Islamiat Notes For Css
Islamiat Notes For Css
Islamic Studies
Revised Syllabus
This document is compiled from numerous articles and research papers. Some of the
references are mentioned. I hope you make the best use of this hard work. Wish you all Best of
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Contents
1) Concept of Islam
10) Study of Seerah of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) as Role Model for:- Military Strategist
and Peace Maker
11) Study of Seerah of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) as Role Model for:- Diplomat
14) Islamic Civilization and Culture: Meanings and the Vital Elements
16) Distinctions of Islamic Civilization (Tauheed, Spiritualism, Dignity of Man, Equality, Social
Justice, Moral Values, Tolerance, Rule of Law)
17) Islam and World: Impact of Islamic Civilization on the West and Vice Versa
23) Concept of Governance and its Applications in the light of Quran, Sunnah and Fiqh
24) Governance Structure in Islam i.e. (Shura, Legislation, Sources of Islamic Law)
1) Origins of Islam
b. The word Islam means "entering into a condition of peace and security with God,
through allegiance or surrender to him".
c. Islam was revealed to the Prophet Muhammad who lived from 570 CE to 632 CE
in Mecca in modern-day Saudi Arabia.
d. The religion of Islam is the complete acceptance of the teachings and guidance
of God as revealed to His, Prophet Muhammad (pbuh).
d. Belief in The prophets of God, especially Muhammad: "We believe in Allah, and in
what has been revealed to us and what was revealed to Abraham, Ismael' Isaac,
Jacob, and the Tribes, and in (the Books) given to Moses, Jesus, and the
prophets, from their Lord. We make no distinction between one and another
among them, and to Allah do we bow our will (in-Islam)." (Quran 3:84).
i. Allah's Apostle said, "If Allah sends punishment upon a nation then it
befalls upon the whole population indiscriminately and then they will be
resurrected (and judged) according to their deeds." Sahih Bukhari
a. Shahadah (declaration of faith): "I bear witness that there is no god, but God; I
bear witness that Muhammad is the prophet of God." By reciting this, one enters
Islamic faith.
b. Salaah (prayer)
c. Zakat (charity)
d. Saum (fasting)
e. Hajj (pilgrimage)
4) Sources of Law
a. Holy Quran
b. Sharia: Sharia is the sacred law of Islam, based on the divine revelations
contained in the Qur'an and sunna
5) Sunni and the Shi'a: This division arose over the order of caliph succession in the first
century of the Islamic calendar.
c. The Concept of Piety (Taqwa): "Lo! the noblest of you, in the sight of God-
Almighty is the best in conduct." (49-13)
d. The Concept of Prophethood
e. The Concept of Life
f. The Concept of Religion
g. The Concept of Sin: No concept of Original sin: He is so Gracious and
Compassionate that His Forgiveness is Encompassing and His Mercy all –
Inclusive (Quran, 7:156)
h. The Concept of Freedom: The Truth is from your Lord. Let him who will, believe,
and let him who will, disbelieve (Quran, 18:29).
i. The Concept of Equality: O mankind, verily We have created you from a single
(Pair) of a male and a female, and have made you into nations and tribes, that
you may know each other. Verily the most honored of you in the sight of God is
the most righteous (49:13).
j. The Concept of Brotherhood: “One Muslim is like a building brick to the others;
one part strengthens the others.” Sahih Bukhari
k. The Concept of Peace: daily salutations
l. The Concept of Community: You should be kind to those who are on earth and
He who is in Heavens will be kind to you” Sahih Bukhari
m. The Concept of Morality; prohibition of certain things: All kinds of intoxicating
wines, liquors, and spirits (Quran, 2:219)
n. The Concept of the Universe: principle of moderation
8) Conclusion
1) Introduction
a. Religion (din) is an all-round movement in the light of faith in Allah and a sense of
responsibility for the formation of thought and belief, for the promotion of high
principles of human morality for the establishment of good relations among
members of the society and the elimination of every sort of undue discrimination.
2) Sanction for the Principles of Morality: Verily, Allah enjoins justice, and the doing of good
to others; and giving like kindred; and forbids indecency and manifest evil and
transgression. (Ch.16:V.91) -
3) Power to Endure Adversities of Life "Surely those who are close to Allah, have no fear
nor shall they grieve." (Surah Younus, 10:62)
4) Encounter with Ideological Vacuum
5) An Aid to the Progress of Science and Knowledge "Everyone is entangled in the outcome
of his deeds." (Surah al-Muddat-thir 74:38)
6) Fight against Discrimination: "Man, we have created you from a male and a female, and
we have divided you into nations and tribes, so that you may get to know one another.
Surely the most honorable of you in the sight of Allah is he who is most pious."(Surah al-
Hujurat, 49 :13)
7) Roots of Religious Sense: Islam is in harmony with nature which Allah has designed for
man. ( Surah al -Rum,30 : 30)
10) Religion promotes social solidarity: 'The best among you are those who have the best
manners and character.' "Allah Almighty revealed to me that you should be humble and
that you should not wrong one another." (Bukhari)
11) Religion inculcates the spirit of self-service: "Removal from the way of that which is
harmful is charity." Sahih Bukhari
12) Religion influences economy: "Sadaqah is incumbent on every Muslim." Shahih Bukhari
1) Introduction
2) Differences
a. Madhab (Religion) has never been used in the entire treasury of Quranic text or
Ahadith, Deen has been used for Islam. “Surely the true religion with Allah is
Islam. True Religion, Allah’s religion.”
c. Several Religions can co-exist but there can be only one deen(system) ‘Then, do
they like a religion other than the religion of Allah? And to Him has submitted
whoso is in Heavens and Earth, willingly and unwillingly, and to Him shall they be
returned”
d. Deen Includes Madhab which only covers three things; belief, worship, and social
customs. Deen is the submission to one God whereas religion can be submission
to many gods. Allah is, besides Whomnone is to be worshipped, Self-living
Sustainer of others.
f. Deen provides complete guideline for all spheres of life with definite laws ‘These
are they whose deeds have been perished in the world and the next and they
shall have no helpers’
g. Islam as a deen is a complete religion with a definite code of life and divine laws
for guidance. ‘This day I have perfected your religion for you and completed my
favour upon you and have chosed for you, Islam as your religion”
h. Islam as a deen promotes family life and is against ascetism and monasticism.
“No ascetism in Islam”
i. Deen calls for a balanced approach in life whereas different religions have
extremities within them: ‘Wellbeing in this world and well being in the hereafter’
God likes to see traces of His bounty on His Creatures’ And do not forget your
share of the world
3) Conclusion
1) Introduction
3) Islam Advocates The Truth Of All The Prophets And Their Books: (No Monopoly of Truth)
And there is no people to whom a Warner has not been sent (35 : 25).
4) Differences and Contradictions Among Faiths - Their Reality exposed only by Islam: They
pervert the words from their proper places and have forgotten a good part of that with
which they were exhorted [10].
5) Islam – an Eternal Religion: This day have I perfected your religion for you and
completed My favour upon you and have chosen for you Islam as religion (5:4)
6) Safeguarding of the Holy Qur’an: “Verily We have sent down this book and verily We shall
safeguard it”(15:10)
7) Islam Combines all Truth in a New Perspective: This indeed is what is taught in the
earlier scriptures; the scriptures of Abraham and Moses (87:19-20)
a. Verily the most honourable among you, in the sight of Allah, is he who is the
most righteous among you [41].
11) Fulfillment of Prophecies: The Prophet said, "Time will pass rapidly, good deeds will
decrease, miserliness will be thrown (in the hearts of the people) afflictions will appear
and there will be much 'Al-Harj." They said, "O Allah's Apostle! What is "Al-Harj?" He said,
13) A Religion Of Peace: The Holy Prophet said that a Muslim is he whose word and deed do
no harm to others, Farewell Pilgrimage, is an eternal charter of peace for all mankind
14) No Contradiction Between God's Word And His Deed: It is He Who hath created for you
all things that are on the earth; Moreover His design comprehended the heavens, for He
gave order and perfection to the seven firmaments; and of all things He hath perfect
knowledge. (2:29)
15) Islam Compels Us To Use Reason: Do you not see that Allah causes the night to enter
the day and causes the day to enter the night and has subjected the sun and the moon,
each running [its course] for a specified term, and that Allah , with whatever you do, is
Acquainted? 31:29
16) Soon will We show them our Signs in the horizons and in themselves, until it becomes
manifest to them that this is the Truth. Is it not enough that your Lord witnesses all
things? (41:53)
17) Conclusion
1) Introduction
a. There are three important areas in which Islam directs the life of its followers:
iii. Religious Ethics, known as Akhlaq and Adab (Virtues and Manners of
Conduct)
b. The two highly respected sources of Islamic teachings in these three areas are
the Qur'an, regarded by Muslims as the "Book of God," and the Sunna, the
exemplary conduct of the Prophet.
b. IMAN in Arabic means to “feel secure in one’s faith” by understanding the belief
system intelligently and implementing it in one’s daily life. belief system requires
understanding and commitment for anyone who wishes to follow Islam
c. There are six Fundamental Beliefs - usul al-din, which must be understood
individually and intelligently:
vi. 'Adl: Belief in the Divine Justice - the attribute that guarantees that all
humans will be treated equally as God’s creatures, and that all humans
are endowed with the conscience to distinguish the right from the wrong.
a. In Islam there are a number of religious practices that Muslims are required to
perform as their duty to God and their responsibility towards fellow humans.
d. Five practices:
ii. SALAT (namaz) is daily worship, required five times a day: at dawn,
midday, afternoon, evening, and night. “ Who believe in the unseen, are
steadfast in prayer, spend out of what We have provided for them” (2:3)
You should worship Allah, as if you see Him; if you do not see Him, He
surely sees you. [Muslim]
iii. SAWM is the fast of the month of Ramadan, marked according to the
Muslim lunar calendar that has been in use since the seventh century. “O
you who believe! Fasting is prescribed to you, as it was prescribed to
those before you, so that you may learn self-restraint” (2:183)
iv. HAJJ is the annual pilgrimage, which all Muslims are required to
undertake once in their lives, provided they have the financial means.
vi. JIHAD is to “strive and struggle” with the spiritual and moral development
of the self, so that it becomes capable of withstanding the temptations
and defending oneself and others against those who threaten their
physical and spiritual well being.
b. The Shari`a is the divinely ordained blueprint for human conduct, which is
inherently and essentially religious.
d. Islamic legal theory recognizes four sources on the basis of which judicial
decisions could be derived: the Qur'an, the Sunna, consensus (ijma`) of the early
community of the Muslims, and reason (al-`aql) which recognizes a substantive
role for methods of reasoning from data furnished by the Qur'an and the Sunna,
in order to estimate the unknown from the known ruling.
i. The legal school that followed the Iraqi tradition was called "Hanafi," after
Abu Hanifa (d. 767) the "imam" (teacher) in Iraq.
ii. Those who adhered to the rulings of Malik b. Anas (d. 795), in Arabia and
elsewhere, were known as "Malikis."
iii. Al-Shafi`i founded a legal school in Egypt whose influence spread widely
to other regions of the Muslim world.
iv. Another school was associated with Ahmad b. Hanbal (d. 855), who
compiled a work on hadith-reports that became the source for juridical
decisions of those who followed him.
v. Shi`ites developed their own legal school, whose leading authority was
the Imam Ja`far al-Sadiq (d. 748).
vi. Most of the Sunnites follow Hanafi or Shafi`i; whereas the Shi`ites follow
the Ja`fari school.
g. The Shari`a reflects Muslim endeavors to ensure that Islam pervades the whole
of life.
Conclusion
1) Introduction
a. Belief in the Gaib: {This is the Scripture whereof there is no doubt, a guidance
for those who are conscious (of Allah). Who believe in the Unseen, are
steadfast in prayer, and spend out of what We have provided for them;} (Al-
Baqarah 2: 2-3)
b. Abu Jafar Al-Razi quoted Al-Rabi` ibn Anas, reporting from Abu Al-Aliyah about
God's statement, {Those who have faith in the Al-Ghaib}, “They believe in Allah,
His angels, Books, Messengers, the Last Day, His Paradise, Fire and in the
meeting with Him. They also believe in life after death and in Resurrection along
with Belief in The supremacy of God's will (or predestination). All of this is the
Ghaib.'' (Tafsir ibn Kathir)
c. Belief in The prophets of God, especially Muhammad: "We believe in Allah, and in
what has been revealed to us and what was revealed to Abraham, Ismael' Isaac,
Jacob, and the Tribes, and in (the Books) given to Moses, Jesus, and the
prophets, from their Lord. We make no distinction between one and another
among them, and to Allah do we bow our will (in-Islam)." (Quran 3:84).
d. Belief in The supremacy of God's will (or predestination) Allah's Apostle said, "If
Allah sends punishment upon a nation then it befalls upon the whole population
indiscriminately and then they will be resurrected (and judged) according to
their deeds." Sahih Bukhari
b. Freedom from slavery to other forces to that saves him from being confined to
any material limits.
e. Modesty and Humility; Allah's Apostle said, "Allah will not be merciful to those
who are not merciful to mankind." Sahih Bukhari
h. Aiming for one purpose: saves him from all that destroys his life and activities
i. Belief in The books of God, especially the Qur'an: Strengthening of trust in Allah
as Quran is His word
l. leads a human being towards the infinite goal, which even continues after death
b. Equality of people: “He neither begat, nor was begotten” (112:3) will eliminate
the effect of personal elements and relations from human value-setting system,
because people are equal like a comb’s teeth.
c. Balanced Human Society: The Prophet said, "None of you will have faith till he
wishes for his (Muslim) brother what he likes for himself." Sahih Bukhari
d. A call for dynamic activity (establishing kingdom of God on earth): "You are the
best community evolved for mankind, enjoying what is right and forbidding
what is wrong" (3:110)
f. A means of making the Muslim society steadfast and understanding each other’s
pain and inflictions, become a helping hand.
i. Detachment from the World and What’s in It: Indifference to Worldly Gain
4) Conclusion
a. Believing in the Unseen embodies the antithesis of the apparent but deceptive
glitter, glamour, and attractiveness that God has cloaked over the life of this
world as a test of faith.
b. the best way to live in this world, as it brings tranquility upon the soul, happiness
to the heart, and peace to the mind, freeing the self from pursuit of base desires
and temptations, and turning it unswervingly towards the submission and
worship of its Creator.
1. Introduction:
b. Allaah clarifies to us this objective saying “And I created not the jinn and
humans except that they should worship Me (alone).” [Quran 51:56].
d. Ibadat denotes servitude. Allaah says: ‘The most beloved deeds with which my
slave comes nearer to me are what I have enjoined on him.’” (Al-Bukhaari).
2. Namaz:
b. It has been mentioned many times in quran “and keep up the prayer and give the
stated alms and bow with those who bow” ( al-baqarah:43) “And keep up the
prayer”(al-nur:56)
a. Spiritual Impact
iii. It is the only act of worship that Allaah directly commanded His Prophet
to perform on the night of Israa` and Mi`raaj (Night Journey and
Ascension to Heaven).
b. Moral Impact
ii. This is attributed to the fact that Prayer is highly esteemed and a noble
act of worship in a Muslim's life.
c. Social Impact
4. Roza:
5. Impacts of fasting:
a. Spiritual impact:
i. Aims at divine nearness “Allaah The Almighty Says: "All the deeds done
by man are for him, save fasting, which is for Me, and for which I will
give a reward." [Al-Bukhaari and Muslim]
ii. Fasters are spiritual wayfarers. : "He who observes the fasts of Ramadan,
out of sincere faith, and expecting the reward from Allaah, his previous
sins will be forgiven."
iii. Shield from eveil deeds and thoughts. “The Messenger of Allaah
sallallaahu `alayhi wa sallam ( may Allaah exalt his mention ) said:
"Verily, fasting is a protective shield therewith a servant saves himself
from Hellfire." [Ahmad]
b. Ethical importance:
ii. Training for the servant to aspire to the Hereafter. "The man's trial in his
c. Social impacts:
i. Inculcates uniformity.
6. Hajj:
a. “And carry out pilgrimage and visit (to kaaba) for the sake of Allah” (al-
baqarah:196)
d. Exemption to those who lack material resources. Holy Quran says : ” it is duty
towards God, incumbent upon those who are able to go thither to visit His
house.”
7. Impacts:
a. Spiritual:
ii. purifies the pilgrims from their sins. The Prophet, sallallaahu 'alayhi wa
sallam, said: "Properly performed Hajj will receive no reward other than
Paradise". (Ahmad)
iii. reminder of the Hereafter when all the people come together in one
place in ‘Arafah.
b. Social benefits:
i. symbol of unity, because Hajj makes all people the same in their clothing,
deeds, rituals, qiblah and the places they visit. “People come from Adam,
and Adam came from dust. No Arab is superior to a non-Arab and no
white man is superior to a black man, except in terms of piety (taqwa).”
ii. Establishes harmony and brotherhood among Muslims from around the
world
8. Zakat:
a. zakaat Al-Fitr is an individual obligation upon every Muslim who can afford it,
c. It was ordained, along with fasting, in the second year after Hijrah . The Almighty
Says (which means): {Zakaah expenditures are only for the poor and for the
needy…} [Quran 9:60]
f. Importance next to namaz. “And establish prayer and give Zakaat.” [Quran 2:110]
9. Importance:
a. Spiritual:
iii. Protection from sins like hoarding. “but My mercy encompasses all things.
So I will decree it [especially] for those who fear Me and give
Zakaat…”[Quran 7:156]
b. Moral:
iv. Hazrat umar bin abdul aziz said” prayers carry half way to God, fasting
brings us to the door of His palace and alms procure us admission.”
c. Social:
regard to mutual love, affection and sympathy is that of one body; when
any of its limbs aches, the whole body aches because of sleeplessness
and fever." [Muslim]
10. Conclusion:
Topic 8: Study of Seerah of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) as Role Model for: Individual
(sallallahu alaiyhi wa sallam)
1) Introduction
a. The human need for role models, most educated people today are skeptics
b. The deep yearning to believe in a Higher Power, true leadership, and an ultimate
purpose in life remains
c. Holy Prophet’s PBUH life is one that was dominated by a superior morality, good
habits, noble and gentle feelings and superior skills, all of which are
characteristics that help prevent people from getting entangled in a web of sin.
d. O Prophet! Verily, We have sent you as a witness, and a bearer of glad tidings,
and a warner and as one who invites to Allah (alone) by His permission and as a
lamp that gives light. (Suratul Ahzaab 33:45-46)
f. "And verily, you are on an exalted standard of character. (Suratul Qalam 68:4)
b. The texts related to the missions of Prophet Muhammad which make contact
with and call people to the new reality, yet make it clear that he is a human being
who only lives for his own mission,
b. Braving the Storm: initial times after the first revelation, nick name ‘The
Trustworthy’, suddenly had to challenge all the laws and customs of his people
that went against the Oneness of Allah.
d. The Strategic Planner: early Muslims of Makkah made two secret pledges with
the people of Madinah to instill peace and understanding between the Muslims,
actual immigration to Madina cleverly planned
e. Message of Equality: “We have made you into nations and tribes so that you
may know one another.”
f. Model Father Figure: Anas said that the holy Prophet Muhammad (peace and
blessings of Allah be upon him) never asked him: why did he do this and why
did he not do that. He never scolded or shouted at Anas. (Anas bin Malik)
g. Height of Self-Control and Calmness: “The Prophet (PBUH) did not swear at
anyone, nor was He rude, nor did He curse anyone. If He desired to reprimand
someone, He would say: ‘What is wrong with him, may dust be cast in his face!”
(Bukhari)
h. Lessons of Cleanliness: Aishah (RA), the Prophet’s wife, was asked: “What did
the Prophet do first when he entered his home?” She answered: “He brushed his
teeth.” (Muslim)
i. The Golden Rule: 'No one truly believes until he desires for his brother what he
desires for himself.'
j. Teachings of Morality: "I have never seen anyone more in the habit of smiling
than Allah’s Messenger." (At-Tirmidhi)
k. Self-Reliance and Self-Help: The Prophet’s wife, `A’ishah, said that he (peace and
blessings of Allah be upon him) used to repair his shoes, sew his clothes, and
share the domestic chores. He (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) was
most merciful, gentle, and amiable to all.
l. A Helping hand: While on his deathbed, the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah
be upon him) sent for the money in his house and distributed it among the poor.
a. Increase in Emaan: [And all we relate to you of the accounts of the messengers
is to strengthen your heart therewith; and in this has come to you the truth and
an admonition, and a reminder to the believers] Surat Hud (11) Verse 120
b. Following the Sunnah: “…Whatever the message (Muhammad) has brought for
you, adopt it; and from whatever he has prohibited you, keep away from it…”
(59:7)
5) Conclusion
a. My choice of Muhammad to lead the list of the world's most influential persons
may surprise some readers and be questioned by others, but he was the only
man in history who was supremely successful on both the religious and secular
levels. Hart, Michael, The 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential Persons in
History
Topic 9: Study of Seerah of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) as Role Model for an Educator
1) Introduction
a. Muhammad (PBUH) was the greatest teacher humanity has ever known.
b. One of the first lessons: our job is not to expel people from Islam or repel them.
c. The Prophet, PBUH, said: "By Allaah! If He may guide through you a single man to
Islam, it would be better for you than red camels.
d. The teaching of the Holy Prophet Muhammad, as contained in the Holy Qur'an, is
a treasure-house of unlimited knowledge and wisdom in every field of endeavor.
e. Aim is to follow the teachings for the benefit and welfare of humanity
f. His PBUH, subject was entire Ummah in terms of soul, mind, heart and all
feelings.
b. The encouragement of the Quran and Hazrat Prophet (pbuh) increased the desire
to write and to learn.
d. All of the members of this ummah have been witnesses of his teaching and
pedagogy.
g. By virtue of the teachings contained in the Holy Qur\'an, the Muslims scaled the
heights of scientific achievement and progress. A famous prayer taught in the
Holy Qur'an is: O my Lord increase me in knowledge. (20: 115)
a. Better understanding: it will help them in both learning themselves and imparting
that information to others.
b. Increasing love for the Prophet, PBUH: For example, in the well-known Hadeeth
(narration) of the Bedouin who urinated in the Masjid, all the assembled
Companions got angry with him except the Prophet, PBUH. Thus, because of the
way the Prophet, PBUH, taught him and shown mercy to him, the man raised his
hands after praying in the Masjid and said, “O Allaah, forgive me and forgive
Muhammad and don’t forgive anyone else after this”! His love for the Prophet,
PBUH, grew manifold due to the manner in which he taught him.
a. Importance to Literacy:
i. Captives of the Battle of Badr could not afford to pay ransom to be freed
but they could read and write, Holy Prophet PBUH, made them teach 10
children to read and write.
ii. Among them was Zayd bin Thabit, who later became one of the revelation
scribes and worked in the committee of compiling the pages of the Quran.
i. After the Hijrah, the first activity of the Prophet (pbuh) in Madinah was to
build a mosque, Masjid an-Nabawi, which was both a place of worship
and a center of education.
ii. In a place next to the mosque called As-Suffa, some Companions were
busy with learning the Quran and writing.
iii. Hazrat Prophet (pbuh) himself taught people there; he also appointed
some teachers to teach people the Quran and writing.
iv. Ubada bin Samit was one of the Companions who taught the Quran and
writing there.
c. New Places For Learning: nine more mosques besides Masjid an-Nabawi in
Madinah when the Prophet was alive.
i. The importance that the Messenger of Allah (pbuh) gave women took
place in a period when women were not regarded as human beings.
ii. There were women teachers during the time of the Prophet (pbuh). As a
matter of fact, Shifa (Umm Sulayman b. b. Haysama) taught Hazrat Hafsa
(may Allah be pleased with her), one of the wives of Hazrat Prophet
(pbuh), to write.
iii. "There are two rewards for a person who educates a female slave, trains
her, frees her and marries her off”
iv. He allocated a special day for women and gave them a talk. There were
female teachers during his period.
e. A Kind Teacher
ii. Teach people; make things easy; do not make things difficult; keep silent
when you become furious!" and he repeated the statement, "Keep silent
when you become furious!" three times
iii. Muawiya b. Hakam as-Sulami stated the following regarding the issue: "I
have never seen a better teacher than the Messenger of Allah. He neither
reprimanded, nor beat nor insulted me."10
v. He made all his contracts in writing and officials write the income and the
estimation, imposition and collection of the revenues.
i. Hazrat Prophet (pbuh) advised and ordered families to teach their young
members in both spiritual and material fields: archery, swimming,
calculation, medicine, genealogy and reading the Quran.
ii. In his period, everybody, children, young people, the elderly, received
education.
iii. There were some people among the Companions who could speak
Persian, Greek, Coptic, Abyssinian, Hebrew and Syriac. Once the Prophet
(pbuh) asked Zayd bin Thabit, "Do you speak Syriac? I receive letters in
Syriac." When Zayd b. Thabit said, “I do not know”, the Prophet (pbuh)
said, “Learn it”. Thereupon, Zayd learned Hebrew and Syriac.
h. Expansion of knowledge:
ii. He asked the people who came to Madinah, stayed there for a while and
learned Islam to teach people what they learned when they went to their
homeland.
5) Conclusion
b. As a result of intensive and hard work, Hazrat Prophet (pbuh) formed a brand-
new Islamic community from those people.
c. Among the people he educated, hafizes (people who memorized the whole
Quran), scholars of reading the Quran, judges, governors and commanders of the
Topic 10: Study of Seerah of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) as Role Model for: Military
Strategist
1) Introduction
a. The life of the Holy Prophet (PBUH) as a role model for human beings
encompasses all aspects of life.
c. Holy Prophet PBUH exhibited most consummate military leadership skills for
protecting Muslims as well as the nascent Islamic state.
d. military training of Makkan Muslims where they were being persecuted by the
infidels.
a. In the space of a single decade he fought eight major battles, led eighteen raids,
and planned another thirty-eight military operations where others were in
command but operating under his orders and strategic direction.
e. He reportedly spent hours devising tactical and political stratagems, and once
remarked that “all war is cunning,”
b. The later Arab conquests were the consequences of Muhammad’s PBUH prior
military success as the leader of an insurgency.
c. Insurgencies also require a messianic ideology; Muhammad PBUH used the new
religious creed of Islam to challenge basic traditional Arab social institutions
e. The leader of an insurgency must take great care to guard his authority from
challenges, including those that come from within the movement itself. For this
purpose he created the suffah, a small cadre of loyal followers who lived in the
mosque next to Muhammad’s house. The creation and establishment of a state
and the selection of warriors who would be harsh against their enemies and
merciful and kind with their friends Al-Fath: 29
a. addressing the need of the time and countering the threat in the most effective
manner, He (Peace Be upon Him) mostly applied active defense and retaliation
c. He PBUH did aim to keep the number of his enemies as low as possible, unless
someone created a problem, the prophet (Peace Be upon Him) did not seek him
to engage in confrontation for any issue like territory or money. When he got
angry, he would swallow his anger and when he had the power (to exact
revenge), he would turn a blind eye. Sahih Bukhari
e. Anyone tried to threaten the peace of the state of Madinah, they were sought
after and punished severely.
a. Advisory Council: generally at every important juncture and especially before the
war, prophet (PBUH) used to hold a grand meeting (Shoora) where his
companions gave their views and proposed new strategies.
c. Active defense: the prophet (Peace Be upon Him) actively sought the enemy and
took the battle to his ground. Case of Badr: not only sent spies to know the exact
military strength of the enemy, but when it came to fighting he (PBUH) reached
the battleground well before enemy, got hold of water source, selected better
position and organized army in different ranks as well.
d. Surprise: in many battles, the enemy was totally surprised.(in Ahzab or Khandaq)
e. Secrecy and silence: it is notable that the element of surprise was achieved when
there were enemies inside and all around the city of Madinah. It is not possible
without extreme secrecy and silence.
f. Mobility: the mobility of the army of Madinah was exceptional noting the type of
transport and general poverty Muslims were in. Almost all the times they took the
war to the enemy.(Hunain)
6) Conclusion
Topic 11: Study of Seerah of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) as Role Model for:- Diplomat
1. Introduction
iii. Instances of written correspondence include letters to Heraclius, the Negus and
Khosrau.
iv. Religion being a belief system, could only enter societies by means of the hearts
of individuals hence never used force or declared war ‘“Let there be no
compulsion in religion,” (Al-Baqara 256) would only increase the number of
hypocrites
v. True meaning of Jihad: Jihad is for removing obstacles to the conveyance of the
divine message to people, to create a foundation to be able to understand Islam
with common sense, far removed from pressure and anxiety, and to be able to
make choices with their own free will.
vi. Peace as the most suitable foundation for calling people to Islam; “God forbids
you not , with regard to those who fight you not for your Faith nor drive you out
of your homes, from dealing kindly and justly with them” (Al-Mumtahana 8);
“But if the enemy incline towards peace, do thou also incline towards peace,
and trust in God. For He is the One that heareth and knoweth all things” (Al-
Anfal 61).
vii. Allah warns not to forego controlling the enemy by trusting agreements. He
PBUH had a cautious approach while making alliances
i. Migration to Abyssinia
ii. Then kept as a precautionary center after the Hijrah to use if needed; The
emigrants to Abyssinia stayed there until it became apparent that Medina
could be a base and a center for immigration.
iii. Order for Jihad: Permission [to fight] has been given to those who are
being fought, because they were wronged. And indeed, Allah is
competent to give them victory. Surat al-Hajj, verse 39
iv. Migration to Medina; found a solid base to stand on and obtained their freedom.
v. Madina Constitution
i. the Prophet PBUH documented brotherhood with a written text, Uniting all
the groups in Medina under his rule at their own will
ii. The rules of the Constitution were to strengthen the foothold from within
and without. treachery and dissention from the non-Muslims in Medina
were prevented; the roads to friendship between the Quraish and parties
in Medina were closed
i. political relations with tribes outside of Medina before Quraish did; Banu
Damra, a three days distance from Medina, Banu Gifar; Banu Juhayna
living in Buvat; the Banu Mudlich living in Zulushayra. At the end of the
same year an agreement was made with the Ashlam Tribe. Terms; they
guarantee that the parties will not attack each other, and that they will
remain neutral or when one of the parties is attacked, they will help each
other.
iii. Economic Blockade: the caravan route of the Quraish was put under
control to pressurize them, sending and distributing 500 pieces of gold
during famine in Mecca to poor and needy to gain their sympathy
ii. Aim to make dialogue with Quraish who were economically weak
iii. With this agreement, the Quraish accepted the Islamic state as a party
and officially recognized it, they showed their weakness by signing the
peace and they indicated that they were abandoning struggle
iv. the authority among the Arabs was completely shaken and Muslims
began to assume the authority. Also the abrogation of this peace by the
Quraish gave a legitimate necessity for the Meccan conquest. Islam’s
sovereignty was completed in Arabia with this conquest.
i. Letter to Heraclius
4. Conclusion
1) Introduction
a. In the midst of the darkness that engulfed the world, the divine revelation echoed
in the wide desert of Arabia with a fresh, noble, and universal message to
humanity: "O Mankind, keep your duty to your Lord who created you from a
single soul and from it created its mate (of same kind) and from them twain
has spread a multitude of men and women...". [Noble Quran 4:1]
b. The sermon of the Holy Prophet PBUH was a declaration of Human Rights and
moral values, a charter of Women Rights
c. The world has not been able to lay down better principles of ethics and morality
than those enunciated in it not even Magna Carta of Britain or Charter of Human
Rights by United Nations.
a. No Superiority: There is no superiority for an Arab over a non-Arab and for a non
-Arab over an Arab, nor for the white over the black nor for the black over the
white except in God-conciousness
b. Basic Human Rights: O’ people! Verily yor blood, your property and your honour
are sacred and inviolable until you appear before your Lord
c. Every one Responsible for their actions: Beware! No one committing a crime is
responsible for it but himself. Neither the child is responsible for the crime of
his father, nor is the father responsible for the crime of his child.
d. Unduly taking away anyone’s property is forbidden: Nothing of his brother is
lawful for a Muslim except what he himself gives willingly. So do not wrong
yourselves.
e. Rights of Slaves: O’ People! Every Muslim is the brother of every other Muslim,
and all the Muslims form one brotherhood. And your slaves; see that you feed
them with such food as you eat yourselves, and clothe them with the clothes
that you yourselves wear.
f. Rights of Women: Treat the women kindly, since they are your helpers and not in
a. Historical Perspectives
i. Women in Ancient Civilization: In Athens, women were not better off than
either the Indian or the Roman women.
ii. According to the English Common Law: ...all real property which a wife
held at the time of a marriage became a possession of her husband.
iii. Right of divorce, Encyclopedia Biblical: "The woman being man's property,
his right to divorce her follows as a matter of course." "In the Mosaic Law
divorce was a privilege of the husband only.... "
i. Respect for Woman:"He (God) it is who did create you from a single soul
and therefrom did create his mate, that he might dwell with her (in
love)..." [Noble Quran 7:189]
iii. Woman according to the Quran is not blamed for Adam's first mistake.
Both were jointly wrong in their disobedience to God, both repented, and
both were forgiven. [Noble Quran 2:36]
not insult her, and does not favor his son over her, God will enter
him into Paradise. [Ibn Hanbal, No. 1957]
ii. As a wife:
iii. As a mother
ii. The right to seek employment; Islam regards her role in society as a
mother and a wife as the most sacred and essential one, however, no
iii. The right of inheritance; "Unto men (of the family) belongs a share of
that which Parents and near kindred leave, and unto women a share of
that which parents and near kindred leave, whether it be a little or much -
a determinate share." [Noble Quran 4:7]
4) Conclusion
a. The history of Muslims is rich with women of great achievements in all walks of
life from as early as the seventh century (A.D.)
c. Throughout history, the reputation, chastity and maternal role of Muslim women
were objects of admiration by impartial observers.
d. It demonstrates the divine origin of the Quran and the truthfulness of the
message of Islam, which, unlike human philosophies and ideologies, was far
from proceeding from its human environment, a message which established
such humane principles as neither grew obsolete during the course of time and
after these many centuries, nor can become obsolete in the future.
1) Introduction
b. Rights may be proprietary or personal, utilitarian or moral, but they almost always
relate to the dignity of the individual.
c. The United Nations Charter and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights state
that recognition of the inherent dignity and inalienable rights of all members of
the human family is the foundation for freedom, justice and peace in the world.
d. The term Dignity: Latin: ‘dignitas’: quality of being worthy or honorable which
signifies his highest and noble position in a community.
e. Human Dignity depends on eight interdependent values, such as: respect, power,
enlightenment, well being, health, skill, affection and rectitude. We have
bestowed dignity on the progeny of Adam (laqad karramna bani Adama) ... and
conferred on them special favours, above a great part of Our creation. (al-Isra’,
17:70)
b. This declaration was drafted by the Islamic Council of Europe in 1981 and was
presented to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO)
c. The Universal Islamic Declaration of Human Rights merely reflects upon the
views of Islam on human rights concepts and has no legal status, since no
Islamic country or international organization has ratified it.
d. Preamble to this Declaration states that “the human rights decreed by the Divine
Law aim at conferring dignity and honor on mankind and are designed to
eliminate oppression and injustice.”
a. The Qur’anic View of Human Dignity: “The believers, both men and women, are
friends and protectors of one another; they enjoin good and they forbid evil.”(Q,
9:71)
b. Fraternity of Man: The most meritorious legacy anyone can leave behind is a
virtuous offspring (Q, 18:46). to speak to everyone with courtesy and fairness
(Q, 2:83)
c. God’s Love for Humanity: “You created Adam from clay and created me from
fire!” God’s displeasure with this response was then conveyed in a question to
Iblis: “what prevents thee from prostrating thyself to one whom I created with
My Own Hand?” (Q, 38:75-76) (grant of special divine favours)
d. Right to Personal Safety: You are most pure and most dignified, but the One in
whose hands Muhammad's life reposes, the sanctity and honour of a believer,
his life and his property, is far greater in the eyes of God. (al-Maktab al-Islami,
1399/1979, vol.2, hadith no.2724.)
e. Dignity and Just Character: “…Unto men the benefit of what they earn (of virtue)
and unto women the benefit of what they earn (of virtue)” [Surah al-Nisa : 32]
g. Personal Privacy
h. Social Decorum: “If any of you sees something evil, he should set it right with
his hand; if he is unable to do so, then with his tongue, and if he is unable to do
even that, then (let him denounce it) in his heart. But this is the weakest form of
faith.”[Sahih Muslim]
i. Dignity and the Objectives of the Shari’ah: The five universals of the Shari'ah,
known as al-daruriyyat (to which a sixth, namely personal honour (al-‘ird) was
subsequently added), do take human dignity into a rights-based concept
j. Dignity and the issue of Basic Needs: “Surely We have created Man; We know
the promptings of his heart, and We are nearer to him even than his jugular vein.”
[2:186]
k. God-Man Relationship: One who offends any of My friends is like declaring war
against Me...and My servant gets closer to Me through good deeds until I love
him, and when I love him, I become like his ear by which he hears, and like the
eye by which he sees, like his hand by which he reaches out, and I walk with him;
when he asks Me, I give, and when he seeks protection through Me, I protect
him. [Sahih Bukhari]
a. Three inter-related concepts of Islamic law of relevance to human dignity that are
featured in the scholastic jurisprudence of the leading schools are ‘ismah
(inviolability), humanity and personhood (adamiyyah) and the five (and later six)
universal maqasid (goals and purposes) of Shariah, collectively known as al-
daruriyyat,
b. These are life, intellect, religion, family, property, and honour, must be protected
c. The Hanafi school commands the widest following (about 50 per cent of all
Muslims) in the present day Muslim countries compared to any of the other
leading schools, namely the Shafi’i, Maliki, Hanbali and the Shi’ah.
5) Conclusion
a. All individuals enjoy the inherent dignity without any distinction as to religious
belief, race, gender and language.
b. However, the acquired dignity, which is obtained through sincere belief and piety,
causes the supremacy of virtuous people over others before Allah.
c. In human rights discourse, we only speak of inherent dignity and human rights
instruments do not get involved with the acquired dignity of man.
d. Comparison of Islamic and Western cultures, the Arab culture, one might say
Islam generally, accentuates human dignity whereas Western culture tends to
emphasize liberty.
e. Aftermath of the 9/11 tragic events, there is a need for wider recognition of the
best values of each civilization to provide a fresh impetus to the prospects of a
more peaceful world.
Topic 14: Islamic Civilization and Culture: Meanings and the Vital Elements
1) Introduction
c. Culture is the consciousness of values in the totality of their realm, implying at its
lowest level an intuitive awareness of their respective identities and of the order
e. The early forms of Muslim culture were predominantly Arab. With the rapid
expansion of the Islamic empires, Muslim culture has influenced and assimilated
much from the Persian, Caucasian, Bangladeshi, Turkic, Mongol, Chinese, Indian,
Malay, Somali, Berber, Egyptian, Indonesian, Filipino, Greco-Roman Byzantine,
Spanish, Sicilian, Balkanic and Western[citation needed] cultures.
f. “Thus we have appointed you a mid-most nation, that you may be witnesses
upon mankind.” (Quran, 11:43)
a. based on the Islamic faith; socio-moral and metaphysical view of the world
c. Idea that man has precedence over the rest of the creatures of Allah. All human
activities should lead to the happiness and welfare of man.
d. an open civilisation and is not shy of deriving and drawing niceties of other
civilisations in the past, provided they do not run counter to the spirit of Islam
e. pluralist religion; it coexists with other religions, allowing full religious autonomy.
a. Medina: Capital Of The First Islamic State; an Arab society that had not gone
beyond the city-state structure. The Constitution of Medina is the first written
civil and political law spelling out the religious autonomy and freedom. The pact
laid down the principles of defence and foreign policy; organised a system of
social insurance (called ‘Ma'aqil’); recognised the Prophet Muhammad (P.B.U.H.)
as the arbiter, the adjudicator and the legislator, and; full religious freedom and
autonomy was granted especially the Jews.
b. Period of Righteous Caliphs; assumed office only with the consent of the people,
governed the people through ‘shura’ (consultation), committed to the rule of law
and the constitutional order, acknowledged supremacy of judiciary, honoured
sanctity of treasury, dignity and divinity of man was taken as the foundational
stones of the socio-political and moral order.
c. The Umayyad Dynasty; established in 661 A.D., was to last for about a century.
Damascus became capital of the Islamic world, stretched from the western
borders of China to southern. France. Islamic conquests continued
d. The Abbasids Dynasty: shifted capital to Baghdad centre of lore and learning as
well as the politico-administrative pivot, A sophisticated banking system was
established
e. North Africa And Spain; WHEN the Abbasids captured Damascus, one of the
Umayyad princes escaped into Spain, where he established an Umayyad
princedom. two powerful Berber dynasties succeeded in uniting much of the
North Africa with Spain in 12th and 13th centuries. The Sharifids of Morocco
succeeded Berbers, who still rule the country.
f. After The Mongoloid Invasion: THE MONGOLS DEVASTATED the eastern lands of
Islam and ruled from the Sinai Desert to India for a century. Il-Khanids, Timuraids
replaced the Il-Khanids, ruled the area from Samarqand as capital from 1369 to
1500 A.D.
g. The Ottoman Empire; THE TURKS rose to political prominence and prevailed over
the whole of Anatolia and parts of Europe. In 1453, Muhammad, ‘the Conqueror’,
captured Constantinople, putting an end to the Byzantine Empire. Suleyman, ‘the
Magnificent’, whose armies reached as far as Hungary and Austria. Kamal
Ataturk gained power and declared Turkey a secular state, terminating the six
centuries of Ottomans rule in 1924.
h. Persia
i. India: Muslims gained political power beginning in the early 13th century, 1526 by
Babur, one of the Timurid princes
th
j. Malaysia And Indonesia: Islam began to spread in the 12 century in northern
Sumatra.
b. Muslims’ Contributions
c. Medical Science; The Persian Al Razi (Rhazes in Europe: 865-925 A.D.) wrote an
important encyclopedia of medicine, Al Havi (Continens), Ibn Sina (Avicenna
f. acid and hydrochloric acid, arts of distillation, oxidation and crystallization, also
j. Paper
k. Gunpowder
l. Textiles.
m. Agricultural Products
n. Machinery
6) Conclusion
a. Beginning with the eighth century, it was the Muslim culture that became the
focal centre of world progress, attracting Jews, Persians, Christians and even
Turks to its fold.
b. When there was no scientific activity in the world, Muslims picked up the threads
of ancient science and technology, where and whenever, available, wocing inot a
definite pattern of progress.
d. The Oxford History of Technology sums it up as follows: “There are few major
technological innovations between 500 A.D. and 1500 that do not show some
traces of the Islamic culture.”
1) Introduction
ii. The term "civilization" or "civilisation" comes from the Latin word civis, meaning
"citizen" or "townsman."
iii. Samuel P. Huntington, in his essay The Clash of Civilizations, defined civilization
as "the highest cultural grouping of people and the broadest level of cultural
identity people have short of that which distinguishes humans from other
species."
iv. the modern world is primarily the product of relatively recent and revolutionary
change such as advances in all areas of human activity —politics, industry,
economics, commerce, transport, communication, science, medicine, technology,
and culture
v. The purpose of Islamic Civilization has never been appointed towards the
development of science but to complement the truth of humanity
2) Role Of Civilization
i. The development of the brain and the development of the human society
occurred in relative parallel.
iii. Evolution and adaptation needed to occur before human society could truly begin
to blossom.
iv. Neurological changes needed to occur in the human mind, to allow for the new
kinds of thinking that man would need to flourish in this new environment. most
important of these adaptations is symbolic self-awareness
v. Evolutionary psychology seeks both to find the traits and behaviors of human
beings, but to understand why they would have developed and remained with
subsequent generations
i. Al-Quran and al-Sunnah: due to the need of knowledge, skills and change of
attitude in the development of the civilization
ii. Mind or Intellect: Human can develop and move progressively with the use of
mind to give birth to a civilization.
iii. Finding and New Invention: This finding is the result of research, discovery and
exploration of the whole universe from the earth until the outer space, part of
sunnatullah or law of Allah.
i. Universal
ii. Openness:
iv. Tolerance
ii. Concept of Human Capital: Intelligence will only work through knowledge. “Read!
In the Name of your Lord, Who has created (all that exists), Has created man
from a clot (a piece of thick coagulated blood). Read! And your Lord is the Most
Generous, Who has taught (the writing) by the pen. Has taught man that which
he knew not”. (al-Alaq:1-5)
iii. Foundations of Human Capital Development: With devotion, human will obtain
nobility, greatness: “And I (Allâh) created not the jinns and humans except they
should worship Me (Alone)”. (al-zaariyat:56)
positive approach
7) Conclusion
Topic 17: Islam and World: Impact of Islamic Civilization on the West and Vice Versa
1) Introduction
ii. The Islamicization of the Medieval West, occurred, first, during the period ending
around the middle of the eleventh century before systematic translations from
Arabic into Western languages began;
iii. secondly during the age of Arabic translations coinciding with the little
Renaissance of the twelfth to the seventeenth centuries;
v. The extensive contacts with the superior Islamic culture and Muslims during the
Crusades ushered in a new era in Western self-consciousness, and awakened
responses to Islamic culture
vi. The highest intellectual achievements of the West during these two centuries,
twelfth and thirteenth, comprised the imitation of Islamic science and learning.
i. They revealed to the West that outside the prevailing catholic church it
was not all darkness and barbarism but immense wealth of knowledge.
vi. Medicine; Avicenna and Averroes were physicians (Hakims); Medicine of the
Prophet (Tibb an-Nabi) "Make use of medical treatment, for Allah has not made
a disease without appointing a remedy for it, with the exception of one disease,
namely old age." (Abu Dawud and authenticated by Al-Albani)
i. commerce and seafaring; Arabs invented the lateen sail; discovered the
mariner’s compass, the portolans or nautical charts; Arab scholar Al
Idrissi (1100-66) under the patronage of Roger II of Sicily, produced a
complete description of the world 70 maps “the book of Roger”. [2:269]
He [Allah] grants wisdom to whom He pleases; and he to whom wisdom
is granted indeed receives a benefit overflowing. But none will grasp the
Message except men of understanding.
book binding
3. Music; The Arabic names of the lute, guitar, rebec and naker show
their Arabic origin
ii. Western culture seems to be presented to the world as the superior culture which
advocates personal freedom, freedom of speech and freedom of thought
whereas Muslim culture is presented to people as being ‘backward’ or ‘unyielding.
iii. Western Hold of Technology spreading its views faster and creating its own
opinion e.g. Issue of purdah; West interprets this as discrimination against
women.
5) Conclusion
i. The West has generally maintained a conspiracy of silence regarding its medieval
rejuvenation through Islamicization
ii. consequences of the denial; denigration of Islam in the eyes of Muslims and non-
Muslims; the identification of Islam and its culture with ignorance and
backwardness and of “modernity” and progress with Western civilization
1) Introduction
a. Completion of Lord’s favor upon mankind; This day have I perfected your religion
for you and completed My favour upon you and have chosen for you Islam as
religion (5:4)
b. Islam encompasses not only belief but behavior as well; The most perfect
believers are the best in conduct and best of you are those who are best to their
wives. [Ibn-Hanbal, No. 7396]
3) Islam effects a perfect balance between all areas of life and activity
c. Individual and Community; “Is the reward for good [anything] but good?” (Ar-
Rahman 55: 60)
a. Racial prejudices
a. Not only a divine purpose to serve but shaped into perfect form; …Who has
created life and death so that He may try you which of you are best in deeds…
The Holy Quran 67:2
9) No Body-Soul conflict
a. Piety is not suppressing physical demands but fulfilling them in acceptable ways
so as to make life full and righteous.
10) Islam goes the middle way; The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) said: "Do
good deeds properly, sincerely and moderately. . .Always adopt a middle, moderate,
regular course, whereby you will reach your target (of paradise)." - Sahih Al-Bukhari,
Volume 8, Hadith 470
11) Spiritualization of all the sectors of human life; “Wealth and children are [but]
adornment of the worldly life. But the enduring good deeds are better to your Lord for
rewards and better for [one’s] hope.” (Al-Kahf 18:46)
b. Muslims humanized science and the spirit of God was breathed into it.
c. The Prophet ( )ﷺsaid, "Envy is permitted only in two cases: A man whom Allah
gives wealth, and he disposes of it rightfully, and a man to whom Allah gives
knowledge which he applies and teaches it." [Al- Bukhari and Muslim].
a. Different from theocracy and Western Democracy; State in islam is not a hateful
organization but a definite human organization.
a. Understanding of outward events is not the only thing required but the study of
the inner actors is also necessary to understand their aims and objectives.
b. Holy Quran treats the events of the past not only to revive them but make them
meaningful for us
c. Explanation of behavior of hypocrites and jews at the change of qiblah; The fools
(pagans, hypocrites, and Jews) among the people will say, “what has turned
them (Muslims) from their Qiblah to which they were used to face in prayer” Say,
(O Muhammad SAWW) “To Allah belong both, east and the west. He guides
whom He wills to a straight way.” 2:142
15) Conclusion
1) Introduction
2) Contemporary Challenges
a. Tarnishing of Muslim Image; Confound not truth with falsehood, nor knowingly
conceal the truth. Qur’an 2:42
c. Linking Islam with Terrorism; Let there be no compulsion (or coercion) in the
religion (Islam). The right direction is distinctly clear from error. (2:256)
d. Lack of Unity; “We made you to be a community of the middle way, so that (with
the example of your lives) you might bear witness to the truth before all
mankind.” (Qur’an, 2:143)
g. Weak Democracies
h. Muslim Youth vulnerable to Extremist Ideas: Downfall is certain for every form of
extremism [Musnad Ahmed]
a. Lack of Peace and Stability; A perfect Muslim is one from whose tongue and
hands mankind is safe, and a true emigrant [muhajir] is one who flees from
what God has forbidden.
c. Poverty Eradication
i. Increase Mutual Cooperation; “Do not be people without minds of your own,
saying that if others treat you well you will treat them well, and that if they do
wrong you will do wrong to them. Instead, accustom yourselves to do good if
people do good and not to do wrong (even) if they do evil.” (Al- Tirmidhi)
4) Conclusion
1) Introduction
b. ‘Thus, have We made of you an ummat justly balanced, that you might be
witnesses over the nations, and the Messenger a witness over yourselves’
(2:143)
d. ‘Adopt the path of moderation [and] you will reach your destination’[Hadith]
e. Extremism may take different forms, but all of them entail crossing or
trespassing the acceptable boundaries, irrespective of whether this is in matters
of religion or in any other affair.
f. Closely linked with ones social and personal conditions and contexts of those
who articulate or uphold such understandings of their faith: ‘Your body also has
rights over you. Your Lord also has rights over you. Your guest also has rights
over you. Your wife and children also have rights over you. That is why you
should fulfill the rights of the Lord of the rights’ [Sahih Bukhari]
c. Ignoring the Spirit of Islam: neglecting higher aims of the Shariah; Islam is an
Easy religion [al-dino yusrun] ‘On no soul does Allah place a burden greater than
it can bear’(2:286)
3) A Classical Example of Extremism in Religion: The Khawarij and Other Such Groups
a. Political tendencies in which Islam was used as means to justify their ideology
and actions, in order to seek legitimacy for a range of social movements.
b. Khawarij( Kharajites), the Mutzalities, the Qadriya etc., were extreme and
imbalanced in terms of ideology and interpretation of Islamic Sources.
c. The Khawarijs seem to be very pious but their ideological deviation was an
extreme i.e. they considered almost all other muslims as Kafirs and even
apostates, whose blood, they believed, to be shed.
a. The new ones and the previous groups share common ideological bent and even
methods of operation.
b. A literalist and narrow perception of the following verse; ‘If any do fail to judge
by (the Light of) what Allah has revealed, they are (no better than) Unbelievers”
(5:44)
5) Conclusion
1) Introduction
v. A letter written during Abbassid Caliph Al-Mamun, written by Tahir Ibn Al Husayn,
Al Mamun’s General, to his son Abdullah Ibn Tahir.
ii. Primacy of Humanistic Ends; man as a thinking and feeling entity and rejects the
exclusively materialistic value-scales and objectives of Western societies.
iv. Supremacy of Law; relationship that Islam establishes between politics and
administration; concept of Allah’s sovereignty
iii. Leadership(participative)
ii. Characteristics
ii. =Human orientation rather than production orientation; One of the three
persons that the Prophet (s.a.w) will argue against on the Day of
Judgement is a man who engaged a labourer and enjoyed full benefit
from him, yet did not pay him (his due) wages.
iii. =Stress on values, ethics and morality(from the Islamic point of view)
"Pay the labourer his wages before his sweat dries”
ii. The Shura; decision through consultation; is not a democratic process in the
sense of majority vote; seeks consensus building in decision-making based on
Islamic ideals
iii. The Shari’ah; affects every aspect of administration; “O ye who believe! Obey
God, and obey the Apostle, And those charged with authority among you, if ye
differ in anything Among yourself, refer it To God and His Apostle If ye do
believe in God And the Last Day. That is best, and most suitable for final
determination”(4:59)
7) Conclusion
1) Introduction
ii. The Qur’an reveals a proper destiny for humanity in that it should be wisely
responsible in the use of power. It presents six inter-related aspects of that
destiny, which are the nature of humanity, the assumption of trust responsibility,
the office of khalīfah, the necessity of wise discernment, the use of good counsel,
and the seeking of justice.
iv. The concepts of amānah and ‘adālah (justice) provide a framework for the main
practical concepts (i.e., sharī‘ah and shūra) of good governance in the Qur’an.
v. The principles behind the sharī‘ah and shūra are open to human understanding
based on reason.
2) Quranic Thesis
i. The Qur’an teaches that each human is born possessing something of God’s life
force.
ii. The Qur’an relates that humanity accepted God’s offer of executing a trust for the
betterment of creation.
iii. The Qur’an reveals that the office holding the amānah given to humanity is that
of khalīfah, or vice-regent for God on earth.
iv. The Qur’an requires that as each human executes his or her amānah and serves
God as khalīfah to take proper and correct action.
vi. The purpose of the vice-regency, on the individual as well as the collective level,
is to achieve justice.
i. story of creation through a conversation between God and the angels 2;30-39
And remember when your God decreed to the angels, ‘I am going to appoint My
vice-regent on earth’ [53]; they said, ‘Will You appoint such a one that he shall
spread mischief in it and spill blood [54] and we reverently speak Your
Glorification and Your Deification?’; He said, ‘I Know that which you do not know’
[55].
ii. The story of creation is very important; understand the role of individuals in
human history and understanding features about human nature; And Allah wants
to lighten for you [your difficulties]; and mankind was created weak. (4;28)
i. Divine purpose is to establish an ethical and egalitarian social order; “Did you see
the one who gives the lie to religion? It is he who maltreats orphans and works
little for the feeding of the poor. Woe to the worshippers … who deny using their
utensils [to the poor]”. (107: 1-7)
i. “O ye who believe! Obey God, and obey the Apostle, And those charged with
authority among you, if ye differ in anything Among yourself, refer it To God and
His Apostle If ye do believe in God And the Last Day. That is best, and most
suitable for final determination”(4:59)
i. While amānah and ‘adālah provide the ontological basis, the sharī‘ah and shūra
furnish the practical mechanism for Islamic polity.
ii. The maqās¬id (objectives) of the sharī‘ah are meant to preserve religion, life,
reason, progeny and wealth. An overarching principle of all policy making
(political, legal, economic, social, environmental etc.) that emerges from these
objectives is mas¬lah¬a (public interest). Public interest can be defined in simple
words as promoting and preserving the things that are beneficial to society and
preventing the things that are harmful to it.
iii. "So, it is through mercy from Allah that you are gentle to them. Had you been
rough and hard-hearted, they would have dispersed from around you. So,
pardon them and seek Forgiveness for them. And consult them in the matter,
and once you have taken a decision, place your trust in Allah. Surely, Allah loves
those who place their trust in Him." (3:159)
ii. Rasulullah (SAW) said: “If any ruler having the authority to rule Muslim subjects
dies while he is deceiving them, Allah will forbid Paradise for him.” (Al-Bukhari)
11) Conclusion
Topic 23: Concept of Governance and its Applications in the light of Quran, Sunnah and Fiqh
1) Introduction
I. The Holy Quran describes good governance as the law of justice, a just and
principled order and compliance of rights and responsibilities in a society.
II. “Those when given authority in land, establish (system of) salah, give zakah and
enjoin what is good (mauruf) and forbid what is wrong (munkar) (Quran, al-Hajj,
22:41)
III. “O you who believe stand up as a witness for Allah in all fairness, and do not let
the hatred of people deviate you from justice (‘adl). Be just, this is closest to
piety (Quran, Al-Maidah, 5:8)
ii. Shura in Islam is based on the rule of Allah’s and Sunna Muhammad SWT
and loyalty to those rules in basis of faith.
iv. Consult them in affairs (of moment). Then, when you have to take a
decision put the trust in Allah. For Allah loves those who put their trust
(in Him). (Quran, Al-Imran, 3:159)
II. Khilafah
iii. Prophet Hood shall remain among you as long as God wills. Then
khilafat on the pattern of prophet hood will commence and remain as
long as He wills. A corrupt monarchy shall then follow and it shall
remain as long as God wills. There shall then be a oppressive despotism
which shall remain as long as God wills. Then once again khilafat will
arise on the principle of prophet hood (Masnad-Ahmad)
i. “…Lo the hearing and the sight and the heart – of each of these will be
asked” (Quran, Bani Israill, 17:36)
IV. Transparency
i. “O you who believe! When you deal with each other, in transactions
involving future obligations in a fixed period of time, reduce them to
writing. Let a scribe write-down faithfully as between the parties…”
(Quran, Al-Baqarah, Beginning of the Ayat, 2:282)
V. Justice
iii. Provision of justice for every citizen regardless of its status in the society
or financial condition.
iv. God commands justice and fair dealing... (Quran, Al-Nahal, 16:90).
v. Equality in Justice; O you who believe! Stand out firmly for justice, as
witnesses to Allah, even if it be against yourselves, your parents, and
your relatives, or whether it is against the rich or the poor... (Quran, Al-
Nisa, 4:135)
VI. Equity
ii. Every Muslim, men and women, has the right to obtain both religious and
material education.
iii. O mankind, your Lord is one and your father is one. You all descended
from Aadam, and Aadam was created from earth. He is most honored
among you in the sight of God who is most upright. No Arab is superior
to a non-Arab, no colored person to a white person, or a white person to
a colored person except by Taqwa (piety) (At-Tirmithi).
1. All men are created by One and the Same Eternal God, the
Supreme Lord of all.
2. All mankind belong to the human race and share equally in the
common parentage of Aadam (Adam) and Eve (Hawa).
3. Allah is Just and Kind to all His creatures. The whole Universe is
His Dominion and all people are His creatures.
4. All people are born equal, in the sense that no one brings any
possession with him; and they die equal in the sense that they
take back nothing of their worldly belongings.
5. Allah judges every person on the basis of his own merits and
according to his own deeds.
ii. “And there should be a group amongst you who invite towards good,
order for acknowledged virtues, forbid from sin and these it is that are
the successful ones” (Quran, Al-Imran, 3:104).
i. Hazrat Umer (R.A.) was the first ruler to practically implement this idea
ii. whether it is a beggar wandering in the streets can bring the performance
and integrity of the ruler in question if he thinks that he is not performing
according to the teachings of Islam.
3) Conclusion
Topic 24: Governance Structure in Islam i.e. (Shura, Legislation, Sources of Islamic Law)
1) Introduction
2) Legislation
a. Shariah
iii. Usul al-fiqh, or sources of law, define the principles and methods on
which it is based.
iv. Fuqaha are the class of Muslim scholars who dealt in theoretical Islamic
law, or fiqh, a judge (qadi) serves in a court, while a mufti gives legal
responses (fatwa) to people’s questions. Say, "O Allah , Owner of
Sovereignty, You give sovereignty to whom You will and You take
sovereignty away from whom You will. You honor whom You will and
You humble whom You will. In Your hand is [all] good. Indeed, You are
iii. Other disciplines such as logic, history and general knowledge as well as
specialized areas like commerce or international relations might be
important in deciding specific cases.
iv. Knowing the history of the law and the schools of law, their differences
and legal precedents (decisions of other jurists in the past)
vii. judges’ rulings are not the foundation of Islamic law, but only its
application to specific cases.
iii. In order to reach a decision, the jurist goes through a careful process of
reasoning.
iv. He who obeys me obeys God; and he who disobeys me, disobeys God.
He who obeys the amir (head of the state) obeys me; and he who
disobeys the amir, disobeys me. (Al bukhari)
c. Ijma' (consensus): In situations when Muslims have not been able to find a
specific legal ruling in the Quran or Sunnah, the consensus of the community is
sought (or at least the consensus of the legal scholars within the community).
The Prophet Muhammad once said that his community (i.e. the Muslim
community) would never agree on an error.
d. Qiyas (analogy);
i. In cases when something needs a legal ruling, but has not been clearly
addressed in the other sources, judges may use analogy, reasoning, and
legal precedent to decide new case law.
e. Ijtehad (literally effort); Prophet (peace be upon him) asked Mu’az, the
companion, by what criteria he would administer the regions assigned to his
control. ‘The Quran,’ Mu’az replied. ‘Then what?’ asked the Prophet (peace be
upon him). ‘The sunnah.’ ‘And then what?’ ‘Then I will make a personal effort
(ijtehad) and act according to that.’ To which the Prophet (peace be upon him)
agreed. by established precedent (taqlid), or by direct analogy (qiyas) from
known law.
a. The Concept
iii. “And consult with them upon the conduct of affairs, and when you are
resolved, then put the trust in Allah. Lo! Allah loveth those who put their
trust (in Him)” Quran
b. Qualities of Shura
5) Conclusion
Topic 25: Governance under Pious Khelifat; Particular letters of Hazrat Umar (R.A) and Hazrat
Ali (R.A) to different Authority
1) Introduction
i. Abu Bakr except from all Prophets are supreme in all human beings. (Tibrani)
iii. Prophet Muhammad (s.a.w.w) married His daughter Hazrat Ruqqiya (r.a) with
Hazrat Usman Ghani (r.a). When She died Prophet Muhammad (s.a.w.w) said: It
is the order of ALLAH to marry Her sister (Ruqqiya's) Um-e-Kalsoom with
Usman. So Prophet Muhammad (s.a.w.w) married Her with Usman Ghani (r.a).
When She died, Prophet Muhammad (s.a.w.w) said: If I would have another
daughter, I would have also married her with Usman. (Hadees)
2) The Caliph
ii. Election Hazrat Abu Bakr R.A; nomination Hazrat Umar R.A
iv. Religious Functions: religious finctions determined his secular position and
power; to be imam and deliver khutbah at Friday prayers
vi. If some else Prophet should have been proposed by ALLAH after me, would have
3) The Shura
ii. Functions: Consult them in affairs (of moment). Then, when you have to take a
decision put the trust in Allah. For Allah loves those who put their trust (in Him).
(Quran, Al-Imran, 3:159)
iii. Ad hoc nature: “Who obey their Lord, attend to their prayers and conduct their
affairs with mutual consultation”. 42:38
i. Diwan-ul-Kharaj
ii. Diwan-ul-Jund
iii. Diwan-ul-Khatm
iv. Diwan-ul-Mustaghallast
v. Diwan-ul-Barid
vi. Diwan-ul-Rasail
vii. Diwan-ul-Hisbah
5) Secretaries/Ministers
6) Provincial Administration
ii. Officers beside governors were; The Treasury Officer (Sahib-i-BAitul-Mal); The
Revenue Collector (Sahib-e-Kharaj); The chief police officer (Sahib-ahadath); The
Judge (Al-Qazi)
7) Judiciary
ii. You who believe! show integrity for the sake of Allah, bearing witness with
justice. Do not let hatred for a people incite you into not being just. Be just. That
is closer to taqwa. Fear [and respect] Allah. Allah is aware of what you do.
(Surat al-Maida, 8)
8) Police
ii. Verily, Allah enjoins justice, and the doing of good to others; and giving like
kindred; and forbids indecency and manifest evil and transgression. (Ch.16:V.91)
9) Revenue Administration
i. Sources of revenue; Jizya, Zakat, Khiraj, Ushr, Booty, Tax on non muslim
merchants as they did not pay Zakat
ii. Bayt-ul-mal: Hazrat Umar set up first public treasury in madina (15 AH/636 AD)
v. Provincial Administration
vi. Judiciary
x. Merit Policy
xiii. Personal care of the public and Stipends to disabled persons and the poor
ii. Letter to Abu musa ashari governor of Kufa regarding Judiciary and its Functions
iii. Letter to Abu Ubaidah when a group of muslims flouted the Islamic ban on wine
in the Euphoria over the conquest of Damascus
v. Letter to Abu Ubaidah when he was at Jabia wherein the former explained about
the qualifications of a civil Servant
i. General Administration
viii. Preaching of Islam: Leading by Example; ‘I am the city of knowledge and ‘Ali is
its gate; so whoever desires knowledge, let him enter the gate.’ Bukhari
ii. The Common man; The counselors; the different classes of people; the
army
ii. Letter to Ziyad bin Abeeh, the Deputy Governor of Abdillah bn al-abbas in Basra
iv. Letter to one of his officers whom he sent for the collection of Zakat and
charities
v. Letter to Mohammad bin abi bakr, when he appointed him as the governor of
Egypt
viii. Letter to Abdillah Bin Al Abbas at the the time of his appointment as his governor
of Basra
15) Conclusion
1) Introduction
ii. According to Hazrat Ali (R.A) they should possess qualities of refinement,
alertness. Serenity, freedom from lust etc.
iii. A public servant in Islam is a responsible person and maintains and implements
law and order
iv. His responsibilities are to dispense justice, called zakat and other taxes
v. Hazrat Abu bakr said at the time of assuming caliphate “In my sight, the powerful
and weak are alike and to both I wish to render justice.”
3. And hold firmly to the rope of Allah all together and do not
become divided. And remember the favor of Allah upon you - when you
were enemies and He brought your hearts together and you became, by
His favor, brothers. And you were on the edge of a pit of the Fire, and He
saved you from it. Thus does Allah make clear to you His verses that
you may be guided. (3:103)
2. … if you do judge, judge between them justly. Allah loves the just.
(Surat al-Maida, 42)
1. S/He must take effective steps You who believe! show integrity
for the sake of Allah, bearing witness with justice. Do not let hatred for a
people incite you into not being just. Be just. That is closer to taqwa.
Fear [and respect] Allah. Allah is aware of what you do. (Surat al-Maida,
8)
3) Conclusion
1) Introduction
i. Accountability is one of the fundamentals of the religion and has general welfare
and great virtue as ordained and inhibited by Allah for the reformation of the
general masses.
ii. ‘Be Afraid, from the curse of the oppressed as there is no screen between his
invocation and Allah’ (Tirmizi)
iii. The Quran says, if anyone does an atom’s weight of good shall see it in Allah’s
court, and if anyone does an atom’s weight of evil shall also see it. Al-Quran
Surah 99: Verses 7-8
iv. Concept of accountability of dual nature; public servants are accountable for
their conduct before public as well as Allah
ii. ‘…Lo the hearing and the sight and the heart-of each of these will be asked’
(Bani Israeel, 17:36)
iii. any bearer of burden (of responsibility & accountability) shall not bear anyone
else’s burden[Al-Quran Surah 35: Verse 18]
v. The Prophet (s.a.w) declared that “I am the first one to submit to the will of
Almighty” Al-Quran Surah 6: Verse 14
i. “If any of you sees something evil, he should set it right with his hand; if he is
unable to do so, then with his tongue, and if he is unable to do even that, then
(let him denounce it) in his heart. But this is the weakest form of faith.”[Sahih
Muslim]
ii. ‘All of you are guardians and are responsible for your wards, The ruler is a
guardian and the man is the guardianof his family; the lady is a guardian and is
responsible for her husband’s house and his offspring; and so all of you are
guardians and are responsible for your wards’ Hadeeth
i. Function of hisba is the supervision of moral behavior of the public and other
segments of society.
th
iii. It ceased to exist by the end of 19 century
iv. Prophet Muhammad PBUH established the Mazalim Courts to handle the
grievances of the people.
vi. In Islamic administrative system, no one is above the law, not even judiciary,
armed forces etc.
iii. In Pakistan, both the constitutions of 1962 and 1973 provided for the
appointment of Ombudsman.
iv. It was by Presidential Order in January, 1983, that the office of the Wifaqi
Muhtasib was established.
6) Administrative Accountability
iii. The actions of every government are right to the extent that human rights are not
infringed and people’s demands are not ignored.
iv. Hazrat Ali’s instruction in the letter to Malik Ashtar Governor of Egypt ‘Let me
remind you once again that you are made responsible to guard the rights of poor
people and to look after their welfare’
7) Conclusion
1. Introduction
I. Stable and permanent social system along with combination of Adl and Insaaaf
III. According to Islam, individual is the starting point of islam, because he is the
fundamental unit of society
IV. One’s friendship should be only for seeking the pleasure of Allah; whatever you
give should be given because Allah likes it to be given, and whatever you
withhold should be withheld because Allah wishes to. (Tirmidhi)
II. Brotherhood
i. “One Muslim is like a building brick to the others; one part strengthens
ii. “O’ mankind! Lo! We have created you male and female, and have made
you nations and tribes, so that ye may know one another. Lo! The
noblest among you, in the sight of Allah, is the best in conduct. Lo! Is
knower and Aware.” (Al-Hujurat: 13)
V. Concept Of Responsibility:
ii. The Holy Prophet (PBUH) said that the man who lives among others and
shows patience on the misdeeds done to him by others is better than
the man who does not live among the people and is not patient over
excesses done to him.
i. Family is the first and basic institution of human social training. That’s
why the importance of a family in Islamic society is very great.
ii. First step of Islamic society is the formation of which is a pure and
legitimate relation between a man and woman. This relation makes a
unity within itself.
iii. Here a new generation comes into being with it many new relations are
also generated.
iv. Finally all these relations spread over to form a complete society.
i. Islam wants to see all these to share each other’s sorrows and happiness.
ii. In Quran there are many places where emphasis is laid upon good
behavior towards relatives.
iii. Anyone whose neighbor is not safe from his misdeeds is not a true
believer. (Bukhari and Muslim)
iii. It is only mosque which can make Islamic social plan successful.
iv. “And holdfast, all of you together, to the cable of Allah, and do not
separate.”(al-Imran).
ii. transfer one’s traditions and knowledge one must ponder over the faults
of one’s education policy.
i. There are many ways to cope with the evils and sins of any society but
rules and regulation to curb evil-doers are also must.
ii. Islam also has such system with proper rules and regulations.
iii. These rules are made to save the citizens from evil-doers and sinners.
Islam has set particular penalties and punishments to deal bad elements
with an iron hand.
v. The Holy Prophet once said, “If my daughter steals something, by God I
will cut her hands too.”
4. Conclusion
1) Introduction
i. The basis of the judicial system is set in the principle that ‘the application of the
Islamic Judgment on any issue is obligatory’.
ii. God commands justice and fair dealing... (Quran, Al-Nahal, 16:90).
iii. The formation of courts and a judicial procedure have existed since the birth of
Islam as are entrenched in the main sources of Islamic Law i.e. the Qur’an, the
Sunnah, Consensus of the Companion of the Prophet(saw) (Ijma’) and Divine
Analogy (Qiyas).
iv. The formation of the Judicial body is established with the appointment of a Chief
Judge who is responsible for the appointments and discipline of other judges.
v. You who believe! show integrity for the sake of Allah, bearing witness with
justice. Do not let hatred for a people incite you into not being just. Be just. That
is closer to taqwa. Fear [and respect] Allah. Allah is aware of what you do.
(Surat al-Maida, 8)
2) Responsibility of Application
iii. resolving the disputes that arise between the people and those of authority i.e.
Khaleef or a Wali
ii. Rule of Law: “Had Fatima daughter of Muhammad PBUH commited theft, I
would have cut off her hands” (Bukhari)
i. As for the courts, they comprise of only one judge who has the authority
to pronounce judgment.
ii. Other judges are allowed to accompany him but only as advisors of
assistants. Moreover, there is no jury. This is so because the judgment is
referred to the Islamic Sources and not to the minds of humans as in the
West.
iii. Neither, within Islamic courts is there a Court of Appeal since court
proceedings are only undertaken when the evidence is proven to be 100%
definite.
iv. Any doubt to the evidence then the whole case is thrown out. After proof
of the evidence, the judgment is considered the Law of Allah on the issue
and cannot be revoked.
v. Qualification of Judges
i. All the judges must be qualified with being Muslim, mature, free, sane,
just and a legal jurist being aware of how to apply rules on the situation.
ii. Judges of the Court for the Unjust Acts must additionally be qualified with
being male and a Mujtahid i.e. capable of making Ijtihad.
iii. The Qadi Madhalim has the authority to dismiss any ruler, governor and
official, including the Khaleef and was well established in the period of the
Prophet (saw) and the Khulafaa’Rashidun.
iv. Allah’s Messenger (saw) appointed Abdullah Ibn Nawfal as judge over
Medina and made Rashid Ibnu Abdallah head of the Judicial system and
the complaints tribunals (Ref: Ibnu Ishaq vol.4, and Imam Shafi’s ‘the Easy
Jurisprudence’).
i. The judge, Qadi Amm, who settles the disputes among the people in
transaction and punishments.
ii. The Mushtasib who judges upon violations of the community’s rights.
iii. The judge of the Court for the Unjust Act (Mahkamat ul-Madhalim) who
settles disputes between people (this includes non-Muslims since they
are citizens) and the officials of the state.
ii. Aqilah: It was a group of male relations in a tribe to pay blood money
i. Muslim is accountable for every action that he/she has performed and for
every crime there exists a punishment that is enforced by the State. It
acts as Kaffarah and is the means to repent and seek forgiveness.
Therefore, it is better to get the punishment in this life and sincerely
repent than to face the punishment in the Afterlife. It is narrated by Abu
Daud when referring to a man who confessed to an illegal sexual act,
and was ordered to be stoned to death, Mohammed (saw) said: “He is
more agreeable than the fragrance of musk in the eyes of Allah.”
ii. The principle of the Punishment System is to, “prevent the punishment as
much as possible,” since the severity of the punishments serve the
primary role of a deterrent. It is narrated that Mohammed (saw) said that:
“to free some criminal is better than to punish someone innocent.”
iii. Islam came to secure and protect five issues and these apply also to the
Al-Dhimma (non-Muslim citizens), for Mohammed (saw) said, “Whoever
harms a Dhimmi it is as if he harms me.” Also because within the Islamic
State, all citizens carry equal status and no one is allowed to discriminate
against the other. The five issues are; Belief: “there is no compulsion in
religion” (2:256), Honor, Mind, Property, and Life: Mohammed (saw) said
that: “the blood of a Muslim is worth more than the Ka’ba and all its
surroundings.” Therefore the punishment for murder is death with the
right of family of the deceased to forgive and receive blood money.
i. Hudood: this punishment is “the Right of Allah (swt) and no one can
forgive.” It covers six areas:
ii. Al-Jynayaat: “the right of the person and he/she can forgive.” This
category covers mainly the issue of killing, whether unlawful or accidental
and the right of the individual or family to forgive and demand blood
money (diya).
iii. Al-Ta’azir: this considered “the right of the community.” It covers those
issues which affect the society is everyday life like, shouting in the streets
and throwing rubbish onto the street. The state adopts the punishment
for the crime.
iv. Al-Mukhalafat: this is the “right of the state,” it covers the issues which
the state enacts such as breaking the speed limit, parking in no parking
areas etc… Again, the state will adopt the punishment for the crime.
4) Conclusion
1) Introduction
i. The belief in the sovereignty of Allah is the starting point of Islamic political
philosophy
ii. Submission to Allah as the Creator and Supreme Law Maker is the rudiment
aspect
iii. The Authority rests with none but Allah, He commands you not to surrender
anyone save (Allah) Him. This is the right way of life” (12:40)
iv. Even the Prophets are subject to Gods sayings and command. The Prophet
(S.A.W.W) said; “I do not follow anything except what is revealed to me”
v. In Islamic state sovereignty rests with God and delegated to some elected
person
vi. The state can not frame laws against injunctions of Quran and Sunnah
vii. The Prophet (S.A.W.W.) said; It is the duty of every man to remove evil activity
i. Adl; ‘And when you judge amongst men, you judge with equity” (An Nisa 58)
ii. Shura; And those who answer the call of their lord, and perform salat is who
(conduct) their affairs by mutual consultation and who spend of what We have
bestowed upon them” (Shura: 38)
iii. Freedom of Speech and expression; duty of muslims to fearlessly speak truth
and promote good
vi. Law of God; the supreme law is the law of Allah as laid down in Quran and
Sunnah
vii. Judiciary; judiciary is independent of executive ; the Caliph is at par with ordinary
citizen of state.
viii. Will of people; Ruler should be elected by will of people, citizens to be consulted
in this matter.
ii. Executive
iii. The Holy Prophet (S.A.W.W): “Authority is a trust and on day if judgment,
it is a cause of humiliation and repentance except for one who fulfills his
obligations and properly discharges the duties attendant thereon”
iii. Legislative
iv. Judicial
iii. “If you do judge, judge between them justly, Allah loves the just.” (Surah
Maida)
v. Cultural
i. By cultural duty, the very raison-d’etre of Islam, which seeks that the Word
of God alone should prevail
ii. Duty of muslims not only to abide by Divine Law but also to make it
known wordly that Islam stands for basic principles; “There is no
compulsion in religion”
iii. According to Dr. Hamidullah, “if they reach the limit of patience and
endurance and are unable to defend themselves, they should migrate
from the abode of tyranny. God’s earth is wide enough to offer them
shelter elsewhere.”
ii. Treaties with non-Muslims; Can enter treaties for creating conditions of peace for
themselves and for others
ii. If convinced of perfidy, they should give a notice and fix a term of
termination of treaty
iv. Force without transgression: Muslims are allowed to use force against
aggressors without transgressing proper limits
v. Socialist Republic
iii. It shall be theocracy in the sense that it derives authority from God
viii. Welfare State: It should not be a police state whose functions ends with laws and
order; It aims to be a welfare state
x. Election of President
5) Conclusion
1) Introduction
i. Freedom of work and enterprise; "Allah has made business lawful for you (Sura
Baqara, Ayat - 275)"
ii. A special concept of ownership; "To Allah belongs whatever is in the earth". (Al-
Imran)
iv. State Ownership: "don't eat each other's property wrongfully " (Sura Nisa,Ayat-
29)
v. Prohibition of Interest
vi. Zakā t and Ṣ adaqah; ‘Zakā t ’ purifies one’s earnings and property Quran;
“Give the ṣ adaqah before delay; for it stands in the way of calamity” Hadith
vii. Concern for Poor; begging “will appear as lacerations on his face on the day of
resurrection and as heated stones which he will eat from jahannum...”[41]
(Tirmidhī transmitted it).
viii. Distribution of inheritance; equitable and just distribution of wealth and property;
The Qur’an apportions “to the male, a portion equal to that of two females:...”;
“From what is left by parents and those nearest related there is a share for men
and a share for women, whether the property be small or large—a determinate
share” Quran
i. “... They ask thee how much they are to spend; Say: ‘What is beyond your
needs’. Thus doth Allah make clear to you His signs....”[Surah Baqarah]
ii. result will be a truly equitable and just society: a welfare society; there is
no justification for possessing any additional property to be let or leased
out for any pecuniary gain
iii. It may be added here that the word “needs” includes his financial
commitments in business and industry also
iv. In this system no extra house or building will be allowed to build for
renting or leasing out.
v. wealth and other resources should remain in circulation, and what is left
to stagnate is illegitimate; "Whatsoever Allah may restore unto His
Messenger - is due unto Allah and unto His Messenger - the orphans and
the needy. So, that it may not be confined to the rich amongst you." [Al-
Hashr: 7]
ii. In connection with the property of an orphan the Holy Prophet is reported by
Amr b. Shu‘aib on the authority of his grandfather to have said, “If anyone is
guardian of an orphan who owns property, he must trade with it and not leave it
till the ‘ṣ adaqah’ consumes it”[8] (Tirmidhī transmitted it)
iii. Investing ones resources in legitimate directions is obligatory for his own benefit
and for that of the whole society; “If the debtor is in a difficulty, grant him time
till it is easy for him to repay. But if ye remit it by way of charity, that is best for
you...”
ii. Ribā al-Faḍ l, i.e. taking a superior thing of the same kind of goods by
giving more of the same kind of goods of inferior quality, e.g. dates of
superior quality for dates of inferior quality in greater amounts’.
iii. A deeper study and analysis of the concept of Ribā (Usury) reveals that
Ribā (Usury) in Islam means that any amount of wealth or property
acquired without personal effort; Islam insists on acquiring a legitimate
amount through effort in a legitimate direction
i. ‘... ! When ye deal with each other, in transactions involving future obligations in a fixed
period of time. Reduce them to writing ...’
ii. ‘...Let him who incurs the liability dictate, but let him fear his Lord Allah, and not
diminish aught of what he owes...’
iii. ‘... But if be a transaction which ye carry out on the spot among yourselves, there is
no blame on you if ye reduce it not to writing. But take witnesses whenever ye make a
commercial contract; and let neither scribe nor witness suffer harm...’
iv. ‘If ye are on a journey, and cannot find a scribe, a pledge with possession (may
serve the purpose)...’
v. ‘... Conceal not evidence; for whoever conceals it,-- his heart is tainted with sin. And
Allah knoweth all that ye do.’
5) Rules For Fair Transaction in the Aḥ ā Dī Th
i. Ḥ akī m b. Niẓ ā m reported the Holy Prophet as saying: ‘The buyer and the seller
have the option to cancel or to confirm the deal, as long as they have not parted or till
they part, and if they spoke the truth and told each other the defects of the things, then
blessings would be in their deal, and if they hid something and told lies, the blessings of
the deal would be lost.’
ii. The seller should not swear to prevail upon the buyer. Abū Huraira reported the
Allah’s Messenger as saying: “The swearing (by the seller) may persuade the buyer to
purchase the goods but that will be deprived of Allah’s blessing”.
iii. Abū Huraira has quoted the Prophet as saying: “whoever is pleased that he be
granted more wealth and that his lease of life be prolonged they should keep good
relations with his kith and kin”
6) System of Islamic Welfare Economics:
i. Cardinal Prohibitions include:
i. Abolition of interest.
ii. Prohibition of gambling in all its kinds.
iii. Abolition of unlawful contracts of exchange.
ii. The dos are:
i. Imposition of Zakat.
ii. Imposition of other Quranic sources of Public revenue as Usher, Jizya, Ghanimah,
Fay.
iii. Implementation of lawful contracts of exchange.
7) Conclusion
1) Introduction
c. The society which was established by the Holy Quran and the Sunnah is a living
society so the Allah almighty gave sanction to the consensus of the Muslim to
meet the arising needs of the time.
d. “Believers! Obey Allay and obey the Prophet and those invested with authority
among you; and then if you were to dispute among yourselves about anything
refer it to Allah and the messenger if you indeed believe in Allah and the Last
Day; that is better and more commendable in the end.” Similarly, in verse No.43
of Surah Nahl/Chapter the Bee, the Allah Almighty directs the Muslims,
e. “(O Muhammad!), whenever We raised any Messengers before you, they were
no other than human beings; to them We sent revelation. So ask those who
possess knowledge if you do not know.” (59 of Surah Nisa)
a. Meaning of Ijma: Ijma is the verbal noun of the Arabic word Ajmaa it is used in
two senses.
3) Basis of Ijma:
a. Quran
b. Hadith or
c. Analogy
a. Allah almighty has completed the Islamic religion and Hazrat Muhammad (Peace
Be Upon Him) was the last of the Prophets (Peace Be Upon Him), so it
necessarily follows that any rule of law, which is not found to be explicitly laid
down in the Quran or by the precepts of the Holy Prophet, must be capable of
being deduced from them, so Ijma is permitted.
i. “You are the best of man, and it is your duty to order men to do what is
right and to forbid them from practicing what is wrong.”
ii. “Obey God and obey the Prophet (Peace be Upon Him) and those
amongst you who have authority.”
iii. “If you yourself do not know, then question those who do.’
ii. “It is incumbent upon you to follow the most numerous body.”
iii. “Whoever separates himself (from the main body) will go to hell.”
5) Kinds of Ijma
i. Explicit Ijma is one in which the legal opinions of all the jurists of one
period coverage in relation to a legal issue, and each of them states his
opinion explicitly.
ii. It may take place when all the jurists are garthered in one session and an
issue is presented to them and they collectively expressed a unanimous
opinion.
iii. It may also take place when an issue is raised in a certain period and all
the jurists in turn issue similar fatwas independently and at sepaeate
times.
i. Tacit Ijma takes place when some mujtahid issue a verdict on a legal
issue and the rest of the mujtahids come to know of it during the same
period, but they keep silent, neither acknowledge it nor refuse it expressly.
6) Who can perform Ijma; Only Muslim Mujtahids or jurists can perform Ijma. He must
b. Knows Qiyas
d. Impartial thinking
a. Ijma by mujtahids; The Ijma must be performed by Mujtahids i. e those who have
attained the status of Ijtihad.
c. Performed by Muslims; All the jurists participating in Ijma must be from the
Ummah of Hazrat Muhammad (Peace be Upon Him).
d. After the death of Holy Prophet (Peace be Upon Him); The Ijma must have taken
place after the death of Holy Prophet (Peace be Upon Him).
f. Upon rule of law; The Ijma must be upon rule of law and all-non legal matters are
excluded from the domain of Ijma.
g. Reliance upon sanad (Evidence); For deriving their opinion, Mujtahids should
relied upon some sanad (evidence).
h. Ijma as a source of law; Ijma as a third source of law and under the circle of
Quran and Sunnah’s delegation many issues can be resolved by Ijma.
a. Ijma as a source of law helps in discovering the law and enforces the principals
laid down in Quran and Sunnah.
b. the Holy Prophet (PBUH) said, “My people will never agree in an error.”
c. Similarly, he stated, “Whatever the Muslims hold to be good is good before Allah.”
9) Interpretation of Sharia
c. To achieve the objects of Quran and Sunnah, new legislation can be made
through the process of Ijma.
d. First Ijma performed by Muslims; The election of Hazrat Abu Bakr to the
caliphate by the votes of the people was based of Ijma.
c. No opinion to the contrary should have been expressed on the question by any of
the companions, or by other Mujtahids before the formation of the Ijma.
d. None of the Mujatahids taking part in the decision should have afterwards
changed his opinion.
c. With the passage of time such opinions become part of their legal system.
d. However the concept of Ijma has wider scope than the concept opinion
prudentium which is also knows as “Responsa Prudentium.”
a. According to the accepted opinion of all four sunni schools, Ijma is not confined
to any particular age or country.
c. In the earlier stages, this forum was confined to jurist companions then the
leading jurists of each school. Today the forum would be the highest court in
each Muslim country.
13) Conclusion
1) Introduction:
b. if a matter is not resolved expressly in a Quran Sunnah and by way of Ijma the
jurist must not leave the matter unresolved rather he should strive hard to find
out the solution under right of Quran and Sunnah.
c. While defining Ijtihad Shatibi writes, “A process in which one exerts one’s efforts
to one’s full capacity in order to acquire exact or probable knowledge or reach
judgment in a given case.”
a. Meaning of ijtehad:
b. Definition of Ijtehad: "Ijtehad means the application by a lawyer of all his faculties
to the consideration of the authorities of the law, that is the Quran Traditions and
the Ijma with a view to find out what in all probability is the law.
iii. "The ask those who have knowledge, if you yourselves do not know,"
i. "Exercise Ijtehad because God makes the work easy for the person for
which he is born in this world."
4) Function of Mujtahid:
a. To discover the law that is either stated explicitly in the primary sources or is
impiled by the texts, that is literal interpretation.
b. To extent the law to new to new cases which are similar to cases mentioned in
textual sources.
c. To extend the law to new cases which are not covered by the previous methods.
5) Limitations of Ijtehad:
a. Ijtehad cannot be made in case which are covered by the express words of Quran
Hadith or has been determined by basic Ijma.
b. A jurist cannot exercise Ijtehad on the basic pillars of Islam e.g paying of Zaket,
Prohibiton of Murder etc.
6) Modes of performing Ijtehad: A jurist may perform Ijtehad by following the following
pattern.
a. Literal construction: A jurist first concentrates on literal meaning of the texts and
follow the plain meaning rule.
b. Qiyas: After the literal construction the jurist may turn to qiyas but must confined
to strict types of analogy.
i. After exhausting the first two methods or modes the jurist may rely on all
the texts considered collectively.
ii. this means that legal reasoning is undertaken more in line with the spirit
of the law and its purposes rather than the confines of individual texts.
7) Qualifications of Mujtahid:
a. The word Mujtahid means a person who can make Ijtehad. following are the
qualifications of a mujtahid.
b. Kinds of Mujtahid:
i. Mujtahidum Fish-Shari: These are the jurists who have an absolute and
independent power of expounding the law e. g. Abu Hanifa Malik, Shafi
etc.
2. the were the disciples of jurists of first rank like Abu Yusuf
belongs to Hanafi school.
1. These are the jurists who are competent to expound the law on a
particular question which had not been settled by the jurist of first
and the second class.
2. they have not any right o deduct the law but their function was to
explain the law and draw inferences.
v. Ashabu't Takrij.
8) Legal effect of Ijthad: The legal effect of Ijtegad is the probability of the conclusion so
arrived at being correct but the possibility of such conclusion being erroneous is not
discretionary or presumptive law.
b. Sunnis and Shiites; The gap in doctrine between various Islamic madhahib
(schools and sectarian positions) should be narrowed.
iii. Ijtihad should also be used to foster better relations between people of
diverse faiths and cultures by promoting dialogue among various groups
rather than encouraging the notion of a clash of cultures and civilizations.
ii. Ethical and moral standards of the Islamic state need to be examined, as
does the promotion of individual freedom, especially that of religious
minorities.
i. Ijtihad should be used to guide the almost one-third of the umma (the
worldwide Muslim community) that is living as minorities in non-Muslim
countries.
ii. Other major obstacles facing Muslims and the practice of ijtihad today
include prejudice, intellectual stagnation, political dictatorship, rejection of
others, lack of democracy and freedom, factionalism, and extremism.
Regrettably, these illnesses pervasive in Muslim societies are worsening,
reaching a point where they may spiral out of control.
vii. Revision and reform of the recess and practices of an early society.
viii. Istihsan.
10) Conclusion
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Islamic Studies by Karim Dad Chughtai (IMPORTANT)