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CHAPTER 7
ISLAM IS THE REAL CIVILIZATION
Islam knows only two kinds of societies, the Islamic and
the jahili. The Islamic society is that which follows Islam in
belief and ways of worship, in law and organization, in morals
and manners. The jahili society is that which does not follow
Islam and in which neither the Islamic belief and concepts,
nor Islamic values or standards, Islamic laws and regulations,
or Islamic morals and manners are cared for.
The Islamic society is not one in which people call themselves 'Muslims' but
in which the Islamic law has no status,
even though prayer, fasting and Hajj are regularly observed;
and the Islamic society is not one in which people invent
their own version of Islam, other than what God and His Messenger-peace be on
him-have prescribed and explained,
and call it, for example, 'progressive Islam'.
Jahili society appears in various forms, all of them ignorant
of the Divine guidance.
Sometimes it takes the form of a society in which belief
in God is denied and human history is explained in terms
of intellectual materialism, and 'scientific socialism' becomes its
system.
Sometimes it appears in the form of a society in which God's
existence is not denied, but His domain is restricted to the
heavens and His rule on earth is suspended. Neither the
Shari'ah nor the values prescribed by God and ordained
by Him as eternal and invariable find any place in this scheme
of life. In this society, people are permitted to go to mosques,
churches and synagogues; yet it does not tolerate people's
demanding that the Shari'ah of God be applied in their daily
affairs. Thus, such a society denies or suspends God's sovereignty on earth,
while God says plainly:
"It is He Who is Sovereign in the heavens and Sovereign
in the earth." (43:84)
Because of this behavior, such a society does not follow
the religion of God as defined by Him:
"The command belongs to God alone. He commands you
not to worship anyone except Him. This is the right way
of life." (12:40)
Because of this, such a society is to be counted among jahili societies, although it may proclaim belief in God and permit
people to observe their devotions in mosques, churches and
synagogues.
The Islamic society is, by its very nature, the only civilized
society, and the jahili societies, in all their various forms, are
backward societies. It is necessary to elucidate this great truth.
Once I announced as the title of a book of mine which was
in press, The Civilized Society of Islam; but in my next announcement I dropped
the word 'civilized' from it. At this
change, an Algerian author (who writes in French) commented
that the reason for this change is that psychology which operates
in a person's mind while defending Islam. The author expressed
regret that this was an expression of immaturity which was
preventing me from facing reality!
I excused this Algerian author because at one time I myself was of the same
opinion. At that time, my thought processes were similar to his thought
processes of today. I encountered the same difficulty which he is encountering
today;
that is, to understand the meaning of 'civilization'.
Until then, I had not gotten rid of the cultural influences
which had penetrated my mind in spite of my Islamic attitude
and inclination. The source of these influences was foreign
-alien to my Islamic consciousness, -yet these influences
had clouded by intuition and concepts. The Western concept of
civilization was my standard; it had prevented me from seeing
with clear and penetrating vision.
However, later I saw very clearly that the Muslim society
was the civilized society. Hence the word 'civilized' in the
title of my book was redundant and did not add anything
new; rather it would have obscured the thinking of the reader
in the same way as my own ideas had been obscured.
Now the question is, what is the meaning of 'civilization?'
Let us try to explain it.
When, in a society, the sovereignty belongs to God alone,
expressed in its obedience to the Divine Law, only then is
every person in that society free from servitude to others,
and only then does he taste true freedom. This alone is 'human
civilization', as the basis of a human civilization is the complete
and true freedom of every person and the full dignity of every
individual of the society. On the other hand, in a society
in which some people are lords who legislate and some others are slaves who obey them, then there is no freedom in the
real sense, nor dignity for each and every individual.
It is necessary that we clarify the point that legislation is
not limited only to legal matters, as some people assign this
narrow meaning to the Shari'ah. The fact is that attitudes, the
way of living, the values, criteria, habits and traditions, are
all legislated and affect people. If a particular group of people
forges all these chains and imprisons others in them, this will
not be a free society. I n such a society some people have
the position of authority, while others are subservient to them;
hence this society will be backward, and in Islamic terminology
is called a 'jahili' society.
Only Islamic society is unique in this respect, in that the
authority belongs to God alone; and man, cutting off his chains
of servitude to other human beings, enters into the service of
God and thus attains that real and complete freedom which is
the focus of human civilization. In this society, the dignity
and honor of man are respected according to what God has
prescribed. He becomes the representative of God on earth,
and his position becomes even higher than that of the angels.
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In a society which bases its foundation on the concept,
belief and way of life which all originate from the One God,
man's dignity is respected to the highest degree and no one is
a slave to another, as they are in societies in which the concepts, beliefs and
way of life originate from human masters.
In the former society, man's highest characteristics - those
of the spirit and mind -are reflected, while in a society in
which human relationships are based on color, race or nation,
or similar criteria, these relationships become a chain for human
thought and prevent man's noble characteristics from coming
to the fore. A person remains human regardless of what color,
race or nation he belongs to, but he cannot be called human
if he is devoid of spirit and reason. Furthermore, he is able
to change his beliefs, concepts and attitudes toward life, but
he is incapable of changing his color and race, nor can he
decide in what place or nation to be born. Thus it is clear
that only such a society is civilized in which human associations are based on
free choice, and that society is backward
in which the basis of association is something other than free choice; in Islamic terminology, it is a 'jahili society'.
Only Islam has the distinction of basing the fundamental
binding relationship in its society on belief; and on the basis
of this belief, black and white and red and yellow, Arabs and
Greeks, Persians and Africans, and all nations which inhabit
the earth become one community. In this society God is the
Lord and only He is worshipped, the most honorable is the
one who is noblest in character, and all individuals are equally
subject to a law which is not man-made but made by their Creator.
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A society which places the highest value on the 'humanity'
of man and honors the noble 'human' characteristics is truly
civilized. If materialism, no matter in what form, is given the
highest value, whether it be in the form of a 'theory', such
as in the Marxist interpretation of history, or in the form of
material production, as is the case with the United States
and European countries, and all other human values are sacrificed at its altar,
then such a society is a backward one,
or, in Islamic terminology, is a 'jahili society'.
The civilized society-that is, the Islamic society-does
not downgrade matter, either in theory or in the form of
material production, as it considers the universe in which we
live, by which we are influenced, and which we influence,
to be made of matter, and it considers material production to
be the backbone of the vicegerency of God on earth. However, in the Islamic
society material comforts are not made
into the highest value at the expense of 'human' characteristics-freedom and
honor, family and its obligations, morals
and values, and so on - as is the case in jahili societies.
If a society is based on 'human values' and 'human morals'
and these remain dominant in it, then that society will be
civilized. Human values and human morals are not something
mysterious and undefinable, nor are they 'progressive' and
changeable, having no roots and stability, as is claimed by
the exponents of the materialistic interpretation of history or
of 'scientific socialism.' They are the values and the morals
which develop those characteristics in a human being which
distinguish him from the animals and which emphasize those
aspects of his personality which raise him above the animals; these are not such values and morals which develop and emphasize those
characteristics in man which are common with
the animals.
When the question is viewed in this manner, a fixed and
well-defined line of separation is obtained which cannot be
erased by the incessant attempt of the 'progressives' and the
scientific societies to erase it. According to this view, moral
standards are not determined by the environment and changing
conditions; rather they are fixed criteria above and beyond the
difference in environments. One cannot say that some moral
values are 'agricultural' and others 'industrial', some are 'capitalistic' and
some others 'socialistic', some are 'bourgeoise'
and others 'proletarian'. Here, the standards of morality are
independent of the environment, the economic status, and the
stage of development of a society; these are nothing but superficial variations.
Beyond all these, we arrive at 'human' values
and morals and at 'animalistic' values and morals, this being
the correct separation or, in Islamic terminology, 'Islamic
values and morals and 'jahili' values and morals.
Indeed, Islam establishes the values and morals which are
'human' - those which develop characteristics in a human
being which distinguish him from the animals. In whatever
society Islam is dominant, whether it is an agricultural or industrial society,
nomadic and pastoral or urban and settled, poor
or rich, it implants these human values and morals, nurtures
them and strengthens them; it develops human characteristics
progressively and guards against degeneration toward animalism. The direction of
the line which separates human values
from animal-like characteristics is upward; but if this direction is reversed,
then in spite of all material progress the civilization will be 'backward',
'degenerative', and 'jahili'!
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If the family is the basis of the society, and the basis of the
family is the division of labor between husband and wife,
and the upbringing of children is the most important function
of the family, then such a society is indeed civilized. In the
Islamic system of life, this kind of a family provides the environment under
which human values and morals develop
and grow in the new generation; these values and morals
cannot exist apart from the family unit. If, on the other hand,
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free sexual relationships and illegitimate children become the
basis of a society, and if the relationship between man and
woman is based on lust, passion and impulse, and the division
of work is not based on family responsibility and natural gifts;
if woman's role is merely to be attractive, sexy and flirtatious,
and if woman is freed from her basic responsibility of bringing
up children; and if, on her own or under social demand, she
prefers to become a hostess or a stewardess in a hotel or
ship or air company, thus spending her ability for material
productivity rather than in the training of human beings, because material
production is considered to be more important,
more valuable and more honorable than the development
of human character, then such a civilization is 'backward' from
the human point of view, or 'jahili' in the Islamic terminology.
The family system and the relationship between the sexes
determine the whole character of a society and whether it
is backward or civilized, jahili or Islamic. Those societies which
give ascendance to physical desires and animalistic morals
cannot be considered civilized, no matter how much progress they may make in
industry or science. This is the only
measure which does not err in gauging true human progress.
In all modern jahili societies, the meaning of 'morality' is
limited to such an extent that all those aspects which distinguish man from
animal are considered beyond its sphere.
In these Societies, illegitimate sexual relationships, even homosexuality, are
not considered immoral. The meaning of ethics
is limited to economic affairs or sometimes to political affairs
which fall into the category of 'government interests'. For
example, the scandal of Christine Keeler and the British
minister Profumo was not considered serious to British society
because of its sexual aspect; it was condemnable because
Christine Keeler was also involved with a naval attache of
the Russian Embassy, and thus her association with a cabinet
minister lied before the British Parliament! Similar scandals
come to light in the American Senate. Englishmen and Americans who get involved
in such spying scandals usually take
refuge in Russia. These affairs are not considered immoral
because of sexual deviations, but because of the danger to
state secrets!
Among jahili societies, writers, journalists and editors advise
both married and unmarried people that free sexual relationships are not
immoral. However, it is immoral if a boy uses
his partner, or a girl uses her partner, for sex, while feeling
no love in his or her heart. It is bad if a wife continues to guard
her chastity while her love for her husband has vanished; it
is admirable if she finds another lover. Dozens of stories are
written about this theme; many newspaper editorials, articles,
cartoons, serious and light columns all invite to this way of life.
From the point of view of 'human' progress, all such societies are not
civilized but are backward.
The line of human progress goes upward from animal desires toward higher
values. To control the animal desires, a
progressive society lays down the foundation of a family system
in which human desires find satisfaction, as well as providing
for the future generation to be brought up in such a manner
that it will continue the human civilization, in which human
characteristics flower to their full bloom. Obviously a society
which intends to control the animal characteristics, while providing full
opportunities for the development and perfection
of human characteristics, requires strong safeguards for the
peace and stability of the family, so that it may perform its
basic task free from the influences of impulsive passions. On
the other hand, if in a society immoral teachings and poisonous
suggestions are rampant, and sexual activity is considered
outside the sphere of morality, then in that society the humanity
of man can hardly find a place to develop.
Thus, only Islamic values and morals, Islamic teachings
and safeguards, are worthy of mankind, and from this unchanging and true measure
of human progress, Islam is the real
civilization and Islamic society is truly civilized.
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Lastly, when man establishes the representation of God on
earth in all respects, by dedicating himself to the service of God
and freeing himself from servitude to others, by establishing
the system of life prescribed by God and rejecting all other
systems, by arranging his life according to the Shari'ah of
God and giving up all other laws, by adopting the values and
standards of morality which are pleasing to God and rejecting
all other standards and, after this, when he investigates the
laws governing the universe and uses them for the benefit of all mankind, applies them to resources hidden in the earth
in accordance with the obligation imposed on him by God
as His vicegerent on earth, unearths the treasures and resources
of food and raw materials for industries, and uses his technical
and professional knowledge for the development of various
kinds of industries, doing all these things as a God-fearing
person and as a representative of God; and when his attitude
toward the material and moral aspects of life is infused with
this spirit, only then does man become completely civilized
and the society reach the height of civilization. In Islam, mere
material inventions are not considered as civilization, as a
jahili society can also have material prosperity. In many places
in the Qur'an, God has described societies of this kind, which
have attained material prosperity while remaining jahili.
(Hud said to his people): "What is the matter with you that
you make a memorial at every high place and build palaces
as if you are immortal? When you deal with others, you are
tyrants. Then fear God, and obey me. Fear Him Who gave
you whatever you know. He gave you animals, children,
gardens and rivers. I fear for you the day of a severe chastisement."
(26:
128-135)
(Salih said to his people): "Will you remain secure here
among these things - among gardens and fountains, the
farmland and palm trees with juicy fruit? You build houses
skillfully out of the mountains. So fear God and obey me,
and do not obey the advice of the wasteful, those who make
corruption in the earth and do not set things right."
(26: 146-152)
"So when they forgot what they were reminded of, We
opened to them the gates of everything until, when they rejoiced in what they
were given, We seized them suddenly,
and behold! they were greatly confounded. So the last remnant of the people who
did evil was cut off. Praise belongs
to God, the Sustainer of the Worlds." (6: 43-44)
"When the earth has taken on its glitter and has adorned
itself fair, and its inhabitants think they have power over it,
Our command comes upon it by night or by day, and We
make it as stubble, as if yesterday it had not flourished."
(10:24)
But as we have said earlier, Islam does not look with contempt on material progress and material inventions; in fact, it
considers them when used under the Divine system of life,
as God's gifts. In the Qur'an we find that God promises His
bounty to people when they are obedient to Him.
(Noah said): "I said to my people, 'Ask forgiveness from
your Sustainer; indeed, He accepts repentance. He will
send upon you rain from the sky continuously and will make
you powerful through wealth and children, and He will
raise for you gardens and make streams for you." (71:10-12)
"Had the people of those towns believed and feared God,
We would have opened blessings upon them from the sky
and the earth, but they rejected the truth, so for their
evil deeds We took them to account." (7:96)
But the important thing is that foundation on which the
industrial structure is built, and those values which bind a
society, and through which a society acquires the characteristics of the 'human
civilization'.
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Since the basis of the Islamic society and the nature of its
growth, which give rise to its community, have a unique
character, one cannot apply to it those theories which can
explain the establishment and growth of jahili societies. The
Islamic society is born out of a movement, and this movement
continues within it; it determines the places and positions
of individuals in the community and then assigns them roles
and responsibilities.
The origin of this movement, from which this community
is born, is outside the human sphere and outside this world.
Its source is a belief which has come from God to mankind,
and which gives them a particular concept of the universe,
of life of human history, of values and purposes, and which
defines for them a way of life reflecting this concept. Thus
the initial impetus for the movement does not come from
human minds, nor from the physical world, but, as we have
stated before, it comes from outside the earth and outside
the human sphere; and this is the first distinctive feature of
the Islamic society and its organization.
Indeed, the origin of this movement is an element outside
the sphere of man and outside the physical world. This element,
which comes into existence from God's will, is not something expected by any human being or taken into consideration
by anyone, and in the beginning, no human endeavor enters
into it. This Divine element sows the seed of the Islamic movement and at the
same time prepares the human being for action
-prepares the one who believes in the faith which reaches to
him from the Divine source. As soon as this single individual
believes in this faith, the Islamic community comes into existence
(potentially) This individual does not remain satisfied at
having this faith, but stands up to give its message. It is the
nature of this faith that it is a virile and dynamic movement;
the power which lights up this faith in this heart knows that
it will not remain concealed but will come out into the open
and will spread to others.
When the number of Believers reaches three, then this
faith tells them; "Now you are a community, a distinct Islamic
community, distinct from that jahili society which does not
live according to this belief or accept its basic premise."
Now the Islamic society has come into existence (actually).
These three individuals increase to ten, the ten to a hundred,
the hundred to a thousand, and the thousand increase to
twelve thousand-and the Islamic society grows and becomes
established .
During the progress of this movement, a struggle would
already have started within the jahili society. On the one side
is this new born society, which in its belief and concepts, values
and standards, existence and organization has separated itself
from the jahili society, from which the Islamic society absorbs
individuals. This movement, from the moment of its inception
until the growth and permanent existence of its society comes
about, tests every individual and assigns him a position of
responsibility according to his capacity, as measured by the
Islamic balance and standards. The society automatically recognizes his
capabilities, and he does not need to come forward
and announce his candidacy; in fact, his belief and the values
to which he and his society subscribe compel him to keep
himself concealed from the eyes of those who want to give
him a responsible position.
But the movement which is a natural outgrowth of the
Islamic belief and which is the essence of the Islamic society
does not let any individual hide himself. Every individual of this society must move! There should be a movement in his
belief, a movement in his blood, a movement in his community,
and in the structure of this organic society, and as the Jahiliyyah is all
around him, and its residual influences in his mind
and in the minds of those around him, the struggle goes on
and the Jihaad continues until the Day of Resurrection.
The ups and downs through which the movement passes
determine the position and activity of every individual in the
movement, and the organic body of this society is completed
through the harmony between its individuals and their activities.
This kind of beginning and this method of organization are
two of the characteristics of the Islamic society which distinguish it from
other societies in respect to its existence and
its structure, its nature and its form, its system and the method
of regulating this system, and make it a unique and separate
entity. It cannot be understood by social theories alien to
it, nor can it be taught by methods foreign to its nature,
nor can it be brought into existence by ways borrowed from
other systems.
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According to our unvarying definition of civilization, the
Islamic society is not just an entity of the past, to be studied
in history, but it is a demand of the present and a hope
of the future. Mankind can be dignified, today or tomorrow,
by striving toward this noble civilization, by pulling itself out
of the abyss of Jahiliyyah into which it is falling. This is true
not only for the industrially and economically developed nations
but also for the backward nations.
The values to which we referred above as human values
were never attained by mankind except in the period of Islamic
civilization. We also ought to remember that by the term
'Islamic Civilization' we mean that civilization in which these
values are found to the highest degree, and not a civilization
which may make progress in industry, economics and science
but in which human values are suppressed.
These values are not idealistic but are practical values which
can be attained through human effort, by applying the teachings
of Islam correctly. These values can be attained in any environment, whatever
the level of industrial and scientific progress
may be, as there is no contradiction; in fact, material prosperity and
scientific progress are encouraged by the teachings
of Islam, as they pretain to man's role as the representative of
God on earth.
Similarly, in countries which are industrially and scientifically
backward, these values teach people not to remain just silent
spectators but to strive for industrial and scientific progress. A
civilization with these values can develop anywhere and in any
environment; however, the actual form it takes is not one, but
depends on the conditions and environment existing in the
society in which these values develop.
The Islamic society, in its form and extent and its way of
living, is not a fixed historic entity; but its existence and its
civilization are based on values which are fixed historical realities. The word
'historical' used in this context only means
that these values took concrete form in a particular period
of human history. In fact, these values, by their nature, do
not belong to any particular period; they are the truth which
has come to man from the Divine source-beyond the sphere
of mankind and beyond the sphere of the physical universe.
The Islamic civilization can take various forms in its material
and organizational structure, but the principles and values
on which it is based are eternal and unchangeable. These
are: the worship of God alone, the foundation of human relationships on the
belief in the Oneness of God, the supremacy
of the humanity of man over material things, the development
of human values and the control of animalistic desires, respect
for the family, the assumption of being the representative of God
on earth according to His guidance and instruction, and in all
affairs of this vicegerency the rule of God's law (al-Shari'ah)
and the way of life prescribed by Him.
The forms of the Islamic civilization, constructed on these
fixed principles, depend on actual conditions and are influenced
by and change according to the stage of industrial, economic
or scientific progress. These forms are necessarily different and
are a consequence of the fact that Islam possesses sufficient
flexibility to enter into any system and mold that system according to its
purposes; but this flexibility in the outward forms
of Islamic civilization does not mean any flexibility in the Islamic
belief, which is the fountainhead of this civilization, nor is
it to be considered as borrowed from outside, for it is the character of this religion. However, flexibility is not to be confused with
fluidity. There is a great difference between these
two.
When Islam entered the central part of Africa, it clothed
naked human beings, socialized them, brought them out of
the deep recesses of isolation, and taught them the joy of
work for exploring material resources. It brought them out of the
narrow circles of tribe and clan into the vast circle of the Islamic
community, and out of the worship of pagan gods into the worship of the Creator
of the worlds. If this is not civilization, then
what is it? This civilization was for this environment, and it used
the actual resources which were available. If Islam enters into
some other environment, then its civilization will also take another form-but
with values which are eternal,-based on the
existing resources of that particular environment.
Thus, the development of the civilization, according to the
method and manner of Islam, does not depend on any particular level of
industrial, economic or scientific progress.
Wherever this civilization is established, it will use all the resources, will
develop them, and if in a certain place these
resources are non-existent, then it will supply them and will
provide the means for their growth and progress. But in all
situations it will be based on its immutable and eternal principles, and
wherever such an Islamic society comes into existence, its particular character
and its particular movement
will also come into existence, and will make it distinguished
and distinct from all jahili societies.
"The baptism of God -and who can baptize better than
God?" (2: 138)
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