After explaining the process by which Islam developed into Shi'i and Sunni schools of thought and how both accrued their own peculiar errors, deviations, corrections, and then convergence into what is or what is becoming an Islamic revolution and then an Islamic State, Dr. Kalim has this to say about the Islamic State in Iran:
The validity of the newly expanded base of our knowledge will remain uncertain and problematic unless it is demonstrated that the historical sequence from which it is derived is repeatable. Historical sequences are repeatable over long periods of time. Thus, if the Islamic Revolution in Iran has not been followed by another revolution within a decade or two in any other part of the Ummah, it may not necessarily mean that the first Islamic Revolution's validity is in doubt. However, if another fifty or a hundred years pass without evidence of repeatability, then the validity of the historical sequence achieved in Iran would begin to lose its wider relevance. Similarly, if the accretion of new knowledge from the process of correction and convergence remains confined to the Shi'i school and does not become relevant to all schools of thought in Islam, then the process may also lose its wider relevance. The failure to repeat itself outside Iran, or failure to attract wider acceptance in the other schools of thought in Islam, may also suggest that the process of correction and convergence is in some respects incomplete. Should this be the case, new evidence of unacceptable results will accumulate. However, if predictable and desirable results begin to emerge in other parts of the Ummah, then the validity of the process of correction and convergence will have been established. [9]
This concern for the cohesion of the Muslim Ummah from its formative years with all its "ups and downs," with all its residual intrigues was characteristic of a man of Allah. It is very easy to extol the virtues of some great Islamic personality in history, it is also relatively unchallenging to pronounce platitudes about the theoretical solidarity of the Muslim Ummah, but when the time comes to stand by this Ummah, defending any part of it that is under attack from the forces of kufr and at the same time working out the modalities of integrating its segments into one body of a solid rank and file, then only few meet this challenge, and certainly the late Dr. Kalim is one of those few.
We have heard oft-repeated the ayah:
"Verily, [O you who believe in Me,] this community of yours is one single community, since I am the Sustainer of you all: conform [comply, observe, obey] Me [alone]!" (Al-Qur'an 21:92.)
It is also effortless to quote the well-known hadith:
"Committed Muslims in their mutual affection, fondness of each other, and attachment to each other are like one single body, if one part of that body aches and pains the rest of the body will respond with care and solicitude."
How many of the calibre of Dr. Kalim showed this type of concern and tenderness for the Ummah? He did not busy himself with empty slogans; he pressed on with the hard task of consolidating this Ummah and defending it at times of duress. Much to the chagrin of the kufr forces the Muslims closed ranks behind their beleaguered brothers in all parts of the Ummah. To a certain degree it was the undaunted determination of Dr. Kalim and his likes who saw the cohesion of the Muslim Ummah not only possible but imminent.
The similarities between the initial pulse in the Prophet's day and age is akin to our momentum in our day and age. And if the Prophet's method is practical and functional then what we need is to get on with the unfinished business of history. Islam is Islam, kufr is kufr, humans are humans, and those who place their trust in Allah shall emerge victorious at the end of the day, be they in the Arabian peninsula or in the Indonesian archipelago or in the continent of Atlantis! In Dr Kalim's words:
The position that has to be taken now, and only the Islamic movement can take it, is that the western civilization is in fact a plague and a pestilence. It is no civilization at all. It is a disease. It feeds upon itself to its own detriment. The west today is qualitatively no different from the jahiliyyah, the primitive savagery and ignorance, that prevailed in Arabia and the rest of the world at the time of the Prophet Muhammad, upon whom be peace. That jahiliyyah also called itself a 'civilization'; it had its 'values', it had its centres of knowledge and gave education to its children. It was strong in its trading relations and had a rich culture. The people of Makkah were renowned for their hospitality and poetry, and other forms of art also thrived there and elsewhere. That jahiliyyah even had its 'gods'.
In that setting Islam came as the instrument of change, indeed of transformation. Islam was not revealed to the Prophet in the seclusion of a monastery. Revelation forms only a part of Islam and consists of the actual words of the Qur'an. The rest of Islam is the actual method of change applied by the Prophet, upon whom be peace, and the Islamic movement that he led. This is known as the Seerah (life) of the Prophet, and the Sunnah (everything the Prophet said, did, caused to be done, allowed to be done, and ordered to be done). The Islamic movement that the Prophet led also included all those who accepted Islam: a handful in Makkah, then the many thousands in Madinah, and finally almost the entire population of the peninsula. The Qur'an called for the total commitment and participation of Muslims with all their resources in the struggle of the Islamic movement (Al-Qur'an 2:208; 3:142; 8:74; 9:16; 111). [10]
Comparing Dr. Kalim with many of the high-profile activists and scholars of our time, one is reminded of the ayaat in the Qur'an:
"Do you, perchance, regard the [mere] giving of water to pilgrims and the tending of the Inviolable House of Worship as being equal to [the works of] one who is committed to Allah and the Last Day and strives hard in Allah's cause? These [things] are not equal in the sight of Allah. And Allah does not grace with His guidance people who [deliberately] do wrong.
"Those who are committed, and who have forsaken the domain of evil and have striven hard in Allah's cause with their possessions and their lives have the highest rank in the sight of Allah; and it is they, they who shall triumph [in the end]!
"Their Sustainer gives them the glad tiding of the grace [that flows] from Him, and of [His] goodly acceptance, and of the gardens which await them, full of lasting bliss, therein to abide beyond the count of time. Verily, with Allah is a mighty reward!" (Al-Qur'an 9:19-22.)
Of course, giving water to pilgrims and tending to the Holy Sanctuary in Makkah is to be rewarded by Allah, but that reward will be little compared to what Allah will give to those who are committed to Him and struggle with determination for His cause. Likewise, those da'is who expend one word here and one admonition there will be rewarded by Allah. But their reward shall pale in comparison with what Allah has in store for those, like brother Kalim, (and we can vouch for no one), who constantly and tirelessly struggled and argued, who confronted and contended, for Allah. His is the portion of the ayah above.
Dr. Kalim was a combatant. He did his fighting in the world of ideas where Muslims have become most vulnerable. He stood at the front line of the ideological frontiers of Islam, he brandished his pen and he fought the mental invasion of kufr valiantly and heroically. He showed no signs of retreating from that position until the last moment of his life. His ink was truly equivalent to the blood of the martyrs. At that front line position he showed the rest of us how to be when we confront the bogus and spurious forces of kufr.
Dr. Kalim did not vacate that position under threats from the external enemies of Islam; he did not vacate that position for the lucrative incentives offered by the internal enemies of Islam. He was not satisfied with watching the assault on this Ummah from all directions. He had to speak out when almost everyone else was silent or passive in this global and titanic clash of civilizations.
Dr. Kalim was the embodiment of the Prophet's words: "The best jihad is the word of truth in the face of tyrannical authority."
Dr. Kalim you have left a void that will prove difficult to fill, but do not fear. We shall move up to that front line position and display the words of truth. It is the Sunnah and the Seerah of the Prophet that will motivate us to go forward.
Dr Kalim, you were always radiating with optimism and confidence. We encounter that poise and enthusiasm in our mutual exemplar, the Prophet of Allah, Muhammad the final Prophet, upon whom be peace.
Rest assured that this Ummah will honor all the mujahids who walked in the footsteps of the Prophet. You have joined that auspicious caravan, and with Allah's help we will also join it.
"[Such as] these will be rewarded for all their patient endurance [in life] with a high station [in paradise], and will be met therein with a greeting of welcome and peace, therein to abide: [and] how splendid an abode and [how high] a station!" (Al-Qur'an 25:75.)
Notes
- Kalim Siddiqui, ‘Political Thought and Behaviour of Muslims Under Colonialism', in Zafar Bangash (ed), In Pursuit of the Power of Islam: major writings of Kalim Siddiqui, London and Toronto: The Open Press, 1996, p. 267. This was the keynote paper presented by Dr Kalim Siddiqui at the Muslim Institute seminar on ‘Muslim Political Thought during the Colonial Period', London: August 6-9, 1986. - (Back to text.)
- Ibid., p. 268.- (Back to text.)
- Kalim Siddiqui, ‘Integration and Disintegration in the Politics of Islam and Kufr', in Zafar Bangash (ed), In Pursuit of the Power of Islam: major writings of Kalim Siddiqui, London and Toronto: The Open Press, 1996, p. 199. This was the keynote paper presented by Dr Kalim Siddiqui at the Muslim Institute seminar on ‘State and Politics in Islam' in London in August 1983. - (Back to text.)
- Kalim Siddiqui, ‘Nation-States as obstacles to the total transformation of the Ummah', in Zafar Bangash (ed), In Pursuit of the Power of Islam: major writings of Kalim Siddiqui, London and Toronto: The Open Press, 1996, p. 267. This was the keynote paper presented by Dr Kalim Siddiqui at the Muslim Institute's World Seminar on ‘The Impact of Nationalism on the Ummah', London, July 31-August 3, 1985. - (Back to text.)
- Kalim Siddiqui, ‘The Islamic movement: setting out to change the world again',in Zafar Bangash (ed), In Pursuit of the Power of Islam: major writings of Kalim Siddiqui, London and Toronto: The Open Press, 1996, p. 159. This paper was written in 1982 and published as the introduction to Kalim Siddiqui (ed), Issues in the Islamic Movement 1980-81, London and Toronto: The Open Press, 1982.- (Back to text.)
- Ibid., p. 142. - (Back to text.)
- See Dr. Kalim's letter to British prime minister John Major in March 1996, written in his capacity as Leader of the Muslim Parliament of Great Britain. This letter is reprinted in A Life in the Islamic Movement: Kalim Siddiqui 1931-96, London: The Muslim Institute, 1996.- (Back to text.)
- After the late Imam Khomeini passed away (May the Mercy-giving rest his blessed soul in eternal peace) we no longer hear or read much about wilayat-e-faqih. This has an ominous ring to it; because it would indicate that the internal Shi'i opposition to the concept have gained a strong foothold within the administrative structure of the Islamic State in Iran. Or it would indicate that the supporters of the concept are so vulnerable vis-a-vis the opponents that they dare not dwell on this "controversial" or this "heretical" concept!- (Back to text.)
- Kalim Siddiqui, ‘Processes of error, deviation, correction and convergence in Muslim political thought' in Stages of Islamic Revolution, London and Toronto: The Open Press, 1996, p. 126. This paper is also published in Zafar Bangash (ed), In Pursuit of the Power of Islam: major writings of Kalim Siddiqui, London and Toronto: The Open Press, 1996, and on-line on the website of the ICIT (www.islamicthought.org/pp-ks-processes.html). - (Back to text.)
- Kalim Siddiqui, ‘The Islamic movement: setting out to change the world again', op. cit., p. 144.- (Back to text.)
About this paper
This paper was presented by Imam Muhammad al-Asi at the ‘Dr Kalim Siddiqui Memorial Conference' convened by the Muslim Institute for Research and Planning and the Muslim Parliament of Great Britain in London on November 3, 1996. - (Back to top.)