Power in the 21st century does not primarily come from armies. It comes from stories. Whoever tells the most compelling, most widely distributed, most emotionally resonant story about reality shapes what people believe is possible, what they fear, what they aspire to, and who they identify with.
Muslims have largely ceded this space, and the consequences are not merely cultural; they are political, psychological, and civilizational.
What Is Narrative Power?
Narrative power is the capacity to define the terms of a conversation to determine what counts as normal, what counts as extreme, what counts as progress, and what counts as a threat. It is exercised not through argument but through framing.
Antonio Gramsci, the Italian Marxist theorist, called this ‘cultural hegemony’, the domination of a society’s values, norms, and common sense by a ruling class, not through force but through the normalization of its worldview.
The Muslim Narrative Crisis
The dominant global narratives about Islam and Muslims have been written largely by outsiders, shaped by geopolitical interests, media incentives, and historical biases. These narratives define Muslims primarily in terms of what they threaten, rather than what they offer.
But the problem is not only external. Within Muslim communities, narrative has been largely ceded to two equally inadequate voices: the reactively defensive (constantly explaining that Islam is peaceful, progressive, compatible with modernity) and the performatively traditional (speaking only to insiders, in insider language, with insider assumptions).
The Prophet ﷺ as Master Communicator
The Prophet Muhammad ﷺ was, among his many roles, an extraordinary communicator. He adapted his language to his audience, speaking differently to the scholar, the Bedouin, the child, and the adversary. He used story, metaphor, analogy, and silence with precision.
Linguist and communication theorist Walter Ong described this quality as ‘secondary orality,’ a sophisticated, audience-aware form of communication that combines the emotional power of oral tradition with the precision of careful thought.
Reclaiming the Narrative: A Practical Framework
Reclaiming narrative power does not require controlling mass media. It requires producing thinkers, writers, teachers, and communicators who can articulate an Islamic worldview with confidence, clarity, and creativity in multiple formats, for multiple audiences.
It requires teaching Muslims not just what to say, but how to frame it how to set the terms of the conversation rather than merely responding to others’ terms. How to speak about justice, not just for Muslims, but for humanity. How to present Islamic ethics as a contribution to civilizational discourse, not a defensive plea for tolerance.