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The
Achievements of the Islamic
Revivalist Struggle
and the Main Task Ahead
Islamic
Revolutionary ThoughtV
Dr.
Israr Ahmad
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(Rendered
into English by Dr. Ahmed Afzaal)
It
is impossible to reflect on the conditions prevailing in Pakistan
without feeling the pain of disappointment and dejection, even
despair. We ponder the past and present of our homeland, and what
do we find? We find a country that owed its very creation to Islam
choosing the path of secularism. We find a country that was meant
to be the starting point for pan-Islamic unity adopting the deadly
path of linguistic, regional, sectarian, and ethnic parochialism.
We find a country that came into existence in order to demonstrate
to the world the practicability of Islam being torn apart by its
own lack of vision and direction. In view of all this, is it any
wonder that apathy and cynicism are rapidly becoming our national
traits?
But
let us not allow ourselves to be overwhelmed by pessimism, and
let us not give up hope. Lack of hope gives rise to volitional
paralysis: an inability to strive, an unwillingness to struggle.
We must focus our attention on the brighter side of the picture
yes, there is a brighter side! and continue
our endeavor to make things better. Indeed, when we consider the
numerous evidences of the Munificence that has been bestowed on
us by the Divine Providence, the dark clouds of gloom and anguish
begin to lift and the vision of the coming age of Islamic ascendancy
begins to brighten up our spirits.
The
first and the most significant manifestation of Divine Benevolence
is the fact that the arduous task of the revitalization of Islamic
social thought and the renewal of the dynamic concept of Islam
has already been completed achieved primarily by Allama
Iqbal and elaborated subsequently by other writers and thinkers.
Thus, the affirmation of the Quranic world-view at the intellectual
level of our times and on the basis of higher mathematics, physics,
and higher psychology has been achieved, albeit in a rudimentary
form, through Iqbals Reconstruction. At the same
time, the various dimensions of the Islamic System of Social Justice
have been elucidated and expounded by Iqbal in his poetry and
by other Islamic thinkers in their writings. Secondly, the independent
Muslim state in the north-west of India, as foreseen by Allama
Iqbal in his 1930 Allahabad address, is still surviving by the
Grace of Almighty Allah (SWT) despite all our blunders
and shortcomings. (The Divine Providence had actually given us
a Pakistan consisting of two regions, and it was nothing but our
own incompetence that led to the loss of former East Pakistan.)
Last, but by no means the least, is the fact that although there
has been no substantial and palpable outcome of the revivalist
effort so far, there is a growing number of Muslims a large
proportion of them being educated young men who have been
motivated by the ideal of Islams revival and domination
and who feel, sincerely and ardently, that to participate in a
collective struggle to achieve this goal is their inescapable
obligation. What we need now, therefore, is to appreciate and
cherish this highly valuable human capital and to continue the
struggle for Islamic renaissance, taking lessons from the errors
and oversights of the preceding generations.
The
most significant task ahead, at the moment, is to keep intact
and alive the Islamic revolutionary thought the active
and dynamic concept of Deen which has been revived in the
present century after a fairly long period of stagnation and neglect.
This task is especially important in view of the fact that the
intellectual milieu of our times is not at all conducive to the
revolutionary concept of religion. Moreover, we need to realize
that the prevailing state of temporary nonsuccess being suffered
by the various revivalist movements is itself a potential threat
to the very credibility of the Islamic revolutionary thought.
Simultaneously, there are some persons with a defeatist mentality
who either abandoned the struggle on their own or were forced
to leave after failing to fulfill the demands of the revivalist
struggle, and who are now bent on harming and discrediting the
dynamic and revolutionary concept of Islam an attitude
that appears to be a morbid psychological reaction on their part.
The
biggest impediment in the propagation of the Islamic revolutionary
thought is the utter lack of support from the surrounding conditions.
The soil is so barren and the atmosphere so polluted that the
very survival of the tree is being threatened from below and from
above. What we mean by this metaphor is that, on the one hand,
an extremely restricted and static conception of religion has
come to dominate the thinking of the majority of Muslims today,
and on the other hand the influence of materialistic philosophies,
secular mode of governance, and of a permissive and libertine
culture are acting as a global envelope from above. It is not
only that both of these factors are hostile and unfriendly to
the dynamic vision of true Islam, but they are also acting in
a symbiotic and cooperative relationship with each other. Thus,
the basic principle of the secular polity is that religion is
the private affair of the individual, and secularism in its "tolerance"
and "broad-mindedness" is perfectly willing to allow
all religions to survive under its umbrella. The only real challenge
to secularism is the Islamic revolutionary thought, the idea that
it is not enough to practice Islam in the personal life unless
the teachings of the Quran and Sunnah are implemented
in their totality in the social, cultural, legal, economic, and
political fields as well. It is the Quranic imperative to
make Islam dominant over all man-made systems of life, all over
the world, that poses the real threat to the secular mode of life.
This is precisely why the secular West is willing to go out of
its way to encourage and patronize the narrow and static concept
of Islam an Islam that restricts itself within the precincts
of the mosque and the seminary. It is only when a Muslim starts
talking about the parliament, the marketplace, and the court that
he is labeled as a dangerous "fundamentalist," even
a "fanatic."
When
the dynamic and revolutionary teachings of Islam started to inspire
and ignite the Muslim consciousness as a result of the
efforts by Allama Iqbal, Maulana Azad, Allama Mashriqi, and Maulana
Maududi the old and stagnant religiosity also reacted and
asserted itself as a "movement." This phenomenon manifested
itself in the form of an effort and activity on such a colossal
level that hundreds of thousands of men are busy throughout the
world at any given moment under its influence, propagating and
popularizing the narrow and static version of Islam in all their
sincerity. It is a clear indication of the degree of cooperation
and collaboration between secularism and the static version of
religion that this particular "movement" is gaining
popularity at an astonishing pace. We, however, firmly believe
that these sincere men would not continue in their passivity and
inertness when the right moment comes. As soon as a genuine Islamic
revolutionary force takes the initiative of actively challenging
the hegemony of falsehood and un-Islamic practices, these pious
men will be instinctively drawn into that struggle, intensifying
and strengthening the struggle for the establishment of the Islamic
order in its totality.
During
the course of our thirteen centuries of decline and deterioration,
and mainly as a result of it, the roots of the static and narrow
conception of Deen have penetrated deep within our collective
psyche. One manifestation of this kind of religiosity was the
failure of Maulana Abul Kalam Azad in motivating and mobilizing
the Ulama with regard to his struggle for Hukumat-e-Ilahiyyah,
even though he enjoyed the support of as great and as well-respected
a personality as Maulana Mahmood Hasan Deobandi. Another example
came when a famous Indian scholar of Shariah and
a great Sufi teacher announced that we Muslims must not involve
ourselves in any activity that would bother or annoy our British
rulers, as we are enjoying "religious freedom" under
their rule. It was precisely this naïveté that impelled Allama
Iqbal to remark, rather sarcastically:
The
Indian mulla is allowed to offer his prayers,
And
this makes him feel that Islam too is free!
It
was none other than the great and remarkable personality of Allama
Iqbal who must be credited with demolishing the whole edifice
of this static concept of Islam. Without his moving and dynamic
poetry preparing the ground, subsequent leaders would not have
succeeded in launching their movements on the basis of the revolutionary
teachings of Islam.
Here
we must address a very important issue. There is one aspect of
the history of the revival and actualization of the Islamic revolutionary
thought that can only be described as deplorable. We sometimes
come across persons, both in India and Pakistan, who either participated
or enthusiastically supported the movements that were launched
on the basis of the dynamic concept of Deen, but who later
abandoned the movement on their own or were forced to leave due
to one reason or the other, and who are now striving zealously
to discredit the Islamic revolutionary thought itself, probably
to rationalize their own desertion. They are trying to prove that
the very concept of the obligation to strive for the domination
of Deen is a fallacious one; that an Islamic Revolution
happens only as a result of preaching and exhortation and there
is absolutely no need for conflict or active resistance; that
the pledge of allegiance or Baiyah can only be given
to the government in power and not to the Ameer of a party
striving for the establishment of Deen; and finally, that
service to Islam can be rendered only in ones individual
capacity or, at the most, in the form of institutions, and there
is definitely no need whatsoever to organize a disciplined revolutionary
group or Jamaah. Such flimsy and unsubstantiated
claims go on and on.
These
modern intellectuals of Islam have somehow managed to deduce,
from the Treaty of Hudaibiyyah, a rationale for the permanent
state of peaceful coexistence between Al-Haq and Al-Batil
and, from the Treaty (or Meethaq) of Madinah, an argument
for the contemporary secular system of politics and governance.
They submit their apology to modernity in the form of their repudiation
of the "barbaric" punishment of Rajm (stoning
to death for adultery), and strengthen the agenda of the Westernized
Muslims by their rejection of the "obscurantist concept"
of Purdah (segregation of the sexes and dress codes). The
warm welcome given to these intellectuals in the circles of Indian
government and even R.S.S. as well as in the secular circles of
the modernist Muslims in Pakistan is indeed a sign of the cooperation
and collaboration between the static and narrow religiosity on
the one hand and secularism on the other. However, we still believe
that Pakistan, which represents the realization of Iqbals
vision, will become the center for the actualization of the authentic
Islamic cultural, social, economic, and political concepts
concepts that were distorted during the period of "Arabian
Imperialism" and which were revived on a philosophical level
by Allama Iqbal himself. What we need now, therefore, is to defend
the dynamic and revolutionary teachings of Islam with all our
ability, and to harmonize our struggle in line with the Prophetic
model, because the guidance of the Seerah of Prophet Muhammad
(SAW) represents the only unfailing path to Islamic renaissance!
There
is, however, a compelling need to comprehend the dynamics of the
Islamic revivalist struggle. In this respect, we need to realize
that the process cannot be completed in just a decade or two.
The Islamic movement will reach its culmination only after a long
and arduous struggle spanned over several generations. History
shows that every genuine revolution requires a fairly long time
to mature. Any study of revolutions will reveal that, in general,
the struggle and effort of several generations is needed before
any tangible results appear. There is only a single exception
to this rule: it is well-known that the "miracle" of
the entire revolutionary process having been completed within
a single human life-span was achieved in the 7th century, when
the Deen of Allah (SWT) was made dominant in the Arabian
peninsula as a result of the struggle led by Prophet Muhammad
(SAW). This revolution was an extraordinary feat in the entire
human history by any standard, but especially because it was achieved
in just twenty years. Beginning from the propagation of an ideology
rooted in Tauheed and passing through the stages of establishing
a disciplined and close-knit party, moral training of the members
and purification of their souls, initially enduring all verbal
and physical persecution by remaining non-violent and then, when
the time is ripe, challenging the status quo and establishing
a new politico-socio-economic order after a long series of armed
conflicts we note that the entire process was completed
under the guidance and leadership of a single human being, Prophet
Muhammad (SAW). There is no revolution in human history that can
even remotely be compared with the revolution of Muhammad. Peace
and Blessings be upon him.
Consider
another fact: The ascendancy of Islam or the establishment of
the System of Khilafah over the entire globe is bound to
come before the end of the world. Both the minor and major premises
of this syllogism are repeatedly mentioned in the Holy Quran.
The major premise consists of the fact that Prophet Muhammad (SAW)
was appointed a Messenger of Almighty Allah (SWT) for the whole
humanity (Al-Quran Al-Araaf 7:158; Al-Anbia 21:107;
Al-Furqan 25:1; Saba 34:28; & Al-Jumah 62:2,3), whereas
the minor premise is represented by the Divine assertion that
the true way of life or Deen Al-Haq will be made superior
over the entire system of living (Al-Taubah 9:33; Al-Fath 48:24;
& Al-Saff 61:9), and that Almighty Allah (SWT)is going to
perfect His Light despite all the resistance from the unbelievers
(Al-Taubah 9:32 & Al-Saff 61:8). The logical conclusion that
necessarily follows from these premises is that the ultimate aim
of the advent of Prophet Muhammad (SAW) will be fulfilled only
with the establishment of the ascendancy of Islam over the entire
mankind, all over the world. This has been explicitly and unambiguously
foretold by Prophet Muhammad (SAW) in numerous traditions, as
given in the following paragraphs.
According
to a tradition narrated by Imam Ahmad (RA) on the authority of
Hadrat Nauman Ibn Bashir (RAA), Prophet Muhammad (SAW) is reported
to have said to his Companions: "The era of Prophethood will
remain among you so long as Allah wills, then He shall cause it
to end. After that, there will be Khilafah among you on
the pattern of Prophethood, and this will last as long as Allah
wills, and then He shall cause it to end. After that, there will
be a reign of oppressive monarchy, and this will also last as
long as Allah wills, and then He shall cause it to end. After
that there will be a period of enslavement, and this will last
as long as Allah wills, then He shall cause it to end. Finally,
there will again be Khilafah on the pattern of Prophethood."
Hadrat Nauman Ibn Bashir (RAA) reported that the Holy Prophet
(SAW) then kept silent.
What
has been described in the above tradition is very significant
indeed. The Holy Prophet (SAW) has clearly foretold that his Ummah
will pass through five phases, and we can now identify these phases
quite easily: (1) the period of Prophethood, i.e., the age of
Prophet Muhammad (SAW) himself; (2) The period of Khilafah,
i.e., the era of the Rightly Guided Caliphs (RAA); (3) the period
of gnawing or oppressive monarchy, i.e., the age of dynastic monarchs
who were more interested in maintaining their own rule than in
the welfare of the Ummah or the propagation and ascendancy
of Islam; (4) the period of enslavement, i.e., the era of slavery
when the Western imperialism ruled the Muslim world; and finally
(5) another period characterized by the true socio-political traits
of Khilafah.
The
fourth period, that of enslavement, has reached its end in the
sense that there is no more direct rule by the Western powers.
However, indirect political and economic control as well as cultural
domination of the Muslims at the hands of the West is still very
much there. It means that, at the present moment, the Muslim Ummah
is passing through an interim era between the fourth and fifth
periods as described by Prophet Muhammad (SAW). It also means
that the age characterized by the domination of Islam is not too
far.
According
to another tradition which is narrated by Imam Muslim (RA) on
the authority of Hadrat Thauban (RAA), Prophet Muhammad (SAW)
is reported to have said: "Almighty Allah (SWT) folded up
the whole earth for me (in a vision), so that I was able to see
all the easts and all the wests, and surely the domination of
my followers will be established over all those places that were
shown to me by thus folding the earth."
In
yet another tradition, Imam Ahmad (RA) has narrated on the authority
of Hadrat Miqdad Ibn Aswad (RAA) that Allahs Messenger (SAW)
said: "There will be no house left on the entire earth
neither of bricks nor one made of camels skin but
Allah will cause the word of Islam to enter it, either with the
honor of the one who deserves honor, or with the subjugation of
the one who is defeated." That is to say, Allah (SWT) will
confer honor on some and they will embrace Islam, and He will
cause the others to give up fighting and they will surrender before
the rule of Islam.
Keeping
in view the pointers of the Quran and the sayings of the
Prophet (SAW), a believer can have no doubt whatsoever that, before
the end of the world, Islam is most surely going to become dominant
all over the world, just as it had become dominant throughout
the Arabian peninsula in the days of the Prophet (SAW). At the
same time, however, it must also be accepted that the "miracle"
of the entire revolutionary process getting completed within a
single human life-span, and under the guidance of a single leader,
is not going to repeat itself. This is because the culmination
of Prophethood with the advent of Prophet Muhammad (SAW) means,
among other things, that the Last Prophet (SAW) will remain a
totally unique and unrivaled personality for all times to come,
both in terms of his spiritual station and his marvelous achievements.
It follows that the task of establishing the ascendancy of Islam,
in our day and age, will be achieved in several phases; several
successive "movements" will be involved in this struggle,
each carrying the goal of Islamic ascendancy one more step closer
to actuality. A commonly understandable example of this phenomenon
is the way in which the Olympic Torch is carried to its final
destination by several different runners, each carrying the Torch
a certain distance and then handing it over to the next athlete.
Thus, it would be a great and momentous accomplishment for us
if we can achieve the same task in four or five generations that
was originally achieved by Prophet Muhammad (SAW) and his devoted
and faithful Companions (RAA) within a short span of twenty years.
If
the above thesis is correct, and there is no reason to doubt its
veracity, then we must also grasp and acknowledge its necessary
and logical corollaries. This is of vital importance because otherwise
we would be exposing ourselves to the danger of immense disappointment
and frustration.
The
first and the most important point to note is that, before the
arrival of the final daee under whose leadership
the struggle will reach its ultimate realization, all the initial
and interim leaders are likely to be limited by, and suffer from,
various types of imperfections. None of them will be infallible
or faultless, and each one of them can have any number of defects
in his understanding, perseverance, fortitude, and steadfastness.
It is precisely on account of these deficiencies that the interim
leaders are likely to become disheartened or unnerved before reaching
the final destination, and they are also liable to go off in a
tangent while looking for a "short-cut." However, if
they were to invest all their energies in the cause of Almighty
Allah (SWT) with sincerity of intent (Ikhlas), then despite
their failure in actually establishing the domination of Deen
they would, nevertheless, be deemed triumphant in the Hereafter
and would be thoroughly rewarded by their Lord. Insha Allah.
Secondly,
all those who are endeavoring for the domination of Deen
must reconcile themselves with the fact that, during the course
of the struggle, a number of their comrades and associates are
likely to give up the mission. The reason for their quittance
could either be a "protest" against the unkind or harsh
attitude of the leader, or it could be their own lack of perseverance,
their inability to invest their time and resources, and their
arrogance, jealousy, or envy. And regrettably, a few of the more
clever among these deserters would even try to discredit and invalidate
the basic revolutionary concepts underlying the struggle itself;
they would do so either in order to rationalize and justify their
withdrawal from the movement or to conceal their own complacency,
wickedness, or lack of courage. The realistic and perseverant
attitude to adopt under these circumstances would be to continue
the struggle for making the Deen of Allah (SWT) supreme,
keeping in constant view the vital facts mentioned above. Every
effort should be made to continuously ponder the question of whether
any mistake is being committed concerning the methodology. However,
the desertion of some of the associates should never be allowed
to overwhelm or discourage the committed and active members of
the movement. It is vital that each interim leader and his comrades
contribute their share of time, effort, and energy towards paving
the way for the next leader, so that the latter would not be forced
to start the mission all over again. One of the prophecies of
Prophet Isaiah, which is quoted in the Gospels in connection with
John the Baptist, amply captures the spirit of the Islamic revolutionary
struggle: "Prepare the way for the Lord; clear a straight
path for him..." (Isaiah 40: 3, quoted in Luke 3:5). This
should be the guiding axiom of our struggle: we may not be able
to reach the ultimate goal ourselves, but at least we could pave
the way for the next generation for onward and ever-closer march
to it.
If
one reflects upon the recent history of the Muslim world, keeping
in mind the premises discussed above, it becomes obvious that
the twentieth century is the century of Islamic revivalist struggle.
Thus, we see that a multidimensional revivalist phenomenon started
to take shape with the beginning of the present century, reaching
its full intensity by the end of its first quarter. The two fronts
of this phenomenon were not only utterly different from each other,
but the demands of the struggle at one front were actually in
sharp opposition to those of the struggle at the other front.
The first was the national and popular front, where numerous
freedom movements actively pursued the goal of independence from
the yoke of Western Imperialism, and the other was the pure Islamic
revivalist front, where the struggle for the revival and renaissance
of Islam took place in all its passionate glory.
It
was the All India Muslim League that led the struggle at the national
and popular front in the Indian subcontinent. Established in 1906,
the Muslim League succeeded in delivering at least two-third of
the Muslim population of India from the slavery of the British
and the threat of the Hindus, after a struggle that spanned 41
years. On the Islamic revivalist front, on the other hand, the
first attempt towards achieving the ascendancy of Islam was made
by Maulana Abul Kalam Azad and his Hizbullah. After Maulana Azads
retreat, Maulana Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi stood up for the
same cause and established his Jamaat-e-Islami in 1941.
(It may be noted here that, in the recent history of the Indian
subcontinent, the versatile and phenomenal personality of Allama
Iqbal stands out as being almost equally active on both the national
and the revivalist fronts.) There can be no doubt that the Jamaat-e-Islami
did achieve precious success and displayed obvious progress, especially
in the pre-independence era. However, it is our considered opinion
that the Jamaat lost its way when, almost immediately after
the establishment of Pakistan, it plunged headlong into the arena
of Pakistani power politics. As a result, far from finding a quick
and easy path to Islamic dominance, the Jamaat-e-Islami
was bogged down in the quagmire of national politics. Now, to
keep the torch alight and to carry on the struggle in the
third generation courageous and steadfast Muslims are needed
to come forward and dedicate their energies and resources for
the continuation of the struggle for Islamic revival.
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