The son of Muslim immigrants from
Bangladesh and
India, living in
East London, Husain describes himself as close to his family and their Bengali spiritual guide (
pir) he calls 'Grandpa' as a child, but a
boffin misfit at the innercity
Stepney Green boys secondary school. There he finds some belonging in studying Islam with a friend, Brother Faileek. Their text,
Islam: Beliefs and Teachings, by
Ghulam Sarwar -- "the first book I read about Islam in English" —tells him that, contrary to his father's teaching, 'religion and politics are one and the same in Islam'. He learns of organizations and people that are dedicated to the creation of 'truly Islamic states' --
Jamaat-e-Islami and its founder
Abul Ala Maududi. At the invitation of Faileek, Husain becomes active in the
Young Muslim Organization (YMO) whose parent organization (Islamic Forum Europe) ran the big
East London Mosque and was aligned with Jamaat-e-Islami. As an "isolated schoolboy" he is flattered by their attention and impressed with the "dynamism" and "discipline" of the group, but his parents are furious, demanding that he choose between political Islam and the family. Husain runs away from home, coming back only after his father backs down. Husain goes on to college at the
Tower Hamlets College where he is elected president of the Islamic Society—the dominant student organisation on the predominantly South Asian Muslim campus. The Society studies
Sayyid Qutb's
Milestones, clashes with the secular college administration over the Society's anti-gay stance, its slogan "Islam: the Final Solution", and its demands for a bigger prayer room. The society organizes a successful boycott of the college disco and a
Socialist Workers Party speech. In 1992, the atrocities against fellow Muslims in
Bosnia disenchant Husain with YMO and its "parochial" concentration on South Asians. He takes up with a rival group,
Hizb ut-Tahrir (HT), impressed with its focus on the international Muslim
ummah (community) and its 'methodology for changing the world.' Along with YMO and HT, other groups --
Islamic Forum Europe, Dawatul Islam, the Wahhabi
JIMAS,
Hizb ut-tahrir—are all actively preaching in 1990s London that Islam is not just a religion but a complete code of behavior, politics, economics, etc. Not all agree, however, on the exact details of the complete code, or at least who should be in charge, and factional infighting results. In the 1980s, Husain writes, police were called to break up fights between Islamic Forum Europe and Dawatul Islam at East London Mosque. Husain is forced from the Islamic Society presidency by YMO in an acrimonious shouting match, and later forcibly evicted from a mosque while aggressively preaching HT's "concepts". He laments, "I had committed myself to Islamism because I wanted to be a better Muslim, ... not in order to divide Muslims. ... Where was all the brotherhood we spoke about?" Hizb ut-tahri disrupts Muslim events it can't control and in debate would "deny, lie, and deflect" to out-argue its opponents in aggressive style -- "never defend, always offend". Looking back, Husain also complains of feeling Islamists often misrepresented themselves or important facts. Ghulam Sarwar, was not a scholar of religion but a business management lecturer, and never mentioned in his book his activism in the organization --
Jamaat-e-Islami—he praised. YMO and especially HT use
front organisations to hide their activity. After the
London 7/7 bombings Husain has lunch with an unnamed "president of a leading Islamist organization in Britain" who in public condemns terrorism, but with Husain lets "slip that he considered that he saw nothing wrong in the destruction of the
kuffar (unbelievers), or prayers that call for that destruction." Husain also feels politics are crowding out his "relationship with God", and sees the same in other activists. In his college history studies Husain learns that the idea of a pure Islamic state, is 'not the continuation of a political entity set up by the Prophet, maintained by the caliphs down the ages (however debatable)', but (according to Husain) borne out of an 'alien',
Wahhabi interpretation of Islam. HT founder
Taqiuddin al-Nabhani's vision of a state to re-established Islamic
caliphate was 'not innovatory Muslim thinking but wholly derived (according to Husain) from European political thought' of
Hegel,
Rousseau,
Antonio Gramsci, and others. Husain's breaking point with HT comes when a Nigerian-British Christian student is stabbed and killed at Husain's college in connection with an earlier Muslim-Christian confrontation. Husain feels "guilt" as the college HT representative who, he says, "had encouraged Muslim fervour, a sense of separation from others, a belief that Muslims were worthier than other humans." In a press release HT itself denies it had ever operated on the campus (falsely, according to Husain), and misleadingly asserts it is a "nonviolent" group. After quitting HT, Husain finishes college, finds but then quits a lucrative but soul deadening job in
the City, and marries. Only gradually severing his psychologically links with Islamism, he begins to discover 'classical, traditional Islam', which includes
Sufi mysticism. but also startled by the casual racism of the Saudis, and the "misery and squalor" of a Muslim African shantytown in Jeddah amid the wealth and luxury of the Kingdom. He contrasts it to the
public housing and benefits provided to poor immigrants in the non-Muslim UK. Despite Saudi separation of the genders, the lack of respect for women is far worse than in the UK or "secular" Muslim Syria (according to Husain), In 2005, Husain returns to London, dismayed to discover what he calls "a sophisticated, entrenched form of Islamism and Wahhabism on the rise" despite the post-7/7 "intense media scrutiny of extremism in Britain." He ends with a call for the "normal" or "mainstream" Islam of "most" British Muslims, rejecting both the Islamist tenets of "subordination of women" and "hatred of Jews, Hindus, Americans, gays", and the Muslim "integration" into non-Muslim British culture with its binge drinking, gambling, and '
Big Brother' and
Ladettes lifestyle. ==Reception==