How Islamic are Islamist Revivalist Movements?

Maroof

Much used and abused statement that Islam doesn’t separatesacred and profane, religious and political often hides more insidious,confounding of modern institution of State and traditional universe ofshariah/Islamic Governance.

   

Given widespread confounding of Islam withIslamism/Political Islam (al-Islam al-siyasi– terms now widely used by MuslimUlama, historians and political theorists), few points  to be noted for broad characterization of it,reviewing the debate and explaining why the latter fails to convince the bestof traditional and modern scholarship:

•             Islamismis that modern(ist) development that assumes key role for Islamic State (asdistinguished from what Hallaq calls Islamic Governance) and imposing itsinterpretation of Islamic law on others though it may use democratic means toget power, rejects/suspects or severely limits role of philosophy, art andmysticism, is wedded to religious exclusivism and privileges premodern modes ofinterpreting texts.

•             Islamismconfounds faith with belief and belief with ideology and almost reducesmetaphysics to religion, intellect to reason and esoterism to batiniteantiliteralism.

•             It  usually assumes, against judgment of majorscholars and Christian self understanding, religion and politics are separatedin Christian or other major traditions in a manner contravening Islam.

•             Itassumes, unwarrantedly and inconsistently given its commitment to previousrevelations, Islamic approach is not a subset of Traditional Approach topolitics and as such fails to see how Christian and Hellenic-Westernphilosophical approaches may be allies for God/Sacred conscious governance andnot adversaries.

•             Itreduces Revelation to Islamic revelation only in practice and reduces that inturn to a narrow theologico-juristic religio-political framework that construesother religions as more or less corrupt idolatrous religio-cultural formations.

•             It,contrary to self understanding and millennial practices of countless Muslimmasses/Ulama/saints and sages  seeks towrite off many traditional expressions of Islamic intellectuality andspirituality and accordingly  is subjectsart to moralistic prejudice, suspects Sufism of alien origin, reducesphilosophy to  Western secularizingthought currents such as rationalism and empiricism and delegitimizesphilosophy as essentially Greek or Western phenomenon and writing off exaltedplace for the sage/hakeem in understanding Islamic canon  as it underemphasizes traditional receptionof intellectual element in the notion of hikmah.

•             Itusually misconstrues the Western as necessarily secularizing and materialistand writes off the secular as anti-religious as distinguished from religiouslyneutral/temporal.

•             It makesa series of problematic hermeneutical maneuvers due to selective, atomistic andliteralist approach and contested readings of mythologies, symbols, arttraditions and religious, philosophical and political thought of majortraditions and even core terms of Islam

•             WaelHallaq, one of the significant voices in theorizing the problematique ofIslamic State states in his path breaking work The Impossible State that “The’Islamic state,’ judged by any standard definition of what the modern staterepresents, is both an impossibility and a contradiction in terms.” “…modernforms of globalization and the position of the state in the ever increasingintensity of these forms are sufficient to render any brand of Islamicgovernance either impossible or, if possible, incapable of survival in the longrun.” “..all things considered, Islamic governance is unsustainable, given theconditions prevailing in the modern world.” 

While himself pleading for the latent meanings of the modernMuslim call for the establishment of Islamic governance (to be distinguishedfrom essentially modern(ist) idea of Islamic State, he is compelled to dismiss”the modern experiment in the Muslim world as a massive political and legalfailure from which no lessons can be positively learned as to how Muslims maygovern themselves properly.

Their states have not successfully met any seriouschallenge, while the ‘Sharīʿa’ that they often constitutionally enshrine as ‘a’or ‘the’ source of law has proven, as I suggested elsewhere, institutionallydead and politically abused.”

“There can be no Islam without a moral-legal system that isanchored in a metaphysic; there can be no such moral system without or outsidedivine sovereignty; and, at the same time, there can be no modern state withoutits own sovereignty and sovereign will, for no one, I think, can reasonably arguethat the modern state can do without this essential form-property ofsovereignty.

If all these premises are true, as they ineluctably must be,then the modern state can no more be Islamic than Islam can come to possess amodern state.”

•             “Theauthenticity it claims for itself, however, is based on a reified understandingof Islam that omits important aspects of Islamic terms and ways of reasoning.In other words, it is not willing to admit the heterogeneous and legitimatenon-conformist elements that have their place in it. Even with the Quran andHadith to which the Islamists claim to adhere, ‘these two not exhaust thenuances, subtleties and varieties of the religion as it was lived and realizedeven during the time of the prophet.’” (Nelly Lahoud)

•             It isimpossible to claim that “a reified model of Islamic politics exists. Yet,despite the historical evidence that shows diverse positions on the subject ofpolitics in Islam, the Islamists insist that what they are presenting is an’authentic’ vision of Islamic politics.”

•             Islamistsfail to adequately theorize such issues as gender, identity, agency,democracy,  tolerance, symptoms ofnihilism such as widespread apostasy or unwilling suspension of belief, ecocide and key moral issues from mass farming to population explosionto war industry. Read any dispassionate and engaging analysis of these issuesby theorists of first order and one feels the difference.

•             “PoliticizedIslam— so-called “fundamentalism”—is largely led by doctors and engineers, who areignorant of anything but a smattering of Islam’s first dimension (law,practice), and who see religion as something like a grid that can be imposed onsociety, an engineering problem to be solved.” (William Chittick)

•             Islamists’most characteristic claim for politically inflected notion of God’s rule isbased not on nass but interpretation and inference (qiyas) that should, inprinciple, be open to revisiting.

•             There islittle depth in engagement with intellectual challenges or intellectual deficitin Islamists as scholars from Nasr to Ovaid Avamir have noted. This isespecially true about post-Maududi period.

•             “BroadIslamist popularity is based on their role out of power, as a fresh,principled, and untested element on a tired and corrupt political scene. Manyof the votes they attract come as protests against existing discredited partiesrather than a vote of for Islamism per se.” 

•             Islamistsare more or less opposed to/niggardly acknowledging  a) the vital part of metaphysics of the mostrevered/influential names in the history of Islamic tradition –  Abdul Qadir Gilani, Ghazzali, Ibn Arabi,Mujadid Alif Thani, Shah Waliullah (and in Kashmir Shaykh Nuruddin and Syed AliHamdani) without being able to articulate better expressions of the same for contemporaryaudienceshaped by philosophy and science b) key aspects of explication ofcultural/mythopoetic resources of Islamic tradition in its greatest sons fromHafiz to Rumi to Khusrau to Ghalib (and in Kashmir to Sufi poets), c) manysignificant elements of understanding of Islamic tradition – especially itsintellectuality and spirituality – as enshrined in first rate Ulama of majorseminaries such as  Deoband, Bareili andAzhar d) philosophers (Judeo-Christian-Islamic/Sino-Indic-Western) in general,e) first rate political thinkers of every tradition including Islamic who havecontributed to traditional political thought f) major saints and sages of alltraditions f) key formulations of self understanding of pre-Islamic revealedreligions  and g) great treasury ofmillennial intuitions and contributions that constitute collective heritage ofmankind in sciences and arts.

•               History and great number of Muslim andnon-Muslim analysts have so far passed negative judgment on its viability andgiven negative report of its results and noted how human and fallible it hasproved to be and emphasized need to evolve better, more nuanced, understandingof the movement of Spirit in history and align ourselves with it.

Having said this, let us note that “most popular Western attempts to characterize Islamism are inevitably simplistic and selective, often verging on caricature and worse, they are analytically unhelpful. It is clearly incorrect, then, to think of political Islam as a fixed ideology to be accepted or rejected as a whole. It does not offer any predictable systematic or comprehensive set of programs, institutions, or style of leadership—except the regular, near obligatory call for “Islamic government” or an “Islamic state.”

“What these terms mean precisely is not known since history has never seen a truly Islamic state to date. Different parties interpret the concept differently.” Islamism’s great mobilizing power and inspiration in helping shape politics in the Muslim world is undisputed – Fuller’s The Future of Political Islam lucidly sums up its positive contributions (although doesn’t forget the negative ones), continued relevance and reasons for appeal to many. It has helped fight many sectarian, moral, social and economic evils bothering Muslims and helped sustain faith of many. It has helped educate and sensitize millions on what it means to bear witness as a Muslim.

 “Islamism has played a key role in the anti-colonial and anti-imperialist struggle across the Muslim world. It powerfully inspires national liberation movements, particularly when Muslims are pitted against non-Muslim rule or when foreign powers threaten Islamic independence and Muslim well-being, whether politically, economically, or culturally.” 

“Islamist movements are likely to remain the foremost champions of oppressed Muslims around the world…for many reasons political Islam at the moment still remains the only realistic major alternative movement to most of today’s authoritarian regimes.” Islamism is indeed becoming self critical, diversified, nuanced, less judgmental of modernists/”secularists” and Sufism and major philosophers, less vocal about the institution of Caliphate, revisiting its construction of the West/secular/culture/Caliphate/patriarchy and opening up to pluralist face of Islamic tradition.

Islamism is slowly losing its sharp edges that made engagement with its other difficult.

We now find many Islamisms, more nuanced Islamists, more and more humility in acknowledging human side of its interpretations of the Divine text. Multifaceted contributions of Islamists to Islamic sciences have to be acknowledged.

Significance of Islamists like Syed Mouduidi lies in showing deeply problematic nature of modern secular state from revelation centric viewpoint though the way out suggested has found many serious critiques from the moment of its articulation till date and those critiques have lately become more convincing.

The future of Islamism is linked to the question ofdistinguishing what is human and thus contestable in one’s interpretation ofIslam (ism/ideology) from what is revealed/has to be received by deconstructingthe realm of interpretation.

We need to develop the moral-spiritual ideal/aspiration of Islamists encapsulated in Revelation-hikmah centric paradigm where politics is a science helping us on our way to sa’aadah (eudomonia) and incorporates catholicity and gnosis-centrism of Khomeini, philosophical rigour and poetic depths of Iqbal, ethical idealism of Moududi, insightful readings of art and culture as essentially religious/Islamic and Islam as the middle point between East and West in Alija Izatbegovitch’s, passionately articulated moral critique of capitalist modernity and Muslim  world’s betrayal of  Islam’s commitments to higher ideals such as justice in Shariati and emphasis on the aesthetic or artistic in scripture in Qutb. The task is to articulate in philosophical style enduring insights scattered in writers often classified as/with Islamists and retrieve and creatively reconstruct what Hallaq calls Islamic Governance.

We need to revive Islamist’s/any true Muslim’s passion for Islam as demanding everything from us for the sake of non-self/Other/Truth/God. Paradoxically, “large numbers of Islamists are now engaged in functionally privatizing and secularizing society beyond the purview of the state.”  Fuller notes that point made by George Joffe and Olivier Roy that “by promoting privatization of society, Islamists are thereby engaged in de facto ‘secularization’ of society.

I refer to ‘secularization’ in its true sense: disassociation of religion and the state, rather than the rigid control or even negation of religious life by the state as radical secularists in the Middle East (especially Turkey) interpret it. As Islamists create civil institutions, whole new areas of private Muslim activity and Muslim areas of life become liberated from the control of the state.” We need to reclaim key Islamist figures as contributors to creative exploration of Islamic Tradition, especially their more philosophical and mystical side that better speaks to contemporary age, admit their errors of judgment and contestable interpretations and note with Fuller that “Islam obviously precedes political Islam and Islam will abide, whatever the fortunes of political Islam will be. Islam may inspire Muslims to formulate visions of political Islam, but Islam is the essence and remains independent of all political interpretations.”                                        

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