Can the Islamic Intellectual
Heritage be Recovered?
William C. Chittick
(note: some of the Arabic terms were corrupted in the transfer. I corrected
most of them.)
By "the Islamic intellectual heritage" I mean the ways of thinking
about God, the world, and the human being established by the Qur’an and the
Prophet and elaborated upon by generations of practicing Muslims. I use the
term "intellectual" to translate the word ‘aqli, and by it I
want to distinguish this heritage from another, closely related heritage that
also has theoretical and intellectual dimensions. This second heritage is the
"transmitted" (naqli) heritage.
Transmitted knowledge is learned by "imitation" (taqlid), that
is, by following the authority of those who possess it. This sort of knowledge
includes Qur’an recitation, Hadith, Arabic grammar, and jurisprudence. It is
impossible to be a Muslim without taqlid, because one cannot discover
the Qur’an or the practices of the Shari'ah by oneself. Just as language is
learned by imitation, so also the Qur’an and Islamic practice are learned by
imitating those who know them. Those who have assumed the responsibility of
preserving this transmitted heritage are known as its "knowers," that
is, its ulama.
In transmitted knowledge, it is not proper to ask "why." If one does
ask why, the answer is that the Qur’an says what it says, or that grammar
determines the rules of proper speech. In contrast, the only way to learn
intellectual knowledge is to understand it. One cannot learn it by accepting it
on the basis of authority. Intellectual knowledge includes mathematics, logic,
philosophy, and much of theology. In learning, "why" is the most
basic and important of questions. If one does not understand why, then one will
be following someone else’s authority. It makes no sense to accept that 2 + 2 =
4 on the basis of a report, no matter how trust worthy the source may be.
Either you understand it, or you do not. The goal here is not taqlid,
but tahqiq, which can be translated as "verification" or
"realization."
In the transmitted sciences, people must follows mujtahids, whether the
mujtahids be alive (as in Shi’ism) or dead (as in Sunnism). In other words, one
follows a mujtahid because the only way to learn the transmitted sciences is
from those who already know them. But one cannot follow a mujtahid in matters
of faith, because faith pertains to one’s own understanding of God, the
prophets, the scriptures, and the Last Day. A Muslim cannot say, "I have
faith in God because my mujtahid told me to have faith." Someone who said
this would be saying that if the mujtahid told him not to believe in God, he
would not. In other words, he would be saying that his faith is empty words.
Although in theory we can distinguish between the transmitted and intellectual
sciences, in practice the two have always been closely interrelated, and the
transmitted sciences have been the foundation upon which the intellectual
sciences are built. One cannot speak properly without grammar, and one cannot
understand things Islamically without the Qur’an and the Hadith. However, the
fact that people may have an excellent knowledge of the transmitted sciences
does not mean that they know anything at all about the intellectual sciences.
Nor does the ability to recite the opinions of the great Muslims on matters of
faith prove that the reciter has any understanding of what he is saying.
Both the transmitted and the intellectual sciences are essential to the
survival of any religion—not only Islam—and both are gradually being lost. By
and large, however, the transmitted sciences have been preserved better than
the intellectual sciences, and the reason is obvious. Anyone can learn Qur’an
and Hadith, but very few people can truly understand what God and the Prophet
are talking about. One can only understand in one’s own measure. One cannot
understand mathematics (or any of the other intellectual sciences) without both
native ability and training. One may have a great aptitude for mathematics, but
without long years of study, one will never get very far. And mathematics deals
with issues that are relatively near at hand, even in the most sophisticated of
its modern forms. What about theology, which deals with the deepest issues of
reality, the furthest from our everyday experience?
It is important to stress that no religion can survive, much less flourish,
without a living intellectual tradition. In order to verify this—because this
statement should not be accepted on the basis of taqlid —we can ask the
questions, What was the intellectual tradition for? What function did it play
in Islamic society? What was its goal? To ask these questions is the same as
asking, "Why should Muslims think?" The basic answer is that Muslims
should think because they must think, because they are thinking beings. They
have no choice but to think, because God gave them minds and intelligence when
He created them. Not only that, but God has commanded them to think and to
employ their intelligence in numerous Qur'anic verses.
No doubt, this does not mean that God requires all Muslims to enter into the
sophisticated sort of study and reflection that went on in the intellectual
tradition, because it is obvious that not everyone has the proper sort of
talents, capacities, and circumstances to do so. Nevertheless, all Muslims have
the moral and religious obligation to use their minds correctly—if they have
minds. As the Qur’an puts it, la yukallifu Allahu nafsan illa wus‘aha,
"God does not burden any soul save to its capacity." When people’s
capacity includes thinking, God has given them the burden of thinking
correctly. But He does not tell them what to think, because then He would be
making taqlid incumbent in intellectual matters. If many of the Ulama
have forbidden taqlid in matters of usul, it is because God
Himself forbids it. He has given people minds, and they cannot use their minds
correctly if they simply accept dogma or opinions on the basis of authority. To
think properly a person must actually think, which is to say that conclusions
must be reached through one’s own intellectual struggle, not someone else’s.
Any teacher of an intellectual science—like mathematics or philosophy—knows
this perfectly well.
It is true that many if not most people are unreflective and would never even
ask why they should think about things. They simply go about their daily
routine and imagine that they understand their own situation. In any case, they
suppose, God wants nothing more from them than observing the Shari'ah. But this
is no argument for those who have the ability to stop and think. Anyone who has
the capacity and talent to reflect upon God, the universe, and the human soul
must do so. Not to do so is to betray one’s God-given nature and to disobey
God’s commandments.
Since some Muslims have no choice but to think, learning how to think correctly
must be an important area of Muslim effort. But what defines
"correct" thinking? How do we tell the difference between right
thinking and wrong thinking? Does the fact that people have no choice but to
think mean that they are free to think anything they want? The Islamic answer
to this sort of question has always been that the way people think is far from
indifferent. Some modes of thinking are encouraged by the Qur’an and the
Sunnah, some are discouraged. Islamically, it is incumbent upon those who think
to employ their minds in ways that coincide with the goals of the Qur’an and
the Sunnah. In other words, the goal of the Islamic intellectual tradition must
coincide with the goal of Islam, or else it is not Islamic intellectuality.
So, what is the goal of Islam? In general terms, Islam’s goal is to bring
people back to God. However, everyone is going back to God in any case, so the
issue is not going back, but how one goes back. Through the Qur’an and the
Sunnah, God guides people back to Him in a manner that will ensure their
everlasting happiness. If they want to follow a "straight path" (Sirat
mustaqim), one that will lead to happiness and not to misery, they need to
employ their minds, awareness, and thinking in ways that are harmonious with
God Himself, who is the only true Reality. If they follow illusion and
unreality, they will be following a crooked path and most likely will not end
up in a pleasant place when they go back.
The history of Islamic intellectuality is embodied in the various forms that
Muslims have adopted over time in attempting to think rightly and correctly.
The intellectual tradition was robust and lively, so disagreements were common.
Nevertheless, in all the different schools of thought that have appeared over
Islamic history, one principle has been agreed upon by everyone. This principle
is the fact that God is one and that He is the only source of truth and
reality. He is the origin of all things, and all things return to Him. This
principle, as everyone knows, is called tawhid, "asserting the unity of
God." To think Islamically is to recognize God’s unity and to draw the
proper consequences from His unity. Differences of opinion arise concerning the
proper consequences, not in the fact that God is one.
The consequences that people draw from tawhid depend largely on their
understanding of "God." Typically, Muslims have sought to understand
God by meditating upon the implications of God’s names and attributes as
expressed in the Qur’an and the Sunnah. The conclusions reached in these
meditations have everything to do with how God is understood. If He is
understood primarily as a Lawgiver, people will draw conclusions having to do
with the proper observance of the Shari‘ah. If He is understood primarily as wrathful, they will
conclude that they must avoid His wrath. If He is understood primarily as
merciful, they will think that they must seek out His mercy. If He is
understood primarily as beautiful, they will know that they must love Him. God,
of course, has "ninety-nine names"—at least—and every name throws
different light on what exactly God is, what exactly He is not, and how exactly
people should understand Him and relate to Him. Naturally, thoughtful Muslims
have always understood God in many ways, and they have drawn diverse
conclusions on the basis of each way of understanding. This diversity of
understanding in the midst of tawhid is prefigured in the Prophet’s
prayer, "O God, I seek refuge in Your mercy from Your wrath, I seek refuge
in Your good pleasure from Your displeasure, I seek refuge in You from
You."
Obstacles to Recovery
My title indicates that I think the Islamic intellectual heritage has largely
been lost in modern times. This is a vast topic, and I cannot begin to offer
proofs for my assertion, but I think it is obvious to most Muslims who have
some awareness of their own history. What I can do here is to offer a few
suggestions as to the obstacles that stand in the way of recovery. For present
purposes, I want to deal with two basic sorts of obstacles, though there are
other sorts as well. First are intellectual forces that originally came from
outside. They are intimately connected with the types of thinking that grew up
in Western Europe and America and have come to dominate in the modern world. However,
they have long since become an internal problem, because most Muslims have
either actively and eagerly adopted them as their own, or they been molded by
them without being aware of the fact. Given that these intellectual forces have
now been internalized, they have given rise to a second group of obstacles,
which are modern attitudes and social forces within the Islamic community that
prevent recovery.
In suggesting the nature of the first category of obstacles, we can begin with
a basic question: Is it possible nowadays to think Islamically? Or, Is it
possible to be a "Muslim intellectual" in the modern world? By this,
I do not mean an intellectual who is by religious affiliation a follower of
Islam, but rather an individual who thinks Islamically about the three basic
dimensions of Islam—practice, faith, and sincerity— while living in the midst
of modernity.
I have no doubt that there are tens of thousands of Muslim intellectuals in the
ordinary sense of the word—that is, Muslim writers, professors, doctors,
lawyers, and scientists who are concerned with intellectual issues. But I have
serious doubts as to whether any more than a tiny fraction of such people are
"Muslim intellectuals" in the sense in which I mean the term. Yes,
there are many thoughtful and intellectually sophisticated people who were born
as followers of Islam and who may indeed practice it carefully. But do they
think Islamically? Is it possible to be both a scientist in the modern sense
and a Muslim who understands the universe and the human soul as the Qur’«n and
the Sunnah explain them? Is it possible to be a sociologist and at the same
time to think in terms of tawhid?
It appears to me, as an outside observer, that the thinking of most Muslim
intellectuals is not determined by Islamic principles and Islamic
understanding, but by habits of mind learned unconsciously in grammar school
and high school and then confirmed and solidified by university training. Such
people may act like Muslims, but they think like doctors, engineers,
sociologists, and political scientists.
It is naive to imagine that one can learn how to think Islamically simply by
attending lectures once a week or by reading a few books written by
contemporary Muslim leaders, or by studying the Qur’an, or by saying one’s
prayers and having "firm faith." In the traditional Islamic world,
the great thinkers and intellectuals spent their whole lives searching for
knowledge and deepening their understanding. The Islamic intellectual heritage
is extraordinarily rich. Hundreds of thousands of books were written, and in
modern times the majority of even the important books are not available,
because they have never been printed. Those that have been printed are rarely
read by Muslim intellectuals, and those few that have been translated from
Arabic and Persian into English and other modern languages have, by and large,
been badly translated, so little guidance will be found in the translations.
I do not mean to suggest that it would be necessary to read all the great books
of the intellectual tradition in their original languages in order to think
Islamically. If modern-day Muslims could read one of these important books,
even in translation, and understand it, their thinking would be deeply
effected. However, the only way to understand such books is to prepare oneself
for understanding, and that demands dedication, study, and training. This
cannot be done on the basis of a modern university education, unless, perhaps,
one has devoted it to the Islamic tradition (I say "perhaps" because
many Muslims and non-Muslims with Ph-D in Islamic Studies cannot read and
understand the great books of the intellectual heritage).
Given that modern schooling is rooted in topics and modes of thought that are
not harmonious with traditional Islamic learning, it is profoundly difficult
today for any thinking and practicing Muslim to harmonize the domain of
intellectuality with the domain of faith and practice. One cannot study for
many years and then be untouched by what one has studied. There is no escape
from picking up mental habits from the types of thinking that one devotes one’s
life to. It is most likely, and almost, but not quite inevitable, for modern
intellectuals with religious faith to have compartmentalized minds — I will not
go so far as to say "split personalities," but that is common enough.
One compartment of the mind will encompass the professional, intellectual
domain, and the other the domain of personal piety and practice. Although
individuals may rationalize the relationship between the two domains, they
necessarily do so in terms of the world view that is determined by the rational
side of the mind, which is the professional, modern side. The world view
established by the Qur’«n and passed down by generations of Muslims will be
closed to such people, and hence they will draw their rational categories and
their ways of thinking from their professional training and the ever-shifting
Zeitgeist that is embodied in contemporary intellectual trends and popularized
through television and other forms of mass indoctrination.
Many Muslim scientists tell us that modern science helps them see the wonders
of God’s creation, and this is certainly an argument for preferring the natural
sciences over the social sciences. But is it necessary to study physics or bio–
chemistry to see the signs of God in all His creatures? The Qur’an keeps on
telling Muslims, "Will you not reflect, will you not ponder, will you not
think?" About what? About the "signs" (ayat) of God,
which are found, as over two hundred Qur’anic verses remind us, in everything.
In short, one does not need to be a great scientist, or any scientist at all,
to understand that the world tells us about the majesty of its Creator. Any
fool knows this. This is what the Prophet called the "religion of old
women" (din al-‘aja’iz), and no one needs any intellectual training
to understand it. It is simply necessary to look at the world, and it becomes
obvious to "those with minds" (ulu ’l-albab).
It is true that a basic understanding of the signs of God may provide
sufficient knowledge for salvation. After all, the Prophet said, aktharu ahl
al-jannati bulhun, "Most of the people of paradise are fools."
However, the foolishness that leads to paradise demands foolishness concerning
the affairs of this world, and that is very difficult to come by nowadays. It
is certainly not found among Muslim intellectuals. They are already far too
clever, and this explains why they are such good doctors and engineers. In
other words, they have already employed and developed their minds, so they have
no choice but to be intellectuals. Inescapably, their intelligence has been
shaped and formed by their education, their disciplines, and the media.
The Gods of Modernity
The information and habits of mind that are imparted by modernity are not
congruent with Islamic learning. Perhaps the best way to demonstrate this
concisely is to reflect on the characteristics of modernity—by which I mean the
thinking and norms of the "global culture" in which we live today. It
should be obvious that whatever characterizes modernity, it is not tawhid,
the first principle of Islamic thinking. Rather, it is fair to say that
modernity is characterized by the opposite of tawhid. One could call
this shirk or "associating others with God." But for most Muslims,
the word shirk is too emotionally charged to be of much help in the discussion.
Moreover, they have lost touch with what it really means, because they are
unacquainted with the Islamic intellectual tradition, where tawhid and
shirk are analyzed and explained. So let me call the characteristic trait of
modernity "takthir," which is the literal opposite of tawhid.
Tawhid means to make things one, and, in the religious context, it means
"asserting that God is one." Takthir mean to make things many,
and in this context I understand it to mean "asserting that the gods are
many."
Modern times and modern thought lack a single center, a single orientation, a
single goal, any single purpose at all. Modernity has no common principle or
guideline. In other words, there is no single "god"—since a god is
what gives meaning and orientation to life. A god is what you serve. The modern
world serves many, many gods. Through an ever-intensifying process of takthir,
the gods have been multiplied beyond count, and people worship whatever god
appeals to them, usually several at once.
The truth of my assertion becomes obvious if we compare the intellectual
history of the West and Islamic civilization. Up until recent times, Islamic
thought was characterized by a tendency toward unity, harmony, integration, and
synthesis. The great Muslim thinkers were masters of many disciplines, but they
looked upon all of them as branches of a single tree, the tree of tawhid.
There was never any contradiction between studying astronomy and zoology, or
physics and ethics, or mathematics and law, or mysticism and logic. Everything
was governed by the same principles, because everything fell under God’s
all-encompassing reality.
The history of Western thought is characterized by the opposite tendency.
Although there was a great deal of unitarian thinking in the medieval period,
from the Middle Ages onward there has been constantly increasing dispersion and
multiplicity. "Renaissance men" could know a great deal about all the
sciences and at the same time have a unifying vision. But nowadays, everyone is
an expert in some tiny field of specialization, and "information"
increases exponentially. The result is mutual incomprehension and universal
disharmony. It is impossible to establish any unity of knowledge, and no real
communication takes place among the specialists in different disciplines, or
even among specialists in different subfields of the same discipline. In short,
people in the modern world have no unifying principles, and the result is an
ever-increasing multiplicity of goals and desires, an ever-intensifying chaos.
Despite the chaos, everyone has gods that he or she worships. No one can
survive in an absolute vacuum, with no goal, no significance, no meaning, no
orientation. The gods people worship are those points of reference that give
meaning and context to their lives. The difference between traditional objects
of worship and modern objects of worship is that in modernity, it is almost
impossible to subordinate all the minor gods to a supreme god, and when this is
done, the supreme god is generally one that has been manufactured by
ideologies. It is certainly not the God of tawhid, who negates the
reality of all other gods. However, it may well be a blatant imitation of the
God of tawhid, especially when religion enters into the domain of
politics.
The gods in the world of takthir are legion. To mention the more
important ones would be to list the defining myths and ideologies of modern
times—evolution, progress, science, medicine, nationalism, socialism,
democracy, Marxism, freedom, equality. But perhaps the most dangerous of the
gods are those that are the most difficult to recognize for what they are,
because we in the modern world take them for granted and look upon them much as
we look upon the air that we breathe. Let me list the most common of these gods
by their seemingly innocuous names: basic need, care, communication,
consumption, development, education, energy, exchange, factor, future, growth,
identity, information, living standard, management, model, modernization,
planning, production, progress, project, raw material, relationship, resource,
role, service, sexuality, solution, system, welfare, work. These are some, but
not all, of the ninety-nine most beautiful gods of modernity, and reciting
their names is the dhikr of modern man.
Anyone who wants an analysis and explanation of the nature of these gods should
refer to the book Plastic Words by the German linguist, Uwe Poerksen. The
subtitle is more instructive as to what the book is all about: The Tyranny of a
Modular Language. Poerksen explains how the modern use of language—a use that
achieved dominance after the Second World War—has resulted in the production of
a group of words that have turned into the most destructive tyrants the world
has ever seen. He does not call them "gods," because he is linguist
and has no apparent interest in theology. Nevertheless, he does give them the
label "tyrant," and this is a good translation for the Qur’anic
divine name, al-jabbar. When this name is applied to God, it means that
God has absolute controlling power over creation. "Tyranny" becomes a
bad thing when it is ascribed to creatures, because it indicates that they have
usurped God’s power and authority. In the case of the plastic words, the
usurpation has taken place at the hands of certain words that are used to shape
discussion of societal goals.
As Poerksen points out, these tyrannical words have at least thirty common
characteristics. The most important of these is that they have no definition,
though they do have an aura of goodness and beneficence about them. In
linguistic terms, this is to say that such words have no
"denotation," but they do have many "connotations." There
is no such thing as "care" or "welfare" or "standard
of living," but these words suggest many good things to most people. They
are abstract terms that seem to be scientific, so they carry an aura of
authority in a world in which science is one of the most important of the supreme
gods.
Each of these words turns something indefinable into a limitless ideal. By
making the ideal limitless, the word awakens unlimited needs in people, and
once these needs are awakened, they appear to be self-evident. The Qur’an says
that God is the rich, and that people are the poor toward God. In other words,
people have no real need except toward God. But nowadays, people feel need
toward meaningless concepts, and they think that they must have them. These
empty idols have become the objects of people’s devotion and worship.
The plastic words give great power to those who speak on their behalf. Anyone
who uses these words—care, communication, consumption, information,
development—gains prestige, because he speaks for god and truth, and this forces
other people to keep silent. After all, we think, only a complete idiot would
object to care and development. Everyone must follow those whose only concern
is to care for us and to help us develop.
The mujtahids who speak for these mini-gods are, of course, the
"experts." Each of the plastic words sets up an ideal and encourages
us to think that only the experts can achieve it, so we must entrust our lives
to them. We must follow the authority of the scientific mujtahids, who lay down
shari'ah for our health, our welfare, and our education. People treat the
pronouncements of the experts as fatwas. If the experts reach consensus (ijma‘)
that we must destroy a village as a sacrificial offering to the god
"development," we have no choice but to follow their authority. The
mujtahids know best.
Each of the plastic words makes other words appear backwards and out-of-date.
We can be proud of worshiping these gods, and all of our friends and colleagues
will consider us quite enlightened for reciting the proper dhikr and du‘a.
Those who still take the old God seriously can cover up this embarrassing fact
by worshiping the new gods along with Him. And obviously, many people who
continue to claim to worship the old-fashioned God twist His teachings so that
He also seems to be telling us to serve "care, communication, consumption,
identity, information, living standard, management, resource . . ." — the dhikr
is well enough known.
Because the plastic gods have no denotations, all those who believe in them are
able to understand them in terms of the connotations that appeal to then and
then convince themselves that they are serving the basic need that is stated in
the very name of the god, because, after all, it is a self-evident need. We are
poor toward it and we must serve it. It is obvious to everyone that these gods
are worthy of devotion. Religious people will have no trouble giving a
religious color to these tyrants. In the name of the plastic gods, people of
good will join together to transform the world, with no understanding that they
are serving man-made idols, idols that, as the Qur’an puts it, "your own
hands have wrought."
The topic of false gods is vast, especially nowadays, when more false gods
exist than were ever found in the past. The Qur’an tells us that every prophet
came with the message of tawhid, and that God sent a prophet to every
community. Every community of the past had its own version of tawhid,
even if people sometimes fell into shirk because of ignorance and
forgetfulness. But in modern society, there are nothing but the gods of takthir,
and these gods, by definition, leave no room for tawhid.
Understanding the nature of false gods has always been central to the
intellectual sciences, but this cannot be the concern of the transmitted sciences.
One cannot accept that "There is no god but God" simply on the basis
of taqlid. The statement must be understood for people to have true
faith in it, even if their understanding is far from perfect. Hence most of the
Islamic intellectual tradition has been concerned with clarifying and
explaining the objects of faith. What is it that Muslims have faith in? How are
they to understand these objects? Why should they have faith in them?
The first of the Islamic objects of faith is God, then angels, prophets, the
Last Day, and the "measuring out, the good of it and the evil of it" (al-qadri
khayrihâ wa sharrihâ). In discussing God and the other objects of faith, it
is important to explain not only they are, but also what they are not. When
people do not know what God is and when they do not know that it is easy to
fall into the habit of worshiping false gods, then they will have no protection
against the takthir of the modern world, the multiplicity of gods that modern
ways of thinking demand that they serve.
What is striking about contemporary Islam’s encounter with modernity is that
Muslims lack the intellectual preparation to deal with the situation. Muslim
intellectuals—with a few honorable exceptions—do not question the legitimacy of
the modern gods. Rather, they debate about the best way to serve the new
tyrants. In other words, they think that Islamic society must be modified and
adapted to follow the standards set by modernity, standards that are built on
the basis of takthir. This is to say that innumerable modern-day Muslims
are forever looking for the best ways to adapt Islam to shirk.
Many Muslims today recognize that the West has paid too high a price for
modernization and secularization. They see that various social crises have
arisen in all modernized societies, and they understand that these crises are
somehow connected with the loss of the religious traditions and the devaluation
of ethical and moral guidelines. But many of these same people tell us that
Islam is different. Islam can adopt the technology and the know-how—the
"progress," the "development," the "expertise"—
while preserving Islam’s moral and spiritual strength and thereby avoiding the
social disintegration of the West. In other words, they think, Muslims can
forget tawhid, embark on a course of takthir, and suffer no
negative consequences.
The fact that so many people think this way and do not recognize the absurdity
of their position shows that they have lost the vision of tawhid that
used to give life to Islamic thinking. They cannot see that everything is
interrelated, and they fail to understand that the worship of false gods
necessarily entails the dissolution of every sort of order—the corruption not
only of individuals and society, but also of the natural world. In other words,
when people refuse to serve God as He has asked them to serve Him, they cannot
fulfill the functions for which He has created them. The net result is that our
world becomes ever more chaotic. A significant Qur’anic verse here is this:
"Corruption has appeared in the land and the sea because of what the hands
of people have earned" (30: 41). When people follow the gods of takthir,
corruption can only increase, and it will end up by destroying the natural
world just as it is destroying society. "Corruption" (fasad),
after all, is defined as the lack of "wholesomeness", and
wholesomeness is wholeness, health, balance, harmony, coherence, order,
integration, and unity, all of which are established through tawhid or
"making things one."
Attitudinal Obstacles
The second sort of obstacle preventing the recovery of the intellectual
heritage can be discerned on the societal level in the attitudes and habits of
mind that have been adopted by modern-day Muslims. These result from the loss
of intellectual independence and have become embodied in the institutions and
structures of contemporary society. I will not attempt to go into details.
Instead let me suggest that these obstacles become manifest in various currents
that are not difficult to see, such as the politicization of the community,
monolithic interpretations of Islamic teachings, and blind acceptance of the
teachings of contemporary Muslim leaders (in other words taqlid where
there should be tahqiq). Perhaps the broadest and most pernicious of
these obstacles, however, is the general attitude that one might call
"anti-traditionalism."
Although Islam, like other religions, is built on tradition—the sum total of
the transmitted and intellectual heritages—many Muslims see no contradiction
between believing in the gods of modernity and accepting the authority of the
Qur’an and the Sunnah. In order to do this, however, they need to ignore
thirteen hundred years of Islamic intellectual history and pretend that no one
needs the help of the great thinkers of the past to understand and interpret
the Qur’an and the Sunnah.
We need to keep in mind that if there is any universally accepted dogma in the
modern world, it is the rejection of tradition. The great prophets of
modernity—Descartes, Rousseau, Marx, Freud—followed a variety of gods, but they
all agreed that the old gods were no longer of any use. In the Islamic view,
God’s prophets share tawhid. In contrast, the modern prophets share the
rejection of tawhid and the assertion of takthir. One can only
reject God’s unity by inventing other gods to replace Him.
In traditional Islamic terms, God is qadim," ancient" or
"eternal." God has always been and always will be. In modernity, the
gods are new. To stay new, they have to be changed or modified frequently. The
new is always to be preferred over the old, which is "outmoded" and
"backwards." Science is always making new discoveries, and technology
is constantly offering new inventions that all of us quickly think we need.
Anything that is not in the process of renewal is thought to be dead.
One name for this god of newness is "originality." He rules by
ordaining new styles and models, and his priests are found everywhere,
especially in the domains of advertising and mass indoctrination. Thus we have
the fashion mujtahids who tell women what to wear and who change their fatawa
every year. Originality’s priests also exercise authority in the world of art.
Or take the modern university, where many professors adopt the latest
intellectual styles as soon as they arrive on the scene. In much of the modern
university, as in women’s fashion, Paris rules.
The greatest danger of anti-traditionalism for modern Muslims is that they have
accepted this god—like so many others—without giving any thought to what they
are doing. Hence they think that for thirteen hundred years, Muslims had
nothing to say. They want to retain their Muslim identity, but they imagine
that in order to do this, it is sufficient to keep their allegiance to the
Qur’an and the Sunnah, blithely ignoring the great interpreters of the
tradition over the centuries.
If people think they no longer need the grand interpreters, this seems to be
because they believe in the gods of progress, science, and development. They
tell us that today we know so much more about the world than those people of
olden times, because we have science. People who think this way usually know
nothing about science except what they are taught by the media, and they
certainly know nothing about the Islamic intellectual tradition. They are blind
obedientalists on the intellectual level, even though taqlid is absurd
in such matters. What is worse, this is a selective taqlid. They will
only accept the intellectual authority of the "scientists" and the
"experts," not that of the great Muslim thinkers of the past. If
Einstein said it, it must be true, but if Ghazzali or Mulla Sadra said it, it
is "unscientific"—which is to say that it is false.
If such people really knew something about the intellectual roots and bases of
science and theology, they would know that science has nothing to say to
theology, but theology has plenty to say to science. The reason for this is
that theology is rooted in tawhid, and hence it can look down from above
and discern the interconnectedness of all things. But science is rooted in takthir,
so it is stuck to the level of multiplicity—the lowest domain of reality—and it
can only dissect this multiplicity and rearrange it endlessly. Even when it is
able to gain a certain overview of interconnections, it does this without being
able to explain how it can do so or what the ultimate significance of these
interconnections may be. By its own premises, science is banned from the
invisible domains—what the Qur’an calls ghayb. If it has nothing to say
about angels and spirits, which are sometimes called the "relative ghayb,"
it has even less to say about God, the "absolute ghayb." In
contrast, the Islamic intellectual tradition is rooted in knowledge of God, and
thereby it also acquires various modalities of knowing His creation. These are
rooted in absolute truth and in certainty, unlike modern disciplines, which are
cut off from the Absolute. Only this sort of traditional knowledge can re–
establish human connections with the divine.
Finally, let me suggest that the most basic problem of modern Islam is that
Muslims suffer from what has traditionally been called "compound
ignorance," jahl murakkab. "Ignorance" is not to know.
"Compound ignorance" is not to know that you do not know. Too many
Muslims do not know what the Islamic tradition is, they do not know how to
think Islamically, and they do not know that they do not know. The first step
in curing ignorance is to recognize that one does not know. Once people
recognize their own ignorance, they can go off in "search of knowledge"—
which, as everyone knows, "is incumbent on every Muslim," and indeed,
one would think, on every human being. No recovery of the intellectual
tradition is possible until individuals take this step for themselves. The
tradition will never be recovered through taqlid or by community action,
only by the dedication of individuals, through their own, personal tahqiq.
Governments and committees cannot begin to solve the problem, because they
start from the wrong end. Understanding cannot be imposed or legislated, it can
only grow up from the heart.
The Prophet said, "Wisdom is the believer’s lost camel. Wherever he finds
it, he recognizes it." People today do not know what wisdom is, and still
less do they know that it belongs to them by right. Until they recognize this,
they will never know that their camel has been lost. They will think that in
any case, camels are no longer of any use, since cars, airplanes, and computers
will take them wherever they want to go. It is a tragedy when people have no
idea that the only way to cross the desert of modernity without danger is by
the camel of wisdom.
http://www.sunniforum.com/forum/showthread.php?t=37655