EP 03 | Shattering the Silos — The Western Muslim Spectrum & the Many Faces of Resistance
This episode maps the Western Muslim spectrum — and uses it to dismantle one of the most powerful tools of colonial control: the silo.
The Western mind has built walls between the spiritual and the political, between faith and reason, between the interior life and the life of resistance in the world. These walls are not neutral. They are a specific historical project — and Islam, taken seriously on its own terms, refuses every one of them.
We follow three figures who proved it:
1.René Guénon — French mathematician, Sufi mystic, author of The Crisis of the Modern World.
2.Malcolm X — who stood at the plain of Arafat in 1964, wept, and wrote home: "I have been utterly speechless and spellbound by the graciousness I see displayed all around me by people of all colors."
3.Yvonne Ridley — captured by the Taliban in 2001,released on one condition: read the Quran. She agreed, intending to use it as opposition research.
TIMELINE
1648 — The Peace of Westphalia. Europe ends its wars of religion by separating church and state permanently. Faith becomes a privatehobby. This solution — born from European trauma — is exported to the world as a universal truth.
1886 — René Guénon is born in France. Peak Western confidence. He will spend his life arguing that the entire project is spiritual devolution.
1930 — Guénon boards a boat to Cairo. Does not take a single European book. Never returns. Writes in Arabic for the rest of his life.
1964 — Malcolm X performs the Hajj. Prays shoulder to shoulder with men of all colours. Sees not just brothers in faith — but a geopolitical bloc. Stops asking for civil rights (granted by the state) and starts demanding human rights (granted by God).
1965 — Malcolm X is assassinated. The system's recognition that a man who integrates the spiritual and the political cannot be managed.
2001 — Yvonne Ridley is captured crossing into Afghanistan in a burqa. Held for ten days by the Taliban. Released on one condition.
KEY TERMS
The Silo — The artificial separation of the spiritual from the political, encoded by Westphalia in 1648 and enforced globally through colonial power. The system that says: faith in the pew, governance in the parliament, and never shall they meet
Deen — Arabic. Almost always mistranslated as "religion." Deen is a total life transaction — governance, trade, family, worship as one integrated reality. It refuses to fit inside the silo. This refusal is why the modern state finds Islam unmanageable
The Reign of Quantity — Guénon's term for what happens when a civilisation can only perceive what it can measure. Truth, beauty, the sacred — not absent. Amputated.
Root, Branch, Voice — The episode's structural framework.Guénon preserves the root (interior truth, at the cost of withdrawal). Malcolm X builds the branch (connecting spiritual depth to political solidarity across continents). Ridley provides the voice (bearing witness from inside the Western media system, at the cost of her career).
Epistemic Event — A fundamental shift in how you know what you know.
Fitra — In Episode 3, the Fitra is what each figure responds to. Guénon's withdrawal is the Fitra refusing a spiritually dead civilisation. Malcolm's synthesis is the Fitra demanding reunion of the spiritual and political. Ridley's experience is the Fitra recognising coherence — even when the encounter was hostile.
Resistance 101: Palestine and the Global Awakening Masterclass