By Dr Tauseef Ahmad
Parray
June 4,
2020
Based on
the interpretations of numerous Qur’anic verses, many modern Muslim scholars
advocate pluralism affirming principles of freedom, difference, and coexistence
In lexical
terms, ‘Pluralism’ is defined as the nature of a society within which diverse
ethnic, social and cultural groups are present and tolerated which implies to a
quality or the ‘condition of being multiple and plural’; a belief or principle
that various religio-political and ethno-racial groups should be allowed to
thrive in a single society; or ‘the existence of different types of people, who
have different beliefs and opinions, within the same society’.
As a
civilization, culture, and religion, Islam can be viewed from many different
perspectives. The diversity of the approaches employed in understanding Islam
are chiefly because of the multiple and diverse interpretations of sacred Islamic
texts—the Qur’an and the Ahadith. The Text has been interpreted in many ways,
at various levels, and from different perspectives. These fundamentally vital
texts have been defined and interpreted via a multitude of ways, approaches and
perspectives throughout the Islamic history. Different sciences and schools of
thought developed, as its necessary outcome, within the broader arenas of
Islam. Therefore, amid such a multitude of textual interpretations of the
verses of the noble Qur’an, it is wrong to assume, as Azyumardi Azra puts it,
that “there is a single, monolithic view among Muslims concerning religious
pluralism and other issues”.
In the
noble Qur’an, there are indeed only a limited number of verses that speak, to
use Azra’s terminology, of “political disunity”, whereas there are many verses
which point out “the need for diversity of tribes, sects, nations, and peoples
as well as races and languages”. These “positive verses” of the Qur’an also
acknowledge “the natural differences in the intellectual and physical
capabilities of human beings and view the different ways of living as a natural
and even as a divine aspect of creation”. The history and tradition of the
Islam yield many examples, both in theory and practice, which recognize
pluralism within the human family. The Qur’anic proclamations like Q. 4:
163-65, indicate that the authorization of previous revelations in present
revelation means that all are worshipping the same Lord.
The Qur’an
defines Islam “as not only peace for and between all”, but also believes in the
prior revelations that were sent and “bestowed upon Abraham, Isma‘il, Isaac,
Jacob, and the Tribes, and that which has been given to Moses, and Jesus,
making no difference between them (Q. 2: 136), thus signifying the pluralism and
its roots in Islam. This primary Islamic disposition, thus, “provides the
foundation for plurality”. In addition to this, the Qur’an demands the Muslims
to believe that ‘God had created heaven(s) and seven earth(s) and whatever in
between them; nation(s), Book(s), Scripture(s), Messengers(s), People(s), …
etc.’ And this statement itself highlights the necessity of pluralism. The
Qur’an is full of such accounts on pluralism, like, “If God had willed, He
could have made you one community” (Q. 5: 48).
A number of
Qur’anic verses, like Q. 5: 48, 11: 118, and 49: 13, offer a distinctly modern
perspective on tolerance, pluralism and mutual recognition in a multi-ethnic,
multi-cultural and multi-community world. These verses reflect that Islamic
civilization in not made either for isolation or assimilation, but for
interaction and co-operation. Thus, the idea that “the people are one
community” (Q. 10: 19) is the foundation of theological pluralism, as Abdulaziz
Sachedina puts it, that presupposes the divinely ordained equivalence and equal
rights of all human beings. Religious pluralism, as Sachedina argues in his The
Islamic Root of Democratic Pluralism (2001), can function as a ‘working
paradigm for a democratic, social pluralism in which people of diverse religious
backgrounds are willing to form a community of global citizens’.
In the same
vein, Asghar Ali Engineer, an ardent advocate of religious pluralism,
interprets Q. 5: 48–9 to mean that Allah has purposefully created different
religions and different groups of people so that He may test us to see if we
can live in harmony and peace and to spur humans to do good works.
What does
the Qur’an exhort Muslims to do in the face of a plurality of religions? Clare
Wilde and Jane D. McAuliffe (in Encyclopaedia of the Qur’an) raise and answer
this question as:
Although Q. 2: 256 (“There is no compulsion in
religion”) and 109: 6 (“you have your religion and I have mine”) are often
cited as “proof texts for an Islamic tolerance of non-Muslims”, they have been
interpreted variedly over the course of Islamic history, especially in the
tafsir literature; but there are other Qur’anic passages that are “not at all
ambiguous in their exhortations of Islam as the true religion”.
Even though
verses like Q. 9: 5, 29 “prescribe ‘proper’ behaviour towards non-Muslims”, but
still there are other verses—like Q. 5: 3; 30: 30 (cf. 30: 43; 39:3; 61:9; 98:
5); 30: 32; 2: 193; 24: 2; 4: 171 (cf. 5: 77); and 40: 26—that shed light on
what they describe as the “Qur’anic attitude to non-Muslims”.
Based on
the interpretations of the Qur’anic teachings, numerous modern Muslim scholars
have advocated pluralism affirming principles of freedom, difference, and
coexistence. They, for example, argue that Qur’anic verses, such as Q. 30: 22
and Q. 49: 13 communicate that the existence of different nations, ethnicities,
tribes and languages is the ‘Divine Will’. They also assert that verses like Q.
5: 48 and Q. 5: 69 declare not only the plurality of civilizations, systems and
laws but also inspire people for fortifying mutual understating and
co-existence rather than engaging in conflict. They also emphasize that Allah
created the Muslim community as Ummatun Wasata, a ‘middle community’—or ‘a fair
and moderate nation’ (Q. 2: 213)—as a reflection of His favor for moderation
and desire to avoid extremes, so that seeking the negation or eradication of
the ‘religious Other’ is not permitted. Such (re) readings and (re)
interpretations highly recognize the basis for realizing pluralism as the
essence of Islam as revealed in the Qur’an and practiced by the Prophet (pbuh)
and the early Caliphs. Thus, pluralism fortifies, in Islamic context, the
co-operation, positive and constructive interaction, and understanding among
the diverse entities within a society.
Many Muslim
scholars interpret Q. 2: 256, as the Qur’anic principle that serves as the
basis for religio-ideological and culturo-political pluralism in Muslim
society. Similarly, citing Q. 5: 48 and Q. 2: 148 “And each one has a direction
towards which he turns”, Professor Mahmoud Ayoub argues that Allah purposely
fashioned pluralism. There are many such examples and interpretations.
In this
context it is apt to conclude with these insights of Asma Afsaruddin (as
proposed in her Contemporary Issues in Islam, 2015):
“The twenty-first century arguably presents
unique opportunities for reimagining historical relations between different
religions and cultures” and the “Scriptural hermeneutics remains a vital
dimension” in this process; therefore, “Reinterpretations of key Qur’anic
verses” acts “as the first step towards imagining a different world based on
peaceful coexistence rather than one based on conflict and strife”.
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Dr Tauseef Ahmad Parray is Assistant Professor,
Islamic Studies, at GDC for Women, Pulwama (J&K).
Original Headline: Islam: Religious Pluralism, and Modern
Interpretations
Source: The Greater Kashmir
URL: https://newageislam.com/islamic-ideology/the-quran-ahadith-signify-pluralism/d/123141
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