After  the recent spate of attacks by Islamic extremists in Europe many have suggested  the  international media mans the front line against Jihadist Islamic terrorism.  Undoubtedly, the  Western media constitutes a prime target for Islamic extremists, especially  since the provocative cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed became a rallying cry  for opposing sides in the debate. However, the real front line for the war of  ideas rests neither in Paris nor the rest of the Western world. The true  battleground lies in the conservative Islamic heartlands of countries like  Pakistan, Egypt or Turkey. 
This  is a war  for the soul of Islam. A war which will be won not by American or NATO soldiers  but by Muslim  theologians reinterpreting religious edicts in line with the aspirations of  the modern Muslim community. These aspirations do not include killing  civilians, denying girls' education, making women sit at home or killing polio  vaccinators doing their job.
Similar  to their non-Muslim counterparts across the world, most Muslims lead humdrum,  boring lives. Muslim adults send  children to schools, watch their kids start families, become grandparents  and lavish affection on their grandchildren. Muslim adults, too, visit dentists  and doctors, socialize with friends, watch television and movies. 
Muslim  hopes and fears are no different from non-Muslim hopes and fears. 
Thus,  it was encouraging reading the transcript of Egyptian President Sisi's speech to  senior Muslim theologians  at Al-Azhar University. The Cairo based university is one of the world's oldest  and most respected institutions of Islamic learning. 
In  the speech, Sisi essentially exhorts the Ulema  (qualified Islamic theologians) to play a genuine leadership role by returning  Islamic dialogue to the realms of normalcy, especially in so far as Islamic  law deals with interactions  with non-Muslims. In actuality, theologians are simply being asked to  endorse the common sense approach to life already employed by the majority of  Muslims around the world. 
One  must applaud Sisi's efforts to galvanize Islamic  clerics in the battle for the Islamic mind. Unfortunately, the influence of  ultra-conservative clerics fed by a  steady diet of petrodollars by oil rich nations remains powerful. It may  take many more Islamic philosophers with the fervent vision of Allama Iqbal  before a clear consensus about the Reconstruction of Religious  Thought in Islam  becomes a reality. 
Meanwhile,  the  ordinary Muslim walking the streets of Karachi - not Cannes - is the one in  the firing line for her 'moderate' beliefs. By challenging ideas propagated by  Islamic extremists in her daily life, she moves us closer to the final victory  against obscurantists currently polluting Islamic beliefs.  
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Imran is a business and management consultant.  Through his work at Deodar  Advisors and the Deodar Diagnostic, Imran improves profits of businesses  operating in Singapore and the region. He can be reached at imran@deodaradvisors.com. 

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