1.0 OVERVIEW
1.1 The problems
The paper starts from the
assertion that 2 internal factors, a knowledge crisis and a thought crisis, are
major causes of ummatic weakness. These 2 factors combine to lead to ummatic
malaise manifesting in the religious, social, political, economic,
technological, and military dimensions. The knowledge crisis can be resolved by
reforming education systems and even more important reforming the epistemology methodology
of research in the various disciplines of knowledge so that it conforms to the
paradigms of tauhid and objectivity, istiqamat. The disciplines to be covered are: education
(pedagogy and andragogy), social sciences and humanities (sociology,
anthropology, psychology, political science, historiography, literature etc),
natural sciences and technology (medical and health disciplines, engineering,
architecture, economics, etc). The thought crisis will be resolved by research
that identifies and defines problems of the society and then proposed solutions
based on the bird-eye view frame-work of the higher purposes of the Law, maqasid
al shari’at. Muslims living in France should consider European
society as their main frame of reference.
1.2 The tasks
There are three main tasks to be
undertaken in approaching solutions to the problems described above. The first
task will be assembling background material on the problems. This should
include translations of pioneers of Islamization of knowledge such as Dr
Abdulhamid Abusulayman as well as writings of others in the past 30 years. The
second task will be holding general and specialized seminars on issue of
epistemology and thought in many places and involving all Muslim intellectuals.
One-day or half a day general seminars will introduce the problem and motivate
the intellectuals to make contributions. Specialized 1-day seminars will bring
together 3-5 specialists in each discipline at a time to present fully written
papers on given topics followed by deep and serious discussion after which the
authors can revise the papers and have them published online for wide and
immediate access with printed versions being made available later. Books and
articles written on epistemology and thought in other parts of the world can be
made accessible by local intellectuals writing reviews that incorporate
commentaries that reflect local problems. These reviews can also be published
online for wider access. A measure of success will be the number of seminars
held and the total number of online publications.
2.0 THE KNOWLEDGE and
EDUCATION CRISIS
2.1 Crisis of Knowledge
The most important manifestation
of the knowledge crisis is dichotomy in the education system: traditional
Islamic vs. imported modern education systems. Integration of the 2 systems has failed. Secularization of education
eliminated the moral dimension and violated the aim of Islamic education to
produce an integrated and perfect individual, insan kaamil.
The ummatic malaise due to the knowledge crisis
that started with the fall of the khilafat rashidah
when the authentic ‘ulama were marginalized.
Society became ‘secularized’
because the rulers were in one valley and the scholars in another valley. This dichotomy
between the sources of Islamic guidance and the political leadership of society
eventually led to and nurtured the knowledge crisis we have today.
2.2 The Need for a New Knowledge
Strategy
Educational and knowledge reform
are a pre requisite for tajdid because tajdiid
= idea + action. The vision of the
knowledge strategy is an upright balanced person who understands the creator,
knows his place, his roles, his rights, and his responsibilities in the cosmic
order. The mission of the knowledge strategy is conceptual transformation of
the education system from kindergarten to post graduate studies to reflect tauhid, positive moral values, objectivity, universality,
and serving the larger causes of humanity.
2.3 Reform of Research Methodology
Modern research is based on the
empirical method that unfortunately has some cultural or philosophical biases. There
is no contradiction among sources of knowledge: wahy, ‘aql,
and kaun.
The Qur’anic provides guiding principles for knowledge and building
civilization. Muslims taught the empirical methodology to the world in the 15th
and 6th centuries but forgot it during the era of decline. It is now
coming back to them in a new context that does not fully reflect the universal
and objective world view espoused by Islam. Muslims accept the essence of the empirical
method but reject philosophical biases and concepts that are added to it. A tauhidi universal, objective and unbiased methodology must
replace the philosophically biased context but not the practical experimental
methods. The precepts of tauhidi
science are: unity of knowledge, comprehensiveness; causality as the basis for
human action, limitation of human knowledge, constant and fixed natural laws,
harmony between the seen and the unseen, 3 sources of knowledge (wahy,
aql, & empirical observation); khilafat; moral accountability; creation and existence have a purpose, truth is
both absolute and relative, human free will is the basis of accountability, and
tawakkul.
2.4 Reform of Disciplines of
Knowledge
Reform has to start with
reforming the epistemology, methodology, and corpus of knowledge of each
discipline. It must be pro-active, academic, methodological, objective, and
practical. Its vision is objective, universal, and beneficial knowledge in the
context of a harmonious interaction of humans with their physical, social, and
spiritual environment. Its practical mission is transformation of the
paradigms, methodologies, and uses of disciplines of knowledge to conform to objectivity.
Its immediate goals are: (a) reforming paradigms of existing disciplines to
change them from parochiality to universal objectivity, (b) reconstruction of
the paradigms using universal guidelines (c) re-classifying disciplines to
reflect universal values, (d) reforming research methodology to become
objective, purposeful, and comprehensive (e) growth of knowledge by research,
and (f) inculcating morally correct application of knowledge. The Qur’an gives
general principles that establish objectivity and protect against biased
research methodology. It creates a world-view that encourages research to
extend the frontiers of knowledge and its use for the benefit of the whole
universe. Scientists are encouraged to work within these parameters to expand
the frontiers of knowledge through research, basic and applied.
2.5 Practical
Steps / Tasks of the Reform Process:
The first step is a good
grounding in Islamic methodological sciences of of usul al fiqh,
ulum al Qur’an, ulum al hadith, and
'uluum al llughat. This is followed by
reading the Qur’an and sunnat
with understanding of the changing time-space dimensions. This is followed by
clarification of basic epistemological issues and relations: wahy
and aql,
ghaib and shahada, ‘ilm
and iman. This is followed by an
Islamic critique of basic paradigms, basic assumptions, and basic concepts of
various disciplines using criteria of Islamic methodology and Islamic
epistemology. Islamic reviews of existing text-books and teaching materials are
then undertaken to identify deviations from the tauhidi
episteme and the Islamic methodology. The initial
output of the islamization process will be Islamic introductions to
disciplines, muqaddimat al ‘uluum, establishing
basic Islamic principles and paradigms that determine and regulate the
methodology, content, and teaching of disciplines. This parallels Ibn Khaldun’s
Introduction to History, muqaddimat
presented generalizing and methodological concepts on historical events. Publication
and testing of new text-books and other teaching materials is a necessary step
towards reform by putting into the hands of teachers and students reformed
material. Developing applied knowledge in science and technology from basic
knowledge will be the last stage of the reform process. This is because in the
end it is science and technology that actually lead to changes in society.
3.0 THE THOUGHT CRISIS
3.1 Thought Failure
Thought failure in the ummah could manifests as intellectual stagnation, syncretism,
lack of vision, superficiality, rituality, esoterism, sterile argumentation,
and use of un-Islamic intellectual tools. Intellectual stagnation
is suppression of the freedom of thought, closure of ijtihad, blind
following, taqlid, and fanaticism
for a madh’hab. Syncretism,
talfiq, is juxtaposition of ideas that
are incompatible
without attempting to analyse them critically to arrive at a synthesis or favor
one of them, tarjiih. There is lack
of vision as a guide vision for the present and the future,
ru'uyat
mustaqbaliyyat. Superficiality,
satahiyyat, is concern with
minor
inconsequential issues. False outward manifestations of religious
rituals, shakliyaat, with a dead
core is
common. Esoteric sects, al firaq al batiniyyat,
claim to have secret agendas or knowledge exposed to
a select few and are a cause of social disruption. Sterile arguments,
jadal, lead to no purpose or goal of
practical utility. Intellectual analysis using un-islamic
terminology and concepts compounds the intellectual confusion.
3.2 Unresolved Issues from the
Past
Thought failure is responsible
for the following issues that started in the past and are not yet resolved up
to today. These issues are still causes of controversy when they should not be.
The role of human free will, qadriyyat,
versus that of pre-determination, al jabriyah, in
human actions is still not fully understood.
Acceptance of repentance, taubah, or
faith, iman, for
persons who commit major sins is
still being debated when the texts are clear on it. Discussions of the essence
of Allah, dhaat al llaah, and
attributes of Allah, sifaat al llaah, are still leading many astray when it is clear that human intellect can
not grasp the nature of Allah and should not be engaged in such an endeavor.
Many still do not understand the scope of knowledge through reason, ‘aql,
and that of transmitted knowledge, naql,
as well as the relation between the two.
There are still many who do not understand
pre-determination, qadar, and
causality, sababiyyat, and how
they interact in human actions.
3.3 Unresolved Contemporary
Issues
Thought failure is also
responsible for the following major contemporary intellectual issues still
unresolved. The woman; her nature, role, rights, and responsibilities; are
still being debated. Plurality of opinion and practice is a cause of
unnecessary controversy. Leadership, imamat, its qualifications, selection, roles, and scope of responsibility are
not fully defined. Shura is
presented as theoretical concept but its practical application is not properly
worked out. Application of Islamic teachings to today’s realities: economy,
education, politics, and international relations is still being discussed.
3.4 Fiqh as the Cause and as the
Solution
Problems of
thought in the past were mainly centered on misunderstanding ‘aqidat. Fortunately most of these ‘aqidat issues were either resolved or are no longer a major
cause of controversy being discussed in a marginal way. Few Muslim
intellectuals today are aware of qadriyyat, jabriyyat,
maturdiyyat, ‘ash’ariyyat,
ittihadiyyat, hululiyat, jahmiyyat, kilaabiyyat, druze,
khawarij, mu’utazilat, ruwandiyyat,
baatiniyyat, dahriyyah, & marji’at. The
persisting problems arise from a narrow and literal understanding of the
shari’at and differences on fiqh have divided the ummat in the recent past on
many issues. If the cause is fiqh the solution will also be found in fiqh. We
need to relook at society from a general bird eye view using the higher
purposes of the Law, maqasid al shari’at then we will be able to make some
progress. The shari’at was
revealed to fulfill 5 higher purposes: religion, hifdh al ddiin;
life, hifdh al nafs; progency, hifdh
al nasl; intellect, hifdh al ‘aql; and resources, hifdh al maal.
|