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frequently comes in your writings across an exhortation to break free from
" patriarchal-glorification-and-infallibility "; you justify that
attitude of yours by asserting that patriarchal idolization precludes any
fresh vision. Does this mean that you support breaking away with the Islamic
heritage? Is not any growth without roots an illusion? Jawdat Said to “Current Islamic Issues” |
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Thank your, Mr. Rifa'ee, for
a good question calls for a good answer. Whether or not my answer will be
satisfactory, your question will remain a challenge. I am sure that the
questions will go on improving and becoming more poignant and urgent and
defined; and so will the answers, until people get over their anxiety and
pain, both physical and spiritual. I daresay I have given some
sort of answer to this question in the folds of my previous answers, but the
topic you are raising is both important and critical in relation to impeding
or reinforcing our progress. Therefore, such topic must be discussed again
and again. It has also been handled by others, but they haven't said, and
they will not say, the last word concerning this topic. I don't advocate rejecting
the heritage, not even the heritage of pre-historical ages, before the
invention of writing. It is in prehistory that man domesticated animals and
discovered agriculture. Such achievements may not be ignored, for if we
ignore them, we must return to life prior to agriculture and the
domestication of animals. Obviously, an age that has passed must not be
repeated – mankind will not ignore the discovery of agriculture and return to
the pre-agriculture age. But agriculture does not stay as it is: people do
new grafting on trees, and they can find out more of the laws by which the
trees produce their fruit, which will in the future enable men to manufacture
the fruits artificially by emulating the trees. Once man has mastered this
skill, fruits and vegetables will be manufactured at cheap prices and with
infinite quantities. We would be within God's law, expressed in the Qur'anic
verse: "And He creates things of which you have no knowledge, (16,
8)." In the same way as men went beyond the age of horses, mules and
donkeys for transport and carrying weights, and discovered means which would
not have occurred to the minds of those before us, those who come after us
will discover things that do not occur to us. The law of 'And He creates
things of which you have no knowledge,' will remain open indefinitely; it
will be so since God has chosen not to set any limit on it – God's bounty has
no limit, as we read in another verse of the Qur'an: "If the ocean were
ink wherewith to write out the words of my Lord, sooner would the ocean be
exhausted than would the words of my Lord, (18, 109)." In so many areas, to stop
where the past generations left us is now suicide. To transfer authority with
killing and treachery used to be acceptable, and people received it gladly –
it was so when people's comprehension of God's law was confined to this, and
that is how they would take verses of the Qur'an like: "O Allah! Lord of
Power and Rule, You give Power to whom You please, and You strip off Power
from whom You please, (3, 26)." But you see now how God enables certain
people, by God's laws, to themselves give power to whom they please, and
strip off power from whom they please. So we need to realize the
limits of our forefathers: they did not have the ability to perceive such
facts, and so they regressed to killing and treachery and dishonesty and
lying; they shed blood and broke the bones of their adversaries. Well, there
you are. I have not the words to answer your question, my intellectual
capacity falls short, and therefore I remain incoherent. I do not bring out
the truth as the Qur'an puts it, with the manifest expression (the word for
manifest expression in all its derivatives is used scores of time in this
sense in the Qur'an.) More capable men and women are being formed at this
moment everywhere, and they will produce the right expressions which will
lead people out of darkness and into the light. It is again God's law in the
world, that the scum will disappear like froth cast out; while that which is
for the good of mankind [all mankind] remains on the earth (reference to the
Qur'an, 13, 17.) It may take long or short, but people will come to
understand. God's law dictates that we
accept from the ancestors, and also from the past generations of others, the
best of their deeds and pass by their ill deeds (reference to the Qur'an, 46,
16)." We have to be sure that history does not come to a stop, that
God's creation has not come to a stop with our ancestors or the ancestors of
other nations. The ancestors of all of mankind lived at one time in caves,
naked, and were devoured by animals – the Qur'an tells us how Jacob said to
his sons about Joseph: "I fear lest the wolf should devour him while you
do not attend to him, (12, 13)," for his fear was logical at that time,
and it is not so far off. We need to put right our
attitude towards the ancestors, and the Almighty tells us in the Qur'an that
to imitate the forefathers is a barrier. It is so because when you love, you
are blind and deaf. Exceeding admiration strips one of the power of seeing
and understanding, in a literal sense in certain cases. That is why the
Qur'an says about following the fathers: "What! Even though their
fathers were void of wisdom and guidance? (2, 170)" Once, the Messenger,
peace be upon him, wondered: "And how can you be just in dealing with
the dear and near?" It is for such aspects that testifying in favour of,
or against, relatives is rejected: it is so because favouring the family, the
father, one's group, one's fellow in religion or compatriots is widespread.
To see the truth and falsehood concerning the fathers and forefathers is so
hard – all those who opposed the prophets cited their fathers as the
authority. And yet, no matter how vehemently the Qur'an condemns following
the fathers, Muslims think that they are exempt from the rules concerning the
glorification of ancestors, as if we were not human like other humans. The
problem of abay'iyyah 'glorification of ancestors' is a stumbling block where
the eyes go wild and the minds are misty and the truth is confused with
falsehood. That is why, no matter how solemnly God commands us: "O you
who believe! Stand out firmly for justice, as witnesses to Allah, even as
against yourselves, or your parents, or your kin (4, 135)," we seem to
turn deaf ears to this. We really need to bring our fathers under the law of
history, for history accepts no indulgence of anybody, and if we are scum we
shall disappear. It is for the good of progeny to let the scum disappear, and
to allow that which is good for everybody to settle in the earth. I have come under the
influence of fathers, and we all do in various degrees; what is agreeable to
the past generations is held up by the next generations. But with the passage
of time, the glorification of ancestors is becoming less pronounced. Indeed,
Muslims have gone farther than any sensible limit in aggrandizing and
extolling their ancestors, even when it became evident that they, the
forefathers, did not have the best solutions: it is our ancestors who fought
amongst themselves, let down the truth and hailed falsehood; it is they who
resurrected the pre-Islamic ways. To this day, we seem incapable of finding
an outlet from the drawbacks and shortcomings of their comprehension; those
who we count as unbelievers have rid themselves of that complex, and they can
think creatively of ingenious solutions to problems. The European Union, the
egalitarian, peaceful, and scientific union which is being shaped with
extreme care is more in line with what God and His Messenger teach, and more
sensible than our disparity and strife and hatred, things that block our way
to understanding – and we seem not to find the way to get over them. It must
be said, however, that the exceeding pain some of us have inflicted on others
are beginning to ameliorate our excesses, and we begin to open our ears and
eyes; our mouths, too, begin to utter some words – it is not taboo, as Iqbal
said, to discuss our culture and analyze it in every way. The Muslim World is
almost the only part of the world where the ancestors remain an impediment to
progress; Muslims still challenge the world and history with their claim that
God has not, and will not, create their likes. But how will those who come
after us read these words, and how will they judge us; history's sentences
are hard and painful, as the Qur'an says: "Such is the chastisement of
your Lord when He chastises communities in the midst of their wrong:
grievous, indeed, and severe is His chastisement, (11, 102)." But we pray to God that He
makes us learn the lessons, to change our attitudes. Enough humiliation and
suffering we have undergone to learn the significance of history's events! |
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