On Extremism

By Khalid Baig
POSTED: 6 SHA'BAN 1423, 13 OCTOBER 2002

"Thus have We Made of you an Ummah justly balanced" [Al-Baqara 2:143]

Ummatan Wasatan can be translated as the middle nation, the best nation, and an 
Ummah justly balanced. The Phrase captures the essence of Islam, which is to 
shun all excesses. At other places [e.g. Al-Maidah 5:12] the Qur'an refers to 
the path it shows at as Sawaa-As-Sabil. Abdullah Yusuf Ali explains: "The 
Arabic word Sawaa signifies smoothness as opposed to roughness; symmetry as 
opposed to want of plan; equality or proportion as opposed to want of design; 
rectitude as opposed to crookedness; a mean as opposed to extremes; and fitness 
for the object held in view as opposed to faultiness."

Our physical well-being requires that we eat a well balanced diet …Our total 
well-being requires finding the path of moderation for our entire life.

Extremism is a product of ignorance. Given two extreme points on a straight 
line, anyone can point out where the middle point lies. But a person that 
cannot see the entire line will also miss the middle point. He may be sitting 
on an extreme edge, yet congratulate himself for being in the middle.

Unlike the line, real life is not one-dimensional. As individuals, we find 
ourselves being pulled in so many directions by myriad internal and external 
forces. In a society the complexity increases manifold as these forces 
intersect in complex ways. When you add their dynamic interrelationship over 
time, the complexity becomes mind-boggling.

Our own instruments of observation and intellect, wonderful as they are, are 
simply not up to the task of finding the proper course in this complex, 
ever-changing, multidimensional maze. There are no satellite observatories, no 
imaging systems, no super computers that can help us find a solution. Yet we 
know that we do need to find it. Our physical well-being requires that we eat a 
well balanced diet and follow the course of moderation. Our economic, social, 
and spiritual well-being similarly demands finding the balanced approach and 
the moderate course in all these spheres. Our total well-being requires finding 
the path of moderation for our entire life.

For this we need Divine Guidance. No one is more conscious of this than the 
believer who turns to Allah five times a day with this supplication: "Show us 
the Straight Path." The Path that avoids the extremes of Ifraat (excess) and 
Tafreet (insufficient action). Is there another group that seeks the path of 
rectitude and moderation with the same fervor?

That this is the Ummah justly balanced can be seen by looking at its beliefs 
and practices.

Islamic monotheism is the truth. Atheism and polytheism are extremist 
distortions of this central truth.

A large number of followers of other religions who accepted Islam have been 
impressed by the simplicity, profoundness, clarity, and logical soundness of 
its belief system. It is in religious belief systems that extremist tendencies 
take their greatest toll. On the one hand there have been people who worshiped 
animals, celestial bodies, and forces of nature; on the other are those who 
deny even the existence of God. Avoiding these extremes are the shining 
teachings of Islam. The sun, stars, fire, water, and wind are mere creations of 
One Almighty God. He alone created the entire universe and He alone is its Lord 
and Master. Islamic monotheism is the truth. Atheism and polytheism are 
extremist distortions of this central truth.

Similar is the case of belief in prophets. On the one hand are people who 
attributed divinity to prophets, declaring some of them to be son of God; on 
the other are those who considered these chosen people as ordinary human beings 
who committed all sorts of sins. There are still others who knowingly 
persecuted and killed the prophets. Again the truth stands in the middle --- as 
taught by Islam. Allah chose messengers from among human beings to convey to 
them His guidance. They were all humans as they were meant to be exemplars for 
humanity. Yet they were best of all humanity and they spoke with Divine 
Authority. They deserved the deepest love, devotion, and obedience from other 
human beings. One only needs to contrast the depiction of the prophets in the 
Qur'an with that in other scriptures to appreciate this difference. The latter 
shows the distortions produced by human imagination. It shows the extremism 
that can creep in when God's words and teachings
 are no longer preserved.

Extremism is inherently unstable. Its injustices invoke a rebellion and a 
counter trend.

It is the same story with religious practices. We see two extremes in 
Christianity and Judaism. In the former Love replaced Law; in the latter Law 
turned into a straitjacket that made life unbearable and from which Reformist 
had to seek escape --- thereby going to the other extreme. If one were to 
borrow the language the media uses, routinely and inappropriately, when 
referring to Islamic law, he would find himself using words like harsh and 
strict in referring to clause after clause in authentic Jewish law.

Again we see Islam as providing the middle ground between the two extremes. It 
does provide law and does distinguish between the permissible and the 
forbidden. But the law is free of that strangulating formalism that is seen as 
a burden rather than a blessing. The Qur'an mentions it as an important 
attribute of the Prophet Muhammad   "He releases them from their heavy burdens 
and from the yokes that are upon them."[Al-A'raf, 7:157].

Extremism is inherently unstable. Its injustices invoke a rebellion and a 
counter trend. Thus we see that the Western World has gone from the 
pleasure-is-sin ascetism of yesteryears to the sin-is-in liberalism of today. 
In these wanderings from one extreme to another, the extremist tendencies 
themselves have not been overcome. Rather, they have produced unprecedented 
social upheaval at home and unprecedented exploitation and injustices abroad. 
(Islamic history is free of such wanderings, as one would expect of a religion 
that came to show the middle path.)

"But if any of you, after this, resists faith, he has truly wandered from the 
path of rectitude." [Al-Maidah 5:12]



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