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By Maryam Sakeenah
“Lost in the loneliness, we turn inwards- with a knife in our hands and a lump in our throats”, writes
Muhammad Fadel describing the deep crisis in contemporary Muslim
consciousness. The loss of the Khilafah has imbued Muslim sensibility
with a deep and haunting nostalgia for a bygone glory. The direction of
foreign policy taken by Western nations vis a vis the Muslim world has
not helped assuage the raw sentiment, leaving Muslims to harbour the
supposition that the ascendant West is locked in a crusade against the
Muslim world in the throes of despondency imposed by a malevolent
external enemy. The frustration this engenders often makes itself felt
in spasmodic bouts of violence like the gasps of an etherized patient
laid across on the table.
The experience of long-drawn colonial rule across
Muslim lands intensified the nostalgic longing for a lost glory as well
as the need to hold on ever more strongly and exclusively to religious
fundamentals as a means of self-preservation and protection of
religio-cultural identity. This exacerbated the disconnect between
‘deen' and ‘dunya' in Muslim consciousness in general and education in
particular. Aurangzeb Haneef notes in his article, ‘Learning from the Past', that
one of the most important effects of European imperialism in Muslim
society was that the pursuit of rational sciences (maqulat) was
abandoned in favour of transmitted sciences (manqulat)in the spirit of
preservation in an attempt to re-center and standardize the traditions
of religious knowledge. Madrassas ceased to be the training grounds for
the intellectual and cultural elite and increasingly came to be
identified with religious education only, which was an aberration from
the tradition.
The rising popularity of Salafism is a reactionary response out of
a prevailing sense of defeatism, victimhood, vulnerability and
insecurity over what is seen as the encroachment upon Muslim identity
and culture by an ascendant Western civilization. The call for a
puritanical ‘return to the sources' down to the letter shunning the
accretions of theology and jurisprudence over centuries is distressingly
ahistorical, uncreative and mimetic. It refuses to recognize the need
to creatively and rationally respond to the exigencies of the times.
Ironically while it claims fidelity to authentic Muslim tradition, it
actually betrays the essential dynamism of the same. This dynamism is
the defining trait of Islamic jurisprudence which traditionally accorded
space to diversity. Muslim jurists were remarkably tolerant of
‘ikhtilaf'(difference of opinion), and were adept at the ‘adab'
(etiquettes) of ikhtilaf. Towering jurists of the sunni school like Imam
Abu Hanifa and Imam Malik discouraged blind following (taqleed) of
their opinions, encouraging critical thinking and research.
These Muslim groups demonstrate all or most of the traits of fundamentalism, that is: ‘a
sense of chosenness tied to the demonizing or damnation of all others
who refuse to get behind the truth subscribed to by the subject
himself.' (Farid Esack) By refusing to defer to historical
understandings of Islam in theology and law, these Muslim groups place
themselves at the fringes of Islamic tradition they claim to be
guardians and restorers of.
Due to a radical subjectivism that confers
quasi-divine authority to a certain set of literalist opinions these
innovation-resistant groups refuse to subject their opinions to rational
inquiry. In so doing, they implicitly refuse to recognize intrinsic
human diversity as well as the status of individuals as rational
subjects imbued with the Divinely-bestowed gift of intellect and free
will. “Unto every one of you have We appointed a [different] law
and way of life. And if God had so willed, He could surely have made you
all one single community: but [He willed it otherwise] in order to test
you by means of what He has vouchsafed unto, you. Vie, then, with one
another in doing good works! Unto God you all must return; and then He
will make you truly understand all that on which you were wont to
differ.” (5:48) At a subconscious level, the deep realization of
the untenability of opinions that refuse to defer to critical
examination has resulted in an inward-looking stasis characterized by an
uncompromising exclusivism and exceptionalism.
Muslim exceptionalism betrays the Quran's universal
embrace of humanity with its consistent appeal to mankind as the
creation of God, a single family. ‘ O men! Behold, We have created
you all out of a male and a female, and have made you into nations and
tribes, so that you might come to know one another. Verily, the noblest
of you in the sight of God is the one who is most deeply conscious of
Him. Behold, God is all knowing, all aware.” (49:13) The Quran
attaches sanctity to all humankind when it narrates how God blew of His
own spirit into the first created person. Muslim exclusivism refuses to
recognize the fact that our well-being as a species on a finite planet
is tied to the well-being of all others we share it with, and that in
the face of this reality, all labels and artificial boundaries are
secondary. It is only the extremely narrow-minded and short-sighted who
would refuse to recognize the fact that our well being is inextricably
tied to the well being of all others.
A further corollary of such exclusivism is the
tendency to view ideas as mutually exclusive, with an either/or
approach. The middle ground, the many grey areas of overlap are lost
sight of. This generates a characteristic intellectual extremism that
infects Muslims en masse. It is not understood that neither of the
extremes is an acceptable alternative to the other, hence the world
appears all black and white, like an arena for a clash of ideas. The ‘Us
versus Them' psyche translates into ‘Islam versus The West.' This is
dangerous as it understands both Islam and the West as monoliths and
glosses over the many instances both historical and contemporary, of
coexistence, intercultural exchange, common grounds and shared values.
It denies the universality of commonly held values, viewing them as
‘Western' or ‘Islamic.' The actual confrontation as recognized by Islam,
is between Haqq and Baatil (Truth versus Falsehood), and before
deciding if anything that passes for Islam is the whole truth, we need
to ask ‘whose Islam?', given the fact that the Quran and sunnah are open
to diverse readings and interpretations and the self-appointed
spokespeople of Islam are as many as the possible interpretations. Nor
is Falsehood equivalent to all that the West is about, given the fact
that the military-industrial complex and the clique of influential
policy-making elites are responsible for the highhandedness of foreign
policy decisions and the injustices that have wreaked havoc and provoked
backlash among Muslim populations.
Muslims often invoke the Ideal of Islam comparing it
to the reality of Western society which often betrays its own values
such as freedom and liberty, to show the degeneracy of the former as
compared to the Divine system they have been denied- unmindful of the
many ways Muslim societies consistently betray the values of Islam.
The myth of ‘Islam versus the West' also denies the
collective heritage of Islamic and European civilizations and the
instrumental role Islam had in making the Enlightenment possible. “Arab
science altered medieval Christendom beyond recognition. For the first
time in centuries, Europe's eyes opened to the world around it- Arab
science and philosophy helped rescue the Christian world from ignorance
and made possible the very idea of the ‘West.'” (Jonathan Lyons,
‘House of Wisdom') Aime Cesaire beautifully and powerfully reminds us of
this collective human heritage and that attempts to claim a monopoly
over the achievements of human civilization are a form of intellectual
dishonesty, whether done by scholars in the West or the Muslim world .
"But the work of man is only just beginning, and it remains to conquer
all the violence entrenched in the recesses of our passion, for no race
possesses the monopoly of beauty, of intelligence, of force. And there
is a place for all at the rendezvous of victory." - Aimé Césaire
In the same vein, there are other binaries like
‘Islam versus Democracy.' In the recent Pakistan elections numerous
religious groups propagated that casting a vote was an act of ‘kufr,'
because democracy is based on the sovereignty of the masses over the
sovereignty of God. While the system of electoral politics in Western
societies has elements that are incompatible with Islam, the values of
democracy are universal and are part and parcel of Islamic governance.
Following the majority opinion a standardized practice in Muslim
tradition (‘Ijma' has many forms, the last of which sanctions general
voting by the public to settle questions that bear upon the interests of
the general masses and can be put to a public vote). Moreover,
respecting popular sentiment and being accountable to the public are
fundamental Islamic political values. The procedural rules of electoral
politics can and should be reformed to conform to Islamic standards and
shari' rulings made exclusively the job of a panel of qualified ulema,
beyond the purview of general voting- and it no more is ‘an affront to
God's sovereignty.' Numberless Islamic scholars have talked of the
compatibility between democratic principles and Islamic politics. Sameen
Sadaf notes the irony in ‘The Dynamism of Islam”: The alternative,
they say, is ‘Khilafat' (which in many ways is democratic in its
ethos). However, since there is no comprehensive system and candidature
for khilafat at the time, one can suppose that all we can do is wait for
a savior while the forces of actual ‘Kufr' take over and ruin us.” Pro-Sharia
activists seem to assume that mainstreaming the Islamic way of life
through dialogue and dawah can be discounted without any loss and they
can march straight to an Islamic Khilafah state that will somehow
miraculously tame the Muslim masses into believing slaves of God.
The binary thinking pattern and exclusivism has made
Muslim consciousness be preoccupied with narrow, parochial concerns
considered ‘Islamic.' It is forgotten that being slaves of Allah means
being good human beings first and that as Muslims everything in the
universe is our business. Zaid Hassan writes of the need to ‘reclaim our relationship to the whole' in his wonderful article, ‘Notes towards an Incomplete Manifesto for Liberating the Muslim Mind.' The
growing distance between ‘deen' and ‘dunya' in Muslim consciousness has
made Muslims unconcerned about aspects that belong to the secular
domain as profane and unworthy. Hence there is an intellectual
degeneracy, and a clear absence of contemporary Muslim discourse in
science, philosophy and the humanities, a near-absence of Muslim
contribution to research. In the recent elections, Islamic parties in
Pakistan exclusively talked of the need for a return to rule by Islam,
invoking Shariah, the Islamic identity and ethos of Pakistan. Talking of
issues that resonate with the masses like poverty or the energy crisis
was considered redundant given their ‘Islamic' credentials. The growing
unpopularity of these parties and their less-than-expected performance
comes as no surprise. This ghettoization of Muslim thought threatens
to make us dwindle into a cult at the margins of civilization.
Religious discourse that fails to take account of
the modern mind and appeal to the youth with their voracity for rational
argument cannot be shoved down people's throats. It is condemned to
survive as no more than a fringe-cult.
Still more lamentable is the fact that Muslims are
failing to realize the need to introspect in these critical times. Any
manifestation of the deep crisis in Muslim consciousness is dismissed as
‘unrepresentative of Islam' at best, and ‘propaganda against Islam' at
worst. Self-criticism is noble, highly needful and the essential trait
of the faithful. Muslims have abandoned it altogether, and any voice
helping us to examine ourselves critically or calling for a reform is
disdainfully rejected with suspicion and sneering self-righteousness.
The belief that terrorists or criminals or misogynists ‘use' the name of
Islam to justify their deeds is comforting but unhelpful because it
does not recognize the fact that many interpretations of the Quran and
sunnah actually give some grounds to sanction such acts and that
therefore there is great responsibility on Muslim thinkers to expose and
oppose the textual basis of such arguments.
The stasis of the Muslim mind is a daunting project
before us. Muslim society is terribly fragmented and polarized between
the extremes of the secular and the religious. So much of Muslim
scholarship today is pitiably out of touch with the vicissitudes of
contemporary society, rationally indefensible, in a language far removed
from and inaccessible to the mass man and incognizant of the psychology
of modernity and post-modernity. ‘Maqulat' must be brought at par with
the ‘Manqulat' as central to a holistic Muslim education, precisely
because that is how it had always been and was supposed to be before
things went awry. The need today is for Muslim scholars to negotiate
between entrenched extreme positions, address issues of the here and now
in a language that appeals to the common man, and to appeal to modern
sensibility in a manner that is faithful to the ethos of Islamic
tradition. Such voices need to collate, organize and rise to a crescendo
that can drown out the clamour of extremisms. It is a grand project and
an urgent one, but cannot be begun until we first realize the need for
such effort today and cease to live in denial of the terrible crisis
that threatens to rob our faith of its very soul and reduce it to
perpetual irrelevance.
Maryam Sakeenah is a Pakistan-based
independent researcher and freelance writer on International politics,
human rights and Islam. She divides her time between teaching high
school, writing, research and voluntary social work. She also authored a
book 'Us versus Them and Beyond' analyzing the Clash of Civilization
theory and the role of Islam in facilitating intercultural
communication.
http://www.countercurrents.org/sakeenah270513.htm
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