| |

Alif-Lâm-Râ. [These letters are one of the miracles of
the Qur'ân and none but Allâh (Alone) knows their meanings].
(This is) a Book, the Verses whereof are perfected (in every
sphere of knowledge, etc.), and then explained in detail from
One (Allâh), Who is All-Wise and Well-Acquainted (with all
things). |
| 2. |

(Saying) worship none but Allâh. Verily, I (Muhammad SAW)
am unto you from Him a warner and a bringer of glad tidings. |
| 3. |

And (commanding you): "Seek the forgiveness of your Lord, and
turn to Him in repentance, that He may grant you good
enjoyment, for a term appointed, and bestow His abounding
Grace to every owner of grace (i.e. the one who helps and
serves needy and deserving, physically and with his wealth,
and even with good words). But if you turn away, then I fear
for you the torment of a Great Day (i.e. the Day of
Resurrection). |
| 4. |

To Allâh is your return, and He is Able to do all things." |
Divine Guidance
Human intellect helps us little in the matter,
because it is not aware of any source of knowledge other than
itself. There is only one guide left for mankind in this
difficult quest; and that confidently proclaims its ability to
lead them to their goal:
The God that has created all the objects in the universe has
also undertaken to make them aware of their goal and guide them
towards it (The Qur'an, 20: 50).
This Guidance which comes direct from God is
known as revelation. It has been revealed all along to mankind
through the agency of various Anbiya. But unfortunately,
due to the ravages of time and human tampering with the texts of
the Scriptures, the messages delivered by the pre-Islamic Anbiya
could not be preserved long in their original form. Eventually,
about—fourteen centuries ago, the complete and final version of
that Guidance was revealed to mankind through Muhammad (P), the
last of the series of the Rusul. This version of the
Device Guidance is embodied, exactly in its original form, in the
Qur'an.
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INTRODUCTION
The history of mankind
makes tragic reading. Down through the ages we come across a
series of sequences of the rise, growth, decline and fall not
only of nations but even of their civilizations and cultures. No
doubt, man has all along shown a remarkable constructive genius,
having attained many an awe-inspiring success, now and then,
despite occasional set-backs and natural catastrophes. But his
constructive genius, was always undermined by some inherent
weakness underlying his ideals or his way of life which
ultimately brought about a disastrous end to his efforts.
Nevertheless, there have been some notable exceptions in the
series of sequences when the idea of the universal welfare of
mankind took practical shape, but the main characteristic of the
type of the society in all those civilizations, however, always
remained one of frustration.
The same dismal spectacle is repeated age after
age. We see a people incessantly striving towards the creation of
a great civilization, which became the focus of their desires and
ambitions, hopes and aspirations. They looked upon their success
as the apogee of human endeavour. This civilisation, they hoped,
would finally liberate mankind from the clutches of tyranny and
slavedom, and usher in an era of eternal peace, security and
contentment. They remained lost in the illusion of having built
up an unparalleled civilization whose growth was always a source
of pride and happiness for them. Every step they took for its
progress kindled a new ray of hope in their hearts for ultimately
attaining human welfare and advancement. But the process never
reached the desired culmination, and the main objective ever
remained a mirage. Long before the goal was reached, invariably
an anti-climax set in and man himself became instrumental in
pulling down the imposing edifice that he had raised through the
ages, shattering all his hopes, ideals and aspirations.
History is replete with such stories of the
rise and growth and the ultimate decline and fall of several
human civilizations. Ancient Babylon, Egypt, Greece, Iran, Rome,
India and even some parts of the New World are now graveyards of
glorious old civilizations. These stand as living testimony to
the story of man's tragic failures. They induce a thoughtful mood
in sensitive spectators and caution them to pause for a while and
reflect over this warning of the Qur’an :
Mind! Be ye not like the old woman who laboured hard to spin
her yarn and then pulled it to pieces (16: 92).
Contemporary Civilization
On the other hand, let us ponder over the state
of the contemporary world in which the leading role is played by
the nations of the West. The splendour and brilliance of that
civilization is indeed dazzling. No doubt, this civilization,
prosperous and powerful as it claims to be, has enabled man to
harness some of the most formidable forces of nature. The
astounding progress of communication by land, sea and air has
brought distant places into close contact. Never before in his
long and chequered history has man enjoyed such power over the
universe and the mighty forces of nature as he does today.
This fantastic phase of human civilization is
hardly a century old, but unfortunately, as in the past, the
portents of its collapse and ruin are already in evidence, as
Mason says :"
We began our era of scientific efficiency confident that
materialistic triumphs would solve life's problems. We are
finding we were wrong . Life is not as simple as that.1
Every thinking man is oppressed by the fear
that this civilisation which has already been shaken to its very
foundations by two global wars will not survive a third shock.
Not only will the whole edifice collapse, but it will also crush
the whole of mankind under it, perhaps, totally out of existence.
Why should this be so? Neither ancient
civilisations nor the present one are the work of thoughtless
men. In fact, all great civilisations, both past and present, are
the manifestations of a highly developed creative mind. This
paradox of progress leads all thoughtful minds inescapably to the
conclusion arrived at by Einstein:
By painful experience we have learnt that rational thinking
does not suffice to solve the problems of our social life.
Penetrating research and keen scientific work have often had
tragic implications for mankind, producing, on the one hand,
inventions which liberated man from exhausting physical labor,
making his life easier and richer; but on the other hand,
introducing a grave restlessness into his life, making him a
slave to his technological environment, and—most catastrophic of
all—creating the means for his own mass destruction. This,
indeed, is a tragedy of overwhelming poignancy.2
In other words, human reason can subdue the
forces of nature but cannot find by itself a satisfactory
solution to the complexity of the problems of mankind. In fact,
these cannot be solved unless and until we first find
satisfactory answers to certain fundamental questions: What is
the aim and purpose of human life? Why are the claims of
different individuals and interests of different nations often
mutually contradictory, and how can they be reconciled? What
things are conducive and which harmful to the interests of
mankind at large? What are the common values of humanity and how
are they mutually related? Why is it necessary to protect and
preserve these values and how? What are the fundamental rights of
man and how can they be safeguarded ? It is clear that human
reason and its manifestations—the sciences—do not and cannot
possibly help us to solve these questions. Let me again refer to
Einstein :
For science can only ascertain what is, but not what should
be, and outside of its domain value judgments of all kinds remain
necessary.... Representatives of science have often made an
attempt to arrive at fundamental judgments with respect of values
and ends on the basis of scientific methods and in this way have
set themselves in opposition to religion. These conflicts have
all sprung from fatal errors. . . .............
For the scientist, there is only "being," but not wishing, no
valuing, no good, no evil, no goal.3
Since the solution of man's fundamental
problems depends upon satisfactory answers to the above questions
and since human reason alone cannot properly answer them, it
should be well to investigate some other source of knowledge to
which we may turn for the right answers which might help mankind
in solving its fundamental problems.
Divine Guidance
Human intellect helps us little in the matter,
because it is not aware of any source of knowledge other than
itself. There is only one guide left for mankind in this
difficult quest; and that confidently proclaims its ability to
lead them to their goal:
The God that has created all the objects in the universe has
also undertaken to make them aware of their goal and guide them
towards it (The Qur'an, 20: 50).
This Guidance which comes direct from God is
known as revelation. It has been revealed all along to mankind
through the agency of various Anbiya. But unfortunately,
due to the ravages of time and human tampering with the texts of
the Scriptures, the messages delivered by the pre-Islamic Anbiya
could not be preserved long in their original form. Eventually,
about—fourteen centuries ago, the complete and final version of
that Guidance was revealed to mankind through Muhammad (P), the
last of the series of the Rusul. This version of the
Device Guidance is embodied, exactly in its original form, in the
Qur'an.
The Qur'an
The Qur’an was revealed from time to time over
period of about twenty-three years. Rasul-ullah had made
fool-proof arrangements for its transcription and preservation,
and before he died it had been fully compiled in the form of a
book, apart from being memorized by heart by thousands of men.
The Book has thus been inherited in its original form and it is
an historically established fact that not a single letter of the
Book has been altered in the course of the fourteen centuries of
its existence. This great and incomparable Book is a unique
testament of the eternal truths and ever-abiding universal
values, and offers enlightenment and perfect guidance in regard
to all aspects of human life.
Writings of men are the products of their
environment and are designed to convey some idea and serve one or
another limited purpose. The life of such writings is, therefore,
transitory, and their interest and utility limited. On the other
hand, a book that carries revealed guidance forever is
independent of time and space and circumstance. Its teachings are
never out of date, and there is no limit beyond which it could
fail to enlighten and guide men. It indicates the principles that
determine the development and the realisation of individual
potentialities, and explains the laws that govern the rise,
decline and fall of nations. The Qur'an thus is a Divine Book
embodying all these attributes, and, being the final code of life
forever prescribed by God for mankind, it is fully comprehensive
and complete in every respect.
This great work of Almighty God tells us that
all the failures and frustrations of mankind, all the
destructions and bloodshed that the world has suffered, can be
traced back to fallacious views of life that man had adopted
through the distorted vision and perverse thinking. One of these
is the materialistic concept of life according to which man is
merely the most developed specimen of animal life, his being
depending entirely upon his physical body for existence and
ending with its decay. Human life, they think, is governed
entirely by physical laws. The preservation and promotion of
man's material welfare is the only aim worth striving for. It is
the function of human intellect to help man in achieving these
aims. Those who believe in this view of life inevitably accept
the supremacy of the law of jungle that might is right. This law
naturally results in strife and conflict among individuals and
groups, eventually leading to global conflicts and mass
destruction of life and property and tragic human sufferings. In
short, all the courses that mankind has adopted for the
organisation of social life have ultimately led, not to security
and peace, but to mutual destruction. In The Making of
Humanity, Robert Briffault has brought the root cause of the
trouble clearly into focus when he says:
No system of human organisation that is false in its very
principle, in its very foundation, can save itself by any amount
of cleverness and efficiency in the means by which that falsehood
is carried out and maintained, by any amount of superficial
adjustment and tinkering (p. 159).
The Qur’anic View of Life
The Qur'an, on the other hand, holds that man
is not merely a physical being but is composed of something else
besides his body, which is called human personality. This
personality, however, is not inherited by man in a fully
developed state; it exists in a latent form and its development
is the ultimate object of human life. When properly developed,
the life of the individual becomes capable of evolving into
higher forms after its end in this mortal world. The growth of an
individual's physical existence is governed by certain natural
laws; but the development of his personality is subject to a
different set of laws which have been given to mankind from time
to time through Divine Revelation, and are now fully embodied in
the Qur'an.
Organization of Human Society
The personality of the individual can grow and
fulfill its destiny in and through society alone and not in
isolation. Therefore, the Qur’anic laws relating to human
personality also outline the principles on which the organization
of human society should be based. A social system evolved in
accordance with the Qur'anic laws aims at ensuring the progress
and full development of entire mankind. It creates a
society free from the clash of interests among individuals
and nations. For, according to its basic principles, the
personality of an individual grows in direct proportion to his
contribution towards the development of other personalities. Thus
in a society where each individual does his best to help others
(in the interest of his own personality) conflict among
individuals does not arise. And once the conflict of interests
among people is eliminated, all other complications that have
been responsible for the perpetual strife, tyranny and disorder
in the world would automatically disappear. The Qur’an,
therefore, lays down a pattern according to which a healthy
social organisation for entire mankind can be formed.
As an outcome of the materialistic concept of
life, mankind today faces a crisis which perhaps has no parallel
in history. This crisis, pervading all spheres of human life, has
taken the form of a universal revolt against religion. This is
not confined to any particular place or group of people. It is
not directed against any particular religion, but against
religion itself. No doubt, every religion has been subjected to
the severest criticism at one time or another since the advent of
civilisation, but a total revolt against religion itself is a
peculiar feature of the contemporary attitude towards life. "All
living religions," says William Ernest Hocking, "are wretched
vessels. They are all wrapped in sanctimony, dusty-eyed with
self-satisfaction, stiff-jointed with the rheum-rust of their
creedal conceits, so timorous under the whips of conformity that
only a few dare the perilous task of thinking."4
Russell is more clear on the point when he says:
Religion prevents our children from having a rational
education ; religion presents us from removing the fundamental
causes of war; religion prevents us from teaching the ethic of
scientific co-operation in place of the old fierce doctrines of
sin and punishment. It is possible that mankind is on the
threshold of a golden age; but, if so, it will be necessary first
to slay the dragon that guards the door, and this dragon is
religion.5
Our age thus poses an open
challenge to religion.
This challenge is not entirely unprecedented.
Fourteen centuries ago religion faced a similar challenge—and a
formidable one at that. This challenge was held out by the Qur’an.
It openly challenged the religions of the day: Judaism,
Christianity, Manichaeism, idol-worship, star-worship,
nature-worship and superstition. What is more, it not merely
challenged the truth and validity of the elements of a particular
form of religion, but also emphasized that "religion" itself was
based on false foundations.
This assertion is likely to cause surprise not
only to non-Muslims but even to Muslims. It may be argued that
Islam itself is a religion (and the Qur'an is a book of religion)
and to say that the Qur’an is the standard-bearer of a revolt
against religion is a contradiction in terms. In fact, however,
this is not a contradiction but may merely be termed as a
paradox, which arises from a fundamental fallacy and a widely
accepted misconception about the nature of Islam. Islam is
generally regarded as a religion (madhhab) whereas in fact it is
not a madhhab but a din. Now madhhab and
din, which are generally treated as synonymous, are not only
essentially different concepts but are mutually contradictory.
So, the fundamental difference between the two must be clearly
understood before the assertion made above can be properly
appreciated. A proper understanding of this difference is also
essential for the deliverance of mankind from the deadly crisis
in which it finds itself today.
The Qur'an tells us that when man began to live
in groups, a clash of interests ensued. And this in turn led to
violent strife and bloodshed. Since this mess had been the result
of man's own limitations, it was beyond his power to remedy it.
What was needed was a clear guidance from a source supra-human.
Obviously, this source could be none other than Divine Knowledge,
for, in the entire universe there is no body or force superior to
man except his Creator—God Himself. The Divine Guidance that
mankind needed to pull itself out of the morass in which it found
itself was available to it through Rusul (the Messengers
of God).
Thus from time to time each of this long
succession of Divine Messengers (Rusul) came to
mankind with a Code of Divine Guidance, and established a
socio-economic order based on the permanent values embodied in
that Code. The old conflicts and strives in that society were
thus brought to an end. The pursuit of individual self-interests
was replaced by the ideal of the good of the society at large.
Oppression and exploitation were abolished and justice and equity
prevailed. The dependence of man upon man and the subjection of
one to another was brought to an end. Every individual was
assured the proper satisfaction of his needs. He was, therefore,
satisfied and did not owe obedience to any person or power except
the Divine Laws (or the Permanent Values enshrined in the Divine
Code). All the members of society thus enjoyed true freedom and
security; security and freedom not confined to man's physical
existence on this earth alone but also ensured in the life
Hereafter. This way of life, this code of law, this social order
was known as din.
This social order prevailed during the lifetime
of the Nabi who founded it and for some time thereafter.
But sooner or later, the forces suppressed by din again
raised their ugly heads and began to undermine it, reviving the
old evils of injustice, exploitation and tyranny. In their
attempt to re-establish the old order, these forces generally
availed themselves of the services of men who appeared in the
robes of piety and spoke in the name of God. They posed as the
interpreters of God's Will and thus distorted the principles and
tenets of din which no longer remained a living force in
society and was reduced to a set of soul-less beliefs and
lifeless dogmas and formal rituals divorced from reason and
knowledge and the realities of life in this world. They sought to
keep the common people entangled in the labyrinth of dogma and
ritual, and the exploiters, religious as well as temporal, were
thus left free to maintain their stranglehold upon the defrauded
masses and to fatten themselves on the labour of others. This was
the metamorphosis of din into madhhab or religion, as in
the old.
But this sort of order, or lack of order, could
not continue indefinitely, and before long another Rasul
(Messenger of God) appeared on the scene, challenged the
standard-bearers of "religion" and eventually re-established the
din or the way of life revealed to and established by his
predecessor.
This process of thesis and antithesis, of
revival and decadence, went on for ages and ended with the
Nabi of Islam, through whom a perfect code of Divine Guidance
embodied in the Qur’an was brought to mankind. The social order
that was established by this Nabi on the basis of that
Code was the culmination of the process of the perfection of
din.
The entire history of mankind is in short the
history of a perpetual conflict between din and madhhab
terminating in the success of one over the other.
The concept of "religion" is a deliberate
creation of the minds of men devoted to the pursuit of
self-interest. Their aim was to enjoy themselves at the expense
of others. As a result of a sustained process of indoctrination,
the masses learnt to hail and bless those who cheated them in
diverse forms of disguises pleasing to them.
In all their attempts to befool the people and
cheat them out of their rights, the standard-bearers of
"religion" have always relied mainly upon one technique: they
attributed their own aims and ambitions as emanating from the
"Will of God." This is the secret of the strong hold of
"religion" on the minds of the masses; and the most effective way
of maintaining this hold is to keep the people ignorant, to
cripple their reason and render them incapable of independent
thinking, and hold up ignorance and stupidity and blind
submission as signs of piety and godliness. The leaders of
"religion" would have us believe that the more obscurely and
incoherently a person talks, the nearer he is to God; and the
more irrational and unscientific he is in his attitude and
approach, the greater the esteem in which he should be held.
The only argument that is advanced in support
of "religion" is that it was followed by their ancestors which
vouchsafes sanctity. If anyone has the temerity to question any
religious belief or practice, the leaders of "religion" try to
arouse the ire of the people against him by accusing him of
desecration and insult to their renowned ancestors. Fear of
popular wrath has been used quite effectively by the leaders of
"religion" to muzzle their critics and hold them in perpetual
awe. It was to undo and break this vicious grip of madhhab,
and to restore din as an effective Code of
Guidance that God sent His Rusul (Messengers) amongst men
from time to time.
Since falsehood has no legs to stand upon, it
always appears in the garb of truth. Similarly, " religion
"secures acceptance by masquerading as din, making use of its
terminology and paraphernalia. It lacks the soul and spirit of
din but seeks to deceive people into accepting the shadow for
the substance. Madhhab is in fact the embalmed corpse of
din. How surprisingly firm is the hold of religion on man's
subconscious can be gauged by a simple fact. Christianity
invented the theory of Original Sin with the result that man was
bereft of free will and reduced to the state of an inanimate
determined object, inasmuch as, when it was held that every human
child sees the light of day at birth tainted with sin for no
fault of his own, and which it was not possible for him to get
rid of through his efforts, he became quite a helpless creature.
The logical conclusion of this belief was that he could not be
held responsible for his misdoings. Determinism and freedom from
responsibility, therefore, became the natural products of
Christianity .
Several men of science and thinkers in the West
have, in the light of reason, renounced Christianity altogether.
They went even to the length of regarding belief in God as mere
absurdity; and have turned confirmed atheists and materialists.
Nevertheless, it is surprising to note how deeply ingrained have
been the basic concepts of Christianity in their minds. The
researches they have carried out in various fields of
natural sciences, sociology, history, psychology, etc., postulate
one thing alone, viz., man's complete helplessness and freedom
from responsibility for his actions. Darwinian research made the
homosapiens a biologically determined creature all of whose
actions were the outcome of his physical inheritance and
altogether beyond his control. Behaviorists tied him down to the
shackles of habits and reflexes and observed that all his actions
were determined by physical stimuli. Anthropologists declared
that man's character-traits were based on heredity, and
Sociologists held that his social environment was responsible for
all his actions and conduct. Freudians regard him as
psychologically determined, and announced that "the ego is not
master in its own house," since all its decisions were made by
the subconscious mind which was dominated by sex drives. Marxists
viewed him as an entity economically determined.
What does all this indicate? It is the result
of that powerful rip of "religion" of which, in their estimation,
they had completely divested themselves. Though they had mentally
liberated themselves from religious bonds, yet their subconscious
was not altogether freed. This was so because after having
released themselves from the negative thoughts of "religion, "
they did not adopt the positive thoughts of din. And,
since it is impossible to have vacuum in nature, their minds were
filled with negative thoughts from other sources. Now the
exigencies of time compel them to face reality, especially
because the generation that has sprung up under the influence of
the philosophy of determinism has no respect for law and order
and does not deem an offense as offense; for, they understand
that they are not responsible for their actions. The only thing
that could work as a deterrent in their path was the pressure of
society. But when society itself is made of such individuals as
have no regard for moral restrictions, they will have no
difficulty in changing the law to conform to the behaviour of the
immoral society itself. So the social laws are also undergoing a
gradual change in he West, lowering the moral level. This has
awakened their thinkers from their deep slumber and the are now
discarding the concept of determinism, and leaning towards the
idea of free will which, in other words, means belief in human
personality.
A question naturally arises here as to why
people are so prone to religious exploitation. The reply
generally given to this very important question is that "urge for
religion" is inherent in man. Man must believe in something—be it
God or mammon or anything else. This is, however, one of those
fallacies which have come down in history and are accepted as
"Eternal Truths" standing in no need of a careful scrutiny. The
argument advanced in support of this assertion is that the entire
history of mankind bears witness to this "urge" which man has
manifested in different forms. This is how the protagonists of
religion justify and rationalise it today. Even some honest and
genuine scholars and thinkers have been convinced of this
peculiar urge in man. Let us now examine this proposition and see
what the basis or nature of this so-called urge for religion is.
One of the two fundamental and most powerful of
man's drives, is that of self-preservation. He does not want to
perish: he wants to survive. This struggle for survival springs
up in the human babe at its very birth when it at once
instinctively cries for its feed. This struggle never diminishes
in its intensity till man breathes his last.
This instinct of self-preservation human beings
share with animals, but with a difference. An animal is provided
by nature with adequate weapons and means of survival and
self-defense; sheer physical power and strength, sharp teeth,
iron-like claws, wings to fly, poisonous sting, camouflage of
colour protection, capacity to swim or leap and run at lightning
speed—animals inherit this equipment biologically as their right.
A human being in comparison is helpless. In the face of
the destructive calamities of nature fierce birds and beasts, and
even the onslaught of his own species, he has to invent tools for
self-defence. In contrast to animals, the history of man is
the history of the development of such tools of
offence and defence.
It was the paradox of this helplessness of man
and his strong instinct of self-preservation that made him bow
down before anything that was powerful, useful or harmful to him.
He prostrated before the manifestations of nature, he worshipped
animals, he venerated trees and plants in the hope that by doing
so he would survive. In these false and artificial props, he
vainly sought his main support for survival.
It may be an interesting field for research to
substantiate the fact that wherever and whenever a people have
advanced high in their tool-making process, they have moved away
from their false gods, and have even grown irreligious. Their
highly developed armaments give them confidence; their conquest
the world around induces them to reject all such superstitions.
In the life of an individual even, one sees a similar process. In
youth, physical strength and prowess keep him indifferent to
religion and superstition with boldness, but as decay sets in the
physical organs, he becomes more and more religiously inclined,
seeking support in everything that he had rejected in his youth.
Similarly, when he is successful in life, he seldom seeks the
support of these false gods; but he searches for them most
reverently when he is confronted with failures and finds his own
means inadequate to meet the challenge.
But the problem of survival is not limited to
physical survival only. A human being, unlike the animals, has
the urge to survive on the human level as well. An animal feels
absolutely satisfied and content after a hearty meal, and comes
into action again only when it faces hunger or a threat to its
own existence. This is not so with a human being. If he were to
face a perpetual and hopeless struggle for economic security all
his life, he may indeed be too engrossed with his plight to think
of any other matter. But once having achieved economic and
physical security, he is faced with the urge to survive on the
human level. Today all welfare and socialist states are
confronted with this problem with much greater intensity and on a
wider scale than the underdeveloped countries. Due to their
scientific power and prosperous economies, their attention is
inevitably focused on the survival other than physical.
Existentialism is nothing but an acute manifestation of this
grave problem. The trend towards religion or mysticism among
thinkers and scientists (especially in their old age) is yet
another form of this search for human survival.
Such is the so-called "urge for religion" —may
it be the primitive man's nature-worship, or the mysticism of
modern thinkers. And this is the urge so often and so
successfully exploited by the seekers of self-interest, in the
name of religion.
Through the ages, the din of Anbiya had
exposed the exploiters and challenged the false gods that the
minds of men had propped up on high. This is the role that the
din, embodied in the Qur'an, is destined to play today and
tomorrow, like the adyan of yesterday.
The Qur’an recognises the demands of the
instinct of self-preservation. It, therefore, strives to
establish an economic system that guarantees the satisfaction of
the basic needs of every individual. It declares that man is
capable of conquering nature, that if he holds on firmly to the
Permanent Values of life, the survival of his human self is
ensured; for, then his personality knows no death. Permanent
Values, as preserved in the Qur’an, are unchangeable and true,
hence trustworthy and reliable. They replace the false gods with
the true God, and the meaningless superstitions of religion with
the strength of rational conviction. In short, the Qur'an
satisfies the instinct of self-preservation both on the physical
and human level and thus sets man free from the shackles of
religion and the bondage of superstitions.
This was the din preached and
established by the last of the line of Anbiya—Muhammad (P).
Unfortunately, however, not long after the
establishment of this din–i.e., the Islamic Social
Order—by Muhammad (P), Islam too met the same fate as that of the
earlier adyan. God had perfected the Islamic din in
the Qur'an, and the Rasul delivered the Book to the
Muslims and established a Social Order thereon. But shortly after
his death, the forces of exploitation began to raise their ugly
heads again. They scored their first success with the
establishment of a hereditary kingship, sustained by capitalism.
Then, to ensure their own survival and consolidation, these two
forces started distorting the din of Islam into a
madhhab. And before long, they succeeded. Like the adyan
of the ancient Anbiya, Islam also gradually lost its
soul and substance as a din and degenerated into a lifeless
madhhab hide bound by dogma and ritual. The only point of
difference between this process of degeneration and its
precedents in earlier history was that the code of Islam—the
Qur’an—remained intact in its original form, which fact, as
already stated, is borne out by historical evidence. This is a
fact of prime importance to be borne in mind. For, if any of the
other religions of mankind seeks to return to its pristine purity
as a din, it will find the task impossible in the
absence of the original testament as revealed to its own Nabi.
The Muslims alone can hope to restore Islam to its original
form as a din, because the complete code of the Islamic
din is enshrined in the Qur'an and is fully preserved in
precisely the same form as it was revealed to Muhammad (P) about
fourteen centuries ago.
The Qur'an calls upon men not to be frightened
by the terrible forces of destruction and not to despair or lose
heart even when they find the prospect dark and menacing. It
exhorts them to have faith in the way of life and the social
order that it has prescribed, and to give it a fair trial. If
they earnestly do so, it assures them that they will, before
long, overcome all the hostile forces of decay and destruction
and rise from the depths of their present misery to the heights
of achievement and glory. And the essence of the social order
prescribed by the Qur'an is simply this: the forces of nature
should be subdued and the gains of the victory should be utilized
for the development and progress of mankind at large in
accordance with the eternal values enshrined in the Revealed Book
of Allah: for,
Only that way of life can survive which is beneficial for the
whole of mankind (13: 17) .
I have given the best part of my life to a
study of the solution that the Qur'an offers to the problems,
difficulties and dangers that beset humanity in the present
times. I have been writing on the subject for nearly a quarter of
a century, and my writings have reached all parts of the land.
But they have so far been available only in the Urdu language.
Now I have felt called upon to present to a wider audience the
Qur’anic solutions to contemporary problems through the medium of
English. My chief purpose is to show that man has no reason to
feel overwhelmed by the apparently insoluble problems that face
him or look upon himself as helpless and despicable, and resign
in despair. There is still a source to which he may turn for
light and hope, and if he follows the light, there is no doubt
that he will overcome the problems that seem to him insoluble and
will also be able to go through further stages of evolution with
confidence.
One of the serious difficulties, which I have
encountered in this effort, relates to the translation in English
of the Qur’anic terms and phraseology bearing on din. Most
of prevalent English equivalents for the Arabic terms are
associated with madhhab, and if 1 were to use them, it
would be wellnigh impossible to distinguish din from
madhhab, and the main purpose of the work would be defeated.
It might be said that I could have chosen suitable equivalents
from the English vocabulary; but this is in fact impossible, for
the English vocabulary does not offer words and phrases that
could convey precisely the exact sense of the relevant Qur'anic
terms. Take, for instance, the word din itself. It has no
exact equivalent in the English language. The same exactly is the
reason why it is practically impossible to translate the Qur'an
faithfully into another language. I quote here the well-known
British Orientalist Professor H.A.R. Gibb, who says in his
famous book Modern Trends in Islam (p. 4):
The Koran is essentially untranslatable, in the same way that
great poetry is untranslatable. The seer can never communicate
his vision in ordinary language. He can express himself only in
broken images, every inflection of which, every nuance and
subtlety, has to be long and earnestly studied before their
significance breaks upon the reader—images, too, in which the
music of the sounds plays an indefinable part in attuning the
mind of the hearer to receive the message. To paraphrase
them in other words can only be to mutilate them, to substitute
clay for fine gold, the plodding of the pedestrian intelligence
for the winged flight of intuitive perception. . . . An English
translation of the Koran must employ precise and often arbitrary
terms for the many-faceted and jewel-like phrases of the Arabic;
and the more literal it is, the grayer and more colorless it must
be. Even in so simple a sentence as
(50 : 43)
"Verily We give life and death and unto Us is the journeying,"
it is impossible to present in English (or perhaps any other
language) the force of the five-times repeated in the six words
of the original.
In view of this serious difficulty, the only
alternative for me was to retain the original Qur'anic terms and
phrases, and to explain their meanings in a glossary. These
meanings have not been "invented" by me. They are based upon
etymological considerations and the original meanings of the
roots of the relevant words and phrases; they are supported by
authoritative Arabic lexicons and also by the Qur'anic verses in
which they occur. I have also compiled a comprehensive lexicon of
the Qur'an on this pattern and it has already been published in
four volumes. And on this basis, I have explained the meaning of
the Qur'an in a separate volume. (Both these works are in Urdu,
and I propose to have, at least the latter, entitled
Mafhum-ul-Qur’an, rendered into English. As a matter of fact
this work is already nearing completion.)
From a comparative study of din, and
madhhab, it would appear that the two have certain
common features; for instance, faith in God, in Divine Guidance
and in the life Hereafter. But this similarity is not very deep
or sufficiently extensive; for if one reflects over the real
meanings of these phrases, it will be abundantly clear that this
similarity between din and madhhab is merely
superficial. In essence, even these articles of faith have
different meanings and connotations in din and madhhab;
nay, these meanings are mutually contradictory in many
respects.
The first few chapters of this work comprise a
historical discussion of the concepts of God and religion. It
should not be taken for a ,discussion of din; nor is it an
attempt to compare Islam with other religions and establish its
superiority over them. From the observations made earlier in this
Introduction, it should be clear that a comparison between Islam
and the existing religions is out of question. Islam is a din,
or a way of life, which can be compared only with another way of
life, and not with any religion, for religion as such has nothing
at all to do with the problems of human life on earth. This
explains why the Qur’an does not present Islam as a rival to any
religions on the other hand, it asserts that this din
(system of life) shall ultimately prevail over all the man-made
systems (9: 33). I would, therefore, entreat you, kind reader,
not to treat this work as a book of religion ; it should be
studied only from one point of view and that is: whether or not
the way of life that it expounds offers a solution to the grave
difficulties and problems with which mankind is faced at present.
Today, all thoughtful men are disgusted both
with materialism as well as religion (madhhab), for
neither of these offers a way out of humanity's present
predicaments. The only solution is through the din that is
expounded in the following pages. This din is enshrined.
only in the verses of the Qur'an, because, as already stated of
all the Books of the revealed adyan, the Qur'an is the
only book that has remained intact in precisely the same form in
which it was revealed to Muhammad (P) who delivered it to
mankind.
The economic problem is indeed the gravest of
all the problems of the present age, and neither Capitalism nor
Communism offers an adequate and effective solution to it. The
Islamic din shows us the path of redemption in this sphere
also. But this aspect of Islam has been touched upon only
casually in the present book; it has been discussed at length in
another book, which is now ready for the press.
Incidentally, in the pages which follow, the
reader will come across numerous quotations, especially from
Western writers. I should make it clear at the very outset that
these quotations have not been used to prove the truth of any
principle or precept of the Qur'an. All the statements and
assertions of the Qur'an are self-evident truths and do not need
any external corroboration. The quotations are meant to serve an
entirely different purpose. The Qur'an presented the outlines of
a new Social Order some fourteen centuries ago. People then not
only disagreed with it but also opposed it. But today, the needs
of the time and the difficult situation in which mankind finds
itself tend to bring humanity gradually nearer to the Social
Order of Islam. Various non-Muslim thinkers who, until a short
while ago, used to pin all their hopes on one or another of the
various social systems devised by men without any Divine
Guidance, have now begun to despair of them. And the outlines of
the new schemes that they are now, contemplating to ensure peace
and justice and happiness for mankind appear very much like those
of the Social Order prescribed by the Qur'an ages ago. It is only
to illustrate this fact that I have quoted frequently from the
writings of some eminent Western thinkers. Human intellect is
gradually advancing towards the comprehension of Permanent Values
as set forth in the Qur'an. Notwithstanding the forces of
exploitation, the Eternal Truth is ultimately bound to prevail,
the sooner the better for the emancipation of mankind.
References
1. J.W.T. Mason, Creative Freedom, pp 183-4.
2. Albert Einstein, Out of My Later Years, p. 152,
3. Ibid., pp. 25, 114.
4. Living Religious and A World Faith p.202.
5. Bertrand Russell, Why I Am Not A Christian, p.
37.