|
(Hajj Abdalhaqq
Bewley and his
wife Hajja Aisha
together
produced:
‘The Noble
Qur’an: a New
Rendering of its
Meaning in
English’,
which is now the
translation of
choice among
Muslims.)

A man came
running from the
far side of the
city, saying,
‘My people!
Follow the
Messengers!
(36:19)
The great
historian Ibn
Khaldun noted in
his
Muqaddimah
that societies
and
civilisations
are revived and
renewed by
influxes of new
peoples from
beyond their
frontiers. From
the earliest
centuries of
Islam this
phenomenon has
been exemplified
within the umma
by numerous
individual men
of knowledge who
have come from
outside the
heartlands of
Islam and
reinvigorated a
moribund
situation at the
centre. Men from
Balkh and
Bukhara, from
Cordoba and
Granada, from
sub Saharan
Africa and
Penang, from
India and
Zanzibar,
invigorating
streams of pure
Islamic teaching
have flowed in
from the
outlying areas
of the umma and
fertilised and
regenerated the
dried up
intellectual and
spiritual
landscape at its
heart, recalling
the Muslims to
the vital,
life-giving
reality of the
inestimably
precious legacy
left to them by
the Messenger of
Allah, may Allah
bless him and
grant him peace,
and his
Companions and
the two
generations who
followed them.
Shaykh Dr.
Abdalqadir
as-Sufi is one
of these men who
has appeared in
our time.
It is a
commonplace
observation that
there is now
nowhere in the
world that the
Western, or we
might say
Euro-american,
dominated and
inspired
technical ethos
does not reign
supreme. Some
countries may
retain certain
cultural
vestiges from
earlier times,
which in most
places are
rapidly being
abandoned or
assuming the
status of
folklore, but in
everything that
matters,
everything that
actively
impinges on
people’s day to
day lives, there
is no nation in
the world where
the western
model does not
hold sway. In
every instance
all aspects of
the machinery of
government, the
financial
system, the
legal system,
the educational
system, police,
military,
transport, all
these things are
uniformly
dictated from
without by the
dominant
technical ethos.
They are
virtually
identical in
every nation
state and any
slight
variations
simply go to
prove the rule.
There have been
basically two
Muslim reactions
to this
implacable
process of
encroachment and
take-over which
has been
happening at an
ever
accelerating
pace over the
last hundred
years or so and
is now virtually
complete. The
first was
outright
rejection, which
was absolutely
correct in that
it recognised
the destructive
nature of the
threat posed to
Islam by the
westernisation
process, but
which proved
useless in that
it was totally
unable to
prevent the tide
of
westernisation
flooding in. The
second and
overwhelmingly
prevalent
reaction has
been to embrace
the process with
open arms.
Sometimes this
has been done
quite cynically
in the name of
progress and
advancement with
no regard for
the deen
whatsoever, and
sometimes not so
uncritically in
the mistaken
notion that the
whole business
is a neutral
phenomenon which
it is somehow
possible to
"islamicise".
This latter
position has
been the one
taken by almost
all the
movements
rhetorically
committed to the
re-establishment
of Islam from
the Ikhwan
al-Muslimeen
through the
Jama‘at Islami
to the Hizb
ut-Tahrir and
continues to be
the one adopted
by the vast
majority of
Muslim
intellectuals up
to the present
time.
One would have
thought that the
singular lack of
success
encountered by
these groups
despite the huge
number of
adherents they
have had at
various times,
in the face of
Allah’s promise
of victory for
those who truly
follow His deen,
would have
demonstrated
indisputably to
them and
everyone else
that there was
something
fundamentally
lacking in the
approach they
have adopted.
But the same
naivety and lack
of in depth
understanding of
the
westernisation
process
continues to be
displayed by
them and almost
every other
Muslim thinker
in the world
today. Their
comprehension of
the
technological
process appears
to be
superficially
limited to
seeing it as the
means of
production of a
series of
apparently
neutral
artefacts –
cars, medicines,
televisions,
computers and so
on – which
appear to be
mostly
beneficial and
should be
espoused by
Muslims without
further ado, and
whose halal or
haram nature is
simply dependent
upon the use to
which they are
put. What they
have almost
universally
failed to
perceive is that
all of these
things are
merely the froth
on the surface
of a floodwater
which stretches
back through
several
centuries.
Taking them on,
along with the
economic and
educational
infrastructure
essential to
them,
necessarily
entails adopting
the particular
view of the
world which made
their emergence
possible, a view
which is
unequivocally
antithetical to
Islam.
No ground has
been gained in
the struggle to
re-establish
Islam because
those supposedly
doing it have
misunderstood
the nature of
the opposition
they face, to
the extent that
they have to all
intents and
purposes allied
themselves both
inwardly and
outwardly with
the very forces
that they are
supposed to be
opposing. It has
been the destiny
of Shaykh Dr.
Abdalqadir
as-Sufi to have
been plucked out
by Allah from
the very heart
of enemy
territory and
trained at the
purest springs
of traditional
Islamic
learning, after
having been
equipped by Him
with deep and
intimate
understanding of
every stratagem
in the opposing
book. This has
enabled him, by
Allah, to use
the profound
knowledge he has
been given to
make
categorically
clear what is
really needed
for the
re‑establishment
of Islam in its
totality.
The domination
it has gained
through its
economic and
technical
supremacy has
allowed the
present world
power structure
to assume a
mantle of moral
superiority
which even the
most cursory
examination will
show to be
entirely
unwarranted. Yet
the arrogant and
overweening
self-assurance
with which this
stance is
adopted has
cowed much of
the rest of the
world, including
sad to say the
vast majority of
the Muslims,
into believing
it to be true.
This has led to
an almost
universal
acceptance of
the false
doctrine of
human rights and
to seeing
constitutional
democracy as the
only legitimate
form of
government, a
viewpoint which
has placed the
Muslims in an
untenable and
perilous
situation, since
the doctrine of
human rights
directly
contravenes
Allah’s words in
His final
Revelation, and
since there is
no precedent
whatsoever for
anything like
constitutional
democracy in
either the
Qur'an or Sunna
or indeed the
entire history
of the Muslim
umma up until
its final
dismemberment in
early part of
the last
century.
Because of this,
one aspect of
Shaykh
Abdalqadir’s
teaching has
always been
devoted to
decoding these
things and
unmasking the
deceptions,
false premises
and ulterior
motives which
underlie them.
This is a matter
of paramount
importance to
the Muslims both
at a
governmental and
an individual
level, since the
adoption of
these false
doctrines by a
Muslim
government
automatically
subjects the
Muslims under
their control to
the authority of
the kafir power
structure and
the adoption of
them by
individuals is
in fact
tantamount to
kufr itself
because doing so
necessarily
entails going
against many
ayats of the
Qur'an.
The Shaykh
devotes a whole
chapter of his
recent book
The Technique of
the Coup de
Banque to
discussing the
true nature of
modern
parliamentary
democracy in
which he
demonstrates
clearly that the
democratic
process with its
party system,
far from
originating in
its vaunted
source of the
ancient city
state of Athens,
is in fact a
product of the
French
Revolution and,
far from being
government by
the people, is
in reality a
machine whose
function is to
install a set of
impotent
representatives
dominated by an
executive body
whose limited
tenure of office
ensures that it
itself is
dictated to by a
permanent body
of bureaucrats,
who in their
turn mask the
fact that true
political power
in the world
today rests in
the hands of an
unelected
oligarchy quite
unknown to the
people they
control. The
Shaykh describes
the democratic
process as a
"staged event"
behind which
"lies that arena
in which the
categorical
imperatives of
the present-day
world are laid
down, and that
in a setting
which has no
place for either
elected
representatives
or the salaried
employees of
political
democracy".
The Shaykh’s
object in
examining these
matters is to
undeceive the
Muslims about
the nature of
the world they
live in,
enabling them to
see behind the
rhetoric with
which they are
constantly being
bombarded to the
stark reality of
the constant
attack on Islam
which is their
true objective.
The fact that he
has emerged
right from the
heart of enemy
territory
enables the
Shaykh to
abandon the
defensive mode
adopted by so
many Muslims. In
one trenchant
passage,
representative
of many others,
labelling
western culture
as
judeo-secularism,
he writes that
it is
characterised
by:
…its
ecological
disaster,
its
social
ruin,
its
destruction
of
manhood
and
womanhood,
its
norms of
urban
murder,
rape and
anarchy,
its
exaltation
of
adultery,
its
horrible
cruelty
to
children,
its
pervasive
usury,
its
enslavement
and
impoverishment
of
millions,
its
genocidal
war
against
Islam,
its rule
by a
tiny
banking
and
corporation
oligarchy,
its
enslaving
myth of
democracy,
and its
ghastly
rush
towards
self-destruction.
It is this
disastrous
scenario into
which so many
Muslims seem
hell-bent on
diving and the
heart-felt
concern of the
Shaykh is to
preserve the
greatest number
possible from
this fate.
Alongside this
incisive
critique of the
modern world is
another
leitmotif which
has threaded
through Shaykh
Abdalqadir’s
work from the
beginning and
that is the
tracing of a
stream of pure
unitary thought
running through
the heart of
European
culture,
originating at
the very springs
of European
civilisation
with the
pre-Christian
Celts and the
Ancient Greeks
and continuing
to flow from
then right up to
the present
time. This has
led him to write
several works
which together
constitute a
rediscovery and
re-evaluation of
the European
philosophical,
literary and
musical
traditions and
which
demonstrate
conclusively
that, at their
cutting edge,
science,
philosophy,
music and
literature in
the West have
each in their
own way reached
right to the
gates of Islam.
Although these
matters are
constantly
recurring themes
throughout his
work and have
their importance
within it, it is
quite clear that
the main thrust
of Shaykh
Abdalqadir’s
teaching is, and
always has been,
directed towards
creating the
conditions
within which
real Islam—that
completely
functioning
spiritual,
political and
social practice
of Allah’s deen
exemplified for
us by the
Messenger of
Allah and his
Companions in
Madina
al‑Munawwara and
bequeathed to us
by them—can be
re-established
in its totality;
and it is vital
to remember, in
this context,
that none of his
teaching has
been abstract or
theoretical but
has all been
directly
pedagogical in
character and
delivered within
the living
context of the
continually
developing and
expanding Muslim
communities
which he has
founded and
continues to
guide.
To this end the
Shaykh has
always been
assiduous in
ensuring that
the ‘aqida, the
bases of belief,
of his followers
has been
absolutely sound
and that their
tawhid, their
affirmation of
the unity of
Allah, has been
correct inwardly
and outwardly.
This matter has
become
particularly
important now
because there is
no doubt that
the kafir
education
system, which
might be better
termed an
indoctrination
process, has had
an extremely
corrosive effect
on people’s
ability to truly
acknowledge
Allah’s unity,
and this applies
to Muslims and
non-Muslims
alike.
The Qur'an
itself makes
abundantly
clear, time and
time again, that
in reality
nothing in
existence has
any power
whatsoever
except for
Allah; there is
no active agent
in existence but
Allah alone.
This means that
everything which
happens, happens
by Allah alone.
The scientific
world view with
which we have
all been
indoctrinated,
is necessarily
based on Bacon’s
dictum that God
only works in
the universe
through
secondary
causes, and,
therefore,
contradicts this
a priori
truth. It is
this scientific
understanding of
existence which
has now intruded
into every
aspect of life
and every corner
of the earth,
and our
education merely
serves to
reinforce it and
articulate it.
All of us have
been immersed in
it since our
childhood and
none of us,
Muslim or
non-Muslim, has
escaped its
influence.
So there is no
doubt that a
true
understanding of
tawhid has been
weakened and
corrupted by the
dominant world
view. Like
almost everybody
else, the modern
Muslim has in
fact divorced
Allah from
direct
involvement in
natural
processes,
seeing them only
in terms of
secondary
causation, and
is, therefore,
to all intents
and purposes
precluded from
truly affirming
the unity of
Allah. He too
views existence
through a
Galilean
telescope and
sees a Newtonian
mechanistic
universe with a
mind permeated
by Cartesian
dualism. As
Shaykh
Abdalqadir
himself once
said, “It is
comparatively
easy to
understand that
it is Allah who
has created the
bird; it is even
not that
difficult to
understand that
it is Allah who
has created the
bird’s nest; it
is, however,
very much harder
to understand
that it is Allah
who has created
the Jumbo jet!”
One thing that
facilitated
Shaykh
Abdalqadir’s own
capacity to have
a true unitary
understanding of
existence was
the fact that
even before
coming to Islam
he formed part
of an
intellectual
elite who were
aware of
discoveries
being made at
the very cutting
edge of quantum
mechanics and of
the implications
which that had
for the
mechanistic
Newtonian view
of the universe.
He had already
freed himself
from the
straight jacket
of nineteenth
century
scientism. He
says in his book
Indications
from Signs:
The
scientific
model
that
“describes”
reality
is, by
the
scientists
themselves,
now
openly
admitted
to be a
fiction…
It must
never be
forgotten
that
between
the
scientific
discourse
and the
popular
indoctrination
there is
a
cynical
gap.
That is
to say,
while
the
scientists,
chez
eux,
happily
admit
the
fictional
basis of
their
studies,
the mass
educated
students
and
populace
wriggle
under
the
authority
of
science
with its
crude
simplifications…
And the Shaykh
even used an
aspect of the
exciting new
anti-Newtonian
scientific view
in his book
The Way of
Muhammad
when he quoted
extensively from
the atomic
physicist,
Fritjof Capra,
to show how the
Newtonian world
view of solid
matter has
collapsed and
been replaced by
an understanding
much closer to
the way things
really are. In
one passage
Capra says:
Quantum
mechanics
thus
reveals
a basic
oneness
of the
Universe.
It shows
that we
cannot
decompose
the
world
into
independently
existing
smallest
units.
As we
penetrate
into
matter,
nature
does not
show us
any
isolated
basic
building
blocks
but
rather
appears
as a
complicated
web, or
relations
between
various
parts of
the
whole,
and
these
relations
always
include
the
observer
in an
essential
way.
In his main
teaching of this
matter, however,
Shaykh
Abdalqadir has
followed his
predecessors,
the shaykhs of
the
Shadhili-Darqawi
Tariqa, in
upholding the
position of Imam
al-‘Ashari on
‘aqida and
tawhid, ensuring
that his
communities
remain firmly in
the camp of the
people of the
Sunna
wa'l-Jama’a and
are protected
from the
rationalist and
literalist
deviations which
have plagued the
Muslims since
early times and
unfortunately
continue to do
so in the
present time.
However, also
like his
predecessors he
has not been
content with a
solely
intellectual
understanding of
these matters
and in his
teaching has
always insisted
that they cannot
be allowed to
remain as mere
formulae on the
tongue but must
be thoroughly
absorbed into
the being and
embodied so that
our knowledge of
Allah’s unity is
reflected in the
way we live our
day-to-day
lives. He has
always taught
that the formula
la hawla wa
la quwwata illa
billah—there
is no power or
strength except
with Allah—means
exactly what it
says and implies
that there
should be no
dependence on
anyone or
anything except
Allah and no
fear of anyone
or anything
except Allah.
This knowledge
is not
informational
and cannot be
found in books
nor can it,
properly
speaking, be
conveyed by
words; it is a
matter of
self-transformation
and purification
of the heart. It
is the third
part of Allah’s
deen, Ihsan,
described by the
Messenger of
Allah, may Allah
bless him and
grant him peace,
as being “to
worship Allah as
if you could see
Him, for though
you may not see
Him, He
certainly sees
you.” It is the
sufism of the
sufis. It is
what enabled the
Companions, may
Allah be pleased
with all of
them, to conquer
half the world
in twenty years.
It is what is
absolutely
essential for
any true and
lasting
re-establishment
of Islam.
One of the chief
aids to the
acquisition of
this knowledge
is dhikrullah
and, following
the command of
Allah, the
people who have
taught it have
always
instructed their
followers to
remember Allah
constantly and
have helped them
to do that by
composing
awrad and
encouraging them
to gather
regularly to
practice them.
Following this
pattern, Shaykh
Abdalqadir has
established
zawiyyas and
ribats all over
the world, from
Copenhagen to
Cape Town and
from Kuala
Lumpur to
California,
where his
followers gather
regularly to
recite the
Qur'an and the
wird of the
Darqawi Tariqa
he leads, in
realisation of
the words of
Allah ta‘ala in
Surat an-Nur:
“In houses which
Allah has
permitted to be
built and which
His Name is
remembered,
there are men
who proclaim His
glory morning
and evening, not
distracted by
trade or
commerce from
the remembrance
of Allah and the
establishment of
salat and the
payment of
zakat.” The
Shaykh also
holds larger
periodic
gatherings in
various places
throughout the
world attended
by numbers of
his followers
from around the
world who come
together with
local Muslims to
glorify Allah
and sing the
praises of His
Messenger, may
Allah bless him
and grant him
peace.
It is worth
noting in this
regard that
Shaykh
Abdalqadir has
always held
firmly to the
position of la
tawhid
biduni'r-rasul,
there could be
no knowledge of
Allah’s unity
unless His
Messenger, may
Allah bless him
and grant him
peace, had
brought it and
taught it and
demonstrated it
to us, the
position that
the first
shahada—la
ilaha illalah—is
necessarily
completed by the
second—Muhammadun-rasulullah.
For this reason
instilling love
of the Prophet,
may Allah bless
him and grant
him peace, into
his followers
has always
formed an
integral and
indispensable
part of the
Shaykh’s
teaching
programme. The
great qasida of
Imam Busiri in
honour of the
Prophet,
al-Burda, is
always recited
in his large
gatherings and
is now taught
and sung in all
his communities.
And the only
English
translation of
one of the
greatest books
about the
Prophet, may
Allah bless him
and grant him
peace, in the
whole history of
the umma,
Ash-Shifa of
Qadi Iyad, was
commissioned and
overseen by him.
It is a
consummate work
dealing with
every aspect of
the nature of
the Prophet in a
comprehensive
way. It inspires
respect and love
for him and
protects him
from all those
who even, or
perhaps
especially, in
our own time try
to diminish him
and lower his
status.
Over the years
many of Shaykh
Abdalqadir’s
discourses at
gatherings of
dhikr have been
recorded and a
good number of
these have been
transcribed and
exist as
booklets or
treasured
manuscripts. In
this way much of
the Shaykh’s
sufic teaching
has been
preserved for
posterity. All
his books also
contain elements
of his deep and
direct knowledge
of Allah
tabaraka wa
ta'ala but
two stand out as
pre-eminent
expositions of
the science of
tasawwuf. One is
his early work
The Way of
Muhammad,
mentioned
previously,
which remains
one of the
foremost
contemporary
works of sufism
and is all the
more remarkable
because, while
remaining
totally true to
the
time-honoured
teaching on the
subject, it
nevertheless
places the sufic
path firmly at
the cutting edge
of the European
intellectual
traditional. By
doing this it
has made Islam
accessible to
many who would
not otherwise
have given it a
thought and also
restored to many
Muslims who had
left the deen a
sense of respect
and discovery in
relation to
Islam they would
never otherwise
have felt.
The other work
is his
Hundred Steps
in which the
Shaykh traces
all the states
and stations on
the path to
Allah. In doing
so he quotes
extensively from
masters of the
past such as
Imam Junayd and
Muhyi'd-din ibn
al-‘Arabi and
his own Shaykhs,
and yet at the
same time
succeeds in
defining the
traditional
terminology in a
breathtakingly
authentic and
original manner
which is somehow
both
contemporary and
timeless. In
this way he
gives the modern
reader a genuine
taste of the
limitless
possibilities
open to those
who sincerely
seek the secret
of their own
existence.
The
Hundred Steps
surely ranks
together with
other great
classic texts of
sufism of all
time.
While it can
certainly be
said that his
insistence on
sound aqida, and
the pure sufic
teaching which
has reinforced
it, has supplied
the unshakeable
foundations
which underpin
all Shaykh
Abdalqadir’s
work, there is
no doubt that
its cornerstone
is his
rediscovery and
revival of the
Madhhab ‘Amal
Ahli'l-Madina
– the School of
the Practice of
the People of
Madina.
The historical
situation we are
in is
unprecedented
since the time
of the Prophet,
may Allah bless
him and grant
him peace, in
that there is
now nowhere on
the face of the
earth where
Allah’s final
Revelation to
mankind is
completely
established,
where the
shari‘a of Islam
is being
properly
implemented. For
almost one
hundred years
now the world
has been bereft
of fully
functioning
Islamic
governance and
this is in spite
of the many
movements whose
sole intention
has been
ostensibly to
re-establish
Allah’s deen and
their numerous
attempts to do
so. This was the
situation facing
Shaykh
Abdalqadir when
he found himself
responsible for
the guidance of
an ever
increasing
number of men
and women who
had entered
Islam through
his da‘wa
activities. He
knew that Islam
was supposed to
be a complete
social
patterning
governing every
aspect of life
but there was no
example of it in
operation
anywhere. It
was, therefore,
incumbent on
him, as it is
indeed on every
Muslim, to do
everything he
possibly could,
to strive to the
utmost, to
remedy this
situation and
see Allah’s deen
re-established
in its totality.
One problem
facing him was
that there were
many different
versions of
Islam, all
claiming to be
authentic, the
four madhhabs
and a multitude
of movements and
groups. They
were in almost
every instance
at loggerheads
with one another
but about one
thing they were
nearly all in
agreement: that
Islam consisted
of kitab wa
sunna, the
Book and Sunna.
The task, then,
was to discover
what really
constituted the
Book and Sunna.
When he examined
the various
movements on
offer, the
question
immediately
arose of why it
had proved
impossible for
so many
thousands of
well intentioned
Muslims, a
number of whom
had been men of
considerable
Islamic
learning, to
re-implement
something which
had worked so
triumphantly
well throughout
so much of the
world for so
many centuries?
Reflection led
the Shaykh to
two clear
answers to this
question. The
first has been
dealt with
earlier, which
is that their
leaders had
misread the
nature of the
modern world and
by doing so had
come to prefer a
machine culture
and systems
control over
natural human
transactions,
which is
contrary to the
kitab and
sunna in a
clearly
demonstrable
way. The second
was that these
movements had as
their objective
a utopian
Islamic state;
they were in
fact the product
of a thought
process
conditioned by
western idealism
and as such
their goal would
inevitably
remain an
unachievable
dream. This was
certainly not
what the Shaykh
was looking for.
As he says in
his book Root
Islamic
Education:
Islam is
not an
idealism,
it is
not an
unachieved
dream
thwarted
by the
greed
and
power
lust of
generations
of
corrupt
men. The
Islam of
the
Messenger
of
Allah,
may
Allah
bless
him and
grant
him
peace,
was
achieved,
was
laid
down,
did
happen,
did
last,
did
endure,
and then
was
swept
away.
So having
discounted that
as a way forward
the Shaykh
turned his
attention to the
existing
madhhabs to see
if they held the
solution. The
received
position
regarding the
madhabs is that
they are
virtually
identical with
certain
insignificant
peripheral
differences and
the whole
business is
really a matter
of geography so
that if you live
in Malaysia or
Indonesia you
are
automatically
Shafi‘i, if you
live in India or
Turkey you are
Hanafi, and if
you live in
North or West
Africa you are
Maliki, and it
doesn't matter
which because
they are
basically all
the same. When
he investigated
the matter,
however, Shaykh
Abdalqadir
rediscovered
something which
proved crucial
in his search
for the genuine
Book and Sunna.
What he
discovered was
that the
madhhabs were by
no means
identical and in
actual fact
represented
quite divergent
methods of
deciding what
constituted the
Book and Sunna.
The madhhab of
Imam Abu Hanifa,
may Allah cover
him with mercy,
was formulated
in Iraq, a very
different
environment to
that of Madina
al-Munawwara
where the deen
had been laid
down, and the
number of
Companions who
had settled
there had been
too few to allow
a complete
picture of the
Sunna to emerge.
For this reason
Hanafi
methodology
involved the
logical process
of examining the
Book and all
available
knowledge of the
Sunna and then
finding an
example in them
analogous to the
particular case
under review so
that Allah’s
deen could be
properly applied
in the new
situation. It
thus entails the
use of reason in
the examination
of the Book and
Sunna so as to
extrapolate the
judgements
necessary for
the
implementation
of Islam in a
new environment.
It represents in
essence,
therefore,
within the
strict compass
of rigorous
legal and
inductive
precepts, the
adaptation of
the living and
powerful deen to
a new situation
in order to
enable it take
root and
flourish in
fresh soil. This
made it an ideal
legal tool for
the central
governance of
widely varied
populations
which is why we
find it in
Turkey as the
legacy of the
Uthmaniyya
Khilafa and in
the
sub-continent
where it is
inherited from
the Moghul
empire.
The case of Imam
Shafi‘i, may
Allah have mercy
on him, was
quite different
from this. He
spent much of
his life
travelling in
search of
knowledge,
studying under
Imam Malik in
Madina and then
the major
students of Imam
Abu Hanifa in
Baghdad. After
that he went to
Yaman and
finally settled
in Egypt. During
his journeys he
could not help
but notice that
there was
considerable
divergence in
the practise of
Islam in the
various places
he visited and
this led him to
formulate a
method of
standardising
and
systematising
the deen to fix
it in place and
prevent it from
being lost.
He did this by
devising a set
of principles to
be applied to
the linguistic
examination of
written sources
of the deen.
Under this
method the Book,
of course,
remained
unchanged,
although it was
subjected to a
rigorous form of
linguistic
analysis, but
the Sunna became
entirely
dependent on,
and synonymous
with, Prophetic
hadiths which
had been
recorded in
writing. With
Imam Shafi‘i,
therefore, the
practise of
Islam ceased to
be a matter of
oral
transmission and
behavioural
imitation and
became, instead,
based on written
texts from which
the actions of
the deen were
derived. Imam
Shafi‘i’s system
was brilliantly
devised and the
Muslims owe a
great debt of
gratitude to him
because there is
no doubt that it
is the rigour of
his methodology
which preserved
so many of the
sources of Islam
in such a
remarkable way
over all these
centuries.
Shaykh
Abdalqadir’s
desire, however,
was to have
direct access to
the Book and
Sunna in their
primal form as
they were first
implemented by
the Prophet, may
Allah bless him
and grant him
peace, and his
Companions, may
Allah be pleased
with them, and
both these
methods
presented the
phenomenon at
one remove so
they were
clearly not what
he was seeking.
It was with Imam
Malik, may Allah
have mercy on
him, that the
Shaykh found
what he had been
looking for.
Shaykh
Abdalqadir
entered Islam in
Morocco and so
his first
acquaintance
with the fiqh of
Islam had
automatically
been by way of
the Maliki
madhhab but he
had discounted
that along with
everything else
in his search
for the pure
source of the
deen. His
rediscovery of
Imam Malik was,
therefore, not
as the founder
of the
subsequent
madhhab named
after him but
rather as the
Imam of the Dar
al-Hijra, Madina
al-Munawwara,
and the recorder
and transmitter
of the ‘Amal
Ahli'l-Madina,
the practice of
the people of
Madina. Imam
Malik saw it as
his task to
capture for
posterity the
living tradition
of Islam in
action, the Book
and Sunna in
their pristine
original form,
which had been
passed down to
him unaltered
through the two
generations that
had elapsed
since the
Prophet’s death,
may Allah bless
him and grant
him peace.
There were two
paramount
reasons for
adopting this
position. The
first was that
it clearly did
represent the
closest possible
exposition of
Islam as it was
actually lived
by the Prophet
and his
Companions. It
constituted
without any
doubt the
unbroken
transmission of
the Book and
Sunna in the
very place where
it had been
established,
preserved and
unaltered in any
way by the two
generations who
had lived there
between the days
of the First
Community and
the time of Imam
Malik. So what
it brings to us
is that raw,
vital energy of
the first days
of Islam, the
time of the
Prophet himself,
may Allah bless
him and grant
him peace, and
the time
immediately
following it of
the Khulafa
Rashidun, may
Allah be pleased
with all of
them, when the
deen was in its
most potent
phase of
expansion and
establishment.
For that reason
it is sometimes
known as the
madhhab of
‘Umar, may Allah
be pleased with
him.
It is, in fact,
the transmission
of the very
behaviour
pattern which
made Islam
happen in the
first place, so
what better
model could
there be for
this time when
it is once again
necessary to
start from the
ground up. The
historical proof
of its potency
can be seen in
the example of
the Murabitun in
the eleventh
century. The
Practice of the
People of Madina
was transmitted
to them by
Abdallah ibn
Yasin, the
teacher sent to
them from
Kairouan, where
the living
record of the
‘Amal
Ahli'l-Madina
had been passed
on from the time
of Malik
himself, and
with it and
nothing else
they burst out
from their land
in West Africa
and revived
Islam throughout
the Maghrib and
al-Andalus,
ensuring the
Muslims in
Spain, who had
at that time
almost come
under Christian
domination, a
further two
hundred years of
Islamic
governance.
The second
reason is its
incontrovertible
authenticity
which has been
repeatedly
verified
throughout the
centuries, not
least by the
celebrated
Hanbali scholar,
Ibn Taymiyya,
whose book
The Soundness of
the Basic
Premises of the
Madhhab of the
People of Madina,
makes it clear
that the most
complete picture
of the Sunna,
both in terms of
its spirit and
its actual
practice, was
that passed on
by Imam Malik
and captured in
its outline in
his book
al-Muwatta.
This was because
of Imam Malik’s
great knowledge,
his geographical
location in the
City of the
Prophet, the
great number of
men of knowledge
who had remained
there,
preserving the
deen in its
entirety from
the time of the
Prophet, may
Allah bless him
and grant him
peace, and the
fact that, as
was universally
acknowledged, no
innovation in
the deen at all
entered Madina
during the first
three
generations of
Islam. Also
worth
mentioning, in a
contemporary
context, is the
book of Dr Yasin
Dutton The
Origins of
Islamic Law,
a piece of
scrupulous
scholarship
inspired by
Shaykh
Abdalqadir. In
his book Dr
Dutton shows
conclusively
that Malik’s
Muwatta does
indeed contain a
direct record of
the authentic
practice of the
first Community
and by doing so,
incidentally,
deals a death
blow to the
orientalists who
had maintained
that there was a
time-gap between
the first
Community and
the development
of the
shari‘a.
Because of this
Shaykh
Abdalqadir felt,
as, in fact, had
the great Indian
scholar Shah
Waliullah of
Delhi two
centuries
earlier, that
here was a
position which
was pure Book
and Sunna with
no controversy
in it whatsoever
on which all the
Muslims could
come together.
As he says at
the end of
Root Islamic
Education:
The duty
is to
come
together
at that
point
where
there is
no
argument
and no
deviation.
The
place is
Madina.
Only
there
can we
all meet
in that
primal
‘Umari
Islam, …
for it
was the
evidence
and
proof
from the
Messenger
of Allah
that men
could
live
together
in
justice
and in
peace
and with
trust in
each
other,
by
obedience
to
Allah,
glory be
to Him.
It is
the
school
of
Madina,
salafi,
and
pure,
that
will
unite
the
Muslims,
and
revitalise
the
deen,
and
restore
the
reality
of the
second
shahada,
along
with the
first.
Shaykh
Abdalqadir had
already been
responsible for
the first
complete English
translation of
Malik’s great
book,
al-Muwatta,
but now he saw
it with new eyes
as the blueprint
for the
re-establishment
of Allah’s deen
in the very same
way in which it
had been
established in
the first place.
Put together
with Allah’s
Book and the
Shifa of
Qadi ‘Iyad,
which provides
the essential
inner dimension
of love of the
Messenger, it is
all that is
necessary for
the complete
re-implementation
of Islamic
governance.
This has
necessarily been
a somewhat
oversimplified
outline of the
Shaykh’s
teaching on this
subject which
can be found in
much greater
detail in his
seminal text
Root Islamic
Education.
The depth of
research which
went into this
extraordinary
work and the
clarity with
which his thesis
is expounded
would by itself
be enough to
earn Shaykh
Abdalqadir a
permanent place
in the annals of
Islamic
scholarship.
This redefined
position of the
Shaykh found
immediate
expression in
the adoption by
all of his
communities of
every aspect of
the Practice of
the People of
Madina that it
was possible for
them to
implement, and
also in the
taking on of an
overtly
political
structure to
introduce into
each community
the element of
governance under
an amir which
Shaykh
Abdalqadir saw
to be absolutely
crucial to the
active
re-implementation
of Islamic fiqh.
He also
organised a
series of four
international
conferences
which drew
together many of
the most learned
‘ulama from some
of the places
where the
Madinan madhhab
is still studied
and practised,
namely Tunisia,
Mauritania,
Morocco and Abu
Dhabi, and by
doing so
regenerated
interest the
‘Amal
Ahli'l-Madina
and in fact
reawakened a
dormant giant.
The invaluable
material
presented at
these
conferences,
which has yet to
be fully
exploited, is
sufficient to
enable every
facet of Allah’s
deen to be fully
re-enacted
within the
present context.
It was, however,
his rereading of
those sections
of the
Muwatta
dealing with the
commercial and
economic life of
the first
Muslims, which
actually
comprise a good
portion of the
book, which was
to prove to have
the greatest
impact on
contemporary
Islam. What
immediately
became clear was
that the laws
governing the
economic
transactions of
the first
community are
totally
incompatible
with the present
world economic
system; there is
no meeting
point. It is not
a question of
Madina having
being a
primitive
situation so
that the shari‘a
regarding these
matters is
outmoded and
unable to deal
with modern
conditions. That
would be
equivalent to
saying that
Allah’s laws
have been
abrogated and
that can never
happen. No, they
are relevant and
applicable to
all kinds and
sizes of
permitted
business
transactions and
you will find in
them all the
elements
necessary for a
very
sophisticated
economy.
What has
happened is that
banking
capitalism which
controls all
economic life in
the world today
is entirely
based on usury
and, therefore,
forbidden to
Muslims in the
strongest terms
both in the Book
and the Sunna.
Yet in this
supremely
important area
of life which
affects every
one of us every
day of our lives
the Muslims
appeared to have
totally turned
their backs on
their deen.
Nowhere was
there any real
critique of the
banking system
and Muslim
involvement in
it. The state
‘ulama of Muslim
countries had
completely
capitulated and
were saying
nothing
whatsoever and
the modernist
Islamic movement
had come up with
something called
‘Islamic
economics’ and
‘Islamic
banking’ which
are in the end
nothing other
than a back door
to the same
world system. As
the Shaykh
himself says
when discussing
Islamic banking
in his book
The Sign
of the Sword:
The
inescapable
fact is
that
banking
by its
nature
is one
global
system.
If you
plug
into it
with one
small,
so-called
‘clean’
investment
called
non-interest
banking
it still
must
interface
throughout
the
whole
larger
system
until it
becomes
immediately
and
automatically
enmeshed
in the
usurious
process.
This
understanding of
Shaykh
Abdalqadir led
to the reopening
of the debate on
riba which had
basically been
dead for a
century since
Abduh’s infamous
fatwa allowing
Muslims to take
interest on
their savings
accounts in the
EgyptianBritish
post office.
Deep
investigation of
the subject
followed and,
inspired by the
Shaykh, a
conference was
held by his
community in
Norwich entitled
Usury the
Root Cause of
the Injustices
of Our Time
which looked
into its
historical
prohibition, its
reintroduction
in the 16th
century, the
growth of
banking, and its
socially and
environmentally
destructive
effects. These
papers were
published and
created a ground
swell of active
interest among
Muslims and
non-Muslims
alike. It became
clearer and
clearer that
true political
power in the
world lay not in
the hands of
national
politicians
anywhere but in
the hands of the
supra-national
financial
institutions and
those who
manipulated
them. This has,
of course, vital
and immediate
implications for
the struggle to
re-establish
Islam and those
doing it. In
another passage
from The
Sign of the
Sword the
Shaykh says:
It is
vital
that the
Muslim
mujahideen
do not
mistake
the
enemy
and
think
this is
a war
against
a nation
or a
leader.
… It is
a Jihad
against
the
usurious
banking
entity.
…
(which)
is not
merely a
personnel
but a
method,
a deen,
with its
Temples,
the
banks;
with its
holy
places
the
Stock
Exchanges
of the
world;
and its
false
scriptures
– the
data-banks
of
figures,
these
magical
millions
and
billions
that
hold the
world’s
poor to
ransom
for the
sake of
a small
elite of
kafir
power
brokers
… It is
with
these
that war
must be
waged.
The deeper the
investigation
went the clearer
it became that
their subjection
to the usurious
world financial
system was the
crucial issue
facing the
Muslims of this
time. In his
book The
Return of the
Khalifate
Shaykh
Abdalqadir
documents with
distressing
historical
accuracy how the
fall of the
Uthmani
Khalifate and
the subsequent
dismemberment of
the Muslim umma
was brought
about not by
military means
but by the use
of usurious
financial
techniques in
the hands of a
few bankers who
first siphoned
off its fabulous
wealth, then
indebted it and
finally
bankrupted it.
One of the key
factors which
contributed to
the downfall of
the khilafa was
the introduction
and acceptance
of paper money
which, from the
17th century
onwards, had
been developed
and continually
used by the
usurious banking
system as an
instrument of
control and a
means of gaining
power. Research
into the Islamic
fiqh concerning
money convinced
Shaykh
Abdalqadir that
paper money was
in itself
clearly haram
and this
conviction was
backed up by the
discovery of
fatawa from
several
authoritative
‘ulama, both
past and
present,
unequivocally
declaring the
same thing. This
realisation has
extremely
serious
implications for
Islam and shows
that through
their control of
the financial
system the
usurers have
been able to
strike at the
very heart of
Allah’s deen.
What this means
is that to all
intents and
purposes the
third pillar of
Islam, zakat,
has been
demolished.
An impartial
examination of
the classical
fiqh of all four
madhhabs on the
subject of zakat
shows that two
things are
absolutely
indispensable to
it. The first is
that it must be
collected and
disbursed by the
ruler. Zakat
collectors must
be appointed and
must assess the
amount of zakat
owed by the
Muslims within
their area of
authority and
collect it from
them, if
necessary by
force. The
second is that
the zakat on
monetary wealth
and on
commercial goods
must be paid in
gold and silver.
The
westernisation
of government
structures
throughout the
Muslim world has
led to the
complete
abandonment of
the first
prerequisite.
There is not one
country in the
world where
zakat is
collected and
distributed
according to the
explicit
stipulations of
the shari‘a. And
the usurious
world financial
system has put
paid to the
second
prerequisite by
replacing gold
and silver
coinage with the
essentially
valueless paper
tokens which are
now all the
money people
know.
Putting all
these
observations
together one
thing became
patently
obvious: there
was no
possibility
whatsoever of
re-establishing
Islam without
the
disengagement of
the Muslims from
the present
world economic
system. To
effect this it
would be
necessary to
restore
correctly
implemented
zakat to its
pivotal place
alongside salat
at the centre of
the deen, to
re-introduce of
gold and silver
coinage as the
currency of the
Muslims, and to
re-activate
among the
Muslims the fiqh
governing
business
transactions.
This was clearly
no small
undertaking yet,
nevertheless,
considerable
progress has
already been
made on the path
towards
achieving it.
Shaykh
Abdalqadir has
had alongside
him, helping him
in this task,
Umar Ibrahim
Vadillo, who has
studied every
aspect of these
matters in great
depth, using the
original sources
and much
ancillary
material, both
old and new.
With regard to
the restoration
of zakat Shaykh
Abdalqadir has
set up in all
his communities
the necessary
political
structure to
enable it to be
collected and
distributed
correctly and
set in motion a
teaching
programme to
educate as many
other Muslims as
possible about
the fiqh of
zakat and the
social and
political
implications
entailed by its
proper
re-implementation.
Gold dinars and
silver dirhams
have been minted
in several
countries to the
exact
specifications
of the dinars
and dirhams of
the first
community and
have now been
successfully
used in more
than twenty
countries. This
re-introduction
of this
bi-metallic
currency has
provoked much
interest among
many Muslims,
including a
number in
influential
positions. The
previous prime
minister of
Turkey,
Nejmettin
Erbakan was so
enthusiastic
about it that he
held up one the
new gold dinars
in the Blue
Mosque in
Istanbul and
declared: “This
is the currency
of the Muslims!”
It may not be
entirely a
coincidence that
it was very
shortly after
this incident
that he was
removed from
office. Another
exciting
development in
this field aimed
at making the
gold coins easy
to use in the
world to day is
the e-dinar.
Umar Ibrahim
Vadillo has also
gone a long way
along the road
to re-activating
the fiqh on
business
transactions. He
has published a
lot of material
about it, both
in book form and
on the internet,
putting the
matter in a
contemporary
context and
showing its
vital relevance
to the modern
world. And his
work has not
been confined to
the theoretical.
Several Islamic
markets have
been instituted
in which the
dinar and dirham
have been used
as the medium of
exchange and the
fiqh of business
transactions
applied, so that
several Islamic
forms of
contract, which
had not seen the
light of day for
more than a
century, have
once again been
effectively
employed.
In this way the
impact of the
teaching of
Shaykh
Abdalqadir
as-Sufi is
increasingly
making itself
felt among the
Muslims
throughout the
whole umma and
it has hopefully
become plain
from what has
been said that
he has indeed
been successful
both in
initiating the
recovery of true
Islamic fiqh and
in overseeing
the beginning of
its
re-implementation.
This has
inevitably been
a very
incomplete
exposition of
the Shaykh’s
teaching and has
failed to do
anything like
justice to it,
even in respect
of those aspects
of it that have
been covered,
and there are
many other
aspects which
have not been
mentioned at
all. It is
hoped, however,
that what has
been presented
will have been
sufficient to
awaken the
interest of
those who have
not been exposed
to his work
before and to
remind those who
have of the
extraordinary
depth and
breadth of his
knowledge, of
his constant
active concern
for all the
Muslims, and of
his unflagging
determination to
see the justice
and compassion
of the living
Islam of the
Prophet, may
Allah bless him
and grant him
peace, and his
Companions, may
Allah be pleased
with all of
them,
re-established
in all its glory
once again on
the earth.
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