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		Ijtihad  
		By  Ibrahim B. Syed, Ph.D 
		 
		President, Islamic Research 
		Foundation
		
		International, Inc7102 W. Shefford Lane
 Louisville, KY 40242-6462
 Phone: (502) 894-6262
 FAX: (502) 894-6935
 E-Mail:
		
		IRFI@INAME.COM
 Website: 
		
		http://www.irfi.org
 
 Finding the causes for the decline and fall of the Muslim Ummah has 
		become a life long pursuit for me. One of the most important causes of 
		Muslims deterioration is the low literacy rate. Even the Islamic faith's 
		fundamental requirement of knowledge of the Qur'an and the Sunnah is 
		marginal. They lack knowledge of even the simple and basic laws of 
		Islam. Those who have read books of collections of Ahadith and have 
		devotedly and extensively studied the Qur'an are ignorant of the many 
		fundamental Aqaid(canons) of Islam including Fiqh. The term Fiqh means 
		knowledge of all the laws of Islam(Shari'ah). Shariah is synonym for 
		Fiqh. It is necessary for Muslims to understand there are four basic 
		sources for the Sharia, viz: (1) Qur'an (2) Sunnah (3) Ijma(consensus) 
		and (4)Qiyas(analogical deduction). These laws cover every action 
		performed by an individual or society.
 
 Today we live in a highly complex and 
		technologically advanced world as a result we are facing very complex 
		problems- to give some examples such as genetic engineering, 
		permissibility eating of genetically altered cattle or vegetables 
		/fruits, gene therapy, in vitro fertilization, organ transplants, space 
		travel(in the near future), etc., Problems of this nature cannot be 
		solved by the Shariah.
 To solve problems like these, Prophet 
		Muhammad (SAS) himself introduced the fifth component (if I would say 
		so) of the Shariah called Ijtihad which is individual intellectual 
		effort. One who performs Ijtihad is a Mujtahid. The word Ijtihad is 
		derived from the Arabic root word of jihad. Ijtihad was once an 
		important force in the articulation and interpretation of Shariah. Some 
		of the greatest minds in the history of Islamic jurisprudence used 
		Ijtihad during the first centuries of Hijra. With time for reasons given 
		below, Ijtihad faltered and was replaced by the doctrine of taqlid or 
		blind imitation. Taqlid not only discouraged individual interpretation 
		but also prohibited it. Some Muslim scholars throughout the ages have 
		been protesting the prohibition of Ijtihad as it violates the original 
		spirit and intention of Islam. Muslims all over the world are fond of 
		saying that Islam is applicable to all places and in all times. How can 
		this be achieved without Ijtehad?  
 In order to perform Ijtihad, a Muslim man or woman should be thoroughly 
		familiar with the sciences of Qur'an and the Sunnah, comprehend the 
		wider purposes of the Sharia and understand Arabic correctly. On 
		complicated and complex issues of law, Ijtihad should be purviewed by 
		trained scholars. Any Muslim or Muslima with some knowledge of religion 
		can perform Ijtihad on certain matters, particularly those of personal 
		concern. For example Muslims have been practicing Ijtihad routinely in 
		determining the direction of Qibla or to ascertain the times of prayer 
		by the position of the sun. The Hanbali scholar, Imam Ibn 
		Taymiyah(1263-1328 CE) wrote that " a Muslim can perform Ijtihad for 
		himself or herself on certain questions, it is permitted, because 
		Ijtihad is not an absolute-the pivotal point is ability or the lack 
		thereof. Thus a person might be able to perform Ijtihad on certain 
		questions and not others." Taqlid (blind imitation) is based on an 
		absence of intellectual activity on the part of the believer, and early 
		Muslims held that it was permissible only if one was incapable of 
		understanding due to a lack of mental ability or faculties. Dr. Taha J. 
		al-Alwani of IIIT (International Institute of Islamic Thought) argues 
		that" both the Prophet (SAS) and the Qur'an rejected taqlid, the Sahabas 
		(companions of the Prophet) and many others considered it an evil and 
		also rejected it." He further quotes one of the successors to the 
		companions as saying, "There is no difference between an animal that is 
		led and a person who makes taqlid." By the end of 4th century Hijra 
		taqlid became the rule rather than the exception in Shariah, in spite of 
		the early contempt for taqlid and judgments against its permissibility. 
		Ultimately a majority of the medireview.
 Muslim scholars (ulama) declared the door of Ijtihad to be closed and 
		ruled that all future Muslims must practice taqlid. Why did they do 
		this? Because after 400 years they thought all conceivable questions and 
		situations had been explored and resolved by the ulama, obviating the 
		need for new judgments. Some historians say that the door of Ijtihad was 
		closed because Muslim Ummah was under attack from external forces such 
		as the Crusades and Mongol invasion and sacking of Baghdad on June 6, 
		1258 CE (seventh century Hijra). However taqlid was adopted one hundred 
		before Crusades and 300 years before the devastation by the Mongol 
		hordes who were still in the far Asian steppes. The real reason there 
		was a serious split between different schools of law and theology among 
		individual jurists and imposition of taqlid was the best way to resolve, 
		but at a tremendous cost. Secondly the jurists such as Imam Abu Hanifa, 
		Imam Malik wanted to preserve their intellectual and juristic 
		independence and did not want to rule in accordance with the wishes of 
		the caliphs. As time passed the pressure from the rulers increased, 
		until the ulama declared the Shariah complete to provide an excuse in 
		the face of an angry ruler. On the one hand the ulama preserved the 
		Shariah from dissolute and corrupt Muslim rulers, but on the other they 
		ensured that the Shariah would remain static and therefore stagnant. As 
		a result we are living in a state of withered intellectual activity, 
		starved for fresh ideas and insights.
 In the past a number of scholars have claimed the right to Ijtihad. 
		Eminent scholars like Ibn Taymiyah, al-Suyuti, Muhammad ibn 
		Abdal-Wahhab, al-Sanusi,Muhammad Abduh of Egypt, Allama Iqbal of the 
		Indian subcontinent and Ben Badis of Algeria (1889-1940) called for the 
		reactivation of Ijtihad to rouse the Muslim world from its intellectual 
		lethargy and recreate the vigor and elan of the early Muslim community. 
		Today this calls for Ijtihad continues louder and more insistent. Modern 
		scholars are demanding the systematic reinterpretation of the Islamic 
		tradition using the Qur'an and the Hadith as a foundation. In the face 
		of new technologies, new philosophies and new challenges, Muslim 
		thinkers are demanding the right to individual interpretation. Allama 
		Muhammad Iqbal in his famous book "The Reconstruction of Religious 
		Thought in Islam" (p.178, Ashraf, Lahore, 1988) declares, "The closing 
		of the door of Ijtihad is pure fiction suggested partly by the 
		crystallization of legal thought in Islam, and partly by the 
		intellectual laziness which, especially in the period of spiritual 
		decay, turns great thinkers into idols. If some of the later doctors 
		have upheld this fiction, modern Islam is not bound by this voluntary 
		surrender of intellectual independence." A modern scholar said taqlid is 
		a renunciation of "critical faith", while Ijtihad is the key to "the 
		Islam of those who understand." Today's Muslims must be critical in 
		their beliefs and in their actions, and have freedom to question, 
		discuss and debate issues that are of personal and collective 
		importance. Only through the exchange of ideas (through Ijtihad) it will 
		be possible to safeguard the Muslim world from deterioration and empty 
		westernization.
 
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