Author's Preface
I did not plan to write Tize Eternal Message of Muhammad as a book. My
intention in writing the original essays was to clarify for Muslims some
of the principles and origins of their society, faith, and revealed Law,
and to speak of the life of their Prophet. It was not my intention to apologize
or preach to non-Muslims.
I may have been inspired also by fear of the onslaught of materialistic
logies to which some older cultures in many European lands already have
succu.
"Islam," writes a Christian historian, "is at once a culture and a religion,
and in which the culture can hardly be conceived of as existing apart from
religion." Consequently, if the Muslims lose their religion, they lose
with it their culture and undergo a process of social dissolution. Moreover,
the Arab nation (to which I belong), itself a creation of Islamic culture,
would also cease to exist through the inevitable process of disintegration.
It therefore seems vital to defend our society against the impact of alien
ultures, particularly those consumed by a materialistic out.
The nineteenth and twentieth centuries have seen Muslim society and institutions
exposed to the impact of European culture, which has been influencing Muslim
ways and thought and not always advantageously. European culture derives
from older creeds and cultures of the same general back ground from which
Muslim society draws its inspiration and strength. Christianity and Judaism
are both recognized by the Koran as having a similar origin to that of
Islam, and this gives them a common meeting ground.
In the twentieth century, Europe,
both East and West, has been gradually losing the religious culture it
inherited from previous centuries, and it has become proud and cynical
in its scientific achievement and technological success. Today, a large
part of the modern world worships its own image. On the other hand, Marxian
socialism and welfare capitalism are alike creating rituals for the new
materialistic creeds and philosophies in the West as well as in the Communist
East.
The God of the universe, of Jews, Christians, Muslims, and all, is being
dethroned in favor of an idol to which all kneel and offer sacrifices;
that idol is called "a high standard of living." It is becoming the object
of unanimous reverence in our material age. In spite of the tug and attraction
from both East and West, the Muslims still hesitate and doubt; they hate
to join in the celebration of materialistic idols and creeds, but they
are nevertheless attracted by the prospect of a higher standard of living.
Some of our people are being indoctrinated with the philosophies, dogmas,
and rituals of the materialistic faith, but the majority of the Muslims
in Africa and Asia are still confused and disturbed. They have known for
a long time that they have a faith, a revealed Law, a society, and principles
which cal for a state that is neither secular nor theocratic but possibly
both, and that is neither autocratic nor demagogic. Muslim society is based
on the freedom of the individual and the equality of everyone. Muslim society
is in its essence a free, classless society. It is classless not on the
basis of any economic theory but on the basis of its egalitarian laws and
its refusal to recognize distinction and honor except through piety and
submission to the revealed Law, whose fundamental principles are universal,
humane, and democratic. Nothing that is preached by the East or West is
new to the Muslims. Reason is essential in judging even their dogmas and
matters of faith, just as independent reasoning is one of the four sources
of their jurisprudence.
Therefore, they are often troubled when told that these modern ideologies
are the fruit of modern science and a ripe Western civilization. They ask
themselves if it is rely necessary to part with the Creator of the universe
in order to share the fruits of modern science and technology. Must they
ignore their beloved prophets, their tolerant universal culture, and their
nation to enjoy the benefits of this age? Are they to part with their humane
society and relaxed life, their trust in the inevitability of a destiny
directed and ruled by the elmighty?
They refuse to believe that human destiny and history are ruled and determined
by a class struggle, for a system of wages. They do not believe, either,
that a classless society on a material basis will be the fulfillment of
history or of human destiny. The pretension that the eternal universe is
planned for such an economic theory, or for a higher standard of living,
is incomprehensible to the Muslim mind. Are they to give up the solidarity
and mutual welfare which they enjoy with their families, relatives, neighbors
because of such reasoning and to join in the general rush for the various
societies of a godless East or West?
These are some of the questions agitating the minds and hearts of those
conscious and responsible among the six hundred million Muslims of all
races and nations.
I have tried, in these pages, to
give a few answers to these matters.
Islam is different from Judaism; Islam, being a universal submission to
God, has no concept of a particular Covenant or a specially chosen people.
It also differs from the Christian view of the Kingdom of God in heaven
and the separate kingdom of Caesar on earth. And it differs from other
religions, such as Buddhism and Hinduism. Islam is a faith, a law, a way
of life, a "nation," and a "state," with a system of jurisprudence that
is continually evolving for the administration of this world and the satisfaction
of human needs under the sovereignty of our Creator. Islam's Kingdom of
God on earth, with its faith, its laws, piety, rituals, society, and state,
is the prelude and the means to the afterlife.
The Muslims, while sharing many of the beliefs and precepts of other religions,
particularly Judaism and Christianity, have a limited common ground with
modern materialistic ideologies. Islam may share a belief in the importance
of this world, the Kingdom on earth, but asks, "Why without God, the Creator?"
And why a life whose rituals are based solely on economics? With such ideologies,
Islam finds no possibility of compromise, being, as I have tried to point
out in this book, a religion, a culture, a way of life, and an indivisible
nation with an independent jurisprudence. Its classless community of partners
has evolved from a totally different philosophy. It refuses to allow its
indivisible culture and faith to be set aside in the pursuit of a planned
economy or adjustment to a welfare state. Islam's institutions are unique;
they do not compromise with materialist dogmas. It stands firm on individual
piety and individual freedom, a close-knit family Devoted to the welfare
of every relative, and a classless, benevolent society.
Though this book, The Eternal Message 0f Muhammad, may be lacking in scholarly
gifts, it is a serious attempt to point out the Muslim answers to today's
world. It was first published in Arabic in 1946. It was translated and
later published by Muslim scholars in Indonesia and Turkey. Its second
Arabic edition, to which a section on the Muslim state and constitution
was added, was published in Cairo in 1954. To this English translation
I have added a new section, written directly in English, on the life of
the Prophet, and a number of explanatory comments and notes. Whatever may
be said about the book, we have no indication that during this period any
of its material has been disputed by Muslim jurists or scholars in Muslim
lands. New York City A.R.A.
Say [0 muslims]: We believe in Allah
and that which is revealed unto us and that which was revealed unto Abraham,
and Ishmael,
and Isaac, and Jacob, and the tribes,
and that which Moses and Jesus received, athat which the Prophets received
from their Lord. We make no distinction between any of them, and unto him
we have surrendered [we are Muslims].
KORAN, 2:136