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Recently I have been studying Marxism in considerable detail, and
have formed the impression that Marx was a man of extraordinary intellect and
spirit; few men of such talent have appeared in the annals of history. Yet, when
he gave his mind to the improvement of the human condition, the remedies he offered
were unparalleled in their foolishness. Why should this have been so? The principal
reason is that he had made no study of the Qur’an. He had not gone to that great
source of knowledge, without which no sound and definite opinion can be arrived
at on the vicissitudes of human existence. It must be conceded that the universe
is a mystery and that the only book which can unveil that mystery for us is the
Qur’an. No mere mortal can solve the mysteries of life and the universe without
the revelations of the Book of God.
Medicines are
accompanied by leaflets explaining what illnesses they are designed to cure, how
they should be used and what their basic formulae are. But man is born into the
world in such a condition that he knows neither what he is nor why he has been
put here. No convenient handbook accompanies him, neither are there any signboards
fixed to the summits of the mountains to give him directions or to provide him
with answers to his questions. Man has, in consequence, formed strange opinions
about himself, the earth and the sky, being ignorant of the essential reality
of life. When he examines his own being, it appears to him as an amazing accumulation
of intellectual and physical powers. Yet, he did not will himself into being,
nor did he play any part in the making of himself. Then he looks at the world
outside himself and a universe of such extreme vastness, that he can neither encompass
nor traverse it, nor can he count the innumerable treasures it contains. What
is all this, and why is it there? Where did this world start from and where will
it all end? What is the purpose of all this existence? He finds himself completely
in the dark on these subjects. Man has, of course, been given eyes, but all his
eyes can do is see the outside of things. He has intelligence, but the trouble
with human intelligence is that it does not even know about itself. Up till now,
man has been unable to find out how thoughts enter the human mind or how the mind
functions. With such inadequate faculties, he is neither able to arrive at any
sound conclusion concerning himself, nor he is able to understand the Universe.
This riddle is solved by the Book of God. Today, the Qur’an is
the only scripture beneath the heavens about which we can say with complete conviction
that it gives us definite knowledge concerning all the realities of life.
Those who have
tried to understand the Universe without recourse to the Book of God are just
like those blind people who try to find out what an elephant is by touching different
parts of its body. One will touch its leg, and think he has found a pillar. Another
will feel its ear, and think it is a winnowing basket. Its back will be proclaimed
a platform, its tail a snake and its trunk a hosepipe. But where in all this is
the elephant? No matter how these blind people put together their findings, they
cannot arrive at the correct answer. This is the eternal predicament of all atheist
philosophers and thinkers. In their attempt to fathom the nature of reality in
the universe, they have failed to be guided by true knowledge. As a result, their
conclusions have been like those of a man, fumbling in the dark, and just hazarding
wild guesses as to the nature of his surroundings, without ever truly understanding
it.
There have been people in this world who have devoted their entire
lives to the quest for Truth, but who, in their desperation at being unable to
find it, have even taken the extreme step of putting an end to their lives. And
then there have been others who sought the Truth but who, having failed to find
it, settled for a concocted philosophy based on pure conjecture. While the latter,
mistaking conjecture for reason, compiled their conclusions and presented them
to the world as Truth, the former saw speculation for what it was, rejected it,
then—anguished at their own ultimate helplessness—opted out of this mysterious
world.
Both groups were denied True Knowledge, for, in reality, no one
can understand the secret of life without the help of the original Keeper of the
Secret. True, man has been given the capacity to think and understand. But this
capacity is little better than an eye which can see only so long as there is some
external source of light. In pitch darkness, this self-same eye cannot see anything
whatsoever. Only when a light is switched on, does everything become clearly visible.
The human intellect, like the eye, needs the light—the light of God’s revelation—if
it is not forever to grope in the dark. Without God’s revelation, we can never
arrive at the truth of things.
A scholarly acquaintance
of mine once remarked that learning—so it is held—is not acquired by reading book
after book and possessing a string of degrees from colleges and universities,
but consists, in its supreme form, of faith. The Qur’an likewise states that,
‘in fact, it is those who fear God who are learned.’ But he failed to grasp the
significance of this, he said. I replied, ‘Karl Marx is considered a ‘prophet’
in the field of economics, but he did not have one whit of the True Knowledge
which, today, by the grace of God, you possess. Faced by a world in which a small
number of feudal lords and industrial magnates had taken possession of a disproportionate
share of the available wealth, while most people lived in abject poverty, Marx
concluded that what lay at the root of these disparities was the present system
of ownership which caused articles to be produced, not for their utility to the
producer, but for the profit they would yield when sold to others. This permitted
the privileged few to behave as plunderers, heaping up profits and increasing
their own property to the detriment of their fellow men. The remedy proposed by
Marx was to abolish ownership rights altogether, and to transfer the means of
accumulating wealth to the public sector. The government was then to be entrusted
with the organization of a public system of creation and distribution of wealth
which should serve the interests of all.
At that particular
point in time, it was those who possessed the necessary capital who were in a
position to profiteer. The question now arose as to the actual advantage of having
the government take complete control of these funds in order to turn them into
a public treasury. Would not this new group of people — the members of government
— be tempted, as individuals, to do the same as their capitalist predecessors,
considering that they would also be vested with military and legislative powers?
Karl Marx’s analysis was that the system of ownership was flawed by jealousy and
the opportunities it gave for outright plunder. According to him, such social
defects would disappear in a communist society. ‘Now, tell me,’ I asked my friend,
‘was Karl Marx correct in thinking so?’ ‘Certainly not,’ he replied, ‘The idea
of accountability in the Hereafter is the only thing in this world that can cleanse
a man of cruel and selfish tendencies.’ ‘That is the real answer to the problem,’
I said. ‘For Karl Marx’s self-made theory resulted in even greater oppression
and cruelty than in the days when political and economic powers were shared by
the Czars and the capitalists. Now, under the communist system, the powers of
Czars and capitalists have all been rolled into one, and it is the common man
who suffers.’
All those philosophers who have attempted-without God-to solve
the riddle of the Universe have fallen into the same pitfalls as Marx. As to their
thinking, one is struck by how such great intellects could produce such infantile
suggestions. They are like so many blind people, trying, gropingly, to identify
an elephant and declaring, with finality, that it is four pillars, or four tree
trunks. It is only when life and the universe are scrutinized in the light of
the Book of God that everything appears clearly, in its true form; then even a
person of very average ability has no trouble in understanding the truth of things;
at the very first glance, he goes straight to the heart of the matter. To a person
who does not possess this Knowledge, however, the universe is but a labyrinth
in which he wanders, lost and distraught.
We owe much to
the human sciences. Yet the absolute maximum that we can learn from them is what
the universe is. Till now, they have not given us one iota of knowledge on the
subject of why the universe is as it is. Bring together a few gases, minerals
and salts, and you have a moving, conscious human being. Put seeds in the ground
and up spring plants and trees. Just make a change in atomic numbers and innumerable
elements come into being. From just two gases, water—that most precious of commodities—is
prepared. Steam, produced by molecular motion within water, gives inanimate engines
the power to move. The electrons within an atom are too tiny to be seen through
a microscope, but they too are a vital source of colossal, mountain-shattering
power. These are all matters of fact. Scientific events do take place as described.
But this description is the outer limit of our scientific ‘knowledge.’ When we
ask why things are as they are, and why things happen as they do, human science
gives us no guidance whatsoever.
Studies in astronomy
show that the number of stars in the sky is as numerous as all of the sand grains
on all the sea-shores of our planet, many of the stars being vastly greater in
size than our earth, some even being of such enormous girth that they could accommodate
hundreds of thousands of earths inside them and still have room to spare. A few
of them are even big enough to contain millions and millions of earths. The universe
is so vast that an airplane flying at the greatest speed imaginable, i.e. at the
speed of light, (186,282 miles per second) would take about ten billion years
to complete just a single trip around the whole universe. Even with such a huge
circumference, this universe is not static, but is expanding every moment in all
directions. So rapid is this expansion that, according to an estimate by Eddington,
every 1300 million years, all the distances in this universe are doubled. This
means that even our imaginary airplane traveling at the speed of light would not
ever be able to fly all the way around the universe, because it would never be
able to catch up with this unending expansion. This estimation of the vastness
of the universe is based on Einstein’s theory of relativity. But this is just
a mathematician’s guess. To tell the truth, man has yet to comprehend the vastness
of the universe.
Human Studies bring us face to face with this astonishing universe.
And there they leave us. They do not tell us the true meaning of the universe.
They do not tell us who causes events to take place. Neither do they tell us whose
hand it is that controls the great spheres revolving in the vastness of space.
If we wish to have the answers to these questions, it is to the Qur’an that we
must turn. If we want to know how things came into existence, how they are sustained
and what their future will be, it is the Qur’an alone which will tell us. In so
doing, it will acquaint us with the Lord and Master of the Universe, opening out
before us the sublime nature of his works.
The Qur’an bears
verbal witness to the sovereignty of God. It describes, with great force and clarity,
the great, hidden, determinative force at work throughout the entire world, and
gives us definitive information on those metaphysical realities which elude the
hand and the eye. Not only does it spell out the facts of existence, but it also
builds up an astonishing gallery of word-pictures which bring a hitherto unseen
world before our very eyes.
The Holy Book
not only tells us that God exists, but also paints an incredibly vivid picture
of the Being who sustains and directs the Universe. Not only does it tell us about
the Hereafter, but describes the Day of Judgment so graphically that its horrors
become deeply etched on our consciousness. There is a well-known story of a Greek
artist who painted such a realistic picture of a bunch of grapes that birds would
come and peck at it. Just think that if a painting executed by an ordinary mortal
could have such an extraordinary effect, what heights of consummate artistry could
not be reached by the Lord of the Worlds in His creation of the Qur’an? Could
any mere mortal truly appreciate the perfection of such art?
The Qur’an opens
with the words: ‘Praise be to God, Lord of the Worlds. ‘This invocation is of
great significance. It means: ‘Thanks be to God, Maker and Sustainer of all creatures
in the world.’ A master and sustainer is one who is filled with profound concern
for his subjects and provides for all their needs. Man’s greatest need is to know
what he is, where he has come from, and where he will go. He also needs to know
where he will gain and where he will lose. If he were to be taken to some region
of space in which there was neither air nor water, this would not be such a great
calamity for him as finding himself in the world without any accurate knowledge
of his origin or ultimate fate.
God has more compassion
for His creatures than a father has for his own son. It is inconceivable, therefore,
that He should have seen this need on the part of His servants and not provided
for it. By means of revelation, He has sent down whatever knowledge a man must
have in order to understand himself, and He has sent it in a form which could
be conveyed by the human tongue. This is the greatest favor that the Lord has
done His servants.
A man who realizes to what extent he needs his Maker’s help in
acquiring True Knowledge will feel his heart simply overflowing with gratitude
to and praise for his Lord, when he sees what favor He has shown him in sending
him the Qur’an. The words: ‘Praise be to God, Lord of the Worlds!’ will spontaneously
burst forth from him. These are the words of a true servant of God having been
inspired in him by God Himself. Even when it is a question of how a man should
serve his Lord, he needs the guidance of his Maker. The desire to serve may itself
be quite instinctive, but the would-be devotee does not know in what manner to
give expression to it. The Qur’an, however, is explicit on this subject, and even
provides him with the exact words he should use. In this respect, the prayers
of the Qur’an are the most sublime gifts.
The Qur’an is
not a book in the ordinary, accepted sense of the word. It is more an account
of the final struggle to convey the message of Islam. From the most ancient times,
God has been sending down knowledge of the truth through His specially chosen
emissaries. In the seventh century of the Christian era, it was God’s will that
the inhabitants of the Earth should quite finally be provided with Knowledge of
Truth and that a society should be founded on the basis of that Knowledge which
would be a source of enlightenment and an example for the whole human race until
the Last Day.
In accordance with this aim, God raised His final Prophet in Arabia,
and charged him with the mission of propagating this message among the Arabs.
Those who came under the influence of his preaching were then set the task of
spreading the message throughout the whole world. In spreading True Knowledge,
and in establishing a society based upon it, the Holy Prophet was working under
divine guidance. God sent His Word down to the Prophet, revealing to him what
he should preach, and providing him with the proofs he required to make his preaching
effective. When his opponents raised objections, he was, therefore, able to give
them answers which silenced them. And when those who accepted the message later
showed some weakness, he was able immediately to bring them to book to reform
them.
Moreover, the Qur’an formulated rules for war and peace, and laid
down principles for education and guidance. It gave solace to its adherents in
times of adversity and, when they ultimately triumphed, it provided the legal
framework on which society could be built anew. Twenty-three years elapsed between
the beginning and the conclusion. At every stage during this period Almighty God,
Light of the World, sent guidance in the form of commandments for mankind. These
guidelines were later compiled, in accordance with His plan, in a particular sequence.
It is this collection which is called the Qur’an.
The Qur’an is
the most authentic record of the True Call, raised in Arabia by the Final Prophet,
who was guided right throughout his Prophethood by God Himself. It is a collection
of divine instructions, issued for the guidance of this movement at different
times over nearly a quarter of a century. But the Qur’an is not merely a historical
record. It is a divine proclamation, valid for all time, and cast in historical
mould in order to be presented meaningfully to mankind. It is also a permanent
proclamation in that it will decide the fate—good or bad—of human beings in every
epoch, in accordance with the will of God.
The various parts
of the Qur’an were separately conveyed over a long period of time, depending upon
local exigencies. These different portions did not, therefore, come into existence
as a mere matter of chance. They were parts of a well-ordered scheme—perfect in
its conception—which had its origin in the supernatural world. Because they were
sent down as circumstances demanded, they were not originally in any regular sequence.
But when the scheme reached its conclusion, it was brought together as a complete
whole, according to a definite pattern, which is unrivalled in its consistency.
In that way, it is distinctly different from the type of anthology which presents
selections of the speeches made by the political leaders of the day.
We can perhaps
have a clearer picture of how the Qur’an was assembled if we imagine the parallel
of a factory under construction in India, for which the equipment is being manufactured
in some country overseas.
This equipment for the factory has to be manufactured in separate
parts in different production units. These parts have then to be loaded on to
different ships and sent off to India.
Throughout the various stages of its construction, our factory will necessarily
appear to the uninitiated as a mass of heterogeneous and incomplete objects. But
as soon as all the parts of the equipment brought in different shipments are properly
assembled, they will take on the shape of a complete factory, all ready to be
put into commission. It was in very much the same way that the Qur’an was assembled
in order to produce a complete and permanent moral code for all human beings.
That is why, although formed of such disparate elements, it is of such astounding
uniformity. It was because it bore a message urging man to turn a hostile environment
into a favorable one, that it had to be revealed in a gradual manner, thus meeting
the needs of differing circumstances. Historically speaking, it is a compilation
of a great diversity of injunctions, but the divine scheme of an Omnipotent and
Omniscient God has made it into a well-ordered and uniform whole.
So many books
have been written on all branches of learning and on every conceivable allied
subject—to date, millions of books have been printed and published—that it would
take more than one’s entire lifetime to read them all. But the Qur’an is a book
of such a kind that, even if one could study all the books in the world, its guidance
would still be a prime necessity. Indeed, one can only truly benefit from the
study of other books if one has first gained from the Qur’an that depth of insight
which is at the basis of genuine discernment in all matters of importance. Without
the Qur’an, the human individual is like a ship adrift on a vast ocean without
a compass. Just as the ocean liner is lost without its compass, so does man need
divine revelation to steer him through the entanglements of human existence. Only
one who has received his share of divine light will be able to navigate his way
across the ocean of this life.
Those who are
denied, or who have denied themselves God’s enlightenment, will be roughly tossed
on the seas of life and are likely to founder on hidden reefs without ever having
been able to bring their affairs to a satisfactory conclusion.
The Qur’an fills
that vacuum in human nature which, in all periods of history, has set man at variance
with himself. Rousseau said that man was born free, but that everywhere he found
‘him tied up in chains.’ I would say, on the contrary, that man has been born
a slave, but seeks, in unnatural ways, to make himself a master. Outwardly, man
appears to be self-sufficient, but in his innermost self, he is a complex web
of needs. In order merely to survive, man needs air, water and the produce of
the land. In the same way, in order to sustain the life of the spirit, he stands
in need of external support. Man instinctively requires a prop on which he can
lean in times of difficulty; he needs one, close to himself, to whom he can bow
his head in reverence; one to whom he can address his needs when he is in trouble;
one before whom he can prostrate himself in gratitude when happiness comes his
way. A man drowning in the ocean needs to have a lifeline thrown to him. Similarly,
a man, adrift in a vast and fathomless universe, needs a spiritual rope to which
he can cling. No one, however great, is free of this necessity. It is a vacuum
which must be filled. If we fill this vacuum with the Divine Being, we are following
the principle of monotheism. But if we abandon God and look to some other for
support, we descend into polytheism.
In every period
of history, man has been forced to have recourse to one or other of these two
props. In ancient times, those who subscribed to monotheism depended on one God
for support and, today, they still depend upon Him and Him alone. But the direction
of those who subscribe to polytheism has kept changing. Ancient man, and many
people, even in more recent times, worshipped countless objects, ranging from
the bright stars that shine in the sky to trees and stones and other randomly
chosen objects. Today, objects such as nation, country, material progress, political
power have taken the place of earlier objects of worship. Such then are the people’s
gods, fashioned by them specifically to fill the aching void in their hearts.
But even with all this, people still need an ultimate destination in life’s struggle
which will transcend the plane of pure materialism. They still need someone or
something to love. They still yearn for one in whose remembrance they can warm
their hearts and revitalize their spirits. But just as idols made of stone have
never given any true support or help in the past, neither do the more resplendent
idols of today, for, fragile and ephemeral as they are, they do not give a nation
any real strength.
The Germans, for example, idolized their nation, but, far from
standing by them, it brought them to the point of destruction in World War II.
Italy and Japan did likewise, but their respective idols could not save their
countries from becoming the graveyards of the people.
Britain
and France also made idols of their material resources, but even then, the empires
of both countries rapidly shrank, the sun finally setting on the British Empire,
an empire on which it was said ‘the sun never set.’
The Qur’an shows
us where strength in this world really lies, giving us a handhold on a rope that
never breaks. Without this, we have no real support in life. Moreover, it is only
through our attachment to God that human beings can retain their hold on the cord
that binds each to each.
The Qur’an explains that it is this One God alone who sustains
us throughout our lives here on this earth. Through Him our hearts are set at
ease, for it is He who provides true warmth in life. He rescues us in times of
peril, assists us in the hour of need. All power rests in His hands: honor and
glory will be the rewards of any nation who looks to Him for support, while only
disgrace and humiliation will be the lot of those who abandon Him. To know this
is to hold the key to all the treasures in life. He who possesses this key gains
all; he who loses it, loses all.
We attach great
importance to the scientists who discovered electric and steam power, thus providing
human civilization with opportunities for progress. But the greatness of the reality
which this Book lays before us is immeasurable. It does not just give us knowledge
of machines, but of the human beings for whom all these machines have been made.
It tells us of Man, and Man in turn learns from it the secret of successful living.
The Qur’an, first and foremost, is the Proclamation of God. Just
as every enlightened sovereign has a Constitution, so is the Qur’an the ‘Constitution’
of the Almighty, Master of Man, King of kings. To put it very simply, the Qur’an
is a book of directions, showing man the right path to tread. It is a Light which
guides his faltering steps, giving him timely reminders of God’s will, awakening
his sleeping nature and conveying the Lord’s admonition. It is a book that, in
giving him the moral sense to distinguish right from wrong, cures him, and his
society, of all ills. In that sense, it is a book of wisdom, full of every expression
of correct understanding. More, it is a book of laws, laying down for us the very
foundations on which to build and organize society. In short, it provides everything
that man—as an individual and as member of society—can ever need. Without this,
man can never be the gainer, no matter how hard he tries.
How can a man
gauge whether he has actually developed a relationship with God or not? There
is only one answer to this question: by turning his eyes inward, and judging how
his inner self stands related to the Qur’an. For how one relates to the Qur’an
is a true reflection of one’s relationship with God. The degree to which a man
adheres to the tenets of the Qur’an will be a sure indication of his attachment
to his Maker. If the Qur’an is the book he values most, it goes without saying
that God is dearer to him than any other. But if some other book is held in greater
esteem by him, then the most important person in his life will be its author,
and not his Maker. Just as it is impossible to find the true God anywhere but
in the Qur’an, so is it impossible that, after finding God, any book other than
the Qur’an should be more precious to him. For the Qur’an is the book of God.
It is the means through which the Almighty converses with His servants, His living
representative on this earth. It is a scale on which man’s devotion to his Creator
may be measured.
When man fears to stand alone, without support, in an unfathomable
universe, the Qur’an sets his mind at rest by making his destination clear to
him, and directing him towards it. In the Qur’an man thus meets his Lord, beholds
His promises and rejoices in His good tidings. In this way, the Qur’an fills a
man with sufficient conviction to define his place in the world. Giving concrete
form to the instinctive feelings which swirl in man’s subconscious about his Lord
and Master, the Qur’an sets his feet well and truly on the path of submission
to Him. In so doing, it brings him closer to God.
In seeking to
ascertain God’s will, just to read through the Qur’an is not enough: one has rather
to become deeply engrossed in it. It is only when one has formed a strong degree
of attachment to the Qur’an that one has access to all the advantages it offers.
One has to be bound to the Qur’an as one is by a contract—or ta’ahud (the word
used by the Prophet) in order to reap its benefits. This awareness of the greatness
of the Qur’an, and consequent adherence thereto, cannot come about at second hand.
That is, one may hear a commentator or man of letters discourse upon the Qur’an
and may form a high opinion of the speaker and his attainments, but that is not
the way to form a genuine attachment with the Qur’an itself. A real bond with
the Qur’an can be forged only if one reads the Holy Scriptures oneself, thus having
direct access to the contents. Only then will its wisdom be engraved upon one’s
memory. Only then will it be appreciated for what it actually is.
This is not a
mere figment of the imagination. It is supported by basic psychology. For example,
it may be contended that the difference between cotton wool and stone is merely
relative, that, in fact, they are the same thing, both in the last analysis being
accumulations of the same kind of electrons. But this contention is purely academic.
In the real world, cotton cannot be thought of as anything but soft, and stone
as anything but hard. It is not superficial or abstract definitions which determine
the impression one shall have of the matter at hand, but the knowledge that one
gains of it by direct, personal experience. |