The eminent Islamic scholar,
Mawlana
Amin Ahsan
Islahi,
93, who died in Lahore, Pakistan, on 15 December 1997, will long be remembered
for his lasting contribution to Qur’anic
studies, especially for his approach based and evolved around the concept
of order and coherence in the contents of the divine book. Historically,
the idea of coherence in the Qur’an
has always been present in the writings of various scholars, both old and
new, but in modern times, it was Farahi,
the renowned scholar and teacher of Islahi,
who first made it the focus of his scholarly research, and wrote systematically
on this subject.
Amin
Ahsan
Islahi,
a most prominent pupil of Farahi,
and later a principal of Madrasah Al-Islah,
the educational institution associated with Shibli
Nu`mani
and Farahi,
learned and mastered Farahi's
concept of internal order and coherence in the Qur’an
and became the most important proponent of this school. Where as the teacher
had left a few isolated writings -- mostly in Arabic and beyond the access
of common readers -- his illustrious pupil developed, elucidated and explained
the subject through his monumental nine volume Urdu Tafthir,
Tadabbur-i-Qur’an (Pondering
on the Qur’an).
Mawlana
Islahi
was born in 1904 at Bhamhur,
a village in Azamgarh, UP, India, and completed his scholastic Islamic
education under the prevalent religious system covering the Qur’an
and Hadith and Arabic language and
literature. Like many of his scholarly contemporaries, he was also influenced
by the Indian freedom movement and, for some time, he acted as the president
of the local Congress party.
Freedom of India, and by implication
of the Muslims, from the British imperialism, was of paramount importance
to him, as it indeed was in the eyes of other ‘ulama.
In the early 1930s, Mawlana
Mawdudi developed a critique of ‘nationalist’ politics represented by the Congress
and the Muslim League and called for the formation of an Islamic party
dedicated to presenting and projecting Islam as a complete way of life.
This led to the formation of Jama’at-e-Islami
in 1941 and Islahi
was one of its founding members. When some people left the Jama’at over
some minor differences, Islahi
reportedly remarked: ‘I am not fanatical enough to jeopardise the future
of Islam over the length of Mawdudi’s
beard.’
In the Jama’at, Islahi
occupied a position, second only to Mawdudi;
and he was generally regarded as the successor to Mawdudi.
An eloquent orator, Islahi
actively worked in the election campaigns of the Jama’at,
but his heart was never in politics. Even during his most active days,
he never enjoyed politics. He left the Jama’at
in 1958 over some policy differences.
He considered electioneering a useless
exercise for the purposes of bringing about an Islamic change. According
to him the politicians cannot establish Islam: their sole aim is to gain
power, by whatsoever means possible. And if some people use the name of
Islam, they do so to achieve their political aims.
Islamic da`wah (message), Islahi
wrote, relies on tabligh (propagation
of the message) and shahadah (testimony
-- by observing what one preaches to others), whereas the main tool of
the political parties is propaganda to achieve their aims.
The difference in the word propaganda
and tabligh is not merely of semantics,
but they are also world apart in their spirit: The purpose of tabligh
is to disseminate the message of Allah faithfully in its true form fully
and completely, while propaganda is aimed at making the movement succeed
by all possible means, right or wrong. Propaganda is an art developed by
modern political movements, and one of its prominent features is its indifference
to all the moral obligations which the Prophets of Allah have always regarded
as an imperative and a necessary condition for establishing Islam and the
Islamic way of life.
Though Mr Goebbels alone is notorious
in history for his propaganda skills, to be fair and just, we find that
in the political arena almost everyone has to follow in his footsteps,
and it makes little difference whether one does so under the banner of
politics or uses the name of religion or recites the Kalimah of
Islam while entering the arena.
Those who would like to work for the
cause of Islam and its revival, he suggested, should work among people
selflessly, without any desire for power, gaining votes or indulging in
political manoeuvres. They should approach the people solely in order to
serve them, to educate them, and to help them reform their lives morally
and Islamically.
In his view, the Pakistani society
was a broken and disintegrated one, afflicted with a most dangerous malaise:
hypocrisy. As such he differed with the view that if free and fair elections
were held the masses would vote for Islam and Islamic parties.
Soon after the establishment of Pakistan,
when its leaders seemed to be going back on their promises of making it
a model Islamic state, Islahi
wrote: ‘Hypocrisy is a deadly disease, and there have been in every age
and society some people who were afflicted with it, but we do not find
in history a single nation whose leaders have chosen it as a national policy,
taking it to be the key to the resolution of all their problems. In history
there seems to be only one such nation, and that is unfortunately our nation
(Pakistani).’
In his book Pakistani
Awrat do Rahay Par (Pakistani
Woman at the Cross-roads), he explains the dangers inherent in such bifurcated
social policies of the Pakistani leadership, as manifest in its attitude
towards women and Muslim institution of family -- perhaps the best example
of their hypocrisy. ‘In our view, for healthy national life it is essential
that the leaders should invite their people resolutely and single-mindedly
to the policies that they want to follow and pursue, but to follow one
path in practice, while portraying beauties of a completely opposite path,
is a most stupid policy from which nothing but only harm can result.’
In the light of his social analysis, Islahi
believed fervently that no superficial efforts at reform would succeed
in transforming the present Pakistani society into a vibrant dynamic progressive
Islamic polity. Like Mawdudi
before him, he held that an Islamic intellectual transformation in the
light and guidance of the Qur’anic
teachings was an essential pre-requisite to make changes.
Islahi
had himself witnessed how Mawdudi
the Jama’at -- despite their
initial, clear long-term plan for a total intellectual transformation touching
on all disciplines and branches of knowledge as a necessary condition for
any genuine Islamic change -- were soon sucked into Pakistani politics.
He was wary of this danger, and shortly
after leaving the Jama’at, he embarked with a single-minded dedication
on his final intellectual journey from where Mawdudi and Jama’at had left.
All his time and energies were focused on studying, teaching a group of
students, and completing his masterpiece, Tadabbur-i-Qur’an,
the exegesis of the Qur’an
which he considered pivotal as a reference work for any future work for
Islam.
Leaving the Jama’at after devoting 16 years was a painful experience. But he was steadfast
in his commitment to Islamic ideals that had initially taken him into the
Jama’at. Now he had a fresh
opportunity to re-assess his own position and talents, and needs of the
society, concentrating on what he considered to be the most important task
of his life: to explain and to elucidate coherently the message of the
Qur’an in order to pave the
way for the true Islamic renaissance world-wide. The success in recent
years of his approach and thought in attracting attention and interest
of the educated classes within his own country and outside, including the
West, shows his assessment was not wrong.
When this writer joined Islahi's
study circle at Lahore in 1963, he seemed to be in a hurry, not sure how
much time was left for the work, and concerned lest the intellectual trust
that he carried from his great teacher should be lost for ever. He would
often say: ‘Listen attentively, you will have ample time to ruminate and
ponder.’
Mawlana
Islahi
was totally engrossed in the study of the Qur’an.
His pupils were the beneficiaries of his painstaking efforts. His advice
was: ‘Study a surah over and
over again, until when you close your eye you are able to see it clearly
in your mind’s eye, its full splendour from top to toe, from the beginning
to the end’.
During my seven years of studying
under him, I found Mawlana
Islahi
very sensitive, courteous and caring, frank yet very reasonable, warm and
loving. Anyone who came to see him felt important, a focus of his undivided
attention; he would not intimidate people or make them feel insignificant.
His grasp and sweep of knowledge of literature, poetry, social sciences
and human psychology turned any encounter or even a seemingly meaningless
question into a major learning experience, the taste of which would remain
long after the event.
In 1925, Islahi
came under the tutelage of the renowned Qur’anic
scholar, Hamiduddin
Farahi
which changed the course of his life. During the next five years, he imbibed
from his teacher his theme about the internal order in the Qur’an
and mastered his technique and methodology for understanding the Qur’an
and the wisdom enshrined therein, the crux of which, according to Farahi,
was its unique consistence and coherence.
The presence of order in the Qur’an
and its parts is nothing new. The tradition goes back to the Prophet (sws)
who was visited every Ramadan
by the angel Gabriel and recited the entire Qur’an
with him. Similarly, when any revelation was received, the Prophet (sws)
would advise his companions where to place it in the book. As such, the
idea of the Qur’an being a
book that is well arranged and has a definite internal order was fairly
known and accepted.
However, to explore and explain it
to every age, is a difficult and arduous task. And both Farahi
and Islahi
believe that earlier people did not pay enough attention to this aspect
of the Qur’an, which is, in
their understanding, the most important of its intrinsic wisdom and message.
Once they realised its importance, Farahi
and Islahi
dedicated their lives to studying and explaining the marvels of the Qur’an.
Hamiduddin
Farahi
first became interested in this particular aspect during his student days
at the Aligarh Muslim University. He has written about it in Arabic and
also written the exegeses of some short surahs in the light of these principles. Some of these were later translated
by Islahi
into Urdu and were published under the title of Majmu`a Tafathir
Farahi.
Farahi's
writings were however, aimed at the Islamic scholars, and were couched
in scholarly language beyond the access of most readers. It was Islahi
who completed the unfinished work of his great teacher by writing an exegesis
of the entire Qur’an based
on his methodology and principles. He started his Urdu tafthir
Tadabbur-i-Qur’an in 1958,
completing it in 1980. His 23 year work contains some six thousand pages.
In his tathsir, Islahi
repeatedly pays tribute to his teacher for the exegesis, saying it is all
based on what he learned form him, and that all the credit goes to Farahi.
The fact, however, is that Islahi
added greatly to what he had inherited. Farahi
had given some rudimentary ideas and principles but did not have the opportunity
to elucidate his philosophy in tangible terms.
Islahi's
great achievement lies in the language and form that is both scholarly
and easily accessible to an educated reader. Considering the complexity
of the task this is not small accomplishment. His frequent references to
his teacher show not only his enormous love and reverence for him, but
his own forthright sincerity and humility.
Islahi's
tafthir, in his works, comprehends
a century’s thinking and work on the Qur’an
by him and his teacher. Starting his critical study at Aligarh, Farahi
carried on for the next 30-35 years until his death. Similarly, Islahi
tells us that the Qur’an has
been at the centre of his own thought and study for the last 55 years.
Thus, the book covers an entire century of hard work by both.
Islahi's
methodology is based on a direct approach to the Qur’an.
Both Farahi
and Islahi
seek to explain the Qur’anic
message by focusing on the Qur’an
itself. They stress the importance of understanding the Qur’an
in the context of its language, Arabic idiom (classical Arabic literature)
as used and understood at the time of its revelation, supported with internal
evidence found in the Book, and the fact that the Qur’an
explains and elucidates its own meaning in diverse forms and contexts:
This is a book with verses basic or fundamental [of established
meaning] - further explained in detail from One Who is Wise and Well-Acquainted
[with all things]. (Hud 11:1)
Above all, this methodology revolves around
the Qur’an's internal order
and the core idea of the entire tafsir
is to elucidate it.
According to Islahi's
concept of the Qur’anic coherence,
all the surahs are found in pairs just as there are pairs in life. Every
surah is a well-knit unit, has a definite theme, an introduction, leading
to an exposition of its message and arguments, and ending on a suitable
epilogue. Just as there is coherence within a surah
and all its verses are inter-related and bear remarkable relationship to
each other, so also there is coherence between surahs
of the Qur’an. Islahi
points out seven distinct groups of surahs
in the Qur’an, each of which
has a definite theme and a distinct flavour of its own, with a most eloquent
exposition of its respective theme.
Islahi
holds that the division of the Qur’an
into seven distinct groups is based on clear evidence from the Qur’an.
He cites the famous Qur’anic
verse (al-Hijr 15:87) as evidence to prove the presence of these
seven distinct Qur’anic groups.
According to him, this verse refers to these seven groups, rather than
to ‘seven-oft-repeated (verses)’ (or Surah
al-Fatiha, as it is generally
understood). Thus being the most important element of his methodology of
study of the Qur’an, Islahi
gives prime importance to the elucidation of coherence in the Qur’an
throughout his masterly work. Every surah is preceded by an explanation of its special theme, and an analysis
of its contents.
Islahi
believes that the principles elaborated by him in his tafthir
are scientific, rational, and based on common sense, without which the
true message and beauty of the Qur’an
cannot be understood or appreciated. In the preface to the ninth volume,
he says that he has written this exegesis not out of any desire of authoring
a book, but purely and solely in response to a call of duty.
‘Although we have the Qur’an
with us, its true knowledge is non-existent. The Qur’an
has rather been reduced to a means of earning reward or supplications for
others; it has been turned into a commercial object. Those who talk about
it most vociferously are that much ignorant of its knowledge and are remote
from it ... But if this Ummah is to survive and exist as a living
community, mere, repetition of the need for unity will not be enough, nor
will the repetition of the name of the Qur’an
will be of any use. Instead, the most important thing to achieve these
goals is to explain and propagate the true understanding and knowledge
of the Qur’an. Those who have
its true knowledge will be able to act rightly, and only through their
efforts will this Ummah find the cure for all its ills.’
In the light of experience of those
who have regularly followed his methodology in studying the Qur’an,
including the writer of these lines, it can be said without hesitation
that Islahi
has given us in explaining the coherence and the intrinsic order of the
Qur’an the master key to unravel
its inexhaustible treasures. He has provided us with a set of rules and
principles to study and understand the Book of Allah, and to explore and
imbibe its wisdom. Islahi
was a prolific writer; he has to his credit more than 16 titles.
During the anti-Qadiyani movement
in the Punjab in 1951, Mawlana
Islahi
together with Mawlana
Mawdudi and Mian Tufail Muhammad was imprisoned in Rawalpindi and Multan jails.
In 1956, when the government of Pakistan set up the Islamic Law Commission,
Mawlana
Islahi
- also an eminent expert on Islamic law - served as a member until the
commission was abolished in 1958 by the martial law regime of General Ayub
Khan.
Mawlana
Amin Ahsan
Islahi
is survived by two sons and two daughters. He has also left behind a group
of dedicated pupils determined to carry on his noble mission.
(Courtsey "The Impact International")
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