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Subject:
From:
Jabou Joh <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 29 Jan 2002 01:01:37 EST
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Bismillah. Wasalatu wasalaam, ala Rasulill kareem, wa Allah Alihi, wa 
sahbihi, minastanabi Sunnahti eela yamideen. (May the peace and blessing of 
Allah be upon the Prophet, his household and his companions, and whoever 
follows his Sunnah until the day of judgement)  

In parts I and II, we  have examined the concept of faith in Islam, the 
pupose for which man was  created and his  relationship to God.

To pick up from where we left off the last time, we will again continue with 
Mawdudi's book, compiled from a  talk he gave on Radio Pakistan  in January 
of 1948, entitled, Islamic Way of Life. 

In this segment, we will take a look at a subject of which  there is much 
speculation and  little in depth knowledge by those who are often the critics 
of it. Mainly,  some aspects of The Shariah are isolated, picked out and 
criticized, but it is important to take the Shariah as a whole concept 
formulated by Allah (SWT) as a code of conduct for Mankind whom He created 
and as such, He  has a much better understanding of our nature and the code 
of conduct that will enable us to live in harmony and with justice for all.

The Shariah is the law as laid down for Mankind by Allah (SWT) in the holy 
Qur'an, and as relayed to his final Prophet, Muhammed Bin Abdullah, the 
unlettered Prophet.

"And he does not speak from his own desires; it is a revelation which has 
been revealed to him." (Soorah An-Najm. 53:3)   

Islamic Way of Life by Syed Abul Ala Mawdudi cont..........

On the Shariah, he states:

Its sources are the Qur’an and the Sunnah of Prophet Muhammad(peace be upon 
him).
    The Final Book of God and the Final Messenger stands today as the 
repositories of this truth, and they invite the whole of humanity to accept 
the truth. God Almighty has endowed men with free will in the moral domain, 
and it is to this free will that this acceptance bears reference. 
Consequently, it is always a voluntary act and not of compulsion. Whosever 
agrees that the concept of Reality stated by the Holy Prophet and the Holy 
Book is true, it is for him to step forward and surrender his will to the 
Will of God. It is this submission which is called "Islam", the 
fructification of faith(Iman) in actual life, and those who do so, i.e., 
those who of their own free will, accept God as their Sovereign, and 
surrender to His Divine Will and undertake to regulate their lives, are 
called "Muslims."

    All those persons who thus surrender themselves to the Will of God are 
welded into a community and this is how the "Muslim society" comes into 
being. Thus, this is a principled society-a society radically different from 
those which are founded on the basis of race, color or territory. This 
society is the result of a deliberate choice and effort; it is the outcome of 
a "contract" which takes place between human beings and the Creator. Those 
who enter into this contract, undertake to recognize God as their Sovereign, 
His Guidance as Supreme, and His injunctions as absolute Law. 

They also undertake to accept, without question or doubt His classifications 
of Good and Evil, Right and Wrong, Permissible and Prohibited. In short, the 
Islamic society agrees to limit its volition to the extent prescribed by the 
All-Knowing God. In other words, it is God and not man whose will is the 
primary Source of Law in a Muslim society.

    When such a society comes into existence, the book and the Messenger 
prescribed for it a code of life called the Shari’ah, and this Society is 
bound to conform to it by virtue of the contract it has entered into. It is, 
therefore, inconceivable that any Muslim society worth the name can 
deliberately adopt a system of life other than the Shari’ah. If it does so, 
its contract is ipso facto broken and the whole society becomes "un-Islamic".
    

       But we must clearly distinguish between the everyday sins or 
violations of the individuals and a deliberate revolt against the Shari’ah. 
The former may not imply breaking up of the contract, while the latter would 
mean nothing short of that. The point that should be clearly understood here 
is that if an Islamic society consciously resolves not to accept the Shari’
ah, and decides to enact its own constitution and laws or borrows them from 
any other source in utter disregard of the Shari’ah, such as a society breaks 
its contract with God and forfeits its right to be called "Islamic"

1.The Objectives and Characteristics of the Plan

    Let us now proceed to understand the plan of life envisaged by the Shari’
ah. To understand that, it is essential that we start with a clear conception 
of the objectives and the fundamentals of Shari’ah.
    

       The main objective of the Shari’ah is to construct human life on the 
basis of Ma’rufat (virtues) and to cleanse it of the Munkarat (vices). The 
term Ma’rufat proclaims as good and right everything declared by Allah and by 
His messenger to be so. 

Taking this definition as the norm, the term Ma’rufat should denote all the 
virtues and good qualities that have always been accepted as "good" by the 
pure and unadulterated human conscience. Conversely, the word Munkarat refers 
to everything that Allah and His Apostle have denounced as evil. 

In the light of this understanding, it denotes all the sins and evils that 
have always been condemned by pure human nature as "evil". In short, the Ma’
rufat are in harmony with human nature and its requirements in general, 
whilst the Munkarat are just the opposite. The Shari’ah gives a clear view of 
these Ma’rufat and Munkarat and states them as the norms to which the 
individual and social behavior should conform.
    

       The Shari’ah does not, however, limit its function to providing us 
with an inventory of virtues and vices only; it lays down the entire plan of 
life in such a manner that virtues may flourish and vices may not pollute and 
destroy human life.
    
       To achieve this end, the Shari’ah has embraced in its plan all the 
factors that encourage the growth of good and has recommended steps for the 
removal of impediments that might prevent its growth and development. The 
process gives rise to subsidiary series of Ma’rufat consisting of the causes 
and means initiating and nurturing the good, and yet another set of Ma’rufat 
consisting of prohibitory commands in relation to those things which act as 
preventives or impediments to good. Similarly, there is a subsidiary list of 
Munkarat which might initiate or allow growth of evil.
    

       The Shari’ah shapes the Islamic society in a way conducive to the 
unfettered growth of good, virtue and truth in every sphere of human 
activity, and gives full play to the forces of good in all directions. And at 
the same time it removes all impediments in the path of virtue. Along with 
this, it attempts to eradicate evils from its social plan by prohibiting 
vice, by obviating the causes of its appearance and growth, by closing the 
inlets through which it creeps into a society and by adopting deterrent 
measures to check its occurrence.

2.Ma’rufat(Ma’roof) 
   The Shari’ah classifies Ma’rufat into three categories: 

the Mandatory(Fardh and Wajib), 
the Recommendatory(Matlub) and 
the Permissible(Mubah).
   
       The observance of the mandatory(Ma’rufat) is obligatory on a Muslim 
society and the Shari’ah has given clear and binding directions about them. 
The recommendatory Ma’rufat are those which the Shari’ah wants a Muslim 
society to observe and practice. 
Some of them have been very clearly demanded of us while others have been 
recommended by implication and inference from the sayings of the Holy 
Prophet(peace be upon  him). Besides this, special arrangements have been 
made for the growth and encouragement of some of them in the plan of life 
enunciated by the Shari’ah. Others still have simply been recommended by the 
Shari’ah leaving it to the society or to its more virtuous elements to look 
to their promotion.
    
       This leaves is with the permissible Ma’rufat. Strictly speaking, 
according to the Shari’ah everything which has not been expressly prohibited 
by it is a Permissible Ma’ruf (i.e., Mubah).  
It is not at all necessary that an express permission should exist about it 
or that it should have been expressly left to our choice. Consequently, the 
sphere of permissible Ma’rufat is very wide so much so that except for the 
things specifically prohibited by the Shari’ah, everything permissible for a 
Muslim. And this is exactly the sphere where we have been given freedom and 
where we can legislate according to our own discretion to suit the 
requirements of our age and conditions, of course in keeping with the general 
spirit of the Shari’ah.

3.Munkarat(Munkar)
   The Munkarat(or the things prohibited in Islam) have been grouped into two 
categories: Haram, i.e., those things which have been prohibited absolutely 
and Makruh, i.e., those things which have been disliked and discouraged. It 
has been enjoined on Muslims by clear mandatory injunctions to refrain 
totally from everything that has been declared Haram. As for the Makruhat the 
Shari’ah signifies its dislike in some way or another , i.e., either 
expressly or by implication, giving an indication also as to the degree of 
such dislike. For example, there are some Makruhat bordering on Haram, while 
others bear affinity with the acts which are permissible. Of course, their 
number is very large ranging between the two extremes of prohibitory and 
permissible actions. More-over, in some cases, explicit measures have been 
prescribed by the Shari’ah for the prevention of Makruhat, while in others 
such arrangements have been left to the discretion of the society or of the 
individual.

4.Some other Characteristics
   The Shari’ah, thus, prescribes directives for the regulation of our 
individual as well as collective life. These directives touch such varied 
subjects as religious rituals, personal character, morals, habits, family 
relationships, social and economic affairs, administration, rights and duties 
of citizens, judicial system, laws of war and peace and international 
relations. In short, it embraces all the various departments of human life. 
       These directives reveal what is good and bad; what is beneficial and 
useful and what is injurious and harmful; what are the virtues which we have 
to cultivate and encourage and what are the evils which we have to suppress 
and guard against; what is the sphere of our voluntary, untrammeled, personal 
and social action and what are its limits; and finally, what ways and means 
we can adopt in establishing such a dynamic order of society and what methods 
we should avoid. The Shari’ah is a complete plan of life and an all embracing 
social order- nothing superfluous, nothing lacking.
   
       Another remarkable feature of the Shari’ah is that it is an organic 
whole. The entire plan of life propounded by Islam is animated by the same 
spirit and hence, any arbitrary division of its plan is bound to harm the 
spirit as well as the structure of the Islamic order. 

In this respect, it might be compared to the human body which is an organic 
whole. A leg pulled out of the body cannot be called one-eight or one-sixth 
man, because after its separation from the living body, the leg can no longer 
perform its human function. Nor can it be placed in the human function. Nor 
can it be placed in the body of some other animals with any hope of making it 
human to the extent of that limb. Likewise, we cannot form a correct opinion 
about the utility, efficiency and beauty of the hand, he eyes or the nose of 
a human being separately, without judging its place and function within the 
living body.
    
       The same can be said in regard to the scheme of life envisaged by the 
Shari’ah Islam signifies the entire scheme of life and not any isolated part 
or parts thereof. Consequently, neither can it be appropriate to view the 
different parts of the Shari’ah in isolation from one another and without 
regard to the whole, nor will it be of any use to take any part and bracket 
it with any other "ism". The Shari’ah can function smoothly and can 
demonstrate its efficacy only if the entire system of life is practiced in 
accordance with it and not otherwise.



THE MORAL SYSTEM OF ISLAM

   The Moral sense is inborn in man and through the ages it has served as the 
common man’s standard of moral behavior, approving certain qualities and 
disapproving others. While this instinctive faculty may vary from person to 
person, human conscience** has given a more or less uniform verdict in favor 
of certain moral qualities as being good and declared certain others as bad. 

On the side of moral virtues, justice, courage, bravery and truthfulness have 
always elicited praise and history does not record any period worth the name 
in which falsehood, injustice, dishonesty, and breach of trust may have been 
upheld; fellow-feeling, compassion, fidelity and magnanimity have always been 
value while selfishness, cruelty, miserliness and bigotry have never received 
the approval of the human society; men have always appreciated perseverance, 
determination and courage and have never approved of impatience fickle 
mindedness, cowardice and imbecility. Dignity, restraint, politeness, and 
amiability have throughout the ages been counted among virtues, whereas 
snobbery, misbehavior and rudeness have never found recognition as good moral 
qualities. 

Persons having a sense of responsibility and devotion to duty have always won 
the highest regard of men; never have people who are incompetent, slothful 
and lacking in sense of duty been looked upon with approval. Similarly, in 
respect of the standard of good and bad in the collective behavior of society 
as a whole, the verdict has always been almost unanimous. Only that society 
has been looked upon as worthy of honor and respect which possesses the 
virtues of organization, discipline, mutual affection and fellow feeling and 
has established a social order based on justice, freedom and equality of men. 


As opposed to this, disorganized, indiscipline, anarchy, disunity, injustice 
and social imbalance have always been considered as manifestations of decay 
and disintegration in a society. Robbery, murder, larceny, adultery, fraud 
and graft have always been condemned. Slandering, scandal mongering and 
blackmailing have never been considered as wholesome social activities. 

Contrary to this, service and care of the aged, help of one’s kith and kin, 
regard for neighbors, loyalty to friends, assistance of the weak, the 
destitute and the orphans, and nursing the sick are qualities which have 
always been highly valued ever since the dawn of civilization. Virtuous, 
polite, mild and sincere persons have always been welcomed. Individuals who 
are upright, honest, sincere, outspoken and dependable, whose needs conform 
to their words, who are content with their own rightful possession, who are 
prompt in the discharge of their obligations to others, who live in peace and 
let others live in peace and from whom nothing but good can be expected, 
having always formed the core of any healthy human society.



    This shows that human moral standard are in fact universal and have been 
well known to mankind throughout the ages.*Good and evil are not myths to be 
hunted out. They are well known realities and are equally well-understood by 
all. The sense of good and evil is inherent in the very nature of man. 

Hence, in the terminology of the Qur’an virtue is called "Ma’roof"(something 
to be announced) and evil is designated as "Munkar"(something to be 
denounced); that is to say virtue is known to be desirable for every one and 
evil is not known to commend itself in any way. This fact is mentioned by the 
Qur’an when it says:

"And(Allah gave to the Soul) its
enlightenment as to its wrong and
its right;..." (Qur’an, 91:8)                                   

To be continue....................






 Jabou N.Joh, 

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