Separation of Mosque and State

Dr. Marvin Zayed

The essential Islamic teaching derives from the Koran and Shariah. There are two ways of reading these texts: the sacred way and the secular way. The sacred way does not involve critical analysis or reflection; instead it consists of memorizing based on blind faith, and allows only very limited consideration of the rational potentialities of human beings. The sacred way is irrational, and de-emphasizes the human being. It is meta-human: beyond thoughts, ideas, or any other human possibilities or limits in physical or mental realms. (Indeed, this is the very definition of the undefined God of Islamic faith.)

The secular way of considering the Koran and Shariah as historical documents is the opposite. This approach does not accept irrational assumptions of sacredness. It rejects the Semitic idea, which the Koran inherited from Christianity and Judaism, about the Forbidden Fruit of Knowledge. If knowledge lies in a sacred realm beyond humanity, why is it possible for the truth-seekers, the inquirers, secular and non-secular, to approach realities by means of histories, theories, and sciences? Can we imagine the future of humanity without free inquiry? Can we even know the truth about the past and present without the freedom of thought?


Three Approaches to Islamic Culture

If we look to the libraries, at histories which deal with Islamic issues and cultures, we find three general trends or schools of thought:

1. The Comfortable Academic Approach, which characterizes the official histories of Islamic/Arabic ideas and societies, but which is not provocative or critical. The textbook approach.

2. The Ideological Approach, which rewrites the history of Islamic ideas, cultures and societies, according to the certain pre-methodological and ideological sets of principles: Marxism, for example.

3. The Critical Approach, which evaluates with a questioning intelligence and free methods of analysis. Practitioners of the Critical Approach have faced and continue to face threats of repression and physical violence in Islamic countries.

We proclaiming that our new, clear approach ñ the critical and secular way, which tries to unite the efforts of past, present, and future free-thinkers throughout the fragmented history of Islam ñ is crucial for the future of Islamic societies. This humanistic approach is part of the general history of humanistic methods and values, which has seen vindication in enlightened democracies across the globe. Freethinkers and intellectuals must now break the code of silence which has veiled human intelligence in Islamic societies for centuries. Only in this way can we all enter upon the path of free living, learning, and writing as citizens of the world. We believe that one of the major factors leading to the stifling of Islamic societies and cultures was and still is the absolute monopoly of theological teachings, which have not been challenged by critical minds.

We do not claim to have a monopoly on truth. But we firmly reject the absolute self-righteousness of religions and fundamentalists. We provide a constructive, not destructive alternative to the traditional structures of authoritarian, theistic Islam. We believe that our task of secularizing Islam is part of the universal task of humanism which today faces very powerful forces of darkness in the form of theocratic fundamentalist movements.

This articles was published in Society For Islamic Humanists (Message # 106)

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