In our society everything is given
patronage except learning and research. Praises are showered on worthless
ideas, meaningless concepts are applauded and senseless thoughts extolled.
Sadly enough, true knowledge is forsaken and condemned. Ignorance is garlanded
with ignorance profound. Scholarly research in religious issues, in particular,
is considered high treason and inevitably rewarded with spite and venom.
In this regard, the greatest malady
is Taqlid (Blind Following). Every opinion which has once been adopted
is never thought over again. Every idea which has once been formed is regarded
with a sanctity which has rendered it eternal. Every view which has remained
undisputed in the past has become no less than the Word of God. Emotional
attachment to traditional concepts and conventional thoughts, however baseless
they may be and however much they might distort the truth, has given rise
to prejudice and intolerance. Sincere words of criticism are anticipated
with fire and fury from these traditional quarters. A person who does so
is degraded in society, even if his arguments are based on the Qur’an and
Sunnah.
But then, this attitude is not even
worth complaining about. Irrespective of all consequences, a person should
always uphold the voice of his conscience. He should remain steadfast in
the cause of truth and face every adverse current of society with grit
and endurance. Any increase in the intensity of opposition should only
increase his patience. The more the going gets tough, the tougher he should
become – for expending even the last drop of blood in the cause of truth
would make this path easier for others to tread. Like a lighthouse all
his struggles and sacrifices would then shine as a source of guidance for
humanity. He would then redefine the meaning of courage and extend the
frontiers of valor. He would add new dimensions to dare and defiance. In
the heavens, the angels would pray for his success and upon the earth success
would yearn to waylay him.
He should, also, never forget that
since the very first nautical mile of his intellectual voyage, he has remained
the most besought target of traditionalists. They have always challenged
the torrent of his intellectual advancement. Almost always they have obstructed
his progress, but then, to no avail. Every time that their claws have closed
on the champions of truth, a new episode of man’s loftiness has been scribed
by the historian’s pen. A Socrates, an Ibn Taymiyyah, a Malik, a Galileo,
a Copernicus, a Farahi was always there to write with his own blood an
episode of man’s resolve to abide by the truth. They died while upholding
the cause of truth and with their death the torch of truth shone even brighter
and is held high to this day by the successors of these giants, by no means
any less in stature.
Perhaps these legends, in the words of Longfellow, have
a message for us:
Lives of great men all remind us
We can make our lives sublime
And, departing, leave behind us
Footprints on the sands of time
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