From: 
http://www.freemuslims.org/document.php?id=56

The Multiple Understandings of the QUR'AN

Generally it is believed by many, if not all, Muslims that there is 
one authentic interpretation of the Qur'an. It is far from true. 
Even the closest companions of the Prophet differed from each other 
in understanding various verses. Also, in Islam, since there is no 
concept of official church, no one interpretation can command 
following of a majority of Muslims, let alone all Muslims. There is 
hardly any major issue on which Muslim 'ulama (scholars) do not 
differ. These differences, more often than not, are due to different 
interpretations of the Qur'anic text.
It is because of this that every sect or school of thought has its 
own orthodox and liberal followers. There is Shi'ah orthodoxy or 
Sunni orthodoxy, Isma'ili orthodoxy or Bohra orthodoxy, Hanafi 
orthodoxy or Shafi'i orthodoxy and so on. But that's not all-now 
there are scholars with modern and liberal thinking that are looking 
at the Qur'anic text from modern and liberal perspectives. And some 
feminists or those working for empowerment of women read the Qur'an 
from feminist points of view.

There are various reasons for this. Firstly, the Qur'anic text is 
very rich and can be understood in many ways. Secondly, its language 
often tends to be symbolic or allegorical, and hence these symbols 
and allegories carry rich social and cultural meanings, and its 
shades of meaning can change with different socio-cultural 
backgrounds. Thus often social and cultural factors can play an 
important role in the understanding of the Qur'anic text. Those 
scholars who have been brought up in modern societies with their own 
intellectual traditions tend to understand the text differently from 
those who studied the text under medieval ethos.



Now the orthodox "Scholars" of course insist on a medieval 
understanding of the text as final and irrevocable, whereas modern 
scholars, of no less intellectual integrity and knowledge, insist 
that there can be multiple understandings of the holy text. Today, 
this debate between orthodox and modern scholars is going on in 
practically every Muslim country. Also, new issues and questions are 
emerging which cannot be answered with medieval understandings of 
the text. Breathtaking discoveries and changes have taken place in 
the last two centuries, and these revolutionary changes cannot be 
ignored if the Qur'an is to play any role for Muslims in modern 
society.

The fear of the orthodox Scholars that any change in understanding 
of the text will in some way change the importance of the divine 
text is totally misplaced. In fact it demonstrates greater richness 
and several levels of meaning hidden in the text. If anything, it 
enhances the significance of the divine word. However, it is 
possible that their fear that if new interpretations are accepted 
then they (i.e. the 'ulama (Scholars)) would lose their importance 
may be justified because they are not intellectually equipped to 
accept the change. Grasping modern changes requires an altogether 
new intellectual orientation.

However, in my opinion, even this fear should not be stretched too 
far, at least in the short term. The Muslim world as a whole is not 
well equipped for understanding the Qur'anic text de novo. The vast 
masses of Muslims in most countries, due to rampant illiteracy, will 
continue to require orthodox interpretations for quite some time to 
come. Muslim countries still live intellectually in medieval times 
though physically they are now in the 21st century. It is quite a 
task to usher them into the 21st century in an intellectual sense. 
Thus the orthodox 'ulama continue to have their own relevance, 
perhaps for many decades to come.

In turn, the two traditions-the orthodox and the modern-will have to 
co-exist in the Muslim world in the coming years, and there is 
urgent need for dialogue between the two traditions. Such a dialogue 
can remove many misunderstandings on both sides. Today there is an 
air of hostility. What is worse is that the 'ulama are getting 
politicized, and religious orthodoxy translates into political power 
due to more and more involvement of masses into politics.
Due to widespread illiteracy and intellectual backwardness, 
democratization will necessarily mean increased influence of the 
traditional 'ulama. And greater influence of traditional 'ulama will 
mean greater resistance to change and longer persistence of 
religious orthodoxy. 

Most Muslim countries are undergoing complex changes, and 
democratization, though highly desirable, poses difficult 
challenges. The authoritarian rulers are more westernized and elite 
in terms of class origin and often support modernization projects. 
There is a long history of this in the Muslim world. King Amanullah 
of Afghanistan in the thirties of the last century tried to impose 
modernization and got deposed since most people were not prepared 
for it.

In Algeria too, the military rulers were Francophile and quite 
westernized, and the elite Muslims supported them. When in an 
election the radical Islamists won, the fear was that they will 
impose orthodox Shari'ah law. The modernized and westernized middle 
and upper middle classes preferred authoritarian military rule to 
democratic rule by Islamist forces. They feared that radical 
Islamists will do away with the modernization projects of the 
military rulers.

It was not much different in Iran. The Shah of Iran was imposing 
modernization from above. There was mass agitation against him, and 
he was overthrown (though the reasons for revolutionary change in 
Iran are admittedly more complex). The masses supported Islamic 
revolution, which was not to the liking of the modernized elite. 
This dilemma has to be faced in the Muslim world today. You cannot 
have democratization and modernization together. Democratization, 
more often than not, might bring forces of Islamic orthodoxy to the 
fore.

In the Islamic world there is hardly full and uncontrolled democracy 
in any country. It is either authoritarian rule or controlled 
democracy, as in Egypt, Pakistan, or Malaysia. There is 
authoritarian rule in most of the Arab countries and greater 
democracy in Bangladesh and Indonesia. In Bangladesh too, forces of 
Islamic orthodoxy are emerging stronger and stronger. Today the 
Jamat-e-Islami, which had collaborated with Pakistani rulers in 
crushing the Bangladesh movement, has become part of the ruling 
alliance and is trying to impose Islamic orthodoxy.

Even in highly advanced countries like the United States, the 
religious right has emerged as a strong factor in American politics. 
President Bush is their representative, and he is doing everything 
to appease the Christian right. And in India, a comparatively 
advanced country, the Hindu right, which ruled for six years, is 
still a strong force in domestic politics.
So religion is a serious force in politics everywhere today and has 
to be creatively used as an option for modernization, change, and 
liberation of the poor masses in the third world. This is again 
easier said than done. The challenge is extremely complex. It is one 
thing to contend with rigid orthodoxy, and quite something else to 
take on the powerful vested interests.

The problem is not orthodoxy. Dialoguing with it, as pointed out 
above, can serve a useful purpose. But the real problem is the 
politicization of religion. Once religious authorities taste power, 
it becomes an end, and religion becomes only a means to that end. In 
such a situation, neither multiple readings of the text nor creative 
use of religious teachings can help. This has to be fought only 
politically. And in such a situation, democracy can greatly help. 
The forces of the Hindu right could only be fought in India 
democratically, and the Christian right in the US can only be 
defeated through the involvement of more people in electoral 
politics.

However, in Muslim countries the situation is more complicated. In 
India and the US, there is a basic secular and democratic 
orientation of politics, and this has been so for quite some time. 
In Muslim countries, there is not only an absence of secularism, but 
also of democracy. Islamic influence on political culture is very 
strong, and one cannot imagine, as of now, the emergence of a 
secular polity. However, one can think of an alternative political 
culture, still based on religion but with liberationist and change-
oriented components.
And here one has to understand the multiple readings of the Qur'an 
from new perspectives. Such perspectives are emerging in different 
Muslim countries, though they are not yet influential enough. In 
some countries, multiple readings of the Qur'anic text are rejected 
and even punished.

Professor Fazlur Rahman, a profound scholar of Islam, had to leave 
Pakistan as the orthodox 'ulama vehemently opposed his understanding 
of the Qur'an. Nasr Abu Zaid of Egypt was declared by a lower court 
as a heretic and his marriage was declared dissolved. He had to 
escape to the Netherlands. There are certainly many other examples. 
But what is important is that such voices are being heard from these 
Muslim countries. They are even respected by some, though not 
accepted by a majority. The forces of orthodoxy are yet too strong 
to make these alternate voices viable.

It is important to note that in 19th century, the beginning of the 
colonial period in most Muslim countries, there seemed to be greater 
space for modern understandings of the Qur'an than today. There was 
no such fierce opposition, though it was not altogether absent, to 
Jamal al-Din Afghani and Muhammad Abduh as they advocated modern 
ideas. Muhammad Abduh even reached the position of grand Mufti of 
Egypt despite his modern approach.
In the Indian subcontinent, a crop of modernists led by Sir Syed 
Ahmad Khan advocated modernity, and despite some opposition from 
orthodox 'ulama, this was accepted by Muslims by and large. There 
was no fierce opposition. Maulavi Mumtaz Ali Khan, Maulavi Chiragh 
Ali, Justice Ameer Ali, Nawab Mohsinul Mulk and several others 
supported modern reforms. Maulavi Mumtaz Ali Khan wrote a book, 
Huququn Niswan (Rights of women), in which his interpretation of 
Qur'anic verses was refreshingly modern. He advocated equal rights 
for women and men by suitably re-interpreting relevant verses of the 
Qur'an and challenging traditional understandings. Thus we see that 
multiple readings of the Qur'an were much more acceptable in the 
19th century than in twenty first century.

The reasons are not difficult to understand. In the 19th century, 
Muslim intellectuals were trying to show that Islamic teachings were 
quite in keeping with modernity and modern science. It helped them 
in overcoming the sense of inferiority which they had developed due 
to superior technology of the colonial powers. It gave them great 
intellectual satisfaction.

However, today the situation is very different. During the colonial 
period one not only had to feel intellectual parity with colonial 
powers, but also to struggle against them for political freedom. In 
several Muslim countries, the 'ulama were engaged in liberation 
movements, and religion was a great mobilizing force for liberation. 
Thus religion, in that situation, was a liberating rather than a 
restrictive force. The Deobandi "Scholars"and the 
Nahdatul "Scholars" in Indonesia, for example, played such a 
liberating role in the political sense.

But today, the "Scholars" have developed political aspirations and 
use religion as a conservative force to capture political power. Of 
course there are a host of other factors which must be taken into 
account and without which our understanding of the complex situation 
will remain incomplete.

Although colonialism is no longer a factor today, neo-colonialism 
is. The American and Israeli policies in the Middle East are greatly 
influencing the resurgence of Islamic orthodoxy. Iran is a case in 
point. While acting as an American gendarme to enhance American 
influence in the region, the Shah of Iran also tried to enforce 
modernization on the Iranian people. This coupled with economic 
polices that generated lots of misery and unemployment and the 
persecution of Ayatollah Khomeini completed the scenario for Islamic 
resurgence under the leadership of Muslim clerics.
The US media then started condemning the Islamic resurgence, since 
it went against the interests of US ruling interests. The 
word 'fundamentalism' was also coined by the US media in the late 
seventies. It began to be used then throughout the world in a 
pejorative sense. Though the Christian right was quite active in 
American politics, it was conveniently ignored, and only Islamic 
intervention was considered harmful.

It is important to note that religion can-or can be made to-play 
different roles in a society, and its role should not be 
stereotyped. Firstly, religion is understood differently by 
different sections of society. At its lowest level it becomes mere 
superstition, and at its highest, it assumes the role of spiritual 
and philosophical sublimation. It plays a politically mobilizing 
role at one level and a spiritually liberating role on another. It 
might become opium at one level and an active agent of change on the 
other. It should be understood in its entirety rather than in a 
monolithic sense.

With increasing democratization, religious leaders seeking an active 
political role view the popularity of orthodoxy among the masses of 
people as a clear advantage for fulfilling their own aspirations. It 
is also important to note that the human mind, when it perceives 
something as "sacred," it prefers to see it as "unchangeable." 
Sanctity and change cannot go together. The process of change can 
rob it of sanctity. Either it is sacred and unchangeable or 
changeable without having an aura of sanctity. And unlike science, 
religion, for most people, falls within the halo of sanctity, with 
the 'ulama being seen as upholders of this sanctity.

These "Scholars" either play a direct role in politics or they toe 
the line of certain politicians or political parties who exploit 
this so called "halo." Thus religion in the hands of these 'ulama 
who align with certain political parties (or who form their own 
parties, as in Pakistan and many other Muslim countries) plays an 
exploitative rather than liberating role.

But a certain reading of the Qur'an certainly makes it possible to 
render Islam as a powerful liberationist force. In Iran, Islam did 
initially succeed in liberating Iran from the exploitative clutches 
of the Shah and American imperialism. However, subsequently as is 
often the case with revolutions, the Islamic revolution in Iran fell 
into the hands of conservative clergy and lost its earlier 
revolutionary spirit and dynamism. In other words it was hijacked by 
conservative 'ulama, and the revolutionary "Scholars" were 
eliminated.

It is also necessary to emphasize that, while it is possible to 
circumscribe its political role, it is impossible to eliminate 
religion from the socio-cultural arena. And as long as it remains a 
socio-cultural force, its potential for political exploitation will 
always remain. Thus it is necessary to promote liberationist 
scriptural interpretations as much as possible. Since religion plays 
multiple roles in one's life-social, cultural, exploitative, 
liberationist, providing inner solace and peace-one has to choose 
the most beneficial roles.

But we should not ignore the challenges to be faced. The powers that 
be and the status quo forces will resist these attempts. Even 
secular liberationist or pro-poor politics is challenged by these 
powerful vested interests. In Latin America, many Christian priests 
who upheld liberation theology were murdered by these vested 
interests.

In fact, it is not only orthodox 'ulama who resist change and uphold 
medieval interpretations of the Qur'anic text; these vested 
interests too, otherwise quite indifferent to religion, strongly 
resist, through such orthodox 'ulama, any multiple interpretations 
of the Qur'an. The 'ulama might collaborate with these forces for 
their own reasons or for their own benefits. A segment of the 'ulama 
have always collaborated with rulers throughout the history of Islam 
and continue to do so today.

Though the majority of the 'ulama might go that way, we will always 
find those who rise above vested interests and take liberationist 
position and are ready to make great sacrifices. The role of 
Ayatollah Khomeini should not be stereotyped and is, in fact, quite 
complex. It was quite liberationist in one context and conservative 
in another. His interpretation of the Qur'an in terms of struggle 
between mustad'afun (oppressed, or weaker sections of society) and 
mustakbirun (oppressors, or the ruling classes) was quite 
liberationist in its main thrust.

In a way, his interpretation of the Qur'an was quite liberationist 
until sometime after the revolution. However, with the changed 
context and emerging struggle for power in post-revolutionary Iran, 
Khomeini's position tended to be more conservative.

Religion has a great psychological role to play in modern social 
life too. Human beings face very complex challenges at various 
levels in their life, and often religion (in the spiritual sense) 
provides inner solace and enables them to enjoy mental peace. In 
Muslim countries, a vast majority of people find the very meaning 
and direction of life through Islam. One cannot rob them of this 
meaning and direction of life. For them nothing else can provide a 
better alternative. We must understand this psychological need of a 
vast majority of people. Thus for many, Sufi Islam is far more 
effective in this sense than the formal doctrinal Islam advocated by 
the "Scholars."

In this way, the interpretation of Islam put forward by mystics like 
Ibn Arabi and Jalaluddin Rumi can play a very creative and 
accommodative role in their life. Among multiple interpretations, 
Rumi's understanding of Islam is far more relevant to a modern 
complex world. It gives not only a message of love and peace, but 
also rejects doctrinaire rigidity. One needs such interpretations in 
this fast changing and challenging world. Inner stability that 
accommodates change is highly necessary. Globalization and the 
ensuing fusing of totally different cultures have created mental 
confusion leading to turmoil.

Since we can't avoid change, nor can we live without moorings, can't 
a positive spiritual interpretation of religion fit the bill?

BY: Asghar Ali Engineer is the founder the Institute of Islamic 
Studies and the Centre for Study of Society and Secularism in 
Mumbai, India. He has authored over 47 books and has been active in 
social justice and inter-faith issues. He was selected to receive 
this year's prestigious Right Livelihood Honorary Award to be 
presented at the Swedish parliament in December.





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