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Reconstructing
the Muslim Ummah: The
Legacy of Abraham
Islam
is not an identity that a group can claim
on its sole patent rather, it is an attitude
of willing and unconditional submission to
God, a door open on all those seeking solace
in the oneness of God. This call for willing
submission, expressed throughout history by
the true prophets of God and their rightful
followers, has to be carried forward by the
Muslims of our time. However, this does not
imply that submitters in other prophetic traditions
will be denied a role in this modern day venture.
A movement calling for world revolution, for
establishing a global family comprising of
the children of one God cannot afford to shut
its door on the submitters found in other
traditions.
No objective reading of the Qur'an can miss
the dominant theme that all the prophets of
God, from Abraham to Mohammed or before them,
were calling people to worship one God, to
embrace the life example of submitters, the
Muslim Haneef. No wonder then that the Qur'an
makes it a precondition of faith to believe
in all the prophets one and at the same time.
The believers are asked to look at the prophets
not as the founders of an specific Ummah but
as upholders of the same divine mission:
In
the divine scheme they are inseparable; together
they constitute a galaxy of divinely inspired
leaders of humanity. They are not to be understood
in isolation. The Quran makes it an inseparable
part of the Muslim faith to believe in all
the earlier prophets and what has come down
to us through them. The remnants of the earlier
prophetic communities, we are told, are our
natural allies. Since Mohammed has not brought
a new message rather he came to revive the
Abrahamic religion, believers are encouraged
to find in him the convergence of the entire
prophetic tradition.
Mohammed founded no new Ummah. Instead, far
from a new identity or a name, the new believers
were asked to shun all pseudo religious identity,
be it Jewish or Christian - the patented Muslims
of Mohammed's time. All those claiming to
be the true inheritors of Abrahamic heritage
from among the Jews and Christians or adamant
on converting people to their bandwagon were
told in clear terms that there was no goodness
attached to mere labels. Far from being a
Jew or a Christian, Abraham was a submitter
per se. Hence all those willing to submit
to one Lord must follow his example(Q 2:135).
Had Mohammed and his followers taken a new
identity as opposed to the Jewish or Christian
this move had certainly undermined his position
as the prophet to humanity. As opposed to
those calling for conversion to Jewish or
Christian fold
the
new believers had to stick to the Abrahmic
fold: 'the true religion of Abraham who worshiped
no God other than Him' (Q 6:161). Contrary
to the Jews and Christians who attached so
much importance to their religious tags, the
new believers were to march through history
tag-free. The Quranic invitation of
of
urging people to be a God-based Ummah or taking
the color of God,
was to drive home the same point that no prophet
ever in history came to establish his own
cult or invited people to submit to his own
self. The Quran tell us, time and again, that
all the prophets, despite their geographical
and temporal difference, in essence had preached
the same message (Q: 3:68). And since Mohammed
represents the essence of Abrahamic tradition
where else one would find a model to emulate?
(Q 3:68)
Mohammed thus projected in the Qur'an is no
cult leader. He is a global prophet; a warner
to all
and
a blessing for all mankind
.
In the early era of Islam one even does not
hear of the term Ummah Mohammadiya same as
in the hay days of earlier prophetic communities
the cultic identity like the Jew, the Christian
or the Buddhist was not known. It took almost
centuries for these personality based identities
to evolve. All the true prophets of God did
their best to connect to people to one God,
to raise a just society centered around God
alone
and
to unite people in Tawhidi paradigm as children
of one God. The prophet is no ordinary seer;
he is endowed with a cosmic knowledge and
a meta-cosmic vision
It
is not expected of him to indulge in cult
formation or call people to worship his own
cult
whereas
he is assigned to call people to worship one
God or identify themselves as none but His
slaves alone
(Q
3: 79). Like the submitters of all time the
new believing community too, we are told,
were to accept all the prophets as a pre-condition
to their faith. They would not even prefer
one prophet over the other (Q 3: 84).
Revival of a universal Ummah based
on God alone was no ordinary vision; the rallying
cry for becoming rabbanin or a general invitation
for plugging in to God created an extra-ordinary
amount of energy and ecstasy. As long as the
new believers remained conscious of their
rabbani identity they looked at themselves
as a convergence of great prophetic tradition.
They were like an open door wherein all souls
seeking solace would find refuge. This extraordinary
emphasis on God based identity gave the new
believers an ideological edge and soon transformed
them into a power not to reckon with. Though
rooted in Arab traditions their changed outlook
had such a great impact that wherever they
went they appeared as a group of people united
around one God and for whom the racial, cultural,
linguistic and geographical identities had
lost all meaning. However, as the era of first
generation Muslims passed by, gradually it
became clear as if the Arab culture was the
natural color of Islam. Some even considered
the grandeur of the Abbasid Empire as the
logical destination of the rabbani movement.
The Arab bias or asabiyah became a foundation
stone for the later Muslims to emulate. Further,
the degeneration of the mawali institution,
from a brotherly corporation into a social
protectorate, also made us believe that hence
onward non-Arabs had to limit themselves only
to the periphery of the Islamic movement.
An empire founded on the Arab asabiyah claiming
the superiority of some Arab clans left little
room for the remnants of other prophetic communities
to join in. The once God oriented vision embracing
all were now transformed into the idea of
a community centered around the personality
of a prophet. This was a clear case of misplaced
loyalty, or what is termed as the ghuloo
in Qur'anic terminology. The idea of a new
Ummah centered around an Arab prophet, reduced
the new believers to the status of just another
community, and like the Jews and the Christians,
yet another slice of the great Abrahmic loaf.
This process of the closing of the Muslim
mind not only transformed them from within
it also changed the entire world around them.
The Ummah was now on a course of perpetual
decline and its Ulema had taken an intellectual
exile. However, the so called golden age of
Abbasid Baghdad, or the splendor of Muslim
Spain and Mughal India and the military prowess
of the Ottoman Empire created some illusions
about our ever declining graph. It was a process
where the Muslim nation, the Ummah Muhammadiyah
had defeated Islam.The very emergence of cult
Islam, or Muhammadan nation, had in fact sounded
the death knell of an ideology based Ummah.
The color of God no more remained the only
identity of Muslims. Forced to take shelter
in the psychological prison house of their
own making, Muslims made Ummah the main focus
of their concern, nay rather object of worship.
The cult worship further degenerated into
sub-cults and the new believers found new
identities to cling too. Internal feuds between
the Shites and Sunnis, Hanafis and Shafais,
not only engineered the fall of Mohammedan
Empires, it caused so much ideological confusion
that it became almost impossible to figure
out who really was the true representative
of Islam. That something had gone awry with
the House of Islam was a general feeling however
those who came to repair the situation focused
mainly on the reorientation of the Ummah Muhammadiyah
itself. What has been the main cause of its
aliment came to be regarded as its cure.
Instead of a employing the cultic notion of
Ummah Mohammadiyah the Quran uses the term
Ummah Mislimah. In Abraham's moving prayer
one hears him saying: 'Our Lord! Make us submitters
to you and raise from among our children a
nation of submitters,
(Q 2:128). Abraham enjoined upon his sons
and so did Jacob: 'my sons! Die not except
in the state of submission' (Q 2:133). The
Qur'anic vision of Ummah Muslimah comprises
all those submitters no matter whatever geographical,
historical or civilizational slot they are
found. It is a glittering galaxy of all the
prophets and their true followers. The people
of Cave whom God blessed and protected, female
role models such as Mary (Jesus' mother) and
Pharos wife and all other believing nations
mentioned in the Qur'an or left unmentioned,
together they constitute the broader Ummah
of Islam. Despite this so clear pronouncements
if there still are people who insist that
Abraham was a Jew or a Christian, the Quran
challenges their misconceptions: 'say! You
know better or God?' (Q: 2:140). Calling Abraham
a Jew or looking at Mohammed as the founder
of Ummah Mohammediyah tantamount to great
injustice: 'And who is more unjust than those
who conceal the testimony they have from Allah?'
(Q: 2:140). And those who still insist that
the present day Ummah Mohammediyah constitutes
the sum total of Ummah Muslimah can they dare
expel Abraham and his progeny or Aasiya and
Mary from the Islamic fold? Salvation
for Submitters alone: Those who submit themselves
to the Lord Almighty and make right moves
need not worry about their salvation. This
is the assurance given to all those who submit
to one Lord thereby constituting the broader
Ummah of submitters. On the contrary those
born in the Muslim tradition and even raised
in the family of submitters if they recourse
to non-Abrahmic way, this assurance is immediately
withdrawn:
or
Such
and the like verses are clear indications
that mere group identity is no good for salvation
nor any blood relation with a group of submitters
or Ummah Muslimah can be a sufficient ground
for it. This is why the Jewish and the Christian
claim -- the traditional Muslims of Mohammad's
time -- that they were the darling children
of God, the chosen ones was out rightly dismissed
(Q 5:18).
That the Quranic term Ummah Muslimah is a
broad based House of submitters can further
be asserted by a re-reading of Surah Ambiya
where we are assured once again: Verily this
Ummah of yours is a single Ummah and I am
your Lord and Cherisher, therefore worship
me (21/91). It is a long chain of submitters
from Abraham to Lot down to Solomon, Jacob,
Ismael, Idrees, Zulkifl, Zunnoon, Zakariyah,
Yahya and Maryam. All of them in fact constitute
one single group though their later generation
might have divided themselves among different
groupings:
(Q
21:93). There are numerous verses in the Qur'an
emphasizing that all those submitting to one
God constitute one Ummah as opposed to those
who get trapped in sectarian thinking or take
refuge in cult worship. The Qur'anic verdict
that this set of people are one nation (Q
2:213) or this Ummah of yours is one Ummah
(Q 21:92) can better be explained by yet another
expression: 'Abraham alone constitutes an
Ummah'
,the
same Abraham who is projected as a role model
for Muslims of all time. Abraham's submission
is beyond all doubts as he never created a
cult of his own nor he was the originator
of the Jewish or Christian identity. Those
who follow him will have to be an integral
part of the greater Ummah of Islam.
This broader view of the Ummah Muslimah has
been in operation in the hay days of Islam.
Even during the dangerous war days and fierce
struggle when Muslims had to face open opposition
from Jewish and Christian quarters our vision
of the broader Ummah of Islam remained intact.
For we are warned in the Qur'an, time and
again, not to fall prey to generalization.
There are still many among the people of the
book sticking to the truth:
Among
them are also God fearing nice souls who stand
all night long reciting the word of God and
prostrating themselves in adoration (Q: 3:113).
As a group identity is not a source of salvation
it cannot be an excuse for condemnation either.
Those among you who are more God conscious
are more worthy in the sight of God (Q 49:13)
On that day every soul will have to carry
his own the burden alone (Q 74:38). Such verses
then, are sufficient pointers to the fact
that submitters to God together constitute
one nation and for them God's favor is guaranteed:
'Those who believe and those of the Jews and
Christians and the Sabians who believe in
Allah and the last day and work righteousness
shall have their reward with their Lord, on
them shall be no fear, nor shall they grieve'
(Q 2:62). This verse of the Qur'an extending
scope of salvation to the followers of other
prophets, to the submitters of other faith
groups, has been an enigma to many Muslim
Ulema and jurists and a matter of irreconcilable
controversy. While Abu Hamid Ghazzali, Rashid
Raza and Tabatabaei believed that God's mercy
would be extended to the submitters of other
faith groups, for an overwhelming majority
of Muslim scholars this notion was no less
than a blasphemy. Where then Muhammed stands
in the scheme of things? they quipped. The
more Muslims started looking at Mohammed as
the founder of a new Ummah it became increasingly
difficult for them to find in him the convergence
of the great Abrahmic tradition. They also
lost sight of the fact that Islam, the chosen
deen of God propagated by all true
prophets throughout history, is essentially
a God-centered religion. It was St. Augustine's
hand in theology that made salvation almost
impossible without Jesus. Those who fashion
Mohammed in similar light or place him on
a much higher pedestal of intercession, are
in fact guilty of operating within an Augustinian
framework. As opposed to Augustinian Christianity
where salvation is the sole right of Christians,
the Qur'an discourages humans to pass strictures
on this sensitive issue. We have to keep our
mouths shut not only about the people of the
book who are taken as our natural allies,
but even about those who are guilty of committing
Shirk. It is God's prerogative, we are told:
'on that day God will bring forth His verdict
about them' (Q 22:17). Same as God created
people in different clans and races so that
they can be mutually recognized (Q 49:13),
it is also His scheme that his obedient children
are known with varying labels. 'Had God so
willed', we are told, 'He would have raised
us as one Ummah' but it is His plan to test
us in what has come down to us. We are therefore
exhorted to mutually compete in acts of goodness
(Q 5:48). If submitters to one God find themselves
in divergent traditions of submission this
diversity should not be cause of worry. The
Qur'an testifies to the fact that the Torah
and Injil have come down from the same
source and there too one may find guidance
and light. Those claiming to inherit different
prophetic traditions should not sink so low
in their disputes as to indulge in deciding
who is going to hell or who can be sure of
salvation. Instead, what all we are required
is to strive in a stiff competition of virtues;
for God alone is the goal of us all, it is
He who will show us the truth of the matters
in which we dispute' (Q 5:48). Having been
aware of the unique position of Mohammed in
history, the first generation of Muslims never
divulged in such issues. Instead, they considered
the remnants of earlier prophets as their
natural ideological allies with whom a common
program of action can be worked out: 'O People
of the Book! Come to common terms as between
us and you: that we worship none but God;
that we associate no partners with Him; that
we erect not, from among ourselves, Lords
and patrons other than God (Q 3:64). Assigned
to a leadership role as they were, the earlier
Muslims displayed a marked openness in embracing
submitters of different hue to their fold.
The door of the new Islamic movement was open
on all those willing to compete in acts of
goodness. However, those still trapped in
sectarian thinking or who attached undue importance
to their Jewish or Christian identity, they
were reminded that they will find no reward
for them unless they stick to the teachings
of Torah (Q 5:68). Though claiming to be representative
of Jewish or Christian faith, they are the
people who have taken their identity as God
and sunken in cult worship. No good is expected
from such closed minded people. Hence it is
advisable to stay away from them: 'O submitters!
Take not the Jew and Christians for your friends
and protectors' (Q 5:51). Such and the like
pronouncements however should not be taken
as a general statement. For we are reminded
in the Qur'an: 'Not all of them are alike:
of the people of the Book are an upright Ummah,
they recite the words of God all night long
and they prostrate themselves in adoration'
(Q 3:113). Since the early Muslims considered
the people of the book as their natural ally,
they found no fault in socially mixing with
them. The Qur'an had allowed their food lawful
for Muslims. And same as Muslim men were encouraged
to take believing women as their wife on condition
of piety so they were also allowed to marry
with chaste women from among the people of
the book (Q 5:5). In a God-centered society
founded on taqwa alone where the call
for becoming rabbani or God-oriented
had attained such a high pitch none could
even have dreamt that one day the same people
would undergo such a through transformation
that it would be difficult for them to look
at themselves as upholder of the rabbani
identity and being Muslims would come to be
regarded as wearing a cultural identity than
the pure unconditional submission. Owing to
some historical factors and political upheavals,
unfortunately this great tragedy befell on
Muslims. Gradually the Muslim national identity
took precedence over their rabbani
identity. This initiated the process of the
closing of the Muslim mind. Soon Muslims found
themselves surrounded with a plethora of doubtful
historical material and unreliable traditions
that had to shape the new Muslim identity
in the centuries to come. This transformation
of a people entrusted to lead history till
end time, from Ummah Muslimah into Ummah Muhammadiyah,
gave birth to a whole new set of beliefs about
the Ummah and its prophet. Like the other
earlier nations Muslims too prided themselves
in their cultic identity and projected their
prophet as super prophet. What as upholder
of the Qur'an they once had found difficult
to sallow the illogical claim of the Jews
that no fire will touch them except for a
short period and that heaven is their eventual
destination irrespective of what they do,
now they had developed same misgivings about
themselves. In the legends that shaped the
new Muslim mind Muhammed is seen as having
exceptional ability to intercede to win the
salvation of his Ummah. On that appointed
day when Abraham, Moses, Jesus and other prophets
will shy away from taking up a single case
of intercession, Mohammed upholding the banner
of God's praise will be able to send his own
folk en masse to heaven. Some traditions even
relate that given the mass entry of Muslims
to heaven there would be general feeling that
Mohammed's Ummah as a whole is being treated
like the Israelite prophets. The envisioning
of an unjust God and an equally partial prophet
left Muslims with no choice but to take shelter
in the psychological shell of their own making.
This was a great mistake. By projecting Mohammed
as the super prophet they in fact painted
his as a cult hero. All those who were passionately
eulogizing him as the great hero of Mohammedan
Ummah were in fact pouring on him insult of
the worst kind. The great international prophet
whom the Qur'an depicts as a blessing to all
mankind, about him we were told by the fabricators
that when his end came he was only worried
about his own folk. On his death bed he muttered
Ummati Ummati and on the Day of Judgment too,
as the traditions has it, he will maneuver
God's judgment in favor of his own people.
If the prophet is seen as one working for
Ummah Muhammediyah alone how can one expect
from his followers that they will mirror themselves
as Warner to all or work for the general good
of humanity.
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