iran. The young Iranians who took the Americans hostage objected to U.S. support for the Shah. They wanted a theocratic rule by the Islamist ayatollah, Khomeini. At that time we tended to see the world as divided between the secular Soviet Union and the secular United States and it allies. This tendency blinded us to another force: religion’s importance in the Middle East and the increasing dissatisfaction with the West’s consumer-oriented lifestyle.
In his book, All Fall Down, about the takeover, Gary Sick writes “We are all prisoners of our own cultural assumptions, more than we care to admit. Those of us who are products of Western cultural tradition … share certain assumptions … .The notion of a theocratic state seemed so unlikely as to be absurd” (pp. 192-3.) Thus we were unprepared for the Iranian revolution which put in place their theocratic state.
What about the recent toppling of other secular governments in the Middle East? How important will religion be to these new regimes?