From: FAITH [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Submission to God by Alija Izetbegovic  (Ex- President of Bosnia)Submission to 
God
Extract from Alija Izetbegovic's magnum opus: Islam Between East and West.
Alija Izetbegovic (8 August,1925 - 19 October, 2003) , the venerable lawyer, 
politician and author from Bosnia-Herzegovina. 

Izetbegovic died in hospital in October 2003 after becoming ill following a 
fall at his home in September. His funeral was attended by over 150,000 
Bosnians. 
 
 
  
"Our goal: the Islamisation of Muslims. Our methods: to believe and to 
struggle."


 The following essay is from Izetbegovic's 'Islam Between East and West': 

Nature has determinism, man has destiny. The acceptance of this destiny is the 
supreme and final idea of Islam. Destiny -- does it exist and what form does it 
take? Let us look at our own lives and see what has remained of our most 
precious plans and the dreams of our youth? Do we not come helplessly into the 
world faced with our own personality, with higher or lower intelligence, with 
attractive or repulsive looks, with an athletic or dwarfish stature, in a 
king's place or in a beggar's hut, in a tumultuous or peaceful time, under the 
reign of a tyrant or a noble prince, and generally in geographical and 
historical circumstances about which we have not been consulted? How limited is 
what we call our will, how tremendous and unlimited is our destiny! 

Man has been cast down upon this world and made dependent on many facts over 
which he has no power. His life is influenced by both very remote and very near 
factors. During the Allied invasion of Europe in 1944, there was, for a moment, 
a general disturbance in radio communications which could have been fatal for 
the operations under way. Many years later, the disturbance was explained as a 
huge explosion in the Andromeda constellation, several million light years away 
form our planet. One type of catastrophic earthquake on the earth is due to 
changes on the sun's surface. As our knowledge of the world grows, so does our 
realization that we will never be complete masters of our fate. Even supposing 
the greatest possible progress of science, the amount of factors under our 
control will always be insignificant compared to the amount of those beyond it. 
Man is not proportional to the world. He and his lifetime me not the measuring 
units of the pace of things. This is the cause of man's eternal insecurity, 
which is psychologically reflected in pessimism, revolt, despair, apathy, or in 
submission to God's will. 

Islam arranges the world by means of upbringing, education, and laws. That is 
its narrower scope; submission to God is the broader one. 

Individual justice can never be fully satisfied within the conditions of 
existence. We can follow all Islamic rules which, in their ultimate result, 
should provide us with the "happiness in both worlds"; moreover, we can follow 
all other norms, medical, social and moral but, because of the terrific 
entanglement of destinies, desires and accidents, we can still suffer in body 
and soul. What can console a mother who has lost her only son? Is there any 
solace for a man who has been disabled in an accident? 

We ought to become conscious of our human condition. We are immersed in 
situation. I can work to change my situation, but there are situations which 
are essentially unchangeable, even when their appearance takes a new look, and 
when their victorious power is veiled: l must die; I must suffer; I must fight; 
I am a victim of chance; I get inevitably entangled in guilt. These basic 
conditions of our existence are referred to as "the border situations."[1] 
Sure, "man is bound to improve everything that can be improved in this world. 
After that, children will still go on dying unjustly even in the most perfect 
of societies. Man, at best, can only give himself the task of reducing 
arithmetically the sufferings of this world. Still, injustice and pain will 
continue and, however limited, they will never cease to be blasphemy."[2] 

Submission to God or revolt -- these are two different answers to the same 
dilemma. 

In submission to God, there is some of every (human) wisdom except one: shallow 
optimism. Submission is the story of human destiny, and that is why it is 
inevitably permeated with pessimism: for "every destiny is tragic and dramatic 
if we come down to its bottom."[3] 

Recognition of destiny is a moving reply to the great human theme of inevitable 
suffering. It is the recognition of life as it is and a conscious decision to 
bear and to endure. In this point, Islam differs radically from the superficial 
idealism and optimism of European philosophy and its naive story about "the 
best of all possible worlds." Submission to God is a mellow light coming from 
beyond pessimism. 

As a result of one's recognition of his impotence and insecurity, submission to 
God itself becomes a new potency and a new security. Belief in God and His 
providence offers a feeling of security which cannot be made up for with 
anything else. Submission to God does not imply passivity as many people 
wrongly believe. In fact, "all heroic races have believed in destiny."[4] 
Obedience to God excludes obedience to man. It is a new relation between man 
and God and, therefore, between man and man. 

It is also a freedom which is attained by following through with one's own 
destiny. Our involvement and our struggle are human and reasonable and have the 
token of moderation and serenity only through the belief that the ultimate 
result is not in our hands. It is up to us to work, the rest is in the hands of 
God. 

Therefore, to properly understand our position in the world means to submit to 
God, to find peace, not to start making a more positive effort to encompass and 
to overcome everything, but rather a negative effort to accept the place and 
the time of our birth, the place and the time that are our destiny and God's 
will. Submission to God is the only human and dignified way out of the 
unsolvable senselessness of life, a way out without revolt, despair, nihilism, 
or suicide. It is a heroic feeling not of a hero, but of an ordinary man who 
has done his duty and accepted his destiny. 

Islam does not get its name from its laws, orders, or prohibitions, nor from 
the efforts of the body and soul it claims, but from something that encompasses 
and surmounts all that: from a moment of cognition, from the strength of the 
soul to face the times, from the readiness to endure everything that an 
existence can offer, from the truth of submission to God. Submission to God, 
thy name is Islam! 

 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[1] Karl Jaspers, An Introduction to Philosophy
[2] Albert Camus
[3] Gasset
[4] Emerson 
  
 




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