|  Islam, Muslims, and Reform
 By Dr. Nazir Khaja
 Chairman, Islamic Information Service
 Thursday, April 24, 2008 
 
  The Turkish Government has recently launched a reform initiative,which is raising many eyebrows. With the view of modernization of
 Islam it has embarked upon the task of publishing a document that
 represents a revolutionary reinterpretation of the religion.
 A team of theologians from Ankara University has been assigned the
 task of revising Hadith, the second most important foundational basis
 of Islam. The Hadiths are a compendium of Prophet Muhammad's
 directives and sayings, which the Muslims hold to be authoritative in
 guiding them in their conduct in all matters. Its authority is next to
 the Qur'an, which is God's revealed word to the Prophet, yet it also
 serves as the principal guide in interpreting the Qur'an itself; it
 also constitutes the basis of Islamic law or Sharia.
  The prevailing attitudes among Muslims regarding the Qur'an and theSunnah have stood in the way of Reform, which is badly needed in
 Islam. Many Muslims claim that all injunctions and precepts found in
 the Qur'an are absolute and applicable to this day. Although the
 Qur'an has a universal, timeless character, and its text must open to
 a modern interpretation of Islam that is beyond the strict,
 traditional literal interpretation of the Qur'an and the spiritual
 heritage of the religion, there is a great deal of hesitation among
 Muslims. .
 Many reform-minded scholars have suggested that the Qur'an be
 understood in the historical context of the seventh century, since it
 dates from this period. And today it must be read anew word by word
 for the twenty-first century – a project which the' traditionalists'
 among Islamic theologians categorically reject.
 A pre-eminent scholar of the 20th Century Prof. Fazlur Rahman
 understood the Koran as a collection of specific examples or general
 rules, behind which a 'true meaning' must be sought. He and others
 have argued that Islam, like all other faiths, must be understood in
 its two dimensions: Qur'anic and historical.
 Qur'anic Islam is the one that represents a total Islamic worldview
 based on the genuine and authentic interpretation of the Qur'an. The
 historical Islam is the outcome largely from its interaction with the
 blood and flesh of history; this is not always necessarily compatible
 with the Prophet's true mission as 'a grace towards all mankind' just
 as historical Christianity can be believed to be entirely representing
 the message of Jesus.
 In the countries in which Islam predominates there is widespread
 institutional failure and democratic deficit. This has contributed to
 a chronic tendency toward theocratic despotism and there is only
 fragile institutional structure that can hardly impose some discipline
 on the chaos and confusion. The Muslim societies therefore remain in
 turmoil despite being in the grip of authoritarianism. Consequently in
 the Muslim World today there is a festering revolt against the decay
 and humiliation of their societies. This has turned the face of Muslim
 masses towards the idea of 'returning to the roots of Islam' - the
 notion that the 'Salafis' and other purists or 'fundamentalists'
 exploit making the situation worse. This has further strengthened the
 hands of a self-selected or state-sponsored bunch of Sheikhs or Ulemas
 the right to enunciate for the masses what God means in the Qur'an or
 other Islamic texts. And it is these largely 'traditionalist' scholars
 with 'literalist' orientation who claim to have the right to say on so
 many things what the community thinks. The rest of the Muslim
 community remains marginalized and lacks the nerve to challenge them.
 Muslims now must come to terms with the many questions that are being
 raised daily about them and Islam. They must realize that answers to
 these will have to be discovered in the light of Islam's contemporary
 experiences and not by seeking refuge in its past historical
 experience. What is needed now in the thirteenth hour are different
 ways of understanding and responding to the many dimensional crises.
 The process of adaptation which the earlier Muslims used and which
 largely came to an end later, with the 'closing of the door of
 Ijtihad' (the 'struggle,' the Islamic word for the use of independent
 reasoning to arrive at modern solutions) must now be pursued
 vigorously.
 The Turkish initiative is certainly bold and timely. The Turkish
 argument is that different groups and conservative cultures use the
 religion for social and political control; that successive generations
 of them have embellished their interest, and buttressed their point of
 view and practices by attributing it to the Prophetic Hadith hijacking
 Islamic tradition. What is needed is to get rid of these accretions
 and cultural baggage, returning Islam to its original values and those
 of the Prophet.
 It is important to note in the common understanding or impression
 regarding Islam that it is largely coterminous with The Middle East if
 not Arabia. This unique legacy of the religion seems to make it for
 ever indebted to Arab culture not only because of this localization
 but more critically on account of the language of the area — Arabic
 which is the vessel of the Divine Message to Prophet Muhammad, the
 Qur'an. This hegemony of language has a significant bearing on the
 political and social aspects of the entire Muslim world the majority
 of which - almost 80 percent - is non-Arab and does not speak and
 understand Arabic. This is crucial to the understanding of leadership
 model among Muslims; even among those living in the West whose claim
 to leadership can only be legitimate if they speak Arabic or at least
 in their public speaking are able to spout the Qur'anic verses and The
 Prophet's traditions in Arabic.
 The history of Islam, with Islam's spread away from Arabia the place
 of it's` birth is clearly a witness to this phenomenon of cultural and
 religious synthesis. In its 'fringe areas,' or periphery such as the
 Turkish Ottoman Empire, Africa, or Southeast Asia, Islam was always
 remarkably open to synergy in developing new systems and cultures from
 itself and discovered traditions. This actually was the reason for its
 widespread appeal to diverse cultures. At the same time, the Islamic
 center of Arabia was always extremely resistant to these new forms at
 its periphery.
 Muslims must not be skeptical or fearful of the Turkish project or the
 word 'Reform'. They must remain convinced that The Qur'anic Islam is
 certainly able to supply that alternative on the condition that
 Muslims are ready to get out of the 'prison of history', which they
 themselves have created and engineered. All they must do is to
 re-engage with it in the spirit of free inquiry which the Qur'an
 itself emphasizes.
 The Muslims have their work cut out; they must now create a space of
 inquiry into philosophical, political, and spiritual meaning or
 relevance, of their Faith drawing symbols both from their religious
 and the ideological past. If framed properly, this will help them move
 from the past into the future. Understanding and separating the
 cultural problems, affecting in the final analysis the ideological
 orientation, is a necessary step forward for reform. The Turks
 certainly deserve all the encouragement and support for having taken
 the step in this direction.
 - 
nazir.khaja@gmail.com
 Moderator - I am pleased to read this and would like to call attention to our most conservative among us not to pay attention to the games of the words - it is revising Hadiths, it is looking hadiths, how they are applicable to us, living a life in 2008. God's word has to as current as he himself, herself or itself is.  Our sensitivities enhance as we live in the societies with more sensitivity. Back where I am from in India, while I was growing up, people did not care about some one who is handicapped and recklessly called names, the very same people do become sensitive to such calls living in the United States.  Prophet Muhammad lived and practiced his faith in Pluralistic societies, meaning where more than three faiths co-existed, and his saying would reflect that. However, when the Hadiths were compiled, all the four Imams spent an awesome amount of time sorting through the authenticity of them and perhaps did not factor in the kind of society that was practice and the kind of society they (the compilers) practiced the same faith. Spain and India lived the same model as of the Prophet, most Muslim majority nations are in a different world. We are back again to the kind of society Prophet Muhammad lived - initiated one of the first documents of co-existence, in that light, the work under taken by Dr. Nazir Khaja is commendable.  I would even suggest to have Jews, Christians, Hindus and others on the review committee, the outcome would be most universal. Indeed, that is our model at World Muslim Congress –  http://www.foundationforpluralism.com/WorldMuslimCongress/Articles/Mission-Statement.asp   |