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Reading the
Muslim Mind
By
Dr. Hassan Hathout

About
the Author
Dr. Hassan Hathout is a physician, scientist, teacher, speaker, thinker,
writer, poet and ethicist as well as an Islamic Scholar. He is one of
those encyclopedic personalities reminiscent of older times. As an Egyptian
American, he is bicultural and bilingual. Appalled by the distorted image
of Islam in the West, he he has made it his mission to explain Islam
as it (really) is. He is the author of eight books and innumerable medical
and non-medical papers and article.

People
will certainly respond favorably to the sincerity and the forthrightness
of the book. The book often shows the penetrating wisdom a
mind is capable of…(Frank Vogel, Harvard Law School).
The book will have an important role in religious studies classrooms
(including my own). (Crerar Douglas, Department of Religious Studies,
California State University, Nothing).
Dr. Hathout addresses live issues which members of no religious community
can ignore….He guides the reader in the path of intellectual discourse
previously chartered by great Muslim scholars like Imam al-Ghazzali.
(Sulayman Nyang, Howard University.)
Other books written by Dr. Hathout are:
Thus
Shall I Stand Before God,
A Brief Introduction to Seerah,
Islam and Some Contemporary Issues, and
Personal Memories
If
you desire the "Reading
The Muslim Mind" book, please click on the title to email
us the request. Include the name of the book, your name and address.
Following
are section and chapters from the book, Reading the Muslim
Mind selected for your reading.
Chapter
Three
The People of the Book (Jews and Christians)
From
amongst humanity, Jews and Christians are the nearest to Muslims
and are given the honorary title of People of the Book. They
are fellow believers in the One God and the recipients of scriptures
from Him. They share the belief in the line of prophethood,
and many of our Jewish and Christian friends are taken by surprise
when they learn that the biblical prophets are also Islamic
prophets. The three religions share a common moral code. The
Ouran says,
Say: 'We believe in God, and the revelation given to us, and the revelation
given to Abraham, Ishmael, Isaac, Jacob and the Tribes, and that given
to Moses and Jesus, and that given to (all) the prophets from their Lord.-
We make no distinction between one and another of them, and to Him we
are submitters.' (2:136)
The word Islam literally means "submission to the will of God."
Muslims are permitted by Islam to eat the food offered them by the People
of the Book (unless specifically prohibited, such as alcohol or pork)
and to reciprocate by offering their food to them: "The food of
the People of the Book is lawful unto you and your food is lawful unto
them" (5:5). Further, a Muslim man is permitted to take in marriage
(the most intimate relation and sacred bond) a Jewish or Christian woman: "Lawful
unto you in marriage are (not only) chaste women who are believers, but
chaste women among the People of the Book revealed before your time when
you give them their due dowers and desire chastity, and not lewdness,
taking them as lovers" (5:5). In such a situation it is unlawful
for the Muslim husband to try to exert pressure on his wife to convert
to Islam, because that would contradict the Quranic injunction, "Let
there be no compulsion in religion" (2:256). It would indeed be
his Islamic duty to ensure her right of worship according to her own
faith.
In an Islamic state the legal dictum about the People of the Book is
that "they have our rights and owe our duties." They are equally
eligible for social security and other benefits the state provides. Muslims
were warned against acts of bigotry or prejudice towards the People of
the Book, and Prophet Muhammad himself said, "Whoever hurts a person
from the People of the Book, it will be as though he hurt me personally.
As a matter of fact, from its inception the Islamic society was a pluralistic
society. As soon as Muhammad immigrated to Madinah to establish the earliest
Islamic state, a treaty was concluded between all the tribes, including
the Jewish tribes who lived there, establishing religious freedom and
equal rights and duties.
Islam is not an exclusive religion. It is a universal call to mankind
(not an "Arab" or an "Eastern" religion as many depict
it). Although it addresses all people, including the People of the Book,
their failure to embrace it is no reason to categorize them as enemies
or infidels. As a matter of fact the term "infidel" is of European
origin, used at the time of the Crusades to describe Muslims.
Goodness is acknowledged by Islam wherever it resides:
"Not all of them are alike: of the people of the Book are a portion that
stand (for the right); they rehearse the signs of God all night long and they
prostrate themselves in adoration" (3:113). No individual or group can claim
monopoly of God's mercy or deny it to others: "Those who believe (in the
Quran), and those who follow the Jewish (scriptures), and the Christians, and
the Sabians, any who believe in God and the Last Day, and work righteousness,
shall have their reward with their Lord, on them shall be no fear, nor shall
they grieve" (2:62).
Chapter Five
LIVE
ISSUES
As
a comprehensive religion dealing with the whole of life and
not confined to matters of worship or the house of worship,
Islam shares the concerns of society at large, of which Muslims
are a part. Naturally, Muslims wish to share their values with
others in an attempt to jointly explore solutions and common
ground in the resolution of these problems.
In this chapter we will present the Islamic view of e contemporary issues.
The topics were selected as specimen cases by which to examine and demonstrate
the relevance of the Islamic perspective our everyday life, moving away
from the area of theory and abstract thought.
The subjects discussed in the following pages are the New World Order,
(2) jihad, (3) family and the al revolution, and (4) biomedical ethics,
including reproductive issues, (b) organ donation and transplantaion,
(c) definition of death, (d) euthanasia, and genetic engineering.
THE
NEW WORLD ORDER
The declaration of a New World Order has been prompted recently by the
precipitate fall of communism. While the collapse of communism had not
been anticipated by much of the world, Islamic literature had, for several
decades, criticized both communism and capitalism and expected neither
to endure. In their comparative works Muslim scholars have clearly demonstrated
how and where each of these systems fall short in comparison with an
independent system based on the teachings of Islam.
It would be rash to conclude that the collapse of communism attests to
the fitness of capitalism. Both are flawed because they are materialistic
ideologies unsuited for a species whose characteristics extend far beyond
the material. Another fallacy of these ideologies-albeit in opposite
directions-is the assumption that the individual and the society are
in irreconcilable conflict. Communism sought to crush the individual
in favor of society. Yet what is society but the individual multiplied?
The result was inevitably a crushed society.
Capitalism, on the other hand, extols individuality and unduly shields
it from the claims of society. This has imbued the individual with a
sense of justifiable selfishness, and when this sense has been projected
outward, its various expressions have been classism corporatism, nationalism,
racism, slavery and colonialism. The cornerstone of capitalism is that
the only function and sole destiny of capital is to grow and keep growing
without limits. When local markets are fully saturated, new ones are
sought overseas and in the Third World. There is obvious (or, perhaps,
willful) blindness to the fact that it is impossible to attain infinite
growth on a finite planet.
The feverish race for dollars and more dollars is coupled with the planned
and active encouragement of patterns of consumerism and planned obsolescence
not to satisfy needs, but rather to satisfy the wish for comforts, pleasures,
and luxuries. Natural resources, many irreplaceable, are being violated
at an accelerating pace. This drive for overkill has targeted, as its
sacrificial lamb, the world's resources. It has especially exploited
the Third World, a vital market and cheap source of labor and materials,
which it presumes to be expendable. Not only are its peoples stripped
of their natural resources and raw materials for a meager price (compared
to the exorbitant prices they pay to buy the finished products of those
materials), they are even prevented from carrying out such projects that
might improve their lot and make them less dependent on First World imports.
To prevent the Third World from total death by exsanguination, it is
regularly injected with fresh capital in the form of loans and aid in
order to maintain its buying power, to the favor of Western capital.
Alas, only a tiny fraction of that aid goes to address the needs of the
people. The major part goes to the home-grown elite, who form the ruling
class, and their retinues, who undertake the maintenance of the status
quo. They prevent the public debate of the terms and conditions of the
loans and aid, and block any attempt at supervising their management
and establishing accountability for their mismanagement. They oppress
labor rights and allow lax safety procedures, and keep a total ban on
unearthing the appalling corruption that has become the hallmark of government
in the Third World-including much of the Islamic World. This seems to
explain two paradoxes. The first is that in many Middle Eastern countries,
the more money the West pumps in, the poorer the country becomes and
the deeper it gets into debt. The second is the total betrayal by the
major democracies of the democratic movements of the Middle East that
seem close to gaining power through following sound democratic process.
Invariably the democracies side with the dictators against the democratic
aspirations of the people, and, when necessary, support dictators even
with the use of military power.
The expression stability, which is the declared aim of every Western
intervention, means in real terms the reservation of the best exploitative
opportunities for foreign capital, even if they are the worst possible
for the foreign masses. They and future generations will inherit a rising
debt that their GNP is unable to service, let alone pay. This state of
affairs is both known and bitterly felt by the people of the Third World.
They see its results in their homes, their families and in the extremely
limited opportunities available to their children. They call it injustice
and they try to change it, but they are brutally suppressed. Western
politicians participate in this suppression, and to justify it in the
eyes of their people, propagandistic formulae and terminologies are promptly
employed (such as declaring that their victims are eroding the stability
of their nation or committing blatant aggression on our national interests).
Until recently, it was convenient to call those seekers of justice "communists." Since
the collapse of communism, their new label is "Islamic fundamentalists."
Under the influence of a gigantic media machine owned by large corporations
and big capital designed to manipulate and shape public thinking, the
masses in the West have so far been swift to swallow the bait and, unsuspectingly,
sanction the means and ways of their policy-makers. And yet this is not
the worst fault of the submissive and unsuspecting nature of the people
in the West. What they have been even slower to grasp is that the vocarious
appetite of capital and its greedy practice in the Third World is not
confined to those faraway places inhabited by strange and exotic people.
Government and big business do not flinch from doing the same at home
to their own citizens whenever prompted by the dictates of their sacred
principle: growth and more growth, capital and more capital, dollars
and more dollars.
What else can explain the shifting of major chunks of industry to Southeast
Asia and elsewhere, where cheap labor (financially and humanly) can produce
a cheaper final product which, however, will not be sold cheaper when
shipped back home to America? During the process, millions of American
workers have been laid off and joined the ranks of the unemployed.
This road of unbridled capitalism cannot continue indefinitely. All evidence
shows that it will hit a dead end before long, evidence that has been
attacked, ignored, and even hidden, but it is there, whether its opponents
like it or not. The twin golden-egged geese of the world's resources
and peoples of the Third World shall not survive for long. Unless there
is radical change before it is too late, this planet will eventually
cease to be sustainable.
What is called for, however, is not merely a change of rules but a change
of heart. As long as the mentality of materialism reigns, there is no
hope for more than symptomatic treatment that might delay the inevitable
for a brief time but will not prevent it. So long as the prevailing thinking
views human interaction in terms of us versus them, North versus South,
exploiter versus exploited, rich versus poor, white versus people of
color, and masters versus slaves (or servants), there is no hope for
the future. The ship of humanity will sink,
even while the passengers in deluxe and first class cabins further amass
more valuables and luxuries.
It is doubtful that the politicians and the financiers of the world possess
the necessary vision, wisdom, and ability to undergo a dramatic self-change.
It is pitiful to watch them staying the ominous course and leading humanity
so close to the edge of the abyss. The only hope is a massive campaign
to educate the public who, as voters, remain the final arbiters at the
end of the day. If a demand is created for a new way, then politicians
will either have to change or get out of the way of change.
What does Islam have to do with all this? Islamic scholars and thinkers
(not the terrorists and extremists that the media hold as a fixed mask
on the face everything Islamic) have, for several decades, been sketching
the features of an Islamic system that would address world problems and
is based on the Islamic Shari'ah, which is naturally not a copy of formulas
that might have served well in previous times and circumstances. Nor
is this system to be considered exclusively Islamic or prescribed strictly
for Muslims, for the welfare of humanity is a common concern and with
our ever-shrinking interactive globe, we all face the same destiny. The
principal features of this system are described below:
The Authority Over Man
Man is not the supreme being of this universe, but is responsible and
accountable to the Supreme Being, God! Without God everything becomes
possible, as Dostoyevsky said, and anything can be rationalized and justified.
When man dethroned God he slipped into self-worship. The true role of
man in this universe is to be God's vicegerent and trustee, so equipped
as to be capable of having full mandate over nature in order to manage
the planet in accordance with the Creator's instructions, and not upon
his own impulses and temptations. Neither science (a tool yet in its
infancy) nor arrogance (a killer trap) should delude man into playing
God ... if only man were wise enough.
The Ownership of Goods
Ultimate ownership is God's by virtue of His being the Creator. Our ownership
is a secondary ownership. We are free to own and to increase our wealth
by lawful means, practically without limits, so long as we are aware
that capital not only has rights but also duties. The function of capital
is not merely to grow ad infiniturn, but also to fulfil obligations towards
society.
The assumption (by both communism and capitalism) that there is an inevitable
conflict between the individual and society does not exist in Islam,
in which the premise is an equilibrium that is delicately balanced between
both and does justice to all. This balance is not maintained merely by
the strong arm of the, law, but by a strong desire to win God's pleasure
that makes giving a continuous source of joy for the giver. God is always
in the equation and is a living reality, a notion that, from a materialistic
perspective, is irrelevant and absolutely meaningless.
In Islam the premise is that God has remitted the sustenance of the poor
in the wealth of the rich-and in a new world order, the principle may
be carried over to international proportions. This new system is of course
achievable and attainable, but not under a value-free educational system,
a tidal wave of media indoctrination, or a society tolerant of injustices.
Society is now so interdependent and integrated that nobody can live
in isolation, either at the apex of riches or at the nadir of poverty.
Over fourteen centuries ago Omar, the second caliph of Islam, decreed
that if a man died in poverty, the citizens of his town had to pay his
ransom as if they had killed him. The community is "like one body
.. when one organ suffers, the others rally in support, " as the
Prophet said. Every citizen has the right to live at a minimum level
of comfort (not merely at subsistence level), and since living on charity
is discouraged, it follows that individual rights include the right to
gainful employment. Labor-saving technology is therefore allowed as an
answer to a labor shortage, but never to economize on jobs and throw
laborers into unemployment. Man takes priority over machine, and the
juridical rule is that the collective welfare takes priority over individual
welfare. This does not mean the arrest of technological progress, but
that it should go hand in hand with labor in dealing with its consequences.
Workers are encouraged and supported in buying shares in their companies
in order to blur the polarization between labor and capital and to enable
them to have a vested interest in the progress of their companies.
Another rule in Islam is that money as an instrument cannot breed money
unless coupled to some kind of production; hence, usury is unlawful in
Islam. In recent decades much has been written on usury-free banking,
and indeed a number of banks, not only in Islamic countries but also
in Europe and America, have successfully pioneered its application.
The Equality of Man
The oneness of humanity as a single family sharing the common grandparentage
of Adam and Eve should be emphasized and taught to children from a young
age, together with the concept of the inherent equality of human beings.
It is unfortunate that both science and religion were, at one time, misused
in Europe (and America) to concoct evidence of the natural superiority
of the white (or Aryan) race over the others. The false evidence in support
of this claim is now dead and buried, but its legacy continues. In most
churches in the West until now, Jesus is portrayed as a blond white man
with blue eyes, unlike the brunet, olive-complexioned people common in
the area of Palestine.
The evidence of racism in the West practically pervades all aspects of
life, and the will to change it is yet to gather sufficient momentum.
An uphill battle for civil rights in America has been going on for decades,
and in spite of palpable progress, one cannot say that the bitter taste
of slavery has been washed away. Equality is not a set of legal specifications
but is primarily a state of mind.
So far the black man in America has not heard the word "sorry" from
the white man for the chapter of slavery that tarnished the history of
white civilization (although the non-white Japanese Americans did receive
an apology and reparations for their internment during World War 11).
Racial tensions continue to erupt, and although regrettable, the participants
in these incidents of violence often have some justification. The Los
Angeles riots in the near past (April of 1992) are a case in point.
Every time there is a call for action to improve the lot of American
blacks, the response, though often helpful for a limited time, usually
misses the root cause of the problem. Neither bullets nor dollars will
come up with permanent and real solutions. Only when everyone in the
depths of their hearts feels and believes that every other human being
is a dear and equal brother or sister will real change occur. This cannot
be decreed by law, but is a function of education. To transform our world,
we must bring about a total educational revolution with the objective
of creating a unified and compassionate society, undivided by barriers
of any kind, and giving new life and significance to slogans of freedom,
fraternity, and equality, not only within national borders, but on a
global scale.
To effect change, the re-education of the neo-colonialist nations must
be coupled with a real effort on their part to assist the development
of the Third World. It has been estimated that the subsidy Europe pays
to its farmers is enough to cause such a turnaround in the Third World
as to eliminate the problem of hunger the world over. Such an idea was
summarily scoffed at in a (philanthropic) meeting in Europe of former
ministers and prime ministers from various countries. Neither the elimination
of subsidy nor the development of the Third World were considered live
options, the former for reasons of political expediency and the latter
for political strategy.
The Need for Self-restraint
Application of the uniquely human faculty of self restraint has been
rapidly eroding and needs to be restored. Although it is a principal
distinction between man and animal, the mentality of modern times seems
to have played havoc with it. A young man who was arrested for shooting
at passing cars on a freeway and killing some people had only this to
offer as explanation: "I felt like killing someone." This is
not a lone example. Statistics on crime clearly indicate that grossly
impulsive and destructive behavior has become a common social phenomenon
rather than an exception, as anyone who watches the news or reads the
papers can confirm. The lack of a sound value system and the consequent
appalling lack of resistance in the face of impulses and temptations
are underlying factors that have led to gradual societal destruction.
A key to change can be found with education and the media -but education
must be informed not only by knowledge but also by a belief in what is
right and an awareness that we are accountable to a higher power - only
then will most people become fully responsive to the prompting of their
conscience. If there is a Day of Judgment, as Muslims and others believe,
then one cannot envy the media moguls who will be confronted by their
role in publicizing and promoting violence, pornography and licentiousness.
Speak lightly of the unthinkable and it naturally becomes thinkable.
Our young then explore and experiment until debauchery and miscreancy
become societal addictions.
Unfortunately, some states are subtly setting the example to their youth
of recourse to naked power, especially when they are strong beyond limits
and their adversaries are weak beyond limits. The fig leaf called values
and principle often falls when the military giants crack down on presumed
aggression with all their might and practically against no resistance;
when a worse aggression follows, the same giants pull back because "the
task would not be easy." Regard for human life is abysmal, both
as they attack it or refrain from protecting it. One of the powerful
but revealing comments made by a military leader during the Gulf War
was, "We are not in the business of counting bodies," but he,
of course, meant the bodies of the other side.
War and Peace
The rules of war in Islam are very clear and were explicitly delineated
by Prophet Muhammad himself. It must either be of a defensive nature
or to remove oppression wherever it might be, following what is now called
a just cause, and it must be fought without harm to innocent civilians
or the environment. Alliance to stop aggression is expressed in the Quranic
verse: "If two parties among the believers fall into a fight, make
peace between them, but if one of them transgresses against the other,
then fight (all) against the one that transgresses until it complies
with the command of God. But if it complies, then make peace with justice
and be fair, for God loves those who are fair" (49:9).
Alliance with non-Muslims for a just cause is acceptable. An example
is the Prophet's treaty with the Jews of Madinah to defend that city
jointly from the disbelievers. Another example is the reference by the
Prophet to a treaty made between the tribes of Makkah long before Islam,
who agreed to join together in supporting the oppressed. The Prophet
commented, "That was an alliance before Islam, but if, in Islam,
I had been invited to it, I would have joined it." The Prophet's
explicit instructions to his armies were strict in that they should fight
only against belligerents and not against women, children, or the elderly.
Non-Muslim religious people in their monasteries or houses of worship
also should not be harmed, nor should enemy trees be cut or set on fire
as a war measure, nor should animals be targeted or slaughtered except
for food. When one reviews these stipulations, it becomes obvious that
the implementation of these lofty Islamic war ethics requires a special
effort in a modern war. Perhaps World War I was the last war in which
it was possible for fighting to be fairly confined to military personnel.
Starting with the Spanish Civil War in the thirties, the rules began
to change as was evident in World War 11, the Korean War and the Vietnam
War. The two atomic bombs over Hiroshima and Nagasaki speak for themselves,
as does the carpet bombing of the Vietnam war and its "free fire
zones," killing not only people, animals and plants, but even the
soil itself.
Some people would therefore take it that those Islamic war ethics are
now theoretical and cannot hold in our modem age. Muslims and others,
however, look at the issue from another perspective. Since modern warfare
is so devastating, war itself should cease to be an option in conflict
resolution. War should be obsolete just like slavery! It is a bad omen
that the New World Order was announced on the occasion of an overwhelming
military strike. Subsequent decisions raise suspicion that what is new
in the New World Order is no more than the old order presided over by
one adversary instead of two.
With humanity at the present apex of civilization - never attained before
- and ready to move into the second millennium heralding and celebrating
a New World Order, a world free of war, and with some alternate instruments
of just peacemaking, is no longer an idle dream.
Why can't independent courts of justice settle differences between nations?
After all, war does not differentiate between right and wrong but only
shows who is stronger and possesses more destructive power. The implementation
of fair and just conflict resolution would be quite possible if courts
of law capable and desirous of honest and impartial handling of conflict
were established (this excludes the United Nations and its Security Council).
The success of any such proposal revolves totally around one pivot: that
the civilized countries decide to be civilized! It takes truth, and nobody
would ever say they are against truth, but they are. Truth is a value,
and regrettably politics are blind to values, and this is the real threat
that we face today.
Will the strong accede to justice as decided by law or persist in believing
that might makes right? Will the military-industrial complex give up
its raison d'etre, justifying itself by some war or another every now
and then? Can justice be accepted in apportioning the cake of the world
resources and the cost of replenishing them? Of course not; that would
be blasphemous to the masters of the current order, unless things change,
and change will not come from above. It will come from below upwards,
from the grass roots.
The Ecology
For the sake of making dollars to buy their food, service their debts,
arm their military, protect their dictators and satisfy the insatiable
appetite of their rulers and elite, the poorer side of humanity in the
developing countries are condemned to deplete their natural resources.
On the part of the affluent side of humanity, with the goal of making
the rich richer to enhance their consumeristic patterns, increase their
luxuries and indulge in their pleasantries, the industrialized world
is violating, poisoning, polluting and killing the ecology. This happens
at a time when science and technology are capable of influencing the
biosphere in a dramatic and unprecedented way, and it happens in peace
time, apart from the devastating and permanent damage that a full scale
modern war is capable of causing.
We borrow from the future at an extravagant rate, whereas sane and reasonable
estimates tell us that we are incurring a debt our future generations
will not be able to pay. Remedial measures and workable suggestions have
been prescribed, but the obstacle, as expected, has been those who hold
the reins of power, the custodians of unbridled, greedy, selfish, gluttonous,
short-sighted capitalism. As the Quran says, "There is the type
of man whose speech about this world's life may dazzle you, and he calls
God to be his witness about what is in his heart, yet is he the most
contentious of enemies. When he prevails, he goes about the earth spreading
mischief and destroying tilth and progeny; and God loves not mischief" (2:204-205).
Notwithstanding bitter opposition from big business, the ecology movement
outside the sphere of politics has steadily gained momentum. On Earth
Day 1990 , one hundred million people in 140 countries showed up for
the largest grass-roots demonstration ever. This cannot be ignored by
the politicians who would otherwise lose their votes. Perhaps it is time
to establish an international ecological agency in which world governments
would participate with the prior agreement to voluntarily heed its recommendations,
recommendations that, of course, should not be oblivious to the question
of justice.
Population Issues
The world population is growing at a pace which far exceeds that of available
resources. Concerns about the population explosion are therefore quite
legitimate. Since most of the population increase occurs in the Third
World, the latter has been accused of irresponsible behavior and targeted
for blame by the West. Disciplinary action has been considered, and a
number of countries that provide aid, including the United States of
America, have entertained the idea of linking that aid with fertility
regulation and family planning achievements. Worse than that, in an article
entitled "Would Machiavelli now be a better guide for doctors than
Hippocrates? (World Health Forum, vol. 14,1993,105.) Dr. Jean Martin
reviews some Western opinions that question the advisability of some
vaccination programs and other health measures in the Third World, since
they allow too many children to live and utilize resources, which eventually
causes the cycle of famine and death to be repeated. In other words,
there is a call to setting limits on the reduction of mortality in the
Third World. A shift from humanitarianism to "pragmatism" sounds
logical to some, hence the inclusion of Machiavelli's name in the article.
That there is a problem, no one can deny. That there is need to avail
families who wish to use them (without coercion) of safe, reliable and
accessible contraceptive methods is a fact also, and Islam has no qualms
with that. Our only reservation is that putting the blame of the population
problem solely and squarely on Third World countries is not telling the
whole truth, for the issue is really multifaceted. Placing blame on the
Third World ignores the fact that the birth of one baby in the United
States ". . imposes more than a hundred times the stress on the
world resources and environment as a birth in, say, Bangladesh," wrote
Paul and Anne Ehrlich of the Department of Biological Sciences at Stanford
University, in National Geographic Magazine. They note that while population
problems in poor nations keep them poor, population problems in rich
nations are destroying the ability of the earth to support civilizations.
(Quotedin Michael Henderson, Hopefora Change (Salem: Grosvenor Books,
1991), 24.)
The way to reduce population growth in the Third World has been debated
(especially at the World Population Conference in Bucharest, 1974). Historical
precedent (studying what happened in Europe that brought down fertility
rates) and common sense indicate that development is the cause and not
the outcome of reduced fertility-development is the best pill. That insecurity
is a natural stimulus of fertility is also a known phenomenon. Yet the
capitalist countries put a disproportionately high emphasis on fertility
regulation in the Third World. Their concern goes far beyond mere philanthropic
or altruistic considerations for the welfare of humanity.
In the summer 1991 issue of Foreign Affairs, a report (originally prepared
for the US Army Conference on Long Range Planning) by Dr. Nicholas Eberstadt
of the American Enterprise Institute warns against the implications of
the proportional increase in numbers in the Third World nations for the
international political order and the balance of world power. After three
generations, he notes, eight great-grandparents in the West will share
only four or five descendants against over three hundred for much of
Africa and the Middle East; therefore, the leading countries of today
will be the smallest nations in the future.
The National Security Study Memorandum 200, a study of "Implications
of Worldwide Population Growth for US Security and Overseas Interests,"(National
Archives. Files of the National Security Study Memorandum 200. RG 273)
is a very educative document, revealing the complex political, economic
and military implications and the solid realities of the world in which
we live. Population factors might be the seeds of revolutionary actions
and an impetus for the expropriation or limitation of foreign economic
interests. Poverty, population growth, and population youth (The common
phenomenon in Third World countries in which the majority of a nation's
population is young, resulting from an accelerated birth rate, especially
among the young, and a lower life expectancy than in developed nations.
Ed.) would urge development, induce the review of foreign investment
terms and conditions and even boost military growth if conscription to
the military is seen as a viable alternative to unemployment. The document
at times imparts the feeling that industrial countries are already waging
a pre-emptive war against underdeveloped countries.
It would seem to us that a New World Order should be geared to the needs
of the global village, for that is what our planet is becoming. It should
not presuppose the inevitability of dividing the world into haves and
have-nots, and hence the inevitability of a fight to the death between
them. It requires of the rich to be humble, content and willing to give
up for the common good many luxuries that their current lifestyles incorporate.
Their luxuries are not vital necessities, their reward would the happiness
of providing the vital necessities for the major part of the human family.
What else can be more conducive to happiness? God must be brought to
the equation!
JIHAD
The word jihad has been frequently used by the Western press over the
past few decades, explained directly or subtly to mean "holy war." In
point of fact, the term "holy war" was coined in Europe during
the Crusades, meaning the war against Muslims. It does not have a counterpart
in the Islamic glossary, and jihad is certainly not its translation.
Jihad means "striving." In its primary sense it is an inner
struggle, within the self, to rid it from debased actions or inclinations
and to exercise constancy and perseverance in achieving a higher moral
standard. Since Islam is not confined to the realm of the individual
but extends to the welfare of society and humanity in general, a Muslim
cannot strive to improve himself or herself in isolation from what happens
in his or her community or in the world at large, hence the Quranic injunction
to the Islamic nation to take as a duty "to enjoin good and forbid
evil" (3:104). It is a duty that is not exclusive to Muslims but
applies to the human race, which is, according to the Quran, God's vicegerent
(deputy) on earth. Muslims, however, cannot shirk this responsibility
even if others do. The means to fulfil it are varied, and in our modern
world encompass all legal, diplomatic, arbitrative, economic, and political
instruments.
Islam does not exclude the use of force by which to curb evil, if there
is no viable alternative. A forerunner of the collective security principle
and collective intervention to stop aggression, at least in theory, as
manifested in the United Nations Charter, is the Quranic reference, "...make
peace between them (two fighting groups), but if one of the two persists
in aggression against the other, fight the aggressors until they revert
to God's commandment" (49:9). Military action is therefore a subgroup
of jihad and not its totality. This was what Prophet Muhammad emphasized
to his companions when, returning from a military campaign, he told them, "This
day we have returned from the minor jihad (war) to the major jihad (self-control
and betterment)."
Jihad is not a declaration of war against other religions and is certainly
not directed against Christians and Jews, as some media and political
circles want it to be perceived. Islam does not fight against other religions.
Christians and Jews are considered as fellow inheritors of the Abrahamic
traditions by Muslims, worshipping the same God and following the tradition
of Abraham.
The rigorous criteria for a "just war" in Islam have already
been alluded to, as well as the moral and ethical constraints that should
be abided by. Modern warfare does not lend itself to those moral standards;
therefore, war should be replaced by some other alternative for conflict
resolution, if all sides agree on a just formula. An enlightened and
resolute world public opinion could overcome and subdue war-oriented
mentalities. The key is a change of heart. Just as there is a constructive
role for forgiveness in interpersonal relations, so might this be possible
in international relations provided justice, and not force, is the final
arbiter.
We must reiterate for the sake of honesty that historically peoples of
all traditions, Muslim, Christian, and Jewish, as well as others, have
had their lapses in honestly following the valued ideals of their religions
or philosophies. We have all made mistakes and we will continue to do
so. Muslims are no exception, and time and again religion has been exploited
by ambitious tyrants or violated by ignorant mobs. This is no reflection
on religion, but it shows how desperately humanity is in need of better
education, more enduring concern for human dignity, rights and freedoms,
and vigilant pursuit of justice, even at the price of curbing political
and economic greed.
FAMILY AND THE SEXUAL REVOLUTION
Prophet Muhammad said: "Women are the other half of men. " The
unit of humanity is not a man or a woman. It is a man and a woman united
in marriage that makes them a family Oust like the smallest part of water
is not oxygen or hydrogen, but both united). Like Judaism, Christianity,
and many other religions, Islam decrees that the pairing off of a man
and a woman to form a family constitutes a sacred bond that the Quran
calls "a solemn pledge," which must be documented and authenticated
by the marriage contract, or wedlock.
Marriage signifies the commitment of spouses to each other and establishes
their mutual rights and responsibilities as well as those vis-a-vis their
children. Children have the right to legitimacy (to know the identity
of and benefit from a relationship with both their parents, as well as
to be born within a valid marriage); to loving care as they are raised;
to both physical and spiritual nurturing; and to education, to enable
them to face life and bear its responsibilities as mature and useful
citizens.
As parents attain old age or become incapacitated in some way, it is
then their children's religious duty to look after them and cater to
their comfort without showing their impatience in fulfilling this obligation.