The Significance of the Taliban for the Muslim Ummah
A Personal Comment:
There, on the opposite side of the river, a fisherman casts his net - he is
standing on the stern of his small boat rowed by another man. Now, the
net-caster, his net thrown, beats the fast-flowing Nile water with a long stick,
there where small narrow fields are planted with sugar cane, maize, and trees
bearing bananas.
I sit in the shade of a palm tree, almost in the middle of one of the strips of
fertile green that bounds both sides of the river. Nearby, an Ibis waits,
patiently watching the water. Beyond, on both sides, is the desert where
yesterday I walked, alone, under the strong, hot sun, until it was time for Asr.
It was good to be there, bowing, kneeling, prostrating, in submission to the one
and only God, saying the same words in the same language as the Prophet himself
(salla Allahu 'alayhi wa sallam), nearly one and half thousand years ago. I felt
connected - to the desert, the Sun, the land around, to the Prophet (salla
Allahu 'alayhi wa sallam), to my brothers and sisters around the world,
suspended in time, and so keenly aware of my fragility, my mortality, my
smallness, among the creations of Allah Subhana wa Ta'ala, who created this
desert, this life-bearing river, the Sun, this planet, and this man, sitting in
the shade of a tree.
Now, as I sit here, I think about the beautiful and profound simplicity of
Islam. For Islam is simple, beautiful, and profound. It is simple in theory,
simple in practice, and both human and futuristic: far superior to any and all
the philosophies, the ways, the political ideas, that I have studied over the
past three decades. Why? Because it places us where we truly belong - providing
as it does an appreciation and understanding of our fallibility, and providing
as it does guidelines to make and keep us human: possessed of an awareness of
our Creator. For it this awareness that is beginning of our humanity, just as it
is the guidelines given in the Quran and Sunnah which, if followed, can take us
to and keep us upon the path of honourable personal conduct in both our private
and our social lives.
Islam is futuristic because it is a gateway to the next and most important life
- that which awaits us after our mortal liife, here on this Earth, has ended. It
is futuristic because it reveals how we can and should live our lives: as
honourable, well-mannered, human beings who are careful, out of respect for
their Creator, not to over-step the bounds of right conduct, and who thus follow
the true middle way that lies between the two extremes of prideful arrogance and
addiction to our own desires, our own selfishness, our own personal fulfillment.
Every time I return to a Muslim land I am aware of two things. First, how many
Muslims seem to be Muslim in name only, imitating as they seem to do the ways of
the kaffir; second, of what this modern world really needs. Does this world
really need more wealth, more luxuries, more materialism, more development,
created by the idea of "progress"? Does the so-called "under developed world"
have to play the Western game according to Western rules in order to achieve
something called "happiness" and something called "prosperity" and something
called "progress"?
Every time I return - and especially now as I sit here under a beautiful blue
sky, with desert beyond the small patches of food-producing land - I ask myself
what is the true meaning of prosperity, of happiness, of progress, of wealth? Is
the fisherman there, casting his net again, happier than the vastly more wealthy
Western man I saw on my journey through London, sitting in his expensive car? Is
there true wealth here, in a simple living, in a simple submission to Allah
Subhana wa Ta'ala? In a simple acceptance of this life as a gateway to another,
eternal, life? The answers to such question all depend on our perspective, on
one fundamental question: what is the meaning and purpose of our lives, as
individuals?
Islam provides one answer, which I as a Muslim have accepted, and it is an
answer which everyone - as Allah Subhana wa Ta'ala says - is free to accept or
reject. This Islamic answer is a simple one, and it is that our purpose, the
meaning of our lives, is to strive for Jannah, for the eternal life of Paradise,
through a complete and simple submission to Allah Subhana wa Ta'ala.
The Taliban:
Several years ago, I came to consider that the Taliban were Allah's blessing to
the Ummah - that they represented all that was good, and honourable, about
Islam, and that in their leader, Mullah Omar (hafidhahullah) we had another
excellent example, similar to al-Khulafaa' al-Raashidoon and As-Salaf as-Saalih:
that he did indeed merit the title Ameer-ul-Mumineen.
Why is this? Because the Taliban had returned to the fundamentals of Islam,
purely from a desire to please Allah Subhana wa Ta'ala and Allah Subhana wa
Ta'ala alone. These were indeed honourable Muslims - who saught to implement
Islam and who, through Jihad, were prepared to die to defend Islam and fight
those who desired to destroy Islam and a true Islamic community.
It occurred to me - as I travelled, talked to Muslims, and read and studied all
I could - that the Taliban were an example of the recent revival of authentic
Islam: that they had perceived, and understood, the essential simplicity and
beauty of Islam, and thus rejected any and all attempts to imitate the kuffar;
that is, any and all attempts, from whatever reason or motive, to move away from
the fundamental truths of Islam.
Thus I understood how the Taliban represented a fundamental if rather neglected
principle of Islam - that of Zuhd in dunya. That is, the desires of this life
comes second - after the desire for Jannah; after the desire to obey Allah
Subhanahu wa Ta'ala; after the desire to love and follow His Messenger and
Prophet (salla Allahu 'alayhi wa sallam).
Understood thus, all the rhetoric of the kuffar - all the rhetoric of the tame
and moderate Muslims subverted by the kuffar - about prosperity, about the
poverty of the Taliban and their land, about the "backwardness" of the Taliban,
is seen for what it is: irrelevant; un-Islamic.
For the simple truth is that, in this life, we do not need very much - but what
we do need, above everything else, is to follow the clear, the simple, the
beautiful guidance given to us by Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala in the Quran and the
Sunnah. We need, that is, to humbly submit to AllahSubhanahu wa Ta'ala ; to
humbly obey Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala ; to love His Prophet (salla Allahu
'alayhi wa sallam) and so be Muslim, in our hearts, our thoughts, our way of
life. And that is all. For it is Zuhd in dunya that moves us towards that simple
submission to Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala that is Islam.
Propaganda Against the Taliban:
There was something quite inspiring about the Taliban - many Muslims sensed
this, as did many who did not like the revival of Islam which was occurring, in
Afghanistan and elsewhere. More and more young Muslims, it seemed, were being
guided to the right path by the example of the Taliban. The Taliban had even
begun to create the foundations for a genuine Islamic community - ruled by
Shariah and Shariah only - as they had begun to encourage Muslims to migrate to
Afghanistan to help in the revival of Islam, and in the construction of what
many hoped would one day become a new Khilafah.
Those in the West who disliked Islam and who had worldly plans of their own for
the world thus came to consider the Taliban a threat, and so began a campaign
against the them, using the power of the Western Media - which was in their
control, directly or indirectly - to try and discredit the Taliban, in the eyes
of the both Muslims and non-Muslims, and using as they often did the services of
the many tame and "moderate" Muslims who believed that imitation of the kuffar
way of life was "a good thing" and that "Islam needed modernizing". In addition,
the so-called leaders of many Western nations began agitating for sanctions
against the Taliban, with some advocating direct intervention by that kaffir
organization, the mis-named "United Nations".
This campaign, by the kuffar, by the enemies of Islam, culminated in the
invasion of Afghanistan by Amerika, and in the installation of a puppet,
pro-Amerikan regime.
The Significance of the Taliban:
Despite the invasion, despite the propaganda of the kuffar, and despite the
attempts by the kuffar to subvert Islam, the Taliban have not been defeated,
Alhamdulillah. The significance of the Taliban, for us, is that they have
revealed, in what the kuffar call "the modern world", the beautiful, the noble,
the true, path of Islam. They have steadfastly rejected all the many and varied
temptations of this modern world - the temptations of the way of life of the
kuffar. They have remained honourable, focused on Jannah, and remained steadfast
in following the Quran and the Sunnah, and these alone.
If the recent events in Afghanistan, in Iraq and elsewhere, reveal anything, it
is this - that we, as Muslims, have a choice: we can allow ourselves to be
influenced by the kuffar, by the ways and ideas of the kuffar, by the
temptations, the materialism, of this world, or we can follow the clear and
noble and quite simple guidance given to us by Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala.
May Allah (Subhanahu wa Ta'ala) protect us from all forms of Al-asabiyyah
Al-Jahiliyyah, forgive us for our mistakes, and guide us to and keep us on the
Right Path.
Abdul-Aziz
8 Rabi` al-Awal 1425