By
Khalid Baig
While on his deathbed, Sayyidna Umar ibn al-Khattab, Radi-Allahu
unhu, dictated a long Will consisting of instructions for the next
Khalifah. Here is the last sentence of that historic document: “I
instruct you on behalf of the people who have been given protection
in the name of Allah and His Prophet .
[That is the dhimmis or the non-Muslim minorities within the Islamic
state]. Our covenant to them must be fulfilled, we must fight to
protect them, and they must not be burdened beyond their
capabilities.”
At that time Sayyidna Umar was lying in pain because of the wounds
inflicted on him by a non-Muslim who had stabbed him with a dagger
soaked in poison while he was leading the fajr prayer. It should also
be remembered that he was the head of a vast empire ranging from
Egypt to Persia. From normal rulers of his time or ours, we could
have expected vengeance and swift reaction. (The enlightened rulers
of today have sent bombers even on suspicion of murder conspiracy).
From a very forgiving head of state we could have expected an attempt
to forget and forgive — and that would be considered noble. But a
command to protect the minorities and take care of them?
What is even more remarkable is that for Muslim historians the entire
affair was just natural. After all it was the Khalifah himself who
had established the standards by writing the guarantees for the
protection of life, property and religion in decree after decree as
Muslims opened land after land during his rule. The pattern
established here was followed for centuries throughout the Muslim
world.
Of course, Sayyidna Umar was simply following what he learnt from the
Prophet Muhammad himself.
That the protection of life, property and religious freedom of
minorities is the religious duty of the Islamic state. That he
personally would be demanding justice in the hereafter on behalf of a
dhimmi who had been wronged by a Muslim. That there is no compulsion
in religion and that Muslims must be just to friends and foe alike.
The result of these teachings was a Muslim rule that set the gold
standard for religious tolerance in a world that was not used to the
idea. Not only that the Muslim history is so remarkably free of the
inquisitions, persecutions, witch hunts, and holocausts that tarnish
history of other civilizations, it protected its minorities from
persecution by others as well. It protected Jews from Christians and
Eastern Christians from Roman Catholics. In Spain under the Umayyads
and in Baghdad under the Abbasid Khalifahs, Christians and Jews
enjoyed a freedom of religion that they did not allow each other or
anyone else.
This exemplary tolerance is built into Islamic teachings. The entire
message of Islam is that this life is a test and we have the option
of choosing the path to hell or to heaven. Messengers were sent to
inform about the choices and to warn about the consequences. They
were not sent to forcibly put the people on the right path. The job
of the Muslims is the same. They must deliver the message of Islam to
the humanity as they have received it. They are neither to change it
to make it attractive, nor to coerce others to accept it. In
addition, the results in the hereafter will depend upon faith. For
all good acts are meaningless in the absence of the proper faith. And
faith is an affair of the heart. It simply cannot be imposed.
It is not an idea that followers of other religions have shared with
Islam. The result is, Muslim experience in the area of tolerance has
been exactly opposite of the rest of the world. As Marmaduke
Pickthall noted: “It was not until the Western nations broke away
from their religious law that they became more tolerant, and it was
only when the Muslims fell away from their religious law that they
declined in tolerance.”
The path that the Western world took to provide harmony in society
was to banish religion from the public square. For this achievement,
it thinks that it has earned lecturing rights over the issue. So it
may be good to remember that while it has indeed made huge progress
in the area of tolerance during the last century (which should be
appreciated), it has a long way to go before it can reach the
standards established by Islam. First, while Muslim Personal Law is
not recognized in the West, the Personal Law of non-Muslim minorities
has always been recognized in the Muslim world. Second, while
throughout Europe and America, Muslims are not permitted to make the
call to prayer (Adhan) on loud speakers, church bells ring freely in
the Muslim world. Third, the wide spread anti-Islamic prejudice in
the Western media is both a cause and a consequence of the underlying
intolerance. Fourth, hate crimes are a fact of life in the West. As
just one small indication, nearly two-dozen incidents of vandalism
have taken place against Mosques in the peaceful USA during the last
seven years, not to mention hundreds of attacks against individuals.
Fifth, the will to admit this state of affairs is also not
sufficiently strong. Again here is just one indication: In 1999 two
resolutions were floated in the US Senate and House, titled “A
resolution supporting religious tolerance toward Muslims.” While
the Senate resolution passed, the House resolution was gutted under
pressure from several Jewish and Christian groups.
The situation of the rest of the “international community” is not
much different. With this background, extortions to display tolerance
become a vehicle for imposing one’s own intolerance.
Recently some people declared that the demolition of Buddhist statues
in a country with no Buddhist minority violated Islam’s teachings
on religious tolerance. They forgot that religious tolerance means
accommodation to religious minorities; it does not mean undermining
the majority. Here the issue of religious freedom had been turned on
its head. For the real question to ask was, why the Muslims in
Afghanistan must endure the statues they abhor?
For Muslims religious tolerance is not about political posturing. It
is a serious religious obligation. They must be a force against all
intolerance, even that which is promoted in the guise of tolerance.
Taken from http://www.albalagh.net