Prof. Henry Francis B. Espiritu
Global Research
5 November 2017
“And thou wilt find the nearest in friendship to the believers to be
those who say, ‘We are Christians’. That is because there are priests
and monks among them and because they are not proud.” (Al-Qur-an, Surah Maidah: 82)
The
contemporary mass media portray Islamic societies to be intolerant of
other’s religious and ideological persuasions. The purpose of this paper
is not to examine whether the contemporary media is right or wrong in
perceiving Islamic societies as intolerant. My aim in this essay is to
show that authentic Islam—as contained in the pristine revelation of
the Qur-an—promotes tolerance, harmony, and goodwill of all peoples despite their differences.
Maulana Muhammad Ali,
in his encounters with Christian missionaries, was able to articulate
and apply the ethical principles of dialogue and tolerance, which were
already laid down by the Holy Qur-an (namely in Surah Nahl:125 and in Surah Ankabut:46).
Maulana Muhammad Ali understood tolerance as something inherent in our
being persons of good will; and that this divine awareness of good
intention leads us to respect the viewpoint of the other person even if
we do not subscribe to his creedal tenets. The verse in Surah Nahl:125
encourages Muslims to dialogue with the religious “other” in the spirit
of sincere courtesy, profound sensitivity, and deep respect for each
other’s differences, by granting a concordant presumption that the
other’s intention in striving to convert another person is due to good
will (i.e., for the “other’s” spiritual salvation).
Before elaborating further on Ustaz Abu Ya’qub al-Sijistani’s view of the Qur-an as the guardian and verifier of previous divinely revealed books and the implications of this Qur-anic guardianship
to an Islamic framework of tolerance, a brief historical background of
Ustaz Sijistani’s life is in order. Ustaz Abu Ya’qub Sijistani—although
himself an Isma’ili Shi’a—maintained amicable relations with the
orthodox Sunni majority during the period of the Fatimid Caliphate
(i.e., 10th-11th century
A.D.). To the dismay of the rabid Shi’as, Ustaz Sijistani forbade his
disciples to curse the first three Caliphs of Islam (Khulafa-ar-Rashidin);
warning them, that Prophet Muhammad lavished praise on these three
Caliphs, and therefore, it is never right and against Islamic prudence
to curse whom the Prophet had abundantly praised.
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Global Research
5 November 2017

Introduction: Context and Commitment
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The
current expansion in mass media and communications reveal more
evidently that our world contains variety of cultures, races, religions,
and ideologies. Despite globalization and its attendant efforts towards
homogeneity, ours is still a pluralist world. As such, tolerance is a
foundational notion and a very relevant conceptual and practical
prerequisite in establishing a pluralistic society. In pluralism’s point
of view, people living in a society with varied religious, cultural,
and ideological commitments should enjoy equal rights and should not
sacrifice their beliefs at the mercy of the hegemonic ideology of a
particular State or of the dominant religion of the majority community.
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In
our highly globalized world, tolerance and amity are all the more
needed for the survival, cohesion, and progress of its citizens.
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Professor Henry Espiritu (right)
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In this paper, I want to reflect straight from the original source of Islamic tenets (i.e., the Qur-an)
the tolerant attitude of Islam vis-à-vis religious, cultural, and
ideological diversities found in human societies. Likewise, I will
endeavor to show various thematic perspectives found in selected
passages of the Qur-an that
encourage tolerance and societal concord. Side by side with my
exposition of authentic Islam’s framework of tolerance, I will likewise
provide several historical instantiations of this “spirituality of
tolerance” in the lives of selected Muslim savants and revered Islamic
personalities of various epochs in their encounter with Christians.
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I sincerely hope that by showing the tolerant and pluralistic pronouncements of the Qur-an,
and the historical instantiations of tolerance manifested in the
exemplary lives of these prominent Muslims as they relate with
Christians, I will be able to encourage Muslims to fully practice and
live-out the Islamic mandates of amity and inter-religious understanding
in their daily lives. Moreover, I further hope that in this essay, I
will be able to inform non-Muslims that genuine Islam—as contained in
the Qur-anic revelation, in
the model conduct of the Prophet, and in the exemplary lives of pious
Muslim personages—is a very tolerant religion that acknowledges and
respects the divergent beliefs and ideological views of others.
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The Dynamics of Tolerance: Philosophical, Metaphysical, and Mystical Presuppositions
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Firstly, let me briefly explicate my own conceptual framework and philosophical presuppositions in understanding tolerance. Tolerance presupposes plurality and diversity of identities.
Pluralism further presupposes alterity or otherness, since diversity
entails variety of identities and plurality of existing values. The
opposite of pluralism is hegemony where one particular value is imposed
and where there is an enforced totalization of expressions of life to
make human values comply to a uniformed worldview and a set praxis. Now,
tolerance can only exist in a pluralistic framework since pluralism
celebrates in the difference of the “other”. Tolerance is a very
important ethical value in the face of the alterity of the “other”. Tolerance
therefore presupposes an “other” since without an “other”, there is
nothing to tolerate at all. In hegemony, however, the “other” is
swallowed and annihilated by the sheer imposition of uniformity and
forcible totalization. Thus with the absence of the “other” in a
hegemony, tolerance will also be non-existent—this is why all
totalitarian and hegemonic societies are most intolerant of differences
and dissenting views.
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Secondly,
I consider tolerance as spirituality. A person who can tolerate the
“other” is able to see the unitive Source Who permits and wills these
various differences and diversities as found in the world. This unitive
Bond that permeates all diverse phenomena of creation and transcends
multiplicities—the mystics termed, “the One God”. In the words of the Holy Qur-an:
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“And your God and our God is One God. There is no god but He, the Beneficent, the Merciful… There is no contention between us and you. Allah will gather us together, and to Him is our eventual coming.” (Surah Baqara:163 and Surah Shuraa:15).
Therefore—for the Qur-an—God
is both the Ultimate Source of these diversities and the Essential End
of all varied cosmic entities. Spirituality or mysticism acknowledges
God as the unifying Connectivity that deeply binds the whole of creation
to Himself despite their apparent differences and multiplicities.
Muslim and Christian mystics are well able to tolerate religious
differences because in their inner beings, these mystics see the vision
of the One, and this unitive vision enabled them to go beyond creedal
and dogmatic differences. It is by this divine grace of an all-inclusive
vision of the One that enables saints and mystics to tolerate the
“otherness” of the other (See Frithjof Schuon, Understanding Islam. London: Mandala Books, 1964; pp. 13-18.).
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Tolerance in dealing with others, particularly the
religious “other” is spirituality because by tolerating differences,
one acknowledges the divine Wisdom of God who wills that these
differences be made manifest. By reflecting on this ineffable
theological tension regarding the plurality or diversity of God’s
creation and the essential oneness of creation in the Being of God,
mystics of all religious traditions appreciate the mystery and
spirituality of tolerance; an unfathomable and sympathetic understanding
that is holistically related to a consciousness of divine unity
manifesting in and through diversity. Tolerance permits us to experience
the sympathetic feeling of divine inter-connectedness among diverse
creatures in the divine immanence of the Creator who permits these
differences.
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My own prayerful reflections evidently reveal to me that authentic Islam, i.e., the Islam as expressed in the pristine pages of the Qur-an and
in the exemplary conduct set forth by Prophet Muhammad—in contrast with
the rigid and hegemonic “Islam” as interpreted by “extremist” exegeses
or “fundamentalist” hermeneutics—clearly advocates pluralism and encourages tolerance in its relationship with the religious “other”. In the next subsections, we will examine how the Qur-anic understanding of pluralism is intimately connected to the spirituality of tolerance. We will also see how the Qur-anic discourse
of tolerance is practically exemplified in the lives of selected Muslim
saints in their encounter and dialogue with Christians.
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The Qur-anic View of Pluralism and Its Relevance to an Islamic Understanding of Tolerance
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The Qur-an is
fully conscious of the pluralistic nature of human societies. Many
Qur-anic passages describe the diverse expressions of life as found in
human communities. Pluralism is therefore a fact, which the Qur-an accepts as the basic reality of our human existence. The Qur-an says:
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“For every one of you We appointed a law and a way. And if Allah had pleased, He would have made you a single people, but that He might try you in what He gave you. So vie with one another in virtuous deeds. To Allah will all return, so He will inform you of that wherein you differed.” (Surah Maida:48; The Holy Qur-an: Maulana Muhammad Ali Translation).
The
above passage is a very decisive proclamation supporting tolerance. The
verse fully points out the pluralistic condition of humankind. The
passage admits to the existence of societal and religious diversity
characterizing human communities when it declares; “for everyone of you,
We appointed a law and a way”. Notice that this verse says that our
pluralistic situation is willed and permitted by God so as to test human
communities so that each community will vie with each other in doing
good deeds. It further says:
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“And if Allah had pleased, He would have made you a single people, but that He might try you in what He gave you. So vie with one another in virtuous deeds”..
Surah Maida:48
is likewise a very relevant verse in understanding the nature of the
Islamic understanding of tolerance. If God willed that this world
contains socio-cultural and religious diversities (when He could have
made the world a “single people”), and if God himself has a divine
reason for allowing these diversities (so that each society will “vie
with one another in virtuous deeds”); then humankind should strive to
accept, tolerate, and appreciate the fact of our pluralistic world.
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Good Will, Courtesy, and Mutual Respect: The Basic Ethical Pillars of Qur-anic Tolerance
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Maulana Muhammad Ali Lahori (circa 1879-1951), was an eminent Pakistani scholar of Qur-anic and Hadith exegesis. He authored exhaustive and authoritative books of Qur-anicexegesis, collectively known in Urdu as Bayan-e Qur-an (Qur-anic Lectures) and a comprehensive commentary of the Prophetic Traditions, entitled The Manual of Hadith.
Maulana Muhammad Ali Lahori strove to present Islam as a rational,
tolerant, and forward-looking religion during the era of the British
rule of then undivided India.
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In
this period of the British Raj, various Christian missionary groups
representing different denominations compete for the conversion of
Indians to Christianity. Seeing the zeal of these missionaries, Maulana
Muhammad Ali began to reflect on the state of the Muslims in India. He
re-evaluated the Indian appropriation of Islamic tenets and found out
that the Muslims in India were enveloped with customs which were thought
to be Islamic, but in reality, were products of obscurantism, and
therefore devoid of Islamic significance.
Maulana
Muhammad Ali likewise engaged the Christian missionaries in friendly
dialogues to clarify common misconceptions of Islam. His scholarly
book, The Religion of Islam,
which was the result of these dialogic exchanges, show a very rational
explication of Islam; at the same time fully cognizant of the Christian
missionaries’ objections against Islam by responding to these objections
using the Qur-an and Sunnah as bases of clarification. In
all his writings, one can admire the profound respect that Maulana
Muhammad Ali accorded to his interlocutors, both Christians and Muslims.
I will quote from his Urdu commentary of the Holy Qur-an on the necessity of courtesy (adab), good will (ahsan), and respect or honor (izzat) in dialoguing with others. Commenting on the Qur-anicayah (verse): “Call to the way of thy Lord with wisdom and goodly exhortation, and argue with them in the best manner” (Surah Nahl:125), Maulana Muhammad Ali had this to say:
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“If we desire to establish communication with other religions and their followers, the first pre-requisite is good will (ahsan). We need good will because we have to be reminded that followers of other religions desire for our own good when they want to convert us. And we too, desire for their own good when we invite them to Islam. Everyone sincerely believes that his or her respective tenet is the truth. Thus, keeping in mind that every religion desires salvation, the Holy Book requires us to conduct our concourse with others in the best manner of etiquette (adab). In his inner heart, the other person who communicates to us his religion thinks that he is doing an act of piety. Similarly, in Surah Ankabut:46, the Word of Allah reiterates its exhortation to concourse with the People of the Book, in the attitude of respect and courtesy, when it says: ‘And argue not with the People of the Book except by what is best… And say: We believe in that which has been revealed to us and revealed to you and our God and your God is One, and to Him we submit’. It is therefore with this innate intention of good will that our Holy Book requires us to establish friendly concourse with the followers of other faiths, in the spirit of courtesy and profound respect.” (See Mawlana Muhammad Ali’s subsequent commentary of Surah Nahl 125 and Surah Ankabut 46.).

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Surah Maida: 48 as Potent Islamic Manifesto Supporting Tolerance
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Maulana Muhammad Ali asserts that Surah Maida:48
is an explicit endorsement of pluralism and its attendant duty of
tolerating the various diversities of humankind. I quote from Maulana
Muhammad Ali’s exhaustive Qur-anic commentary to this particular passage:
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“The appointment of a law and a way for everyone refers to the giving of different laws to different nations… Thus, the Holy Qur’an here recognizes the principle to which it refers frequently, that prophets were raised among every people (see Holy Qur’an 10:47; 13:7; and 35:24)… Man [sic] is placed above the whole of creation in that he has been granted discretionary powers so that he can choose to follow one path or another, as against the rest of creation, which must necessarily follow the laws to which it is subject. Hence led by that [God-given] discretion, men follow different ways, adopting different sects, whereas if man’s very nature had been so made as to make him unable to use his discretionary powers, all men [sic] would have been a single people, but then man’s better qualities, would not have been manifested.” (Maulana Muhammad Ali Commentary of the Holy Qur-an.Columbus, Ohio: Ahmadiyya Anjuman Ishaat Islam Lahore, 1998; pp.256.).
As commented by Maulana Muhammad Ali, Surah Maida:48
explicitly declares that Almighty God sent his messengers to diverse
groups of people and gave these communities their respective
commandments in keeping with the different circumstances of each
community. The laws prescribed by God to the different communities
ensure the holistic development of their respective people. The verse
continues, “And if Allah had pleased, He would have made you a single
people, but that He might try you in what He gave you. So vie with one
another in virtuous deeds”. This verse clearly pointed out that if God
so willed it, He can create a single community out of varied groups of
people. Nevertheless, God planned that humankind be varied in its
communitarian expressions.
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God’s
endowment of a pluralistic world is His grace to humanity. Our
differences provide venues for existential celebration of life and of
living: variety and diversity being the potent antidote to our humdrum
existence. Each community has its own unique way of life, its own
customs and traditions, its own laws. Nevertheless, no matter how
diverse these ways of life are, it should be understood in the light of
the Almighty’s life-affirming purpose in allowing such diversities,
i.e., human flourishing. It is therefore clear from Surah Maidah:48
that although God can produce a uniformed world of totalities by
imposing a single law for all communities, yet He prefers to create
pluralistic communities so that humankind will learn the values of
tolerance, amity, harmony, and fraternity.
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Another
aim of God in creating varied communities is to test human beings in
the conduct of virtuous deeds. He tests the various societies if they
can live amicably and cordially with each other despite their
differences. The divergence in each society’s ways of life should not be
a cause of disharmony and differences; instead, societal divergences
should prod each community to vie with one another in the performance of
virtuous conduct (Cf., Reza Shah Kazemi, The Metaphysics of Interreligious Dialogue. London: Institute of Isma’ili Studies, 2001; pp.5-7.).
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The Qur-an insists
that the best way of putting an end to religious, cultural, and
ideological conflicts is to tolerate differences with openness and good
faith. Each religious community should do righteous deeds according to
their tenets; leaving to God the judgment as to which community is the
best. The final section of the passage states:
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“To Allah will all return, so He will inform you of that wherein you differed”..
The
verse is very precise in stating that it should be left to God (and to
God alone) in deciding the truth of the matters that peoples dispute. It
is not for humans to pontificate which view is true and which is wrong.
Vain and fruitless arguments as to which religious, ethical, and
ideological point of view is right or wrong will only lead to communal
fracas and infringement of societal concord. Likewise, the verse firmly
admonishes human beings to contend with one another in good deeds by
utilizing their own respective laws as bases of their righteous conduct.
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God as the Ultimate Source of Divine Revelation: A Central Tenet in the Qur-anic Understanding of Tolerance
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The prologue of Surah Maida:48 states, “And We have revealed to thee the Book [i.e., the Qur-an]
with the truth verifying that which is before it [i.e., the previous
scriptures]…and a guardian over it”. This verse is a strong proclamation
in favor of tolerance and pluralism. The Qur-an is referred to as “guardian” of the truths revealed by earlier scriptures. Likewise, one of the roles of the Qur-an is
“a verifier” of previous scriptures. According to Ustaz Abu Ya’qub
Sijistani, a Fatimid theologian and philosopher of the tenth century AD,
this verse implies that the scriptures of various religions may be
different, but the Ultimate Source of all revealed scriptures is the One
and Only God. Thus, scriptures of different faiths are based on Divine
revelation.
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The tolerant nature of Islam as a religion can be seen in this verse in that, the Qur-an takes it upon itself to be the confirmer, verifier, and guardian of truths revealed in earlier scriptures (Paul Walker, Abu Ya’qub al-Sijistani: Intellectual Missionary. London: I.B. Tauris Publishers, 1996; pp. 26-32, 58.).
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His
endeavor to establish Sunni-Shi’a rapprochement was also matched by his
spiritual and intellectual relationship with the Coptic Christians of
Egypt, the Arab Orthodox Christians of Iraq, the Byzantine Christians of
Anatolia, and the Jews. He studied the Torah in Hebrew and the New
Testament in the Syro-Aramaic text. He often consulted Jewish rabbis and
Orthodox Christian hermits and enquired from them regarding their
interpretation of some obscure passages of the Bible. His encounters
with Christianity and Judaism were indeed intellectually stimulating
since Ustaz Sijistani wrote six (6) religio-philosophical treatises
reflecting on his relations with Christianity and Judaism, not to
mention the orthodox Sunni Islam. Sijistani’s main books, The Wellspring of Wisdom (Yanbu-al-Hikmat) and Proofs of Prophecy (Ithbat-un-Nubuwwat)
were written to show that God is the ultimate Source of Revelation and
that this divine Revelation is progressive, i.e., it is sent according
to the measure of the spiritual preparedness of humankind to receive
divine guidance. Ustaz Sijistani was therefore a perfect example of an
“ecumenical Muslim”—if I may be permitted to coin such a term.
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Let
us now explicate on Sijistani’s understanding of progressive revelation
and its implication to an Islamic perspective of tolerance. As per
Ustaz Sijistani, the inclusive nature of the Islamic faith can be
clearly observed in the Qur-an’s numerous narrations regarding the ministries of Jewish, Christians, and other pre-Islamic prophets. The Qur-an’s inclusion
of the prophets of other religions preceding Islam is meant to
illustrate the pluralistic and tolerant dimension of the Qur-anic Revelation. The list of prophets as found in the Qur-an was
never meant to be exhaustive; it was meant to illustrate the extent of
the universal chain of prophethood. Thus, we can safely assume that
other religious communities that were not mentioned in the Qur-an are likewise included in the all-inclusive Qur-anic guardianship (Walker, Ibid, pp. 45-58, 110-112.).
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Furthermore, Sijistani opined that the Qur-an fully
acknowledges the different expressions of worship undertaken by
different religions, while at the same time firmly holding to the
Islamic expressions of worship (i.e., the five-times-a-day liturgical
prayers, prescribed pilgrimage, Ramadhan fasting, etc.). In Surah Baqara:148
it is stated: “And everyone has a goal to which he turns (himself), so
vie with one another in good works”. Abu Ya’qub al-Sijistani,
interpreted the phrase, “everyone has a goal to which he turns” to
signify the diverse spiritual communities and their different approaches
of worship (Ibid, pp. 49–51.). Ustaz Sijistani, also pointed out that Surah Baqara:148 is very much related to the phrase in Surah Maida:48, viz; “For everyone of you We appointed a law and a way”.
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The Qur-an on the Oneness of Humankind and Diverse Expressions of Human Cultures
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The Qur-an, in many numerous passages explicitly proclaims the oneness of humankind. Humanity was “created from a single being” (Surah Nisah:1). All humans came from a single ancestry and living in the same homeland, earth (Surah Hujurat:13). Furthermore, Surah Baqara:213
says that the whole of humankind is essentially one in origin—from God,
humankind’s Creator. God sent various messengers with their respective
scriptures to guide the peoples of the world to righteous living. These
prophets were sent to different places of the world and their
revelations were suited to the varying milieus, mentalities,
contextualities, situations, and circumstances of the peoples and
societies in which they were being sent. However, instead of respecting
other societies’ contextualities, people began to be divided and
incessantly fight against each other. Surah Baqara:213
further states that God in giving His revelation to different
communities did not intend that they fight each other; but that each
communities respect each other’s differences.
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The Qur-an balances
its affirmation of the ontological oneness of humankind by equally
highlighting on the divergent racial, linguistic, ideological,
religious, and national identities of each society. God wills these
identities; as the Qur-an plainly
states, “And of His signs is the creation of the heavens and the earth
and the diversity of your tongues and colors. Surely, there are signs in
these for the learned” (Surah Rum:2).
This passage acknowledges cultural differences as “signs” of God and
must be duly appreciated as these “signs” serve as venues for each
society’s expression of identity. Cultural
differences are essential for establishing a community’s identity and
these divergences should prompt peoples to celebrate each other’s
cultural and national identities (See, Maulana Muhammad Ali’s commentary of Surah Baqara:213, Hujurat:13 and Maida:48; op.cit.). Therefore, the Qur-anundoubtedly
recognizes cultural, religious, and societal diversities as being
willed by Divine Providence; even as it equally affirms the essential
unity and oneness of humankind.
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Tolerance and the Diverse Liturgical Expressions of Worship Found in Other Faiths
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As of this juncture, it is noteworthy to quote some Qur-anic passages
that illustrate the practical dimensions of Islamic tolerance with
respect to the different worship expressions of other faith-traditions.
The Qur-an says:.
“It is not righteousness that you turn your faces towards East or West; but righteous is the one who believes in Allah and the Last Day, and the angels, and the Book, and the prophets, and gives away wealth out of love for Him, to the near of kin, and the orphans, and the needy, and the wayfarer, and to those who ask, and to set the slaves free; and keeps up prayer, and pays the poor-rate [i.e., charity]: and the performers of their promise when they make a promise, and the patient in distress and affliction and in the time of conflict [adversities]. These are they who are truthful; and these are they who keep their duty.” (Surah Baqara:177; Maulana Muhammad Ali Translation.)
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The great master of Islamic mysticism, Hazrat Shaykh-al-Akbar Muhaiyuddin Ibn Arabi (circa 1164-1240 AD), in his Sufi treatise, Bezels of Wisdom (Fusus al-Hikam)
provided a very universal and inclusive interpretation of the above
passage, showing the tolerant nature of Islamic Sufism that Ibn Arabi
espoused. Before discussing Ibn Arabi’s explanation of the
above-mentioned passage, I feel that it is beneficial for our
understanding to describe briefly his historical contextuality. Ibn
Arabi’s tolerant and pluralistic approach to Islamic spirituality can
best be gleaned in his oft-quoted pronouncement:
.“My heart is open to every form: it is a pasture for ecstatics, and a cloister for Christian monks, a temple for idols, the Mecca for the monotheists, the tablet for the Torah and the bookstand of the Qur-an. I embrace the religion called ‘Love’; I go where my Beloved’s caravan asks me to go. My religion is the creed of Love.” (Shahabuddin Maliki, Light from the Sayings of Shaykh Ibn Arabi. Decca, Bangladesh: Markaz Towheedi, 1977; p.63.).
Arabi’s frequent discussions and meetings with Jewish and Christian
philosophers and mystics may have influenced his all-inclusive and
panentheistic approach to understanding Ultimate Reality (wahdat-ul-wujud).
Ibn Arabi’s homeland, Andalusia, a cosmopolitan region in Spain was
ruled during Ibn Arabi’s time by the extremely tolerant Umayyad sultans.
The emirs of Andalusia encouraged learning and supported all
educational institutions, whether Muslim, Christian or Jewish. It was
during this period that Christians all over Europe flocked to Muslim
Spain to study Greek philosophy as mediated by the Arabic textual
sources. Likewise, it was in Muslim Spain where Jews from all parts of
Europe and the Mediterranean took refuge from pogroms that greatly
diminished their ranks. Ibn Arabi’s Islamic Andalusia ruled by the
enlightened Umayyads offered an atmosphere of intellectual freedom—an
atmosphere that was so different from the rest of Europe where
inquisitions and religious persecutions were the order of the day (See
Oliver Leaman, A Brief Introduction to Islamic Philosophy.
Oxford: Polity Press, 1999; pp. 158-164.). This historical context
contributed to Ibn Arabi’s universal and all embracing approach to
Islamic mysticism.
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Now let us come to Ibn Arabi’s inclusivist exegesis of Surah Baqara:177
and how this exegesis conduces to an Islamic spirituality of tolerance.
Commenting on the above-mentioned verse, Ibn Arabi says:
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“Beware of being bound up by a particular creed and rejecting others as unbelief. Try to make yourself a prime matter for all forms of religious beliefs. God is greater and wider than to be confined to one particular creed to the exclusion of others. For He Himself says: ‘To whichever direction you turn, there is the Face of God’. God is much greater, wider and deeper than our religious conceptions.” (See Oliver Leaman, A Brief Introduction to Islamic Philosophy. Oxford: Polity Press, 1999; pp. 158-164. )
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Ibn
Arabi admits that although in Islam, there exists a specific direction
and prescribed liturgical postures by which a Muslim faces when praying,
yet for him, the Qur-an equally
acknowledges with respect the various directions and gestures of prayer
adopted by other religions in their worship. More importantly, for Ibn
Arabi, Surah Baqara:177
encourages religious pluralism and tolerance by going beyond (i.e.,
transcending) the ritual demands of different ceremonial expressions of
worship and focusing instead on the importance of humane character, viz, compassion towards others and persevering faith in the midst of trials and difficulties (See, Henry Bayman, The Station of No Station: Open Secrets of the Sufis.
Berkeley, California: North Atlantic Books, 2001; pp. 166, 206.). Ibn
Arabi explained that the divine purpose of the various prescribed acts
of worship is for the spiritual education of humankind, aside from the
avowed aim of glorifying God. For him, more than the outward
manifestations of piety, the crucial intention of the Qur-an is for the Islamic Ummah(community) to produce proper human beings who are sensitive to the needs of others. The Qur-an endeavors
to create compassionate and “humane” persons who act with benevolence
and equanimity to everybody with no regard whatsoever to racial,
cultural, religious, or ideological differences (Ibid, pp. 97-98, 103.).
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Instantiations of Tolerance from the Life of the Prophet of Islam and His Companions
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The Qur-an clearly reveals that, “all the children of Adam are equally honored” by God (See, Surah Bani-Israil:70). The Qur-an also
takes an all-inclusive humanistic view in its understanding of justice
and equality among all peoples. When it comes to judging actions that
either benefit or harm humanity, the Qur-an does not distinguish between Muslims and non-Muslims. As pointed out in Surah Nisah:123-124,
“It
will not be in accordance with your vain desires [i.e., Muslims], nor
the vain desires of the People of the Book [i.e., Jews and Christians]
that can prevail. Whoever does evil will be requited for it… And whoever
does good deeds, whether male or female—these will enter the Garden and
they will not be dealt with a whit unjustly.” (Maulana Muhammad Ali Translation.)
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The Qur-an further affirms; “so he who does an atom’s weight of good will see it. And he who does an atom’s weight of evil will see it” (Surah Zilzal:7-8.). According to the Qur-an,
God does not consider a person’s dogmatic or creedal commitment when
rendering judgment of an action. Everyone will be given their just
recompense based on one’s deeds and not because of one’s religious
adherence.
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Furthermore, the Qur-an exhorts
Muslims to respect places of worship of other faith-traditions and to
ensure that these will be protected and safe from acts of vandalism and
destruction. Surah al-Hajj:40
says; “And if Allah did not repel some people by others, cloisters, and
churches, and synagogues, and mosques in which the name of Allah is
much remembered would have been pulled down” (Maulana Muhammad Ali Translation.).
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The
abovementioned verse is very explicit in enjoining Muslims to sacrifice
even their very own lives to defend the sanctity of churches and
synagogues, and not just mosques. Interestingly, this particular passage
avers that whether in church, synagogue or mosque, God’s name is
“commemorated in abundant measure” in all these places of worship (Cf., Muhammad Hamidullah, Islam: An Introduction. Lahore: Kitab Islami Wakf, 1979; pp.34-35. See also Kazemi, op.cit., p.12.). Here, we can find that the Qur-an did
not make any distinction between shrines of worship—it acknowledges the
sacredness of places of worship where God’s name is celebrated with
reverence; no matter what faith-tradition these shrines belong.
.
The Qur-an solemnly affirms, “there is no compulsion in religion” (Surah Baqara:256). The Qur-an is
very keen in preserving freedom of conscience and freedom of belief—two
crucial elements which are at the heart of tolerance. In this
connection, a narration of two episodes in the life of the Prophet
Muhammad is very pertinent in order to show that Islam fully respects
the freedom of peoples to practice their own faith. When the people of
Medina accepted the Prophet as their lawmaker and chief governmental
executive, the Prophet himself immediately asked his scribes to write a
declaration assuring the freedom of Jews and Christian residents of
Medina and Najran to practice their faith. Likewise, when Christian
monks and priests from Abyssinia came to Medina to see the Prophet, they
inquired where they can hold their Eucharistic service (since they were
still in Medina on a Sunday), the Prophet Muhammad gladly offered half
of the space of his masjid (i.e., the first masjid built by the
Prophet’s own hands) to the Christian priests for their liturgy. The
priests tearfully thanked the Prophet for his hospitality, munificence,
and cordial act of tolerance by offering and allowing them to hold their
Divine Liturgy in his masjid (See, Maulana Muhammad Ali, The Religion of Islam. Columbus,
Ohio: Ahmadiyya Anjuman Isha’at Islam Lahore, 1990; pp.281-291. For
numerous instances showing the Prophet Muhammad’s tolerance and
concordant treatment to non-Muslims particularly Christians and Jews,
see also, Mumtaz Ahmad Faruqui, Anecdotes from the Life of Prophet Muhammad. Columbus Ohio: Ahmadiyya Anjuman Ishaat Islam Lahore, 1997; pp.18-19, 35-37, 40-43.).
.
In keeping with the example of the Prophet Muhammad, the second Caliph of Islam, Hazrat Umar al-Farooq,
assured the delegation of Coptic and Orthodox Christians that their
churches, convents, and monasteries were to be protected and to be held
inviolable by the Islamic State. The same Caliph Umar climbed by foot to
Mount Sinai, Egypt to sign a treaty guaranteeing the safety of the
monks and nuns of St. Catherine’s monastery. During this visit, the
Caliph gave five thousand dirhams for the repair of the monks’ convent
and chapel. The trustworthy Arab historian, At-Tabari narrated that the
call for the noon prayer once overtook Caliph Umar while he was having
consultations with the Orthodox Christian patriarch of Jerusalem at the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre. The kind patriarch offered Caliph Umar to
pray inside the church premises. The Caliph gently declined the
patriarch’s offer saying that he was afraid that future Muslims might
claim the church for themselves on account of the fact that the second
Caliph of Islam prayed his noon prayer inside it. Caliph Umar then went
out of the church and prayed at a vacant yard nearby (Cf., Hafsah Dawud
Zikri, The Exemplary Precedents of our Righteous Sunni Ancestors. Pakpattan,
Pakistan: Daawat-e Irshad, 1963; pp.68-85.). These historical instances
and many others show the extent of amity, tolerance, and concordance
that the Companions of the Prophet Muhammad afford to Christians. The
continued existence of Arab, Coptic, Armenian, Greek, and Kurdish
Christian communities in the Middle East and the marked presence of
churches and convents in these Islamic realms give witness to the
tolerant attitude of authentic Islam to the religious “other”.
.
Epilogue: Acceptance of “the Other” as Foundational Basis of an Islamic Spirituality of Tolerance
.
The Qur-an is
very explicit in its pronouncement that non-Muslims should be given the
right to worship based on the prescriptions of their own scriptures. As
already mentioned in this paper, non-Muslims were given their civil,
political, and religious rights during the time of the Prophet Muhammad.
After the Prophet’s demise, the Holy Companions and the immediate
Caliphs of the Prophet made numerous provisions so that the rights of
Jews and Christians will be acknowledged and respected. Tolerance
towards non-Muslims were also implemented by various Islamic monarchs
like the pious Umayyad Caliph, Umar ibn Abdul Aziz; the Abbasid Caliph,
Harun-al-Rashid; the just Sultan of Palestine, Saladdin Ayyubi; the
Mughal Sultan Akbar; the Ottoman emperors, Fatih Mehmet and Kanooni
Suleyman; and the emirs of the Moorish courts of Cordova and Grenada.
These Islamic monarchs not only tolerated non-Muslims, much more, they
employed Jews, Christians, and even Hindus in their administration,
supported their respective places of worship, clergies, and educational
institutions. These non-Muslims were accepted with dignity and treated
with respect and at par with the Muslim citizens.
.
Authentic Islam based on the Qur-an and
as practiced by the Prophet and his companions are not against the
promotion of a pluralist egalitarian society that guarantees tolerance
and respect to all religious communities within the society. The Qur-an recognizes
religious diversity not only as a basic reality of human existence but
also as a venue for humanity’s spiritual development (Cf., Surah Maida:48.).
It is indeed very regrettable that in our contemporary times, most of
the so-called Muslim nations are perceived as lagging behind in
fulfilling the spirit of tolerance as plainly expressed in the Qur-an and the Tradition (Sunnah)
of the Prophet. It is equally lamentable that political and religious
extremism failed to see the pluralistic, concordant, and tolerant
dimension of Islam as found in the Qur-anictexts and in the conduct of the Prophet.
.
As
amply shown in history, it cannot be denied that there were many
instances of bloody conflicts between Christians and Muslims and that
atrocities and violence can be equally attributed to both sides. The era
of the Crusades during the Middle Ages and the more recent phenomenon
of Western colonization of Muslim lands painted a different picture of
Christianity in the perceptions of Muslims—a grim and greedy
“Christianity” which is far from the peace-loving Christianity of Christ
and of the Gospels. Similarly, basing their perceptions on the Western
media’s skewed descriptions of Muslims and the intolerance of some
Islamic movements, Christians perceived a rigid and inflexible Islam—an
“Islam” very different from the tolerant and inclusive Islam of the Holy Qur-an.
It is high-time now for both Muslims and Christians to move past these
historical contingencies—contingencies that were political, economic,
and pragmatic in nature; which had little or even nothing to do with the
essential spiritual and religious contents of both faiths as expressed
in their respective Scriptures (Jean Rene Milot, Muslims and Christians: Enemies or Brothers? New
York: Alba House, 1997; pp. 31.). Indeed, it is high time now for both
Muslims and Christians to go back to their respective Scriptures and be
nourished by the precepts of tolerance, understanding, and amity
enjoined by both the Bible and the Qur-an.
In so doing, both the largest and the second largest religions of the
world will be able to contribute actively towards achieving world peace.
.
It
is likewise imperative for academicians engaged in Muslim-Christian
dialogue and researchers of Islamic political philosophy to work out
theoretic and praxis in pursuance to the Qur-anic vision
of tolerance and amity, by taking into consideration present realities
of our pluralistic world. There is no contradiction in accepting the
truth of ones’ own religious and ideological perspective and in
tolerating or respecting the beliefs of others. Similarly, the Qur-anic belief
in the ontological oneness of humanity does not contradict the
pragmatic reality that humankind’s expressions of culture, spirituality,
and political ideology are varied and diverse. Authentic Islam as found
in the Qur-an respects
the freedom of conscience of every individual; which includes the right
to practice one’s own religious, cultural, ethnic, and ideological
commitments. By paying careful and prayerful reflection to what the Qur-an says regarding tolerance, coupled with the faithful adherence to the Qur-anic values
of amity and harmony amidst differences, Muslims and non-Muslims will
be able to live a tranquil, serene, and secure life—a life of dignity
and justice by accepting with openness and good faith each other’s
differences. May this hope become a Reality for all Muslims and
non-Muslims alike. Insha-Allah (God willing)!
.
References
.
Ali, Abdullah Yusuf. The Holy Qur-an: Text, Translation and Commentary (3rd ed.). Kashmiri Bazar, Lahore: Shaikh Muhammad Ashraf, 1978.
Ali, Maulana Muhammad. The Holy Qur-an: Translation and Commentary. Columbus, Ohio: Ahmadiyyah Anjuman Ishaat Islam Lahore, 1998.
_______. The Religion of Islam. Columbus, Ohio: Ahmadiyyah Anjuman Ishaat Islam Lahore, 1990.
Bayman, Henry. The Station of No Station: Open Secrets of the Sufis. Berkeley, California: North Atlantic Books, 2001.
Ghulam-Ahmad, Hazrat Mirza. Paigham-e-Sulh: Letters of Peace. Suva, Fiji: Ahmadiyya Anjuman Isha’at Islam Lahore-Fiji, 1972.
Hamidullah, Muhammad. Islam: An Introduction. Lahore: Kitab Islami Wakf, 1979.
Kazemi, Reza Shah. The Metaphysics of Interreligious Dialogue. London: Institute of Isma’ili Studies, 2001.
Leaman, Oliver. A Brief Introduction to Islamic Philosophy. Oxford: Polity Press, 1999.
Maliki, Shahabuddin. Light from the Sayings of Shaykh Ibn Arabi. Decca, Bangladesh: Markaz Towheedi, 1977.
Milot, Jean Rene. Muslims and Christians: Enemies or Brothers? New York: Alba House, 1997.
Schuon, Frithjof. Understanding Islam. London: Mandala Books, 1964.
Walker, Paul. Abu Ya’qub al-Sijistani: Intellectual Missionary. London: I. B.Tauris Publishers, 1996.
Zikri, Hafsah Dawood. The Exemplary Precedents of our Righteous Sunni Ancestors. Pakpattan, Pakistan: Daawat-e Irshad, 1963.
Prof. Henry Francis B. Espiritu is
Associate Professor-VI of Philosophy and Asian Studies at the
University of the Philippines (UP), Cebu City. He was former Academic
Coordinator of the Political Science Program at UP Cebu from 2011-2014.
He was also the former Coordinator of Gender and Development (GAD)
Office at UP Cebu. His research interests include Islamic Studies
particularly Sunni jurisprudence, Islamic feminist discourses, Islam in
interfaith dialogue initiatives, Islamic environmentalism, Classical
Sunni Islamic pedagogy, the writings of Imam Al-Ghazali on pluralism and
tolerance, Turkish Sufism, Muslim-Christian dialogue, Middle Eastern
affairs, Peace Studies and Public Theology.
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