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 Topic: Can Islam be Reformed?

 (Read 14972 times)
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  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #30 - September 09, 2015, 07:09 PM

    I’m going to be blunt here. What’s being proposed here is a bloodless coup, and —...........

    Huh! what??

    bloodless coup by who  Wahhabist?  who is that dictator here?  bloody dictator..........

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #31 - September 09, 2015, 08:44 PM

    Wow Wahhabist, that certainly is a lot to chew on. Although I tend to agree with your own well articulated reasons for the difficulty of a an Islamic reformation in the near term through liberal, peaceful movements, I do hope that I'm wrong and that thinkers like Hassan can sway the hearts and minds. I think ultimately a lot of forces throughout the world are coming together to make literalist Islam untenable and farcical, and eventually this will lead to significant change in the very way that things look throughout the "Muslim world".

    how fuck works without shit??


    Let's Play Chess!

    harakaat, friend, RIP
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #32 - September 09, 2015, 08:52 PM

    Let me make this a little more personal by mentioning the following agreed upon hadith, in Bukhari and Muslim, as narrated by Anas bin Malik:

    Some people of 'Ukl or 'Uraina tribe came to Medina and its climate did not suit them, they became ill. So, the Prophet ordered them to go to the herd of camels and to drink their milk and urine as a medicine. So they went as directed and after they became well, they killed the shepherd of the Prophet and drove away all the camels. The news reached the Prophet early in the morning and he sent men in their pursuit; they were captured and brought back at noon. He then ordered to cut their hands and feet, and their eyes were put out with heated iron. They were then thrown in 'Al-Harra' (a barren volcanic desert) and when they asked for water, no water was given to them; they eventually died of thirst and starvation.

    I was taught this hadith within the context of tahara and so-called Islamic medicine i.e. the efficacy of camels’ urine. Thus, I had never stopped to think for a moment about the incredible barbarity of the punishment above. Was it because growing up in Saudi, I got used to unquestioningly submitting to the final wisdom of Allah as bogart said above? I do not really know but it has something to do with it more than mental illness. In addition, maybe I became desensitised because I have personally witnessed at least 40 sword executions (in Riyadh, AD Dirah, next to the Grand Mosque and in front of Masmak Fortress) in which a short statement with the relevant Qur'anic verses was always read beforehand them.

    However barbaric and cruel, this was what infallible Allah wanted and impressed on believers the greatness of the reward reaped by its implementation. My stupid and very irresponsible father took me to these after Friday Prayer executions, telling me not to close my eyes at the moment of impact, because there was a lot of ajir to be made by witnessing the will and command of Allah realised. I’d managed to suppress and bury all these teenage memories deep until ISIS violently brought them to the fore. (Even today, I do not watch horror movies because I have seen with my own eyes enough amputations and the violent thrashing about of blindfolded men, struck by a thin and breakable sword in the nape of the neck. Unlike most adults, I cannot simply think in my mind and at will that the gore I’m seeing in SAW for example is not real, thereby compartmentalising and dismissing the potential trauma in it as a bad dream, because I had seen with real thing and it very much looks like the fake one.)

    In one video, ISIS placed four or five prisoners in an iron cage and then downed the cage into a swimming pool. They painfully drowned. An underwater cameraman filmed the prisoners' muffled cries. I have seen this a few weeks ago, yet even now I can't escape the barbarity of their slow death (that this to me is part of human wickedness that I should never try to understand if I want to retain sanity). Yet I would most likely to  be cheering and ululating their death if I had been my earnest Muslim self five years ago because their death would be in the way of infallible and impossibly perfect Allah. I don't think I'm a new person if by that I meant that after Islam I have somehow psychologically and morally transmogrified into a different human. Rather, I believe I was able to reconnect (with varying success) with the already-there readiness to reject torture, cruelty and barbarism whoever their proponent was. Islam hijacks people's humanity and teaches children alwala wal bara, effectively hating other nonspecific people who couldn't possibly mean or do them personally any harm.

    Please forgive me, Hassan, for becoming personal with you or equally, feel free to tell me where to go: Why did it take you 47 years to see through the falsity of Islam when all these years you were living in England? I think what I mean by this is to say that a lot of Muslims live all their lives in the West —  where it is possible to read differing views on Islam and censorship is largely minimum, where at least personal reformist possibilities could be many —  yet they remain Muslim in the traditional, scriptural sense I mentioned above because Islamic authority has always come conclusively from without.

    They might wall themselves from the logical conclusions of what they believe in ( let that be, as I personally happened upon, considering themselves a faith minority like the Meccan Muslims so that they could be excused from not fully practising Islam and not fully potentialising their Islam; let their rationalisation be that between the majority host country and them a peace pact, by virtue of whatever residential visas they hold or by the implied allegiance to Country on their passports) and refer in hope rather than in expectation to a time when Islamic applicability to everything was much much simpler. They might keep things wishful until they are old enough to return to their majority Muslim countries of origin to comfortably retire there and worship Allah on full thrust (most honest Muslims admit it is Islamically prohibited for a Muslim to indefinite live among the mushrikeen. So much for integration and social cohesion). They might seek, as I had sought, solace in what is known as Minority Figh (فقه الأقليات) where Islam gets watered down to what allows it basic survival (again the Meccan era gets over-applied here or if you happen to be a computer wizard, Islam being watered down to restarting your PC in Safe Mode).

    Minority figh offers the closest thing to peaceful reformation and rehabilitation of Islam to suit the needs of Muslims who were born and have grown up in countries whose constitutions are secular and collide head-on with Islam. However, the reformation of Islam in majority Muslim countries would happen, if at all, by Muslims allowing Islam to fulfil its violent potential, and then getting tired of its insane and farcical realities within themselves. It only then becomes conceivable for them to seek to neutralise the offending verses, in the same way they have all over the world erected barriers and impossible conditions to effectively suspend chopping thieves' hands. Muslims need to defer judgment of others in religious matters to Allah in the afterlife in the same way institutional Christianity has become. But did that happen through peaceful reformation? I'm afraid not.
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #33 - September 09, 2015, 09:01 PM

     
    Why couldn't one argue that the Quran IS the perfect and direct word of God however God is talking to and using language that warring ancient superstitious tribes of the Arabian desert will understand, that is not the world we live in today. Therefore, other than instructions on religious duties such as praying and fasting etc the rest does not need to be applied because there are no eternal rules set in stone, we can use our minds to decide everything else.


    Some are trying to do that - and good luck to them! But as Suki said that's not an option for me because I don't believe it's the perfect word of God.

    But imho it won't work anyway. As long as the Qur'an is regarded as infallible and perfect word of God then the response will be these and similar verses:

    And We have not sent you but as a mercy to the worlds.21:107
    Blessed is He Who sent down the Furqan upon His servant that he may be a warner to the worlds 25:1
    Say: "No reward do I ask of you for this (Qur'an), nor am I a pretender. This is no less than a Message to (all) the Worlds" 38:36-37
    But thou art truly a warner, and to every people a guide. 13:7
    And no reward dost thou ask of them for this: it is no less than a message for all creatures. 12:104
    "Those were the (prophets) who received God's guidance: Copy the guidance they received; Say: 'No reward for this do I ask of you: This is no less than a message for the nations.'  (6:90)"
    "Verily this is no less than a Message to (all) the Worlds:  (81:27)"


    Even if you could get past this with a straight face - who decides what was a religious duty and not?

    Nope not gonna work.

    Oh and don't worry it I wasn't frustrated with you - just been spending too much time on the internet - and I need a holiday Smiley
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #34 - September 09, 2015, 09:05 PM

    Wow Wahhabist, that certainly is a lot to chew on. Although I tend to agree with your own well articulated reasons for the difficulty of a an Islamic reformation in the near term through liberal, peaceful movements, I do hope that I'm wrong and that thinkers like Hassan can say the hearts and minds. I think ultimately a lot of forces throughout the world are coming together to make literalist Islam untenable and farcical, and eventually this will lead to significant change in the very way that things look throughout the "Muslim world".

     That might be so but in a limited way. I believe grassroots reformation if at all possible is going come from within, and these external forces would only serve to highlight Islamic conspiratorial theories and make Muslims revel further in victimology. It is only when a lot of Muslims have by design suffered from their own medicine --- rather than suffering from it accidentally, for example, when islamist extremists used to kill only the proper kuffar, and spare anyone suspected to being Muslim, and any Muslim killed was through what is known as shielding (التترس) --- that sustainable change is likely to take root. I really hope that I'm laughably wrong.
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #35 - September 09, 2015, 09:07 PM

    I’m going to be blunt here. What’s being proposed here is a bloodless coup, and — to use a historically analogous example — wanting something nothing short of the Glorious Revolution (how very English of you, Hassan!). That is, taking away by means of discourse & doubt the literality of Allah’s divinity, which would hopefully culminate in pacifying Muslims. The process of pacifying Islam, if you ask me, is extremely unlikely to be bloodless. Thus, peaceful organic transition of Muslims into a spiritualist, self-focused, inoffensive, apolitical, C of E type of Islam remains largely wishful.

    It is for this reason that I think ISIS is not very bad news; ISIS is in actuality good. I have come to think ISIS to be a necessary evil, a movement that earnestly tries to realise the hitherto suspended, dusty ideals of Islamic teachings. ISIS quotes all the relevant verses from the Quran — beautifully recited and translated into English — before it goes ahead with carrying out floggings, beheadings and grisly amputations. ISIS rubs the practical realities of theoretical Islam in the face of any honest Muslim, in ways other terrorist movements, including Takfir wal-Hijra and Al-Qaida, don’t. This is because all modern Islamist movements are focused on defensive Jihad to the near exclusion of all else; others are one-trick ponies and are very busy with Jihad to even try to implement anything Islamic beyond its scope — whatever you have to say for Taliban, they were not universalising expansionists in the ISIS sense. You pick your ISIS deed and they would furnish you with the Quranic verse which supports it, or a Salafi interpretation of the verse which supports it, or an authenticated hadith explaining its asbab alnuzol and lending it theoretical compliance, or a validating action or saying of any of The Rashidun Caliphs or those who followed them and those who followed those who followed RCs.

    When Muhammed said in authenticated hadith — in Alhakim’s Mustadrak i.e. of the same rigour of Bukhari and Muslim —that Allah will send from his ummah every 100 years a mujedid (reformer), he didn’t exactly mean an innovator with an imaginative reconstruction project. Rather, he meant someone who takes the ummah back in time and tradition to its point of origin in him. The hadith is also in Abu Dawood and it’s not for frivolity that he narrated it in the chapter of Great Wars (Bab Almalahim). ISIS to me therefore, is Islamic spiritual and ideological revolution (and thus, reformation) in which people are polarised into Muslim or not; ruling is established through bayyah according to Al Kitab and Sunnah, and people are ruled by Al Kitab and Sunnah and is a geography in which people elect to live on Al Kitab and Sunnah.

    The whole thing is built on the infallibility of Allah and His book. Take that away, and nothing’s worth praying or fighting for. This is because a lot of the crucial Islamic stuff falls, in terms of its legislative wisdom, within the scope of trustful submission (علل تعبدية) where the worshiper trusts the validity and importance of an Islamic matter without any recourse to reason; an example would be why a camel’s meat breaks a Muslim’s wodu and why prayer where camels sleep is invalid. There’s a sort of interdependent survivalism to which earliest of thinkers and religious practitioners within the circumference of Allahu Akbar — Mutazilite et al — referred to, when they humbly acknowledged that a lot of the deen is erected on the absolute ‘truthfulness of the teller’ rather than on reason (and the examples they gave were the impossibility of reaching to the certainty of Allah having risen on his throne, or that his throne was on water, or that the throne is carried by eight angels whom he empowers to carry i.e. he carries himself).

    You, Hassan, bring fallibility into this mix and none of it stands the gentlest logical scrutiny. I think it would very dishonest of me, of you, of happymurtad and others to say that we ourselves would still have remained Muslim if Allah's infallibility and that of his book were stripped away. Why should other people sell themselves short by remaining Muslims after having discovered through a lot of probable pain the baseless quintessence of Allah? Why are there so many Ex-Muslims here when they could have remained culturally Muslim if cultural affinities and shared ancestral and social history were sufficient to make anyone Muslim? I love you dearly, Hassan, and I'm completely supportive of you subjectively calling yourself an agnostic Muslim. But beyond the subjectivity of such an imaginative label, you are not Muslim in any traditional, scriptural sense. And well you know it. You do not look forward to meeting Allah and are practically ensconced in hayat al-dunya (as mentioned in surat Yunus, verse 8 ) so that if Allah were real, only Jahanum awaits you after death, like the rest of us murtadoon.

    A lot of scholars knew this infallibility weakness, knew about this chink in the Islamic armor which is forged through generous submission and anyone’s greatest willing to believe in Allah's and his book's perfection against their own reason. These scholars, thus, have written books precisely on Islam’s legislative wisdom to make up for the possible human thing of us wanting to subject this type of truth to a minimum of common sense i.e. reason. Thus, the jurist Ibn Qayyim al- Jawziyyah wrote two books, I'laam ul Muwaqqi'een (اعلام الموقعين) and Shifa al-Alil (Healing of the Sick) to expand on the possible humanly comprehendible reasons behind Islamic rules in case raw imaan stopped doing the trick. So did his peer, Al-Iz bin Abdussalam when he wrote a very detailed book — Qawa'id al-ahkam fi masalih al-anam. Lots of what Zaghloul al Najjar and his fellow Muslim scholars do vis-a-vis I'jaz is also to acknowledge the wild might of human reason even when it's been extremely demosticated; when they seek to islamise science and scientific discoveries by claiming the miraculous Qurran has foretold them here (http://quran-m.com/).

    It would more likely to fall to ISIS rather than to pacifist, lovable hippies to make Muslims wake up and face the implementation realities of their peaceful Deen. And look around you, why is the West so insistent on rejecting violence as a way of settling arguments and differences? Was the French and American Revolutions peaceful? No. I believe the West rejects violence because it tried it for long enough and has got tired of violence. Muslims and the Islamic World haven't. Muslims cannot skip the historical cycle of lasting peace being a product of long wars and misery. We here on CEMB are a pointed example that the totality of Islam left us no choice but to totally reject it, rather than opting for creating a 'reformed' Islam that is fit for us to consume; no, if we are going to create it ourselves in principles, then that ability is sufficient for us becoming murtadoon with knobs on. I'm sorry to say this but it is my deeply held belief that ISIS, like 9/11, is more likely to drive a lot of honest Muslims away from Islam (after having exhausted all the efforts to re-imagine the Quran without its infallibility claims) than through aeons of erudite, peaceful reformation.


    Wonderfully insightful as always Wahhabist - I won't comment too much, though this deserves to be in greatest hits.

    But it doesn't have to be either ISIS or Hippie Hass to bring about change. It can be both and more Wink
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #36 - September 09, 2015, 09:14 PM

    Wonderfully insightful as always Wahhabist - I won't comment too much, though this deserves to be in greatest hits.

    But it doesn't have to be either ISIS or Hippie Hass to bring about change. It can be both and more Wink

     That's true Habibi, but I think it could be a matter of scale where you dole Islamic change through a spoon or a ladle at best but where ISIS does it through a lot of loader trucks.
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #37 - September 09, 2015, 09:27 PM

    Please forgive me, Hassan, for becoming personal with you or equally, feel free to tell me where to go: Why did it take you 47 years to see through the falsity of Islam when all these years you were living in England? I think what I mean by this is to say that a lot of Muslims live all their lives in the West —  where it is possible to read differing views on Islam and censorship is largely minimum, where at least personal reformist possibilities could be many —  yet they remain Muslim in the traditional, scriptural sense I mentioned above because Islamic authority has always come conclusively from without.


    I don't have a simple answer, Wahhabist. I think there were a great many factors. Firstly religion is not a rational choice. It is an emotional attachment. Before I started practising around age 19 I was searching for my identity and direction. Islam actually did a great deal for me at that time. I was indeed a bit of a hippie and rather wasting my time doing nothing smoking too much dope  and in a dead end job and dead end relationship. When I visited Egypt it was like a revelation for me - I loved my extended family and they seemed so sure of what life was all about. Islam straightened me out. I studied and got a 1st class hons degree. I got a good job. I married a beautiful woman who I loved. She was Muslim of course. We went to meetings - a big family. We had kids and before I knew it Islam was my whole life and I was a respected teacher at an Islamic School.

    My islam was always moderate. Orthodox but moderate at the same time. I regarded the difficult issues as something that must have a higher more meaningful explanation than the ones given by traditionalists. I wasn't a Sufi - but I think I had that elitist view that I knew better than most of the rabble and that there was a deeper metaphorical meaning to some of the nasty stuff. It mostly just passed me by anyway. Religion for me was personal interaction with my family community children wife friends colleagues - all who were lovely intelligent peace-loving moderate Muslims. Sure I studied the books of Tafseer and hadith etc... but it was an academic study - I always referred nasty stuff to that shelf marked "It has some other spiritual/metaphorical meaning" - and went on happily with my life.

    I think it would have continued like that till my death tbh if it wasn't for the several shocks that shook my personal world and tore it apart. Only then did I begin to look at Islam in a new light and suddenly I could see the things that were right infront of me but I never noticed before.

    I always say that although we give rational reasons for leaving Islam (and for entering it) it is emotional and personal reasons that at the very least trigger them.

    Hey you naughty boy you got me writing too much - I was about to get my hot chocolate and go to bed.

    Good night sir!

    Smiley
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #38 - September 09, 2015, 09:44 PM

    Oh and long live the bloodless revolution!
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #39 - September 10, 2015, 04:19 AM

    But it doesn't have to be either ISIS or Hippie Hass to bring about change. It can be both and more Wink


    It can all also go terribly wrong which would be a great shame. Let's hope we live in transitional time, let's hope the change is coming and let's hope the ultimate "us vs them" situation won't happen.  What Hassan is proposing seems like a great solution but to solve anything it would have to gather vast support, mentalities would have to change, a big paradigm shift would have to occur... It won't take months, it will take decades. That's the optimistic scenario - Islam reforms gradually and becomes more of a tradition, set of certain values, a piece of culture rather than a political doctrine influencing and controlling everything in everyday life. Liberalism Uber Alles Wink

    The pessimistic scenario is the rise of right-wing movements in Europe, more violence from ISIS and other terrorist groups that fuels more violence, fear and hate from the western world population. Most people don't really have much of an understanding about branches of Islam, schools of thought - it's all the same to them. Take Eastern block countries - predominantly christian, very homogenous.  There is already a lot of negativity towards immigration from Middle East, refugees. If you are born in monocultural society, and have no contact with anyone who's Muslim for the whole life, and anything that you hear Islam-related is War, terror, bombs, beheadings - that will make an impact. You have no other references, you don't know any peaceful Muslim families - you have no emotional attachment at all. Same goes to someone born in Muslim country and having no contact with western culture - what you will hear, what will be implemented in your brain by your parents, teachers, authority, TV - will become you. There is a lot of work to be done to fix those misconceptions. I can really see it going the wrong way, especially if there is more violence to come. Man, I'm atheist, Polish, white, I live in the UK and I have a beard and I get some morons shouting "You fucking Muslim" at me occasionally... Because I have beard... Let's hope another "Kristallnacht" won't happen...
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #40 - September 10, 2015, 07:06 AM

    I really hope that I'm laughably wrong.

    Bu you know very well that you are most probably not. Great posts as usual.
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #41 - September 10, 2015, 08:20 AM

    It is for this reason that I think ISIS is not very bad news; ISIS is in actuality good. I have come to think ISIS to be a necessary evil, a movement that earnestly tries to realise the hitherto suspended, dusty ideals of Islamic teachings. ISIS quotes all the relevant verses from the Quran — beautifully recited and translated into English — before it goes ahead with carrying out floggings, beheadings and grisly amputations. ISIS rubs the practical realities of theoretical Islam in the face of any honest Muslim


    I actually find that the average muslims are not really bothered by what ISIS does. ISIS is far away from the reality that they live in, they don't think it's Islamic. Their average muslim community doesn't act like ISIS.

    They just dismiss ISIS as being non-islamic after listening to some preacher they heard somewhere.

    I don't think ISIS is effective at being "necessary evil" as you said.


    Quote
    The whole thing is built on the infallibility of Allah and His book. Take that away, and nothing’s worth praying or fighting for. This is because a lot of the crucial Islamic stuff falls, in terms of its legislative wisdom, within the scope of trustful submission (علل تعبدية) where the worshiper trusts the validity and importance of an Islamic matter without any recourse to reason; an example would be why a camel’s meat breaks a Muslim’s wodu and why prayer where camels sleep is invalid.


    I disagree with this... People pray because they like praying.

    People want God because they like having God around.

    I think the strongest driving force in religions is the "God" itself. What religion offers - community, purpose, afterlife, etc. None of these disappear just because the Quran is fallible.

    If devout muslims have always seen praying or fighting as a chore (even for God!) then they would be lazy muslim in the first place.

    Quote
    Why should other people sell themselves short by remaining Muslims after having discovered through a lot of probable pain the baseless quintessence of Allah?


    This is our main disagreement I think. People are not in pain for believing Allah. Despite what the Quran says about dunya being paradise for nonbelievers, it is actually a paradise for believers. Believers do it because they want to do it. They pray because praying is cathartic. Praying makes them feel good.

    Religions exist because humanity NEED salvation. People need to feel good. People need to be pacified about afterlife. People need a pat in the back and encouragement from a being higher than humans.

    Quote
    Why are there so many Ex-Muslims here when they could have remained culturally Muslim if cultural affinities and shared ancestral and social history were sufficient to make anyone Muslim?


    I think that exmuslims are minority D:

    Most muslims won't make the jump.

    Most muslims are nonpracticing, lazy muslims, muslims who don't read Quran, or muslims who dismiss bad parts in Quran as outdated or metaphorical. They are muslims because they still want to believe in God even IF they don't practice. Knowing that they can just repent and go to heaven - this is powerful.


    That might be so but in a limited way. I believe grassroots reformation if at all possible is going come from within, and these external forces would only serve to highlight Islamic conspiratorial theories and make Muslims revel further in victimology. It is only when a lot of Muslims have by design suffered from their own medicine --- rather than suffering from it accidentally, for example, when islamist extremists used to kill only the proper kuffar, and spare anyone suspected to being Muslim, and any Muslim killed was through what is known as shielding (التترس) --- that sustainable change is likely to take root. I really hope that I'm laughably wrong.


    This, so much. I agree with this.

    Change has to come from within.

    I do think it's going to be somewhat bloody because conflict is unavoidable.
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #42 - September 10, 2015, 08:20 AM

    I think we are going to have to create a term for Wahhabist. Wah-smack or something.

    Quote
    Man, I'm atheist, Polish, white, I live in the UK and I have a beard and I get some morons shouting "You fucking Muslim" at me occasionally... Because I have beard... Let's hope another "Kristallnacht" won't happen...


    Same shit happens to me but I was labelled a Jew, with some other term applied before Jew, by my looks and habits regarding money. Apparently if I spend my own money the way I want I am a Jew rather than financially responsible. People get these stupid ideas in their head then form a bubble of stupid ideas they live by which acts as a filter. This is contrasted with the other stupid idea bubble that the so-called beacons of civilization are now above the petty issues of just a few decades ago. However many are blind to the fact that these petty issues were just placed on an external group, communism. With the group no longer being a threat a new scapegoat is required for these petty issues.

    Going to end here before I start ranting about political and propaganda based ideologies stuffed down everyone's throat in public school.
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #43 - September 10, 2015, 11:17 AM

    I think we are going to have to create a term for Wahhabist. Wah-smack or something.

    why call such suckers of islam as Wahhabist? call them as SAUDIST or FUCKING  SADISTIC SAUDIST MALE RULERS

    Quote
    Same shit happens to me but I was labelled a Jew, with some other term applied before Jew, by my looks and habits regarding money. Apparently if I spend my own money the way I want I am a Jew rather than financially responsible.

     You can not do that.,  ...........well give me your money ..........Jewish folks worked hard to make lot of juice . give me some otherwise I will force you in to my heha whooooo voodoo doll religion...

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #44 - September 10, 2015, 12:43 PM

    Let's hope another "Kristallnacht" won't happen...


    Indeed!
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #45 - September 10, 2015, 04:55 PM

    @bogart, don't be silly x
    @yeezevee, bless your soul and thank you for being always able to make me laugh, whether you intend it or not.
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #46 - September 10, 2015, 05:01 PM

    However much we might protest, I’m not convinced that “ex-Muslims” are as external to this debate as we’d like to think we are. Whatever we may call ourselves, our experience is a uniquely Muslim one.  Our backgrounds don’t suddenly change and our experiences don’t suddenly vanish just because we were honest enough to admit we don’t believe in Islam.

    Traditional Islam, of course, has given us lots of derogatory titles: murtad, munafiq, kafir, etc. But people don’t follow labels. They follow what they can actually believe – if they are given the chance.

    Traditional Islam is, as Bruce Lee said of classical Kung Fu, “a form of paralysis (which) only solidifies and conditions what was once fluid. These practitioners [insert, for our purposes, Islamic Scholars] are merely blindly rehearsing systematic routines and stunts that will lead to nowhere.” No one stands to benefit from it but those who derive their power and influence from the status quo, and the poor saps who genuinely believe them.

    Removing the pressures of fear and intimidation will mean that people will be free to salvage whatever they want from the wreckage of classical Islam. I don’t think the task at hand is about looking backwards to determine what we are “allowed” to believe or not.
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #47 - September 10, 2015, 05:31 PM

    Bang on!

    I think the influence of Ex-Muslims (inc... doubters, freethinkers, heretics, quranists, liberals, progressives... and even the odd Agnostic Muslim) on the discourse is already very visible.
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #48 - September 10, 2015, 06:58 PM

    @Halaine, you mistook me and mistook me more than once but I equally blame myself for talking too much and drawing analogies where it might not be obvious. Yet let me talk too much again with the expressed intention of clarifying the one thing quoted below:

    I believe I’ve intentionally and repeatedly modified the noun ‘Muslim’ with the adjective ‘honest’. This was with reference to ISIS causing unavoidable cognitive disequilibrium to them in particular. Honesty here requires not passive Islamic consciousness but active conscientiousness in which every Muslim is necessarily practising; and practising is fostered by deeper Islamic knowledge often gained by the individual informally and through their own initiative. So an honest Muslim who is also conscientiously seeking Islamic knowledge could be safely excluded from those who pick and choose their Islam and preachers according to their taste or those 'average Muslims' whom a fair minded person can workout an 'average' from.

    Thus another connected and interesting phenomenon rears its head. That is, the so-called ‘non-practising Muslim’ as a concept could hardly be anything but an importation into Islam from other traditions which might not require the fullest commitment of its subscriber so long as the subscriber theoretically agrees with them. If I may draw an analogy here, I’d say the concept of ‘lapsed Catholic’ is canonically apt (incidentally, when native speakers of English say about someone that they have “catholic tastes”, they mean having a variety of interests and not just one thing to which they give their full attention, and this could be an etymological wink at its origin in Late Latin and from Greek katholikos ‘general, universal’).

    Unlike both Imaan and Ihsan, Islam is quintessentially demonstrable even without comparing it with the other two individual 'states of the heart'. You must ‘do’ Islam and let it be known about you doing it to be a Muslim; you publicly declare the shahada unless you’re fearful for your life (this is why new Muslims do their declarations in public in mosques after well-attended prayers) ; you must ‘do’ your prayer to remain a Muslim; you must ‘do’ your Zakat when applicable to you; you must ‘fast’ Ramadan; you must ‘go’ on Hajj. All these are acts of worship which are sine qua non within the earliest, authentic understanding of Islam shed some explanatory darkness on why some people were told off for claiming Imaan before they've performed demonstrable Islam in Surat al hujurat [49:14]. Islam cannot be un-practised by a Muslim and you cannot hide your Islam from others without a compelling reason.

    ((( I’m aware of the absence of jurisprudential consensus regarding the certainty of the disbelief of any Muslim through their omission of fasting & ‘doing’ Hajj but I believe the traditional point I’m making still stands. I’m also aware that the Murjites believe you can be a Muslim without ever needing to practise it as they focus on Imaan being a testimony rather than an action — aware also that the late Salafi muhadith, Nasiruddin al-Albani too was of the opinion that you can still be a Muslim even if you completely stopped praying, but this view isn’t widely held.)))

    Therefore, I assert that those Muslims for whom Islam isn’t an everyday lived reality (as mentioned in [6:162]) are not very many, especially past teenage and as people get on in years. They are not very many because it is not consistent to put up with the physically tasking prayer and fasting, financially tasking Zakat and doubly tasking Hajj. This is with conclusive reference to the five pillars, without any dietary and sexual limitations Islam places on its subscriber.

    I know about people wishing there to be Allah or a god, Halaine, and not very long ago have leafed through The Future of an Illusion by the Viennese quack but it is experientially hard to deny that this wishful Allah is a "god of the gaps" particularly when a worshiper experiences bereavement or illness or any incurable hardship from which they seek solace/salvation.

    People grow acute islamic conscience, become more active participants in it and become stricter adherent to their Islam for a variety of reasons and at various stages of their lives to often cope with different life experiences and emotions. And I do not disagree with what sociologists say about women, on humanity level, being more prone to be religious because they have more injustices to cope with, and equally they, as a kind, are less likely to commit suicide. But I'm interested in what could happen to any passive Muslim suddenly becoming 'very practising' in what they wear, how they conduct themselves socially and more importantly, in the all seeing voyeuristic eye of Allah.

    In my experience, it is these Muslims if they were honest and have become thorough in finding out what Allah traditionally wants — through his book and prophet — that either end up becoming murtadoon or Jihadi Johns (I appreciate the irony of the former becoming the very opposite of what they'd really and earnestly wanted to achieve and I also appreciate that through their acute Imaan that 'significant minority' can be said about Islamist extremists). I'm sorry to agree in this regard with the view that any Muslim anywhere in the world might be susceptible to becoming an extremist once they sought more based on knowledge, more authentic and earnest form of Islam on the way and guidance of the Salaf. Again, I really hope that I'm laughably wrong in all this.

    I actually find that the average muslims are not really bothered by what ISIS does. ISIS is far away from the reality that they live in, they don't think it's Islamic. Their average muslim community doesn't act like ISIS.

    They just dismiss ISIS as being non-islamic after listening to some preacher they heard somewhere.

    I don't think ISIS is effective at being "necessary evil" as you said.

  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #49 - September 10, 2015, 07:21 PM

    I don’t think you are laughably wrong. I just think that you are, true to your name, seeing things through a quintessential Wahhabi lens. I had much the same position when I first began debating Muslims around my ideas of what Islam “actually says.” (I am personally a product of the Islamic University and its set of aged scholars.) The fact of the matter is that the Muslim world has had a strong and long standing tradition of being what we salafis would have called mubtadi’in, and they are more than content with those traditions

    Ibn Abdel Wahhab, Ibn Al Jawzi, Ibn Taymiyyah, et al. have always had their detractors, and what the Saudi clergy would like to present as the “official” narrative has ever been the entirety of the story. Islam, like everything else, adapts and changes along with its time and environment.

    It is circular reasoning to insist that their version is correct because their version says it is correct.
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #50 - September 10, 2015, 07:54 PM

    I don’t think you are laughably wrong. I just think that you are, true to your name, seeing things through a quintessential Wahhabi lens. I had much the same position when I first began debating Muslims around my ideas of what Islam “actually says.” (I am personally a product of the Islamic University and its set of aged scholars.) The fact of the matter is that the Muslim world has had a strong and long standing tradition of being what we salafis would have called mubtadi’in, and they are more than content with those traditions

    Ibn Abdel Wahhab, Ibn Al Jawzi, Ibn Taymiyyah, et al. have always had their detractors, and what the Saudi clergy would like to present as the “official” narrative has ever been the entirety of the story. Islam, like everything else, adapts and changes along with its time and environment.

    It is circular reasoning to insist that their version is correct because their version says it is correct.



    Again, that might be so and there are limits to authenticity that cannot be denied by a reasonable person. It equally cannot be denied in one’s own experience and that of reported, repeated realities of those Muslims having recently reconnected with their ‘truer’ Islam in practice on the ummah level. In their awakening all over the world, why would they be attracted by a dry and restrictive form of Islam, dropping in the process whatever bidah they might’ve inherited from their islamically passive parents? Why would they be unless they want to reform their Islam from whatever alluvial deposits added to it at least in the last 100 years, intentionally or accidentally, by the social irregularities of spiritual weather? I’m very guilty of the charge of pessimism on my way to embracing a realistic view of practised Islam on the ummah level but these literalist fanatics aren’t about to disappear soon or their theological influence to wane so long as rewinding the clock back to the 7th century is sought by so many on their way to seeking authenticity and authority from without. Wherever they are, they face Mecca five times a day and I'm afraid Mecca would always be literalists' ground zero.
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #51 - September 10, 2015, 08:24 PM

    Reading accounts of what Arabia was like before the successive Wahhabi invasions, and what the Ottoman Empire was like before its ultimate collapse, I can’t help but conclude that the trajectory of Islam would have been set on a much different course had Ibn Saud and his gang not been the ones to discover the Peninsula’s oil. Had the Sherif of Mecca become ruler of Arabia (and the Wahhabi sect exterminated) I think the mainstream manifestations of Islam would, at least, be more palatable than they are today.

    The remoteness of Dir’iyyah, isolated from the great centers of learning that emerged in the capitals of the Muslim World, coupled with the extreme and binary nature of the environment (desert/sky, hot/cold), and the harsh realities of desert life all bear their marks on the simple and absolute teachings of “Shaikh an-nas”- “The Populist Scholar” as Ibn Abdel Wahhab was called by his detractors. It may be true that from a purely literal standpoint, the Wahhabi claim to authenticity may be supported by the text. In reality, though, what we see upon closer inspection is an incredibly simplistic and unsophisticated take on things. It is so enthralled in the map that it loses sight of the destination.

    I liken it much to those churches just a few hours south from me right now whose congregations gather and manhandle poisonous serpents because of their literal understanding of a New Testament verse. Perhaps the isolation and lack of sophisticated learning manifests itself in them much the same. Is that “true Christianity?” I believe many would rightfully protest. 

    But the thing is, Wahhabi Islam does not actually work on any grand or practical level any more than the snake handling version of Christianity does.  Saudi Arabia itself is hemorrhaging with repression and inefficiency. Were it not for the billions of petrol dollars available to prop up the opium of religion that the ruling family has hooked the masses on, the country would have failed long ago. Their system can never be exported to form a functioning, desirable society.  The oil subsidizes the religion’s failure. Repression keeps the masses coming back for more. And the State stays in power.

    But the status quo is not sustainable. No one actually wants to live under the realities of a literalist interpretation for extended periods of time, nor can a society truly thrive under such conditions. They are antithetical to the very things that make a civilization thrive, and people are waking up to that. The ulama have found themselves making concession after concession in the Desert Kingdom, where bicycles were once forbidden and women were once encouraged to cover up in front of the television broadcast of the evening news. It is a different world now than it was 50 years ago and it will be a different world 50 years from now than it is today. I do tend to be overly optimistic, but I think the tides will change eventually.
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #52 - September 10, 2015, 08:55 PM

    But I do understand what you are saying, and people searching for answers have long been attracted to the comfort of simplistic absolutes, especially when those absolutes claim some sort of authenticity or authority through tradition. Exposure to other ideas, and even one’s own life experiences, can quickly propel the disillusionment of all but the most stringent, though. I do believe that sometimes, what it takes is for someone to finally stand up and say, “Wait a minute, guys. This just isn’t right” before enough people gain the courage to follow suit.   Again, my optimism talking.
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #53 - September 10, 2015, 08:58 PM

    I genuinely agree with almost everything you said above excluding what is counterfactual. Indeed, I’ve not so long ago myself eluded to the symbiotic nature of this toxic marriage of Deen to Dunya in the largely tribal Saudi Kingdom. Things seem to be moving, for example, a month ago and for the first time ever in the history of the kingdom they have opened the door for Saudi women to stand in municipal elections of 2015. But there is no escaping Islam’s predominantly afterlife focused; there’s no escaping literalist interpretations being authentically attractive to so many practising Muslims for whom erecting civilisational Jannah in the here and now is only one of the two husnayain.
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #54 - September 10, 2015, 09:03 PM

      Again, my optimism talking.

     Yes, your optimism talking for which I thank you a lot and carry on thanking your indulgent forbearance. This was a thinking out loud for me, so who's it to say if I stick around for long enough that I wouldn't catch the hippiist sanguine flu from you two?
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #55 - September 10, 2015, 09:36 PM

     Cheesy Perhaps I'll change my title to Hippiist Muslim. I'm curious as to what parts were counterfactual.  Smiley
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #56 - September 10, 2015, 10:05 PM

    Quote
    I genuinely agree with almost everything you said above excluding what is counterfactual. Indeed, I’ve not so long ago myself eluded to the symbiotic nature of this toxic marriage of Deen to Dunya in the largely tribal Saudi Kingdom. Things seem to be moving, for example, a month ago and for the first time ever in the history of the kingdom they have opened the door for Saudi women to stand in municipal elections of 2015.

    But there is no escaping Islam’s predominantly afterlife focused;

    we can escape that and more Wahhabist and

    Quote
    there’s no escaping literalist interpretations being authentically attractive to so many practising Muslims for whom erecting civilisational Jannah in the here and now is only one of the two husnayain. ..


    Well No..No...... there is, there is a way..where there is a will there is way

    After all it all that is there is Quran comes write out of OT and NT.  I would actually challenge any Islamic intellectual/pandit on internet in writing  that    If we remove the direct verses from Quran ((such as Zaid/Zaynab story))  that addresses/related to Muhammad ..  then there is NOTHING NEW in quran that you will not find in OT/NT..

    The only that is new in Quran is "Christ is NOT son of god and is a prophet /messenger whatever " . So dear Wahhabist., That is only the thing that is NEW in Quran..

    So what all we need to do is beat the shit of literalist brains about Islam/about Quran and about stupid hadith that is filled in Islam..   If we do that OUR JOB IS DONE Wahhabist.,   allah will give us all raisins and houries and reserve honey filled gold walled swimming pools .. These literal freaks will buring in hell fire forever ..

    THAT IS WHAT ALLAH TOLD ME..

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #57 - September 10, 2015, 10:21 PM

    I'm curious as to what parts were counterfactual.  Smiley

    With pleasure.

    Counterfactual, for those who don’t know what it is, is entertaining the might-have-beens of a past given event and is grammatically communicated through the subjunctive mood (i.e. IF only X didn’t happen, or HAD Y been the case in lieu of X or WERE it not for the actual givenness of X). Counterfactual approaches to history are frowned upon perhaps more readily in rarefied academic circles, and you seem to entertain them more than once in the following quotes from Reply#51:

    Quote
    I can’t help but conclude that the trajectory of Islam would have been set on a much different course had Ibn Saud and his gang not been the ones to discover the Peninsula’s oil. Had the Sherif of Mecca become ruler of Arabia (and the Wahhabi sect exterminated) I think the mainstream manifestations of Islam would, at least, be more palatable than they are today.

    Quote
    Were it not for the billions of petrol dollars available to prop up the opium of religion that the ruling family has hooked the masses on, the country would have failed long ago. Their system can never be exported to form a functioning, desirable society.

  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #58 - September 10, 2015, 11:25 PM

    I see. Thank you. I learn something new everyday. Reminds me of a discussion we had around Allah's knowledge and the wa law laa formulas often employed in the Quran. Allah, of course, knows what would have been, though curiously often found his will frustrated by simple mundane occurrences. I can see why academic circles might avoid such hypothetical discussion, but what do you think might have happened had the British not broken with strategy and not allowed Ibn Saud to gain control of wider Arabia?
  • Can Islam be Reformed?
     Reply #59 - September 10, 2015, 11:29 PM

    <strong Yorkshire working-class accent> "Let rarefied academic circles frown upon whatever they wish - we're just simple folk here, lad! Aye!"
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