‘Preaching’---the word instantly calls to mind the methods
and devices long since popular among Muslims for propagating Islam. When a
certain approach to a problem becomes time-honoured, people find it almost
impossible to think of that problem without at the same time thinking of that
approach to it. The approach looks so natural that anyone wanting to solve that
problem automatically adopts it. Even a person who resolves to avoid taking it,
sooner or later finds himself insensibly drawn to it. We, therefore, think it
necessary to point out first the shortcomings of the prevalant mode of preaching
Islam.
The shortcomings are of two types: conceptual and
practical. In other words, the philosophy and the methodology are both wrong.
That is the reason why most of the efforts made to spread Islam, far from
advancing the cause of Islam, have actually damaged it. We shall begin by
examining the theoretical errors.
1. Communalistic Angle of Vision
The most egregious mistake of the propagators of Islam
consists in their failure to understand correctly the stance of Islam, and,
consequently, in their failure to present Islam in the light in which the Qur’ān
had presented it. According to the Qur’ān, Islam has been the religion of God
since the world was made. Every prophet that came, no matter where and when,
preached Islam. Peoples of the world kept disfiguring Islam and playing tricks
with it and God kept renewing and reviving it by sending more prophets until,
through Muhammad, the last of the Prophets (sws), He revealed it in its complete
and finished form, making it proof against any kind of change, garbling, or
interpolation. Contained now in the Qur’ān, this religion of Islam is not the
religion of any one particular community, but the religion of the whole mankind.
He who believes in it is a Muslim, he who does not is a non-Muslim. It does not
discriminate against any prophet, does not deny the other books revealed by God,
and does not assert its absolute superiority over the other divinely-revealed
religions. It only claims to be an accurate and reliable compilation of the
teachings---brought to perfection---of all the prophets.
Our preachers and writers, however, presented Islam as the
religion of the Muslim community only and, as such, as a religion hostile to the
other religions. To prove its authenticity they poked fun at the other divine
books and ridiculed even those of their teachings which, as Muslims and as
believers in all the prophets, they ought to have been the first to affirm. With
the Holy Prophet they compared other prophets and sought to establish their
inferiority to him whereas the Qur’ān explicity forbids Muslims to accord any
prophet absolute superiority over the others and tells that each prophet was
endowed by God with some distinction peculiar to him only. The distinctive
aspects of the prophethood of Muhammad were described by the Qur’ān in specific
terms and the Holy Prophet warned Muslims against claiming for him absolute
pre-eminence over the other prophets.
But it was with a blind communalistic zeal that Muslims
presented Islam and Muhammad (sws)before the world. The blunder was made not
only by the ordinary preachers, pulpiteers, and writers but also by those
illustrious authors whose books were, for Muslims and non-Muslims, the only
means of understanding Islam. Take a look at the books written by these authors
and you will find in them so many venomous utterances about the other prophets
that you will be driven to conclude that, like Jews and Christians, Muslims too
have developed the pernicious habit of discriminating against certain prophets.
Literature and oratory of this brand were enthusiastically received by the
Muslim masses because they humoured their communalistic pride and vanity. On the
contrary, men whose books and speeches lacked this seductive quality failed to
win a name or even to attract the attention of the people. They remained
unesteemed by the populace and unappreciated by the elite.
It is true that this poisonous literature was produced
largely in response to the provocation offered by certain foul-spoken
non-Muslims, but the blame really rests on Muslims in so far as they returned
evil for evil. Their imprudence bred ill-will in the hearts of non-Muslims,
rendering them incapable of regarding Islam as a religion which was only meant
to remind them of the truths they have forgotten and to make over to them the
legacy of their own prophets; they took Islam as a rival religion which desired
to rob them of their own religion and impose itself upon them.
2. Trivial Issues
Secondly, Islam was not presented as a system of life
which binds in a unity all the problems---personal and collective, doctrinal and
practical---of life and solves them in a rational and natural manner. Instead,
our preachers and controversialists placed the greatest emphasis on a set of
certain issues which had cropped up as a result of Muslims’ religious conflict
with Christians and Hindus. The issues, for example, of the eternity of matter,
reincarnation, the divinity of Christ, and the Trinity. Issues like these tickle
only a handful of professional disputationists whose real achievement consists
not so much in having solved them as in having made them more tangled. To try to
convince such people is to waste one’s time and energy. But our preachers spent
their lives in waging wars over such issues. They never for once stopped to
think that these issues interest only a few polemicists who do not want to solve
them but to further complicate them. They never realized that the world today is
facing an altogether different kind of problem, upon the solution of which
hinges its salvation, and that any religion which offers a satisfying solution
to them will become the religion of the entire globe. If, in a world which has
depleted its stock of devices for tackling its social and collective problems,
if in such a world Islam had been introduced not merely as a set of certain
dogmas and rituals but as a complete code of life, it would have been a
different world today. But those Muslims who preached Islam or wrote about it
probably entertained a Christian view of religion, namely that it is no more
than professing a few articles of faith and has no positive bearing on the
practical aspects of life. No wonder that the intelligentsia of the world, who
had closed their ears to the meaningless hair-splitting of the Christian
thinkers, showed complete indifference to the propositions of Islam, and all
that great hullabaloo about propagating Islam was ultimately reduced to an
ineffectual clamour of a few individuals. Wastage of time and money was the only
outcome.
3. Barren Literature
Thirdly, all our literature on Islam belongs to one of
these four categories. It is either purely academic, or polemical, or
apologetic, or theo-scholastic. None of these, it may boldly be stated, serves
any useful purpose in the preaching of Islam. Academic works do have their
utility for men wanting to attain mastery of some particular aspect of Islam,
but they are not written with a view to spreading religion, nor do they possess
the charm and merit which propagative literature must have. Polemical works deal
with a few specific problems which afford no idea whatsoever of Islam. They
contain all those qualities which repel instead of attracting men. By apologetic
literature we mean the works of those authors who were over-awed by the West.
Anything in favour with the West, they tried to prove, already exists in
Islam,---even though it may be quite foreign to Islam. And anything out of
favour with the West they wished to blacklist out of Islam,---even though it may
be a basic tenet of Islam. Obviously, the works of such passive-minded writers
could not be expected to depict Islam truly, nor could they have been imbued
with that spirit of faith which sways the heart and persuades the mind.
Theo-scholastic literature is the most disappointing of all. The scholastic
approach is unnatural and irrational. It can add more knots to a problem but it
cannot undo a single knot. The scholastic method of argumentation is ideally
suitable for logic-chopping, but it is totally devoid of any grace or
winsomeness and appeals neither to reason nor to human nature. To adopt it is to
alienate men from Islam. The only right way of presenting Islam before the world
was the one which was used by God and His Prophet (sws). But our scholastic
writers were so deeply influenced by the Greeks that they paid no attention to
the Qur’ānic method of argumentation, they even criticised and found fault with
it. This mistake was committed by our later as well as earlier scholastics. As a
result, while it has become impossible to present Islam before non-Muslims in a
cogent manner, the educated ones from among Muslims themselves who wish to
remain Muslims, or at least to be counted as such, have started saying that
Islam is something which one may believe in blindly but must on no account try
to comprehend rationally. And some of the more dauntless among them are openly
making fun of Islam, and except in so far as their names denote their religion,
they have shaken themselves quite free from Islam.
O
No less glaring are the errors of practice. We shall point
out some of them.
1. Duality
While on the one hand Muslims claim to be a principled
community, that is, a community raised on the principles of Islam, they possess,
on the other hand, all the qualities which might characterize a nation born of
racial, historical, or cultural, homogeneity. They maintain that a Muslim is one
who believes in God, in the books revealed by Him, and in the Hereafter, and
also obeys the dictates of God and His Prophet in all spheres of life, but their
ranks include men who are Muslims only by birth. They grant that Muhammad (sws)
is their sole guide in every matter, and yet they have entrusted the reins of
authority to those people who are totally disregardful of the teachings of the
Holy Prophet. With loud professions they support the complete ethico-practical
system of Islam and insist that one cannot deviate from it without ceasing to be
a Muslim, but they themselves exemplify every vice and every immorality that can
be found in other nations and still their Muslimhood remains unimpaired. They
are all out for Islam, which, on their own admission, is inviolate, but then
they call the entire history, from the Holy Prophet right down to Mustapha Kamal
Pasha, Islamic, whereas a very large chunk of that history has not the remotest
connection with Islam. They urge that the world’s only hope of salvation lies in
adopting the comprehensive system of Islam, but in practice they beat the bounds
of Europe and America in order to find out whether the British or the American
system is the more Islamic.
The Muslims themselves may or may not have felt this
duality of theirs, but there is no reason to suppose that it has gone unnoticed
by the other nations. These nations are astonished to see how sharply the deeds
of the Muslims are opposed to their words, and if any odd non-Muslim, by sheer
Divine grace, gets attracted to Islam, he soon drops back because he concludes
that it is no use joining a community which is not at all different from the one
he is quitting. And if some good-natured non-Muslim embraces Islam in spite of
our two-faced behaviour, we may rest assured that he has accepted the truth not
because we presented it before him but because God, besides exposing the flaws
of his previous religion, has also shown up, to him, the Muslims. That convert,
we should make no doubt, has drawn a distinction between Islam and the Muslims,
or how could he have been impressed by a community so unprincipled that its
members have been known to have set up religious institutions and, having raised
funds for that purpose, have loaned it out on interest, or, being employed in
some Hindu or Christian college themselves, are getting their sons educated in
some other Aryan or missionary college?
2. Wrong Targets
It was perhaps under the influence of the Christian
missionaries that, in preaching, the Muslims always aimed at converting the
downtrodden sections of society. This is a completely wrong approach. The first
addressees in preaching must be those classes of the society whose thoughts and
ideas are governing the societal system. It is these men who make or unmake a
nation. It they are reformed, the whole system is reformed. And if they refuse
to budge, then a reformation of the lower classes, if at all it comes about, is
purely temporary, for the passive disposition of these classes soon gives way to
the pressure of vices exerted on them from the really effectual classes above.
It is just like the heart and the other organs of the body. A heart made
wholesome would make the entire body healthy, but with the heart gone sick,
plastering and massaging the body will be of no avail.
The only goal the Christian missionaries had in sight was
that of swelling their numbers. And the method they adopted was quite suitable
for that purpose. But Muslims do not preach with the sole end of increasing
their numbers. Their job is to show mankind the right path, to bring about a
wholesale reformation in the life of man. Now this end can be achieved only when
the entire milieu is changed, and that can happen only when the intelligent and
dominant sections of society accept the proposed change. Those with a knowledge
of sociology will agree with that upstart and revolutionary movements rise from
below and throw the structure above into disarray, but the solidly-based
reformatory and rational movements take root only when they work from top to
bottom. All those Muslims who have tried to spread the teachings of Islam,
whether among their co-religionists or others, have generally make this mistake
that they have kept their eyes on the lower orders of society and, having taught
them the kalimah and the prayer, have thought that their job is over. No doubt a
partial reformation does take place in this way, but life as a whole remains as
it was. When it is the whole atmosphere that is contaminated, an attempt should
be made to treat the contamination rather than the victims of that
contamination. Otherwise it would be like giving an injection to a patient who
is living in a town stricken with plague. The injection might check the
malignant influence, but for how long? That is why the prophets, as we shall
later see, never addressed the common people first but the influential classes
of society. It was through the reformation of these classes that they sought to
reform the masses.
3. Hollow Words
Then the Muslims have preached with words only, they have
never tried to live Islam. It is clear, however, that there are only a few
persons so intelligent and morally so courageous that they would embrace Islam
simply on account of the excellence of its principles. A large part of the world
will admit the truthfulness of those principles only when they see them
producing beneficial results in practical life. But the preaching which has been
done here over a long period of time amounts to no more than a dream trip to the
paradise of the Islamic life arranged by eloquent speakers, inspired preachers,
and potent penmen. The high irony is that while these men have been hymning the
praises of the system of Islam, the whole Islamic society, with all its vices of
jahiliyyah, has been giving them the lie. Silent action is much more effective
than loud protestations. That is why all the sermons vanished into thin air and
the world remained obstinate. If, instead of hollow bombast, a group of persons
had actually tried to evolve a society on the basis of the principles they
believed in, they would have, even if they had failed, rendered a nobler service
to Islam than that which they failed to render with their successful sermons and
writings. To prove that Islam is a blessing to the whole world, it is not
sufficient to narrate moving anecdotes from the past, nor it would do to deliver
speeches and compose articles on the logical possibility of Islam. The only way
to accomplish this goal is that a group or party of men demonstrate in practice
the worth of the doctrines they hold dear. And here precisely has the lack been
most conspicuous.
4. Cheap Tactics
In preaching, the Muslims also resorted to some of the
base methods used by the Christians or Arya Samajis. They tried to adopt the
same techniques with which the Christians tried to convert the world or which
the Aryans employed to gain their ends. In debates they exerted to beat their
rivals at splitting hairs, heaping abuse, and committing outrages. If some
Muslim turned Aryan on account of some temptation offered or misunderstanding
caused, the Aryans trumpeted their victory, and so did the Muslims when some
Hindu professed Islam. Adoption of cheap tactics, like misleading immature
children and actually running away with them, was an important plank in the
preaching methodology of others, and so it became in the preaching of Islam. If,
from prurient motives, some Hindu woman eloped with a libertine Muslim, it was
hailed as an invaluable preaching trophy, and wantonness and immorality of this
kind was regarded as a means of advancing Islam. As a result, many dissolute men
and women made a business out of changing faith. In the morning they would get a
shoulder-ride from Muslims announcing them that they had joined them, in the
evening they would extract money from Christians or Aryans by proclaiming that
they had turned Christian or Aryans. In the days when the Hindu proselytizing
movements of Shudhi and Sanghatan were going strong in certain parts of India, a
notable Muslim appealed to the ‘Muslim prostitutes’ of Delhi to preach Islam to
their non-Muslim clients! Such an approach made Islam look worthless to
non-Muslims. They started thinking that Islam is also a commercial enterprise
meant to increase the size of a particular community. And they were justified in
thinking so, for how could they have been convinced of the superiority of Islam
when they noticed that the Muslim were using Islam for the same purpose for
which they were using their own religion and in a manner quite like their own?
5. Incompetence
Whether they insist or do not insist that competence is
required to do other kinds of work, the Muslims believe that there are two jobs
for which no competence is necessary: Leading prayers in the mosque and
preaching religion. There was a time when prayers were led either by the head of
the state himself or by the man appointed by him, and there is a time when
Muslims entrust this job to men who are incapable of doing anything else in the
world. There was a time when every Muslim felt that the sole responsibility of
this Ummah is to convey Islam to the world with the same zeal and concern with
which the Prophet (sws) conveyed it to them, and when the Islamic Caliphate was,
with all its departments and top executives, a means of performing the same
function which was being discharged by the Prophet (sws) himself and was, after
him, entrusted to it, and there is the time when the whole Islamic Community
along with all its intelligentsia and leaders is serving the evil system of
jahiliyyah. Occasionally it occurs to some virtuous people that preaching Islam
is a good thing and so they raise some money and hire a few men to propagate
Islam. The chief qualification of these paid workers is their random and scanty
knowledge of the other religions and their ability to fire off a speech and
bandy arguments. Getting hold of the platform of some organization, they start
preaching Islam. Of Islam they are as ignorant as of the other religions, and
they possess neeothing in the way of Islamic character. Their principal trait is
being loudmouthed and disputatious, and the result of preaching by such men is
not difficult to predict.
We have talked about some of the major errors of theory
and practice in the current mode of preaching Islam. A deeper analysis would
reveal that there are many other points on which it is vulnerable. But we do not
want to prolong this discussion. We only wanted to bring out the fact that what
today goes by the name of preaching is least related to the preaching done by
the prophets, that the two kinds of preaching are contrary to each other in
purpose and method both, and that the present preaching is, in respect of its
aims and techniques, an imitation of the preaching of non-Muslims.
(Translated from Islahi’s “Da’wat-i-Din”) |