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Clash of Civilizations
by Kerby Anderson
In
the summer of 1993, Samuel Huntington published an article entitled
"The Clash of Civilizations?" in the journal Foreign Affairs.
The article generated more controversy than any other article in
the journal since the 1940s. And Huntington says it stirred up more
debate than anything else he wrote during that time.
Three years later Samuel Huntington published a book using a similar
title. The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order
came on the market in 1996 and became a bestseller, once again stirring
controversy. Given the events of the last year, it seems worthy
to revisit his comments and predictions since in many ways he seems
as accurate as an Old Testament prophet.
His thesis is fairly simple. In the future, world history will
be marked by conflicts between three principal groups: Western universalism,
Muslim militancy, and Chinese assertion.
Huntington says that in the post-Cold War world, "global politics
has become multipolar and multicivilizational." During most
of human history, major civilizations were separated from one another
and contact was intermittent or nonexistent. That pattern changed
in the modern era (around 1500 A.D.). For over 400 years, the nation
states of the West (Britain, France, Spain, Austria, Prussia, Germany,
the United States) constituted a multipolar international system
which interacted, competed, and fought wars with each other. During
that same period of time, these nations also expanded, conquered,
and colonized nearly every other civilization.
During the Cold War, global politics became bipolar, and the world
was divided into three parts. Western democracies led by the United
States engaged in ideological, political, economic, and even military
competition with communist countries led by the Soviet Union. Much
of this conflict occurred in the Third World outside these two camps
and was composed mostly of nonaligned nations.
Huntington argues that in the post-Cold War world, the principal
actors are still the nation states but they are influenced by more
than just power and wealth. Other factors like cultural preferences,
commonalities, and differences are also influential. The most important
groupings are not the three blocs of the Cold War but rather the
major world civilizations.
He believes that culture is both a divisive and unifying force.
"People separated by ideology but united by culture come together,
as the two Germanys did and as the two Koreas and the several Chinas
are beginning to. Societies united by ideology or historical circumstance
but divided by civilization either come apart, as did the Soviet
Union, Yugoslavia, and Bosnia, or are subjected to intense strain,
as is the case with Ukraine, Nigeria, Sudan, India, Sri Lanka, and
many others."
To put it simply, the line has moved. For 45 years, the Iron Curtain
was the central dividing line in Europe. "That line has moved
several hundred miles east. It is now the line separating the peoples
of Western Christianity, on the one hand, from Muslims and Orthodox
peoples on the other."
Samuel Huntington provides a compelling world view for understanding
the future of global politics as well as understanding the philosophical
and spiritual interaction and conflict between Christianity and
Islam. I believe that Christians need to begin to understand the
implications of this major shift in countries and civilizations
as we move into the 21st century.
Worldview Weekend.com
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