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What Does It
Mean To Be a Muslim Today?
"To
be a Muslim one has constantly to face the challenge, first of knowing what God
wills or desires not only for humanity in general but also for oneself in
particular, and then of doing what one believes to be God's will and pleasure
each moment of one's life."
By Riffat Hassan
To be a Muslim today--or any
day--is to live in accordance with the will and pleasure of God. Muslims often
say, with joy and pride, that it is easy to be a Muslim since Islam is "the
straight path" leading to paradise. What this means, in other words, is
that the principles of Islam are simple and straightforward, free of
ambiguities, confusions, inconsistencies or mysteries, and that comprehending
them or living in accordance with them is not difficult. The assumption here is
that if one somehow comes to "the straight path" by accepting Islam,
which is God's last and final revelation to humanity, one will fairly
effortlessly arrive at the destination which is a state of eternal blessedness
in the presence of God. I must confess that I am totally amazed, and
overwhelmed, by this assumption. To me, being a Muslim today--or any day--seems
to be exceedingly hard, for to be a Muslim one has constantly to face the
challenge, first of knowing what God wills or desires not only for humanity in
general but also for oneself in particular, and then of doing what one believes
to be God's will and pleasure each moment of one's life.
In view of the stereotyping of
Islam and Muslims which has gone on in the West for many centuries, and
especially since the Arab oil embargo of 1973 and the Iranian Revolution of
1979, it is necessary to state at the outset of this article that "the
world of Islam" is not a monolith and that Muslims differ as sharply within
their "ummah"1 of one billion persons as do adherents of other major
religious traditions within their own respective communities. Therefore, my
perception and understanding of Islamic ideals and Muslim realities as presented
here ought not to be taken as those of Muslims in general. At the same time,
from my encounters with many Muslims in different parts of the world I believe
that my response to the question "What does it mean to be a Muslim
today?" is grounded in an Islamic perspective which is shared by a number
of contemporary Muslims.
To be a Muslim means, first and
foremost, to believe in God, who is "Rabb al-'alamin": creator and
sustainer of all peoples and universes. The Qur'an, which to me is the primary
source of normative Islam, tells me that God's creation is "for just
ends"2 and not in "idle sport."3 Humanity, fashioned "in the
best of moulds,"4 has been created in order to serve God.5 According to
Qur'anic teaching, service of God cannot be separated from service to humankind,
or--in Islamic terms--believers in God must honor both "Haquq Allah"
(rights of God) and "Haquq al-'ibad" (rights of creatures).
Fulfillment of one's duties to God and humankind constitutes righteousness, as
stated in Surah 2: AL-Baqarah: 177, which reads as follows:
It is not righteousness That ye
turn your faces Towards East or West; But it is righteousness To believe in God
And the Last Day, And the Angels, And the Book, And the Messengers; To spend of
your substance, Out of love of Him, For your kin, For orphans, For the wayfarer,
For those who ask, And for the ransom of slaves; To be steadfast in prayer,
And practice regular charity; To
fulfill the contracts Which ye have made; And to be firm and patient, In pain
(or suffering) And adversity, And throughout All periods of panic. Such are the
people Of truth, the God-fearing.6
As I reflect upon the above
passage, as well as many others in the Qur'an, I am struck deeply by the
integrated vision of the Qur'an, which does not separate belief in God and God's
revelation ("iman") from righteous action ("'amal"), or
regular remembrance of God ("salat") from regular discharge of one's
financial and moral obligations to God's creatures ("zakat"). Thus, to
be a Muslim means--in a fundamental way--to be both God-conscious and
creature-conscious, and to understand the interconnectedness of all aspects of
one's life, of the life of all creation and of our life in this transient world
to life eternal.
For Muslims, the Qur'anic notion
of righteousness has been actualized in the life of the Prophet Muhammad-- known
in the Islamic mystic tradition as "Insan al-kamil" or the complete
human being. Through his God-centeredness, the Prophet of Islam attained the
highest degree of "'ubudiyat" (service of God) and became a model of
righteous living not only as the spiritual and political leader of the Muslim
"ummah", but also as a businessman, citizen, husband, father, friend,
and a human being in general. Following him, there have been individual
Muslims--recorded and unrecorded--in every age, who have known that being a
Muslim means more than seeking or worshiping God. The poet Iqbal speaks for them
when he proclaims, "There are many who love God and wander in the
wilderness,/I will follow the one who loves the persons made by God."7
Considering the emphasis placed
upon the interrelatedness of "Haquq Allah" and "Haquq al-'ibad"
both in Qur'anic teaching and in the life of the Prophet Muhammad, the exemplar
par excellence of this teaching, it is difficult to understand their
compartmentalization in the minds and lives of many present-day Muslims. But
what has happened is not surprising given the fact that many generations of
Muslims have been told by their leaders that the primary duty of a Muslim is to
engage in "'ibadat"--which is understood as "worship" rather
than service of God--and to obey those in authority over them rather than to
engage in "'jihad fi sabil Allah"8 to ensure that the fundamental
rights given to all creatures by God are honored within the Muslim "ummah."
The River of Tradition
For many contemporary Muslims,
being a Muslim means following the "Shari'ah" of Islam, as pointed out
by the well-known Muslim scholar, Seyyed Hossein Nasr, who says:
The Shari'ah is the Divine Law by
virtue of accepting which a person becomes a Muslim. Only he who accepts the
injunctions of the Shari'ah as binding upon him is a Muslim although he may not
be able to realise all of its teachings or follow all of its commands in life.
The Shari'ah is the ideal pattern for the individual's life and the Law which
binds the Muslim people into a single community. It is the embodiment of the
Divine Will in terms of specific teachings whose acceptance and application
guarantees man a harmonious life in this world and felicity in the hereafter . .
. The Shari'ah is Divine Law, in the sense that it is the concrete embodiment of
the Divine Will according to which man should live in both his private and
social life. In every religion Divine Will manifests itself in one way or
another and the moral and spiritual injunctions of each religion are of Divine
origin. But in Islam the embodiment of the Divine Will is not a set only of
general teachings but of concrete ones. Not only is man told to be charitable,
humble or just, but how to be so in particular instances of life. The Shari'ah
contains the injunctions of the Divine Will as applied to every situation in
life. It is the Law according to which God wants a Muslim to live . . . [It] is
the blue print of the ideal human life. It is a transcendent law which is at the
same time applied in human society, but never fully realised because of the
imperfections of all that is human. The Shari'ah corresponds to a reality that
transcends time and history. Rather, each generation in Muslim society should
seek to conform to its teachings and apply it anew to the conditions in which it
finds itself. The creative process in each generation is not to remake the Law
but to reform men and human society to conform to the Law.9
There is much in the above passage
which is of crucial significance for modern Muslims. However, before reflecting
on this, it may be useful to note that the term "Shari'ah" comes from
the root "Shar'a", which means "to open, to become clear."
F. W. Lane points out in his monumental Arabic-English Lexicon that, according
to the authors of the authoritative Arabic lexicons, the Taj Al- 'A rus, the
Tadheeb, and the Misbah, the Arabs do not apply the term "shari-at" to
"any but (a watering place) such as is permanent and apparent to the eye,
like the water of a river, not water from which one draws with the
well-rope."10 A modern lexicon, Lughat ul Qur'an, states that the term
"Shari'ah" refers to a straight and clear path, and also to a watering
place where both humans and animals come to drink water provided the source of
water is a flowing stream or river.11 It is not a little ironic that the term
"Shari'ah", which has the idea of fluidity and mobility as part of its
very structure, should have become the symbol of rigid and unchanging laws to so
many Muslims in the world.
That the "Shari'ah" has
played a pivotal role in Islamic history as a means of bringing diverse groups
of Muslims within a single legal-religious framework, is beyond dispute.
However, the assertion that one is a Muslim only if one accepts the "Shari'ah"
as binding upon oneself, and, further, that the "Shari'ah" is divine,
transcendent and eternal, can be seriously questioned (and, in my judgment,
ought to be).
Being a Muslim is dependent
essentially only upon one belief: belief in God, universal creator and sustainer
who sends revelation for the guidance of humanity. Believing in God and God's
revelation to and through the Prophet Muhammad, preserved in the Qur'an, is,
however, not identical with accepting the "Shari'ah" as binding upon
oneself. As Wilfred Cantwell Smith has remarked insightfully, "A true
Muslim ... is not a man who believes in Islam--especially Islam in history; but
one who believes in God and is committed to the revelation through His
Prophet,"12
Most Muslims regard the "Shari'ah"
as a sort of umbrella that stretches over the length and breadth (and perhaps
even the depth) of their lives and they feel secure under its cover. However,
many of them do not know about the sociological process whereby the
"divine" "Shari'ah" came to be codified. Seyyed Hossein Nasr
describes the process briefly in the following passage:
In essence all of the Shari'ah is
contained in the Qur'an. The Holy Book, however, contains the principle of all
the Law. It contains the Law potentially but not actually and explicitly--at
least not all the different aspects of the Shari'ah. There was, therefore, a
gradual process by which this Law became promulgated in its external form and
made applicable to all domains of human life. This process was completed in
about three centuries during which the great books of law in both Sunni and
Shi'ite Islam were written, although the exact process is somewhat different in
the two cases. The principles of Law contained in the Qur'an were explained and
amplified in the prophetic Hadith and Sunnah which together constitute the
second basic source of Law. These in turn were understood with the aid of the
consensus of the Islamic community (ijma'). Finally, these sources of Law were
complemented by analogical reasoning (qiyas) where necessary. According to the
traditional Islamic view, therefore, the sources of the Shari'ah are the Qur'an,
Hadith, ijma' and qiyas, of which the first two are the most important and are
accepted by all schools of law while the other two are either considered of
lesser importance or rejected by some of the schools.'13
It is to be noted that of the four
sources of the "Shari'ah" mentioned in the above passage, three are
human, and not divine, in origin, and that two "are either considered of
lesser importance or rejected by some of the schools." The author has also
accepted that while the Qur'an contains the Law "potentially," it does
not do so "actually and explicitly, at least not all the different aspects
of the Shari'ah." What this means, in other words, is that while the Qur'an
elucidates the essentials of Islam, the details of the code of rules and
regulations pertaining to all aspects of a Muslim's life which is cumulatively
referred to as the "Shari'ah" cannot be regarded as divine--as Seyyed
Hossein Nasr and many others assert--since the Qur'an categorically rules out
the possibility of any human being (including the Prophets, the Imams of the
Shi'is and the great scholars of Islam) being divine. Unless all of the "Shari'ah"
can be shown to be of nonhuman origin--as Muslims believe the Qur'an to be--the
claim that it is divine, transcendent, eternal or immutable cannot be validated
logically or theologically.
Not only are the majority of the
sources of the "Shari'ah" not divine in origin but they can also be
regarded as problematic in other ways. For instance, as every scholar of Islam
knows, Hadith literature, crucial as it is in the development of Islamic law and
even doctrine,14 is surrounded by controversies regarding all its aspects. In
particular, the question of the authenticity or otherwise of individual
"ahadith"'5 as well as of the Hadith literature as a whole has
occupied the attention of many scholars of Islam since the time of Ash-Shafi'i
(died in A.H. 204/A.D. 809). Regardless of the fact pointed out by one of the
most important Muslim scholars of our times, Fazlur Rahman, namely, that "a
very large proportion of the Hadiths were judged to be spurious and forged by
classical Muslim scholars themselves,"16 Muslims, in general, continue to
believe in the "sacred" character of the Hadith literature.
Furthermore, on the basis of a "hadith" which states, "My
Community will never unite in an error,"17 they also continue to believe
that "Ijma'" of the first three centuries of Islam (during which the
four "Madhahib" or Schools of Law accepted as equally
"orthodox" by Sunni Islam were established) is "protected from
error," i.e., it is infallible, hence binding upon Muslims of all times.
The theological point made by some modern Muslim thinkers and legal scholars
that since infallibility belongs only to God, the "Ijma'" of any place
or period cannot be regarded as infallible and hence eternally binding, is
disregarded--even as the scholarly criticism of the Hadith literature by Muslim
scholars is disregarded--by a large number of Muslims who believe that the
preservation of the "sacred" nature of the "Shari'ah" is
essential for the continuance and well-being of Islam.
Modernization without
Westernization
In order to understand what
amounts to a virtual deification of the "Shari'ah" by many Muslims as
well as the strong impetus towards "Islamization" evident in a number
of Muslim societies in recent years, it is necessary to know that of all the
challenges confronting the contemporary Muslim world, the greatest appears to be
that of modernity. "Shari'ah"-minded Muslims who consider themselves
the caretakers of "the Islamic way of life" are aware of the fact that
viability in the modern technological age requires the adoption of the
scientific outlook, which inevitably brings about major changes in modes of
thinking and behavior. Unable to come to terms with modernity as a whole,
present day Muslim societies make a sharp distinction between two aspects of it.
The first--generally referred to as "modernization"--is largely
identified with science, technology and a better standard of life; the
second--generally referred to as "westernization"--is largely
identified with mass western culture and moral degeneration and disintegration.
While all Muslim societies of today desire modernization, most of them reject
westernization, which is associated not only with the colonization of Muslim
peoples by western powers in the not too distant past, but also with what is
perceived to be a continuing onslaught upon traditional Islam by westerners as
well as by westernized Muslims who want to apply modern methods of scholarship
or analysis to the study of Islam.
In strong and startling contrast
to conservative Muslims who are deeply fearful of any form of creative thinking
which might liberate Muslim masses from the straitjacket of traditionalism, is
the refreshing voice of Muhammad Iqbal, modern Islam's most outstanding thinker
and visionary, who was a passionate advocate for "Ijtihad"--the
principle of independent reasoning--which he, perceptively, called "the
principle of movement in Islam." In his lecture on "Ijtihad,"
Iqbal says:
I know the Elema18 of Islam claim
finality for the popular schools of Muslim Law, though they never found it
possible to deny the theoretical possibility of a complete Ijtihad'19... For
fear of ... disintegration, the conservative thinkers of Islam focused all their
efforts on the one point of preserving a uniform social life for the people by a
jealous exclusion of all innovations in the law of Shari'ah as expounded by the
early doctors of Islam. Their leading idea was social order, and there is no
doubt that they were partly right, because organisation does to a certain extent
counteract the forces of decay. But they did not see, and our modem Ulema do not
see, that the ultimate fate of a people does not depend so much on organisation
as on the worth and power of individual men. In an over-organised society the
individual is altogether crushed out of existence 20 The closing of the door of
Ijfihad is pure fiction suggested partly by the crystallisation of legal thought
in Islam, and partly by that intellectual jaziness which, especially in a period
of spiritual decay, turns great thinkers into idols. If some of the later
doctors have upheld this fiction, modern Islam is not bound by this voluntary
surrender of intellectual independence ... 21 Since things have changed and the
world of Islam is today confronted and affected by new forces set free by the
extraordinary development of human thought in all its directions, I see no
reason why this attitude (of the Ulema) should be maintained any longer. Did the
founders of our schools ever claim finality for their reasonings and
interpretations? Never. The claim of the present generation of Muslim liberals
to reinterpret the foundational legal principles in the light of their own
experience and altered conditions of modern life is, in my opinion, perfectly
justified. The teaching of the Qur'an that life is a process of progressive
creation necessitates that each generation, guided but unhampered by the work of
its predecessors, should be permitted to solve its own problems.22
A Personal Commitment
To me being a Muslim today means
taking a stand against those who insist that being a Muslim means following the
trodden path and sanctifying tradition without subjecting it to serious
reflection or scrutiny. According to the Qur'an, Adam was elevated even above
the celestial creatures on account of his capability to "name" things,
i.e., to form concepts or to exercise the rational faculty.23 in one of the most
significant passages of the Qur'an,24 we are told that God offered the
"trust" of freedom of will to all creation but only humanity accepted
it. What this says to me is that it is not only a right of Muslims, but also
their duty--and indeed their glory--to think and to choose. As Iqbal has pointed
out,25 freedom is a precondition of goodness and a person who is totally
determined (whether by tradition or anything else) cannot produce goodness.
To me being a Muslim means knowing
that the Qur'an is the Magna Carta of human freedom and that a large part of its
concern is to free human beings from the bondage of traditionalism,
authoritarianism (religious, political, economic, or any other), tribalism,
racism, sexism, slavery or anything else that prohibits or inhibits human beings
from actualizing the Qur'anic vision of human destiny embodied in the classic
proclamation: "Towards God is thy limit."26 Though it is necessary to
set limits to what human beings may or may not do so that liberty does not
degenerate into license, the Qur'an safeguards against the possibility of
dictatorship or despotism and states with clarity and emphasis: "It is not
right for a human being that God should give him the Book of Law, power to judge
and (even) Prophethood, and he should say to his fellow-beings to obey his
orders rather than those of God. He should rather say: 'Be ye faithful servants
of God by virtue of your constant teaching of the Book and your constant study
of it.'"27
To me being a Muslim today means
carrying forward the message of the Muslim modernists who have raised the cry
"Back to the Qur'an" (which, in effect, also means "Forward with
the Qur'an")28 and insisted on the importance of Ijtihad--both at the
collective level (in the form of "Ijma"29) and at the individual
level-as a means of freeing Muslim thought from the dead weight of outmoded
traditionalism. It is a profound irony and tragedy that the Qur'an, despite its
strong affirmation of human equality and the need to do justice to all of God's
creatures, has been interpreted by many Muslims, both ancient and modern, as
sanctioning various forms of human inequality and even enslavement. For
instance, even though the Qur'an states clearly that man and woman were made
from the same source, at the same time, in the same manner, and that they stand
equal in the sight of God, men and women are extremely unequal in virtually all
Muslim societies, in which the superiority of men to women is taken to be
self-evident.30 To me a very important part of what it means to be a Muslim
today is to acquire the competence to develop a hermeneutics for interpreting
the Qur'an in such a way that its fundamental teachings, such as those
pertaining to human equality of justice, are separated from historical and
cultural accretions which-though they represent the biases or prejudices of
specific Muslims or Muslim societies--are taken by the Muslim masses to be part
of the Qur'anic message.
Living in the West, I am all too
painfully aware of the fact that westerners in general--including many
Christians and Jews who, like Muslims, are "People of the
Book"--perceive Islam as a religion spread by the sword, and Muslims as
religious fanatics who are zealously committed to waging "Holy War"
against non-Muslims or even against non-conforming Muslims. While it is beyond
the scope of this article to examine the historical roots of these perceptions,
being a Muslim today means not turning away in hatred or anger from those who
regard Muslims as adversaries but engaging in dialogue with them in a spirit of
amity and goodwill.31 Being a Muslim today means paying serious heed to the
Qur'anic teaching that God, universal creator and sustainer, who cares for all
and sends guidance to all, has decreed diversity for a reason, as the following
passage tells us: "O men! Behold! We have created you out of a male and a
female, and have made you into nations and tribes, so that you might come to
know one another. Verily the noblest of you in the sight of God is the one who
is most deeply conscious of Him. Behold, God is all-knowing, all-aware."32
What this passage says to me is that we should be mindful both of our unity and
our diversity, that one of the basic purposes of diversity is to encourage
diverse groups and persons to know one another, that a person's ultimate worth
is determined not by what group he or she belongs to but how God-conscious he or
she is.
Being a Muslim today means taking
serious note of the Qur'anic imperative, "Let there be no compulsion in
religion,"33" knowing that the right to exercise free choice in
matters of belief is unambiguously endorsed by the Qur'an, which says: "The
Truth is/From your Lord:/ Let him who will/Believe, and let him/Who will, reject
it."34 Being a Muslim today also means realizing that by merely professing
Islam we do not attain to Paradise, and that Muslims have no special claim upon God's
grace, for the Qur'an tells us:
Those who believe (in the Qur'an)
And those who follow the Jewish (scriptures), And the Christians and the Sabians,
Any who believe in God And the Last Day, And work righteousness, Shall have
their reward With the Lord; on them Shall be no fear, nor shall they grieve.35
Finally, to me being a Muslim
today--and always--means being on a journey, both external and internal, toward
attaining a state of peace which is the goal of Islam. However, peace is not
merely the absence of conflict, even as health is not merely the absence of
sickness. According to the perspective of the Qur'an, peace is a positive state
of safety or security in which one is free from anxiety and fear. It comes into
being when human beings honoring the divine imperative to live justly, learn to
be just to themselves and to others. Constant striving is required to overcome
the fragmentation to which most human beings are subjected in the technological
age and also to eliminate sexism, racism, classism, and all forms of
totalitarianism which lead to the injustices and inequities which characterize
the world in which we live. To engage in such striving (which the Qur'an calls
'jihad fi sabil Allah": striving in the cause of God) is the purpose of a
Muslim's life.
Notes
1 "Ummah": community.
2 The Qur'an, Surah 15: AI-Htir:
85.
3The Qur'an, Surah 21: AI-Anbiya':
16.
4The Qur'an, Surah 95: At-Tin: 4.
5The Qur'an, SuTah 51:
Adh-Dhariyat: 56.
6Translation of The Holy Qur'an by
A. Yusuf All. Mcgregor and Werner, Inc., USA, 1946, pp.69-70.
7Bang-e-Dara, Shaikh Ghulman All
and Sons, Lahore, 1962, p.151.
8 "Jihad fi sabil Allah":
to strive in the cause of God.
9The Ideals and Realities of
Islam, George Allen and Unwin Ltd., London, 1975, pp. 93-96.
10Arabic-English Lexicon, William
and Norgate, London 1863, Book 1. Part 4, p. 1535.
11Parwez, G. A., Lughat ul Qur'an,
Idara Tulu' e Islam, Lahore, 1960, Volume II, pp. 941-944.
12 Islam in Modern History,
Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1957, p.146.
13The Ideals and Realities of
Islam, p.99.
14 Hodgson, Marshall, G. S., The
Venture of Islam (Conscience and History in a World Civilization), The
University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1974, Volume One (The Classical Age of
Islam), p. 332.
15 "Ahadith": plural of
"hadith": a saying ascribed to the Prophet Muhammad.
16 lslam, Doubleday and Company,
Inc., Garden City, New York, 1968, p.64.
17 Reported by AI-Tirmidhi and Ibn
Majah on the authority of Abd Allah ibn 'Umar, cited by K. A. Faruki in Islamic
Jurisprudence, Pakistan Publishing House, Karachi, 1962, p.27.
18 "Ulema": scholars.
19 The Reconstruction of Religious
Thought in Islam, Shaikh Muhammad Ashraf, Lahore, 1971, p.168.20lbid., p.151.
21 Ibid., p. 178.
22 lbid., p.168.
23 Reference here is to The
Qur'an, Surah 2: Al-Baqarah: 30-34.
24 Reference here is to The
Qur'an, Surah 33: Al-Ahzab: 72.
25 The Reconstruction of Religious
Thought in Islam, p.85.
26 Reference here is to Surah 53:
An-Najm: 42; translation is by Iqbal (The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in
Islam, p.57).
27 Reference here is to The
Qur'an, Surah 3: AI-'Imran; 79.
28 In this context, the
"double movement" outlined by Faziur Rahman in his book Islam and
Modernity: Transformation of an Intellectual Tradition (University of Chicago
Press, Chicago, 1982), pp.5-8 is important.
29 IqbaI's remarks about "Ijma"
in modern times, stated in The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam, pp.
173-174, are thought-provoking.
30 Those interested in the issue
of woman-man equality in the Islamic tradition may refer to my articles
"Made from Adam's Rib?" in Al-Mushir, Christian Study Centre,
Rawalpindi, Volume XXVII, No.3, Autumn 1985, pp.124-155, and "Equal Before
Allah?" in Harvard Divinity Bulletin, Volume XVII, No.2, January-May 1987,
pp.2-4.
31 See The Qur'an, Surah 29: Al-'Anlabut:
46.
32 This passage (Surah 49: AI-Hujurat:
13) is taken from The Meaning of the Qur'an, translated by Muhammad Asad (Dar
AI-Andalus, Gibraltar, 1980) p.793.
33 The Qur'an (Surah 2: AI-Baqarah:
256).
34 The Qur'an (Surah 18: AI-Kahf:
29).
35 The Holy Qur'an, pp.33-34
(Surah 2: AI-Baqarah: 62) and The Holy Quran p.265 (Surah 5: AI-Ma'idah: 69).
RIFFAT HASSAN is currently
teaching in the Religious Studies Program at the University of Louisville in
Kentucky. Her article originally appeared in the February 1990 issue of New
Blackfriars (Blackfriars Oxford OX 1 3LY England, $30 a year), which was
devoted to "The World of Islam."
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