By
Moin Qazi, New Age Islam
25 October
2023
In recent
years, clichéd calls for reform of Islam have acquired more stringent tones.
"We need a Muslim reformation." "Islam needs reformation from
within." Such headlines keep flashing in the media. Yet if Muslims are
true to themselves and their scriptures, Islam doesn't need a reformation.
Muslims need to save themselves from intolerance and dogmatism.
The vision
of some reformers asks Muslims to abandon fourteen hundred years of accepted
dogma in favour of a radical and demanding new methodology that would set them
free from the burdens of traditional jurisprudence. In recent years, an
enormous industry of reform-minded interpreters has arisen to explain,
contextualize, downplay, or ignore them, often quoting the well-known verse
that says there is "no compulsion in religion."
Islam is
worlds apart from Christianity. The two faiths aren't analogous, and it is
deeply ignorant to try and impose a neatly linear, Eurocentric view of history
on diverse Muslim-majority countries in Asia or Africa. Each religion has its
dissent and culturally evolved through uniquely distinct traditional paths and
each religion's followers have been affected by geopolitics and socio-economic
processes in myriad ways. The theologies of Islam and Christianity are far
away: the former, for instance, has never had a Catholic-style clerical class
answering to a divinely appointed pope. The truth is that Islam has already had
its reformation, in the sense of stripping cultural accretions and a process of
supposed “purification”..”.
The truth
is that Islam has already reformed in the sense of stripping cultural
accretions and a process of supposed "purification." Wasn't reform
precisely what was offered to the masses of the Hijaz by Muhammad Ibn Abdul
Wahhab, the mid-18th century itinerant preacher? He provided an austere Islam
cleansed of what he believed to be innovations, which eschewed centuries of
mainstream scholarship and commentary. He rejected the authority of the
traditional ulema or religious leaders.
The idea of
the reformation of Islam can be better understood if we explore how close
Wahhabism is to Protestantism or Catholicism is highly complex and paradoxical.
In Islam, there has always been the argument that Wahhabism arose directly as
an imitation of Protestant Christianity. And some Wahhabis do make this
comparison. They say, "We are creating a Protestant Islam." But many
Catholics respond to this by saying to
Wahhabis, "If you're looking for models from the Christian world, the
Catholics are much better models.
There is
one significant difference, however. Protestantism did not attempt to enforce
conformity. Protestantism fostered pluralism. Wahhabism does not promote
pluralism, unlike traditional Islam, which is pluralistic and non-conformist
and allows for diverse opinions. And that's why, in the end, I now essentially
reject the parallel.
Abd
al-Wahhab was the most significant reformist who believed that Islam had been
corrupted and weakened by the Ottomans and needed to return to its roots. But
his brand of an original, authentic Islam was harsher and more stripped down
than the religion that the Prophet Muhammad had founded centuries before.
Al-Wahhab forbade many practices and traditions that were an established part
of Muslim culture, such as the celebration of the Prophet's birthday, the
decoration of mosques, and the use of music in worship and daily life.
People must
realize that Wahhabism embodies violence because Wahhabism begins by saying
that everybody who isn't a Wahhabi who calls himself a Muslim isn't a Muslim.
And that is, in essence, a violent proposition. Some Wahhabis are not directly
involved in going off and killing people, but they support the ideology that
supports the people who are going off and killing people. The difference is
that the Wahhabis have a religious dispensation that creates a totalistic sense
of self-righteousness. Nazism and Stalinism didn't have this.
Renewal and
reform are the essential components of the new learning methodology of the
Qur'an. The Salafis lead the most influential movement in this direction. They
signify a stripping away of accumulated misreading and wrong or lapsed
practices, as in the Protestant Reformation, and a return to the founding texts
of the Qur'an and the Sunna—guidelines based on the recorded words and deeds of
the Prophet
Nearly a
century after it emerged in Egypt, political Islam is redefining the Muslim
world. Also called Islamism, this potent ideology holds that the billion-strong
global Muslim community would be free and great if only it were pious—that is,
if Muslims lived under state-enforced Islamic law, or sharia, as they have done
for most of Islamic history. Islamists have long been confronted by Muslims who
reject sharia and non-Muslims who try to get them to reject it.
Salafism, imported into Egypt from Saudi
Arabia and publicized around the world thanks to petrodollars, is the enemy of
anything moderate and tolerant. The Salafis believe that the only true path is
to follow the practices of the early generations of Muslims – literally.
Although
most Egyptians do not identify as Salafis, their thinking has been greatly
influenced by Salafism, especially the younger generation. Much effort is
expended in public displays of religiosity, such as beards, prayer beads,
prayer calluses and women's clothing. At the same time, the spiritual aspect of
religion and the proper ethics Muslims should adhere to take a back seat.
Reforms
are, of course, needed across the crisis-ridden Muslim-majority world:
political, socio-economic and, yes, religious too. Muslims need to rediscover
their heritage of pluralism, tolerance and mutual respect – embodied in the
Prophet's letter to the monks of St Catherine's monastery or the "Convivencia"
(or co-existence) of medieval Muslim Spain.
Responding
to those who claim that sharia fuels much of the violence and political
instability in Muslim countries, several scholars argue that Islamic law is the
key to rebuilding the political order in the country. They point out that
sharia is invoked to justify misogyny and human rights abuses but that it has
also been it is not sharia but struggles over the legal system that has been
the primary source of contention and conflict going back to the beginning of
the colonial era .it is. We must try to understand how successive national
states grappled with integrating Western jurisprudence, customary law, and
sharia. x
WE cannot
judge the era of the founding of Islam by the values of our own time: and,
indeed, what we understand as the emancipation of women was never really
considered by any of the great monotheistic religions. Some of the West's
Christian establishments have accepted relatively equal rights, abortion and
divorce only under pressure from women's associations and after long battles.
Islam is aware of these changes. And it is inclined to blame the commentators
of the Qur'an or canon law for the prevailing repression of women.
Westerners
think of Islamic societies as backwards-looking, inhumanely governed, and
oppressed by religion, comparing them to their enlightened, secular
democracies. But measuring the cultural distance between the West and Islam is
a complex undertaking, and the reality is that the distance is narrower than
they assume. Islam is not just a religion, and indeed not just a fundamentalist
political movement. It is a civilization and a way of life that varies from one
Muslim country to another but is animated by a common spirit far more humane
than most Westerners realize.
How did a
religion that initially offered women greater freedom than they had known in
traditional societies come to be associated with their repression? Muslim
feminists have begun to reclaim the independence and respect accorded to women
during the early centuries of Islam.
The problem
is less religion itself than the way commentators have interpreted it. The
Qur'an has multiple teachings with many meanings, and Muslims have always been
free to comment on them according to circumstances. The texts have been
interpreted over centuries to endorse conservatism and intolerance and promote
openness, freedom, forgiveness and intellectual revival.
There is
plenty of historical evidence for the servitude of women and the contempt and
hatred they have suffered. Women's inequitable legal and social situation in
most Muslim countries is deplorable. But is this situation directly
attributable to a religion that is seen as sexist, or is it the result of
religious or civil authorities interpreting that religion according to a male
desire to dominate, despite Islam's insistence on the eq
Unlike
Christianity, Islam was concerned with politics and governance from the start.
The Muslim rule that developed in the lifetime of the Prophet required
attention to principles of community life, justice, administration, relations
with non-Muslims, defence and foreign policy. The main new ideas were a vision
of what constitutes good governance, law and just society. The Prophet came not
to protect the status quo but to reform and change. Women, for instance, were
given legal status (where they had none before) and concrete legal protection
within society.
If Prophet
Muhammad's life were revolutionary, its aftermath would have seen a monological
recital of Hadiths and inflexible analyses of Qur'anic verses, where historical
context is taken up or ignored to suit the interpreter. Memories of early Islam
have hardened into dogma, and many scholars have taken the Hadiths as stone
tablets.
Islam
received the unique stamp of Prophet Mohammed's success. Unlike earlier
prophets, Prophet Muhammad lived for some years as the head of a state of his
creation and to which he gave laws. He shaped laws about marriage, inheritance,
divorce and similar matters, aiming to reform generally recognized customs. He
restricted the number of wives a man might have to four—imposed an almost
impossible f; fulfilment of a condition that equality is maintained among them.
Women had no inheritance rights; the new code granted them the request for half
of the men's share. Slavery was widespread; Islam outlawed it except for
captives taken in war, and for these, it introduced reforms and ways of
regaining freedom. Wine drinking was gradually controlled, and usury was
forbidden. The caste system, which was still in vogue, was abolished, as was
the cruel practice of burying unwanted female babies alive.
We need to
understand every religion from its primary scriptures and not from secondary
sources, which are unfortunately prone to many interpretations that may be
erroneous or deceptive and are usually representative of a particular school of
thought. The only lasting solution will be to liberate society from manmade
religion and return to the pristine message of the scriptures. These scriptures
had a simple, straightforward and plain-speaking message for all humanity,
which got distorted at the hands of the modern tools of intellectual sophistry
and sterile polemics. We need to sanitize our bodies, environment, minds, and
intellect.
The great
modern reformist thinker Fazlur Rahman firmly believed that one of the primary
purposes of the Qurʿān was to create a justice-based society. He saw
the Prophet Muḥammad as a social reformist who sought to empower the poor, the weak,
and the vulnerable. He viewed the Qurʿān as a source from which ethical
principles could be derived rather than a book of laws.
He played
the role of father, husband, chief, warrior, friend and Prophet. His respect
for learning, tolerance of others, generosity of spirit, concern for the weak,
gentle piety and desire for a better, cleaner world would constitute the main
elements of the Muslim ideal. For Muslims, the life of the Prophet is the
triumph of hope over despair and light over darkness. For instance, Rahman
argues that the practice of family law in Islamic history had not accorded
females the equal rights to which they appear to be entitled based on the
Prophet's example and teachings of the Qurʿān.
Earlier
attempts were made to create new ideologies promising rejuvenation. Jamal
al-Din al-Afghani and Muhammad Abdouh led attempts to make Islam more legible
by calling for adapting Muslim life to the West's views on economic and
political modernity. They never called themselves Salafists (for them, it was
about returning to the sources to find compatibility with these new
challenges).
Fazlur
Rahman writes in his book Islam and Modernity: "A historical critique of
theological developments in Islam is the first step toward a reconstruction of
Islamic theology. This critique should reveal the extent of the dislocation
between the world view of the Qur'an and various schools of theological
speculation in Islam and point the way toward a new theology." This is a
significant suggestion that should have been considered seriously and would
have benefited the Islamic world immensely. For him, it was the intellectual
ossification and replacement of scholarship based on original thought by one
based on commentaries and super-commentaries, the closing of the gate of
ijtihad, and establishing of the Islamic method solely on taqlid (blind
imitation) which led to the decline.
Fazlur
Rahman's goal was to reassess the Islamic intellectual tradition and provide a
way forward for Muslims. In his view, re-examining Islamic methodology in the
light of the Qur'an was a prerequisite for any reform in Islamic thought.
Rahman
says, "Muslim scholars have never attempted ethics of the Qur'an,
systematically or otherwise. Yet no one who has studied the Qur'an carefully
can fail to be impressed by its moral fervour. Its ethics, indeed, is its
essence and is also the vital link between theology and law. The Qur'an tends
to concretize the ethical, clothe the general in a particular paradigm, and
translate the ethical into legal or quasi-legal commands. But it is precisely
the sign of its moral fervour that is not content only with generalizable
ethical propositions but is keen on translating them into existing paradigms.
However, the Qur'an always explains the objectives or principles that are the
essence of its laws."
At the same
time, there needs to be abundant caution. Reform is an unruly horse that can go
berserk unless adequately saddled. In several societies, the hardliners have
served as vigilantes and sentinels of their faith. Their resistance has helped
winnow the weaker strands in the formulation of new trajectories of thought and
discourse. The bigoted and intolerant forces can acquire aggressive postures to
suit their distorted understanding and ideological positions. Akbar is
considered a great liberal king. However, we must not forget that he made
extraordinary efforts to subvert Islam by attempting to reinvent the faith.
Shaykh
Ahmad Sirhindī, the great mystic and theologian, was primarily responsible for
the reassertion and revival of orthodox Sunnite Islam as a reaction against the
syncretistic tendencies promoted by Akbar. It was a serious attempt to dilute
Islam and reinterpret its original philosophy. Persecuted for his outspokenness
and straightforwardness, he is today revered as a saint and saviour of Islam.
Similarly, Darah Shikoh was not just a great liberalist of his times but was
charged with blasphemy by clerics. Both Akbar and Dara Shikoh were secular
individuals. Still, their creative efforts had much to do with power and
politics. Nothing by way of communal harmony and interfaith cordiality eroded
some of Islam's most cherished values and traditions.
Hardliners
have their unique place in all discourses and their presence helps redefine
unchecked and anarchic impulses. Always delay judgment no matter who you are,
how experienced, and how knowledgeable you think. Give others the privilege to
explain themselves. What you see may not be the reality. Never conclude for
others. This is why we should never focus only on the surface and judge others
without fully understanding their perspective. This requires an enormous amount
of tolerance.
All
scriptures are, above all, a spiritual and moral resource that, if they are
correctly understood and internalized both in letter and spirit, provide the
reader with helpful guidance through the complexities of modern life. It is the
nature of the human dialogue that finally culminates in the direction one is
seeking for his salvation. Human perversity and ignorance can turn this overtly
benevolent and benign exercise into intricate, complicated means to divide
people. Instead of divine consciousness and guidance being the moral principles
that bring people together, it becomes the embodiment of the most fundamental
differences. They should be seen as a training manual for human nature.
Submitting ourselves to their wisdom should mean testing and interrogating all
our ideas and experiences afresh in the light of the fresh dose of thinking
ingrained during the dialogue. We must all teach ourselves to read these divine
and holy books liberated from the weight of tradition and classical
commentaries. The real wisdom that we can glean from them is the one that
ignites our spirituality when we constantly think outside the box of our
earthly concerns by keeping in mind the intersection of time and timelessness.
While
several reformist thinkers continued their creative work in the last two
centuries, it was the great poet Muhammad Iqbal. He conceived a very coherent
and inspiring philosophy that crystallized around Islamic ideals. His Islam is
not the Islam of primitive punishments, the veil and bigoted mullahs, but the
Islam which provided a new light of thought and learning to the world and of
heroic action and glorious deeds. He was devoted to the Prophet and believed in
his message. Iqbal regarded as 'nullification' the search for 'inner meanings'
or 'hidden meanings' in either the code of Muhammad (peace be upon him) or in
his way of life, which he found not only satisfying but also convincing. He
blamed the Persian poets for confusing the message of Islam. As he put it,
"The Persian poets tried to undermine the way of Islam by a very
roundabout, though apparently heart–alluring, manner. They denounced every good
thing of Islam and made contemplation in a monastery the highest crusade in the
way of God."
Iqbal
preached action. He was a rebel against all the accretions that had gathered
around Islam due to the Hellenic and Persian influences and wanted to cleanse
it so that the world could, once again, witness the glory of Islam in its
pristine form. For the laziness and lethargy that had gripped the Islamic fold,
Iqbal blamed the Sufis. They, with their Iranian background and Greek ideas,
had corrupted the religion of Muhammad (peace be upon him). As Iqbal explains,
"it is surprising that the poetry of Sufism in Islam was produced during
the period of political decline. The nation which exhausts its fund of energy
and power, as was the case with the Muslims after the Tartar invasions, changes
the outlook. The weakness becomes an object of beauty and appreciation, and
resignation from the world is a source of satisfaction."
Iqbal's
poems reflect the pain and agony he felt at the degeneration of Islam. This
feeling is patent in every couplet. Muslims are repeatedly asked to go back to
the early era of Islam when the spirit of Muhammad (peace be upon him) goaded
his followers to conquer half the world and brought enlightenment to people of
various regions and colours. While Iqbal retained his admiration for the
otherworldliness of Sufi mystics. He rejected their belief in the world's
transitoriness and the unreality of life. He was appalled by western
commercialism and greed, lamented the loss of the Muslim empire, and was saddened
by the decadence of Islam.
A legacy
can be preserved only if it is honoured and respected by its custodians. We
must try to understand and delineate those attributes that aided the
personalities of yesteryears to attain those levels of glory. At the same time,
we have to examine the social and cultural factors that enabled them to use
their talents to their farthest value and harness their energies toward the
goals fruitfully. Some Muslim countries have seen the emergence of leading
politicians who have unfortunately not been able to live up to the ideals of
the early women and have done significant damage to the reputation of an
Islamic female.
Islam is at crossroads today and Muslims are
poised at a critical juncture in their history. The stagnation in Islamic
thought is patent in the couplets of Muhammad Iqbal:
You are one
people. You share in common your weal and woe.
You have
one faith, one creed and to one Prophet Allegiance owe.
You have
one sacred Ka'aba, one God and one holy book, the Qur'an.
Was it so
difficult to unite in one community every single Musselman?
-----
Moin
Qazi is the author of the bestselling book, Village Diary of a Heretic Banker.
He has worked in the development finance sector for almost four decades.
URL: https://newageislam.com/ijtihad-rethinking-islam/reformation-intolerance-dogmatism-muslim/d/130967
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