Shaykh-ul-Islam Dr Muhammad Tahir-ul-Qadri has been one of the most
unreserved voices against terrorism. The 61-year-old Pakistani Sufi scholar is
the founder of the Minhaj-ul-Quran International, an NGO, which works for the
welfare of Muslim youth the world over and particularly in Pakistan. In 2010 he
decreed the Fatwa on terrorism to widespread attention and international
coverage. It was released in India in the form of a book Fatwa on Terrorism and
Suicide Bombing, last week at the India Islamic Cultural Centre. Dr Qadri,
candid and erudite yet determinedly apolitical, talks to Aradhna Wal decoding
the cause of anger among Muslim youth, “true” Sufism and effective ways of
combating extremism.
What is the premise of your work?
The problem of extremism and terrorism started in the last decade or two.
Statements of condemnation were given, but they were soft statements, containing
ifs and buts. There was not a single book written on this subject in a
comprehensive way, consisting of Quranic evidences, juristic evidences from the
great Islamic jurists. There has been no comprehensive, theological,
jurisprudential perspective of this subject in the light of the Quran. This is
the first book of its nature in the history of Islamic literature.
Who made these statements of condemnation?
Various scholars around the world have been giving these statements. Some were
soft, some were very brief. Some were just declarations. They were messages of
peace, but none of them contained any evidence. The youth, who are brainwashed,
given distorted versions of Islam, and are exploited for ulterior motives,
parrot these teachings and verses with wrong meanings; without any context. So
the ones who had made these statements were not in a position to change their
minds. They couldn’t refute the teachings these youths were given. This book not
only refutes, but also provides evidences, without any conditions, that any act
and manifestation of terrorism is unconditionally forbidden, prohibited and
against Islam. That’s the theme.
Fatwa was issued in 2010 and hailed by many prominent thinkers. How effective
has it been since?
I’ve seen it become very effective. It’s created ample impact. When it was
issued in London in 2010 there was a very big resistance on YouTube, on
websites. The story started with massive opposition. The youth, who I am
primarily concerned with, was a little shy or weak in responding. But as time
passed, the graph changed. The minority became the majority. The supporters of
extremism became the minority. And hundreds of thousands of websites and blogs
showed support for the Fatwa. Support came from multiple languages such as
Arabic, English, French, Norwegian, Danish, even Chinese. We received a lot of
comments from the youth, those who didn’t even belong to our organisation,
saying that we had changed their minds, and even saved their lives and their
faith.
If the youth were slow to respond, whose was the most immediate positive
response?
The youth online was a little hesitant to reply. But within two weeks the
response was overwhelming. Now that they had this concrete reference book in
their hands they had something to refute extremism with. The best thing is that
in the two years that have passed, not a single scholar among the extremist camp
has been able to refute this book or fatwa. Not a single booklet or pamphlet has
been written with evidences which could discredit it. This has created a further
impact on the youth who were exposed to the extremists. They have started
questioning the ideology and asking for answers from these camps. Their silence
on an intellectual, theological, jurisprudential level has caused a great damage
to their ideology. I won’t say that the acts have stopped, but this is still
big, because ideology is the first thing with which they brainwash the young
Muslims.
The softest target group for recruitment is the unemployed Muslim youth, who are
angry at their socio-economic situation. This is prevalent in a lot of
countries. How do you and the Minhaj-ul-Quran deal with such a problem?
I’ve always maintained that religious extremism is only one aspect of the
problem of terrorism. There are others too. I haven’t discussed them in this
book as I didn’t want to expand the subject so much so as to dilute the main
point. But yes there is anger, there is poverty, there are socio-economic
conditions. Those exposed to them are easily accessible to extremist recruiting
camps. The boys are easily picked up because they have nothing to eat, no money,
no schools. They have lost their loyalty to the law, to the land and to the
system. These groups provide them monthly scholarships and allowances. The first
step to counter extremism is to fight poverty. The most important is reforms in
the education system. Minhaj-ul-Quran invests and spends in education. We are
recognized as an NGO, we’ve received the special consultative status with the
UN. We try to establish schools in various parts. We encourage people to
establish schools in their own districts. And we have not established a single
Madrasa. We combine secular and religious discipline, for boys and girls. Duly
recognized syllabi of the government and then scriptures are taught as
disciplines. Now we have 600 schools in Pakistan alone, and they are all giving
top ranking results. We have established colleges, and technical education and
vocational centers to train and provide for jobs. We’ve established the Minjah
International University, which is chartered by the government of Pakistan. Its
degree is equivalent to a degree from Jamia al-Azhar of Egypt. It has all
disciplines.
We’ve also established mass education centres and adult centres in rural areas.
They are set up for six months to a year for the local community that couldn’t
go to school. We get people of all ages. Then there are our welfare centres,
which work with juvenile delinquent boys, trying to reform and integrate them.
They work on improving family relations, between parents and children and
husbands and wives.
You employ methods of Sufism while working. Could you elaborate?
I believe and practice Sufism. But my Sufism is not what is found commonly in
different places. I believe in true Sufism, as taught by Khwaja Muinuddin
Ajmeri. Not as practiced by the caretakers now. I follow the saints, who taught
self purity, purity of the soul, mind and heart, to try to do spiritual acts in
service of god and mankind. These are the basic spiritual values that connect
the mind with the creator. And these are what I employ in the teachings in our
schools. This Sufism teaches love, tolerance, and patience. It counters anger,
extremism, frustration—the elements that lead to terrorism.
There has been a growing Wahabi influence in South Asia. In the last few
years many Sufi shrines across Pakistan have been under attack. South Asian
Islam has primarily been Sufi Islam. How do you ensure that it continues?
I will not comment on Wahabism, or South Asia. As far as Sufi principles are
concerned, I will give this message to followers of Sufism. If they practice the
true values of Sufism, as I have mentioned, it will never die. Sufism is not a
tradition or a hodgepodge of certain acts. It is just something that deals with
the purification of the soul. Traditions and conventions cannot do that. And the
spirituality is universal.
Considering how the Islamic community has become dangerously stereotyped in
the contemporary world, how do you plan to spread more awareness about the true
non-violent nature of Islam?
We have to work with both sides; to teach the Muslim community and also the
Western world. Words have to change. We cannot call it Islamic terrorism or
Islamic extremism. Attaching the word Islam or Islamic with these criminal acts
provides the perpetuators with legitimacy, to ground their acts within the
tenets of Islam. And tell the youth that they really are Islamic. As if
terrorism has a place in Islam. We have to de-link terrorism from religion.
How do you plan to reach out to the Western world and other countries?
Wherever I go, my audiences always include non-Muslims. Just last year, on the
24 September, we had a huge conference on Peace for Humanity at the Wembley
Arena. It was attended by 14,000 people. World leaders were on stage in their
traditional dresses. We all collectively prayed for peace under a single roof.
We try to promote commonalities, not difference, to promote an atmosphere of
dialogue. People who promote differences and disputes do a disservice to
religion.
How do you reach out to the man on the street dealing with these stereotypes
in his everyday life?
It is a slow process. It will take some time. But the more you do the better it
is. The practices I have started in certain areas can be adopted in different
areas. For example in Pakistan, people from different practices come to
Minhaj-ul-Quran and we sit together and have joint functions in our mosque. We
participate in the holy activities of other religions, with the Naulakha Church
of Lahore, and the Nila Gumbad Temple, the famous Hindu temple in Lahore. We go
to them and they come to us. If you practice these things at the grassroot
level, it will slowly spread awareness among people that different religions are
not there to hate one another.
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