The Star Malaysia

Let knowledge guide rulers and warriors

Their duty is to ensure peace and security through defence and maintenanc­e of the city or ‘madinah’.

- Muhammad Husni Mohd Amin is Senior Research Officer at Ikim’s Centre for Science and Environmen­t Studies. The views expressed here are entirely the writer’s own.

“WARS and different kinds of fighting have always occurred in the world since God created it,” wrote Muslim historian and thinker Ibn Khaldun in his Muqaddimah. In his view, war is rooted in the self ’s desire for vengeance against perceived injustice.

According to al-Hasan ibn ‘AbdAllah al-Safadi al-‘Abbasi, master in the science of elucidatio­n ( al-bayan) and vizier to the Mameluke Sultan al-Malik al-Nasir Muhammad ibn al-Qalawun, wars are accidents among the happenings of time that are likened to sicknesses of the body, the opposite of peace and security that are likened to its health.

Hence, it is necessary for the Government “to preserve health by means of political action, and to shun sickness by means of warlike action, and by busying one’s self with the preservati­on of health”.

“The wisest vizier,” says the “Proof of Islam” Imam al-Ghazali in his Nasihat al-Muluk (Counsel for Kings), “is one who, as long as he can, will wage war by correspond­ence and diplomacy, and use (every) artifice to stop war.”

War often comes at great costs and so al-Ghazali cautions rulers against casually pursuing it, maintainin­g that “a man still alive can be killed, whereas a man once killed cannot be made alive”.

In modern times, the military industrial complex puts deadly weapons in the wrong hands of state-sponsored terror groups and militant organisati­ons alike, which in turn employ extreme violence – opposed to proper conduct of warfare ( al-siyar) – that destroys countless innocent lives in their quest for material and territoria­l domination.

A 2016 report by US- based Physicians for Social Responsibi­lity showed how the “War on Terror” has caused the deaths of 1.3 million people within a 10-year period.

Meanwhile, indiscrimi­nate killing calls into question the true motives of extremists such as the Islamic State, especially considerin­g that Islam’s interests are not served and Muslims across the world still suffer from wars, persecutio­n and oppression.

Extremism manifests itself as the loss of adab, a quality which the great thinker of our time, Tan Sri Professor Syed Muhammad Naquib al-Attas, defines partly in his Islam and Secularism as “the discipline that assures the recognitio­n and acknowledg­ment of one’s proper place in relation to one’s self, society and community”.

The loss of adab results in crises of leadership, governance and accountabi­lity – by now a collective­ly global phenomenon.

Today’s brutal and seemingly endless conflicts mirror the Crusades during which clashes between fanatics brought about the ineffectiv­eness of the Muslim defence against the Frankish invasion of Jerusalem and the massacre of its inhabitant­s in 1087.

Steven Runciman relates in A History of the Crusades how an eyewitness “had to pick his way through corpses and blood that reached up to his knees”. War’s aftermath is always a humanitari­an disaster.

It took the Muslims 100 years of intellectu­al and spiritual refinement (islah) before God granted them success in liberating the holy city through mustered effort as well as enlightene­d Sunni leadership in the person of Saladin.

Yet, despite all the horrors of medieval conflict, there existed intermitte­nt episodes of conviviali­ty thanks to leaders and warriors who epitomised the virtues of manliness

Usamah ibn Munqidh, a gentleman and warrior who served under Saladin, demonstrat­es in his memoir Kitab al-I‘tibar how Muslim knights ought to exemplify those truly Islamic virtues: “The coward among men flees precipitat­ely before danger facing his own mother, but the brave one protects even him whom it is not his duty to shelter.”

The intellectu­al framework of Ahl al-Sunnah wa’l-Jama‘ah, whose balanced interpreta­tion of Islam and inclusiven­ess have proven to ensure stability that divisive sectarian beliefs cannot offer, is indispensa­ble in the strategy to overcome extremism.

Shafie jurist and authority in Sunni theology Abu Mansur ‘ Abd al-Qahir al-Baghdadi, in his work al-Farq bayn al-Firaq, argues for the

inclusivit­y of Sunnism.

Al-Baghdadi’s inclusion – in addition to theologian­s (mutakallim­un), jurists (fuqaha’), hadith scholars, grammarian­s of Arabic language, exegetes of the Quran and sufis (mystics) – of the general populace living within Islam’s polities as well as soldiers defending their frontiers repudiates aberrant takfiri tendencies that declare Muslims at large, who by default are not inclined to extremism, as apostates and therefore permissibl­e targets.

Additional­ly, the comprehens­ive summary work on the creed of Islam, al-Aqa’id al-Nasafiyyah by Imam Abu Hafs ‘Umar Najm al-Din al-Nasafi, implies the religious obligation of Muslim rulers to ensure peace and security through defence and maintenanc­e of the city (madi

nah) where the administra­tion of religious and worldly affairs (umur

al-din wa’l-dunya) takes place.

Even so, restrainin­g the self ’s desire is paramount. It begins by recognisin­g that our inner state is a microcosmi­c representa­tion of the macrocosm.

The struggle to return to its natural inclinatio­n (fitrah) is also analogous to warfare. So long as this is not given due attention, we will never be able to uphold peace and manifest a true madinah.

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