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Islam and its Challenges in the Modern WorldBy: Dr. I. Bruce Watson [Article first appeared in Insight, vol. 12, issue 1 May 1997, no. 33] Islam today is facing challenges from within and from the wider world. The critical problems are the fundamental tensions within Islam. The attitudes and criticisms common in the outside world can be ignored as misguided or hostile, but the tensions within Islam throughout the world must be confronted. In a simple geographical sense, Islam has to come to grips with its changing centres. The religious centres define the heartland: Saudi Arabia maintains its guardianship of the shrines at Mecca and Medina, and the conduct of the hajj, against the claims of Shii Iran, the Shii tradition, and other sects disillusioned with Saudi Arabia's credentials within the ummah. Saudi Arabia enjoys much of its strength to repudiate other claims because it remains the economic centre of the ummah. It takes a combination of the incomes of Kuwait, Iraq, the United Arab Emirates, Iran and Yemen even to come close to Saudi Arabia's oil wealth. However, this wealth is based on finite resources, and in the years to come the economic centre will shift to those parts of the Muslim world with sustainable resources and reproductive assets. West Asian financial investments recognise this long-term problem, but they remain overwhelmingly located in the Western and non-Muslim economies. The intellectual centre of Islam is Al-Azhar in Cairo. The ideas and attitudes taught here are spread throughout the ummah, particularly through the population centres of Islam: Indonesia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, India and Malaysia. The relative power of the different centres is shifting. Over time the claims on and against the heartland from and by the peripheral Muslim communities will exacerbate the tensions already present. The conservative centre will be under greater pressure from the more vigorous, prolific and liberal Muslim societies on the periphery. Despite the ideals promoting an equitable and productive material life, the overwhelming majority of Muslims experience living standards which are hardly enviable by any standard. This frequently appears to be a greater paradox in the wealthy oil-producing Muslim countries. Where justice and brotherhood are recommended by the ideals, in such countries we see the conspicuous consumption of the very rich, the purchase of very expensive military technology and armaments, and we see the exploitation of 'guest workers': fellow Muslims from Palestine, Pakistan, the Philippines, among others. The plight of these groups was obvious during and after the Gulf War in 1990-1991. Unemployment of masses of people; rapid urbanisation; unbalanced development - all need to be addressed quickly by the ummah, if the ummah is to become the social force of international Islam. The wide imbalances in the distribution of incomes and wealth between Muslim societies are obvious, but since effective redistribution is not happening within most Muslim societies it is unlikely to occur to any major degree between different Muslim societies. Development investment in Muslim countries is slow simply because investors are put off by the more extremist agitations and the perceptions in the West about Islamic legal proscriptions of such financial mechanisms as interest. Muslim investors appear quite happy to send their money into the non-Muslim economies, where greater profits are available and the political and social circumstances are much more settled. In other cases, where people are trying to help their communities they often encounter problems from unlikely sources. The Grameen Bank in Bangladesh has been lending small sums of money, mostly to rural women so that they can engage in small enterprises, but also to collective groups. The sums are small and the interest is fixed, with the principal being repaid first and the interest calculated on the diminishing principal. Twenty per cent interest per year still seems high, but it is tiny when compared with the twenty per cent per month or ten per cent per day demanded by the traditional money-lenders, or the compound interest at Bangladesh's commercial banks. The Grameen Bank lends money to people who would not be eligible in the normal commercial sense. People are helped to determine the best way to satisfy their needs and are helped by the bank's officers in the villages. The Grameen Bank goes out to its clients and it permits the good sense and honesty of its clients to prevail: it has a recovery rate of some ninety eight per cent. The bank faces conflict from the traditional money-lenders, the commercial banks which claim that the scheme is too small to create the economic growth necessary in Bangladesh, and from the Muslims who see the scheme emancipating women in the villages. The bank fulfils the ideals of Islamic thinking, but is attacked by established interest groups defending their interpretation of Islamic practice.
Economic frustration and unequal opportunities are fertile breeding grounds for dissent
and protest. Equally important is the failure of most Muslim governments to confront the
demands of general education. "Modernity, the circumstance of being 'modern', is, in
a central sense, inescapable. It is the necessary context for every tolerably
well-informed life-journey undertaken in the contemporary world."[1] Being modern does not mean being Western but it does mean
that some degree of secular knowledge will have to be given far greater prominence in
Muslim epistemologies. Dr Mahathir bin Mohamed has made the point that there can be no
separation between secular and religious knowledge because all knowledge, all life, is
encompassed by Islam. It is interesting that so prominent and successful a Muslim leader
as Dr Mahathir had to tread a fine line: advocating on the one hand an independent and
progressive Muslim attitude to acquiring the widest possible knowledge, while placating
the traditional sensibilities by insisting on the moral rectitude of learning as the only
way to protect the faith. There are Muslim intellectuals working to understand what it
means to be a Muslim in the modern world, but they do not receive the prominence given to
the extremists in Western reports. Western media are more interested in the violent and
emotional than they are in quiet, but deeply significant, debates about the eternal values
that remain, despite the anarchic individualism of Western communities, the essence of
being human. Not only are Muslim intellectuals under pressure from the conservative
elements of their own societies, they are not receiving the recognition and support they
deserve from the West. Yet it is at this level of ideas and reassessments that Muslim
leaders will have to convert the de facto modernisation of their societies into
general acceptance. The renaissance of ijtihad will be needed to reinterpret the
principles of Islam, to retain the critical moral core while jettisoning the dubious
accretions of traditional and worldly Muslim authorities. There is a very real danger involved if Muslims are not critical enough of Western world perceptions and if they take things for granted. There needs to be an increase in criticism in the light of Islam criteria. Without a heightened critical faculty Muslims are in danger of considering
The main danger arises if Muslims accept the more extreme view of
the difference of Islam and the insistence on establishing 'the third way'. If everything
Western is to be discarded, then the creative and productive dynamism inherent in Islamic
traditions will be suppressed yet again. Is Islamic resurgence giving enough attention to
the challenges of poverty and hunger, disease and illiteracy? Have Islamic resurgents gone
past, or are they still stuck on, their rhetoric regarding education and knowledge,
science and technology, politics and administration, economics and management in their
preferred Islamic order? To what extent have Islamists become pre-occupied with forms and
symbols, rituals and practices? Do they regard laws and regulations in a static rather
than a dynamic manner ? Is there a tension between the extremists' positions and the
principles of the Quran and sunnah about the roles of women in society and the place of
minorities in Muslim societies? Is the main problem a betrayal of the spirit of the Quran
in the extremists' exclusiveness in a variety of matters ranging from charity to politics?
Are the activities of extremists encouraging sectarianism in the umma through their
insistence on their interpretations being the only correct ones? Have extremist views
contributed to the factionalism and fragmentation of the ummah. [3] Untrammelled economic growth and development has resulted in consumerism, institutionalised selfishness, ill-gotten wealth, rising expectations, laxity in sexual behaviours, the dissolution of the family, essentially independent electronic media, the influx of foreigners and foreign values, the materialism of modern science and technology and greater amounts of secularism. [5] In an Increasing Secular World, can Islam unite a Modern Society?Western secular politics is based on the notion that sovereignty
belongs to individuals who select their governors through political consensus arrived at
during free and regular elections. Islam believes, in theory at least, that sovereignty
belongs only to God and that a legitimate temporal government is so only for as long as it
implements God's will and the Sacred Laws. Whatever the theory asserts, the reality is
that governments have to find the equilibrium that produces social prosperity and harmony
under the guiding impulses of a strong moral code. The problem is made more complex when
the moral code is itself subject to sectarian divisions: between orthodox and heterodox
claims to revelation and legitimacy. We have to return to the questions: whose Islam, what
Islam, where and when? It is clear that in states which have declared Islam as the
ideology of political order, Saudi Arabia, the Sudan, Pakistan, Iran and Afghanistan,
there has been little reduction in domestic conflict or the reduction of conflict with
their neighbours, Muslim or otherwise. In these states there is little real evidence of
effective redistribution of wealth or substantial economic and social benefits flowing
down to the general population. The benefits promised by Islam are not being realised. Political Islam is under challenge from its own rhetoric and
message to be self-critical: to live up to its own standards; to live up to the principles
it espouses and demands of others; to avoid and denounce excesses committed by governments
and movements that identify themselves as Islamic; to take or share responsibility for the
failures of Muslim societies, and not simply to blame the West for all the problems. [7] One of the central questions will be the treatment of
minorities under Islamic governments, and the behaviour of Muslim minorities in other
countries. At present the political ideology of Islam cannot entertain an equal and
pluralist society of Muslims and non-Muslims. [8]
This is not just a matter of tolerance: it entails the recognition in ideal and reality of
the unqualified equality and citizenship rights of people of all faiths irrespective of
whether they are male or female. The role and influence of political dissent, trade
unions, and the media will have to be re-examined along with the social and legal issues.
A new equilibrium will have to be reached between the legitimate demands of the individual
and the legitimate demands of the society in which he or she lives. Islam has preserved the central position of moral values as the defining character of human society. Francis Lamand, President of the French Association 'Islam and the West', considers that: "Islam can contribute to the rebirth, in the West, of three essential values: the sense of community, in a part of the world that has become too individualistic; the sense of the sacred; and the legal sense. This can be the contribution of Islam to Western societies". [11] In return the West has to control its arrogance and reassess its stance towards the rest of the world. The notion of there even being a 'rest of the world', from whatever perception, is something we all have to change. Notes1. Shabbir Akhtar, A Faith for All Seasons:
Islam and Western Modernity (London, Bellew, 1990), p. 104. ----------------------------- |
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