I have to put to my readers a question concerning the Quran , the answer to which may hold a key to the understanding of the current conflict .
According to the Quran , the Quran is the indestructible , unchanging , and eternally valid word of God , and is to be seen and interpreted as such . This interpretation is also accepted by today's Muslim clergy . This is the view taught to students in Muslim countries , in both religious and secular schools ( except Turkey , which has been influenced by Europe ) . According to the Quran , Mohammad , the prophet , lived the "perfect" life . That is , all his actions were inspired purely by God and were thus the epitome of perfection .
This attitude towards the Quran and the life of Mohammad has shaped , and continues to shape , Islamic jurisprudence to this day . The foundation of Islamic law are the Quran and the Hadith ( which are a record of the Prophet's life ) , whose final authority comes from God ( because the authority of the life of Mohammad comes from the Quran , which comes from God ) . That is why Islamic law can be , in some cases , too absolutist for the liking of people who have made their own laws by the democratic process .
Western scholars and the Western public ( and also the Western-educated intelligentsia in India ) , however , do not accept this interpretation . They attempt to interpret the Quran and Hadith as they interpret other texts – secularly , with a view to history . Sometimes , it degenerates into apologism , and an attempt to interpret away some things in the Quran which are accepted as gospel by the Islamic world and by Islamic jurists . In fact , this selective re-interpretation has gone so far that anyone rejecting it is held to be anti-Muslim ( if he is not a Muslim ) , or a fundamentalist fanatic ( if he is a Muslim ) , and thus both are ignored .
This leads to a disconnect between people's perception of what the Islamic world is , and what it actually is . This disconnect prevents many people from forming the slightest understanding of the causes of the issues that the Muslim world faces today . And that is a cause for concern , because you cannot address something you do not understand .
There is an inherent contradiction in this whole scenario – can you interpret a book by any other standard than the one it has provided for itself ? Is it that , due to a fear of bringing to light the darker aspects of the religious texts , Western scholars are reluctant to use the standards provided by the texts themselves to judge them ?
Ultimately , it boils down to this : which interpretation is the “correct” one for understanding the Muslim world – the Muslim one , or the Western one ? And is it really honest to use any other interpretation than the one the text provides for itself ( irrespective of the results of such interpretation ) ?
According to the Quran , the Quran is the indestructible , unchanging , and eternally valid word of God , and is to be seen and interpreted as such . This interpretation is also accepted by today's Muslim clergy . This is the view taught to students in Muslim countries , in both religious and secular schools ( except Turkey , which has been influenced by Europe ) . According to the Quran , Mohammad , the prophet , lived the "perfect" life . That is , all his actions were inspired purely by God and were thus the epitome of perfection .
This attitude towards the Quran and the life of Mohammad has shaped , and continues to shape , Islamic jurisprudence to this day . The foundation of Islamic law are the Quran and the Hadith ( which are a record of the Prophet's life ) , whose final authority comes from God ( because the authority of the life of Mohammad comes from the Quran , which comes from God ) . That is why Islamic law can be , in some cases , too absolutist for the liking of people who have made their own laws by the democratic process .
Western scholars and the Western public ( and also the Western-educated intelligentsia in India ) , however , do not accept this interpretation . They attempt to interpret the Quran and Hadith as they interpret other texts – secularly , with a view to history . Sometimes , it degenerates into apologism , and an attempt to interpret away some things in the Quran which are accepted as gospel by the Islamic world and by Islamic jurists . In fact , this selective re-interpretation has gone so far that anyone rejecting it is held to be anti-Muslim ( if he is not a Muslim ) , or a fundamentalist fanatic ( if he is a Muslim ) , and thus both are ignored .
This leads to a disconnect between people's perception of what the Islamic world is , and what it actually is . This disconnect prevents many people from forming the slightest understanding of the causes of the issues that the Muslim world faces today . And that is a cause for concern , because you cannot address something you do not understand .
There is an inherent contradiction in this whole scenario – can you interpret a book by any other standard than the one it has provided for itself ? Is it that , due to a fear of bringing to light the darker aspects of the religious texts , Western scholars are reluctant to use the standards provided by the texts themselves to judge them ?
Ultimately , it boils down to this : which interpretation is the “correct” one for understanding the Muslim world – the Muslim one , or the Western one ? And is it really honest to use any other interpretation than the one the text provides for itself ( irrespective of the results of such interpretation ) ?
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