By Mushtaq Ul Haq Ahmad Sikander, New Age Islam
12 August 2020
Deeni Madaris: Asri Maanwiyat Aur Jadeed Taqazey
Author: Ebrahim Musa
Translator: Waris Mazhari
Publisher: Maktaba Naimia, Deoband, India
Year of Publication: 2017
Pages: 339 Price: Not mentioned
Madrasas in South Asia have been described as ‘dens of
terror’ in the media. This stereotypical image of madrasas still continues to
dominate the mainstream media. A number of studies have been conducted about
the role and impact of madrasas among Muslims. There certainly are voices that
demand a holistic change in madrasas in order to keep them abreast with the
current changing times, context and scenario. Till now the madrasas have been
resisting such changes and maintaining the status quo particularly pertaining
to their curriculum.
The book is an Urdu translation of What is a Madrasa?
written by Ebrahim Moosa, Professor of Islamic Studies at Notredam University,
United States of America (USA). The translation has been done by a prolific
writer and Islamic scholar Dr Waris Mazhari. In his Translators note, Dr Waris
writes the problems he had to confront with while translating the text as well
as the need for its translation in vernacular Urdu for wider dissemination.
Prof. Moosa terms the book as his complex autobiography and
he is correct. This book documents his educational journey in the madrasas of
Deoband and Nadwatul Ulama. It is quite interesting to go through his journey
as he is grounded in both traditional (madrasa) form of education and
contemporary (University) educational system. So events of 9/11 brought
madrasas in the focus, that too in a very negative manner. The stereotypical
image of madrasas as factories producing terrorists was reinforced by the
foreign policy of U.S. Similarly madrasas were quite critical of the
imperialistic goals of U.S against the Muslim world. This manufactured image of
madrasas still persists but academically it has been established that madrasas
certainly do not engage in terrorist activities particularly those based in
India.
Prof Moosa is of the opinion that many things that are
taught in the madrasas have no application in the modern society. The world is
much more complex than what has been defined by Deoband, Nadwa and their allied
madrasas. The obsession with certain mundane issues like dress is keeping the
madrasas confined to narrow aspects of life. Also, the sectarian staple diet
that is included in madrasa curriculum is certainly helping reinforce the
sectarian divide among the Muslims in India. This sectarian polemics is then
carried out further by the Ulama and theologians who have been trained in this
curriculum. The antagonism towards other sects and particularly Mawlana Abul
Ala Mawdudi is evident from the curriculum and attitude of teachers both at
Deoband and Nadwatul Uloom madrasas.
Prof. Moosa spent six years of his life in madrasas and
describes its unique variegates. The life inside a madrasa is quite simple that
revolves around studies only. It provides complete boarding, lodging and eating
facilities that are free of cost for the students. Madrasa institutions are one
of the most well networked educational movements among muslims particularly in
South Asia. But due to the irreligious division of the madrasa education between
religious and worldly, two strands of knowledge exist parallel among muslims.
So it has led to a dichotomy and antagonism among Muslims as each group is
leveling charges against the other for the retrogression prevalent among
Muslims. There have been demands for introducing new subjects like social
sciences and English language in madrasa curriculum but the administrators of
madrasas have been resisting such demands as they believe that such steps will
render the students to become worldlier and career oriented. Although this
apprehension is ill founded but the believers in status quo observe that unlike
schools, madrasas emphasize on the holistic development of a personality
particularly the character of the students.
The book also engages with the Muslim religious reformers in
the subcontinent and books that are included in the curriculum and are part of
different disciplines. The question of change in madrasa curriculum known as Dars
e Nizami is engaged with time and again. The rate of success of this change
is documented too. The need for change in Dars e Nizami has been
articulated by traditional Ulama like Manazir Ahsan Gilani and Maulana Yusuf
Binori, so it is not a new demand but has met with a very little success. So
now madrasas have been rendered as republics of piety instead of being Republic
of letters.
The question of madrasas needs to be seriously engaged with.
Very few insider and native accounts of the working, education, administration
and curriculum of madrasas is available. The media and Islamophobes keep
churning out lies about madrasas and their functioning. They allege that
Madrasas produce violent and exclusivist Muslims who are a threat to modern
societies. The evidence however runs to the contrary. Few Ulama have written
their accounts about life in a madrasa but they are available in vernacular
languages only with no serious readership available. This book has an added
advantage that it has been written in English language only. But the
translation was essential too so that madrasa cadres, their ulama and other
general readership who cannot read English are acquainted with the narrative
and arguments of the book. Hopefully this book makes the madrasa oriented Ulama
think afresh particularly about the inclusion of social sciences and English
language in madrasas that will make them and their students quite abreast with
the modern issues. The Ulama till now have been unsuccessful in tackling the
challenges that are being faced by the Muslims and the underlying cause for the
same has been the flawed curriculum that has been drafted two centuries back
and since then has witnessed very little modification.
Both the author and the translator need to be congratulated
for their laudable academic efforts. Hopefully this book will clear many myths
related to madrasas.
M.H.A.Sikander is Writer-Activist based in Srinagar,
Kashmir
URL: https://www.newageislam.com/books-documents/world-more-complex-than-been/d/122607
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