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The
long standing political and moral decline of the Muslim Ummah
has reslted, among other things, in a serious distortion of our
very concept of Islam itself. We have grown accustomed to viewing
Islam as a mere religion, instead of using the original
Qur'anic term Deen. This apparently minor change in
semantics is actually a huge leap backwards. This is because the
word religion is commonly used in a rather narrow sense, its scope
being limited to a set of dogmas, some rituals for worship, and
a number of social customs to celebrate important life-events.
Deen, on the other hand, is a system of life in which human beings
consciously surrender to the sovereignty of a higher authority,
and live a life of total obedience to that higher authority. In
this sense, the term Deen can be applied to monarchy, where the
king is accepted as the final authority, or to democracy, where
the people as a whole act as sovereign. Thus, when the term Deen
is used for Islam, it obviously means a system of life where the
Almighty God is worshipped and obeyed, not just in the narrow
religious sense, but in a manner that includes all aspects of
human of life.
A
well-integrated set of beliefs describing the nature of existence
as it really is (Iman), modes of worship including Salat, Zakat,
Saum, and Hajj, as well as social customs and ceremonies
all comprise indispensable and integral parts of Islam. However,
in addition to these religious features, we are also
provided by the Almighty God all the relevant instructions regarding
our social, economic, and political existence (generally considered
to be the secular elements of life), and this is what
really distinguishes Islam from other religions, say, Christianity
or Buddhism. Unfortunately, the majority of our masses are simply,
and perhaps blissfully, unaware of what it really means to be
a Muslim; thus, their concept of religious duties is usually very
narrow and limited. But, as Allama Iqbal has so correctly observed,
you begin to shudder with the fear of accountability once you
realize the tremendous responsibilities that come with being a
Muslim.
When
Islam loses its political authority, it is relegated and dethroned
to the status of a mere religion a private affair of the
individual; and if any particular generation is to revive the
teachings of Islam in the social, economic, and political spheres,
then this is impossible without adopting the same methodology
as was adopted by Prophet Muhammad (SAW). After the independence
of the Muslim lands from direct subjugation of Western Imperialism,
it was naively believed that since political authority now belongs
to the Muslims, the next step, that of implementing the Islamic
values, won't be all that difficult. However, it has been proved
during the last half century or so that the ideal Islamic State
is still very much a dream, and since no short-cuts are available,
we have no alternative except to start at the very beginning.
We must remind the Muslims of their responsibilities. The significance
of this subject is quite clear: We cannot hope to achieve salvation
in the Hereafter without fulfilling all our obligations. Moreover,
we cannot even think about the revival of the Muslim Ummah and
the Renaissance of Islam without first inculcating the true concept
of our Divinely ordained obligations in a significant portion
of the Ummah.
OUR
FIRST OBLIGATION as a Muslim is to develop
real faith and true conviction (or Iman) in the teachings of the
Qur'an as explained by to us by Prophet Muhammad (SAW). The faith
must not be a mere dogma which has little or nothing to do with
the practical aspects of one's life, but it must be a deeply-felt
certitude that changes the whole system of values, ambitions,
and behavior in favor of Islam. Iman can be gained by reading,
comprehending, and pondering over the meaning of Holy Qur'an with
a genuine search for truth. The knowledge of Arabic language is
indispensable for this purpose.
OUR
SECOND OBLIGATION is to live a life of total
obedience to the Almighty God. This duty is described in the Holy
Qur'an as Ibadah, which is often inaccurately translated as worship
or prayers. However, the true meaning of the term Ibadah can only
be understood if we combine two apparently unrelated concepts:
one is surrender, obedience, submission; the other is love, adoration,
devotion. Total and unconditional compliance to all Divine injunctions
is obviously required; at the same time, this compliance ought
to be with a spirit of wholehearted devotion and love for the
Creator.
All
of us need someone or something to love, admire, and adore. Usually,
our lack of knowledge of the one Being worthy of all our love,
admiration, and adoration lead us towards other, less than perfect,
ideals. We start loving various ideologies, like Socialism, or
Liberalism, or Humanism; we sometimes start loving our tribe,
our nation, or our race as the ultimate ideal. The Holy Qur'an
teaches us that the faithful are those who love the Almighty God
over everyone and everything else. When we love our Lord, we find
it easy to obey Him. Sometimes we slip and forget, committing
a sin; the point is to immediately turn back towards the Almighty
God with genuine remorse, and to repent; if we can do this, Divine
forgiveness is guaranteed.
OUR
THIRD OBLIGATION as a Muslim is to preach
and disseminate the word of Almighty Allah (SWT) the Holy
Qur'an and the teachings of his last messenger Muhammad
(SAW) to the whole humanity. What does it involve? Calling people
towards the light of Islam and Iman; enjoining and encouraging
all that is good and just and moral, forbidding all that is evil
and unjust and sinful; exhorting the common people, explaining
the philosophy and wisdom of Islam to the educated and intelligent
classes, debating with the stubborn and the rigid; testifying
to the truthfulness of the message with our behavior and conduct,
our character and morals.
It
is significant to note that communicating and explaining the teachings
of Islam to others is not, as we have erroneously come to believe,
the profession of the Mulla alone, but this is actually
a duty of anyone who claims to be a Muslim. As Prophet Muhammad
(SAW) has ordered, Convey on my behalf, even if it is only
a single verse (of the Qur'an that you know).
This
is because preaching and delivering the message of God to the
entire humanity is actually the responsibility of Prophet Muhammad
(SAW), but now, after his departure and due to the termination
of Prophethood, that sacred obligation has been transferred on
to the shoulders of the Ummah as a whole. This, incidentally,
is the purpose for which the entire Muslim Ummah was created in
the first place, as mentioned in a most emphatic fashion in the
Holy Qur'an: You are the best of people raised for the (guidance
of) mankind; You enjoin the good, forbid the evil, and believe
in Allah (3:110).
Of
course, you cannot convince anyone unless you understand yourself
the message you are trying to preach. Thus, according to another
saying of the Prophet, The best among you are those who
learn (and comprehend) the Qur'an, and then teach (and propagate)
its message.
OUR
FOURTH OBLIGATION as Muslims is to try our
utmost in establishing a polity based on Qur'an and Sunnah and
the Islamic System of Collective Justice, initially in our own
homeland and then, ultimately, over the entire globe. The teachings
of Islam vis-à-vis human society, law, economics, and politics
cannot be implemented without a true and ideal Islamic state in
existence. There are numerous terms to describe this highest of
all our duties: establishing the Deen of Allah, achieving the
domination of Islam, creating on earth the kingdom of God, bringing
about an Islamic Revolution; different phrases, same meaning.
Unless we succeed in creating a real model of what an ideal Islamic
state should look like, all our adulations and glorifications
of Islam would continue to be dismissed by the world as mere Utopian
claims.
What
are we talking about in practical term? An ideal Islamic state
is neither a monarchy nor a theocracy. Instead, we have a vision
of a democratic welfare state, where the sovereignty of the Almighty
God is accepted and enforced at all levels of the state __ executive,
judiciary, and legislature; where no law can be formulated repugnant
to the Qur'an and the Sunnah; and where the elimination of all
forms of injustice, exploitation, and repression is the primary
aim of the government.
The
process of an Islamic Revolution will start from a single country,
and then it would spread to the rest of the globe. Muslims are
obliged to struggle tirelessly in establishing the de facto soverignty
of Almighty God, first in the country where they live, and ultimately
all over the world.
This
comprehensive view of the duties of a Muslim can be very easily
understood by a simple analogy. Consider a three-storied building
which is supported by four pillars. The underground foundation
represents faith or Iman, which remains hidden from the spectators;
the plinth of the building represents Shahadah, or the testimony
of faith on a legal level; the four pillars of the building are
obviously Salat, Zakat, Saum, and Hajj. The first floor represents
our first level of obligation as a Muslim, i.e., to live a life
of total obedience to Almighty God; the second floor is a symbol
for our second level of obligation, i.e., to preach and disseminate
the teachings of Islam; and, finally, the third floor represents
our third level of obligation, to try our very best in establishing
the Deen of Allah in its entirety on a socio-political level.
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