|
Looking For Global Reconciliation? Look
To Islam - Stop The Islamophobes
16 June 2011
By Wahida C. Valiante
“With Canadians being periodically subjected to
ill-informed, ignorant, Islamophobic and downright
racist rants by invited bigots to Canada who presume
to lecture us on the evils of Islam, we should look
instead to those with the intelligence and the moral
fortitude to critically understand the message of
Islam, a message whose core is about peace with
justice and human equality.”
Noah Feldman in his book “After Jihad: America and the
Struggle for Islamic Democracy,” comments on the
universality of the Qur’anic approach to human
existence. He writes:
“Islam is a global religion. Its followers constitute
one of the world’s largest religious communities. They
are of every ethnic group and inhabit every type of
geographical region. The religion’s historical success
as a universal religion arises in part from the
simplicity of its message and its ability to make
itself relevant to different times and peoples. Islam
constitutes a ‘mobile idea’ because it can be easily
understood anywhere and is flexible enough to come
together ‘in intriguing ways to produce unanticipated
new configurations’.” (Feldman 2003, 11-12)
In fact, it was more than 1400 years ago that Islam
introduced to the world a new concept of the unity of
the human — not just that of specific nations. The
Islamic idea, writes M. Ali, “welded together nations
which had warred with one another since the world
began. It was not only in Arabia, among the ever
bickering tribes of a single peninsula, that this
great miracle … was wrought.” (Ali 1973, 7-8)
Speaking of Arabia, the same author adds: “It was
among these people that Prophet Muhammad was born who
was to unite the whole known world of the east and
south.” (Ali 1973, 7-8) Islam laid the basis of a
unification of humanity to which no other religion can
lay claim, by eliminating differences of colour, race,
language, geographical boundaries, even of culture.
“All men [people] are a single nation.” (Ali, Qur’an
2:123)
Islam’s universality, or global view of humanity, is
based on the concept of Tawhid – the singularity of
God, “who knows the secrets of the heavens and earth
and the secrets of the [collective] minds.” (Asad,
Qur’an 35:38) The importance of Tawhid, the apex of
Islam, lies in its view of creation. All creation
shares a common source in God, as well as a common
origin (the single self) and a common purpose – that
humans serve as God’s vicegerents on earth. Thus, the
foundational unity of creation comprises different
parts living in harmonious order with the whole and
embodying universal concepts, ethical and moral laws,
ordinances and rules, all of which relate to every
form of existence in this one unified and
comprehensive pattern.
Perhaps the most important test of Tawhid is in terms
of its capacity for generating a guiding model, or the
system of Islam, an alternative course of action. It
engages the full participation of each interconnected
and interdependent human being in a community-oriented
way of life that embraces diversity, pluralism,
spirituality, altruism and selflessness. Because unity
offers an alternative perception of personhood, it
also invites alternative modes of action and behaviour,
enabling human beings to live together more peacefully
within their families, communities, societies and even
entire nations, as opposed to striving for control
over one another.
Thus, the precepts of Tawhid provide the guidance and
resources for dealing with some of the most difficult
and intractable social problems that still confront
humanity today. In order to explore this area however,
I must first examine the Islamic social order itself
and define its foundational concepts, general rules,
principles, and laws, as well as critically examine
their application in everyday life. The fundamental
question of our times is: does this system of Islam
have the potential to renew itself and adequately
respond to circumstances that are different in varying
degrees from those in which it was born and matured? A
response to this question – one that is both
rhetorical and pragmatic – is offered by J.H. Denison:
“In the fifth and sixth centuries the civilized world
stood on the verge of chaos … It seemed then that the
great civilization which it had taken four thousand
years to construct was on the verge of disintegration,
and that [humankind] was likely to return to that
condition of barbarism where every tribe and sect was
against the next and law and order were unknown… The
old tribal sanctions had lost their power… The new
sanctions created by Christianity were working
division and destruction instead of unity and order…
Civilization like a gigantic tree whose foliage had
over-reached the world… stood tottering… rotted to the
core… Was there any emotional culture that could be
brought in to gather [humankind] once more into unity
and to save civilization? It was among these people
that the man (Muhammad) was born who was to unite the
whole known world of the east and south.” (Denison
1928, 265-268)
In “Whither Islam,” H.A.R. Gibb expands on that theme
of uniting people from different races and ethnicities
in a status of shared equality, asserting that “Islam
has still the power to reconcile apparently
irreconcilable elements of race and tradition.” (Gibb
1932, 379)
“But Islam has yet further service to render to the
cause of humanity… No other society has such a record
of success in uniting in an equality of status, of
opportunity, and endeavour, so many and so various
races … The great Muslim communities of Africa,
Indonesia, and India; perhaps, also the small Muslim
community of Japan, show that Islam has still the
power to reconcile apparently irreconcilable elements
of race and tradition. If ever the opposition of the
great societies of the East and the West is to be
replaced by cooperation, the mediation of Islam is an
indispensable condition.” (Gibb 1932, 379)
With Canadians being periodically subjected to
ill-informed, ignorant, Islamophobic and downright
racist rants by invited bigots to Canada who presume
to lecture us on the evils of Islam, we should look
instead to those with the intelligence and the moral
fortitude to critically understand the message of
Islam, a message whose core is about peace with
justice and human equality. This message is so clear
and simple that its power escapes the twisted and
perverted mind of those who simply cannot fathom the
universality of the Qur’an that was so eloquently
understood by Feldman, Denison and Gibbs.
“We have sent down to you the Book explaining all
things, a guidance, a mercy and glad tidings to those
who have submitted themselves to God.” (Ali, Qur’an
16:89) “For indeed, many facets have We given in this
Qur’an to every kind of lesson [designed] for [the
benefit of] humankind!” (Asad, Qur’an 17:89)
©
EsinIslam.Com
Add
Comments |