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EDITORIAL |
Beyond an Islamic Reformation
From Makkah to Washington DC
Islamic Reformation is the buzz word. Though the reform movement is no new
innovation in Islam, nevertheless, the rallying cry for reforming Islam from
within had never attained such a high pitch. And despite the fact that
reformation has an Islamic basis, the external pressure to do so has cast a
shadow of doubt on the nature of the reform itself. Then, there are
intellectuals in the west, whose advocacy for reform is not to make Islam more
compatible with our time but to tame it, thereby creating a version of Islam
that may fit into the liberal western framework. The way they did it with
Christianity and Judaism. If the follower of the Islam feel at home in the
citadel of Evangelical Capitalism, it is assumed, the West will lose its most
dreaded enemy.
Another variety of reformers include Muslim scholars who have been trained and
educated in the West. This category of Muslim intellectuals look at themselves
as a natural extension of great reformers of the past such as Ibne Hazm, Daoud
Zaahri, Ibn Taimiya, Abu Hamid Ghazzali, Mohammad bin Abdul Wahab, Waliullah al-Dahlavi
and the like. And if in the past Muslims had acceded to carry on Islamic reform,
they argue, there is reason that they should object to it in the new situation.
However, the mega question still remains unanswered. If our reformers in the
past were unable to achieve the required result how can one guarantee that the
modern reformers would achieve it today? For last many centuries Muslim
reformers have been calling for a return to the Qura'n and Sunnah, for
constructing anew the tattered worldview of Islam. Yet no return to the pristine
purity of Islam appears in sight. We must focus our attention on the stumbling
blocks that have been turning thus far all our initiatives into non-starters.
The new reformers have a double task; firstly, to pin-point precisely the
failures of their predecessors and secondly, to devise a viable methodology and
appropriate tools for rediscovering Islam in true colours, transcending
historical Islam and the human interpretations around it. An open debate
questioning almost every thing under the sky in true Qur'anic paradigm alone
holds promise of rediscovering that great Islamic sensibility which if properly
unveiled today could create an unprecedented revolution.
Before we proceed further the let us make an honest confession. If our reformers
in the past failed to rediscover Islam in true colours it was mainly because
they, despite their desperate willingness to travel back in time and space to
the prophet's Madinah, failed to realize that the journey demanded from them a
new methodology of enquiry and investigation. They wanted to return to pure
Islam employing a fiqhi methodology of their choice. Probably, they lacked the
courage that was needed to put aside the historical baggage and intellectual
garbage that they had accumulated during centuries of interpretive activities.
An open investigation into the great Fuqha and their methodology were considered
as ‘security zones’ that were conveniently to be left out of the focus of our
discussion. To be a Hanafite or a Shafeite was considered crucial for being a
Muslim and hence it became simply unthinkable to imagine Islam without its great
masters, the fuqaha. Even Iqbal, the poet philosopher of the East, who by virtue
of being a distinguished scholar of the Quran was no less than a mujtahid, found
it convenient to stick to the Hanafi schools of jurisprudence. He once declared
that for practical convenience he had adopted the Hanafi fiqh. Be they the
Quranic exegetes of repute or other champions of Islamic reform, it was not
possible for them to fashion out an Islamic identity without a fiqhi tag. The
rediscovery of Qur'anic intent and a return to Qur'anic weltenshuaang remained
elusive. And the disturbing question, nonetheless, kept us haunting: why,
despite being the Last Ummah assigned to lead humanity till End times, today we
find ourselves on the margins of history?
Today, no doubt, Islamic reform stands a better chance. Firstly, it has become
clear to us all that worn out fiqhi methodology of the past and outdated tools
of inquiry cannot impart on us a true understanding of the changed realities.
Secondly, the movement for Islamic revival so vociferously launched in Muslim
lands and later exported to the West have miserably failed. Harping on the same
string or employing the same methodology can in no way guarantee a future.
Thirdly, as the things radically changed around us; the creation of a virtual
world on the internet and the employed smallness of the globe have further
emphasized that no isolationist strategy would survive in the future. It is no
more possible for any religion to work for its salvation in isolation. Fourthly,
Muslim intellectual of our time have come to realize that if today Muslim
strategists lack a direction and leadership it is mainly because the shape of
Islam that has come down to us is more a product of history than the divine
revelation. Purging the human or historical elements is a must if we want to
achieve the same result that the sublime revelation had achieved during the
Prophet’s time. Fifthly, living in the borderless world of the internet has
positively influenced our communitarian sensibilities. Being the followers of an
international prophet we aspire, at heart, to become an all-embracing Ummah
working for the betterment of entire humanity, yet we find ourselves trapped in
the psychological shell of our own making, the cult of the Ummah Muhammadiya. In
our time Muslim intellectuals and Ulema have come to realize that for centuries
their segregated living in the supposed Darul Islam and their involvement in
exclusively communitarian projects have deprived them of their true prophetic
moorings, of being a source of mercy and blessings for all. This metamorphosis
of an international Ummah into a cult has come under serious investigation
today. And the need for rediscovering the Qur'anic intent and reconstruction of
a global Muslim outlook have attained an urgency. Amidst great hopes and
optimism lurks the danger; if a proper methodology is not put forth the
opportunity to rediscover Islam in true colours may slip from our hands once
again, leaving the humanity directionless for a few more centuries to come.
Methodology for Reform
The Reform Movement has not to reform Islam as such, rather, it has to purge the
human, interpretative elements that have overshadowed the true colours of Islam.
Islam is a divine message but it is a paradox that it has to be interpreted by
human mind. We are not against the involvement of the human mind as such, on the
contrary, we call for making this involvement a continuing process. Great minds
of the past have done their job and now it is for us to work out our own
Enlightenment. A new beginning has to be made. And it has to be different from
the past if we want to avoid the pitfalls of the past reformers. Here are some
suggestions:
1. The new reformers must avoid value loaded terminologies such as ‘Reformation’
or ‘Enlightenment’. There is a real danger that reform movement itself is swayed
by the cultural and historical connotations of these terms. In the west
reformation speaks of a process of undoing church tyranny and a head-on
collision with rational thinking. A semblance of this situation is not found in
Muslim history where both the Ahbar of Islam and the ruling elite have
continuously faced organized dissent legitimized by the Shariah. Those who call
for the emergence of a Luther or a Calvin amongst us are in fact unaware of
Muslim history and the liberating message of the Qur'an. The same can be said
about the term Enlightenment. Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno have blamed
Enlightenment for the Holocaust. Isaiah Berlin levels similar charges of a
totalitarian tendencies lurking in the Enlightenment which not only produced
Holocaust but also the communist tyranny, the Gulag. The story does not end
here. Owing to the western experiment of Enlightenment some great minds of the
West, such as Jefferson, Kant and Hume, came to believe in the supposed
superiority of the white race. It was Enlightenment that eventually created the
‘stupid white men’ and armed them with ideological and scientific justification
for colonizing ‘the other’. The new reformers of Islam must handle such
terminologies with utmost caution.
2. No doubt Luther who made a dent on Christian thinking for all time to come
had rightly argued that scripture should be the final authority, that the
mandate of God must stand supreme to the mandate of fallen humans. In the
medieval Christian context, it was a revolutionary Idea. There is nothing wrong
in learning from the Lutherian experience. Nevertheless, Muslim reformers of
today must not lose sight of the fact that the Qur’an is not a mere scripture in
the Christen sense of the term and hence cannot be handled just like any other
scripture. Here each word is definite and is preserved in the original language,
the way it was sent down to the prophet Mohamed, in verbatim. Reforming Islam
from within simply amounts to purging the human interpretative elements in it
and not in any case the intent itself.
3. Islamic scholars have usually taken reason as opposite to revelation. They
came to believe that rational knowledge and revelatory knowledge do not come
from the same source as one is based on observation and the other on intuition.
Muslim Ulema have always attached more importance to the revelatory knowledge
than the observatory Knowledge. Contrary to this attitude, the Qur'an, the main
source of the revelatory knowledge among the Muslims, invites people, oft and
on, to think and observe. The Qur'an wants us to lay down the basis of
revelatory knowledge on a rational thinking. The Qur'an itself is a rational
discourse which calls upon us to be more reflective than dogmatic. Even the most
essential creed of Islam such as the oneness of God, the belief in the hereafter
and in the agency of prophet hood are not spared of this discourse. It is a
great dichotomy of the human mind that despite its limitation it has been
assigned to appreciate the cosmos thereby leading to an enlightened
understanding about the creator. Throughout the process it is very much possible
to commit mistakes and at the same time learn from them. The great Ulema and
fuqaha of the past were also humans like us. No wonder then if they made
mistakes or could not envision our modern context in their fiqhi formulations.
We are not supposed to carry on the burden of others’ mistakes; we have enough
of our own share.
4. Taqleed, the blind following and Reform cannot go hand in hand, nor can they
together pave way for Enlightenment. There is certainly no harm in learning from
the past masters but we should not insist on getting to the same results. If we
feel obliged at the outset to come out with the same result the entire reform
activity would be a waste of time and energy, a lifeless imitation of the past.
With the utmost purity of mind and heart at our command we are equally capable
of engaging with the Revelation as our Elders did in the past. We should also
bear in mind that revelatory and observatory knowledge are and not opposed to
each other, they, in fact, complement each other. True knowledge is always
reflective, a combination of the two. It is more of a Buddhist bodhi than what
is generally termed as Enlightenment. Reflective knowledge has no dogmatic
fixity nor is it a directionless drift characterized by the western
enlightenment whose logical destination is post-modernism.
5. There were some ‘security zones’, some sensitive questions beyond any
investigation and enquiry which the past reformers did not consider appropriate
to divulge with. For example, knowing well that owing to different fiqhi schools
of their own making the Ummah is split from within, yet none dared to challenge
the ratio legis of various fiqhi schools. Each wanted to achieve broader Islamic
unity within the given fiqhi framework. Some even made us believe that the four
conflicting schools of sunni Islam are a divinely ordained arrangement to
provide us with a selection of choice. This is no different from the popular
Christian notion that the writings of Paul that now forms part of the canonized
text are divinely inspired. The new reformers of Islam have a daunting task
ahead. They need to bring the entire heritage literature under intense
investigation. Except the last Revelation that has come down to us through the
Prophet Mohamed no inspired words of any individual or scholarly interpretation
of any Imam could form the basis of Islamic canon. Unless we are really able to
shake up the very basis of fiqhi division and uproot the alien fiqhi
institutions of ahbarul-Islam, a return to pure Islam will remain elusive.
6. For centuries we Muslims have been living in a psychological ghetto of our
own making. As the Ummah Muslimah we were entrusted with world leadership but we
preferred to recast ourselves as Ummah Muhammadiyah, the cult of Mohammed. We
were supposed to be a source of mercy and blessings for entire humanity. But the
emergence of a cultic thinking amongst us has made it very difficult for us to
look beyond our noses. The ghetto mind-set has transformed the once
revolutionary Ummah of Islam from within. Swayed by some popular but fabricated
traditions we even came to believe that the Prophet Mohammaed, a blessing for
the entire mankind and a Warner to all as he is projected in the Qur’an, was
only worried about his own folks and that the last words he utteredon hid death
bed were ummati, ummati (my folk, my folk). The Quranic basis of a global
agenda, the Kalimatun siwaen demands from us that we shed the isolationist
mind-set. Each and every effort to create a better world deserve our attention.
They are very much part of our agenda and deserve our pro-active participation.
7. It is high time to question each and every bit of our heritage literature.
There is nothing beyond criticism except the words of God and the proven Sunnah
of the Prophet. There are no security zone of worn out dogmatic beliefs and no
issues beyond the scope of rational investigation. Unless we put the entire
historical Islam under intense scrutiny we cannot pin-pointedly say where we
went wrong.
8. If Ijma or conventional Islamic practise does not properly fit into Qur’anic
weltaanshuang, the former must be done away with. Ijma or supposed consensus is
a false metaphor. No Ijma has ever taken place on any single issue save it is
directly derived from the book of God and the Sunnah of his prophet. An Ijma
without a proper rational discourse cannot claim any legitimacy whatsoever. To
believe that consensus of the great masters of the past have decided some issues
for all time and the issue is now closed for discussion are product of slave
mind-set so vociferously condemned in the Quran.
9. The words of God and the wise counsels of our Ulema are two different things
altogether. While the former commands our unfailing respect the latter is a
human creation. In other words, the intent of Shariah as expounded in books of
fiqh may not command the same degree of respect than those enshrined in the book
of God. We must distinguish between the dictates of God and the edicts of
humans.
In a society where an open debate on issues of vital import are closed for
centuries it is not easy to make a new beginning. It amounts to transforming the
society from within, journeying from closed to an open society. This indeed is a
daunting task. But there is no other way out.
Rashid
Shaz
New Delhi
May 01, 2005