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Iqbal's
Thought and Contributions
By Wasiullah
Khan, Ph. D.
When Prophet
Muhammad (s) was about to return to his Creator in 632 C.E., he said he was
leaving only the Quran and his way of life (Sunnah) for his followers
eternal guidance. Islam is unique among the worlds great religions that
since the Prophets demise no person could claim to be the absolute, infallible
authority to interpret the Quran and Sunnah. At every time and place,
whatever a majority of the Muslim community members agreed upon, under the advice
of the knowledgeable people, became the accepted doctrine and injunction of
Islam for that time and place. However, while interpreting the Quran and
Sunnah concerning any particular issue, it will be very egotistical to ignore
the thought of great learned men of the last 1400 years.
The Prophets
person (s) was so predominant and overwhelming that even after his demise, for
about 70 years when the last of his companions lived, we dont have any
record of even one persons thought that was independent of the Prophets
traditions. Then the five great jurists Jafar al-Sadiq (699-765), Abu
Hanifa (699-767), Malik bin Anas (711-796), Shafii (767-820), and Ahmed ibn
Hanbal (780-855) compiled their interpretations of the Quran and
Sunnah to delineate the Islamic creed and practices. Among more than one billion
Muslims of the present time, there are many millions who follows the fiqh (jurisprudence)
of each of these jurists. Then came other towering scholars with great followings
like Abu Hamid al-Ghazali (1058-1111), Fakhr al-Din Razi (1149-1209), Jalaluddin
Rumi (1207-1273), Ibn Taymiyya (1263-1328), Ibn Khaldun (1332-1406), Shaikh
Ahmed Sirhindi (1564-1624) and Shah Waliullah (1703-1763). Every one of these
and many other scholars have been the focus of learned studies and dissertations.
The development of Islamic through cannot be traced without studying what they
held to be the authentic beliefs and injunctions of Islam.
Some people
argue that the decline of Muslim political power in the world was caused by
the demise of the Rightly-guided Caliphate with the martyrdom of the fourth
caliph Ali in 661 C.E. and its substitution by absolute dynastic rule of the
Umayyads, Abbasids and subsequent emperors. Such monolithic governance never
lets human potential of a society flourish. The Magna Carta, on the other hand,
was signed in 1215 C.E. restricting the powers of the kind of England and 500
years later the industrial revolution started from the same country. In about
three centuries, the Western European nations became so powerful that they colonized
the huge continents of North and South America, Africa and large parts of Asia.
The last great empires of the Muslim world, the Moguls and the Ottomans, became
so weak that by 1857 Mogul rule in India broke up like a house of cards. It
was not the overwhelming Hindu majority of India which replaced the Muslim emperors
of Delhi. Surprisingly, it was the British traders of the East India Company
who steadily spread their control from the coastal cities inland and finally
made India a jewel of the British crown. After 1857, Muslim intellectuals and
scholars were in a state of shock, too numb to figure out how God Almighty could
replace believers by infidels and heretics to rule over large continents. Sir
Syed Ahmed Khan of India (1817-1898) followed by Jamaluddin Afghani of Iran
(1839-1897), Mufti Muhammad Abduh of Egypt (1849-1905) and Rashid Rida of Syria
(1865-1935) held the position that, as Quran says: Say, are those
who know equal to those who do not know? (39:9), if the collective acquisition
and creation of knowledge among Muslims is at a very low level, their understanding
of Gods will as enunciated by the Quran and Sunnah would be equally
inadequate. This explanation still holds true after over 100 years.
By 1918,
the Ottomon Empire also succumbed to the Europeans in World War I and vast areas
of the Muslim Africa and West Asia came under their colonial rule. After many
centuries this was the worst time seen by the Muslims around the world. Iqbal
(1877-1937) was designed to be the pre-eminent thinker of the time and initiator
of a new movement of ideas which has held sway for the last 80 years. He was
the greatest synthesis of both eastern and western thought of his time. Besides
Iqbal, the thinkers of this new movement Said Nursi of Turkey (1873-1960),
Abul Ala Mawdudi of Pakistan (1903-1979), Malek Bennabi of Algeria (1905-1973),
Hasan Al Banna (1906-1949) and Syed Qutb (1906-1966) of Egypt, Muhammad Natsir
of Indonesia (1908-1993), and Ali Shariati of Iran (1933-1977)- had a new focus:
revival of the Islamic civilizational heritage. As a result, we have witnessed
struggles for the establishment of an Islamic social order, creation of an Islamic
republic, and organizing an Islamic economic system. The recency of these struggles
is such that the jury is still out of their more resilient outcomes.
Born in
November 1877 in Sialkot, Punjab (now Pakistan), Iqbal achieved high proficiency
in Arabic and Persian languages at an early age. After completing graduate studies
in philosophy, he became a college lecturer in Lahore at the age of 24. Later
he moved to Cambridge, England for higher studies and earned Ph.D. from Munich
University, Germany at the age of 30. He became barrister-at-law in 1908 and
returned to Lahore to practice law. He was actively involved in the Muslims
cultural and political strivings and was elected in 1920 a member of the Punjab
Legislative Assembly. He was an outstanding and highly popular poet of Urdu
and Persian languages and also delivered scholarly addresses at various occasions.
A collection of his six (later seven) addresses was first published in 1930
titled Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam. The same year, he delivered
a historic address proposing creation of a Muslim homeland by partitioning British
India when it achieves independence. He said in this country Islam would have
an opportunity to mobilize its law, its education, its culture, and to
being them into closer contact with its own original spirit and with the spirit
of modern times. (Speeches, Writings and Statements of Iqbal, p 11) Nine
years after he passed away in April 1938, Pakistan came into being in August
1947.
Although
many compilations of Iqbals poetry also deliver his message very eloquently,
his foremost book Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam was intended
to secure a vision of the spirit of Islam as emancipated from its Magian
overlayings. (p.114) He says, far from reintegrating the forces
of the average mans inner life and thus preparing him for participation
in the march of history, this Muslim mysticism has taught man a
false renunciation and made him perfectly contented with his ignorance and spiritual
thralldom (or servitude). (pp.148-49) One cornerstone of Iqbals
thought is his keen understanding of the profound significance of the supreme
idea of finality of prophethood looked at from the view point of religious and
cultural growth of man in history and also looked at from the viewpoint of mans
achieving full self-consciousness as bearer of the Divine promise
of a complete subjugation of all this immensity of space and time. Iqbal
assumes this idea of the finality of prophethood to be a psychological
cure for the Magian attitude of constant expectation. He says with the
revelation of this idea of finality, one of the greatest that dawned upon the
prophetic consciousness, all personal authority claiming a supernatural
origin came to an end in this history of man. (p.101) He tells us that
the constant appeal to reason and experience in the Quran and the
emphasis that it lays on nature and history as sources of human knowledges are
different aspects of the same idea of finality. Iqbal asserts that the
birth of Islam is the birth of inductive intellect. (p. 101)
If we agree
with Iqbals thesis, we must believe that revelation as a source of knowledge
discontinued after 632 C.E. and the only source of knowledge now available to
us is sense perception and reasoning by which we can both understand Gods
will as enunciated in the Quran and Sunnah and create new knowledge to
predict and control the natural and social phenomena for purposes of better
survival of the humankind. Unfortunately, many Muslims, presumably out of anger
towards their recent colonial past, want to discard all modern knowledge, labeling
it as western, and strive to dig out a certain prescription for
all our social ills through religious intuition or extra-sensory perception
an obsurantist and obviously futile effort.
Another
unique contribution of Iqbal to the contemporary Islamic thought is his bracketing
modern science with God-consciousness which he considers more precious
than mere belief in God. He equates the scientists observation of nature
with seeking a kind of intimacy with God, a kind of mystic search in the act
of pray. (pp. 45, 73) He asserts that scientific observation of nature
keeps us in close contact with the behavior of Reality (God), and thus sharpens
our inner perception for a deeper vision of it. (p.72) This alone
will add to his power over nature and give him that vision of the total-infinite
which philosophy seeks but cannot find. (p.73)
If Muslims
had heeded for the last 70 years Iqbals advice and considered scientific
advancement as an act of prayer, the road map of world power today would have
been very different. Abdul Qadeer Khan, the nuclear scientist of Pakistan, and
his team seem to be the only significant exception in this regard. Of course
scientific inquiry is limited to material, objective and verifiable reality.
But Quran forbids us from striving to know the metaphysical and supernatural
reality that it refers to in the verses not entirely clear which are searched
for their hidden meanings only by those in whose hearts there is a deviation.
(3:7) Allah has required of us only belief in the unseen. (2:3) Iqbal was despaired
with the Muslim religio-philosophic tradition of his time, which he called a
worn-out and practically dead metaphysics with its peculiar though-forms
and set phraseology producing manifestly a deadening effect on the modern
mind. (pp.72,78). He intended to write a book on the system of Fiqh (jurisprudence)
in the light of modern knowledge which would have been another work of
reconstruction on the legal thought of Islam. To this second work of reconstruction,
the present book would have been, in his own words, a prelude. Death at the
age of 60 precluded his writing this greatly important book, but this idea signifies
his will to the posterity.
[republished
with permission from www.icna.org]
Date/Time Last Modified: 6/18/2002 8:04:31 AM
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