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MASTER ISLAM ACADEMY
Master Islam Academy
We are here as African Muslims - to put ourselves in the service of Islam and to put Islam in the se the Qur’anic view called “hikmah”. What is religion [deen]?
Introduction:
We begin with the praise of God-Allah, Whose greatness is not diminished by lack of recognition, Whose grandeur is not increased by praising. Peace be upon God’s last Prophet Muhammad ibn ‘Abdullah, abundant peace.
[These, are our remnants we’ll leave behind, to tell everyone what we are… And so, when we are gone, consider the remnants we have left behind.]
We have been studying I
23/07/2022
A spiritual journey through the mystical verses of the Qur'an.
Dive into the ocean of light that the Muslim sages and mystics have always seen in the holy text.
Go deep into the inner secrets of the Qur'an, building on teachings of the Prophet Muhammad (S), as well as sages like Imam Ali, Rumi, Ibn 'Arabi, al-Ghazali, and others.
See how the Qur'an serves as a Healing, and the fountainhead of a vibrant spiritual life.
14 video-based lessons, totaling 12 hours - plus the option for monthly "Chai with Omid" sessions. Meet other seekers from around the world, ask questions and share your observations!
The course is open to everyone, of every background,
and you can go through the lessons at your own pace and time.
The Heart of the Qur'an - Online Course with Omid Safi A spiritual journey through the Qur'an! See what the Prophet Muhammad, Sufis like Mawlana Rumi and Ibn 'Arabi, and scholars like al-Ghazali identified as the "Heart of the Qur'an." - Online course with Omid Safi.
29/06/2022
THE QUR'AN AND THE WOMAN
To better understand the Qur'anic discourse on the equality of men and women, we should immediately distinguish between ontological equality and legal equality. The first is theoretical, the second deals with historical reality. This explains two levels of discourse in the Quran on the matter.
Ontological and metaphysical equality
The concept of equality between men and women as we understand it today is very recent, and its history is still in the making.
Assuming that the notion of equality is already clear, to read with our Western eyes and from our modern conditioning, an inequality between men and women in the Qur’an would be to commit an anachronism. This would lead to a theological error that would create an image of a Qur’anic God who is unjust. Yet, unlike the New Testament, the God of Qur’an is a God who did not become man, masculine. It is a God who is neither on the side of the man nor of the woman. But the two, male and female were created united in His image. There was indeed at the beginning only one being that we could call an “adamic, primordial and asexual metaphysical being”.
Indeed, the story of the Qur’an does not follow that of the Bible as it is reported in Genesis. The Biblical story traces a chronology of creation that begins with Adam and then Eve. This one created for Adam to keep him company. In the Quran, both come from the same being, from the same soul, but in two different bodies. Eve was not created to keep Adam company, much less his appendage (coming from his rib as in the Bible).
The Sunna informs us that the soul deposited in man and woman is of the same asexual nature. And it is this same soul which, in the eyes of the Texts, gives nobility to man and woman. And so there is no spirituality or male or female intelligence, even if the biological is a little different. Nor is there Adam's fault induced by Eve, who would be an accomplice of Satan. The Qur’an remains terse on the matter: both were tempted by Satan at the same time and sinned at the same time. There’s no original sin because of the woman. Theologians have never discussed the spiritual and moral equality between man and woman.
Practical and legal equality
If equality is a theological, metaphysical, ontological and even ethical principle underlined by the Texts of Islam, it nevertheless remains humanly impossible to achieve totally on the real and legal, sociological, historical level... In particular, in the context of the Qur’anic moment – which has nothing to do with our now postmodern condition.
This practical, legal and concrete aspect of the Qur’an has indeed been taken into consideration by other Texts which could shock us today and which are attributed to Sharia, a term that is overused today, as if Sharia is a mechanical and even absurd application of the Texts to the letter. Now the Principal Texts emphasize on the one hand the ontological and spiritual equality of men and women; on the other hand, other Circumstantial Texts this time translate this principle into a juridical or a normative one linked to a particular moment or time in history. This last practical aspect could not be better formulated in a tribal and patriarchal context and where the economy was linked to essentially physical and therefore male work, which in fact put women away from the circle of political and economic power... Consequently, they could not have much independence from man in such a context. This explains, for example, the Qur’anic distribution of inheritance, etc.
It is this anthropological configuration that explains the differentiated disposition between men and women in the statuses of the social and relational order, but not in the spiritual and religious order. Today this is no longer the case. Technology, among other things, has enabled women to work, even if parity is far from being achieved. This new situation therefore calls, in our opinion, for a displacement of these Qur’anic norms towards concrete ethical forms adequate to the condition of women today. Because it is not a Qur’anic obligation to reproduce all the legal forms of the Qur’an, mechanically. On the contrary, we must retain the spirit of the concept of equality and translate it adequately into our context.
To illustrate this theological subtlety, we could give the example of divorce: "among the things that God has made lawful - while being the most detestable to Him - there is divorce", says a hadith. This means that the law does not necessarily reflect the ideal in conformity with the divine Will. And that reality sometimes imposes realistic concessions.
Therefore, systematically confusing the Qur’anic norm with an absolute Will of God who would have approved the situations and the condition of the men and women of that time is a theological error of serious consequences.
It is simply a consideration of an anthropological model and not its canonization. The fundamentalist predilection, on the other hand, consists in wanting to reproduce the society of the time of the Prophet - which is impossible - in order to apply the teachings of the Qur’an to the letter, this, assuming that the letter of the Qur’an was one day applied completely even during that era.
To express this general problem in Galenic metaphor, we could say that the characteristic of fundamentalism, the evil that threatens our century, is to confuse the active principle of the teachings of the Qur’an with its excipients and its cultural adjuvants of the Qur’anic moment which without which the Qur’anic message cannot be audible and acceptable for the context of Revelation. Instead of reproducing the spirit and methodology of the Qur’an to translate it into a new and contemporary form, this form of fundamentalism wants to reproduce a context abrogated by history to make it correspond to the letter of the Qur’an. The origin of this inversion of the process of interpreting the Texts is due to a nostalgic and backward-looking posture, a discomfort that some feel with regard to their time, badly installed in their world. ~Tareq Oubrou - 2015
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Pugu Road, 2nd Floor Temba Fuel Station Office Block, Mzambarauni, Gongo La Mboto
Dar Es Salaam
12110