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Old 12-13-2003, 08:58 AM   #9
Skippy1
Elminster
 

Join Date: December 9, 2003
Location: England (Ex-pat Aussie)
Age: 62
Posts: 447
The very last paragraph really is the crux of the matter.


The term jihad should cause little confusion, for context almost always indicates what a speaker intends. The variant interpretations are so deeply embedded in Islamic intellectual traditions that the usage of jihad is unlikely to be ambiguous. An advocate of jihad as warfare indicates so through his goals. A Sufi uses the term mujahada or specifies the greater jihad. Bourguiba clearly did not advocate violence to improve education and development in Tunisia. When ambiguity does exist, it may well be deliberate. In the case of Arafat’s statement about a “jihad for Jerusalem,” he intended his Muslim audience to hear a call to arms while falling back on the peaceful definition to allay concerns in Israel and the West. Only his later actions reveal whether he was coopting Islamists by adopting their rhetoric or duping Israelis by hiding his violent intentions.
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"The greatest discovery of my generation is that human beings can alter their lives by altering their attitudes of mind." -- William James
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