On September 21, 2013, a group of attackers entered the Westgate Shopping Center in Nairobi, Kenya. They opened fire and began throwing grenades at the crowd of shoppers. It was the beginning of a half-a-week siege, which left over sixty people dead. On the next day, two suicide bombers attacked the All Saints Church in Peshawar, Pakistan. More than eighty people were killed.
In Nairobi and Peshawar there were groups behind these attacks which associated themselves with Islam. In both the mall and the church mostly non-Muslims were targeted. It makes some people come to the simple conclusion that “Muslims are fully capable of attacking a church and killing innocent Pakistanis, just like Christians, when they fought their battles of faith, destroyed churches and burned heretics.” This comparison of contemporary terrorist activities with the wars of religions is a mere commonplace. Yet it is not reflective of the reality of either wars of religion or terrorism. Such wars were rather for power and influence in Europe than for religious principles. Furthermore, the age of wars of religion resulted in secularism coming.
Terrorism is hardly to be found in a traditional religious society, consisting of people who are brought up and educated there, who know this tradition, its texts and practices, and whose life is religiously integral rather than separated into religious and profane parts. Who can say now that he or she regards every breath as a religious act? A tiny number of hermits, may be. But if they have a weapon, it would be a prayer or charitable act rather than a gun. It does not mean that there is no violence in traditional religious societies. It does exist there, yet this is not the terrorism.
In the post-secular world where we live now, people are free to mix some elements of religions with everything else which could be very far from the religious tradition. This looks like a shopper who takes what he or she likes at the moment. That is why today religion can be found side by side with insolence, hatred, and animosity.
If Christians of the Medieval Russia used to help those who were in prisons, knowing the words of Jesus Christ: “I was in prison and you came to Me” (Matthew 25:36), today many people formally belonging to the Orthodox Christian Church do not want to show mercy to Pussy Riot’s Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and others who are in the Russian prisons which are notorious for their inhuman living conditions.
It would be impossible in a traditional religious society to justify the Pussy Riot performances as well as the malicious joy demonstrated by others regarding the bad consequences for the women from this group. In the same way it is impossible to regard the attacks in Nairobi and Peshawar as religious acts. These terrorists are not Muslims. They are just criminals who know almost nothing about Islam.