Blindspot!
Change
While the modern West has concentrated on "change" and has
rejected or ignored any "permanence," many Muslims have stuck themselves
to "permanence" and have ignored "change," its effects, and its
implications in the human life in different times and places. They
became fond of the "oneness" in the Muslim thinking and the Muslim
society, thinking that this is a natural and essential result of the
belief in the One God and in Muslim unity. Such a fundamental
misconception has developed other distortions about human nature, the
message of Islam, and Muslim history.
A static understanding of
the Islamic "model" has led to ignoring human diversity in conducting a
Muslim lifestyle and adhering to the same faith and divine sources. The
flourishing civilization under the Umayyads and Abbasids has been simply
considered a deviation from the right path, since the pattern of that
lifestyle was different from what had existed at the time of the early
caliphate in Medina. Naturally not every difference is
deviation, and all the Muslim life and the entire Muslim society cannot
be restricted to the political system and the rulers. Magnificent
material and intellectual developments in the Muslim civilization which
were brought up by the whole people, whatever the rulers' behaviour may
be, cannot be denied, and they had their impact on non-Muslim countries
at the time. Hereditary monarchy and absolute authority characterized
the Umayyad and Abbasid dynasties, but during that period fascinating
developments took place in the exegesis of the Quran, the examination
and collection of Sunna and the commentary on it, jurisprudence,
theology, logic and philosophy, linguistics and literature, science in
its various fields, medicine with its various areas, architecture, art,
agriculture, industry, trade, transportation etc. Can we ignore such
total distinguished civilizational developments produced by all the
people because of the negatives of palace life?
Compiled From:
"Human Rights in the Contemporary World" - Fathi Osman, p. 11
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