Kafir Is a Relative Word
Main
Points:
1. 2. Kafir
means ungrateful.
2. Quran calls
the illiterate animists of Makkah and Madina of Jahiliyyah Kafir.
3. Pharaoh
calls Moses Kafir and Prophet Moses calls Pharaoh Kafir.
4. Hindus of
India do not fall into the category of Kafir.
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By
New Age Islam Staff Writer
4 October
2022
RSS Sarsanghachalak Mohan Bhagwat | PTI photo
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Ibn Khaldun
Bharati argues that Hindus of India do not fall into the category of Kafir
because the polytheists of Makkah were illiterate (Ummi) and uncivilised
without any religious scripture.
The head of
the RSS had recently told a group of Muslim intellectuals that the word Kafir
used by Indian Muslims for Hindus was humiliating. This sparked a debate on the
word Kafir.
The Quran
on a number of occasions says that they (the polytheists of Arab) do not have a
Sanad (testimony) or book. The Hindus of India, on the other hand, had
their scriptures and had philosophical treatises on religious topics. The Quran
does not typecast a whole community and so does not declare any community
entirely Kafir or Mushrik (polytheist). It marks out Kafirs
from among the People of the Book (98:1 and 98:6). It does not say that all the
People of the Book are Kafirs.
An interesting point here is that the Pharaoh
uses the word Kafir for Prophet Moses who was a prophet of God in the
sense of ungrateful as Prophet Moses was brought up under the patronage of the
Pharaoh and his queen. Therefore, Kafir is a relative word. The Quran
does not use the word Kafir for a whole community and so the use of the
word Kafir for the entire Hindu community is not correct. Even a Muslim
is said to have committed Kufr when he violates an important injunction
of the Quran. In support of his arguments, the author quotes some verses from
the Quran and suggests that the use of the word Kafir for the Indian
Hindus should be stopped in order to build bridges between the two communities.
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Also Read: Revisiting the Meaning of Kafir
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Mohan
Bhagwat’s Right — No Word Wounds Hindus Like Kafir Does
By
Ibn Khaldun Bharati
2 October,
2022
The
much-belated revelation about a meeting, held a month ago, between Mohan
Bhagwat, the Sarsanghchalak of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, and five
Muslims, “a motley group of friends”, has generated a great deal of excitement
in the media — print, electronic, digital and, most importantly, social. Much
has been said about the representative character of the Muslim members and the
details of the conversation they saw fit to share with the public. While the
“concerns about the insecurity of the Muslim community” and how best they be
allayed have been thoroughly discussed, the concerns of the Hindus, as usual,
have received little attention.
In the said
meeting, Bhagwat expressed his deep concern about two issues and how hurtful
they are to the Hindu psyche: One, cow slaughter, and two, the ‘Kafir’
appellation. The first one has already been dealt with by others, so I will
focus on the second.
The
apologia proffered by the Muslim members was that Kafir was the word for
non-believers, that is, non-Muslims, and so, the Hindus were amiss in taking
offence at that. They explained that in Abrahamic religions, there are such
words for those beyond the pale. Wrong. Kafir is not the word for a mere
non-Muslim, and it is not an Abrahamic problem. The oldest Abrahamic religion,
Judaism, does have a word for a non-Jew — gentile. But it is not a slur. At
least, no longer, and certainly not in popular usage. There is no corresponding
word for a non-Christian either. Pagan, heathen or infidel, etc., are not the
exact opposite of a Christian, like Kafir is considered to be of a
Muslim. Similarly, non-Abrahamic religions don’t have opposites either. Neither
in the Indic religions is there a word for a non-Hindu, non-Buddhist, non-Jain,
or non-Sikh.
People are
best identified by the names they give themselves. Names given by others are
seldom palatable to the individual. Religions can co-exist with one another, in
peace and on equal terms, without identifying others as opposites and enemies.
This is the crux of pluralism — a modus vivendi in which Indian Muslims have a
greater stake than others.
A Product
of Islamic High Noon
The Kafir
of Islamic theology and the one mentioned in the Quran bear no resemblance to
each other. Islamic theology is a product of the imperial high noon of the
religion and reflects its imperialist and supremacist ethos to the tee. Islam
acquired an empire before its formative phase was over. Inevitably, it became
politicised at the outset and set out to conquer all that it could and
developed concepts and categories that would further its supremacist and
imperial agenda.
Kafir is one such concept. No word has
wounded the Indian psyche like it. If nearly 300 years after the Muslim rule,
Hindus still feel so hurt at being called Kafir, it shouldn’t be hard to
imagine how deep their sense of injury must be. Historical memories, passed on
from generation to generation, in oral traditions and through folklores,
resonate more with collective consciousness than the curated facts and
ideological interpretations in history books. To dismiss this concern of Hindus
by telling them that if they knew the lexical meaning of the word, they
wouldn’t mind this appellation, is both facetious and cavalier. Irrespective of
its dictionary meaning, what is important is how the word was employed and
understood.
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Exclude,
Insult, Humiliate
In Indian
history, Kafir has been a word of insult, exclusion, hostile othering,
xenophobia and, above all, dehumanisation and disenfranchisement. During the
Muslim rule, the State was governed by Islamic principles. A non-Muslim — a
Hindu, a Kafir — couldn’t legitimately have a share in power. A Kafir
had no original rights and lived on sufferance.
The Muslim-Kafir
binary is a recast of the Arab tribal system on a large scale in which someone
excommunicated from the tribe had no rights, not even to life. The ethos of
Arab tribalism has deeply informed the Islamic norms.
Even today,
this practice of excommunication by declaring someone a Kafir is rampant
in the Muslim community in India and globally. It could be done over a most
arcane quibble on a minor dogmatic dispute. There is no bigger humiliation and
danger than being declared a Kafir. The person not only loses all his
rights but forfeits his life too. If this could happen to someone from within
the fold, one could only imagine the plight of a vanquished community. It is
this generational memory of subjugation and humiliation that continues to haunt
Hindus. The least that Muslims can do is to show some empathy towards their
biradran-e-watan, their compatriots, and shun the usage of this offensive word.
If they did
so, they would be standing on a solid theoretical foundation as they would be
nearer to the Quran even as they break away from the imperial Islamic theology.
Unearthing
‘Kafir’ Roots
The root
verb of Kafir, and of the infinitive noun kufr, is the trilateral K-F-R
(kafara), which means, “he covered (a thing)”. Originally, it described farmers
burying seeds in the ground. In surah 57, verse 20, the Quran uses the word Kafir
for a farmer as he covers the sown seed with earth. Arabic poets personify the
darkness of night as Kafir. Ideologically, it implies a person who hides
or covers the truth. This is the connotation that the Quran employs to describe
those who evinced active hostility towards its message. Another connotative
usage of this word in the Quran is of a thankless person who shows ingratitude
towards God’s grace. The Quran depicts how Fir ’awn fulminated against Moosa
for challenging his authority, called him a Kafir, an ingrate, for the
latter was brought up in his own royal household (surah 26, verse 18-19).
Besides
these two meanings, the Quran identifies as Kufr some behavioural traits
such as the N-word (4:37, et al), exorbitant usury or high rate of interest
(3:130), vulgar display of charity (2:264), using religion for material gains
(5:44), and haughtiness (2:34). However, howsoever sinful being parsimonious or
usurious might be, it doesn’t, ipso facto, make a person Kafir. These
characteristics of kufr are universal, regardless of faith and community.
No verse of
the Quran describes a mere non-Muslim as Kafir. One doesn’t become a Kafir
by default for not belonging to the Muslim community. What does make one is the
persecution and oppression of Muslims; attempt to stop them from practising
their religion; driving them out of their homes; and waging war against them
(2:190, 217; 47:1). Hindus never stopped Muslims from practising their religion
or drove them from their homes and made them refugees, or waged religious war
against them. So, how do they become a Kafir?
Hindus were
designated as Kafirs because, on a bad analogy, they were likened to the
Mushrikeen (associationists, that is, those who associate other
‘imaginary beings’ with God’s unicity and thereby practise shirk) of Arabia.
The Mushrikeen were a primitive people living in the Jahiliyyah
(ignorance) era before Prophet Muhammad. They were Ummi — illiterate and
uncivilised. A people without a book. The Hindus, on the other hand, had an
advanced civilisation, profound spirituality and sophisticated philosophical
systems. To liken them to the Mushrikeen on the wrong equation between
their respective modes of idol worship was a thoughtless analogy. By the way,
even the Mushrikin were not Kafir per se as is clear from the
Quran 98:1 and 6, which mention Kafirs from among the Mushrikeen
and the ‘people of the book’, implying that all of them were not Kafirs.
Abu Talib, Prophet Muhammad’s uncle, has never been called a Kafir
though he didn’t become a Muslim.
Yet the
Hindus wrongly continue to be called Kafir. It’s time to correct the
wrong. In South Africa, the word kaffir, as the blacks were pejoratively
called, has been outlawed. Kaffir was a legacy of the slave trade in which
Muslim slave traders captured the blacks. It was considered legitimate since
they were not Muslim. In America, the N-word has as good as been eliminated
from usage, and in India, using caste name for the Scheduled Castes is a
punishable offence. It’s time that the word Kafir for Hindus and other
non-Muslims in India should also be outlawed.
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Ibn
Khaldun Bharati is student of Islam, and looks at Islamic history from an
Indian perspective. Views are personal.
The
Print Editor’s Note: We know the writer well and only allow pseudonyms when we
do so.
(Edited
by Humra Laeeq)
Source: Mohan Bhagwat’s Right — No Word
Wounds Hindus Like Kafir Does
URL: https://newageislam.com/interfaith-dialogue/hindus-kafirs-quran-rss-bhagwat/d/128100
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