AJISS+8 3 3+ARTICLE+Muslim+Contributions+to+the+Ghulam Haider+Aasi
AJISS+8 3 3+ARTICLE+Muslim+Contributions+to+the+Ghulam Haider+Aasi
AJISS+8 3 3+ARTICLE+Muslim+Contributions+to+the+Ghulam Haider+Aasi
3, 1991 409
Ghulam-HaiderAasi
Their approach to religion was, however, a philosophical one. Thus all Greek
endeavors to comprehend religious phenomena are reduced to the categories
of allegory, psychology, history, or euphemism?
The contribution of the Christian West to the study of religion during
its early and middle ages is explained in terms of an apologetical or polemical
nature. Its approach to religious phenomena was based on a cultic approach,
because it had an intolerant and exclusive attitude towards other religions.
In comparing the Greek and the Christian attitudes towards other religions,
Eric Sharpe writes:
31bid.
‘Jacques Waardenburg, Classical Approaches to the Study of Religions: Aims, Methods,
and Zkeories of Research, 2 vols. (The Hague and Paris: Mouton, 1973).
412 The American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences Vol. 8, No. 3, 1991
studying and analyzing their works, we can enrich the history of the study
of religions and can thereby learn from the experiences of the past.
also refers to the names of d Tabari, al Mas‘iidi, and al Biriini and writes:
faint praise of one Muslim scholar or another. They were fully aware of the
Muslim contribution in this field of study, but denigrated all works that dealt
with this field and relegated them to universal histories, polemics,
heresiographies, dogmatics, and theology. It comes as no surprise that even
a1 Shaharast&i’s Kit& a1 Milal wa a1 N i h l , recently accepted by Western
historians of religion as the first written history of the world’s religions, had
been relegated to the genre of heresiography. The fate of his predecessors
and their works, upon which he drew and improved, still has not changed
much. On occasion, references are made to scholars of the history of religion
(like a1 Binini and Ibn Hazm), but no systematic study of their contribution
to this field has been made in either the Muslim world or in the West.
The interest of Muslim scholars in studying the phenomenon of religion
and its diversity is as old as the Qur’an itself. Muhammad‘s religious experience
took place in an environment where encounters among the practitioners of
Judaism, Christianity, Zoroastrianism/Manichaeism, and pre-Islamic Arab
religions of Associationism, Hanifism, Tribalism, and Naturism were possible
through trade caravans. The caravans offered the exchange of ideas as well
as the exchange of goods.
The Qur’an was sent to humanity with its definite position of tolerance
for earlier religions and with its definite understanding of the nature and
reality of religious diversity. Muhammad anxiously wanted and expected
everyone to embrace Islam as a religion of common sense and reason, since
it was a model of the Truth dictated by God. Nonetheless, he was time and
again reminded in the Qur’an that his duty and role was only that of a
messenger-prophet, a reminder- someone who was to warn, bring the good
tidings, and act as the teacher of the divine writ and wisdom>0The Qur’an
emphasized the formal, perfect, and final form of Islam (submission to the
will of God).It represented the final Shari‘ah (divine law and model way
of life). The Qur’an declares itself to be the final revelation of the will of
God.Accordingly, Muhammad is the last messenger-prophet to humanity.
It was he who showed his finality as “the prophet,” and Islam as “the religion.”
Nowhere, however, was the coexistence of other religious traditions with
Islam prohibited. Though distorted, deviant, imperfect, and incomplete forms
of Islam, these religious traditions still merited Islam’s protection>’Muhammad
therefore practiced religious tolerance, as formulated in the Qur’an, in his
encounters with adherents of other religions. He served as a model, through
his practice and teaching, to his companions and, through them, to the early
generations of Muslims.
l0Qur’an7188; 11:12;22:9; 26:115; 35:23; 46:9; 17:105; and many other verse describing
Muhammad as ndzir.
“Qur’an, 2:62, 148; 5:44-69; 22:17.
Ghulam-Haider Aasi Muslim Contributions 415
. lZBruceB. Lawrence, Shahmstani on Indian Religions, vol. 4, Religion and Society Series
(The Hague and Paris: Mouton, 1976), 5-preface. Mam Mez admits this fact even with a
better record. See Adam Mez, m e Renaissance of Islam (New York: AMS Press, 1975), 210 ff.
Ghulam-Haider Aasi Muslim Contributions 417
is objective, scientific, more coherent and consistent, and that they are based
upon original sources and direct observation, thus making their works a
presentation of these religions on their own terms. These are the criteria
that previous studies lacked. In the preface of Kitiib a1 Fisl j? a1 Milal wa
a1 Ahwii’ w a1 NihaZ, Ibn Hazm writes:
Similarly, after explaining his purpose and method for the study of Indian
religions and condemning the lack of objectivity among his predecessors in
the description of other ideas, systems of thought, and religious outlooks,
a1 Biriini writes:
Neither al Biriini nor Ibn Hazm inform us about the authors or the titles
of those works they believe to be unscientific and unsatisfactory. As there
is no other extant systematic study of other religions which can equal their
studies, we are left with hypotheses designating these works mentioned by
these two authors as the first scientific and objective works on the history
of religions.
Students of Islam are aware of the fact that an abundance of data on
world religions is’available in different Muslim scholarly wrks -works dealing
with universal hist6ry, geography, philosophy, theology, literary criticism and
belles lettres; Qur’anic commetaries, hadith commentaries, and fiqh literature.
These data were distributed according to the context of the main subject matter.
This is telling evidence that the history of religions was not known just to
theologically-orientedMuslim scholars but was also common knowledge among
scholars of various persuasions. The originality and importance of al Bi~iini’s
and Ibn Hazm’s studies lies in their ingenious development of methodology
and systematic analysis, later taken to a high-water mark in a1 Shaharastiini’s
study.
. One may ask why both of the above-mentioned authors and their works
have been ignored and why they did not attain even the same status as that
accorded to a1 Shaharastiini? The primary reason may be the fact that both
scholars are encyclopedicin their knowledge. Both have more than one magnum
opus in other sciences, while al Shaharastiini’s magnum opus is only on the
history of religions.
Many Muslim students of Ibn Hazm, especially in the modern period,
have been occupied either with his works on fiqh or on the history of belles
lettres; seldom have they felt the need to emphasize his contribution to the
history of religion^?^ Partly because this discipline (once the queen of all
sciences in the heyday of Muslim scholarship) had been ignored after the
onslaught of colonialism, and partly because of the downfall of the Muslim
empire, Muslim scholars became more concerned with the preservation of
~
I5MoshePerlmann, “The Medieval Polemics between Islam and Judaism,” in Religion in a Religious
Age, ed. S . D. Goiten (Cambridge, MA: Association for Jewish Studies, 1974), 103-138. See also his
“Eleventh Century Andalusian Authors on the Jews of Granada,” in American Academy for Jewish Research
Proceedings 28 (1948-1949), 269-290. It is noteworthy that Perlmann, who reduced Ibn Hazm’s studies
on religion to sheer polemics, the studies later produced on the same pattern as Sa’d bin Manqdr bin
Ka~~~nUnah’s Tanqib a1 Abgith fi a1 Mild a1 Thahth are claimed by him to be a study of comparative
religion. See Ibn Kummunahk Euuninution of Three k i t h s : A Thirteenth Century Essay in the Study
of Comparative Religion, ed. and trans. by Moshe Perlmann (Berkeley, CA: University of California
Press, 1971; Arabic Text, 1967). See its review in The Muslim ubrld 65 (Oct. 1975), 295-6. See also
Israel Friedlaender, Heterodoxies of the Shi’ites according ro b n Huzm (New Haven, CT: Jewish Theological
Seminary, 1909). George Makdisi’s criticism and analysis of Goldziher’s disparagement of the Hanbali
and Zahiri schools of Islamic law and their theological thought came to our notice after we had already
realized Goldziher’s and his followers views, in concurrence with Dozy and others, against Ibn H u m .
See George Makdisi’s “Hanbalite Islam,” in Studies on Islam, ed. and trans. by Merlin L. Swartz (New
York: Oxford University Press, 198l), 216-74.
420 The American Journal of I & m k Social Sciences Vol. 8, No. 3, 1991
their tradition and mre rigid and defensive, rather than open and analytic,
in their points of view.
The orbtalist scholars of Ibn Hazm, with the exception of Miguel Asin
palacios, studied his w r k s on belles-lettres, the psychology of lave, ethics,
and fiqh. Among his orientalist readers, one finds two different approaches
and attitudes tcrwards Ibn Han’s scholarlycontribution. One group ofscholm,
led by Ignaz Goldziher, studied Ibn Hazm’s literalist approach to fish and
his revivification of the Ziihiri school of Islamic law. Goldziier reduced all
of Ibn Hazm’s scholarly contribution to dogmath, polemics, and hemiogmphy
and labelled him the representative of the most conservative, fundamentalist,
and exclusivist stream of Muslim scholars. The second group of orientalists,
led by Miguel Asin Palacios (who, alone, thoroughly studied Ibn Hazm’s
Kifiib al declared Ibn Hazm the founder and unprecedeted scholar
of the history of religions. But their findings did not gain any following after
the 1930s. Though Palacios’ study of Ibn Hazm was a classic, it remained
an unconsultedand unused reference. His evaluation of Ibn Hazm was passed
by, although his analysis was never dispmed. Consequently, Ibn Hazm
continued to be described as the great Muslim polemicist and hemiograph
of medieval Muslim Spain rather than the founder of the history of religions
and biblical criticism.
As for al BinM, he had been mogmzedand acknowledgedas an objective
and scientific scholar of his time by both Muslim and non-Muslim scholars.
Nonetheless, his Kitiibfi w i g mii li al Hind has never been studied or
analyzed as a study of the Hindu religious tradition. There has been some
recent awareness of his contribution to the history of religions, but this
appreciation has not yet produced a thorough analysis of his study of the
Hindu religious tradition from the viewpoint ofthe history of religions. Students
of al B S n i have also been primarily occupied with his works on astronomy,
astrology, mathematics, geography, and history; little attention has been paid
to his contribution to the history of religions.
Conclusion
Both Ibn Hazm and al Biriini were great original thinkers and
encyclopedists and therefore cannot remain unknown or simply ignored by
serious students of Muslim intellectual history. The major point of complaint
and concern here is the lack of appreciation due to them by students of the
history of religions and religious ideas.
Thisjbrief and sketchy survey on Muslims scholars’ founding of and
contribution to the history of rehg~ons an attempt to remind Muslim historians
and social kientists that their pr&xessors conceived the reality of
Ghulam-Haider h i Muslim Contributions 421
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