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The Institute of Contemporary Islamic Thought an intellectual centre of the global Islamic movement
By Fuad Nahdi, Editor, Q-News, London.
[Paper presented at the ICIT/Crescent International 'Kalim Siddiqui Memorial Seminar' in London, May 7, 2000.] I am proud to be able to say that I am one of the people who can claim to have known the late Dr Kalim Siddiqui reasonably well. He was parent, teacher, friend and colleague. Actually this has caused problems with preparing my address for this afternoon, because every time I wrote something I had a powerful image of him looking over my shoulder and telling me, "you can actually do better than this, Fuad." It is very important that we have such events as this one today in our calendar as British Muslims. It is not only part of our tradition to respect and honour those among us who have selflessly contributed to the development of our community, but it should also be seen as part of the continued process of change and progress that is essential for the historical maturity of our community. This event is particularly apt because it is the way KS, as some of us were fortunate to affectionately refer to the late Dr Kalim Siddiqui, would have liked it. For more than anything, Dr Kalim Siddiqui was a man who thrilled in dealing and combatting with ideas. It was in this spirit that I finally managed to jot down a few ideas to share with you this afternoon. My presentation is going to be brief and panoramic: more than notes of a mesmerised journalist rather than those of a seasoned political analyst. Of all the countries of Western Europe and the Americas (the so-called modern "West") Britain has had — and continues to have — a unique relationship with the Muslim world. It is important that we understand this 'special relationship'. It goes back to the eighth century of the common (or Christian) era. Initially, Muslims landed on these isles as explorers and traders. Unfortunately for the British isles, however, early Muslim visitors found the country totally unattractive: certainly not one that somebody would want to willingly emigrate to. The country was poverty-stricken, physically hostile and lacked any exotic goods or produce that could be the basis of any form of mercantile relationship. The food was awful and the weather was unpredictable -- and normally awful. According to Muslim commentators at the time, even the slaves captured from the coast by some Muslim pirates based in north Africa at the time were a terrible disappointment: they were "too fair and not used to the sun, too laid-back, lazy, not inclined to hard physical work and not good at words or making conversation." But while, for the Muslims, Britain was a far away place that one could live without, the Muslim world made a very different impression on Britons. Offa of Mercia, a powerful Anglo-Saxon King who died in 796CE, was so desperate to do trade with the dynamic and vibrant Muslim world that he produced gold coins that were not only up to Islamic standards, but also had the kalimah — La ilaha illa Allah — inscribed on them. Several these coins survive and can be seen in museums around the world. However, it was not only Muslim trade and commerce that was attractive to the Britons of the medieval ages. By the 14th century — after the crusades and the introduction of several Muslim cultural traditions into British life, from the paisley and arches, to spices and the very concept of chivalry — the Muslim world was also admired and respected for its scholarship and advances in all fields of knowledge. By 1386 Muslim scholarship formed the backbone of intellectual and scholarly life in Britain: Chaucer wrote surrounded by Islamic texts of all kinds drawn from all over the Muslim world. In the Prologue to the Canterbury Tales, there is among the pilgrims wending their way to Canterbury, a "Doctour of Phisyk" whose learning included Razi, Avicenna (Ibn Sina) and Averroes (Ibn Rushd). By the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, Islam and the Muslim world were part of the elite in society. The first British Muslim whose name survives in an English source, The voyage made to Tripoli (1583), was a "son of a yeoman of our Queen's Guard... his name was John Nelson." The universities of Oxford and Cambridge established Chairs of Arabic in the 1630s, and scholars in Britain relied heavily on translations from Arabic in the fields of mathematics, astronomy and medicine throughout the medieval period and the Renaissance. The first rendering of the Qur'an in English was produced by Alexander Ross in 1649, and this edition had two imprints, attesting to its popularity and wide circulation. Of course all this is exciting stuff and there is a lot of it. It is very important that we learn more and more about Britain's Islamic past so that we can be better equipped to build an Islamic future for Britain. But time is limited. However, more important fact about the historic interaction between Britain and Islam needs to be noted: that British colonialism and colonial policy is one of the major reasons of the situation and condition of the global Ummah today. By 1897 a map of the British Empire included Nigeria, Egypt, India and Malaya — all large territories with significant Muslim populations. The British Imperial Empire has been described by some people as "the greatest Muslim Empire in the world"; that is to say, there was a time when more Muslim people and nations were ruled by Britain than by any other single government. It is also true that Muslim lands provided the manpower and material resources that contributed to the prosperity of Victorian and Edwardian England. In other words, it is Muslim wealth and human resources that put the "Great" in front of Britain. I believe it is only with the help of British Muslims that Britain can continue to call itself Great Britain today and tomorrow. Let us now move on to British Muslims. There has been a Muslim presence in Britain for at least 350 years. But it was the colonial encounter that opened the gates to the mass-migration of Muslims, starting from the middle of the last century. The East India Company recruited seamen from Yemen, Gujarat, Sind, Assam and Bengal, known by the British as lascars. A number of these established settlements in port towns and cities in Britain, particularly London. There were also a number of Muslim businesses in Britain by in the nineteenth century, of which one of the best known was the fashionable "Mahomed's Baths" founded in Brighton by Sake Deen Mohammed (1750-1851). By 1842 three thousand lascars were visiting Britain every year. Following the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869, seamen originally from Yemen settled in small communities in Cardiff, Liverpool, London, South Shields and Tyneside and set up zawiyyahs (small mosques or prayer rooms). These were the settings for the rites of nikah (marriage), aqeeqah (birth celebrations), khitan (circumcision) and janazah (funeral) and for the celebration of the two Eids and the mawlid, the birthday of the Prophet (saw). Groups of Muslim intellectuals emerged in Britain late in the nineteenth century. In the period 1893 to 1908 a weekly journal, The Crescent, was distributed from Liverpool. Its founder was a lawyer, William Henry Quilliam (known within the Muslim community as Shaykh Abdullah Quilliam). He had become a Muslim in 1887, following time spent in Algeria and Morocco, and was famous throughout the Muslim world as author of the influential The Faith of Islam. This was the first book in Ebglish by a Muslim. The Liverpool Muslim community set up the Islamic Institute, the Liverpool Mosque in Broughton Terrace, the Medina Home to care for children and a Literary Society which held weekly meetings. In 1889 Britain's first custom-built mosque was established at Woking in Surrey. Most of the funds for this were provided by Shah Jehan, the ruler of Bhopal, India. My reason for highlighting these well-know facts about British Islam is to contextualise us today as Muslims within known British history. The point is that British Islam is older than Great Britain as a political, cultural or spiritual entity. Appreciating this and understanding its consequences would not only makes us strong and relevant but also identifies us as part of the Islamic tide that has been flowing across this country's history over the centuries. Today there are 2 million Muslims in Britain. British Muslims are the most multi-racial, multi-national and multi-lingual in the world. We are also becoming the most innovative and advanced in the process of evolving into the kind of Muslims that are going to be relevant and suitable prototypes of the 21st century, insha'Allah. I would like to end by trying to connect British Muslims, Britain and the global Ummah. As I said earlier, British Muslims are a magnificent microcosm of the diversity of the global Ummah, in every possible way: madhhab, language, cuisine... you name them we have them here somewhere. One of the most important aspects of the debate initiated by the views and opinions of the late Dr Kalim Siddiqui was the position of Muslim minorities living in the West, such as British Muslims. The Muslim Manifesto and the Muslim Parliament were efforts to tackle a complex matter in a comprehensive and revolutionary manner. It is not my intention this afternoon to go into debate over either the Muslim Manifesto or the Muslim Parliament. But before I proceed I think it is crucial to point out that this document and this institution were important turning-points in the development of Islam in Britain. Today, one cannot fully comment on such diverse events as having Muslims in the Houses of Parliament, the publications of a report on Islamophobia, or the emergence of organisations such as the Muslim Council of Britain, without relating them to the ideas and institutions produced by the late Dr Kalim Siddiqui. Questions surrounding the future of Islam and Muslims in Britain are complex; as a journalist, I know better than to make predictions. But after more than a decade of being engaged in British Islam, I do have the confidence to make a few suggestions. The first is that any serious analysis or strategy for British Islam and British Muslims must take into account the nature, experience and potential of British people as a whole. Anybody hoping to seriously contribute to shaping the future of Islam in modern Britain must understand that all depends on shaping individuals to become Muslims: in our faith and spirituality, ethics and morality, deeds, community life, and most importantly of all, in our identity. Identity development has, unfortunately, received little attention among those of us purporting to work for the global Islamic movement. But it should: without people with strong individual and Muslim identities, our community has no hope of survival. Having an identity means answering the questions: "Who am l?" and "Who are we?" These questions are basic to any individual or group of people and need to be answered before we can move on to any of the other issues we face. After all, how can we discuss our purposes and priorities as Muslims in Britain without a firm grip on who we are? We need to establish a framework for Muslim identity development in the British context, to serve as a basis for creating and shaping well-adjusted, well-rounded individual Muslims who have strong faith in Allah and a strong commitment to Islam; a firm grip on reality and a heightened sense of responsibility to both the Muslim community and to society at large. Perhaps the first stage of identity development should include a strong sense of self-identity and self-awareness. This is a difficult concept for many to understand because it is not well-developed in traditional Muslim cultures, which emphasise family or group identity. Other bases for a healthy identity include ties to such basic human institutions as family (both nuclear and extended), to one's cultural heritage and, most importantly, to Islam. This should include knowledge and practice, participation in community life, membership of relevant organisations, and friendships within the Muslim community. A human being may function well without one or two of these, but when too many such contacts are missing, it means a serious weakening of a person's self-identity and self-worth, leading to identity crises and alienation. Most Muslims in Britain are missing several of these ties, and they are indeed suffering from identity crises and alienation. As a result a substantial number of people have little real sense of who they are, within either the local concepts of the Ummah or the global one. This is dangerous because it means a weakened sense of responsibility to ourselves, to our families, to our Muslim communities and to society at large. The effect of this lack of identity on attempts to establish Islam and Muslim communities in Britain is not hard to see. Increasingly, studies are showing that many Muslims are decreasing their ties with mosques and community centres: the masajid, according to many, are only there for the obligatory Friday prayers and the odd gathering. Sometimes they are useful because they run a madrassah. Otherwise they are as alien as the local KFC selling haram chicken nuggets. Our younger generation is growing up little aware of, and even less concerned about, their responsibilities towards Islam and the Muslim community here and abroad. The evidence is plain to see in the trend of British Muslim contributions towards Islamic causes. The struggle must be to re-introduce our brothers and sisters to the old Muslim axiom of thinking global but acting local. Britain — and the Muslim world — needs Muslims with a healthy and balanced identity, the starting point for the emergence of a genuine Islamic movement. This would enable communications and interactions with others and is important in discovering one's purpose and ways in which one might contribute to the world. The future well-being and survival of the Muslim community requires us to face the challenge of raising such people. We must establish some means of instilling an identity that is Islamic in every sense of the word: we must go beyond the process of just producing scarf-wearing, bearded people bothered only with the consumption of halal meat. As Muslims in Britain there is another issue of identity that faces us. This is the question of who we are collectively, as a community. The answer is very simple. No matter what our ethnic origin, language or culture, we are more than just Muslims in Britain: we are British Muslims. We seem to shy away from affirming this rather obvious fact, which affects our approach to the work of establishing Islam and the Muslim community in the United Kingdom. Serious as overseas issues are to the Muslim Ummah, placing a higher priority on them than on our British issues is suicidal. Our first duty as British Muslims has to be to establish Islam in Britain. For us, this should be as much a jihad as any jihad in the Muslim world. Such a mis-ordering of priorities is preventing us from discussing issues vital to our very survival as individual Muslims and as a community. It is also diverting attention from defining appropriate purposes and priorities for our community and finding solutions to the many problems we face. It is also affecting relationships with other groups, keeping us from finding our place in this society and reaching out to others in it. One is saddened to see an almost schizophrenic Muslim mind emerging. It is true that most of us function according to one set of rules in private life, at home with family and Muslim friends, and within Muslim communities; and according to another set of rules in public life; with non-Muslim neighbours and friends, at school or college, on the job and in business or professional contacts. Nowhere is this dichotomy more obvious than in gender relations, where Muslims interact freely with members of the opposite gender in their public life, with non-Muslim neighbours and friends, at school or college, on the job, and in business or professional affiliations. Through such dichotomous behaviour, we somehow think we are preserving Islam, but are we really? We may be preserving it in the short term but in the long run such a lifestyle prevents us from developing a British Muslim culture. We need to do some serious thinking about developing such a culture, which would serve as bridge between Islam, our Muslim cultural heritage and our cultural and social environment. We must re-educate ourselves: we must learn to discuss rather than argue; to smile rather than frown; to sing rather than growl. Our future in Britain may well depend on how well we are able to do just that. |