Laaltain

Death of Rationality

5 جنوری، 2014

Fazal Muham­mad Khan

In the fol­low up of my arti­cles “Why Balochistan’s Mama Qadeer is on Long March” pub­lished in The Laal­tain on Novem­ber 27, 2013 and “My Name is Khan and I am Not a Tal­ib” pub­lished in Pash­tun Women View­point on Decem­ber 15, I received sev­er­al dis­parate respons­es in social media where­in the nation­al­ists’ nar­ra­tive was rep­ri­mand­ed and dubbed to be sec­u­lar and anti-Islam­ic. I wish to con­tin­ue the con­ver­sa­tion about the quan­daries of Baloch and Pash­tun peo­ple by reply­ing to the feed­back I received in the social media.

Viewed from a broad­er per­spec­tive, Islam under­scores more on Ijte­had which denotes the exer­cise and appli­ca­tion of one’s rea­son or log­ic (ratio­nal­i­ty) to mat­ters con­cern­ing one’s own self or social sphere and less on Taqlid, the (blind) fol­low­ing of the tra­di­tion.

My approach would pri­mar­i­ly be to appeal to the ratio­nal­i­ty of the read­ers. By ratio­nal­i­ty I mean a fun­da­men­tal fac­ul­ty of uti­liz­ing rea­son and log­ic to resolve any issue. The peo­ple who were too quick to dis­cred­it my opin­ions by call­ing it anti-Islam­ic should know that Islam rous­es in man the fac­ul­ty of rea­son and encour­ages him/her to pon­der deeply in mat­ters that he/she comes across. It instructs man to real­ize issues in the light of real­i­ty. In the Holy Quran, God Almighty denounces the act of not using one’s fac­ul­ty of rea­sons in Surah Al‑A’raf in the fol­low­ing words:
“They have hearts where­with they under­stand not, they have eyes where­with they see not, and they have ears where­with they hear not (the truth). They are like cat­tle, nay even more astray; those! They are the heed­less ones.”(Verse 179)
Viewed from a broad­er per­spec­tive, Islam under­scores more on Ijte­had which denotes the exer­cise and appli­ca­tion of one’s rea­son or log­ic (ratio­nal­i­ty) to mat­ters con­cern­ing one’s own self or social sphere and less on Taqlid, the (blind) fol­low­ing of the tra­di­tion.
Ill-starred, how­ev­er, turned out to be the Mus­lim Ummah when by the 10th Cen­tu­ry AD, the ratio­nal­i­ty was almost barred in the pub­lic mat­ters because author­i­ties of the day believed that ijte­had was the priv­i­lege of only a few great schol­ars who had died by then. As a result, all that was left for the Mus­lims to rely on was Taqlid or the fol­low­ing of the judg­ments and prin­ci­ples set by the likes of Imam Abu Han­i­fa and his con­tem­po­raries in the 8th cen­tu­ry AD. The appli­ca­tion of one’s own rea­son and log­ic on the issues which sprout­ed from con­tin­u­ous­ly evolv­ing cul­ture, ever-increas­ing knowl­edge and advance­ments was reject­ed.
This was begin­ning of the death of ratio­nal­i­ty among Mus­lims. The Gold­en Age of Islam which last­ed from the mid-8th cen­tu­ry till the Mon­gol inva­sion of Bagh­dad in 1258 AD has con­tin­ued to col­lapse since then. Dur­ing the gold­en peri­od, how­ev­er, Mus­lim world was an intel­lec­tu­al cen­ter for sci­ence, phi­los­o­phy, med­i­cine and edu­ca­tion. The House of Wis­dom (Bait­ul Hikmah) was estab­lished in Bagh­dad where sci­en­tif­ic knowl­edge was assim­i­lat­ed from ancient Chi­nese, Roman, Egypt­ian, Per­sian, Greek, Phoeni­cian, Byzan­tine, and Indi­an civ­i­liza­tions. How­ev­er, with the con­se­quent death of ratio­nal­i­ty which jammed the knowl­edge, Mus­lims could no longer pro­duce genius­es like Bu-Ali Sina, Khwariz­mi, Jabir Bin Hayyan, Ibn al Haisam and oth­ers. Here began the era where Mus­lim Ummah went into per­pet­u­al reliance on the West for knowl­edge.
Com­ing back to Pak­istan, fac­tors like unnec­es­sar­i­ly exten­sive and pow­er­ful role of reli­gious cler­gy in state affairs, Zia’s Islamiza­tion and his exten­sive revamp­ing of the edu­ca­tion­al syl­labi with the prime pur­pose of Islamiz­ing edu­ca­tion have bot­tled up ratio­nal­i­ty and deeply instilled the con­cept of Taqlid in the sociopo­lit­i­cal fab­ric of the nation. The atti­tude of Taqlid has devel­oped an uncrit­i­cal sup­port, no mat­ter ratio­nal or irra­tional, to what­ev­er is uttered from the mouth of or writ­ten from the pen of some self-pro­claimed reli­gious schol­ars and preach­ers.

The atti­tude of Taqlid has devel­oped an uncrit­i­cal sup­port, no mat­ter ratio­nal or irra­tional, to what­ev­er is uttered from the mouth of or writ­ten from the pen of some self-pro­claimed reli­gious schol­ars and preach­ers.

Because of this atti­tude of Taqlid, we as a nation have ignored the great achieve­ments of peo­ple such as Prof. Dr. Abdus Salam – the only Nobel Lau­re­ate of Pak­istan who is high­ly revered through­out the world but not in Pak­istan. So star-crossed was he that we con­demned him only for his belong­ing to the minor­i­ty Ahmadiyya com­mu­ni­ty and so ill-fat­ed are we that we failed to ben­e­fit from what he achieved. One won­ders that Har Gob­ind Kho­rana (1922 – 2011) who was born in pre-par­ti­tion Pak­istan and won the Nobel Prize in med­i­cine in 1968 might have antic­i­pat­ed our dis­crim­i­na­to­ry atti­tude and decid­ed to leave Pak­istan and acquire a nat­u­ral­ized cit­i­zen­ship of Amer­i­ca.
Sim­i­lar­ly our atti­tude towards Malala Yousafzai is anoth­er reflec­tion of our irra­tional mind­set. Devoid of any con­crete rea­sons and proofs, we are too quick to chas­tise the poor child. Too many of us blind­ly fol­low the opin­ions and writ­ings of ide­o­log­i­cal­ly dri­ven Malala haters. And when ques­tioned on ratio­nal grounds, we tend to end the con­ver­sa­tion by blam­ing lib­er­als and sec­u­lars for all the ills in Pak­istan. Let me recall what she has done. She is a girl of six­teen, shot in head by the Tal­iban, the one who talks of peace and edu­ca­tion for all. She is the one who has shown to the world that Pak­istan does have the tal­ent, courage and the peo­ple who think pro­gres­sive­ly and speak against all the odds and oppres­sions in the soci­ety. If this is in fact the case, what is then wrong with her? Has she done any­thing dis­taste­ful either to Islam or to Pak­istan? Of course not! But the death of ratio­nal­i­ty makes us think oth­er­wise.
Such men­tal­i­ty has also by and large implic­it­ly ham­pered research in both social and basic sci­ences. As an exam­ple, Tab­lighi Jamaat, a staunch prop­a­ga­tor of Taqlid, dis­cred­its sci­ence by equat­ing it just with tech­nol­o­gy and does not con­sid­er it an impor­tant knowl­edge. Like­wise, the incum­bent course con­tent taught in our edu­ca­tion­al insti­tutes requires stu­dents to read sci­en­tif­ic lit­er­a­ture with jaun­diced eyes result­ing in social stag­na­tion and ham­per­ing the devel­op­ment of social val­ues. The atti­tude of Taqlid proves out to be a mon­strous block­ade to the exchange of ideas in research in social sci­ences, in par­tic­u­lar. It is prob­a­bly the same men­tal­i­ty of Taqlid that has blocked the inclu­sion of sci­en­tists, both social and basic, in impor­tant pub­lic pol­i­cy deci­sions. A case in point is the irra­tional­i­ty of the Coun­cil of Islam­ic Ide­ol­o­gy in say­ing that DNA evi­dence can­not be tak­en a con­clu­sive proof in rape cas­es.
On the basis of these premis­es about Taqlid and ratio­nal­i­ty, let us go back to the dis­cus­sion of nation­al­ists being termed as sec­u­lars and ant-Islam­ic. Nation­al­ism is defined as a belief or creed or polit­i­cal ide­ol­o­gy that involves an indi­vid­ual iden­ti­fy­ing with one’s nation. This def­i­n­i­tion is very much in sync with the words of the Holy Prophet (PBUH) in his famous last ser­mon:
“O’ ye peo­ple! Allah says, O’ peo­ple We cre­at­ed you from one male and one female and made you into tribes and nations, so as to be known to one anoth­er.”
Nation­al­ism, how­ev­er, should not be con­fused with eth­no­cen­trism which is defined as the judg­ing of another’s cul­ture by the norms, mores, stan­dards and val­ues of one’s own cul­ture. And the Prophet of Islam (PBUH) has denounced eth­no­cen­trism, and not nation­al­ism, when he said in the same ser­mon:
“Ver­i­ly in the sight of Allah, the most hon­ored amongst you is the one who is most God-fear­ing. There is no supe­ri­or­i­ty for an Arab over a non-Arab and for a non-Arab over an Arab or for the white over the black or for the black over the white except in God-con­scious­ness.”
In the words of Mah­mood Khan Achakzai, ‘where in the Holy Quran, Hadith or Sun­nah of the Prophet (PBUH) has it been men­tioned that one should not raise one’s voice on the con­trol of nat­ur­al resources which exist in one’s area of res­i­dence?’ Albeit being only a ques­tion, these words explic­it­ly define nation­al­ism.
To con­clude, let me put here the ques­tion: Does decry­ing the killing of 70 inno­cent peo­ple by a bru­tal army oper­a­tion in North Waziris­tan a few weeks back make any Pash­tuns an eth­no­cen­tric (Read nation­al­ist)? So let us be ratio­nal in our cri­tique of the ‘nation­al­ists’.


1454751_705439582813115_1302696223_nFazal Muham­mad Khan is a grad­u­ate of GC Uni­ver­si­ty Lahore- He is Gen­er­al Sec­re­tary of Insti­tute for Devel­op­ment Edu­ca­tion and Advo­ca­cy (IDEA) — He can be reached at fazajana@gmail.com.


 

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