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Terrorism: An Ideology or a Conspiracy

with all respect i think that there is a thing which i call 'religious superiority complex' & this thing is there in most of Muslims which screws up things for them & people around them

& people from all religions have it in them
 
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i disagree.
infact i think this is main reason for all the chaos in the world.
becoz every tom dick n harry thinks he is perfectly entitled to spread the knowledge.
and howcome its only the responsibilty of a muslim..??
every christian jew or hindu can do it too..becoz they all feel their religion is best.
if u want to seek knowledge through islam , its fine , but dont think its ure responsibilty to spread this.

like i said earlier there is no need to cry over the rooftops that my religion is better than yours , muslim youth should start focussing on science and moral values instead of religious teachings.

All Prophets came to link humanity with one God to fullfill their spritual and material needs.

This universe was created by God for limited time period , God wanted that all human being obey His laws and orders , so that God could send His blessing for them .

Almost all religion believe in God , but it responsibility of every human being to find the path or way of life ( religion) which is acceptable to God.

Your are right, no one have right to critise any religion.Every one has right to chose his way of life as per his wisdom and knowledge.
 
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Almost all religion believe in God , but it responsibility of every human being to find the path or way of life ( religion) which is acceptable to God.

again ure beating the same old drum.
no religion is perfect , u need to get out of this "god's religion" syndrome.
almight god doesnt care which religion one follow.
at the end of the day its our deeds that matter and not our beliefs.
 
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again ure beating the same old drum.
no religion is perfect , u need to get out of this "god's religion" syndrome.
almight god doesnt care which religion one follow.
at the end of the day its our deeds that matter and not our beliefs.

Our action always depend on our faith and believes ,so it is very important that faith should be right.
 
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The demand for Pakistan and Islam —Ishtiaq Ahmed


The Muslim League’s propaganda struck terror in the hearts of the Hindus and Sikhs who were told that they would be paying jazya and Islamic law will prevail in all sectors of individual and collective life. The minority Shia and Ahmediyya communities were also fearful that it would result in Sunni domination

The recent attack on a congregation of Ahmedis during prayers, which claimed more than 90 innocent lives, has revived a discussion as to whether there is a connection between the creation of Pakistan and Islam. Within the Muslim League there was always a constituency in favour of Pakistan becoming an Islamic state. One of its proponents was a close confident of Jinnah: Raja Sahib Mahmudabad, a Shia. In 1939 he wrote to the historian Mohibul Hassan:

“When we speak of democracy in Islam it is not democracy in the government but in the cultural and social aspects of life. Islam is totalitarian — there is no denying about it. It is the Quran that we should turn to. It is the dictatorship of the Quranic laws that we want — and that we will have — but not through non-violence and Gandhian truth” (Mushirul Hasan, 1997: 57-8).

If the March 23, 1940, Lahore Resolution be taken as the start of the Pakistan campaign, then Jinnah had to make a breakthrough in the Muslim-majority provinces of northwestern India — Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Punjab and Sindh — each of which had regional parties headed by Muslims. The Muslim League had to convince the Muslim voters in these provinces that their leaders were courting Hindus and Sikhs and thus were paving the way for Hindu Raj under the Indian National Congress. That opportunity arrived in July 1945 when the British government announced provincial elections for February 1946. Punjab Governor Sir Bertrand Glancy has recorded in several secret fortnightly reports (FR) the tactics that the Muslim League adopted during the long election campaign. In the FR of December 27, 1945, Glancy noted:

“Among Muslims the Leaguers are increasing their efforts to appeal to the bigotry of the electors. Pirs and maulvis have been enlisted in large numbers to tour the province and denounce all who oppose the League as infidels. Copies of the Holy Quran are carried around as an emblem peculiar to the Muslim League. Feroz [Khan Noon] and others openly preach that every vote given to the League is a vote cast in favour of the Holy Prophet (PBUH). These deplorable tactics, as I have frequently said, were only to be expected; they provide a grim augury of the future peace of India and they are certainly not easy for the Unionists to counter” (Lionel Carter, 2006: 160).

In the FR of February 2, 1946, Glancy wrote:

“The ML [Muslim League] orators are becoming increasingly fanatical in their speeches. Maulvis and pirs and students travel all round the province and preach that those who fail to vote for the League candidates will cease to be Muslims; their marriages will no longer be valid and they will be entirely excommunicated...It is not easy to foresee what the results of the elections will be. But there seems little doubt the Muslim League, thanks to the ruthless methods by which they have pursued their campaign of ‘Islam in danger’, will considerably increase the number of their seats and Unionist representatives will correspondingly decline” (Carter, 2006: 171).

Similar tactics were adopted in the campaigns in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Sindh. In his doctoral dissertation, India, Pakistan or Pakhtunistan?, Erland Jansson writes:

“The pir of Manki Sharif...founded an organisation of his own, the Anjuman-us-asfia. The organisation promised to support the Muslim League on the condition that Shariat would be enforced in Pakistan. To this Jinnah agreed. As a result the pir of Manki Sharif declared jihad to achieve Pakistan and ordered the members of his anjuman to support the League in the 1946 elections” (pg 166).

Jinnah wrote in November 1945 a letter to Pir Manki Sharif in which he promised that the Shariat would apply to the affairs of the Muslim majority. He wrote:

“It is needless to emphasise that the Constituent Assembly, which would be predominantly Muslim in its composition, would be able to enact laws for Muslims, not inconsistent with the Shariat laws and the Muslims will no longer be obliged to abide by the un-Islamic laws” (Constituent Assembly of Pakistan Debates, Volume 5, 1949, pg 46).


The Muslim League’s propaganda struck terror in the hearts of the Hindus and Sikhs who were told that they would be paying jazya and Islamic law will prevail in all sectors of individual and collective life. The minority Shia and Ahmediyya communities were also fearful that it would result in Sunni domination. This is obvious from the correspondence between the Shia leader Syed Ali Zaheer and Jinnah in July 1944 (G Allana, 1977: 375-9). Although the Council of Action of the All-Parties Shia Conference passed a resolution on December 25, 1945, rejecting the idea of Pakistan (SR Bakshi, 1997: 848-9), most Shias shifted their loyalty to the Muslim League in the hope that Pakistan will be a non-sectarian state. Initially the Ahmediyya were also wary and reluctant to support the demand for a separate Muslim state (Munir Report, 1954: 196). It is only when Sir Zafarullah was won over by Jinnah that the Ahmedis started supporting the demand for Pakistan. To all such groups Jinnah gave assurances that Pakistan will not be a sectarian state.

In my forthcoming book on the partition of Punjab, now running into more than 1,000 pages but which is at last completed and for which I am now looking for a publisher, I will shed light on how the fierce Islamist propaganda impacted on the partition of Punjab. The Sikhs had more fears than anyone else about what could happen to minorities in Pakistan. In a meeting in May 1947 sponsored by Lord Mountbatten to help the Muslims and Sikhs reach an agreement on keeping Punjab united, Jinnah offered the Sikhs all the safeguards they wanted if they agreed to support Pakistan. Only in March 1947 some 2,000-10,000 Sikhs — depending on who you cite — were butchered in the Rawalpindi rural areas so the Sikhs were very wary of Jinnah’s overtures. Chief Minister of Patiala Hardit Singh Malik writes he had an inspiration and asked Jinnah: “Sir you are making all the promises but God forbid if something happens to you, what will happen then?” The exact words Jinnah used in reply will be revealed in my forthcoming book, but the reasoning was that his followers will treat his words as sacred.
 
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Please be informed that darse nazame is complete education system sucessfully working from last 400 years, which include mathematics,muntaq,medicine,fiqa,tafseer ,Hadees etc .

These graduates dont need to wait for job and million of students are studing in these Islamic schools .

Graduate from government institution could not have job ,even professionals doctors and engineers could not fullfill their expenses with present government salary structure but they are eligible of zakat.

Setting the Record Straight: The Non-Miracle of Islamic Science - WikiIslam

There was no known european scientist uptill 15 century.:lol:

Quran is source of all beneficial knowledge and Islam encourage to seek knowledge the first word of Quran is Iqra ( meaning read).For example 1400 years ago Quran told us the process of Birth of Child .

Islam discourage matrialism

"Mathematics", "Fiqah" "Tafseer"....!!! Sounds impressive. Imam Ghazali said study of mathematics is useless as such knowledge that sum of angles of a triangle is equal to two right angles is of no practical use. Might be darse nizami is teaching similar kind of mathematics.

And so what if there was no western scientist prior to 1500...??? This is the period when Muslim world was in darkness. Period of Ibn-e-Rushd was about 1300. He ... who was disregarded by the Muslim society, invoked the spirit of rational inquiry in western mind. Because Ibn-e-Rushd was in Spain.

Before 1500, West was also deeply religious and dogmatic. They did not learn any religion in 1500. They have learned "rational inquiry" by that time. Now we are really irrational as compared with West.

And where Muslims learned science...??? It were the translations (Mainly done in the time of Mamoon Rasheed) of Greek and Indian Books which introduced science to Muslims.
 
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Hon khuramonline,

I would like to add that greatest critic of Mutazalite movement was Imam Ahmad ibne Hanbal. Al Mamun and Imam Hanbal were contemporaries. Imam Al Ghazali was born in 1058, more than 200 years later.

This is however true that Imam Ghazali rejected rationality and denounced Greek philosophers such as Socrates and Aristotle. His influence on contemporary Islamic thought was profound and he was primarily responsible for the elimination of Ijtehad from the four original principals “Quran, Sunnah, Qiyas and Ijtehad”.

In my humble opinion, Imam Ghazali's ideas were a reaction to the philosophers such as Allama Al Razi (865-925), who questioned the very basis of religion and theorized that religion led to violence.

I beg to differ with your comments on Iqbal. If you happen to do research on Iqbal' life; you will find that he had a very inquisitive mind. Iqbal even briefly flirted with Mirza Ahmad of Qadian. He also wrote a letter to Attaullah Shah Bukhari (chosen as Amir e Shariat in 1930) inquiring whether the Amir (Hazrat Omar R.A.) had the authority to include ‘Assalata khairum min an noam’ in the morning azaan and formalize the Traveeh prayers during Ramadan. These practices did not exist during the life of the prophet (PBUH).

My view is that religion doesn’t lead to violence but “Dogma” does. I would define dogma as any set of principles; whether religious or secular; who's adherents believe that all others are totally wrong.

Would one call terrorism an ideology? Possibly but a conspiracy? Not in my view.

Thyankyou Niaz for the comments. I agree with your point about Dogma. About Allama Iqbal,,, I only mentioned his ideological approach which was predominantly anti-rational in nature.

Khird ki guthiyan suljha chuka main
Ya mere Maula mujhe Sahib-e-Janoon Ker

If he compares Aqal-o-Khirad with Janoon, Ishq, Masti,,,, he always prefers Ishq, Janoon, Masti. This is anti rational ideology which is retarding to scientific approach. This approach only can produce Janoon Musical Group sort of things. I think Janoon Group even have sung "Ya Rub Dil-e-Muslim ko wo zinda Tammanna de" ... in their popular PoP style.
 
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Most Terrorist groups work with foreign intelligence agencies. They lack a true agenda and only seek to cause harm, fear and destruction.

In the case of Pakistan, they kill, maim and injure innocent men, women and children. If you see any ideology in that, its called ''Foreign Sponsored'' and on our part, poor internal security but then again, how to do you defend against such lunacy, its not organized group.

There is much to learn and better equipment for us to procure to deal with these groups.

We need to improve our domestic security apparatus, intelligence gathering, infiltrate, expose them to domestic/international media and send/encourage these ''chickens'' to go back to the countries that fund them, where im sure they can find many more soft targets.
 
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Thyankyou Niaz for the comments. I agree with your point about Dogma. About Allama Iqbal,,, I only mentioned his ideological approach which was predominantly anti-rational in nature.

Khird ki guthiyan suljha chuka main
Ya mere Maula mujhe Sahib-e-Janoon Ker

If he compares Aqal-o-Khirad with Janoon, Ishq, Masti,,,, he always prefers Ishq, Janoon, Masti. This is anti rational ideology which is retarding to scientific approach. This approach only can produce Janoon Musical Group sort of things. I think Janoon Group even have sung "Ya Rub Dil-e-Muslim ko wo zinda Tammanna de" ... in their popular PoP style.

Your post remind me one Kalam of Bullah Shah

" Mein wich mein na rah gai raai, Jab sang Piya Peet lagai"
 
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with all respect i think that there is a thing which i call 'religious superiority complex' & this thing is there in most of Muslims which screws up things for them & people around them

& people from all religions have it in them
Religious superiority is common thing in almost all the western Abrahamic religions ..Judaism/christianity/Islam.
 
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@ajtir

Only in March 1947 some 2,000-10,000 Sikhs — depending on who you cite — were butchered in the Rawalpindi rural areas so the Sikhs were very wary of Jinnah’s overtures. Chief Minister of Patiala Hardit Singh Malik writes he had an inspiration and asked Jinnah: “Sir you are making all the promises but God forbid if something happens to you, what will happen then?” The exact words Jinnah used in reply will be revealed in my forthcoming book, but the reasoning was that his followers will treat his words as sacred.

thank god finally you have solved the unsolvable question who started the massacre of 1947!! muslims blamed the sikhs and the sikhs the muslims!! :hitwall::disagree:

however today you have finally fixed all that! and please

Jinnah's saying was:

We must work our destiny in our own way and present to the world an economic system based on true Islamic concept of equality of manhood and social justice. We will thereby be fulfilling our mission as Muslims and giving to humanity the message of peace which alone can save it and secure the welfare, happiness and prosperity of mankind. Speech at the opening ceremony of State Bank of Pakistan, Karachi July 1, 1948
 
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Most Terrorist groups work with foreign intelligence agencies. They lack a true agenda and only seek to cause harm, fear and destruction.

In the case of Pakistan, they kill, maim and injure innocent men, women and children. If you see any ideology in that, its called ''Foreign Sponsored'' and on our part, poor internal security but then again, how to do you defend against such lunacy, its not organized group.

u guys should get out of this "foreign hand " bubble , and start taking responsibilites for the evil in ure society.
blaming foreign agencies is not the solution , infact its not even true.

like i said earlier , everything is happening in the name of the religion , so the only solution is , take religion out of politics , attract ure youth towards science and tech. instead of religious blind faiths.

according to me the only way to curb terrorism in muslim countries today is to--
1. stop preaching hate in the name of religion
2. ban the madrasas.
3. ban sharia. promote democracy.
4. stop claiming that islam is best or better than any other religion. teach youth that all religions are same , n implementing democracy will be one way of doing that.
i wonder on one hand muslim youth demand for sharia law , on teh other hand they talk about religious equality.

islamic lands will never be in peace with others , till they time they drop this idea of being religiously superior to others.
feeling proud of our religion is one thing , but the feeling should not go wild , n this is vats happening in muslim countries , therefore , terrorism.
 
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In the case of Pakistan, they kill, maim and injure innocent men, women and children. If you see any ideology in that, its called ''Foreign Sponsored''

its utter nonsense.
they were not doing this becoz of foreign hand.
they were doing this becoz they are too religious.
they were doing all these crimes becoz they were following sharia.
hiding head under the sand is not the solution , one should have the guts to accept the wrong.
 
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Thyankyou Niaz for the comments. I agree with your point about Dogma. About Allama Iqbal,,, I only mentioned his ideological approach which was predominantly anti-rational in nature.

Khird ki guthiyan suljha chuka main
Ya mere Maula mujhe Sahib-e-Janoon Ker

If he compares Aqal-o-Khirad with Janoon, Ishq, Masti,,,, he always prefers Ishq, Janoon, Masti. This is anti rational ideology which is retarding to scientific approach. This approach only can produce Janoon Musical Group sort of things. I think Janoon Group even have sung "Ya Rub Dil-e-Muslim ko wo zinda Tammanna de" ... in their popular PoP style.

Allama Iqbal’s Approach towards the issue of Rationality:

Posted by khuram on August 27, 2006

Iqbal, basically was not a Rational Philosopher. He was a Scholastic (Mutakkalim — Mahir-e-Ilm-ul-Kalam). Scholasticism basically is such an attempt whereby Scholastic scholars try to interpret their religion in such a way as to show that religious doctrines are in perfect harmony with the established rational philosophies.

As I pointed out in another post on the topic of “Scientific Revolution and Muslim World” that roots of early Muslim philosophers could be found in Mutazillah faith. Mutazilities were the first ever Scholastics (Mutakalims) in Islam. Thus Yaqub Alkindi, Al-Farabi and Ibn-e-Sina etc. were also basically Scholastic scholars. All of them had tried to resolve the apparent differences between the doctrines of Islam and the work of such rational Philosophers as Aristotle and Plato.

All of these Muslim scholars however committed a common mistake. They mistakenly took the work of Platinus, a first century B.C mystic type philosopher as an original work of Aristotle. Both Plato and Aristotle were pro-rational philosophers but Platinus was inspired by mysticism of Pythagoras. In this way elements of Greek mysticism entered in the work of above-mentioned Muslim scholars. Platinus was not pro-rational in the strict sense but under the influence of Plato, he did assign due importance to rationality in his otherwise pure mystic type doctrines. This point basically deceived Muslim philosophers and they considered those doctrines as the original work of Aristotle, who was a complete Rationalist Philosopher. So the work of Muslim Philosophers was aimed at bringing harmony between the religious doctrines of Islam with such Greek rational doctrines, which had been contaminated by the elements of mysticism. Muslim Philosophers had tried to get understanding of religious doctrines based on strong rational footings. Their intention was admirable and it might had got ultimate success also just if they had successfully segregated the mystic elements from the rational elements of Greek thought.

Just like early Muslim philosophers had tried to bring harmony between Islamic religious doctrines and rational doctrines of Aristotle and Plato, Allama Iqbal also had tried to bring ‘harmony’ between Islamic doctrines and the doctrines of Western philosophers, who were popular in his time. Thus Iqbal had tried to bring harmony between Islamic doctrines and the works of such Western philosophers as Rousseau, Fichte, Neitzsche, Bergson, Loyed Margon, Alexander Ward etc. etc. In addition, Iqbal also incorporated various elements of Muslim Sufism in his work. Iqbal also had taken the negative meanings of the emergence of Quantum Physics in his time. He had viewed it as a defeat to classical physics. He also equalized this ‘defeat’ of classical physics as a ‘victory’ of religion.

Iqbal, in his work, had adopted many anti-rational elements out of the work of Rousseau, Neitzsche and Bergson. Rousseau, in his work, had preferred ‘passions’ (jazbat) to ‘rationality’ (aqal). The same thing reflected in the work of Iqbal where he gave preference to ‘Ishq’ (obviously a kind of passion) over ‘rationality’.

Bergson was another anti-rationalist. According to him, human rationality particularly was incapable to understand the true nature of time or ‘duration’. For him, ultimate reality could be found in the true meaning of his ‘duration’. But this purpose could not be achieved by using intellect or rationality. Only ‘intuition’, according to him, could find that ultimate reality. According to Bergson, Rationality can understand ‘time’ only in terms of ‘minutes’ and ‘seconds’ etc. whereas reality is that each and every moment of time continuously keeps on creating new and new features to the universe. He calls this phenomenon as ‘creative evolution’ and considers it as the ultimate reality of universe. Since rationality sees time just in mechanical terms of minutes and seconds, so it cannot get the true knowledge of ‘creative evolutionary’ aspect of duration. Only intuition, according to Bergson, can find out this reality. Bergson has conceived ‘intuition’ as equivalent to such ‘instincts’, which acquire the quality of ‘self cognition’. So according to Bergson, only the ‘intuition’ (i.e. self-aware instinct) can find out the ultimate reality of ‘creative evolutionary’ duration. This reality, which intuition finds in this way cannot be communicated to others with the help of written or spoken words. So reality can be found only through personal intuitive experience. Bergson also discusses the role of ‘rationality’, which just serves the purpose of converting that non-communicate-able pure reality into the shape of less pure but communicate-able form of written or spoken words of language. In this way, ‘intuition’ produces the knowledge of reality. This original knowledge is pure but cannot be communicated to others in this pure form. Role of rationality is secondary. Rationality converts this pure knowledge into impure form that can be communicated to others in the form of written or spoken words.

What Iqbal has done? He has picked the same concept of Bergson’s ‘intuition’ with the same meaning and has given preference to this concept of intuition over rationality. He also says that only intuition gives pure knowledge but this pure knowledge cannot be communicated. By just following the Bergson’s course, he says that rationality can be used to convert this pure knowledge into impure form and so knowledge can be communicated but only in impure form. Just like Bergson, Iqbal also says that pure knowledge can be acquired only through personal ‘intuitive’ experience. Rationality cannot produce any knowledge. Rationality only converts pure knowledge into impure but communicate-able form. See that for the purpose of getting new knowledge, there is no need of rational inquiry according to Bergson and Iqbal.

Bergson’s views deserve heavy criticism. Despite the traditional criticism, these views are not acceptable to me because of my own views about how new ideas are generated by mind. I myself have worked on the issues of how new ideas come to mind. I am having the opinion that only rationality produces new ideas. At first new ideas (in the form of compound ideas etc.) are formed inside mind in such way that gives the vague feelings that something new has been known. This thing has been considered to be ‘intuitive product’ by Bergson. I consider it the product of rationality. Bergson considers it as pure knowledge. I consider it as vogue and less transparent knowledge. According to Bergson, his intuitive and ‘pure’ knowledge could be made into ‘impure’ but ‘communicate-able’ through the application of rationality. In my opinion, that ‘vogue’ and ‘less transparent’ knowledge can be made into solid, more transparent and more explanatory by purposeful thinking and deep rational inquiry, which are more advanced features of human rationality. In another post, where I have presented some aspects of my views about ideas, I have shown that in producing any form of new knowledge, mind only arranges and re-arranges the already available pieces of information. I, in my work, have defined ‘intellect’ as the ability of mind that it can arrange and re-arrange various sets of information. So the process of creation of ‘new’ knowledge takes place under the control of ‘intellect’ or ‘rationality’. At first instance, rationality can produce only vague and less transparent ideas. Those vague and less transparent ideas can be made into more transparent and more explanatory through the processes of deep purposeful thinking and analysis, which are advanced features of same rationality.

What cannot be communicated cannot be regarded as ‘pure’ just because it cannot be communicated. Actually it could not be communicated just because it was not sufficiently elaborated or it had not acquired sufficient transparency and explanatory power so as to be successfully communicated. What cannot be communicated can be better termed as ‘vogue’ or ‘less transparent’ etc. One who knows something new in ‘vogue’ and ‘less transparent’ form finds oneself unable to successfully communicate it to others. If that person makes his mind more clear about that vogue or less transparent idea after thinking and analysis, then he can bring sufficient elaboration in that idea that now it becomes communicate-able. A more elaborated idea would be better than a vogue idea. Bergson and Iqbal are having the view that more elaborated idea would be ‘impure’ whereas that vogue idea would be ‘pure’.

Actually this ‘intuition’ has deceived many Sufi-type philosophers. It is another interesting fact that only Bergson has tried to define the term ‘intuition’. Otherwise, it always has been regarded as something very mysterious, which at once can convey the knowledge of reality to Sufi etc. Bergson is actually a Sufi by heart. According to Bertrend Russell, Bergson has just presented old Sufism using modern terminology of biology such as ‘instincts’ etc. Iqbal is also a Sufi, though explicitly he has reacted against Wahdat-ul-Wajood. Actually there are many other things in Iqbalian thought where he has assumed clear contradictory positions. Iqbal has presented his views in the form of poetry but his detailed views about philosophical matters are found in his lectures on ‘Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam’. His poetry is full of exaggerations and cannot serve the purpose of any systematic philosophy. ‘Reconstruction of Religious Thought’ is actually an attempt to ‘modernize’ the Islamic Theology. He has taken many of the views from above mentioned western philosophers as well as even from Wahdat-ul-Wajoody Sufism and has presented them in the name of new Islamic Theology.

There is clear difference between the approach of ancient Muslim philosophers and that of Iqbal. Ancient Muslim Philosophers like Al-Farabi and Ibn-e-Sina also had tried to present Islamic Theology on strong rational footings. But, for doing it, they openly had admitted that their works were the attempt to bring harmony between the doctrines of religion and those of Plato and Aristotle. Allama Iqbal however never has admitted that he has taken such and such ideas from the works of such and such western or Muslim Sufi Scholar. Instead, he has presented these ideas and has given supporting proofs by manipulating the meanings of various teachings of Islamic Sacred books in a way which was suitable to his context. Original meanings of those teachings do not come up to the meanings, which Iqbal takes for his purpose. For example, he has taken the same meaning of ‘time’ as had been taken by Bergson. But Iqbal uselessly has tried to show that he had taken that meaning of time from the work of ancient Muslim scholars.

FICHTE belonged to post Napoleon-war Germany. He had tried to re-build the morale of German nation after their defeat in the hands of Napoleon, with the help of his philosophy of ‘Egoism’. According to him ‘Absolute Ego’, an impersonal entity – i.e. instead of religion’s God who possesses ‘personality’, was the ‘ultimate reality’. All humans also possess ‘personal egos’ which have been originated (emanated) from the same ‘Absolute Ego’. This Absolute Ego, according to Fichte, was in the state of transition towards stronger positions. (Remember that aim before Fichte was to give strength to the ego of German nation after their defeat … with the view to restore the morale of nation.) Fichte also asserted that those individuals who successfully strengthen their personal egos, not only contribute to the purpose of Universe as a whole, but also they could ensure the survival of their individual personalities even after death.

What Iqbal has done? In his new Theology, Iqbal has adopted the same concept of Ego by the name of ‘Khudi’ and Fichte’s ‘Absolute Ego’ has become ‘Ana-e-Mutliq’ for Iqbal. There is one important difference however. Fichte had conceived Absolute Ego as the ultimate reality. That ultimate reality was of a non-religious type. Iqbal only has given this non-religious type ultimate reality a religious touch. He also conceives ‘Ana-e-Mutlaq’ as the ultimate reality but in addition, he has equalized this ‘ultimate reality’ to God. Individuals, on the other hand possess personal ‘khudies’, which have been emanated (originated … In a manner in which light originates from sun) from Ana-e-Mutlaq. See that in this scheme, individuals have not been ‘created’ by God but individual khudies (individuals) have been ‘emanated’ from Ana-e-Mutlaq (God). Just like Fichte’s views, Iqbal’s Ana-e-Mutlaq is also in the state of transition towards stronger positions. Individuals who try to give strength to their khudies (through ‘ishq’, ‘riazat’ etc. etc. i.e. not through using rationality) contribute to the purpose of Ana-e-Mutlaq. Again just like Fichte, In Iqbalian system also, individuals who possess strong khudies can survive death also. It’s meaning is that persons who did not possess strong khudies shall not be given any life after their death. According to Iqbal, a person who wants to die forever can do it provided he must not try to give any strength to his khudy. So there are no such things as paradise and hell in Iqbalian new Theology. Just like SATAN is hero of Milton (Remember a famous quotation by Milton: “Better to reign in Hell, than serve in Heaven” – Milton’s work relates to Romantic movement in literature) , Iblees is the hero of Iqbal. Iqbal also was influenced by Romantic writers/ scholars like Milton etc.

At this point, it seems necessary to give a mention of two main forms of Theology. Theology is any systematic theory about God and about the relationship of God with the Universe. In Theology, there always have been two different types of views about God. First one is the ‘Transcendental View of God’ (Mawarayi) and the second is ‘Imminentalist View of God’ (Suryani). Semitic religions like Judaism, Christianity and Islam etc. possess the ‘Transcendental View of God’ (Mawarayi Khuda). Its meaning is that these religions conceive God as a ‘personality’ whose existence is separate from and is independent of the existence of material universe. God existed in those times also when there was no existence of material world. The relationship between God and Universe is that of a Creator and creature.

Second view, which is mainly held by Arian nations, is known as ‘Imminentalist’ (Suryan) view of God. According to this view, God is not viewed as any personality. There is no separate existence of God and Universe. God actually pervades (Taari-o-Saari Hona) in the whole Universe. The relationship between God and Universe is not that of Creator and creature but is that of soul and body. If God is viewed as a ‘soul’ of Universe then it means that God did not exist before the existence of material world. Actually, according to Imminatalism, God and Universe neither had any origin and nor would have any end.

It is clear that Islamic concept of God is that of Transcendental. First of all Fichte’s ‘Absolute Ego’ is an impersonal entity. Iqbal has equalized this impersonal entity with God. So Iqbalian Theology talks of an ‘Imminantalist’ God and this view has to be contradictory with the Islamic doctrines.

Secondly, Iqbal was also influenced by an Evolutionary School of Thought, which is known as “Emergent Evolution”. Alexander Ward and Loyed Margon were the main proponents of this school of thought. According to Prof. Alexander, (In Europe, name of one of Iqbal’s teacher was Alexander … I am not confirmed however whether he was same Prof. Alexander) the whole Universe is in the process of evolution. Non-living matter first evolved into the form of plant life. Then plant life evolved into animal life. This life ultimately has been evolved into the shape of human mind. According to him, it seems wrong to assume that human mind was the last stage in the evolution of universe. He says that universe is moving towards another stage of evolution. He calls this stage to be Divinity. He says that relationship of human mind to Divinity is similar to the relationship of animal life to human mind. According to him, just like human mind has been evolved from animal life, in the same way, Divinity shall evolve from human mind. Thus universe is not complete at the moment because it is still in the process of evolution.

Under the influence of these views, Iqbal has conceived reality to be in the process of continuous evolution. According to him, God pervades (taari-o-saari hai) in this evolutionary reality. Here Iqbal explicitly adopts the imminentalist view of God. According to him, since reality is ‘evolutionary’, so Transcendental God will have to be considered indifferent and having no linkage with the affairs of material world. By saying that God pervades in such an evolutionary reality, Iqbal is saying that God is also in the process of evolution. To be in the process of evolution means to be still incomplete etc.

So there is variety in Iqbalian thought but neither Iqbal has given this variety any systematic shape, nor anything can be regarded as pro-rationality in this confused bundle (Iqbalian thought) of a handsome variety of ideas.


I think Iqbal approach is more realistic and practical .

Western scientisfic development rational theories failed to provide them spiritual needs that is result their suicidel rate is much higher.
 
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