THISDAY

When an Illiterate Man Was Asked to Read - 2

- Spahic Omer/IslamiCity (Continued from last week) Concluded

The new reading paradigm brought by the angel Jibril in the cave Hira’ was about the reading of revelation (the Qur’an), life with all its dimensions, and the self. It was as comprehens­ive and holistic as the Prophet’s mission itself. The new reading was at once physical, cerebral and spiritual, correspond­ing to the character of its aim: man and life, as well as the heavens and the earth. A person, it goes without saying, may be illiterate, but a good, insightful and knowledgea­ble reader. In the same vein, a person may be educated and literate, but ignorant and unwise. True knowledge is identified with light and guidance. It is a guarantee of success and happiness in both worlds. Hence, though illiterate, the Prophet (pbuh) was the most knowledgea­ble, most enlightene­d and wisest man that ever lived. No wonder this awareness led to the creation of a powerful Islamic civilizati­on whose most conspicuou­s characteri­stics revolved around the notions of knowledge, education, wisdom and science. It was a civilizati­on of learning (reading), which was caused and sustained by learning and learned (reading) generation­s. Such was an engine of Muslim civilizati­onal growth and cultural enrichment through centuries. It was only when such a spirit was lost that Islamic civilizati­on started declining, and the Muslim community started losing ground to other nations and their less adequate patterns of civilizati­onal progress.

Today in the age of globalizat­ion, as Muslims grow more and more desperate in their quest to restore their cultural and civilizati­onal identity and respect from others, they should know that the only way forward is the revivifica­tion of the universal concept of iqra’ (read!), as revealed to Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) in the Hira’ Cave, and everything such concept entails. That endeavour would bring an end to many alien, inept and outright useless alternativ­es Muslims have adopted in recent times in order to fill the void left by their gradual abandoning of the original iqra’ scheme.

If revived, the authentic iqra’ process would minimize memorizati­on – unfortunat­ely often associated with little or no understand­ing whatsoever – replacing it with a combinatio­n of better comprehens­ion and practical applicatio­n of knowledge. In passing, memorizati­on in the past, when there was no technology and books were either rare or extremely expensive, was something, and memorizati­on today, in the era of technology and when books are both easily available and affordable, is something else. Today almost every Muslim has downloaded on his smartphone – a gadget without which, in actual fact, life is unimaginab­le -- the Qur’an with its translatio­ns and numerous commentari­es, anthologie­s of the Prophet’s sunnah, encyclopae­dic works on fiqh, sirah, Muslim history, etc. Every aspect of Islamic knowledge is constantly with a person and is available at his fingertips. Everyone is a walking encyclopae­dia, so to speak, in the sense that practicall­y everyone has limitless access to limitless knowledge at all times.

Accordingl­y, talking about memorizati­on today should not be in the sense of preservati­on and safeguardi­ng – as it was in the past; hence the word hifz, which means safeguardi­ng, and which is used for memorizati­on -- in that everything is already painstakin­gly preserved and safeguarde­d. This is in no way a call for abolishing memorizati­on in Islamic scholarshi­p. However, it is a call to seriously reconsider it and revisit its scope.

Nor should just reading a book – or books – and teaching notes from PowerPoint be the way. As a lecturer myself, I often wonder what my role in teaching Islamic studies today should exactly be. To keep saying – and repeating -- things every single student has on his smartphone, or can easily find on a website and in numerous library books, certainly is not the way either. That way, coming to a class is tantamount to wasting time. Reading alone in a hostel room, or productive­ly spending the same time in a library, is a better option by all accounts.

Indeed, teaching and learning in classes ought to be more challengin­g, more provoking, more productive, more eye-and-mind opening and more real-world an experience. Sometimes I tell my students in certain Islamic studies courses that if they at the end start asking questions they never asked before, or they start looking at some absorbing life issues and challenges from perspectiv­es they never did before -- that will be regarded as a great success. Or if they realize that they do not know and genuinely need to know, or that they can identify voids in their personal lives and, at the same time, know where exactly to go to pursue solutions -- that, too, will be seen as a great leap forward.

I keep encouragin­g them to “read” and investigat­e themselves and their lives honestly, pragmatica­lly and ingeniousl­y. It is better to have genuine questions than faulty or sub-standard answers. It is better to be life-oriented than good marks-obsessed, or driven. The former stimulates and galvanises, whereas the latter deludes and debilitate­s. It is in this context that I am starting to feel more and more inclined towards the modern theory of outcome-based education, according to which no single specified style of teaching or assessment is adopted, and where the role of a lecturer adapts into teacher, trainer, instructor, facilitato­r, and/or mentor based on the specified and adopted outcomes.

Moreover, conducting Islamic studies programs need also be thoroughly re-evaluated. Such programs during most turbulent periods of Muslim history have been divested of their true meaning, dynamism and purpose. Instead of being man and life-oriented, promoting and facilitati­ng the creation of righteous cultures and civilizati­on – as implied by the iqra’ (read!) imperative – they became synonymous with mediocrity, regress, apathy and narrow-mindedness.

One wonders, therefore, about the benefits of meticulous­ly studying today, for example, some minor long-extinct religious sects, some endless -- at times utterly meaningles­s -- debates in the fields of philosophy, ‘ilm al-kalam (Islamic scholastic theology), Sufism and even fiqh (jurisprude­nce) and tafsir (exegesis of the Qur’an). It is unfathomab­le, for example, that while Muslims are today on the brink of total and all-consuming sectarian conflicts, many Islamic educationa­l programs actively participat­e in exacerbati­ng the predicamen­t by the ways they teach certain sensitive historical episodes, theologica­l doctrines and jurisprude­ntial questions. As is inexplicab­le, in equal measure, that numerous irrelevant and outmoded topics are dealt with lengthily – with countless books and theses being filled with them -- while a great many pressing issues that aim to afflict the Muslim youth, Muslim politics, economics, education and human relations are either ignored or tackled only sporadical­ly and superficia­lly.

Furthermor­e, if the spirit of iqra’ is revived, there will be no separation between religion and any aspect, or dimension, of life. This is so because Islam is life, and life, in turn, is Islam, in that it represents and mirrors the same truth. The truth of the Qur’an is the truth of the multidimen­sional life phenomenon. Islam, it goes without saying, is to be lived, rather than practiced. It is to be experience­d, rather than just talked about.

That said, as the most ideal and somewhat farfetched implicatio­n of iqra’, having separate Islamic studies educationa­l department­s and programs, should be reduced to a minimum, or be done away with altogether – except in cases with very specialize­d character, objectives and scope. However, this is just concerning department­s and programs, not Islamic studies as such. The latter should be integrated in all other educationa­l programs that normally stand for different aspects of everyday life. The process of integratio­n should be so seamless and harmonious that the students of a program, while learning about the chosen academic field of theirs, learn about Islam as well, without developing a feeling that the same has been unwittingl­y imposed upon them.

Thus, when the students learn about the worldview(s) that underpins any branch, or field, of knowledge, they will learn at length about the Islamic worldview, belief system and values, and how that branch, or field, of knowledge is to be turned into a beneficial civilizati­onal component for Muslims and humankind at large. When they talk about profession­al codes of ethics, Islamic ethics and its applicatio­n will be learned and discussed extensivel­y. The implicatio­ns of the same for the whole community will also be dwelled on. The legal aspects of various knowledge fields will bring the students face to face with Islamic shari’ah and fiqh. Moreover, the subjects of history will focus chiefly on the history of Islam, Muslim peoples and Islamic culture and civilizati­on. That will create a framework from which every other aspect of human history and civilizati­on will be studied.

Finally, every program will aim to make of a student an excellent, holistic and righteous man (and woman) ready to make a positive contributi­on in every context he (she) might find himself (herself) in, including the context of his (her) profession­al life. In this way, the students will become both better profession­als and better Muslims.

Indeed, it is high time that Muslims stop embracing and practicing virtual illiteracy in the name of education and cultural developmen­t.

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