When writers with defeatist and apologetic mentalities write
about "Jihaad in Islam," trying to remove this 'blot' from
Islam, then they are mixing up two things: first, that this
f religion forbids the imposition of its belief by force, as is clear
from the verse, "There is no compulsion in religion"(2:256),
while on the other hand it tries to annihilate all those political
and material powers which stand between people and Islam,
which force one people to bow before another people and
prevent them from accepting the sovereignty of God. These
two principles have no relation to one another nor is there
room to mix them. In spite of this, these defeatist-type people try to mix the
two aspects and want to confine Jihaad
to what today is called 'defensive war'. The Islamic Jihaad
has no relationship to modern warfare, either in its causes
or in the way in which it is conducted. The causes of Islamic
Jihaad should be sought in the very nature of Islam and its
role in the world, in its high principles, which have been given
to it by God and for the implementation of which God appointed the Prophet-peace
be on him-as His Messenger
and declared him to be the last of all prophets and messengers.
This religion is really a universal declaration of the freedom
of man from servitude to other men and from servitude to
his own desires, which is also a form of human servitude; it is a declaration that sovereignty belongs to God alone
and that He is the Lord of all the worlds. It means a challenge
to all kinds and forms of systems which are based on the
concept of the sovereignty of man; in other words, where
man has usurped the Divine attribute. Any system in which
the final decisions are referred to human beings, and in which
the sources of all authority are human, deifies human beings
by designating others than God as lords over men. This declaration means that
the usurped authority of God be returned
to Him and the usurpers be thrown out-those who by themselves devise laws for
others to follow, thus elevating themselves
to the status of lords and reducing others to the status of slaves.
In short, to proclaim the authority and sovereignty of God
means to eliminate all human kingship and to announce the
rule of the Sustainer of the universe over the entire earth.
In the words of the Qur'an:
"He alone is God in the heavens and in the earth."
(43:84)
"The command belongs to God alone. He commands you
not to worship anyone except Him. This is the right way
of life." (12: 40)
"Say: O People of the Book, come to what is common
between us: that we will not worship anyone except God,
and will not associate anything with Him, and will not take
lords from among ourselves besides God; and if they turn
away then tell them to bear witness that we are those who
have submitted to God." (2: 64)
The way to establish God's rule on earth is not that some
consecrated people - the priests - be given the authority
to rule, as was the case with the rule of the Church, nor
that some spokesmen of God become rulers, as is the case
in a 'theocracy'. To establish God's rule means that His laws
be enforced and that the final decision in all affairs be
according to these laws.
The establishing of the dominion of God on earth, the
abolishing of the dominion of man, the taking away of sovereignty from the
usurper to revert it to God, and the bringing
about of the enforcement of the Divine Law (Shari'ah) and the
abolition of man-made laws cannot be achieved only through
preaching. Those who have usurped the authority of God and are oppressing God's creatures are not going to give up
their power merely through preaching; if it had been so, the
task of establishing God's religion in the world would have
been very easy for the Prophets of God! This is contrary
to the evidence from the history of the Prophets and the
story of the struggle of the true religion, spread over generations.
This universal declaration of the freedom of man on the
earth from every authority except that of God, and the declaration that
sovereignty is God's alone and that He is the Lord
of the universe, is not merely a theoretical, philosophical and
passive proclamation. It is a positive, practical and dynamic
message with a view to bringing about the implementation
of the Shari'ah of God and actually freeing people from their
servitude to other men to bring them into the service of God,
the One without associates. This cannot be attained unless
both 'preaching' and 'the movement' are used. This is so
because appropriate means are needed to meet any and every
practical situation.
Because this religion proclaims the freedom of man on the
earth from all authority except that of God, it is confronted
in every period of human history-yesterday, today, or tomorrow - with obstacles
of beliefs and concepts, physical
power, and the obstacles of political, social, economic, racial
and class structures. In addition, corrupted beliefs and superstitions become
mixed with this religion, working side by side
with it and taking root in peoples' hearts.
If through 'preaching' beliefs and ideas are confronted,
through 'the movement' material obstacles are tackled. Foremost among these is
that political power which rests on a
complex yet interrelated ideological, racial, class, social and
economic support. Thus these two-preaching and the movement - united, confront
'the human situation' with all the
necessary methods. For the achievement of the freedom of
man on earth - of all mankind throughout the earth -
it is necessary that these two methods should work side by
side. This is a very important point and cannot be over-
emphasized .
This religion is not merely a declaration of the freedom
of the Arabs, nor is its message confined to the Arabs. It
addresses itself to the whole of mankind, and its sphere of work is the whole earth. God is the Sustainer not merely of
the Arabs, nor is His providence limited to those who believe
in the faith of Islam. God is the Sustainer of the whole world.
This religion wants to bring back the whole world to its
Sustainer and free it from servitude to anyone other than God.
In the sight of Islam, the real servitude is following laws devised by someone,
and this is that servitude which in Islam
is reserved for God alone. Anyone who serves someone other
than God in this sense is outside God's religion, although
he may claim to profess this religion. The Prophet- peace
be on him - clearly stated that, according to the Shari'ah,
'to obey' is 'to worship'. Taking this meaning of worship, when
the Jews and Christians 'disobeyed' God, they became like
those who 'associate others with God'.
Tirmidhi has reported on the authority of 'Adi bin Hatim
that when the Prophet's message reached him, he ran away
to Syria (he had accepted Christianity before the Prophet's
time), but his sister and some of the people of his tribe
became prisoners of war. The Prophet-peace be on him-
treated his sister kindly and gave her some gifts. She went
back to her brother and invited him to Islam, and advised
him to visit the Prophet - peace be on him. 'Adi agreed
to this. The people were very anxious to see him come to
Medina. When he came into the presence of the Prophet,
he was wearing a silver cross. The Prophet - peace be on
him-was reciting the verse. "They (the People of the Book)
have taken their rabbis and priests as lords other than God".
'Adi reports: "I said, 'They do not worship their priests."
God's Messenger replied, "Whatever their priests and rabbis
call permissible, they accept as permissible; whatever they
declare as forbidden, they consider as forbidden, and thus
they worship them."
This explanation of the above verse by the Prophet-peace
be on him - makes it clear that obedience to laws and
judgments is a sort of worship, and anyone who does this
is considered out of this religion. It is taking some men as
lords over others, while this religion has come to annihilate
such practices, and it declares that all the people of the earth
should become free of servitude to anyone other than God.
If the actual life of human beings is found to be different from this declaration of freedom, then it becomes incumbent
upon Islam to enter the field with preaching as well as the
movement, and to strike hard at all those political powers
which force people to bow before them and which rule over
them, unmindful of the commandments of God, and which
prevent people from listening to the preaching and accepting
the belief if they wish to do so. After annihilating the tyrannical force,
whether it be in a political or a racial form, or
in the form of class distinctions within the same race, Islam
establishes a new social, economic and political system, in
which the concept of the freedom of man is applied in
practice.
It is not the intention of Islam to force its beliefs on people,
but Islam is not merely 'belief'. As we have pointed out, Islam
is a declaration of the freedom of man from servitude
to other men. Thus it strives from the beginning to abolish
all those systems and governments which are based on the
rule of man over men and the servitude of one human being
to another. When Islam releases people from this political
pressure and presents to them its spiritual message, appealing
to their reason, it gives them complete freedom to accept
or not to accept its beliefs. However, this freedom does not
mean that they can make their desires their gods, or that
they can choose to remain in the servitude of other human
beings, making some men lords over others. Whatever system
is to be established in the world ought to be on the authority
of God, deriving its laws from Him alone. Then every individual is free, under
the protection of this universal system,
to adopt any belief he wishes to adopt. This is the only way
in which 'the religion' can be purified for God alone. The
word 'religion' includes more than belief; 'religion' actually
means a way of life, and in Islam this is based on belief.
But in an Islamic system there is room for all kinds of people to follow their
own beliefs, while obeying the laws of the
country which are themselves based on the Divine authority.
Anyone who understands this particular character of this
religion will also understand the place of Jihaad bis saif
(striving through fighting), which is to clear the way for striving through
preaching in the application of the Islamic movement. He will understand that
Islam is not a 'defensive movement' in the narrow sense which today is
technically called
a 'defensive war.' This narrow meaning is ascribed to it by
those who are under the pressure of circumstances and are
defeated by the wily attacks of the orientalists, who distort
the concept of Islamic Jihaad. It was a movement to wipe
out tyranny and to introduce true freedom to mankind, using
resources according to the actual human situation, and it
had definite stages, for each of which it utilized new methods.
If we insist on calling Islamic Jihaad a defensive movement,
then we must change the meaning of the word 'defense' and
mean by it 'the defense of man' against all those elements
which limit his freedom. These elements take the form of
beliefs and concepts, as well as of political systems, based
on economic, racial or class distinctions. When Islam first
came into existence, the world was full of such systems, and
the present-day Jahiliyyah also has various kinds of such systems.
When we take this broad meaning of the word 'defense',
we understand the true character of Islam, and that it is
a universal proclamation of the freedom of man from servitude
to other men, the establishment of the sovereignty of God
and His Lordship throughout the world, the end of man's
arrogance and selfishness, and the implementation of the rule
of the Divine Shari'ah in human affairs.
As to persons who attempt to defend the concept of Islamic
Jihaad by interpreting it in the narrow sense of the current
concept of defensive war, and who do research to prove that
the baules fought in Islamic Jihaad were all for the defense
of the homeland of Islam - some of them considering the
homeland of Islam to be just the Arabian peninsula-against
the aggression of neighboring powers, they lack understanding
of the nature of Islam and its primary aim. Such an
attempt is nothing but a product of a mind defeated by
the present difficult conditions and by the attacks of the treacherous
orientalists on the Islamic Jihaad.
Can anyone say that if Abu Bakr, 'Umar or 'Othman had
been satisfied that the Roman and Persian powers were not
going to attack the Arabian peninsula, they would not have
striven to spread the message of Islam throughout the world?
How could the message of Islam have spread when it faced such material obstacles as the political system of the state, the
socio-economic system based on races and classes, and behind
all these, the military power of the government?
It would be naive to assume that a call is raised to free
the whole of humankind throughout the earth, and it is confined to preaching and
exposition. Indeed, it strives through
preaching and exposition when there is freedom of communication and when people
are free from all these influences,
as "There is no compulsion in religion; but when the above-
mentioned obstacles and practical difficulties are put in its
way, it has no recourse but to remove them by force so
that when it is addressed to peoples' hearts and minds they
are free to accept or reject it with an open mind.
Since the objective of the message of Islam is a decisive
declaration of man's freedom, not merely on the philosophical
plane but also in the actual conditions of life, it must employ
Jihaad. It is immaterial whether the homeland of Islam -
in the true Islamic sense, Dar ul-Islam - is in a condition
of peace or whether it is threatened by its neighbors. When
Islam strives for peace, its objective is not that superficial
peace which requires that only that part of the earth where
the followers of Islam are residing remain secure. The peace
which Islam desires is that the religion (i.e. the Law of
the society) be purified for God, that the obedience of all
people be for God alone, and that some people should
not be lords over others. After the period of the Prophet -
peace be on him - only the final stages of the movement
of Jihaad are to be followed; the initial or middle stages are
not applicable. They have ended, and as Ibn Qayyim states,
"Thus, after the revelation of the chapter 'Bratt', the unbelievers were of
three kinds: adversaries in war, people with
treaties, and Dhimmies. The people with treaties eventually
became Muslims, so there were only two kinds left: people
at war and Dhimmies. The people at war were always afraid
of him. Now the people of the whole world were of three
kinds: one, the Muslims who believed in him: two, those with
whom he had peace (and from the previous sentence we
understand that they were Dhimmies); and three, the opponents
who kept fighting him."
These are the logical positions consonant with the character and purposes of
this religion, and not what is understood
by the people who are defeated by present conditions and
by the attacks of the treacherous orientalists.
God held back Muslims from fighting in Mecca and in the
early period of their migration to Medina, and told them,
"Restrain your hands, and establish regular prayers, and pay
Zakat". Next, they were permitted to fight: "Permission to
fight is given to those against whom war is made, because
they are oppressed, and God is able to help them. These
are the people who were expelled from their homes without
cause. The next stage came when the Muslims were commanded to fight those who
fight them: "Fight in the cause
of God against those who fight you." And finally, war was
declared against all the polytheists: "And fight against all
the polytheists, as they all fight against you;" "Fight against
those among the People of the Book who do not believe
in God and the Last Day, who do not forbid what God and
His Messenger have forbidden, and who do not consider
the true religion as their religion, until they are subdued and
pay Jizyah." Thus, according to the explanation by Imam
Ibn Qayyim, the Muslims were first restrained from fighting;
then they were permitted to fight; then they were commanded
to fight against the aggressors; and finally they were commanded
to fight against all the polytheists.
With these verses from the Qur'an and with many Traditions
of the Prophet - peace be on him - in praise of Jihaad,
and with the entire history of Islam, which is full of Jihaad,
the heart of every Muslim rejects that explanation of lihaad
invented by those people whose minds have accepted defeat
under unfavorable conditions and under the attacks on Islamic
Jihaad by the shrewd orientalists.
What kind of a man is it who, after listening to the commandment of God and
the Traditions of the Prophet -
peace be on him-and after reading about the events which
occurred during the Islamic Jihaad, still thinks that it is a
temporary injunction related to transient conditions and that
it is concerned only with the defense of the borders?
In the verse giving permission to fight, God has informed
the Believers that the life of this world is such that checking
one group of people by another is the law of God, so that
the earth may be cleansed of corruption. "Permission to fight is given to those against whom war is made, because they
are oppressed, and God is able to help them. These are the
people who were expelled from their homes without cause,
except that they said that our Lord is God. Had God not
checked one people by another, then surely synagogues
and churches and mosques would have been pulled down,
where the name of God is remembered often." Thus, this
struggle is not a temporary phase but an eternal state -
an eternal state, as truth and falsehood cannot co-exist on
this earth. Whenever Islam stood up with the universal declaration that God's
Lordship should be established over the entire
earth and that men should become free from servitude to
other men, the usurpers of God's authority on earth have
struck out against it fiercely and have never tolerated it. It
became incumbent upon Islam to strike back and release
man throughout the earth from the grip of these usurpers.
The eternal struggle for the freedom of man will continue
until the religion is purified for God.
The command to refrain from fighting during the Meccan
period was a temporary stage in a long journey. The same
reason was operative during the early days of Hijra, but after
these early stages, the reason for Jihaad was not merely to
defend Medina. Indeed, its defense was necessary, but this
was not the ultimate aim. The aim was to protect the resources and the center of
the movement - the movement
for freeing mankind and demolishing the obstacles which prevented mankind from
attaining this freedom.
The reasons for refraining from fighting during the Meccan
period are easily understood. In Mecca preaching was permitted. The Messenger -
peace be on him - was under
the protection of the Banu Hashim and hence he had the
opportunity to declare his message openly; he had the freedom
to speak to individuals as to groups and to appeal to their
hearts and minds. There was no organized political power
which could prevent him from preaching and prevent people
from listening. At this stage there was no need for the use
of force. Besides this, there were other reasons and I have detailed these
reasons in my commentary, In the Shades of the
Qur'an, in explanation of the verse, "Have you seen the people
to whom it was said, 'Restrain your hands, and establish regular
prayers, and pay Zakat?" (3:77) It may be useful to reproduce
65
parts of this explanation here.
"A reason for prohibiting the use of force during the Meccan
period may have been that this was a stage of training and
preparation in a particular environment, for a particular nation
and under particular conditions. Under these circumstances,
an important factor in training and preparation was to train
the individual Arab to be patient under oppression to himself
or to those he loved, to conquer his pride, and not to make
personal revenge or revenge for one's dear ones the purpose
of one's life. Training was also needed so that he could
learn control of his nerves, not lose his temper at the first provocation as was
his temperament - nor get excited at
the first impulse, but so that he could develop dignity and
composure in his temperament and in his action. He was to
be trained to follow the discipline of a community which is
under the direction of a leader, and to refer to this leader in
every matter and to obey his injunctions even though they
might be against his habit or taste The aim was to develop
individuals of high character who would constitute the Muslim
community, who would follow the directions of the leader,
and who would be civilized and progressive, free of wild
habits and tribalism.
"Another reason for it may have been that the Quraish
were proud of their lineage and honor, and in such an
environment only persuasion could be most appealing and
effective. At this stage, fighting would have resulted in kindling
the fires of revenge- There was already much tribal warfare based on blood
feuds, such as the wars of Dahis, Gabra
and Basus, which continued for years and annihilated tribe
after tribe. If blood feuds were to become associated in their
minds with Islam, then this impression would never have been
removed. consequently, Islam, instead of being a call toward
the true religion, would have become an unending sequence
of tribal feuds and its basic teachings would have been
forgotten at the very beginning.
"Another reason may have been to avoid sowing the seed
of discord and bloodshed in every household. At that time,
there was no organized government which was torturing
and persecuting the Believers; the Believer was persecuted,
tortured and 'taught a lesson by his own patrons. Under these circumstances, permission to fight would have meant
that every house would have become a battlefield. The people would have said
'So, this is Islam'! In fact, this was said
about Islam, even though fighting was not permitted. During the
season when the people of Arabia came to Mecca for pilgrimage and commerce, the
Quraish would have gone to them
and would have said, 'Muhammad is not only dividing his
nation and his tribe; he is even dividing sons from fathers!
What kind of a thing is this which incites the son to kill
his father, the slave to kill his master, in every house and in
every locality?"
"Another reason may have been that God knew that a
great majority of those who persecuted and tortured the
early Muslims would one day become the loyal soldiers of
Islam, even its great leaders. Was not 'Umar Ibn al-Khattab
one of them?
"Another reason may have been that the sense of honor
of the Arabs, especially in a tribal framework, comes to the
help of the person who is persecuted yet does not concede
defeat, especially if the persecuted are honored by the
people. Several such incidents can be quoted to support
this thesis. When Abu Bakr, who was an honorable man, left
Mecca in order to migrate to some other place, Ibn al-Daghna
could not bear it and restrained him from leaving because
he considered it a disgrace to the Arabs; he offered Abu
Bakr his own protection. The best example of such an incident is the tearing up
of the contract under which the Banu
Hashim were confined to the Valley of Abu Talib when the
period of their hunger and privation seemed unreasonably
long. This chivalry was a peculiarity of the Arabs, while in
ancient 'civilizations' which were accustomed to seeing people
humiliated, those who suffered and were persecuted were
laughed at, ridiculed and treated with contempt, and the
oppressor and the tyrant were respected.
"Another reason may have been that the Muslims were few
in number and they lived only in Mecca, as the message
of Islam had not reached other parts of Arabia or had reached
only as hearsay. Other tribes considered it as a domestic
quarrel of the Quraish; they were watching for the outcome
of this struggle. Under these circumstances, if fighting had
been allowed, this limited warfare would have resulted in the complete annihilation of the Muslims; even if they had killed
a great number of their opponents, they would still have
been completely annihilated. Idolatry would have continued
and the dawn of the Islamic system would never have arrived
and would never have reached its zenith, while Islam is
revealed to be a practical way of life for all mankind".
In the early Medinite period fighting was also prohibited.
The reason for this was that the Prophet - peace be on
him- had signed a pact with the Jews of Medina and with
the unbelieving Arabs in and around Medina, an action which
was necessary at this stage.
First, there was an open opportunity for preaching and persuasion. There was
no political power to circumscribe this
freedom; the whole population accepted the new Muslim
state and agreed upon the leadership of the Prophet-peace
be on him-in all political maners. In the pact it was agreed
by all parties that no one would make a treaty of peace
or declare war or establish relations with any outsider without
the express permission of the Prophet - peace be on him.
Thus, the real power in Medina was in the hands of Muslim
leadership. The doors were also open for preaching Islam
and there was freedom of belief.
Secondly, at this stage the Prophet-peace be on him -
wanted to conserve all his efforts to combat the Quraish,
whose relentless opposition was a great obstacle in spreading
Islam to other tribes which were waiting to see the final
outcome of the struggle between the two groups of the Quraish.
That is why the Prophet - peace be on him - hastened
to send scouting parties in various directions. The first such
party was commanded by Hamza bin Abdul Muttalib, and it
went out during the month of Ramadan, only six months
after the Immigration.
After this, there were other scouting parties, one during the
ninth month after Hijra, the next in the thirteenth month
the third sixteen months after Hijra, and in the seventeenth
month he sent a party under the leadership of Abdullah bin
Jahash. This party encountered some resistance and some blood
was shed. This occurred during the month of Rajab, which was
considered a sacred month. The following verse of Chapter
Baqara refers to it:
"They ask you about fighting in the sacred months. Say:
Fighting in them is a great sin, but to prevent people
from the way of God, and to reject God, and to stop
people from visiting the Sacred Mosque, and to expel
people from their homes are a much greater sin, and oppression is worse than
killing." (2:217)
During Ramadan of the same year, the Battle of Badr took
place, and in Chapter Anfal this battle was reviewed.
If this stage of the Islamic movement is viewed in proper
perspective, then there is no room to say that the basic aim
of the Islamic movement was 'defensive' in the narrow sense
which some people ascribe to it today, defeated by the
attacks of the treacherous orientalists!
Those who look for causes of a defensive nature in the
history of the expansion of Islam are caught by the aggressive attacks of the
orientalists at a time when Muslims possess
neither glory nor do they possess Islam. However, by God's
grace, there are those who are standing firm on the issue that
Islam is a universal declaration of the freedom of man on
the earth from every authority except God's authority, and that
the religion ought to be purified for God; and they keep
writing concerning, the Islamic Jihaad.
But the Islamic movement does not need any arguments
taken from the literature, as it stands on the clear verses of
the Qur'an:
"They ought to fight in the way of God who have sold the
life of this world for the life of the Hereafter; and whoever
fights in the way of God and is killed or becomes victorious,
to him shall We give a great reward. Why should not
you fight in the way of God for those men, women and
children who have been oppressed because they are weak
and who call 'Our Lord! Take us out of this place whose
people are oppressors, and raise for us an ally, and send
for us a helper'. Those who believe fight in the cause of
God, while those who do not believe fight in the cause of
tyranny. Then fight against the friends of Satan. Indeed,
the strategy of Satan is weak." (3: 74-76)
"Say to the unbelievers that if they refrain, then whatever
they have done before will be forgiven them; but if they
turn back, then they know what happened to earlier nations.
And fight against them until there is no oppression and the religion is wholly for God. But if they refrain, then God
is watching over their actions. But if they do not, then know
that God is your Ally and He is your Helper." (8: 38-40)
"Fight against those among the People of the Book who do
not believe in God and the Last Day, who do not forbid
what God and His messenger have forbidden, and who
do not consider the true religion as their way of life, until
they are subdued and pay Jizyah. The Jews say: 'Ezra is
the Son of God', and the Christians say: 'The Messiah is
the Son of God'. These are mere sayings from their mouths,
following those who preceded them and disbelieved. God
will assail them; how they are perverted! They have taken
their rabbis and priests as lords other that God, and the
Messiah, son of Mary; and they were commanded to worship
none but One God. There is no deity but He, glory be to
Hlm above what they associate with Him! They desire to
extinguish God's light with their mouths, and God intends
to perfect His light, although the unbelievers may be in opposition"
(9:
29-32)
The reasons for Jihaad which have been described in the
above verses are these: to establish God's authority in the
earth; to arrange human affairs according to the true guidance
provided by God; to abolish all the Satanic forces and Satanic
systems of life; to end the lordship of one man over others
since all men are creatures of God and no one has the authority to make them his
servants or to make arbitrary laws for
them. These reasons are sufficient for proclaiming Jihaad.
However, one should always keep in mind that there is no
compulsion in religion; that is, once the people are free from
the lordship of men, the law governing civil affairs will be
purely that of God, while no one will be forced to change
his beliefs and accept Islam.
The Jihaad of Islam is to secure complete freedom for every
man throughout the world by releasing him from servitude
to other human beings so that he may serve his God, Who
IS One and Who has no associates. This is in itself a sufficient reason for
Jihaad. These were the only reasons in the
hearts of Muslim warriors. If they had been asked the question
"Why are you fighting?" none would have answered, "My
country is in danger; I am fighting for its defense" or "The Persians and the Romans have come upon us", or, "We want
to extend our dominion and want more spoils'.'
They would have answered the same as Rabati bin 'Amer,
Huzaifa bin Muhsin and Mughira bin Shtuba answered the
Persian general Rustum when he asked them one by one during
three successive days preceding the battle of Qadisiyyah, "For
what purpose have you come?" Their answer was the same:
"God has sent us to bring anyone who wishes from servitude
to men into the service of God alone, from the narrowness
of this world into the vastness of this world and the Here-
after, and from the tyranny of religions into the justice
of Islam. God raised a Messenger for this purpose to teach
His creatures His way. If anyone accepts this way of life,
we turn back and give his country back to him, and we fight
with those who rebel until we are martyred or become
victorious" .
These are the reasons inherent in the very nature of this
religion. Similarly, its proclamation of universal freedom, its
practical way of combatting actual human conditions with
appropriate methods, its developing new resources at various
stages, is also inherent in its message from the very beginning-
and not because of any threat of aggression against Islamic
lands or against the Muslims residing in them. The reason for
Jihaad exists in the nature of its message and in the actual
conditions it finds in human societies, and not merely in the
necessity for defense, which may be temporary and of limited
extent. A Muslim fights with his wealth and his person "in
the way of God" for the sake of these values in which neither
personal gain nor greed is a motive for him.
Before a Muslim steps into the battlefield, he has already
fought a great battle within himself against Satan-against his
own desires and ambitions, his personal interests and inclinations, the
interests of his family and of his nation; against
which is not from Islam; against every obstacle which comes
into the way of worshipping God and the implementation
of the Divine authority on earth, returning this authority to
God and taking it away from the rebellious usurpers.
Those who say that Islamic Jihaad was merely for the defense of the 'homeland
of Islam' diminish the greatness of
the Islamic way of life and consider it less important than
their 'homeland'. This is not the Islamic point of view, and their view is a creation of the modern age and is completely
alien to Islamic consciousness. What is acceptable to Islamic
consciousness is its belief, the way of life which this belief
prescribes, and the society which lives according to this way
of life. The soil of the homeland has in itself no value or
weight. From the Islamic point of view, the only value which
the soil can achieve is because on that soil God's authority
is established and God's guidance is followed; and thus it
becomes a fortress for the belief, a place for its way of life
to be entitled the 'homeland of Islam', a center for the movement for the total
freedom of man.
Of course, in that case the defense of the 'homeland of
Islam' is the defense of the Islamic beliefs, the Islamic way
of life, and the Islamic community. However, its defense is
not the ultimate objective of the Islamic movement of Jihaad
but is a means of establishing the Divine authority within it so
that it becomes the headquarters for the movement of Islam,
which is then to be carried throughout the earth to the
whole of mankind, as the object of this religion is all humanity
and its sphere of action is the whole earth.
As we have described earlier, there are many practical obstacles in
establishing God's rule on earth, such as the power
of the state, the social system and traditions and, in general,
the whole human environment. Islam uses force only to remove these obstacles so
that there may not remain any wall
between Islam and individual human beings, and so that it
may address their hearts and minds after releasing them from
these material obstacles, and then leave them free to choose
to accept or reject it.
We ought not to be deceived or embarrassed by the attacks
of the orientalists on the origin of Jihaad, nor lose self-
confidence under the pressure of present conditions and the
weight of the great powers of the world to such an extent
that we try to find reasons for Islamic Jihaad outside the nature
of this religion, and try to show that it was a defensive measure under
temporary conditions. The need for Jihaad remains,
and will continue to remain, whether these conditions exist
or not!
In pondering over historical events, we should not neglect
the aspects inherent in the nature of this religion, its declaration of
universal freedom, and its practical method. We ought
not to confuse these with temporary needs of defense.
No doubt this religion must defend itself against aggressors.
Its very existence in the form of a general declaration of the
universal Lordship of God and of the freedom of man from
servitude to any being other than God, and its organizing
a movement under a new leadership other than the existing
jahili leadership, and its creating a distinct and permanent
society based on the Divine authority and submission to One
God, is sufficient cause for the surrounding jahili society, which
is based on human authority in some form or another, to
rise against it for its own preservation and for the suppression of Islam.
Clearly, under these conditions, the newly-
organized Islamic community will have to prepare itself for
defense. These conditions inevitably occur and come into existence
simultaneously with the advent of Islam in any society.
There is no question of Islam's liking or disliking such a situation, as the
struggle is imposed upon Islam; this is a natural
struggle between two systems which cannot co-exist for long.
This is a fact which cannot be denied, and hence Islam has
no choice but to defend itself against aggression.
But there is another fact which is much more important
than this fact. It is in the very nature of Islam to take initiative for freeing
the human beings throughout the earth from
servitude to anyone other than God; and so it cannot be restricted within any
geographic or racial limits, leaving all mankind on the whole earth in evil, in
chaos and in servitude
to lords other than God.
It may happen that the enemies of Islam may consider it
expedient not to take any action against Islam, if Islam leaves
them alone in their geographical boundaries to continue the
lordship of some men over others and does not extend its
message and its declaration of universal freedom within their
domain. But Islam cannot agree to this unless they submit
to its authority by paying Jizyah, which will be a guarantee
that they have opened their doors for the preaching of Islam
and will not put any obstacle in its way through the power
of the state.
This is the character of this religion and this is its function,
as it is a declaration of the Lordship of God and the freedom
of man from servitude to anyone other than God, for all people.
There is a great difference between this concept of Islam and the other, which considers it confined to geographical
and racial limits, and does not take any action except out
of fear of aggression. In the latter case, all its inherent dynamism
is lost.
To understand the dynamism of Islam with clarity and depth,
it IS necessary to remember that Islam is a way of life for man
prescribed by God. It is not a man-made system, nor an ideology
of a group of people, nor a way of life peculiar to a given
race. We cannot talk about external reasons for Jihaad unless
we overlook this great truth and unless we forget that the
fundamental question here is the sovereignty of God and the
obedience of His creatures; it is impossible for a person to
remember this great truth and still search for other reasons
for Islamic Jihaad.
The true estimate of the difference between the concept
that war was forced upon Islam by Jahiliyyah because its very
nature demanded that jahili societies would attack it, and the
concept that Islam takes the initiative and enters into this struggle, cannot be
made in the early stages of its movement.
In the early stages of the Islamic movement it is difficult
to discriminate between these two concepts, because in either
case Islam will have to do battle. However, in the final stages,
when the initial battles are won, the two concepts make a
great difference-a great difference in understanding the purposes and the
significance of the Islamic message. And here
lies the danger.
There is also a great difference in the idea that Islam is a
Divinely-ordained way of life and in the idea that it is a
geographically-bounded system. According to the first idea,
Islam came into this world to establish God's rule on God's
earth, to invite all people toward the worship of God, and
to make a concrete reality of its message in the form of a
Muslim community in which individuals are free from servitude
to men and have gathered together under servitude to God
and follow only the Shari'ah of God. This Islam has a right
to remove all those obstacles which are in its path so that
it may address human reason and intuition with no interference and opposition
from political systems. According to the
second idea, Islam is merely a national system which has a
right to take up arms only when its homeland is attacked.
In the case of either concept, Islam has to strive and to struggle; but its
purposes and its results are entirely different, both
conceptually and practically.
Indeed, Islam has the right to take the initiative. Islam is not
a heritage of any particular race or country; this is God's
religion and it is for the whole world. It has the right to destroy all
obstacles in the form of institutions and traditions
which limit man's freedom of choice. It does not attack individuals nor does it
force them to accept its beliefs; it attacks institutions and traditions to
release human beings from
their poisonous influences, which distort human nature and
which curtail human freedom.
It is the right of Islam to release mankind from servitude
to human beings so that they may serve God alone, to give
practical meaning to its declaration that God is the true
Lord of all and that all men are free under Him. According
to the Islamic concept and in actuality, God's rule on earth
can be established only through the Islamic system, as it is
the only system ordained by God for all human beings, whether
they be rulers or ruled, black or white, poor or rich, ignorant or learned. Its
law is uniform for all, and all human beings
are equally responsible within it. In all other systems, human
beings obey other human beings and follow man-made laws.
Legislation is a Divine attribute; any person who concedes this
right to such a claimant, whether he considers him Divine
or not, has accepted him as Divine.
Islam is not merely a belief, so that it is enough merely
to preach it. Islam, which is a way of life, takes practical
steps to organize a movement for freeing man. Other societies
do not give it any opportunity to organize its followers according to its own
method, and hence it is the duty of Islam
to annihilate all such systems, as they are obstacles in the
way of universal freedom. Only in this manner can the way
of life be wholly dedicated to God, so that neither any human
authority nor the question of servitude remains, as is the case
in all other systems which are based on man's servitude to
man.
Those of our contemporary Muslim scholars who are defeated by the pressure of
current conditions and the attacks of treacherous orientalists do not subscribe to this characteristic
of Islam. The orientalists have painted a picture of Islam as a violent movement which imposed its belief upon people
by the sword. These vicious orientalists know very well that
this is not true, but by this method they try to distort the
true motives of Islamic Jihaad. But our Muslim scholars, these
defeated people, search for reasons of defensive with which to
negate this accusation. They are ignorant of the nature of
Islam and of its function, and that it has a right to take the
initiative for human freedom.
These research scholars, with their defeated mentality, have
adopted the Western concept of 'religion', which is merely a
name for 'belief' in the heart, having no relation to the practical affairs of
life, and therefore they conceive of religious
war as a war to impose belief on peoples' hearts.
But this is not the case with Islam, as Islam is the way of
life ordained by God for all mankind, and this way establishes
the Lordship of God alone-that is, the sovereignty of God
- and orders practical life in all its daily details. Jihaad in
Islam is simply a name for striving to make this system of life
dominant in the world. As far as belief is concerned, it
clearly depends upon personal opinion, under the protection
of a general system in which all obstacles to freedom of personal belief have
been removed. Clearly this is an entirely
different matter and throws a completely new light on the
Islamic Jihaad.
Thus, wherever an Islamic community exists which is a concrete example of the
Divinely-ordained system of life, it has
a God-given right to step forward and take control of the
political authority so that it may establish the Divine system
on earth, while it leaves the matter of belief to individual conscience. When
God restrained Muslims from Jihaad for a certain period, it was a question of
strategy rather than of principle;
this was a matter pertaining to the requirements of the movement and not to
belief. Only in the light of this explanation can we understand those verses of
the Holy Qur'an
which are concerned with the various stages of this movement. In reading these
verses, we should always keep in mind
that one of their meanings is related to the particular stages
of the development of Islam, while there is another general
meaning which is related to the unchangeable and eternal
message of Islam. We should not confuse these two aspects.