Concept of Education in Islam
It is both
fashionable and academically useful sometime to understand and
analyze etymological definitions. In the case of English words,
these are definitions in terms of the word from which it was derived
(normally Greek or Latin). In this sense the word “education” is
taken to come out either from educere or educure. In
the first sense to educate is to “lead out or bring out,” while in
the second it means to “form or train.” According to an eminent
British scholar, G. Langford, education is an activity which aims at
practical results in contrast with activities which aim at
theoretical results. We agree with Prof. R.S. Peters when he says
that education forms a “family” of ideas united by a complicated
network of similarities which overlap and criss-cross.
It
will be generally agreed that education forms the most important
link between man´s past and future. In fact, it constitutes that
process of evaluation and transmission, of coping with the present
and planning for the future, which determines a community´s
survival. It is through education that the cultural heritage,
knowledge, and values of a social group are preserved and the
continuity of its collective life ensured. In short, education
imparts meaning to the existence of a culture and helps it sustain
its world-view. As such, it cannot be equated with a mere inventory
of the paraphernalia and instruments of instruction, including even
institutions and external structures. On the contrary, in every
meaningful and constructive way education is inextricably linked
with the general intellectualism of a culture, the principal task of
which is to provide a forum for self-analysis, criticism, and search
for authenticity. Educational philosophy, therefore, not only shapes
the destiny and identity of any historical community in its
functions as the guardian and cultivator of values, it is also the
very basis of all culture and civilization.
Endorsing the
above ideas, the well-known Pakistani educationist, the late Dr.
Mahmood Hussain, writes in a collection of excellent articles
entitled Education and Culture: “Education is a social
process and it receives its meaning and essential logic from the
human society of which it is a part. In its broadest sense the
totality of human experience within the society, whether tangible or
intangible, is called its culture.... This consensus within a
society, which is both emotional and intellectual, is what gives a
culture its inner source of strength and motive force.… The
cementing force within a society is a system of sentiments which we
can call its value-system. The system of values is essentially a set
of inter-related ideas, concepts and practices to which strong
sentiments are attached. The value system is nurtured and reinforced
primarily by the system of beliefs of a group and by its sense of
history and traditions.”
In a similar
vein the above mentioned ideas are emphasized by A.K. Brohi thus:
“By education we understand a participation in a cultural process by
which successive generations of men and women take their place in
our national history upon the foundation of an ideological
commitment to the Islamic way of life, and a certain manner of
thinking and action conforming to its tenets and commands.” (Cf.,
Education in an Ideological State, published in Aims and
Objectives of Islamic Education ed. S.M. Al-Naquib Attas).
One of the
most damaging effects of Western colonialism has been the creation
in all colonized countries, particularly Muslim countries, of a
class of people called “the elite” but which may be more
appropriately called the “deluded hybrids”. They are the products of
the imposed system of education, which is designed to create a class
which is almost totally uprooted from its cultural and moral
traditions. They were nurtured as alternatives to the Ulama
(men of real knowledge and character) who had refused, with
remarkable consistency, to have anything to do with the colonial
government. The Euro-Christian educational system of the colonial
powers was purposely designed to destroy the identity of its victims
while at the same time exalting the European race and culture. The
elite class in many Muslim countries exhibits, like their European
counterparts, a servile spirit, and can only play the role of slaves
to political and cultural imperialism. This obtains even when they
claim to be free. This is, of course, in marked contrast to those
who are imbibed with true Islamic values and are educated as
Muslims. They have remained intellectually and morally independent
and do not exhibit, even for one moment, the sickening servility and
moral emptiness from which the colonial elite suffer. This is so
because the Islamic education, as the celebrated African scholar,
Edward Blyden has observed, elevates and exalts the human
personality in Africa. On the other hand, the Euro-Christian
education which dominates African education today, degrades and
demoralizes the human personality. (Cf., Christianity, Islam, and
the Negro Race, Edinburgh University Press, 1967.)
What produced
this difference between Islam and imperialism, Blyden explains, is
that “when the religion (Islam) was first introduced it found the
people possessing all the elements and enjoying all the privileges
of an untrammeled manhood. They received it as giving them
additional power to exert an influence in the world. It sent them
forth as the guides and instructors of their favored neighbors, and
endowed them with self-respect which men feel who acknowledge no
superior. While it brought them a great deal that was absolutely
new, and inspired them with spiritual feelings to which they had
before been strangers, it strengthened and hastened certain
tendencies to independence and self-reliance which were already at
work. On the other hand, Christian influences, along with other
colonial menaces were imposed on the African when he had already
been dispossessed of his freedom and had been put in chains.” Along
with the Christian teaching, says Blyden, “he [the African] and his
children received lessons of their utter and permanent inferiority
and subordination to their instructors, to whom they stood in the
relation of Chattels.... their development was necessarily partial
and one-sided, cramped and abnormal. All tendencies to independent
individuality were repressed and destroyed. Their ideas and
aspiration could be expressed only in conformity with the views and
tastes of those who ruled over them.” Consequently, those who have
gone through this slave education suffer from “general degradation”
and could only play “the part of the slave, ape or puppet” as Blyden
laments.
A system of
education derives its legitimacy from its world-view. Contemporary
Western concept of education is a sibling of the reductive,
arrogant, and capitalistic world-view of Western civilization. The
West “secularized” knowledge in order to overthrow religion and
Truth. On the contrary, the concept of education in Islam
incorporates positive spiritual and social dimensions. It makes
sense only within the ethical and social frame-work of Islamic
metaphysical world-view. As modern ecology has taught us, and
Western science is rediscovering, nothing in nature behaves as an
isolated system. Everything is connected to everything else — an
all-pervasive principle of interconnectedness is in operation. Thus,
there is no such thing as pure physics or pure economics devoid of
social, political, cultural, environmental and spiritual concerns.
Looking specifically on the subject of education, it is worth
remembering that data or information of any sort is not generated in
a vacuum. It is accumulated in accordance with a pre-conceived
pattern and purpose. Its subsequent analysis and dissemination is
thus only an extension of the data generation process. Indeed, an
authentic classification scheme, or — to use a somewhat Kantian
phraseology — a categorical framework must precede collection,
processing, storage, and dissemination of information. If it is not
sufficiently realized by a Muslim intellectual and educationist, he
would unwittingly end up promoting an alien world-view. Saturation
with information without the analytical capabilities to sift it, and
the value-bias involved in the generation and use of data, are the
twin problems which need to be firmly kept in mind by a convinced
and committed Muslim if one is not trapped in false illusion of the
“information ocean” and if one is to remain faithful to one´s
tradition and metaphysical world-view.
For a true
Muslim, Islam is the norm for judging and evaluating everything. Not
very long ago the dearth of information on a particular subject was
the limiting factor on one´s correct cognition of events. With the
advances in communication and information technologies, there is an
avalanche of data being generated and exchanged. Now one can safely
say the limiting factor on analysis of a particular fact or event is
too much raw data and too little analysis or too ill-developed
analytical tools or norms to handle the data adequately. However, as
any intelligent person can see, there is a vital difference between
the two situations. Previously the sheer lack of data meant that
those privileged to have access could manipulate the information to
serve their ends at will. Now, provided one develops sufficiently
powerful analytical tools and normative categories, most situations
can be understood in their proper perspective. The purveyors of
information and so-called value-free empirical data have thus
resorted to other means to confuse the public. They bombard the
populace with a mass of raw data so that an impression is given that
all that is to be known about a situation or reality is available,
and the interpretation given to them by the media is the only valid
one. Soon, an unshakable image about the “facts of the case” is
formed in the public mind which, in turn, is used to shape events
and achieve desired results. The Islamic concept of knowledge (ilm)
and the process of education is diametrically opposed to all this
humbug. In order to sift the relevant from the irrelevant, Muslims
have their own scheme of classification, as the mental effort of
“constructing” facts precedes their collection.
As
a matter of fact it is the Islamic concept of knowledge — ilm
— which must form the basis of the theoretical and institutional
structure of education in Islam. In other words, what makes
education truly Islamic is the fact that it is based on a genuinely
Islamic notion of knowledge. The concept of ilm, as has been
argued forcefully in recent years by numerous Muslim scholars,
integrates the pursuit of knowledge with values, envelopes factual
insight with metaphysical concerns, and promotes an outlook of
balance and genuine synthesis. This is the ultimate difference
between the western notion of knowledge which keeps “knowledge” and
“values” in two separate compartments, and does not appreciate any
form of knowledge which is not gained by sense perception. The
integral world-view of Islam, on the other hand, furnishes us with a
number of concepts which, when operationalized and actualized in all
their sophistication at various levels of society and civilization,
yield an integrated infrastructure for the distribution of
knowledge. In addition to the core concept of Tauheed, at
least five other Islamic concepts — of ilm (knowledge),
adl (justice), Ibadah (worship) Khilafah
(trusteeship), istislah (social welfare) — have a direct
bearing on education to be pursued in the true Islamic spirit. The
all-embracing Qur´anic concept of ilm shaped the outlook of
the Muslim people right from the beginning of Islam in Arabia. Islam
actually made the pursuit of knowledge a religious obligation: by
definition, to be a Muslim is to be deeply entrenched in the
generation, production and dissemination of knowledge. This is
significantly borne out by the first revelation of Iqra
(Read!) given to our beloved Prophet Muhammad (SAW). Again the
concept of ilm here is not a limiting or elitist notion.
Ilm is distributive knowledge — it is not a monopoly of a few
individuals, or a certain class, group, or gender; to acquire it is
not an obligation only for a few, absolving the vast majority of the
society; it is not limited to a particular field of inquiry or
discipline but covers all dimensions of human awareness and the
entire spectrum of natural phenomena. Indeed, it seems that the Holy
Qur´an places ilm at par with adl; the pursuit of
knowledge is as important as the pursuit of justice. One is an
instrument for achieving the other. Only when knowledge is widely
and easily available to all segments of society can justice be
established in its Islamic manifestations. The Islamic civilization
has rightly been described by some historians as the civilization of
“the book.”
Dr. Ismail Raji Al-Faruqi, in his perceptive work entitled Tawhid:
Its implications for Thought and Life, has unfolded in a very
scholarly fashion the paramount importance of the concept of
Tauheed in the ideational and practical spheres of a Muslim
polity. We fully agree with him that Iman is primarily and
basically a cognitive or gnoseological category. That is to say, it
has to do with knowledge, with the truthfulness of its propositions.
And since the nature of its prepositional content is that of first
principle of logic and knowledge, of metaphysics, of ethics and
aesthetics, it follows that it acts in the believer as a light which
illumines everything. As Al-Ghazali has described it, Iman is
a vision which puts all other data and facts in the perspective
which is proper to, and requisite for, a true understanding of them.
It is the grounding for a rational interpretation of the universe.
In itself, the prime principal of reason cannot be non-rational or
irrational, and hence in contradiction with itself. To deny or
oppose it is to lapse from reasonableness and hence from humanity.
In
the end it must be said that only by rooting their education policy
firmly in the matrix of Islamic concepts can Muslim countries
generate the type of intellectual energy and productivity needed not
only to meet the problems of the contemporary Ummah, but also
to rejuvenate and re-establish Islam. A Muslim needs to penetrate
beyond the external form of the Modern Age to understand and grasp
its transcendental nature and reality. We firmly believe that a
dynamic and pulsating faith is not possible to attain unless our
knowledge-edifice is firmly based on the spiritual foundations of
the Qur´an and Hadith. It is heartening to note that a number
of Islamic revivalist movements as well as organizations in the
private sector are engaged in educating and training youths and
scholars from the Islamic perspective. Markazi Anjuman
Khuddam-ul-Quran Lahore and its affiliated societies, along with
numerous Qur´an Academies and Qur´an Colleges, have been established
to make a humble contribution in this very direction.
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