Islams Gifts [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

This is a Digital Library

With over 100,000 free electronic resource in Persian, Arabic and English

Islams Gifts [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

| نمايش فراداده ، افزودن یک نقد و بررسی
افزودن به کتابخانه شخصی
ارسال به دوستان
جستجو در متن کتاب
بیشتر
تنظیمات قلم

فونت

اندازه قلم

+ - پیش فرض

حالت نمایش

روز نیمروز شب
جستجو در لغت نامه
بیشتر
لیست موضوعات
توضیحات
افزودن یادداشت جدید


ISLAM'S GIFTS TO THE
WORLD


Islam


Islam stands for harmony and perfectibility with an
unmatched depth and breadth of scope that comprises all aspects of spirit and
life. It knows all the roads that lead to blessing and happiness. It has the
cure for human ills, individual and social, and makes them as plain as the wit
of man can devise or comprehend. It sets out to develop all sides of each
person: and therefore perforce includes every reality which impacts human
existence. It has not given way, in its doctrine of man, to modern errors or
corrupt institutions. It does not set man in God's place. To do so is to leave
man with only himself to rely on in all his pride and egotism: or else to reduce
him to the slavery of being a beast of burden for his fellows, powerless,
will-less, helpless before nature's and matter's tyrannies. This is precisely
what modern heresies do with man. But Islam vindicates man's unique nature
vis-a-vis all other living creatures, affirming that he is a special creation
with a lofty calling all his own.

Islam holds that a man's personality does not cease to exist with death, but
is continuous and eternal. "Worldly" and "other-worldly" are an indivisible
unity. body and soul can therefore not be dissolved into disparate elements.
Islam, on these grounds, presents both worlds in shining terms. It both trains a
man for eternity and also finds the guiding principles for its public
institutions on earth in the sublime destiny inherent in man's creation.

Eternity dictates universal principles, unchanging and unchangeable. These
Islam proclaims as tenets, convictions, commandments, statutes, in its school of
contentment, in its thrust for progress. It offers man the perfection of freedom
for thought, for concern, and for exegesis of the divine law on matters of
social necessity. It reverts to first principles which provide the sure and
unshifting basis of rock-bottom truth in all the chances and changes of this
mortal life.

Islam holds that man has certain characteristics which are his link with the
material world and certain others which connect him with realities that are
non-material and which motivate desires and aims of a more sublime nature. body,
mind and spirit each has its proper propensities. Each must be duly weighed, so
that what one of these indivisible elements desires does not conflict with the
desire of another. Islam takes all the elements and facets of human nature into
account and caters for the compound essence of man's combined material and
spiritual propensities. It draws him upward towards the highest without cutting
his roots in the material. It demands absolute purity and chastity without
denying the flesh and its needs. Its current flows from pole to pole over a
network of live wires - convictions and regulations which preserve the integrity
of all the innate human instincts while rejecting the Freudian doctrine of total
freedom which treats man as nothing but animal.

Islam is not a mere set of ideas in the world of metaphysical speculation :
nor did it come into being simply to order man's social living. It is a way of
life so comprehensively meaningful that it shapes education, society and culture
to heights none other ever aimed at. It forms a supreme court of appeal and
rallying-point for East and West alike, and offers them an ideology which can
answer their divisive materialisms. It can replace their inequities and
contradictions with a more universal, more perfect and more powerful idea.

Islam does not concede priority of any kind to material affluence or to
hedonistic comfort as basic for happiness. It finds its principles in an
analysis of man's true nature. With these principles it constructs a plan for
individual , social and international living, framed by fixed and all embracing
moral standards, aimed at a goal for humanity far loftier than the modern world'
s limited materialist aims.

Islam does not imprison man in the narrow confines of the material and the
financial. It sets him in a spacious and expansive air. There morality,
principle and the spirit reign. Its statutes are those which spring from the
nature of man himself. They encourage mutual help and team-work. They pursue
values outside the straitened boundaries imposed on individual and on community
by the petty pusillanimous pedestrian patterns of materialist purposes. Instead
it yokes man's strength and striving to the change, advance, progress and
perfecting inherent in his creation.

Islamic training sets out to refine and enhance human qualities and to
harness them to right and reasonable objectives which direct and dictate every
forward step to the desired end. It focuses a man's motives, which arise from
his natural desires and basic needs, in such a concentrated and streamlined beam
that each talent is called in to exercise its function in due succession and
order. Impetuous uncoordinated impulses are thus controlled so that no single
instinct overrule commonsense nor momentary urge replace reason. Instead man is
made master of his fate and captain of his soul. Excess is obviated and every
person is accorded his or her legitimate share in the common triumph of all. In
this employment every need of body, mind and soul is met and satisfied.

Whenever in history individuals have united in harmonious pursuit of such
aims, persons and communities have found themselves. "What is right" has ruled
thoughts, conduct and character; human living has been orderly and secure.
Reason dictates this training, and calls to a religion with convictions
superstition-free, canons practical, statutes feasible and excellencies
virtuous. The God-given human intelligence intuitively and logically perceives
their truth.

No man is asked to perform a task above that which he is able. But his
powers are put at full stretch. Every possibility within him is expressed to the
full. And each is, at doomsday, judged; then the fire itself shall prove each
man's work of what sort it is.

Islam and Political
Theory

Modern political theory exalts "the general will" Democratic government
attempts to put that general will into practice by making law out of the policy
voted for by «'the majority" (which need only be 51%) leaving null and void the
will of the minority (which may be that of as many as 49% of the voters). The
minority is thus not "free" at all, even though in some cases its will may be
sensible, and in the circumstances right. But '«Government by the Will of the
People" will never voluntarily strip off the sanctity and splendour with which
it has endowed "the general will", giving that concept precedence over all other
material and spiritual values.

Islam, on the other hand, gives precedence to the Will of the Lord of this
world, rather than to the uncontrolled inclinations and sentiments of a majority
of humans. Islam refuses to strip the Godhead of control of the legislative and
jurisdictional power Islam's conception of Godhead and of divine government is
wide enough to comprise everything that goes to make up human life everywhere on
this planet. This makes Islam man's unrivalled guardian. It demands total
obedience to its statutes on the ground that these are God-given and that
therefore no human being has a right to allow his own desires to dictate any
action in breach of these statutes and rules of life.

How can God be proclaimed worthy of total commitment by people who arrange
their lives on precepts deriving from other sources than God Himself? No person
dare claim divine authority for a partner for God, nor substitute another
lawgiver for Him. Islam's aim is to champion truth and right in everything in
human society, since truth does not specialise exclusively in social, political
and financial matters but also clothes the stature of man himself in its most
beautiful vestments.

The human physique is fearfully and wonderfully made. So are the rules and
rights that govern human living. No-one can claim a complete knowledge of all
the mysteries of man's make-up, or of the complicated social structure it
generates. For this structure comprises the specialised areas of the body and
the spirit of all its individuals as well as of all their relationships with
each other Nor dare anyone claim to be innocent of sin, of a shortcoming, a
fault or an error. No-one is aware of all the elements which go to make up human
happiness and welfare.

Despite all the devoted efforts of scientists to penetrate the mysteries of
human being, the area they have succeeded in covering is still extremely
limited. To quote Dr. Alexis Carrel again ("'Man, the Unknown" p.4): "'Mankind
has made a gigantic effort to know itself. Although we possess the treasure of
the observations accumulated by the scientists, the philosophers, the poets, and
the great mystics of all times, we have grasped only certain aspects of
ourselves. We do not apprehend man as a whole. We know him as composed of
distinct parts. And even these parts are created by our methods. Each one of us
is made up of a procession of phantoms, in the midst of which strides an
unknowable reality."

Without insight into the human make-up man cannot frame laws 100% suited to
the human condition, nor justly cure the troubles that arise : witness the
bewilderment of legislators, their constant alteration of their own statutes in
face of today's new problems and unexpected blind alleys. Motives of personal
advantage, self-interest, profit, ambition, power, and even of environmental
predilections, intrude to distort the legislators' outlook consciously or
unconsciously. Montesquieu said of legislation that "none is ever wholly
objective and impartial, for the personal ideas and sentiments of the legislator
influence his drafting". Thus Aristotle, because he was jealous of Plato,
influenced Alexander to denigrate his great predecessor.

Modern slogans of "Liberty and Equality" and "the Public Will" are empty
words used by politicians to win support for their laws, laws which in fact
represent the interests not of the masses but of the landowners and capitalists.

Henry Ford wrote of England, which boasts itself "the Mother of Democracy".
"We cannot forget the 1926 general strike or the way the government tried to
break it with every means in its power. Parliament, tool of the capitalists,
proclaimed the strike unconstitutional and illegal, and turned police and army
out against the strikers with bullets and tanks. Meantime the media of radio and
press declared the government to be the servant of the workers, a plain
subterfuge contradicted by the fines imposed on the trade unions and by the
imprisonment of their leaders as soon as the opportunity offered."

Khrushchev declared in the 22nd Supreme Soviet Congress: "In the era of the
personality-cult (i.e. under Stalin) corruption infiltrated our Party's
leadership, government and finances; produced decrees which trod the masses'
rights underfoot; lowered industrial output; filled men with fear in their work;
and encouraged sycophants, informers and character-assassins."

Thus both Eastern and Western systems of government falsely appear in the
guise of the public will, Parliamentary rule, representation of the masses:
while capitalism and communism alike frame inequitable laws because they neglect
the heavenly decrees which establish fast what is best for man.

Islam and
Legislation

Jean Jacques Rousseau wrote ("Social Contract" Book II: Chapter 6: "The
Lawgiver"):

"To discover the rules of society that are best suited to nations, there
would need to exist a superior intelligence who could understand the passions-
of men without feeling any of them, who had no affinity with our nature but knew
it to the roots, whose happiness was independent of ours but who would
nevertheless make our happiness his concern, . . . in fact a divine lawgiver is
needed."

By these standards the most competent legislator is the Creator of man
Himself, He knows all the mysteries of man's being, makes no profit out of any
human society, and needs no man. Hence the principles which can shape equitable
social regulations must be learnt from a person who receives direct guidance
from the Creator, whose teachings are the inspired revelations of that unique
Source, and who is wholly reliant on that Infinite Wisdom.

Human laws aim only at the ordering of human society. They do not stray
outside those limits, nor touch non-social matters like personal conditions,
attitudes of mind, spiritual excellence. They do not try to cure internal
pollutions within the personality. It is only when personality problems issue in
social disorder in action that they enter the scope of legal measures. A person
may be filthy in thought and spirit and still good in the eyes of Western law,
which looks only upon outward acts and not upon the heart. Islam with its wide
outlook aims not just at redressing what has been done wrong but primarily at
putting individual and society right from inside, regarding the ethical
personality as the basic unit, and its perfecting as the priority. Islam aims at
an orderly society composed of sound morals, sane thinking, sensible action,
serene psyches. It therefore legislates for the inner life of the individual in
as much detail as for the outer life of society. It brings order and congruence
between large and small in creation, the natural laws and the spiritual, the
material and the metaphysical, the individual and the social, creeds and
philosophies. It helps man not to come into collision with the natural laws
which underlie the orderliness of the universe; disobedience to which collapses
and confounds all human affairs.

Man-made institutions pursue performance of the law. but in Islam the
trustee for the law's performance is a deep-rooted faith; and a Muslim duly
performs his obligations by the force of morality and faith, even in matters
where he is seen by no one save by God alone. Armed force is only needed to
control the tiny minority of criminal-minded hypocrites. Islam thus pays due
regard both to inner purity of heart and to outward purity of action. It calls
those deeds good, laudable and meritorious which spring from sincerity and
faith.

USA's Attorney General, in his introduction to his book on Islamic Law ,
wrote: "American law has only a tenuous connection with moral duty. An American
may be accounted a law-abiding citizen even though his inner life is foul and
corrupt. But Islam sees the fount of law in the Will of God as revealed to and
proclaimed through His Apostle Muhammad. This Law: this Divine Will, treats the
entire body of believers as a single society, including all the multifarious
races and nationalities which go to make it up in a far-scattered community.
This gives religion its true sound force and makes it the cohesive element of
society. No bounds of nationality or geography divide, for the government itself
is obedient to the one supreme authority of the Qur'an. This leaves no place for
any other legislator,. so that no competition or rivalry or rift can arise. The
believer regards this world as a vale of soul-making, the ante-room to the next
: and the Qur'an makes perfectly plain what are the conditions and laws which
govern believers' behaviour to each other and towards society; and thus makes
the changeover from this world to the next a sure and sound and safe
transition."

Despite Westerners' small acquaintance with Islam, and their often mistaken
ideas, far removed from reality, a comparatively large number of their thinkers
grasp some of the depth and profundity of Islamic teaching and do not conceal
their admiration for its clear exegesis and estimable doctrines.

A Muslim scientist's respect for Islam's laws and ordinances is no surprise.
But if a non-Muslim savant, despite his slavery to his own religious bigotry,
yet recognises Islam's grandeur and greatness and its lofty leading, that is a
real tribute, especially when it is based on a recognition of the progressive
nature of Islam's legal systems and their legacy to mankind. This is why this
book quotes foreign verdicts on Islam. We do so, not because we need their
support, but because they can help to open the road for seekers and enquirers so
that who reads may run its way.

Dr. Laura Vacciea Vaglieri, Naples University professor, wrote: "In the
Qur'an we come across jewels and treasures of knowledge and insight which are
superior to the products of our most brilliant geniuses, profound philosophers
and powerful politicians. How can such a book be the product of the brain of a
single man - and that of a man whose life was spent in commercial, not
particularly religious, circles - far removed from all schools of learning? He
himself always insisted that he was in himself an ordinary simple man like other
men, unable, without the help of the Almighty to produce the miracle of such
work. None other than He whose knowledge compasses all that is in heaven and
earth could produce the Qur'an."

Bernard Shaw in his "Muhammad, Apostle of Allah" said: "I have always held
the religion of Muhammad in the highest esteem simply from the marvel of its
living vigour. To my mind it is the sole religion capable of success in
mastering the multifarious vicissitudes of life and the differences of culture.
I foresee (it is manifest even today) that, man by man, Europeans will come to
adopt the Islamic faith. Mediaeval theologians for reasons of ignorance or
bigotry pictured Muhammad's religion as full of darkness, and considered that he
had cast down a challenge to Christ in a spirit of hatred and fanaticism. After
much study of the man, I have concluded that Muhammad was not only not against
Christ, but that he saw in Him despairing mankind's saviour I am convinced that
if a man like him would undertake leadership in tile new world, he would succeed
in solving its problems, and secure that peace and prosperity which all men
want."

Voltaire, who at the beginning was one of Islam's most obdurate opponents
and poured scorn on the Prophet, after his 40 years of study of religion,
philosophy and history frankly said: "Muhammad's religion was unquestionably
superior to that of Jesus. He never descended to the wild blasphemies of
Christians, nor said that one God was three or three Gods were one. The single
pillar of his faith is the One God. Islam owes its being to its founder's
decrees and manliness; whereas Christians used the sword to force their religion
on others. Oh Lord! if only all nations of Europe would make the Muslims their
models."

One of Voltaire's heroes was Martin Luther. Yet he wrote that "Luther was
not worthy to unloose the latchets of Muhammad's shoes. Muhammad was a great man
and a trainer of great men by his example of virtue and perfection. A wise
lawgiver, a just ruler, an ascetic prophet, he raised the greatest revolution
earth has seen."

Tolstoi wrote: "Muhammad needs no other claim to fame than that he raised a
barbarous bloodthirsty people out of their diabolical customs to untold
advances. His Canon Law with its intelligence and wisdom will come to be the
world's authority."

/ 4