A
real educator must have several virtues, among them the following:
First:
To give due importance to all aspects of a person’s mind, spirit,
and self, and to raise each to its proper perfection. The Qur’an
mentions the evil-commanding self that drags people, like beasts
with ropes around their necks, wherever it wants to go, and goads
them to obey their bodily desires. In effect, the evil-commanding
self wants people to ignore their God-given ability to elevate their
feelings, thoughts, and spirits.
The
Qur’an quotes the Prophet Joseph (Yusuf) as saying [Surely the
self commands evil, unless my Master has mercy] (Yusuf 12:53).
Commanding evil is inherent in the self’s nature. However, through
worship and discipline, the self can be raised to higher ranks, to a
position where it accuses itself for its evils and shortcomings (Al-Qiyamah
75:2), and then still higher where God addresses it: [O self at
peace! Return unto your Master, well-pleased, well-pleasing]
(Al-Fajr 89:27-28).
Higher
than the self at peace (at rest and contented) is the self perfectly
purified. Those who rise to this degree of attainment are the
nearest to God. When you look at them you remember God, for they are
like polished mirrors in which all of His attributes are reflected.
The Companions’ desire to follow the training provided by Prophet
Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon him) enabled almost all of
them to reach this degree of moral and spiritual perfection;
millions of people have followed—and continue to follow—their
example.
Second:
An education system is judged by its universality,
comprehensiveness, and quality of its students. The Prophet’s
students were ready to convey his message throughout the world. The
message they conveyed, being universal in nature and valid for all
times and places, found a ready acceptance among people of different
races, religious backgrounds, intellectual levels, and age
differences from modern-day Morocco and Spain to the Philippines,
from the Russian steppes to the heart of Africa. Its principles
remain valid. Despite numerous upheavals and changes, as well as
social, economic, intellectual, scientific, and technological
revolutions, his system remains the most unique and original, so
much so that it is the hope of the future of humanity.
Third:
An education system is judged by its ability to change its students.
Look at how Islam and the Prophet’s spread of it transformed the
tribes of Arabia into their exact opposite within the space of just
two or three decades. To those who deny or question his prophethood,
we challenge them to go anywhere in the world and accomplish, over
the course of 100 years, even one-hundredth of what he accomplished
in the deserts of Arabia 1,400 years ago. Let them take all of the
experts they can gather, and then we will wait to see their results.
When
Prophet Muhammad was conveying the message, Arabia was isolated from
its neighbors by vast deserts and rightfully could be considered one
of the most backward areas of the world in terms of its cultural,
intellectual, and moral life. The Hijaz, where the Prophet was born,
had experienced no social evolution and had attained no intellectual
development worthy of mention. Dominated by superstitions, barbarous
and violent customs, and degraded moral standards, Arabia lived in
savagery. People drank wine, gambled, and indulged in what even
average societies consider immoral sexual activities. Prostitutes
advertised their services by hanging a flag on the doors of their
houses.
It
was a land without law and a government. Might was right, as in many
parts of the world today, and looting, arson, and murder were
commonplace. Any trivial incident could provoke intertribal feuding,
which sometimes developed into peninsula-wide wars.
These
were the people Prophet Muhammad appeared among. With the message he
relayed from God and his way of preaching it, he eradicated
barbarism and savagery, adorned Arabia’s wild and unyielding
peoples with all praiseworthy virtues, and made them teachers of the
world. His domination was not simply physical or military; rather,
he conquered and subjugated them by becoming the beloved of their
hearts, the teacher of their minds, the trainer of their souls, and
the ruler of their spirits. He eradicated their evil qualities and
implanted and inculcated in his followers’ hearts exalted
qualities in such a way that they became second nature to all of his
followers.
But
this transformation was not limited only to the people of his own
time and place, for this process continues even today wherever his
message spreads. It was not only quickly accepted in Arabia, Syria,
Iraq, Persia, Egypt, Northern Africa, and Spain at its first
outburst, but, with the exception of the now-vanished brilliant
civilization of Islamic Spain, it has never lost its vantage ground.
Since it first appeared, it has never stopped spreading.
Many
world-renowned individuals have been raised in the school of
Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon him). Certainly, we come
across numerous great historical figures in other schools of
education as well. God has honored humanity with great heroes,
eminent statesmen, invincible commanders, inspired saints, and great
scientists. However, most of them have not made a deep impression on
more than one or two aspects of human life, for they confine
themselves to those fields. But since Islam is a divine way for all
fields of life, a divine system encompassing all aspects of life
“like a perfect work of architecture all of whose parts are
harmoniously conceived to complement and support each other, nothing
lacking, with the result of an absolute balance and solid
composure,” according the Muhammad Asad, a Jewish convert. Its
students usually combine within themselves the spiritual and the
rational, the intellectual and the material, the worldly with the
other-worldly, the ideal with the real, and the scientific and the
revealed (by God).
At
its very outset, Islam abolished tribal conflicts and condemned
racial and ethnic discrimination. The Prophet put the Quraishi
chiefs under Zaid’s command (an emancipated slave), and
innumerable scholars and scientists, commanders, and saints appeared
among conquered peoples. Among them was Tariq ibn Ziyad, an
emancipated Berber slave who conquered Spain with 90,000 valiant
warriors and laid the foundations of one of the most splendid
civilizations of world history. After this victory, he went to the
palace where the defeated king’s treasury was kept. He said to
himself, “Be careful, Tariq. Yesterday you were a slave. God
emancipated you, and today you are a victorious commander. However,
you will change tomorrow into flesh rotting under earth. Finally, a
day will come when you will stand in the presence of God.”
The
world and its pomp could not attract him, and he continued to live a
very simple life. What kind of education could transform a slave
into such a dignified and honorable person?
However,
his conquest of Spain was not his real victory. This came when he
stood before the treasury of the Spanish king and reminded himself
that one day he would die and face God. As a result of this
self-advice, he took none of the treasure for himself.
`Uqbah
ibn Nafi’ was another great commander who conquered northern
Africa and reached the Atlantic coast. There he stood and said, “O
God, if this sea of darkness did not appear before me, I would
convey Your name, the source of light, to the remotest corners of
the world.”
Before
his conversion, `Abdullah ibn Mas`ud took care of `Uqbah ibn Abi
Mu`ayt’s sheep. He was a weak, little man whom everyone ignored.
After becoming a Muslim, however, he was one of the most senior
Companions. During his caliphate, `Umar sent `Abdullah to Kufah as a
teacher. In the scholarly climate he established there, the greatest
figures of Islamic jurisprudence grew up, among them `Alqamah,
Ibrahim An-Nakha`i, Hammad ibn Abi Sulaiman, Sufyan Ath-Thawri, and
especially Imam Abu Hanifah, the founder of the largest Islamic
legal school of thought.
`Ikrimah
was the son of Abu Jahl, the harsh and inflexible leader of the
Quraishi unbelievers. Finally, after the Conquest of Makkah, he
converted to Islam. This event so changed him that he welcomed
martyrdom 3 years later at the Battle of Yarmuk. His son, `Amir, was
martyred with him.
Khansa’
was one of the finest poetesses before Islam. Becoming a Muslim, she
abandoned poetry because “While we have the Qur’an, I cannot
write poems.” She lost her four sons at the Battle of Qadisiyyah.
This great woman, who had lamented her brother’s death before the
appearance of Islam with a great poem, did not lament this loss.
Instead, she deepened her submission to God and said only, “O God,
all praise be to You. You have bestowed on me while alive the
possibility of offering you as martyrs my four sons that You gave
me.”
The
school of Prophet Muhammad also produced the most just rulers in
history. Besides Abu Bakr, `Uthman, `Ali and many others who
succeeded them, `Umar has been recognized in almost every age as one
of the world’s most just and greatest statesmen. He used to say,
“If a sheep falls from a bridge even on the river Tigris and dies,
God will call me to account for it on the Day of Judgment.” When
you compare the pagan `Umar to the Muslim `Umar, you easily see the
sharp contrast between the two and understand how radically Islam
changes people.