By
Jeelani Khan, IOL South East Asia Correspondent
New
Delhi, December 4 (IslamOnline) - “A religion whose literal meaning
is aman-o-amaan (peace and harmony) can only give the message of
goodwill, harmony and peace,” scholars and academics put across this
view unanimously at a seminar held in New Delhi on Tuesday, December
3.
The
seminar, entitled “Islam: The Religion of Peace”, was organized by
the department of Arabic in Delhi's Jamia Millia Islamia, a central
university with an Islamic character.
Noted
political scientist Prof. ZA Nizami read his touching Urdu poetic
essay in which he elaborated aspects of peace, love and mercy in
Islam.
Other
speakers included Prof Syed Mohammd Ijtiba Nadwi, Prof Iqbal A Ansari,
Prof Altaf Azmi, Dr Zafarul-Islam Khan and vice-chancellor (rector) of
Jamia Millia Islamia, Syed Shahid Hasan Mehdi.
Quoting
the Qur'an and Hadith to drive his point home, Prof Nadwi said,
“Islam is the only religion which takes into account the peace of
the individual as well as that of the whole world.” “ If you kill
an innocent, no matter to which religion you belong, you have killed
all human beings,” he said referring to the holy Quran.
Blaming
the Muslim Ummah, Prof Nadwi said, “It is we who are solely
responsible for the linking of Islam with terrorism,” because
Muslims have failed to spread the massage of Islam in its true
perspective.
Prof
Iqbal A Ansari, a noted human rights activist who has written a number
of books on human rights, elaborated the teachings and message of
Islam and referred to examples of the Prophet's life that show his
preference for peace and accommodation and laid down strict rules for
warfare which are now incorporated in the Geneva conventions.
Prof
Ansari concentrated on the human rights perspective of Islam and said,
“It is only Islam which orders us to behave nicely even with the
enemies.” He added, “jihad (holy war) is allowed in Islam, but
only in an extreme situation - when there is a real threat to this
religion or to the lives of its followers.”
Prof
Altaf Azmi of Jamia Hamdard lashed out at those who had been
projecting Islam as a religion of terrorists. He said emphatically,
“Yes, Islam permits jihad, but only as a last measure.”
“There
is no religion which can be more humane and peaceful than Islam,”
said Prof Azmi, adding “we accept that the Qur'an mentions jihad,
while the followers of other religions don’t own up their misdeeds
and the result is that Islam has been projected as a religion
spreading terrorism.”
On
the other hand, Dr Zafarul Islam Khan, editor of The Milli Gazette, in
his speech pointed out that Islam emphasized on the principle of
conciliation (sulah) in human relations which made it crystal clear
that there is no place for terrorism in this religion.
Khan
quoted a number of Qur'anic verses to emphasize that Islam
categorically prohibits aggression and violence in human relations.
He
conceded that there is tiny Muslim minority which has resorted to
terrorism during the last three decades but the roots of this violence
do not lie in Islam and the Qur'an but in the long, humiliating
experience of colonialism and neo-colonialism, especially the
usurpation of Palestine and the continuous rape and plunder of Muslim
societies with western help.
In
his presidential speech, Syed Shahid Hasan Mehdi informed the seminar
that his university is in the process of establishing a Center for
Peace Studies. He hoped that the project will be completed in the last
quarter of the year 2003.
He
added that the faculty of education in his university had been working
on the manual of peace education released by the UN in order to
incorporate it in the university curriculum.
“Terrorism
is a universal trend and people of all religions are engaged in this
activity. To blame only Islam for this inhuman phenomenon is due to
the misconception of those who know nothing about this religion,” he
said.