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We Muslims live with a paradox. If we are really the last
chosen nation entrusted to lead the world till end time, why
it is so that we are unable to arrest our own decline?
Despite the fact that the Muslim nation today constitute
almost two billion strong population and they are
strategically located in energy-rich lands on which depends
the future of the world, they are reduced to mere consumers.
The new technology has revolutionised the way we live and it
is still forcing us to live differently, but we as a nation
has almost no share in this process and hence have
completely lost control of the happenings around us. The new
inventions and the pace of scientific discoveries have
confronted us with a host of mind boggling and disturbing
questions. For example, what will be the social and ethical
fall out of the DNA revolution? If human living on other
planets becomes a reality, or if future researches point to
arrest the process of aging thus increasing the longevity to
a thousand years, how will it affect us? Or, imagine a
future scenario where each individual will bear an
identifying genetic code or possibly due to a microchip
ingrained on him will find himself a prisoner of the
tech-world. Can we or should we stop this technological
menace? These and many other similar questions might hold
our common future, but the Muslim nation is not in a
position to take a decisive stand on any such issues.
Unfortunately, those who shape the future agenda today are
not us.
Yet the Qur’an keeps mentioning that the global supremacy
and domination is the hallmark of believers:
انتم الأعلون إن كنتم مؤمنين.
Those entrusted with world leadership are the people engaged
in good deeds. They are, to use the Quranic term, the ibad
as-saleheen per se. And as compared to the abd saleh who is
destined to have leadership role, the kafir or rebel of God
has to be on the margin. A terrible fate awaits him not only
in the hereafter, in this world too he is reduced to a
non-entity, the saghiroon.
The kafir, due to his blind and uncreative opposition to the
natural process eventually gets isolated. Devoid of a role
in the policy-making, like the animal he lives only on
material plane. Kufr and Iman are no cultural identity. In
fact, they are two binary opposing worldviews. Whenever a
prophet blows trumpet of life, the otherwise barren land of
spiritualism gets revived and a host of submitters to God
emerge from the long forgotten nations. However, when the
same nation of submitters, in course of time, loses the zest
for life and many among them take on a destructive course,
they unknowingly engineer their own fall. Among the
believing nations those who commit kufr or bid farewell to
life affirming attitude, usually fail to realise that in
their vainglory of false religiosity they have in fact
walked away from road to submission. The Qur’an tells us in
great detail how the Jewish nation which once was entrusted
with world leadership came to believe that that this
privilege was their birth right. They failed to realise that
this chosenness was due to their adherence to the Torah and
not simply because they belonged to a particular nation.
Much like the Jews, we Muslims too have the delusion that
despite our muddled religious outlook and the obvious shift
in our worldview the world leadership is reserved for us and
for ever. Nevertheless, the stark realities of life and the
fact that for centuries we find ourselves on a slippery
slope give us a very different and awkward feeling. Bridging
the gap between our declared position and manifested reality
that surrounds us today is no easy proposition. This
dichotomy has led some of our thinkers to believe that the
world leadership or supremacy that the Quran declares a
logical outcome of a life of faith has nothing to do with
political or cultural domination in this world. Instead, as
they argue, this amounts to excellence in the realm of
spiritualism alone. The disparity between the promise and
the reality has forced them to conclude that probably what
Qur’an promises is a sort of spiritual ecstasy in this world
and salvation in the next. In their opinion, the material
world is heaven for the non-believers and a prison house for
the people of faith. Then there are other ultra-mystical
sects among Muslims who believe that given the deplorable
condition of the Muslim Ummah, a remedy is being worked out
in providence where the assembly of autad wa aqtab -- the
mythical seers of the spiritual realm, is likely to take a
decision soon.
Such mythical, irrational and defeatist interpretations of
the world around us has only added to our woes as they
deliberately divert our attention from the root cause of our
malaise. The mythical mind that has been in the making since
the days of Abu Hamid Ghazali has not only been successfully
postponing a creative debate on vital issues, it has also
failed in creating a new theological paradigm to meet the
demands of our time. Thus we are forced to live with this
theological paradox: if we are the last Ummah chosen to lead
the world till end time, why do we have this awkward feeling
that the reign of history has slipped from our hands?
Let me elaborate. In Islam, faith without action is not
acceptable. Here, faith and action, i.e., iman and amal
salih, move hand in hand. Together they complement each
other. In fact, a good deed is the logical outcome of
sincere faith, an extension of the faith itself. Whereas as
a sincere believer continuously testify to his faith by his
good deeds, the munafiq or hypocrite on the other hand, by
his/ her contradictory actions go on negating what (s)he
verbally declares. The early generation of Muslims were
aware of the implications of faith and hence they saw for
themselves a pro-active role in the universe. As upholders
of the last revelation they were required to compete (فاستبقوا
الخيرات),
collaborate and take lead in acts of goodness. Then, amal
salih was taken as an act of common good. As the Qur’an had
projected its Prophet as the mercy unto all, it was quite
logical that the good deeds emanating from followers of the
prophet become a solace for the entire humanity.
Muslim scholars have generally confused amal salih with
ritual worship. A close reading of the text, however,
clearly indicate that amal salih is much more than the
ritual worship or obligatory prayers such as salah and zakat
etc. It is rather advanced though essential stage of faith: إن الذين
آمنوا وعملوا الصالحات
وأقاموا الصلوة وآتوا الزكوة لهم أجرهم عند ربهم
(Qur’an, 2:277). Urging the faithful to get involved in
amal salih, an act distinguished from the obligatory salah
and zakat, clearly indicate that a life in faith goes a long
way. If amal salih is so clearly other than the ritual
worship, what it is then? The Qur’an tells us, oft and on,
that all those who submit to Gad and do good deeds are
people for whom a place is assured in the heaven:
والذين آمنوا وعملوا الصالحات
أولئك أصحاب الجنة
(Qur’an, 2:82). And this assurance is not for Muslims alone.
Even those who come from other faith communities such as the
Jews, the Christians, the Sabians, they too, if committed to
amal salih, deserve fare reward (أجرهم
عند ربهم)
and an assured amnesty from all kinds of worries in the
hereafter (لا خوف
عليهم ولا هم يحزنون).
The amal salih is the only criteria of assured success both
in this world and in the next for all faith communities, no
matter what prophetic tradition they come from. No wonder
then, if our loud proclamations of faith devoid of amal
salih do not yield long awaited results.
The amal salih, as propounded in the Qur’an, is an
all-inclusive term for general wellbeing in consonance with
nature. It is a positive contribution of man to add his own
beauty to the universe by delicately and thankfully availing
the bounties of natural world. From keeping the city clean
for fellow citizens to inviting them to the worship of one
Lord God, or inventing a cure for a deadly disease, each
action comes within the purview of amal salih. Where as the
believer due to his life-affirming and proactive attitude is
always busy in making the world a better place to live, the
kafir is always hell bent on destroying the harmony of
phenomenal world. In the Quranic worldview, kufr is opposite
to amal salih: من كفر
فعليه كفره ومن عمل صالحا
فلأنفسهم يمهدون
(Qur’an, 30:44). Those who lack a creative, proactive
and life-affirming attitude or who are unable to contribute
their own share of amal salih in the universal projects of
common good or who do not think beyond their communitarian
interests, such nations find themselves in close allegiance
with kufr. Such nations find it difficult to sustain a
leadership role. This is exactly what had earlier happened
with the Jews (كونوا
قردة خاسئين;
The Quran exhorts the believers to think, reflect and make
use of the brain to its fullest, yet for the last many
centuries the Muslim nation has not been a substantial part
of common wellbeing projects, save assuming a leadership
role. The modern world appears to us a radically different
place as compared to the past when the Ummah’s hegemony went
unchallenged. The large-scale deployment of modern gadgets,
the mass transportation through jumbo jets, the invention of
radio, TV, computer and the internet, have not only
revolutionised our life, they have also brought knowledge
and information within the easy reach of common man. Much
has been written on the failure of anti-biotics and the
unhealthy side effects of modern medicines, yet we cannot
ignore the fact that over all health sciences have greatly
contributed in improving the conditions of our living. There
were many selfless people who devoted their entire life to
scientific researches and who took great pains in carrying
out successful inventions. We may not know their names or
nationality but for their good deeds or amal salih they
deserve appreciation from their Lord. It was due to their
hard works that today, in 21st century, we are in a position
to breath in the cyber-world, a human extension of the
majestic world of God. No doubt, such and the like projects
of common good that appear today as purely western
constructs owe much to the great masters of Muslim East of
the medieval age, but for the last many centuries our share
has been minimal. The orthodox Muslims even find it
difficult to call such acts of common good as amal salih.
The closing of the Muslim mind did not occur in one day.
Under the influence of tasawuf, as early as in the Abbasid
Baghdad, Muslims had come to believe that an austere living
and resignation were the essence of faith. The monastic
living was in vogue that guaranteed the faithful multiple
reward for each mystical formula uttered thus leaving no
room for the luxury of thinking or pondering on the signs of
God. As the emerging Sufi orders of the time were promising
a short cut to salvation few would feel tempted to devote
their life to the cause of common good. If uttering a
particular formula or jumble of words could guarantee
salvation, it was sheer waste of time and energy to reflect
on the forces of nature or to decipher such forces for
improving life on this earth. Although it is no secret that
the Quran has great appreciation for all those people who
reflect as to how the rain comes down from the sky and how
the same rain produces from the same soil grains of
different variety and colour. Astounded by the awe of God as
they are, the Quran declares them as true scholars. But our
decline was so steep that we even changed the definition of
a scholar and all those who had nothing to do with
reflecting on the signs of God in natural world or any
inkling of serious researches came to be regarded as
scholars simply because they had named their high school
certificate as aalamiyat and called their graduates as ulema,
or scholars. Similarly, the concept of good deed or amal
salih underwent a radical change. Instead of doing something
really good we came to believe that uttering a mystically
proven formula a hundred thousand times, or counting God’s
name on a sack of seeds, or leisurely turning one’s finger
on an impressive rosary of thousand beads were really the
good deed that could cause wonders in our life. Such pseudo
good deeds were vehemently condemned by no less than a man
of Caliph Omer’s stature in the very early days of Islam.
Nevertheless, the emergence of clergy in the Muslim society
who always had a soft corner for such spiritual vagaries and
the social prominence accorded to religious seers made it
difficult to shun this alien notion altogether. Once this
change in our perception about the good deeds set in, its
fall-out on the Muslim psych was disastrous. While other
nations were busy in various projects of common good thereby
maintaining their leading role on issues that concerned the
world, we Muslims due to our abstinence from amal salih
found isolated and marginalised. Even those amongst us who
willy-nilly participated in such projects in their personal
capacity had always had an uncomfortable guilty feeling that
probably they were not on a right course. As they lived with
a guilt conscience and wore a split personality, they could
hardly achieve excellence.
Whereas this mistaken notion about the common good or amal
salih kept most of sincere Muslims engaged in futile
mystical exercises, it compelled many rational minds to take
refuge in secularism. The newly invented tools of amal salih
needed no apprenticeship nor posed any physical or
intellectual challenge for the practitioners of faith. More
so, they successfully helped create an ivory tower for those
religiously inclined people who sought a moratorium on
disturbing questions. In our own time, the ever-growing
popularity of Sufi Islam or religious passivity and the
general acceptance of non-Quranic terminologies such as
chilla (the forty-day religious frivolity), gasht (spiritual
wanderings in group) etc. point to the fact that a dominant
number of Muslims do not want to confront this vitally
important question: why despite so much of religious
assertion Muslims are no match for a leadership role. The
Quranic promise of world leadership is clear and candid,
though: ‘Allah has promised to those amongst you who submit
and do acts of goodness, that He will, of surety grant them
in the land authority and power as He granted it to those
before them’(وعد الله
الذين آمنوا منكم وعملوا
الصالحات ليستخلفنهم في الأرض كما استخلف الذين من
قبلهم)
(Quran, 24:55). The promise of istikhlaf, of worldly power,
for the submitters who are committed to good deeds is
obviously for this world and hence it cannot be postponed
for the hereafter. The Qur’anic God is just; He even takes
care of goodness worth an atom’s weight (فمن
يعمل مثقال ذرة
خيرا يره).
Can we expect a just God to ignore the good deeds of other
faith communities and instead keep us at the helm of affairs
simply because we live under the delusion of being the
‘khaire ummah’, the best of nations? . |