THE CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ISLAMIC SOCIETY
AND THE CORRECT METHOD FOR ITS FORMATION
SYED QUTB
PIR SYED GHULAM QUTB-UL-HAQ GILANI
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The grand-grand son of Hazrat Syedna Pir
Meher Ali Shah (R. A). He is the illustrious
son of Hazrat Pir Syed Shah Abdul Haq Gilani,
Sajjada Nasheen, Dargah-e-Ghausia Mehria,
Golra Sharif, Islamabad.
Sayyid Qutb (also Said, Syed, Seyyid, Sayid,
or Sayed; Koteb, Qutub, Kotb, or Kutb) October
9, 1906[1] - August 29, 1966) was an Egyptian
author, educator, Islamist, poet, and the
leading Islamic theologian of the Egyptian
Muslim Brotherhood in the 1950s and '60s.
Author of 24 books, including novels, literary
arts' critique, works on education, he is
best known in the Muslim world for his work
on what he believed to be the social and
political role of Islam, particularly in
his books Social Justice and Ma'alim fi-l-Tariq
(Milestones). His magnum opus, Fi Zilal al-Qur'an
(In the shade of the Qur'an), is a 30-volume
commentary on the Qur'an. Even though most
of his observations and criticism were leveled
at the Muslim world, Qutb is also known for
his disapproval of the society and culture
of the United States[2][3] which he saw as
obsessed with materialism and violence.[4]
Views on Qutb vary widely. He has been described
by supporters as a great artist and martyr
for Islam,[5][6] but by many Western observers
as one who shaped the ideas of Islamists[7]
and particularly of terrorist groups such
as Al Qaeda[8][9][10][11] Today, his supporters
are often identified as Qutbists[12] or "Qutbi",
though they do not use the term to describe
themselves.
Anyone who takes time to read the works of
Qutb, would make a perplexing discovery.
His formative writings are not too far from
those that adorn Christian thinking during
the period of the Enlightenment. Underpinning
of reform: Ijtihad. That is how I came to
see him as the John Locke of the Muslim World,
who advocated freedom-and supported rebellion
against tyrannical rulers. This thesis must
come as a complete surprise to those in the
West who have heard of Qutb. For example,
in this New York Times Magazine feature in
March 2003, Paul Berman argued that Qutb's
philosophy-and his rigorous understanding
of Islam-was underpinning the ideological
basis of al Qaeda and its affiliates.
Muqtedar Khan, Visiting Fellow, Brookings
Project on U. S. Policy Towards the Islamic
World
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The Characteristics of
the Islamic Society and the Correct Method
for its Formation
SYED QUTB
Pir
Syed Ghulam Qutb-ul-Haq Gilani
The message of Islam brought by the Messenger
of God, Muhammad - peace be on him -was the
last link in the long chain of invitations
toward God by the noble Prophets. Throughout
history, this message has remained the same:
that human beings should recognise that their
true Sustainer and Lord is One God, that
they should submit to Him Alone, and that
the lordship of man be eliminated. Except
for a few people here and there in history,
mankind as a whole has never denied the existence
of God and His sovereignty over the universe;
it has rather erred in comprehending the
real attributes of God, or in taking other
gods besides God as His associates. This
association with God has been either in belief
and worship, or in accepting the sovereignty
of others besides God. Both of these aspects
are Shirk [Shirk is an Arabic word which
refers to ascribing the attributes, power
or authority of God to others besides Him
and/or worshipping others besides Him.] in
the sense that they take human beings away
from the religion of God, which was brought
by the Prophets. After each Prophet, there
was a period during which people understood
this religion, but then gradually later generations
forgot it and returned to Jahiliyyah. They
started again on the way of Shirk, sometimes
in their belief and worship and sometimes
in their submission to the authority of others,
and sometimes in both.
Throughout every period of human history
the call toward God has had one nature. Its
purpose is 'Islam', which means to bring
human beings into submission to God, to free
them from servitude to other human beings
so that they may devote themselves to the
One True God, to deliver them from the clutches
of human lordship and man-made laws, value
systems and traditions so that they will
acknowledge the sovereignty and authority
of the One True God and follow His law in
all spheres of life. The Islam of Muhammad
- peace be on him-came for this purpose,
as well as the messages of the earlier Prophets.
The entire universe is under the authority
of God, and man, being a small part of it,
necessarily obeys the physical laws governing
the universe. It is also necessary that the
same authority be acknowledged as the law-giver
for human life. Man should not cut himself
off from this authority to develop a separate
system and a separate scheme of life. The
growth of a human being, his conditions of
health and disease, and his life and death
are under the scheme of those natural laws
which come from God; even in the consequences
of his voluntary actions he is helpless before
the universal laws. Man cannot change the
practice of God in the laws prevailing in
the universe. It is therefore desirable that
he should also follow Islam in those aspects
of his life in which he is given a choice
and should make the Divine Law the arbiter
in all matters of life so that there may
be harmony between man and the rest of the
universe. [See Towards Understanding Islam,
by A. A. Maududi, for an explanation of this
point.]
Jahiliyyah, on the other hand, is one man's
lordship over another, and in this respect
it is against the system of the universe
and brings the involuntary aspect of human
life into conflict with its voluntary aspect.
This was that Jahiliyyah which confronted
every Prophet of God, including the last
Prophet-peace be on Him-in their call toward
submission to One God. This Jahiliyyah is
not an abstract theory; in fact, under certain
circumstances it has no theory at all. It
always takes the form of a living movement
in a society which has its own leadership,
its own concepts and values, and its own
traditions, habits and feelings. It is an
organized society and there is a close cooperation
and loyalty between its individuals, and
it is always ready and alive to defend its
existence consciously or unconsciously. It
crushes all elements which seem to be dangerous
to its personality.
When Jahiliyyah takes the form, not of a
'theory' but of an active movement in this
fashion, then any attempt to abolish this
Jahiliyyah and to bring people back to God
which presents Islam merely as a theory will
be undesirable, rather useless. Jahiliyyah
controls the practical world, and for its
support there is a living and active organization.
In this situation, mere theoretical efforts
to fight it cannot even be equal, much less
superior, to it. When the purpose is to abolish
the existing system and to replace it with
a new system which in its character' principles
and all its general and particular aspects,
is different from the controlling jahili
system, then it stands to reason that this
new system should also come into the battlefield
as an organized movement and a viable group.
It should come into the battlefield with
a determination that its strategy, its social
organization, and the relationship between
its individuals should be firmer and more
powerful than the existing jahili system.
The theoretical foundation of Islam, in every
period of history, has been to witness "La
ilaha illa Allah"-"There is no
deity except God" - which means to bear
witness that the only true deity is God,
that He is the Sustainer, that He is the
Ruler of the universe, and that He is the
Real Sovereign; to believe in Him in one's
heart, to worship Him Alone, and to put into
practice His laws. Without this complete
acceptance of "La ilaha illa Allah",
which differentiates the one who says he
is a Muslim from a non-Muslim, there cannot
be any practical significance to this utterance,
nor will it have any weight according to
Islamic law.
Theoretically, to establish it means that
people should de- vote their entire lives
in submission to God, should not decide any
affair on their own, but must refer to God's
injunctions concerning it and follow them.
We know of God's guidance through only one
source, that is, through the Messenger of
God-peace be on him. Thus, in the second
part of the Islamic creed, we bear witness
'Wa ashhadu anna Muhammadar Rasul Allah"
- "And I bear witness that Muhammad
is the Messenger of God".
It is therefore necessary that Islam's theoretical
foundation-belief-materialize in the form
of an organized and active group from the
very beginning. It is necessary that this
group separate itself from the jahili society,
becoming independent and distinct from the
active and organized jahili society whose
aim is to block Islam. The center of this
new group should be a new leadership, the
leadership which first came in the person
of the Prophet-peace be on him- himself,
and after him was delegated to those who
strove for bringing people back to God's
sovereignty, His authority and His laws.
A person who bears witness that there is
no deity except God and that Muhammad is
God's Messenger should cut off his relationship
of loyalty from the jahili society, which
he has forsaken, and from jahili leadership,
whether it be in the guise of priests, magicians
or astrologers, or in the form of political,
social or economic leadership, as was the
case of the Quraish in the time of the Prophet-peace
be on him. He will have to give his complete
loyalty to the new Islamic movement and to
the Muslim leadership.
This decisive step must be taken at the very
moment a person says, "La ilaha illa
Allah, Muhammadar Rasul Allah" with
his tongue. The Muslim society cannot come
into existence without this. It cannot come
into existence simply as a creed in the hearts
of individual Muslims, however numerous they
may be, unless they become an active, harmonious
and cooperative group, distinct by itself,
whose different elements, like the limbs
of a human body, work together for its formation,
its strengthening, its expansion, and for
its defense against all those elements which
attack its system, working under a leadership
which is independent of the jahili leadership,
which organizes its various efforts into
one harmonious purpose, and which prepares
for the strengthening and widening of their
Islamic character and directs them to abolish
the influences of their opponent, the jahili
life.
Islam was founded in this manner. It was
founded on a creed which, although concise,
included the whole of life. This creed immediately
brought into action a viable and dynamic
group of people who became independent and
separate from the jahili society, immediately
challenging it; it never came as an abstract
theory devoid of practical existence. And,
in the future it can be brought about only
in this manner. There is no other way for
the revival of Islam in the shade of Jahiliyyah,
in whatever age or country it appears, except
to follow its natural character and to develop
it into a movement and an organic system.
When Islam, according to the method described
above, starts a Muslim community on this
basis, forms it into an active group, and
makes this faith the sole basis for the relationship
between the individuals of this group, its
ultimate aim is to awaken the 'humanity of
man', to develop it, to make it powerful
and strong, and to make it the most dominant
factor among all the aspects found in man's
being. It seeks to implement this purpose
through its teachings, its rules, its laws
and injunctions.
Some human characteristics are common with
those of animals, even with those of inorganic
matter. This has misled the exponents of
'scientific Jahiliyyah' to consider man to
be nothing more than an animal, or even than
inorganic matter! But in spite of the characteristics
which man shares with animals and inorganic
matter, man possesses certain other characteristics
which distinguish him and make him a unique
creation. Even the exponents of 'scientific
ignorance' were forced to admit this, the
evidence of observational facts choking them;
but even then, their admission of this fact
is neither sincere nor unequivocal. [Foremost
among the modern Darwinists is Julian Huxley.]
In this respect the service rendered by Islam's
pure way of life has produced concrete and
valuable results. Islam based the Islamic
society on the association of belief alone,
instead of the low associations based on
race and color, language and country, regional
and national interests. Instead of stressing
those traits which are common to both man
and animal, it promoted man's human qualities,
nurtured them and made them the dominant
factor. Among the concrete and brilliant
results of this attitude was that the Islamic
society became an open and all-inclusive
community in which people of various races,
nations, languages and colors were members,
there remaining no trace of these low animalistic
traits. The rivers of higher talents and
various abilities of all races of mankind
flowed into this vast ocean and mixed in
it. Their intermingling gave rise to a high
level of civilization in a very short span
of time, dazzling the whole world, and compounding
the essences of all the human capabilities,
ideas and wisdom of that period, in spite
of the fact in those times travel was difficult
and the means of communication were slow.
In this great Islamic society Arabs, Persians,
Syrians, Egyptians, Moroccans, Turks, Chinese,
Indians, Romans, Greeks, Indonesians, Africans
were gathered together- in short, peoples
of all nations and all races. Their various
characteristics were united, and with mutual
cooperation, harmony and unity they took
part in the construction of the Islamic community
and Islamic culture. This marvelous civilization
was not an 'Arabic civilization', even for
a single day; it was purely an 'Islamic civilization'.
It was never a 'nationality' but always a
community of belief'.
Thus they all came together on an equal footing
in the relationship of love, with their minds
set upon a single goal; thus they used their
best abilities, developed the qualities of
their race to the fullest, and brought the
essence of their personal, national and historical
experiences for the development of this one
community, to which they all belonged on
an equal footing and in which their common
bond was through their relationship to their
Sustainer. In this community their 'humanity'
developed without any hindrance. These are
characteristics which were never achieved
by any other group of people in the entire
history of mankind!
The most distinguished and best known society
in ancient history is considered to be the
Roman Empire. Peoples of various races, languages
and temperaments came together in this society,
but all this was not based on 'human relation-
ship' nor was any sublime faith the uniting
factor among them; rather their society was
ordered on a class system, the class of 'nobles'
and the class of 'slaves', throughout the
Empire. Moreover, the Roman race - in general
- had the leadership and the other races
were considered its subjects. Hence this
society could not achieve that height which
was achieved by the Islamic society and did
not bring those blessings which were brought
by the Islamic society.
Various societies have also appeared in modern
times. For example, consider the British
Empire. It is like the Roman society to which
it is an heir. It is based on national greed,
in which the British nation has the leadership
and exploits those colonies annexed by the
Empire. The same is true of other European
empires. The Spanish and Portuguese Empires
in their times, and the French Empire, all
are equal in respect to oppression and exploitation.
Communism also wanted to establish a new
type of society, demolishing the walls of
race and color, nation and geographical region,
but it is not based on 'human relationship'
but on a 'class system'. Thus the communist
society is like the Roman society with a
reversal of emphasis; there nobles had distinction,
while here the proletariat has distinction.
The underlying emotion of this class is hatred
and envy of other classes. Such a selfish
and vengeful society cannot but excite base
emotions in its individuals. The very basis
of it is laid down in exciting animalistic
characteristics, and in developing and strengthening
them. Thus, in its view, the most fundamental
needs of a human being are those which are
common with the animals, that is, 'food,
shelter and sex. From its point of view,
the whole of human history is nothing but
a struggle for food!
Islam, then, is the only Divine way of life
which brings out the noblest human characteristics,
developing and using them for the construction
of human society. Islam has remained unique
in this respect to this day. Those who deviate
from this system and want some other system,
whether it be based on nationalism, color
and race, class struggle, or similar corrupt
theories, are truly enemies of mankind! They
do not want man to develop those noble characteristics
which have been given to him by his Creator
nor do they wish to see a human society benefit
from the harmonious blending of all those
capabilities, experiences and characteristics
which have been developed among the various
races of mankind.
God Most High says about such people:
"Say: Shall We tell you who will be
the greatest losers in their deeds? Those
whose effort goes astray in the present life,
while they think that they are doing good
deeds. Those are they who disbelieve in the
signs of their Lord and in the encounter
with Him. Their works have failed, and on
the Day of Resurrection We shall not assign
to them any value. That is their payment-Hell-for
that they were unbelievers and took My signs
and My Messengers in mockery." (18:103-
106)
God Almighty speaks the truth.
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