COVER STORY
Standing Up for Islam
Muslims are fighting back—not just against the West but also against the militancy in their midst. A TIME Special Report on the diversity of Islam in Asia

The Politics of Islam
To many Southeast Asian Muslims, reports Michael Schuman, Islam is born again—as a political force
Wahhabism: Money Trail

Weakness in Numbers
Muslim minorities across Asia are under siege—and their persecution fuels fundamentalists' rage

A Jihadi's Tale
What drives so many Muslims to find peace in a holy war? Andrew Marshall seeks to understand the path taken by an Indonesian cleric



Under the Crescent
How Islam is lived, practical ad celebrated in Asia. Photographs by John Stanmeyer

A Jihadi's Scrapbook
A pictorial pilgrimage through the many lives of Habib Abdurrahman bin Ismail



Islam in Asia
A roundup of issues facing the region's estimated 670 million Muslims

Religion by Numbers
Islam is the second-largest religion in the world

Shades of Green
The Muslim world is far from homogenous. Islam is practiced and observed differently across cultures and countries



Model Nation
Malaysia stands out in the Muslim world for merging Islam and modernity

Ending the Patriarchy
To claim their rights, Muslim women cannot leave it to men to define Islam



We're All on the Same Side
That Muslims are defined exclusively by their faith is fallacious—and dangerous



A Faith Healer's Passion
Kali Bawang, February 2003

Muslim Mind, Female Body
Singapore, February 2003

Stuck in the Middle
Jaffna, September 2002

Bullies for Islam
Poso, December 2001

"The Guest of Allah"
Kabul, September 2002

Did You Hear...?
Yogyakarta, February 2003



After Bali
Asia—and the world—reels after a devastating attack (Oct. 28, 2002)

Indonesia's Rage Culture
Why does a moderate Islamic nation serve as a hotbed for religious extremists? (Oct. 28, 2002)

Taking the Hard Road
Indonesia's tough choice: crack down on extremists and risk backlash—or incur America's wrath (Sep. 30, 2002)

The Moderate Majority
Asia's progressive Islam can be a strong weapon against extremism (Oct. 28, 2002)



Wahhabism
Money Trail



When Mustaqim Azmi made the grueling sea journey from India to Jeddah on his first hajj in 1953, he felt like a rich man landing in a poor country. Bedouins crowded the docks to welcome their Muslim brothers coming from the subcontinent—and to catch the stale roti bread the passengers had saved for them. "They were so hungry," Azmi recalls. But with OPEC's founding and the rocketing of oil prices following the 1973 Arab-Israeli War, Saudi Arabia became one of the world's wealthiest nations. "Today, we're the poor ones," says Azmi, now general secretary of the All-India Ulama Council. "We are the ones needing help from Saudi Arabia."

Donations can come at a price, however. Every year, some $6 billion leaves the Arab kingdom, mostly from private charities, to build mosques and Islamic schools, feed Muslim children and deliver life-saving drugs to Muslims from Mozambique to Mindanao. That's commendable work, but along with the money comes Saudi Arabia's second-most-important export to the world: its austere and feudal 18th century brand of Islam, Wahhabism. At a mosque and madrasah in Zamboanga City in the southern Philippines, for example, head imam Jain Jali was replaced by a Saudi-trained cleric who had access to much-needed funds from benefactors in Saudi Arabia. Now, Jali's less orthodox kind of Islam is no longer preached, and community women must wear head scarves and long-sleeved tops. "If you have a Saudi graduate for an imam," says Jali, "he's going to push Wahhabism."

Besides the religious and social fallout, there's the terrorist factor. Often it's hard to track where donations end up. For example, last September, Dhaka police raided a Riyadh-based international nongovernmental organization, al-Haramain Islamic Foundation, acting on a tip that Bangladeshi branches had been recruiting madrasah students for jihad in Kashmir and Afghanistan. Al-Haramain's records showed that it had received $2.4 million from Saudi Arabia—proof that Saudi alms aren't always used in the most benevolent manner.



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SPORTS
All Washed Up?
Once football's favorite son, Paul Gascoigne has bottomed out in China

THAILAND
The Killing Season
Thailand's swift, popular crackdown on drugs has claimed more than 1,000 lives
CHINA
The Mystery Man
Does Wen Jiabao, China's new No. 2, have the courage to carry out reforms?

TRAVEL
War Jitters? Relax in Egypt
It's a great time to visit the land of the Nile


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FROM THE MAR 10, 2003 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED MONDAY, MAR 3, 2003


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