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   | Agenda 
for Muslims 
   Quantum 
note 
 By Dr Muzaffar Iqbal
 The writer 
is a freelance columnist. Email: quantumnotes@gmail.com
 
 It is now generally recognised that Muslims are currently facing the greatest 
challenge in their entire history. These challenges have many facets -- from 
political instability to sordid violence and from economic and cultural 
colonisation to the destruction of social and cultural norms. These challenges 
have emerged out of a long historical process and they need to be understood 
within that context. Thus, the first task for Muslim intellectuals is to 
understand what went wrong. How have Muslims arrived at this historical 
juncture? What happened to the apparently strong and resourceful empires which 
existed at the dawn of the eighteenth century? Why were Muslims not able to 
resist subjugation? What made it possible for European powers to conquer almost 
the entire Muslim world in a relatively short period?
 
 These questions have many dimensions. Take, for instance, the question of the 
balance of power in the world at the dawn of the eighteenth century. At that 
time, Aurangzeb (1658-1707) had seven more years to live and, after a long and 
protracted process, he had successfully subdued revolts against the central 
authority. But during the course of that same century, India saw an 
unprecedented expansion of British control. This rise of the British power in 
India, which is sometimes attributed to their better weapons, has much more to 
do with the gradual decline of the local institutions and internal disputes than 
better weapons -- a fact that has been brought to light with considerable 
clarity in general histories -- but what remains enigmatic is the absence of any 
successful effort at restructuring of the military and economic institutions to 
meet the new challenges. What were the social, political, economic and 
intellectual factors which prevented this? After all, it was the century in 
which men like Shah Wali Allah (1703-1762) lived and taught, but their presence 
and influence was insufficient to give birth to a new force that could restrict 
the expansion of foreign control and power. Why? Likewise, similar questions 
remain unanswered about the Ottoman and the Safavid empires.
 
 Of course, these and similar questions have been asked before, and numerous 
partial answers exist, but these questions have never been answered in a 
definitive manner, and there is a need for a thorough and detailed investigation 
of the source material in order to uncover various facets of this fatal decline 
and eventual disappearance of the independent political entities that existed in 
the Muslim world prior to its colonisation.
 
 This is not merely an academic exercise; it is an essential undertaking for two 
reasons: (i) without a clear, detailed and exhaustive understanding of the 
processes which contributed to the decline and eventual dissolution of the 
Ottoman, Safavid, and the Indian Timuri Empires, the contemporary Muslim world 
will not be able to understand the fault lines of its historical restructuring; 
and (ii) such an inquiry is of utmost important for a renaissance of the 
institutions which nourish civilisations. It is obvious that no one else is 
going to undertake this task for the benefit of Muslims; it is a matter of their 
survival and only they are responsible and in need of such an undertaking. This 
is not to say that non-Muslims cannot be involved in this project; quite the 
contrary. The participation of non-Muslims in this project would, in fact, 
enhance the reflection in many ways, but what is being said is simple: no 
European or North American university or research institution has an existential 
need for such an undertaking.
 
 The fact that, almost half a century after the end of the direct rule over the 
colonies and the emergence of fifty-seven Muslim states, such an essential 
project has not been undertaken merely points to the lack of appreciation of its 
essential qualities. But the past must not dictate the future. There is no 
reason why a team of scholars cannot be gathered to devote focused attention to 
this undertaking.
 
 A related task is to understand the exact nature of the colonisation of the 
Muslim world and its relationship to the current situation. Colonisation was 
accompanied by an almost total transformation of the institutional structure of 
the Islamic civilization. From education to state bureaucracy and from the 
military to the judiciary, it was a large-scale reordering of the constituting 
building blocks of the Muslim world. What were the factors that made it possible 
for the colonisers to destroy the old institutions and implant their own? Why 
were they successful in eliminating or marginalising institutions that had 
emerged over centuries? Understanding this process is of utmost importance for 
the survival of the Muslim world as well as for its renaissance because, in a 
particular sense, the departing colonising powers seem to have left behind a 
mechanism of their own survival all over the Muslim world through implanted 
institutions still functioning today. Even new institutions that have come into 
existence in the so-called post-independence period have generally been molded 
on the pattern of the implanted institutions, and in most cases, these clones 
only differ from their parents in name. This cloning is most apparent in 
education and in institutions dealing with scientific research.
 
 A third aspect of understanding the present challenges pertains to the studies 
focused on the resistance against colonisation. It is a well-known fact that the 
colonisation of the Muslim world was not accomplished without political, 
military and intellectual resistance at various levels, but we do not have a 
definitive overall picture of the intricacies of this resistance nor any 
substantial understanding of the causes of its failure. This area of Muslim 
history not only remains poorly understood; in textbooks used even in the Muslim 
countries, this resistance is often seen from the perspective of the colonisers. 
Thus in Pakistan, a country established with the clear and fully expressed 
purpose of the establishment of an Islamic polity, the heroic but ill-fated 
uprising against the British in 1857 is usually called Ghadar (mutiny or 
rebellion against a lawful authority), instead of a fight for freedom.
 
 At first sight, research into the details of resistance against the colonisation 
of various parts of the Muslim world may also seem to be a purely "academic" 
exercise. Such an attitude fails because such studies are helpful not only for 
understanding the extent of success and failure of those resistances against 
colonization at that historical juncture but also in providing material for 
charting a path forward in our own times.
 
 
 
 Source: http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=62413
 
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