Rethinking
Islam
Dotting the I’s and Crossing the T’s
|
Ahmed
Kamal Sultan
STARLAB-
Department of Electrical Engineering
Stanford
University
|
21/10/2002
|
In
his article “Rethinking Islam”,
Prof. Ziauddin Sardar called for new
Ijtihad to reform Islam. No one can argue that a wide opening of the
door of Ijtihad is crucial for the Muslim Ummah. Yet, it is
legitimate to question what is meant by Ijtihad and if there are any
boundaries for the process.
Does
Islam really need to be rebuilt from scratch?
To
elaborate on these important points, we need first to define
Ijtihad.
Ijtihad:
Ijtihad is the most important source of Islamic law next to the
Qur’an and Sunnah. The main difference between Ijtihad and the
revealed sources lies in the fact that Ijtihad is a continuous
process of interpretation and reasoning while the Divine revelation
and the Prophetic legislation and oral traditions are immutable. In
this sense, Ijtihad will continue to play its role as the main
instrument of applying the Divine message in the continuously
changing conditions of the Muslim Ummah in its aspirations to truth,
and justice.
Ijtihad
can be defined as the serious effort by a jurist to infer, with a
degree of probability, a religious ruling from its detailed evidence
in the authentic religious sources. The question arises to what is
and what is not amenable to Ijtihad.
The
Definitive and Speculative Evidences:
The
Qur’anic verses and the Prophetic Sayings can have definitive or
speculative meaning. The definitive texts have meanings that no two
persons with sound intellect and proper understanding of Arabic
language could disagree upon. These texts comprise the eternal and
immutable core of the Islamic belief. They are not open to Ijtihad
or abrogation lest Islam will cease to be a religion in the first
place.
They
are only subject to operationalization and measures of becoming
practical matters linked carefully to codes of ethics, norms and/or
laws. To be more accurate regarding the definitive and the
speculative, one should mention that one verse or Prophetic saying
can have a definitive level of meaning, and a speculative one has
different horizons of significance. A very simple example is the
verse of ablution:
“O
you who believe! When you prepare for prayer, wash your faces,
and your hands (and arms) to the elbows; rub your heads (with
water); and (wash) your feet to the ankles.” (Qur’an, 5:6).
The
text is clear that ablution is a perquisite for prayer. Ablution
consists of washing the face, washing arms, rubbing the head, and
washing the feet. This is the definitive level of the verse. The
speculative level may pertain to: a) Whether the order is obligatory
or not. b) The arms are to be washed to the elbows. Are the elbows
included or not? c) The feet are to be washed to the ankles. Are the
ankles included or not? d) Should the whole head be rubbed or only a
portion? So, there are several definitive rulings that are
indisputable. Nonetheless, due to the very nature of language, there
is another level of multi-layered reasoning that requires diligent
analysis.
Ijtihad:
Scholarly and Methodological Conditions:
The
next question that arises: are there any rules of interpretation to
be followed and obeyed while undertaking Ijtihad or is it a
completely subjective process? The Rules of Interpretation: Ijtihad
requires interpreting the sacred texts and interpretation should
have rules lest it would run the risk of being a simple exercise of
capricious whimsy. I will not approach this subject in the
traditional way of the books on Usul al-Fiqh (The Principles of
Islamic Jurisprudence) by stating the rules by which one should
abide while pursuing Ijtihad. I would rather define what
interpretation should be by stating what it should not be. My idea
is that any epistemological discourse whose inevitable result is the
nullification of the foundations of Islam is completely unacceptable
and actually amounts to forsaking Islam itself. This is a legitimate
concern that surely is present in any discipline, religion or
ideology.
I
will mention four discourses of this type: a) The most radical
discourse aimed at undermining Islam and impairing its foundations
is the idea that the Qur’an is a historical product, i.e. the
verses are revealed to deal with specific socio-historical
circumstances and may not be applicable in modern life. The
“fundamentalist secularists” who adopt this approach, in order
to evade a prompt rejection of their ideas, argue that, “…it is
the spirit of the verses that is valid for all times in all
places. Every generation of Muslims should give them new meanings
that suit their age.”
Yet,
if the relevance and universality of the message for all times and
places was of that liquid nature, I would argue that any text or
message could fit it. Here religion looses any distinctive nature
and the essence and wisdom of divine revelation becomes subject to
relativism and subjectivity. There are Divinely inspired
transcendental constants in Islam that are eternally and
ubiquitously valid. Validity stems from relevance and compatibility
with essential human nature and welfare of mankind.
Historicizing
Islam:
Now,
let us investigate where this discourse of relativization and
historicity can lead to. The pre-Islamic Arabs had the habit of
drinking wine till they became fully intoxicated. In modern ages,
humans are educated and rational and can control their intake of
wine without losing control. So, there is no harm in drinking some
wine if one remains sober!! Almsgiving (zakah) is not necessary
since the nation state collects taxes from people! Fasting was
prescribed to curb the desires of those lusty Arabs of the seventh
century; nowadays fasting hinders productivity and thus should be
abrogated or removed to the month in the Gregorian Calendar with the
shortest day! Interest-based (usurious) economy is crucial for
modern capitalist economy. The “public” interest of people
requires lifting the ban on usury. Pilgrimage was for those Arabs
who entered Islam while believing in the magical powers of stones.
Islam could not have prohibited Arabs from visiting Ka`bah.
Nonetheless,
after the widespread of rationality and enlightenment, there is no
need to adhere to the idolatrous practices that were allowed for
those naive ignorant Arabs of the desert! Woman should not obey the
Islamic dress code. Working and active women in the modern world
should not be burdened by this regulation! Capital punishment is the
epitome of savagery and barbarity. It was just mentioned in Qur’an
to deter people. It was just given as an option not an obligation!
The same applies to the prescribed penalties of theft and
fornication. Amputating hands and flogging are a flagrant violation
of the United Nations convention of human rights! Ablution was for
those dirty Arabs who lived in the desert in the seventh century.
After the advancement of civilization and the clean environment in
offices and houses there is not need to repeat it before every
single prayer.
In
short, since everything was revealed to those backward Arabs of the
past, it must be replaced by more modern rulings (mainly liberal
capitalist). Obviously, the result will just be the Western secular
laws and social habits. The vast majority of those who advocate the
historicity of the Qur’an have fully assimilated the Western
epistemological and philosophical assumptions. Direct confrontation
and military conquest are now secondary tools to dominate cultures
and markets. Habits and lifestyles are primary target of change in
order to guarantee an open market based on a free consumer who has
an open mind. Too open to be affected by any ways of life or beliefs
that would set principals contradicting the calculations of market
profit...and too open to feel empowered vis a vis the market rules
and dynamics.
The
most striking observation one finds in their writings, is that they
want to change the specific Islamic rulings that the Western
scholars always criticize or belittle. If their attempts are really
sincere and aim to develop and reform the Islamic Jurisprudence and
saving the Muslim Ummah from its perils, they should consider Islam
itself as the ultimate point of reference. Western paradigms and
discourses can be invoked in logistics and procedures as a human
experience one can learn from, like, for example, how to implement
the Islamic principle of Shura (consultation) through a pluralist
party system. Nevertheless, the West need not be our point of
reference. The divine origin of Islam should not be subject to
man-made secular measures to re-formulate it to match them. The
opposite should be the case. Any Muslim must believe in this for
Allah, Glorified be He, says in the Qur’an that He has perfected
our religion: Islam.
Deconstructing
the Qur’an:
Recently
there has been an ongoing debate regarding analyzing the Qur’an as
a simple text with the tools of the deconstruction school of
thought. This was advocated as a reformation and an innovative way
of reading the Text. The Divine nature of the Islamic text was
ignored and it was treated as a man-made text with no special nature
nor purpose. Language here was also itself considered a man-made
device and all the rules of understanding related to it subject to
change and addition. For example, Derrida’s Deconstruction is a
theory of understanding the text (philosophical, legal, fictional,
or scientific) by which a reading can attempt to undermine and
refute the text’s structure and meaning. But what would be left if
we de-sanctify the Qur’an and deconstruct it? The theories that
regard texts as an authorial enterprise that is influenced by the
text itself, the author, and the reader cannot be applied to the
Qur’an. The reason is that Qur’an is the immutable word of
Allah, Glorified be He, and Allah has all the attributes of
perfection. Allah, Glorified be He, says:
“Do
they not consider the Qur’an (with care)? Had it been from
other than Allah, they would surely have found therein much
discrepancy.” (Qur’an, 4:82).
Contradictions
and inconsistencies can be found in human texts but by no way they
can be found in a preserved Divine text like the Qur’an. The role
of reason is to understand the text and explore the structural
coherence of the text and see the explicit differences of meaning as
related to different contexts the text can be applied to not as
implicit or internal contradictions in the text itself.
There
is always a temptation to imitate the Western scholars and implement
their discourses as if they are universally valid. The current state
of backwardness of the Muslim Ummah and the apparent superiority of
the West stimulate many scholars to adhere blindly to Western
paradigms and methodologies. “Reforming” the Qur’an is another
discourse nullifying the Islamic Shari`ah. Also casting doubts on
the way the Sunnah was transmitted and/or discrediting the
Companions of the Prophet, peace and blessings be upon him, who are
well known for their numerous narrations like Abu Hurayrah. The
Qur’an is replete with verses commanding the Muslims to obey the
Prophet, peace and blessings be upon him:
“O
you who believe! Obey Allah, and obey the Messenger, and make
not vain your deeds!” (Qur’an, 47:33).
The
Sunnah expounds the Qur’an, specifies its general, qualifies its
absolute, and elaborates on its horizons of meaning. For example,
the Qur’an instructs Muslims to pray. The Sunnah determines the
number of prayers, their manner, and their times. Ignoring the
Sunnah under the pretext of the sufficiency of the Qur’an is
contrary to the Qur’an itself which says:
“(We
sent them) with clear signs and scriptures and We have sent down
unto you (also) the Message; that you explain clearly to men
what is sent for them, and that they may give thought.”
(Qur’an, 16:44) and
“We
have sent among you a messenger of your own, rehearsing to you
Our signs, and purifying you, and instructing you in scripture
and wisdom, and in new knowledge.” (Qur’an, 2:151).
These
are clear verses on the role of the Prophet, peace and blessings be
upon him, in explaining the Divine message and thus the crucial
importance of the Sunnah.
No
reasonable Muslim opposes the idea as well as the fact that Muslims
should, are, and have been reforming their understanding of Islam,
but we surely need always to dot the i’s and cross the t’s so as
not to loose the essence of Islam in that crucial process, with all
the assumed good intentions!
*
A cultural critic, Muslim scholar, author of many books, and editor of Futures: The Journal of Planning, Policy, and Futures Studies. He is based in London