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Chapter Three
The Islamic Movement In The Field Of
Education And Religious Training
Education is the basic and necessary approach for any
Islamic movement that seeks to change the state of affairs by changing people themselves.
The point of focus in the field of education should be the preparation of the Muslim
vanguard who will aid the cause of Islam. They would be to our age what the Prophet's
Companions were to the Prophet's age.
The foremost quality that members of this vanguard must have is belief, by which I mean
the belief of Quran and Sunna; the belief that has over seventy branches of values and
morals; the belief on which whole volumes were compiled, for belief does not come about by
the wish or by pretence: it is what settles in the heart and is proved by acts.
So, what is meant here is not just the mental knowledge whose effect does not extend to
the heart to light it or to the will to move it. Neither is it just filling the memory
with words and terms such as God and the Lord; religion and worship; the various branches
of monotheism; idols and (the Times of) Ignorance, and then feeling proud that one
possesses what makes a true believer and what constitutes yaqin [perfect and absolute
belief] and dragging others to arguments and verbal battles over these words and terms.
Neither argument nor verbal battles would yield a belief like that of Pharaoh's magicians
when they believed in the Lord of Moses and Aaron, or like that of the Prophet's
Companions when they believed in the Message of Allah's Messenger.
The needed belief is the one of the first generation, as prescribed in the Quran and
Sunna.
Only one verse from a surat in the Quran needs to be quoted here: it is the verse with
which Allah answers the desert Arabs who said, "We believe" while belief had not
entered their hearts: (Only those
are believers who have believed in Allah and His Messenger, and have never since doubted,
but have striven with their belongings and their persons in the Cause of Allah. Such are
the sincere ones) [Surat AlHujurat: 15]. It is
also narrated in the hadith that the Prophet said, (Whoever possesses the following three qualities will have the sweetness
[delight] of faith: to love Allah and His Messenger more than anything else; to love a
person only for Allah's sake, and to hate to revert to atheism [disbelief] after Allah
saved him from it like hating thrown into Hell) [Bukhari & Muslim].
It may be enough for the common people who follow the leaders to have a half, or even a
quarter, belief, but the leading vanguard must have a true belief. They should never
include a half or a quarter believer.
Imam Hassan AlBanna used to say to his disciples, "Give me twelve thousand believers, and I will
conquer with them the
mountains, cross the seas and invade the land''.(l)
But is this number enough to bring about the great hopes and realize the ambitious
aspirations of the Islamic Nation? I say yes, we will do with twelve thousand of the true
believers. But I also say that we will not do with twenty-four thousand half believers
or forty-eight quarter believers, or any of the "fractions" of believers whom
one stumbles upon as a result of their stupendous numbers but who can do nothing of use in
times of need.
We want believers like the Ansar of Medina, who were described of becoming large in number
at the time of war and few at the time of distribution of the war booty.
As for those who are many in numbers but of little use in reality and are no better than
'the scum of the torrent, they will never be fit to be in the leading vanguard, even if
they are millions in number.
Belief based or God inspired education is the first precondition for bringing up a
generation that will defend the cause of Islam.
It is this generation that has been described by the Almighty (you who believe, if any from among you turn back from his faith,
soon will Allah produce a people whom He will love as they will love Him lowly with the
believers, mighty against the rejecters, fighting in the way of Allah and never afraid of
the reproaches of such as find fault. That is the Grace of Allah, which He will bestow on
whom He pleases. And Allah encompasses all, and He knows all things) [Surat
AlMa'ida: 54].
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A measure of proper Sufi education based on
the Quran and Sunna is in order here, as it would help in shaping a religious character
whose owner would put Allah before Allah's creation, the Hereafter before earthly life and
the motives of religion before the motives of desire.
Not all Sufism is evil as some would imagine. Neither are all Sufists misled as claimed by
those who lack in knowledge or fairness. Sufists are like other groups, as Sheikh
Al-Islam IbnTaymia said in his treatise entitled "AlFuqara"' [the Poor]. He
said about them, "Among them you find the straightforward and the deviant; the one
who wrongs his own soul, the one who follows a middle course, and the one who is, by
Allah's leave. foremost in good deeds".
Of course, we reject all the fallacies of philosophical Sufism (including such tenets as:
hulul" divine incarnation" and ijtihad "mystic communion with God"),
ecstatic utterances of heretic Sufists and the deviations of money oriented Sufism. What
we really seek is the pure, quintessential Sufism of the pioneer Sufists, such as
AlHassan AlBasri, AlFudayl Ibnlyad, Ibrahim IbnAdham, Abu Sulayman
AlDarani,
AbulQasim AlJunayd and others like them.
We seek the sunnite Sufism that follows a balanced line of Quran and Sunna the Sufism
that cares about the "piety of hearts" before it concerns itself with the
"acts of the organs of the body". It is said in the sound hadith that (Allah
shall not look at your bodies or your faces, but rather into your hearts} [Muslim].
We seek the Sufism that addresses the ailments of the heart, plugs the holes through which
Satan can steal into hearts, and resists the desires of the human soul, so that it may
have proper morals and virtues and abandon sins.
Someone described Sufism in a nutshell, saying, "Sufism is being true to Allah and
good to mankind". This is what Allah the Almighty means by saying, (For Allah is with those who restrain themselves
and those who do good) [Surat AlNahl: 128]. The Sufists are with Allah by being pious, and with people by doing good.
Allama Ibn AlQayyim quoted the early Sufists as saying, "Sufism is good manners, an
anyone who surpasses you in manners should be better than you in Sufism". Ibn
AlQayyim comments on that by saying, "No, religion is good manners, and anyone who
surpasses you in good manners should be better than you in religion".
True ! And we need only to quote the Prophet's hadith, (I have been sent [with the Message] to make manners perfect) [Bukhari].
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There are four points of focus in this education, as follows:
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Pure Intention:
The first focal point is making one's intention pure, so that his work may be done solely
for the sake of Allah, not for the sake of any other gain such as money, power, people's
favor or any other of the ambitions that the soul may covet in secret.
Islamic work is a worship and a jihad. Worship is good only when it is practiced
in pure
intention for the sake of Allah: (And
they have been commanded no more than this: to worship Allah, offering Him sincere
devotion, being true [in faith]) [Surat AlBayyinah: 5].
Jihad in Allah's cause is proper only when it is performed with an intention that is pure
and is directed at making the Word of Allah exalted to the heights.
Allah the Almighty does not accept a deed with shared objective, nor a heart with shared
beliefs.
This why Imam Hassan AlBanna was keen to raise his first slogan as, "Allah is Our
Goal", so as to assert that the pleasure and reward of Allah are our most aspired
goal. We might say that we seek to establish an Islamic community, an Islamic state or an
Islamic ruling system, or that we work for restoring the integrated Islamic way of life,
or any other near or long term objective, but our goal in all this will be to gain
the pleasure of Allah so that He may count us among His righteous servants.
Every Islamic worker should bear in mind these two verses,
(Say: "Truly, my prayer and my
service of sacrifice, my life and my death, are [all] for Allah, the Cherisher of the
Worlds. He has no partner: thus I am commanded, and I am the first of those who submit to
His will) [Surat AlAn'am: 162163].
Causes are not made victorious through the efforts of
fame seekers, but through the efforts of those who were described in hadith to be
(charitable, pious and quiet people, who are not
felt when present nor missed when absent, and whose hearts are the lamps of [Allah's]
guidance) [AlHakim].
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Fearing Allah:
The second focal point is to fear Allah in any deed, so that such deed may take its
share of perfection.
This is why the Prophet, when Gabriel asked him about perfection, said: (Perfection is to worship Allah
as if you were seeing Him, for although you do not see Him, He does see you)
This is a prerequisite in any deed, be it earthly or religious, for perfection in work
is a farida that every Muslim should seek to observe. Allah has prescribed perfection in
everything, and nothing should make a man seek perfection more than his feeling that Allah
sees and hears him and knows all that he does.
Perfection is more a prerequisite when the deed in question is related to religion, such
as work in the fields of the Islamic Call and the Islamic Movement, where Islamic workers
discharge
their duty on behalf of other Muslims who sit idle and watch, and even sometimes attacks
them and try to bring them to abandon their efforts.
Islamic workers never lack in supervision, nor do they ever require administrative
inspections, for they are under supervision from within themselves, and they are the first
inspectors of their efforts, as they always have in mind Allah's saying,
(And He is with you
whosesoever you may be, and
Allah sees well all that you do) [Surat AlHadid: 4].
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Calling Oneself to Account:
The third focal point is self accounting. First, we have to have a true
intention before setting to work. Second, we have to seek perfection in our work.
Third, we
have to call ourselves to account. It is the hadith (A wise man is that who calls his soul to account and works for that
which comes after death, and a helpless (fool) is that who gives his soul a free right and
hopes for Allah's forgiveness [without cause for such forgiveness] )
It is also related that Omar said (Call yourselves to account before you are called to
account, and weigh your deeds before they are weighed against you) Another saying by Maymun
ibnMahran, is: (A pious man is that who calls his soul to an account
that is fiercer than that of a tyrant ruler and a tightfisted partner.)
The origin of our point here is Allah the Almighty's saying in the Quran,
(And I do swear by the
self reproaching soul)
[Surat AlQiyamah: 2).
Self accounting always breeds more effort towards rectification of errors and elimination
of shortcoming, making one always seek perfection and avoid self admiration, conceit and
contempt of others.
Calling oneself to account is also one of the moral and educational fundamentals in Islam.
This is why it is considered as a must by all Sufists and experts of education.
People nowadays repeat the term "self-criticism". There is no harm in using
this term, but there does exist real harm in regarding its meaning as being new to us and
regarding it as a practice that we have copied from others, for it is nothing but the
self accounting that is called for by our Quran, our Sunna and our very culture.
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Putting One's Trust in Allah:
The fourth focal point is putting one's trust in Allah. It is the spiritual weapon
that turns weakness into strength and few numbers into large numbers. It was also the
weapon with which the Apostles of Allah faced up to the tyrants among their people, never
being intimidated by their tyranny or weakened by their mischief, but saying,
(Why should we not put our trust in Allah? Indeed
He has guided us to the ways [we follow]. We shall certainly bear with patience all the
hurt you caused us. For those who put their trust should put their trust in Allah) [Surat
Ibrahim: 1 2].
Putting one's trust in Allah means to take Allah as
one's guide, following His commands and depending on Him, as He says, ([He is] the
Lord of the East and the West: there is no God but He, take Him therefore for [your]
disposer of affairs) [Surat AlMuzzammil: 9].
You should take Allah as your disposer of affairs, however,
only after you prepare yourself and, take every precaution, then go ahead in confidence
that Allah will not abandon you.
Putting one's trust in Allah should by no means be taken to mean neglecting one's work,
abandoning the means that lead to ends, ignoring the approved practices or waiting to reap
unsown seeds or harvest unattended crops. It means what the Prophet and the Apostles
before him did: doing one's best and leaving the outcome to Allah, out of trust in Him,
out of conviction in His promise and out of belief in His support.
Our noble Prophet made the best arrangements for his hijra, but the unbelievers managed to
reach the cave where he was hiding. When AbuBakr said, "If any of them looks under
his feet, he will certainly see us!", the Prophet said, "What do you think of
two people whose third is Allah?" (Have no fear, for Allah is with us)
[Surat AlTawbah: 40].
This was also what Moses said to his people when Pharaoh pursued them at the head of his
army, and they were caught between the sea before them and their enemy behind them: (And
when the two bodies saw each other, the people of Moses said.
"We are sure to be
overtaken". He said, "By no means!! My Lord is with Me! Soon will guide me!)
[Surat
AlShuara: 6162].
We really need this sort of conviction to face up
to the grandchildren of Pharaoh and AbuJahl, trusting that Allah is with us. Those who
have Allah with them will not fail (If Allah helps you, none can overcome you. If He
forsakes you, who is there, after that, that can help you? In Allah, then, let the
believers put their trust) If Allah helps you, none can overcome you. If He
forsakes you, who is there, after that, that can help you? In Allah, then, let the
believers put their trust) [Surat AlImran: 160]. If Allah helps you, none can overcome you. If He
forsakes you, who is there, after that, that can help you? In Allah, then, let the
believers put their trust) If Allah helps you, none can overcome you. If He
forsakes you, who is there, after that, that can help you? In Allah, then, let the
believers put their trust) [Surat AlImran: 160].
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In preparing
vanguards, we have to insure the presence of a combination of two things: pure intention
and correct work.
Pure intention and goodwill are required in every Islamic work, because every Islamic work
is a worship and a jihad, and no worship or jihad will be accepted unless there was a pure
intention behind it, as we have already said. This is why our 'ulama' attach so much
importance to the Prophet's hadith saying, (Deeds are [measured] by the intentions behind them) that they regard it as a quarter, a third, and even a half, of Islam as
a whole.
However, this alone is not enough for steering the Islamic Movement's ship among the waves
and winds of the tempest. For besides pure intention, there should exist an ability to
distinguish between right and wrong, and even differentiate between the more right of two
opinions and choose the lesser of two evils or the best of two good things. It is said
that a man in
his right mind is that who knows good from evil, but a wise man is that who knows the
better of two evils, if there could ever be an evil that is good!
True, a Muslim is required to try and seek what is right; and if he goes wrong, he is
excused, even rewarded. However, as the hadith says, one who tries and goes wrong is
rewarded only once, while one who tries and goes right is rewarded double: once for trying
and making the effort, and once for going right.
A double reward is promised to those who go right so that "seeking correctness"
may always be an objective for those who try, and that all wise believers may set their
sights on going right in their endeavors.
However, I would like to underscore two points here:
First, he who gets rewarded for trying should be qualified for trying in the first
place, i.e. he should possess the minimum qualifications to make an ijtihad [personal
reasoning]. I do not mean the literal meaning of ijtihad as pertaining to the conditions
for making such endeavors as they are mentioned in usul alfiqh [ principles of
jurisprudence] books, but rather to any attempt made in any field that requires special
knowledge. Making a trial in politics is certainly different than making a trial in the
military, economic or educational fields, as each field requires special knowledge in
addition to common sense.
But he who launches himself into a topic that he does no. know well, passing judgment in
it without proper knowledge, should only wrong himself, his topic and his people, and
should get no reward at all, but rather get (a punishment for) an undeniable sin, for he
would be passing judgment in ignorance and wading into waters he does not know how to swim
in.
This was why the Prophet said in hadith (Judges
are three kinds: one shall go to The Garden, and two shall go to Hell. The first is a
judge, who knows right and judges by it, and he shall go to The Garden. The second is a
judge who passes judgment in ignorance, and he shall go to Hell. The third is a judge who
knows right but passes judgment unjustly, and he shall go to Hell) [AbuDawad,
AlTirmidhi, IbnMajah, AlNasa'i, AlHakim].
This hadith makes a judge who passes judgment in
ignorance equal to a judge who knows right but passes unfair judgment, as an ignorant
judge would be sailing in unknown waters that he would get lost into, and had better leave
them to those who can steer the ship safely through them, and give the helm to a skilled
master.
Even if he does right, a man of this kind will not be rewarded by his right deed, as it is
a shot without a marksman, and a right word from the wrong quarter, having no value
because.: it is not based on a proper methodology.
It is said in the hadith, (He who
gives his own opinion [without knowledge] in the Quran and goes right shall be wrong) [reported by AlTirmidhi who classified it as
"gharib", i.e.. a hadith which is related by only one narrator. In other Sunna
collections it is classified among the "da'if", i.e. weak traditions].
He will be wrong, although his opinion is right, because his right opinion came out of a
haphazard trial, not through a proper methodology that he followed strictly. Such a
haphazardly reached right is not to be depended on.
The second point I want to note here is that those who will be rewarded for their
ijtihad, even with the single reward for trying, will be worthy of reward only if they do
their best in seeking the truth and exert every effort to ensure that they understand
things right. In so doing, they have to use all the means at their disposal and digest all
the available information to discover right. They have also to consult knowledgeable
people, so as to arm themselves with sound opinions and valuable experience that will help
them do right.
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The importance of ideological education of future leaders
The problem of the Islamic Movement in
many countries is that its base is larger than what its leadership can cope with. There is
no shame in admitting that.
The reason for this situation is that the contemporary Islamic Movement has spread all
over the world, driving roots in all countries, its base becoming more expansive. However,
this growth has not been accompanied by the appearance of a suitable number of leaders
that can cope with it at ideological, educational and political levels.
This is a situation that the current readerships have to bear in mind and prepare for in
the next phase.
The first
fact that should be taken into consideration here is that being faithful to the
Call, making sacrifices for its sake or being among the first to enter its field are not
the only qualifications for leadership of the Islamic Movement, though they have their
weight as points in favor of candidates and have their own value before Allah and in the
eyes of people.
The required type of leadership should enjoy certain mental, psychological and practical
abilities in addition to the traditional prerequisites of morals, behavior and faith.
By leadership, I do not mean the figure at the top of the hierarchy, but rather the group
that plans for work, launches the work and directs and controls it and gets out the best
in those working under its command, so as to divert them from destruction to construction;
from argument to work; and from idleness to serious endeavor.
Those who were first to assume leadership should not stand in the way of new leaders,
thinking that leadership is a lifelong right that is invalidated only by death, thus
denying the youthful talents and young abilities the opportunity to come into the light.
We have to abandon the idea that leaders are selected for life, like the Rightly Guided
Caliphs, whom we were commanded to take as an example.
In fact, such historical precedents are not a law that the Nation should observe until the
Day of Judgment, and we have discussed this point elsewhere.
However, what matters here is that we should, even must, prepare the readerships required
for the coming phase, so as to ensure that there will stand at the helm only those leaders
who are strong, honest, dependable and knowledgeable.
We must prepare ideological, educational and political readerships.
This is what we must seriously think of, taking the practical steps and measures to
achieve. We have to bring it about from theory to application.
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I suggest, for this purpose, that an institute
be established for preparing Islamic leaders. Its students should be selected from among
the faithful talented elements who possess the required mental, psychological, behavioral
and belief related qualities. They should also be recommended by prominent figures known
to be good judge of men. They should also sit for written and oral examinations of various
kinds before they are admitted to this institute.
The institute had better be a boarding school type, so that the students may live as
a community in it, leading a life in which religion, knowledge, the Call, brotherhood and
jihad will be the basic elements.
The curricula of this institute should be comprehensive, profound and diversified,
combining traditions with contemporary knowledge, mixing religion with human sciences from
an Islamic perspective, and giving due attention to the study of the local, Arab, Islamic
and international state of affairs, with emphasis on the examination and analysis of the
forces opposing our religion, our Nation and our march. This institute should combine
knowledge and work, theory and practice.
The faculty to teach these curricula should be selected from among trustworthy professors
who combine high qualifications with mature thought and true belief. They should be far
from being either lax or extreme. There should exist among them an integration and a
coordination that would ensure that none of them would tear down what another has built,
and that there would not be among them Accidentalists and Orientalists or Rightists and
Leftists who would wreak contradiction, confusion of thinking and disturbance in the
character formation process among the students.
However, I do not mean that the great professors we should seek should be replicas of one
another: I only mean that there should be a harmony among them in terms of the general way
of thinking of major issues and in terms of the general philosophy that will be adopted in
the institute. At this point I would 1ike to discuss
some of the features of the ideology we should established through this ambitious
endeavor.
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What I would like to assert beyond any doubt
or ambiguity is that besides the belief based education that is the foundation of the
moral upbringing of future leaders of the Islamic Movement, there should be a strong
ideological education that is based on the sort of 'fiqh" explained earlier, which we
want for the Movement in its days to come.
Belief, to us Muslims, is not against reason or intellect. On the contrary, it is based on
and fed by reason, and the believers are described in the Quran as "men of
understanding", and the Quran is meant to give signs to "people who
understand" or " people who ponder". Reason to the prominent intellectuals
of the Nation is the basis of all [inherited] revealed knowledge, for without it nobody
could have proved the existence of Allah or the validity of prophethood.
Through the instructions it contains, the Quran has laid down the foundation of the
"scientific mentality" which worships Allah superstitions and denounces the
imitation of forefathers or prominent figures.
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The ideology on which our aspired education is
based has specific features that should be sought and established by teachers and driven
home by educational curricula.
First, this ideology is scientific in the full sense of the word.
By " scientific ", we do not mean that it is scientific as related to abstract
and applied sciences though they are a field that should be sought by Muslims by all
means but rather that it is an ideology that would not accept any claim without proof,
any result without preamble, any evidence without documentation or any preamble that is
not totally free from suspicion.
We want "scientific thinking" and scientific spirit'' to guide our life in every
way, so that we may view things, issues, situations and people in a scientific way, and
pass our tactical and strategic decisions on issues related to economy, politics,
education and other fields with a scientific mentality that is free from the influence of
emotions, improvisation, self centeredness, herd effect and the many diversified
pretexts given for everything today. Such adverse factors have come to dominate our
behavior to a great extent. A decision maker who is under the influence of his or his
party's whims will only be seeking to appease the public by doing what they like, not what
is good for them and their future in their homeland and their Nation as a whole.
The "scientific spirit" has major characteristics that I have already dealt with
in my book, "The Islamic Solution: A Farida And A Must" In the course of
"self Criticism" of the Islamic Movement. However, I think it would be better
to recall them here for purposes of reasserting the Nation's need to them, not to imported
"secularism".
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The scientific spirit has many characteristics, the most important of which are
as follows:
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Adopting an objective attitude
towards matters, situations and statements, regardless of who is behind them. Ali Ibn
AbiTalib said, "Do not know Truth by men. Know Truth, and you will easily know the
men who belong to it"
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Respecting specialization. The
Quran says, (Ask of
those who possess the Message) [Surat AlNahl: 43] (Ask, then, about Him of any
acquainted [with such things]) [Surat AlFurqan: 59] and (And none [O man!]
can inform you like Him who is AllAware) [Surat Fatir: 14]. Religion has its own experts, as do
economics, military affairs and other branches of knowledge,
especially in this age of ours, here specialized knowledge is the rule. He who knows
religion, politics, economics, arts and military arts, giving his opinion on everything,
is a jack of all trades who is a master of none.
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Having the ability of self-criticism, admission of mistakes and learning from them and evaluating past
experiences under a fair light that is not dimmed by the "glory seeking" view
which sees the past only as being full of glories and victories.
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Employing the latest and best
techniques so as to ensure success, and learning from the experience of others, including
enemies. Wisdom is a believer's quarry, wherever he finds it, he is more worthy of it than
any other man.
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Subjecting everything, except
religious and ideological incontestable facts, to tests and accepting the outcome
regardless of whether it is in one's favor or not.
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Avoiding haste in passing decisions
and judgments, and adopting attitudes only after a careful study based on examination and
evaluation and only after a constructive dialogue [with the other side] that would reveal
shortcomings and advantages [of the issue being discussed].
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Appreciating the other view and
respecting the opinions of those who adopt contradictory attitudes towards multifaceted
issues in fiqh and all branches of knowledge, so long as each has his own evidence and
argument, and so long as the point at issue is not decided by a clear text that would
preclude any dispute. Our 'ulema' have established that there is no ban on an ijtihad
based opinion, as no one who tries to come out with a judgment based on ijtihad should
be regarded as better than another. However, this should not prevent constructive dialogue
and academic, impartial verification in an atmosphere of tolerance and love.
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It is against the
scientific way of thinking to oversimplify complicated issues, underrate serious issues,
view difficult problems with an alarming superficiality or deal with major issues with the
mentality of the uneducated and the practices of the dervishes.
It is detrimental to our thinking that we should see behind anything that we do not like
those invisible hands and evil foreign powers that had masterminded our plight wickedly
and waited patiently until we stepped into the trap of our own accord. This may be true in
some cases, but it is wrong to generalize it.
This explanation of events in our history to be the results of schemes and conspiracies,
regardless of whether the events in our countries are political, economic, social or
cultural, only bears two bad fruits:
First, if such a feeling escalates, it breeds a sense of "fatalism": that
there is nothing we can do about these satanic schemes because of the gigantic financial
and intellectual capabilities of the forces of them and our own weaknesses and
shortcomings. This way, we become "chessmen on a chessboard", as is often said.
Such a feeling would breed only despair and a destructive sense of defeat.
Second, this attitude prevents us from
self-criticism and precludes any sincere
attempt to understand our deficiencies, remedy our ailments or examine our failures and
sins. It impedes any effort to look for the causes of our diseases so that we may find a
cure for them. This situation will remain as long as any deficiency, neglect, corruption
or ruin is seen as the result of a devious foreign scheme, not as the consequence of our
own behavior.
We had often adopted this attitude despite the fact that the Quran teaches us to blame
only ourselves whenever we are met by a misfortune or are the target of a calamity or a
defeat, as Allah the Almighty says, (Whatever
misfortune happens to you, is because of the things your hands have wrought, and for many
[a sin] He grants forgiveness) [Surat AlShura: 30].
After the Muslims had been struck by the calamity of losing seventy of their heroes in the
Battle of Uhud while they had scored a dazzling victory in the Battle of
Badr, they asked
themselves what the reason was. The answer was sent down by Allah in (What! When a single disaster smites you,
although you smote your enemies with one twice as great, do you say? "Whence is
this?" Say [to them]: It is from yourselves) [Surat AlImran: 165]
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Among the characteristics of the scientific ideology we
want for the Islamic Movement in the next phase is that it is based on reality, not on
illusion or dreams.
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One of the realities we have to etch on our
minds is that we should balance our ambitions with our capabilities and weigh what we wish
against what we can actually get, so that we may not commit ourselves to matters for which
we are not prepared or for which we do not possess the necessary tools.
The Holy Quran includes an authorization for a warrior to turn his back to battle if
"he is trying to execute a stratagem of war or retreat to a troop of his own
people".
A warrior is also authorized to withdraw from battle when the situation is not in his
favor as a result of the presence of large enemy numbers that are more than double the
number of the Muslim army: (For the
present, Allah has lightened your [burden], for He knows that there is a weak spot in you:
But [even so], if there are a hundred of you, patient and persevering, they will vanquish
two hundred, and if a thousand, they will vanquish two thousand, with the leave of Allah:
for Allah is with those who patiently persevere) [Surat
AlAnfal: 66].
In the Battle of Mu'ta, the Roman Army was many times the number of the Muslim Army (the
Muslims were 3,000 against 150,000 Romans). This correlation of troops made the military
genius Khalid Ibn AlWalid plan for the Muslims withdrawal to safety, preferring that to
throwing his army into a battle that would be more like suicide.
When he returned with his companions to Medina, the enthusiastic Muslim youths received
them by throwing stones at them, describing them as the deserters", but the Prophet
defended them saying, "No, they will be the attackers by the will) of Allah".
A wise commander is that who cares for his troops lives. This is what made Omar Ibn
AlKhattab early in his reign reluctant to invade the Byzantines, saying to those who
urged him to do so, "By Allah, a single Muslim is dearer to me than the Byzantines
Empire and all [the wealth] that it has"!
A wise Muslim is that who does not get himself involved in things he cannot undertake.
Allah the Almighty says, (So fear
Allah as much as you can) [Surat AlTaghabun: 16].
It is said in the hadith ("A Muslim should not humiliate himself", [said the
Prophet]. "How could he humiliate himself, O Allah's Messenger?" [asked the
people] "By shouldering such ordeal he cannot carry", [answered the Prophet]).
A mistake that the Islamic Movement could easily make is to be driven by the emotions
of the common people in making vital decisions.
In some countries, the Muslim masses may push some of the Movement's leaders into the
political battle where they
would be fighting with all their might before they are fully in possession of the mental,
political and specialized abilities required for that task. In so doing, these leaders
would be shouldering more than they can carry, which is sure prescription for failure.
Such failure is the result of haste, miscalculation, overestimation of one's abilities and
underestimation of the abilities of others.
We have before us the example of the Prophet when he denied his Companions in Mecca
permission to initiate an armed clash with the polytheists, even when they were being
harmed and tortured. He used to say, ( Hold back hands from fight and establish prayer).
The Prophet followed that practice until Allah provided for him a free land and a solid
base for launching his operations, whence he started jihad and launched battle. It was
then that Allah the Almighty sent down His Words: (To those against whom war is made, permission is given [to fight],
because they are wronged; and verily, Allah is Most Powerful for their aid) [Surat
Al-Hajj: 39].
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We want the new ideology to make us bury old
problems that have preoccupied Muslim minds and wasted Muslim efforts for some time, such
as the problem of divine entity and qualities; attributes are the divine attributes the
very divine essence, or rather something else? Or are those attributes neither essence nor
anything else? The problem of whether, the Quran was "created" and the ensuing
ordeals to which a number of Islam's prominent Imams were subjected; the unneeded
exaggeration in raising controversies about Ta'wil (exploring hidden meanings in
interpreting religious texts) between early and later generations; the attempts to refute
the tenets of Asharites, Maturidites and their proponents among the Muslim world's
religious universities scholars of AlAzhar, AlZaytuna, AlQarawiyyin,
Diobard, etc.
None of those problems should be allowed to preoccupy the minds we prepare for the next
phase to face up to Zionists, Crusaders, Marxists and advocates of destructive
philosophies that blow on our Nation from East and West alike.
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The realistic ideology we need is one
that focuses on construction and work, not on haggling and debate. For when Allah wants
to punish people, He preoccupies them with debate and denies them [serious] work.
By debate, I mean debate on problems that are historical, purely hypothetical or have a
controversial nature.
A debate that we do not need, or would not benefit from today is that debate which is
raised from time to time about the nature of military jihad (fighting) in Islam: whether
it is a "defensive" Jihad for defending Islam's creed, sanctums and territories,
or an "offensive" Jihad for spreading Islam in the world.
Many of the contemporary scholars wrote on this topic, and have been divided into two
groups as follows:
Those who adopted the first opinion [that jihad should be defensive] include: Sayyed
Rashid Reda, Sheikh Mahmoud Shaltut, Sheikh Mohammad Abdallah Diraz, Sheikh AbdelWahab
Khallaf, Sheikh Mohammad AbuZahra, Sheikh Mohammad AlGhazali and Sheikh Abdallah
IbnZeid AlMahmoud.
Their argument is based on many verses from the Holy Quran, such as, (Fight in the Cause of Allah those who fight you
but do not transgress limits, for Allah does not love transgressors) [Surat Al-Baqara:
190]; and (Therefore if they withdraw from you but do not fight you and [instead] send you
[guarantees] of peace, then Allah has opened no way for you [to war against them]) [Surat
AlNisa: 90] etc.
The second group includes Allama Abul A'la
AlMawdoudi, Imam Sayyed Qutb and
others.
Their argument is based on what they call "the Verse of the Sword" which to
their claim, has abrogated all the
verses that preceded it and were representing a phase that had ended. However, they have
differed over the Verse of the Sword itself, being unable to determine unanimously which
verse it is in the Quran.
I believe that there is no call for this fierce controversy over this issue at present,
for three reasons:
First: we Muslims have not discharged the duty of jihad that is compulsory for
everyone of us in many Islamic countries to liberate the Muslim land from usurpers and
aggressors in Palestine, Eritrea, the Philippines, Afghanistan, Tashkent,
Bukhara, Samarkand, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan and other Muslim republics (and cities) of the Soviet
Union, and other similar places in China, Ethiopia and Thailand, etc. No Muslim can argue
against the necessity of rescuing them from the hands of antiIslamic forces, and Allah's
judgment in the Holy Quran included in the following verse applies to them, (And why should not you fight in the cause of Allah
and of those who, being weak, are illtreated [and oppressed]? Men, women and children
whose cry is, "Our Lord! Rescue us from this town, whose people are oppressors, and
raise for us from You one who will protect, and raise for us from you one who will
help!") And why should not you fight in the cause of Allah
and of those who, being weak, are illtreated [and oppressed]? Men, women and children
whose cry is, "Our Lord! Rescue us from this town, whose people are oppressors, and
raise for us from You one who will protect, and raise for us from you one who will
help!") And why should not you fight in the cause of Allah
and of those who, being weak, are ill-treated [and oppressed]? Men, women and children
whose cry is, "Our Lord! Rescue us from this town, whose people are oppressors, and
raise for us from You one who will protect, and raise for us from you one who will
help!") [Surat AlNisa': 75].
The Muslim Nation has not carried out this compulsory defensive duty, so how can it talk
now of offensive jihad?
Second:
offensive jihad, to those who advocate it, is removing the forces that block
the path of Allah's servants and have taken it upon themselves to prevent Muslims from
conveying the Word of Allah to people.
But no force can stand in our way today if we act in earnest and devote our efforts to
conveying our Call to the whole world. The spoken, written and televised word can be
spread all over the world in all languages by radio, television, book, messages, the Press
and the Muslim communities in all countries of the world.
However, we are the most abysmally negligent people in this respect, if we compare our
efforts to those of the men of Christian missionization and what they do to promulgate
their doctrine and translate their Bibles to languages and dialects that may be counted by
the thousand, sending their missionaries, male and female, to the four corners of the
earth in hundreds of thousands, to the extent that they now aspire to convert us to
Christianity so that we may follow their creed!!
Third: we depend on others for military power. Those against whom we want
to launch our offensive jihad are the same people who make all sorts of weapons and sell
them to us. But for them, we would be unarmed, defenseless and unable to do anything!
That being the case, how can we talk of launching offensives to subject the whole world to
our Message, when the only weapons we can muster are those given us by them and when the
only arms we can carry are those they agree to sell us?
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Among the characteristics of this ideology is that it is a
traditionalist ideology.
By traditionalist here we mean that it should be an intellectual methodology based on an
application of the understanding of the provisions of the Quran and the guidelines of
Sunna by the best generations of the Umma; the Prophet's Companions and those who followed
correctly on their path.
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This
methodology is generally based on the following principles and fundamentals:
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Judging by the infallible texts, not
by men's sayings.
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Having recourse, in determining the
meaning of the intricate (texts), to the perspicuous ones of the inconclusive ones to the
conclusive ones.
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Understanding secondary concepts and
subsidiary judgments in the light of the principles and generalities.
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Advocating ijtihad (personal
reasoning) and renewal, and denouncing rigidity and imitation.
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Advocating commitment (to proper
conduct), not looseness, in the field of morals.
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Advocating facilitation, not
complication. in the field of jurisprudence.
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Advocating tabshir (being affable to
people and giving them a nice and kind example) rather than tanfir (scaring them away by
behaving harshly with them) in the field of guidance.
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Devoting attention to the
cultivation of true and firm belief, not argumentation, h1 the field of faith.
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Devoting attention to content, not
form, in the field of worship.
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Paying attention to adherence to
rules in religious matters, and innovation of rules in earthly matters.
This is the essence of the methodology followed by the
early believers and applied in the theoretical and practical education of the cream of
this nation's generations, who were praised by Allah in the Holy Quran and by the Prophet
in the hadith, and proved to be worthy of that praise as told by history, for they have
handed down to their successors the Holy Quran after they had led a life in which they
kept the approved practices, accomplished conquests, spread justice and goodwill,
established the State of science and belief and laid the foundations of a universal,
moralistic, humanitarian and religious civilization whose memory is still alive in
history.
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The term salafiyya (traditionalism) has been
wronged by its proponents and opponents alike.
Its proponents those who are claimed by people and by themselves to be its proponents,
or many of them, to be precise have confined this methodology to a framework of
formalities and polemics on issues of scholastic theology, jurisprudence or Sufism. They
spend their days and stay awake all night in a relentless attack against anyone who goes
against their opinion on any of these issues or refutes their judgment on any particular
detail.
Their attitude has become so absurd that some people now think of traditionalism as the
methodology of polemics, not construction and work, or that it focuses on details at the
expense of generalities; on disputed concepts at the expense of approved concepts; on form
and letter at the expense of content and spirit.
The opponents of traditionalism, on the other hand, describe it as being
"backward" always looking back but never going ahead, and never caring for
the present or the future. They also describe it as being fanatic, never listening or even
paying attention to the other opinion, as they regard it to be against renewal, innovation
and ijtihad and also far from moderation. In fact, this is an injustice to real
traditionalism and to its true advocates.
Perhaps the most prominent advocates of traditionalism in old times were Sheikh AlIslam
Ibn Taymia and his disciple Ibn AlQayyam.
They were truly the most worthy of being representatives of the Islamic revivalist
movement in their time, for theirs was an all encompassing renewal of the sciences of
Islam.
They stood in the face of blind imitation and the ideological, theological and
jurisprudential fanaticism that had been dominating Islamic thought for several centuries.
However, although they had stood against the fanatic methodology of imitation, they did
give the imams of the schools of jurisprudence their due share of respect and esteem, as
manifested in Ibn Taymia's treatise, "Lifting The Blame Off Prominent Imams".
Moreover, in their campaign against the ideological and doctrinal aberrations, especially
by the proponents of hulul and ijtihad and behavioral deviations that had infiltrated into
Sufism, at the hands of the ignorant, the imposters and the mercenary people, Ibn Taymia
and Ibn AlQayyem did do justice to true Sufism, and paid tribute to its faithful
advocates. They produced much literature in this field, including two volumes containing
the fatwas (Islamic legal opinions) of Ibn Taymia and a number of books by Ibn
AlQayyem, the most famous of which are "Madarij alSalikin", Sharh
"Manazil alSa'irin" ("The Pathway of The Travelers", a commentary
on "The Stations of The Walkers") in three volumes.
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I have
to emphasize here that you should adopt the methodology of early Muslims, not just apply
their judgments on spdetails, as you could apply their judgments on some details but know
nothing of their balanced, integrated, all encompassing methodology.
You could also apply the spirit of this methodology and seek its goals while differing
with some of the opinions given by early Muslims.
This is how I stand from Imam Ibn Taymia and Imam Ibn AlQayyem: I do respect and
appreciate their overall methodology, but that does not make me accept all that they say.
If I accepted all that they say, I would be imitating them in everything, and thus
violating the very methodology which they advocated and for which they had to contend with
so much trouble and opposition, for their methodology called for contemplation, judging by
proof and weighing by the judgment itself, not by its author.
How can one be right in criticizing those who imitate AbuHanifa and Malik in one is
himself imitating IbnTaymia or Ibn AlQayyem?
It would also be unfair to the two Imams to mention only the academic and intellectual
part of their lives and ignore the
other bright sides of their active lives.
We should not ignore the righteous trait that made a man like IbnTaymia say,
"Sometimes I say: "if the people of the Garden are leading a life like mine,
then they should be leading a good life!".
We should also remember that it was the same trait that
made him say in his distress and captivity, "What [harm] can my enemies do to me? My
captivity is a seclusion [for worship], my banishment is religious travel, and my murder
is martyrdom!"
He was a man of godly taste, and so was his disciple Ibn AlQayyom, as must be realized
by anyone who reads their literature with attention and good faith.
Moreover, we should never ignore the aspect of helping the Call and jihad in the lives of
the two Imams. IbnTaymia took part in some of military battles himself, fighting with
his hands and raking the flames of enthusiasm in the hearts of other warriors with his
words. The two Imams lived in a continuous struggle for renewing Islam, going to prison
several times on account of their zealous efforts, until Sheikh AlIslam Ibn Taymia died
in prison in the year 728 A.H.
This is what true traditionalism is!
If we examine our contemporary history, we will find that
the most prominent scholar who advocated traditionalism in his articles, his books and his
magazine, which carried the flag of modern traditionalism, was Allama Mohammad Rashid
Reda, owner of the "AlManar" magazine, in which he published the
"AlManar Interpretation" (of the Holy Quran), and which was famous all over
the Muslim World.
Imam Mohammad Rashid Reda was the true renewer of Islam of his time. Anyone who reads his
"Interpretation", his "fatwas" or his books such as "The
Inspiration Of Mohammad", "the Facility Of Islam", "A Call To The Fair
Sex", "The Caliphate", "The Arguments Of The Reformer And The
Imitator" and many other books and articles, will certainly realize that the man's
thought was a real "lighthouse" [manar, the name of the magazine] that has
guided the ship of Islam in modern history. The man's practical life was a real
application of his traditionalist ideology.
Imam Reda was the originator of the golden rule which was adopted later by Imam Hassan
AlBanna, namely, "We should cooperate in what we agree upon, and find excuses for
each other in what we differ on". What a marvelous rule, if only it could be
properly understood and applied by those who claim to be advocates of traditionalism.
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Another characteristic of the ideology we want is that it
is revivalistic and would not be confined to the boundaries of the "old", nor
would it adhere to inherited forms or accustomed means. It is an ideology that believes in
ijtihad and adopts creativity, as it rejects imitation and subordination and sees
stagnation as death itself. It renews jurisprudence, education, politics and all other
fields.
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There is no contradiction between revivalism
and traditionalism, as I explained in my book "The Islamic Awakening And The Woes Of
The ArabMuslim world". On the contrary, the two of them are two faces of the same
coin: revivalism is true only when it is traditionalist, and traditionalism is true only
when it is revivalistic.
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We should never say that the Movement is
Islamic in it`; origin, direction, goals and principles, that Islam is only one thing that
is fixed and cannot be renewed. First, we say that Islam itself approves of [the legitimacy of] revival,
as told in the accepted and verified hadith (Allah shall send [a man] who will revive the religion of this Nation at
the start of every hundred years) [AbuDawud & AlHakim].
Revival is legitimate and required by hadith, and what .say could be better than the
Prophet's'?
We should not be intimidated by the term revival in religion, now that it has proven to be
stated in the [accepted] hadith. What we should do here is to determine the meaning of
"revival" so that no manipulators would manipulate the religion in the name of
their so-called revival while they are far from revival as can be.
I have explained in a study I had written on this hadith the meaning of
"revival". its aspects and who should undertake it. In short, reviving something
does not mean eliminating it and substituting something for it, but means restoring it as
much as possible to the shape it was in when it first emerged into existence, and
maintaining its essence, characteristics and features to the minutes" detail without
altering them in the least.
This applies to both the concrete and abstract senses. Renovating an ancient building,
such as a palace, a temple or a mosque, does not mean demolishing it and building another
in its place along the latest lines of construction, but rather means restoring it and
taking every care to return it to its original state as much as possible. This is what
true revival is.
Revival of religion includes the renewal of its understanding its fiqh, which is
an ideological revival; renewing
belief in it, which is a spiritual one; and renewing the effort for its help and the call
for its promulgation, which is a practical one.
Each age requires its own type of revival that addresses the deficiencies and cures the
ailments of this specific age.
However, there is an area that renewal can never enter under any conditions: it is the
area of "conclusive" where Islam has passed its decisive judgment in the
various aspects of doctrine, worship, morals and legislation, which embody the doctrinal,
spiritual, intellectual and behavioral unity of the Muslim Nation.
I have elaborated on this point in other books, which the reader may refer to if he so
wishes.
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Second, we say that the Movement, though it is Islamic in source,
orientation, principle and objective, adopts such methodologies and means as it sees fit
to serve its religion and establish it on the earth, as appropriate to time, place and
conditions.
Methodologies, means and systems are not as immortal as Islam itself. They do not possess
the consistency of Islamic fundamentals and principles, as they are tools produced by
human endeavor and effort for reviving and renewing Islam in the hearts and in life
itself.
Imam Hassan AlBanna, who laid down the first rules of organized work of the Islamic
Movement for the renewal of Islam, did not claim infallibility for himself or for the
tools which Allah inspired him with, despite the fact that his tools were so good and
powerful that it was right for Sayyed Qutb to call them "the genius of building"
and for Guide General Omar AlTelmisani to describe him as "the inspired, talented
leader". and for Sheikh AlGhazali to say that he was "the reviver of the
fourteenth century after Hijra. "These means should be subjected to evaluation from
time to time, just as education experts do to their curricula and reference books,
bringing them up for revision every few years and making a deletion or insertion here and
an amendment there. This is necessary for any human activity, regardless of how close it
may be to accuracy or perfection".
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Hassan AlBanna himself was not stiff, but
was always renewing and developing means and approaches for the Movement's structures,
institutions and systems.
Hassan AlBanna would not turn in his grave if some of his children and followers went
against him in an issue on which he had passed an opinion in the past, such as the
multiparty system in an Islamic state, which I myself have done in one of my studies.
Hassan AlBanna would not do that either if somebody added to his fundamentals others
which that somebody deems as complementary to these fundamentals, which Sheikh AlGhazali
has done in his explanation of the twenty fundamentals in his book entitled "The
Constitution of Cultural Unity For Muslims".
There is nothing legal, traditional or mental that prevents the reconsideration of
educational means and systems inside the group, such as the (Muslim Brotherhood's)
Fraternal Groups and Katiba, with a view to adding new means or systems to them if
appropriate.
It should also be right to reexamine political tools in the light of local, regional and
international changes and developments, which would make it imperative to enter into
fronts or alliances, or resort to truces or partnerships, as dictated by the high
interests of Islam, the Nation and the Movement under the current circumstances. Every
country has its unique conditions, every period has its own rules, and every group has its
own capabilities, imperatives and conditions that are known to it better than to any other
group.
The Islamic Movement, like jurisprudence and other Shariarelated sciences, will not
live, prosper and grow without the minds of studious. creative renewers, and will wither,
shrink and become impotent only through the minds of the stiff imitators, if what they had
in their heads could be called "minds"!
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Stiffness is one of the diseases that afflict
the "systemized" ideologies of the Islamic Movement, and one of the obstacles
that hinder the Movement from within, as I have explained in my book "The Islamic
Solution: A Farida And A Necessity" [Stiffness' its] sticking to a stiff pattern in
organization, stiff methods in education, stiff means in advocating the Call, stiff
procedures in attaining an objective and stiff ideas in pursuing politics, so that anyone
who tries to change or amend these procedures, means and methods finds facing zealous
refusals, even accusations and denunciations.
Once again, I would like to stress that the renewal we seek does not mean the abolition of
the old. it rather means modernizing, improving, upgrading and adding to the old,
especially in terms of tools, means and procedures, which are flexible and changeable,
with a view to making use of' the capabilities afforded by our contemporary age and
possessed, and used. by others. The word of wisdom should always be sought by believers.
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My worst fear for the Islamic Movement is that
it opposes the free thinkers among its children and close the door to renewal and ijtihad
confining itself' to only one type of thinking that does not accept any other viewpoints
which prescribe different objectives. means or phases for the Movement, give a different
assessment of events, situations or men, or differ with that single way of thinking in any
other of the pursuits that fall under human ijtihad. For human ijtihad is always subject
to development and change according to the changing conditions and factors. Our
felyih.`
said long ago, "A fatwa must change with the change of time. place, customs and
conditions". If my fear turns into reality, then the capable minds that can renew and
innovate will escape from the ranks of the Movement like water through fingers. leaving
behind those conservatives who can only imitate and who like everything to stay as it is
regardless of how ancient it is, as they believe that what we know is better than what we
do not know and that what we have tried should be better than what we have yet to try.
The end result will be for the Movement to lose the creative minds among its ranks and
eventually fall prey to stagnation, or to an impotence that afflicted jurisprudence and
literature in the ages of imitation. The remaining members of the Movement will then creep
into their shells, despairing of any fruitful effort to help Islam, or they will work
individually, disassociating themselves from any collective effort, or they will throw
themselves with others in another collective venture whose consequences are unknown.
The worst damage to Muslim minds in all ages, past and present, has been done by that
adage which says, "The predecessors have left nothing to be added by the
successors"! or, in other words," It cannot be better"!
There is nothing that can benefit Muslim minds now more than the adoption of a contrary
adage saying, "The predecessors have left a lot to be added by the successors"!
or. "It can always be better!" (And He has created [other] things of which you have no knowledge) [Surat
AlNahl:8].
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Another characteristic of the ideology we seek is that it
is balanced in its objectives and orientation, for it is an ideology that reflects an
intermediate, balanced, comprehensive attitude towards people and life, a balanced
attitude of an evenly balanced nation that is far from being extremist or negligent.
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The even balance of
this ideology is evident in its attitude towards important major issues, as follows:
It is balanced between the advocates of strict M a d h habiyyoh (adherence, in theology,
jurisprudence, etc., to one certain school of Islamic law, such as the
Malikite, Hanafite,
etc.) and the advocates of loose nonMadhhabiyyah (freeing oneself from any abidance by
rules of whatever school of Muslim law).
It is balanced between those who support Sufism regardless of whether it deviates or
invents, and those who oppose Sufism regardless of whether it is proper and abiding (by
Shari'ah).
It is balanced between the advocates of an uncontrolled
open-door policy, and the
advocates of an unjustified closed door policy.
It is balanced between those who refer to reason even if it goes against conclusive text,
and those who never refer to reason even in understanding the text.
It is balanced between those who regard heritage as sacred even if it shows human
failures, and those who disregard heritage even when it shows signs of heavenly
inspiration.
It is balanced between those who indulge in politics at the expense of education, and
those who neglect politics completely on the pretext of devotion to education.
It is balanced between those who hurry to pick the fruit before it is ripe, and those who
fail to see it until it falls into the hands of others after it becomes ripe.
It is balanced between those who are preoccupied with the present and do not heed the
future, and those who exaggerate in foreseeing into the future as if they were reading
from a book.
It is balanced between those who regard organizational structures as idols to be
worshipped, and those who shirk any organized work as if they were beads in a broken
string.
It is balanced between those who go to an extreme in obeying a sheikh or a leader, as if
they were dead men committed to the hands of the washer, and those who behave with such
freedom as if they were not members of a group.
It is balanced between the advocates of worldwide action without regard to local
conditions, and the advocates of narrow regional action that has no connection with the
world movement.
It is balanced between the overly optimistic who disregard obstacles and dangers, and the
overly pessimistic who see nothing but darkness and never hope for the break of dawn.
And it is balanced between those who go to an extreme in
forbidding as if there were nothing halal in this world, and those who exaggerate in
allowing as if there were nothing haram in it.
This is the balanced ideology we seek. However, the rule in our societies today is to go
to either extreme, and the exceptions are few!
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Some Islamists can see only two colors: black and white. They know no other
colors, nor can they see any of the original and mixed colors that other people can see
and which have countless shades.
Some of these people restrict all colors, and life itself, to only one colorblack.
They see people and things through a black film that covers their eyes.
It is through this black, pessimistic look that they have formulated ready answers for
every question, which they launch like missiles, not caring whom or what they hit.
[To them] the whole society is (as) pagan (as the
preIslamic people), Everything in life is a sin;
All people are either unbelievers
or hypocrites;
The world is full of monsters;
The universe is full of evil.
[In their eyes] everything that people do in their
contemporary life is haram and nothing else:
All singing is haram;
All music is haram;
All acting is haram;
The theatre is haram;
All art is haram,
They venture in their judgments, despite the fact that our
predecessors were very careful not to use the word "haram" to describe anything
except what they knew to be haram beyond any doubt. That is why two Quranic verses
denounced wine in Surat AlBaqara: (They
ask you concerning wine and gambling. Say, "In them is great sin and some profit, for
men, but the sin is greater than the profit") (219) and in Surat AlNisa'): (Do not
approach prayer in a state of intoxication) (43),
but some of the Prophet's companions continued drinking it, and some said "O Allah,
send down to us a decisive judgment on wine", and the decisive verse was sent down in
Surat Al Ma'ida: (Avoid [such
abomination] that you may prosper)(90).
We have to admit that the past period, especially the 1950's and 1960's, was a rich
breeding ground for a certain type of dark ideas that proliferated in the Islamic fore, to
the extent that the predominant way of thinking was one that advocated rejection of
everything, pessimism and suspicion and accusation of others regardless of their beliefs
and tendencies, including Muslims.
Yes! The idea of judging others as sinners and heretics, even unbelievers, found a very
rich breeding ground, and was helped to grow and proliferate by the oppressive environment
in which the Islamic Movement and its advocates lived at that time. In that period, the
advocates of the Islamic movement were hanged in public, tortured to death in secret or
subjected to all kinds of persecution, while the doors were opened wide to communists,
secularists and enemies of Islam from every color.
It was in that period that the books of Sayyed Qutb, which reflected the last phase in his
thought, were published. They were full of ideas that advocated branding society as an
unbelieving society, advised the postponement of calling for an Islamic system, made fun
of the idea of renewing and developing
Islamic jurisprudence and reviving ijtihad, advocated isolation from society as a whole,
called for launching an offensive jihad against all people in general, and made light of
the advocates of tolerance and flexibility, branding them with naively and psychological
defeat in the face of Western civilization.
This trend in Sayyed Qutb's thinking is most evident in his interpretation of the Holy
Quran entitled, 'In The Shade Of The Quran [lit.]" in its second edition, as well as
in his book "Signs Along The Road", most of which was taken from the former
book, and "Islam And The Problems of Civilization", and other books that had
great positive effects but also had negative effects.
There were also the books of Sheikh Said Hawwi. may Allah forgive him and have peace on
him, who advocated the same ideas.
Meanwhile, there emerged a new type of jurisprudence invented by those whom I call
"the neoZahirites [who interpret the Holy Quran according to its literal meaning]
who claim, or are claimed by people, to belong to the school of IbnTaymia and his
disciples, while lbnTaymia and his disciples were as far as can be from "literal
interpretation of the Holy Quran" and never confined themselves to the "forms
and moulds" which these people hold so desperately to.
That was how stiffness and obstinacy came to dominate the Islamic way of thinking and the
tolerant, easy spirit of evenly balanced thinking was forced to give ground for some time.
I believe that the Islamic Movement now has to disentangle itself from the way of thinking
peculiar to times of distress, or crisis, so that it may move on to the moderate, evenly
balanced ideology that expresses the evenly balanced Muslim Nation and the evenly balanced
Islamic way of life, by which Allah intends facility, not difficulty.
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Being evenly balanced goes, in my view, hand
in hand with facilitation, which is a balanced attitude between stiffness and undue
exaggeration in religiosity on the one hand and laxity and looseness on the other.
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The Islamic Movement must
adopt a line of facilitation, not complication, in its jurisprudential opinions regarding
society and its policies, economy, laws, dealings and international relations. I say that
for more than one reason.
First, our
Shari'ah is based on facility, mercy tolerance and elimination of
difficulty and unease as manifested in many texts. Allah the Almighty says after the verse
in which He prescribes fasting: (Allah
intends every facility for you; He does not want to put you to difficulties) [Surat
AlBaqara: 185]. At the conclusion of the verse
that prescribes Tahara [cleanliness] we find (Allah does not wish to place you in a difficulty) [Surat AlMai'ida:
6]. After the judgments on marriage and forbidden liaisons, Allah says,
(Allah wishes
to lighten your [burdens], for Man was created weak [in flesh])
[Surat AlNisa': 28]. In the context of prescribing equality in cases of murder and the
remission related to that, He says, (This
is a concession and a mercy from your Lord) [Surat AlBaqara: 178].Our noble Prophet says, (render matters easy, not difficult)
[Bukhari & Muslim] and, (You are
sent to facilitate matters, not make them difficult)
[AlTirmidhi].
When Amr Ibn Al-As was afflicted by janaba [a ceremonial] impurity on a cold night, he
performed prayer without performing ghusl [ritual bathing]. The people who were with him
complained to the Prophet, and Amr defended himself saying, "I remembered the saying
of Allah, (Nor kill yourselves, for
verily Allah has been to you Most Merciful) [Surat AlNisa': 29], and the Prophet smiled. But the Prophet very strongly denounced the
attitude of some people who opined that a wounded man who had had a janaba must perform
ghusl, and the man bathed and died as a result of their cruel opinion. The Prophet said,
(They killed him, may Allah kill them! Why
did not they ask when they did not know? The cure for him who does not know is to ask. It
was enough for him to tie a bandage around his wound and perform tayammum [striking
lightly with hands over clean earth, then passing the palm of each hand over the back of
the other, blowing off the dust and then passing them over the face. This is performed
instead of ablution when water is not available or when it is feared that water will be
harmful for some reason]) ' [reported by AbuDawud, on the authority of
Jabir. and by Ahmad, AbuDawud and AlHakim, on the
authority of IbnAbbas. The hadith is also in "Sahih alJam) AlSaghir"].
Second, in this age of ours, people are in as dire a need as they could
ever be for facilitation, out of mercy to them, for their will has eroded and they have
become reluctant to pursue the ways of good and charity, as their motives for
philanthropic deeds have become less while their motives for doing evil have increased.
It is, therefore, more advisable to give people license of facility instead of ordering
them to follow the strictest rules in religious rites. This was what the Prophet did with
the people who had taken up Islam recently, or with the bedoiuns of the desert. The
Prophet used to accept those who vowed not to perform, over and above the basic
faridas,
any other voluntary acts of worship, saying about any of them, "He would fare well if
he was good as his word", "He would go to the Garden if he kept his
promise", or "If any of you wants to see one of the people of the Garden, let
him look at this man".
The Prophet only did that out of kindness to such people
and consideration of their shard] circumstances.
Third, an individual may impose on himself the hardest conditions if he so wishes,
testing his will to the limit, though moderation is the best and most appropriate way as
the Prophet says, (Allah likes
people to take the [facilitation] licenses He gave them as He hates their
committing of sins [that anger Him]) reported by Ahmad, Ibn Hibban and
AlBayhagi, on
the authority of IbnOmar. It is also in the "Sahih alJam)' alSaghir"]. However, a faqih should not impose hard conditions on Muslims in the
matters that concern the wide majority: he has to take into account that among them are
the weak, the old and those who have lawful reasons for exception. A hadith says about
leading congregational prayers, (He
who acts as imam [leader] in prayer should make his prayer short, for among the people
[behind the imam] are the old, the ill and those with errands to run). Prayer is a symbol of the various aspects of life.
Therefore, the faqihs of the Islamic Movement just cannot adopt strict opinions that
restrict and do not facilitate, and prohibit but do not allow, especially with respect to
the issues related to women, family, arts, entertainment and their likes. It also applies to penal codes, where the least punishment should be
imposed, including the opinion that the repentance rescinds the hadd, the opinion that the
punishment for drinking wine is a discretionary one, and so on.
I would like our motto in this phase to be the statement of Imam Sufian
AlThawri,
"Only the trustworthy faqihs can give licenses, but everybody knows how to
pass a restraining pinion " .
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One of the characteristics of the ideology we want for the
Islamic Movement is that it is a futuristic ideology that always looks into the future and
does not confine itself to the present. It is not strange that the Islamic Movement should
care about the future, for this is the logic of [slam, as manifested in the Quran and the
Sunna.
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A careful study of the Holy Quran should make us see that since the Meccan
time, the Quran attracted Muslims' attention to the aspired future, telling them that the
world was changing and circumstances were fluid, with victor becoming vanquished and
weakling becoming a giant, each having his turn [for assuming power] at both regional and
international levels.
Muslims have to put their house in order and prepare themselves for the developments that
will come sooner or later, but come they eventually will.
If we read Surat AlQamar (the moon), which is Meccan, we will find Allah's saying about
the polytheists who were strongly built, large in number and heavily armed:
(Soon will their multitude be put to flight, and
they will show their backs. Nay, the Hour [of judgment] is the time promised them [for
their full recompense]. And that Hour will be most grievous and most bitter) (4546). IbnKathir says in his interpretation of the Holy
Quran that Ikrima said, "When the verse (Soon will their multitude
be put to flight) was sent down, Omar
Ibn AlKhattab asked, which multitude will be put to
flight! On the day of [the battle of Badr, I saw the Prophet moving in his armour and
saying, "Soon will their multitude will be put to flight! I knew then what was meant
by this verse".
AlBukhari says, "Narrated Aisha: Mohammad received in Mecca when I was still a
young girl the Qur'anic verse: (Nay,
the Hour [of Judgment] is the time promised them [for their full recompense]: and that
Hour will be most grievous and most bitter).
Such verses were aimed at preparing the Muslim
mentality and psychology for the inevitable change and the awaited future.
At world level, we find the Holy Quran speaking of that historic conflict between the two
super powers of their time: the Romans and the Persians a conflict that the two groups
in Mecca: the Muslims and the Unbelievers, were concerned about. The Quran promised the
Muslims that the days to come would be dominated by the Romans who were people of the
Book, while the Persians, who worshipped fire, would be vanquished. Surat AlRum asserts:
(Alif Lam Mim. The Romans have been
defeated. In a land close by. But they [even] after [this] defeat of theirs, will soon be
victorious within a few years, with Allah is the command in the past and in the future:
on that day shall the believers rejoice with the help of Allah. He gives victory to
whom He will, and He is Exalted in might, Most Merciful) [15].
These verses tell us two things:
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That the Muslims, small in number
and means as they were, were quite aware of the great events in the world and the
conflicts of the great powers around them and the positive and negative effects of those
conflicts on them.
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That the Holy Quran recorded those
events and attracted the Muslims' attention to the factors of change and the transition
from present to future.
In Surat AlMuzzammil, which is Meccan, we have the last
verse which tells of Allah's lightening of the burden of the Prophet and the Muslims
staying up [in prayer] and reciting the Holy Quran were concerned, as the Prophet and the
Muslims were to be tasked with great missions, meeting with enemies who would fight them
and block their advance on the path of Allah, which required that they save some of their
strength for that meeting which would be forced on them. Allah the Almighty says
(Your Lord knows that you stand forth [to prayer]
nearly twothirds of the night, or half the night, or a third of the night, and so
does a party of those with you. But Allah appoints night and day in due measure. He knows
that you are unable to keep count thereof. So He has turned to you [in mercy]: read,
therefore, of the Quran as much as may be easy for you. He knows that there may be [some]
among you in ill health, others traveling through the land, seeking for Allah's bounty,
and yet others fighting in Allah's cause. Read, therefore, as much of the Quran as may be
easy [for you]) [20].
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[He] who examines the Prophet's sirat carefully should find that the
Prophet was not negligent of the future of his Call, but was always thinking of and
planning for it within the limits of the opportunities presented to him and the tools
bestowed on him by Allah.
It should be enough for us to read about his effort and activity during the hajj
[pilgrimage! seasons had brought members of all the Arab tribes together, and how He
{peace be upon him) used to present the Call to them asking for their support and
promising them the wealth's of the Roman and future.
Persian empires, to know how much he had his eyes on the Prophet believed in two main principles:
First,
that that state of affairs had to change, because it had bred the reasons for its own
disappearance, that its substitute was Islam, and that the dark night of Ignorance should
be followed by a real dawn, and the Muslims had only to stand fast and be patient and not
try to pick the fruit before it was ripe.
When the persecution [by the unbelievers] became too much for the Prophet's Companions in
Mecca, especially the weak among them, Khabbab Ibn AlAratt came to Allah's Messenger
complaining and asking for help. The Prophet was sleeping in the shade of the
Ka'ba.
Khabbab said, "Will you pray Alla to help us, O Allah's Messenger? Messenger?
"The Prophet said, ( There were among those before you some men who would be taken
and buried in holes in the ground, then their skulls would be split in half with saws, and
their flesh would be parted from their bones with combs of iron, but that [torture I would
not turn them away from their religion. By Allah, He shall make this [Islam] complete so
that a caravan would travel from Sanaa to Hadhramout [in Yemen] and the travelers
would
only fear Allah and [guard against] wolves lest they attack their sheep. But you do not
have the patience [to wait to see that come true].
Second, that this aspired future would only come about according to the
[approved] practices of Allah in doing one's duty, preparing oneself as much as possible,
removing obstacles from the way and leaving everything beyond that to Providence, for what
humans cannot do will not be difficult to Allah at all. This was quite evident in the
Prophet's hijra to Medina. The Prophet had chosen his place of hijra in the Arabian
Peninsula, not outside it, like in Abyssinia for instance, for that was the appropriate
place. He took for ansar [supporters] pure Arabs who had pledged to spare and protect him
against what they would spare and protect themselves and their families against. He gave
precedence to the hijra of his Companions, as that would make it easier for them [to leave
Mecca] and because it was more appropriate for him to arrive after them.
After getting Allah's permission, the Prophet prepared the animals he would ride and
sought the companion he would ride with and the guide who would lead him, as well as the
cave he would hide in until the search for him became less intensive and the enthusiasm of
the unbelievers cooled down.
He subjected all his preparations to all the secrecy and precautions that was humanly
possible, and left everything else that he had no control over to Providence.
That was why he had no doubt whatsoever that Allah would help him.
When AbuBakr said to him while they were in the cave, "O Messenger of Allah, if any
of them should look under his feet, he would certainly see us!" The Prophet said,
"AbuBakr, what do you think of two people whose third is Allah?". It was on
this situation that All the Almighty sent down His Words: (If you do not help him [the Prophet], [it is no matter], for
Allah did indeed help him, when the Unbelievers drove him out: he had no more than one
companion. They two were in the Cave, and he said to his Companion, "Have no fear,
for Allah is with us". Then Allah sent down His peace upon him, and strengthened him
with forces which you did not see, and humbled to the depths the word of the Unbelievers.
But the word of Allah is exalted to the heights: for Allah is Exalted in might,
Wise) [Surat AlTawba: 40].
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