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Abul A’la Mawdudi was perhaps the most important Islamic thinker of the
20th century in terms of the impact that his Islamic exposition had in his own
region of the Indian Subcontinent, the Arab World, and also amongst the
Muslim diaspora in the West. His political interpretation of Islam has gained
widespread currency amongst all Muslim societies. In one of his columns, the
Pakistani writer, Nadeem Farooq Paracha, drew a very interesting analogy;
he wrote that Mawdudi is to Political Islam, what Karl Marx was to
Communism[i]. I will start off by completely agreeing with that analogy. In
the ensuing text, readers will notice that I frequently invoke that comparison.
I do that because it is, I believe, essential to understanding the phenomena of
Political Islam.
Mawdudi was born in the year 1903, in British India, to a traditional Islamic
family, which traced its roots back to a famous Sufi mystic of the 11th century
(Mawdood Chisti – after whom Mawdudi was named). Yet, very early, Mawdudi
relinquished his family’s Sufi affiliations and became interested in exploring the
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new ideas and movements that were slowly engulfing the Indian political and
social discourse. He was particularly intrigued by the Secularist and Marxist
tendencies, which prompted him to read the main texts of such philosophies
personally. He did receive traditional Islamic schooling but never disclosed this to
his audience because, first, he took great pride in being considered an autodidact
(which he was to a great extent), and secondly, because he regarded the traditional
clergy and its reliance on an antiquated approach to Islam, with great disdain. He
realised, perhaps accurately so that in order for Islam to retain its prominence, it
can no longer be presented as a mere spiritual faith that had nothing to say about
the new socio-political ideas that had emerged during the last couple of centuries,
and he took it on himself to study these new trends that were slowly making their
pathways into the Indian Muslims’ socio-political discourse. One writer recalled
that when he visited Mawdudi, he found him completed surrounded by English
books, most of which were Communist texts[ii].
This explains why his Political interpretation of Islam bears a great resemblance
to Marxism-Leninism. Despite his apparent disgust for Communism, he was still
fascinated by many of the communist ideas, and this fascination was quite
apparent in the interpretation of Islam that he proposed, the basis on which he
founded his Islamic Political party, and the plans he laid out for his future Utopian
Islamic society.
important parallels
He wrote:
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“If we really wish to see out Islamic ideals translated into reality, we
should not overlook the natural law that all stable changes in the
collective life of a people come about gradually. The more sudden a Very correct
Thus, it is true that most of the Jihadi extremism of the last few decades has been
more influenced by Sayyid Qutb and his followers (Ayman-al-Zawahiri, etc.) than
Mawdudi. However, he still remains the main ideologue who so coherently
presented the Political thought of Islam.
But I re-read it a couple of months ago just to see whether it was a mere collection
of silly conspiracy theories (which are now very prominent in the Islamist circles)
or if it did indeed include something accurate. It is, to the best of my knowledge,
an accurate understanding of western history and carries no huge deliberate
adulteration. He describes certain theological trends within Christianity and then
deals with the philosophy that emerged out of the Renaissance and
Enlightenment. His texts deal with a wide array of western thinkers, including
Descartes, Hume, Locke, Berkeley, Francis Bacon, Kant, and many others. This is
why it is no surprise that Mawdudi was so successful in gravitating a large section
of young Muslims who had received modern education and were familiar with
such modern ideas.
It should be self-evident by now that his intention was not to bring the two
continents together; but to set them apart, and to do that, he felt no remorse in
borrowing terms and ideas from the ideological repository of the very same
people whose influence he sought to expunge from his country.
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Yet, I believe the most interesting rebuttal to his interpretation of Islam has
emerged from the people who once firmly shared his beliefs. Two scholars stand
out in this regard: Javed Ahmad Ghamidi from Pakistan and Wahiduddin Khan
from India.
Wahiduddin Khan was inspired by Mawdudi’s movement and joined his party, but
very soon started to discern deep political connotations in Mawdudi’s exposition
of Islam. He felt that Mawdudi, owing to his extensive study of the Western
totalitarianism, has brought those external influences in his understanding of the
religion. What resulted was a series of correspondence between Khan, Mawdudi,
and many of his senior associates, but Khan could not get a convincing enough
answer from them. His dissatisfaction culminated in a book entitled “The error of
Interpretation,” where he at length elaborated how the Politic-centric worldview
of Mawdudi greatly influenced his interpretation of Islam. The contrast between
Marx and Mawdudi, which was also used by Wahiduddin Khan in his book, is
very pertinent in this case because there does appear to be a glaring similarity. In
Marx’s materialist interpretation of history, class struggles became the most
important aspect of understanding human cultures. While even some non-
Marxists would agree that social struggles and conflicting interests could be
important in understanding any human society, many would not go as far as Marx
did in implying that law, religion, philosophy, or other elements of the culture
have no history of their own, and that their history is merely the history of the
relations of production. Khan believed that Mawdudi, indebted to his secular
influences, did the same with religion; he took one aspect of the faith, important
yet not overriding, and presented the entirety of the faith through that single
aspect. In his book, he shows many instances where Mawdudi not simply
departed from the established understanding of Islam but tried to convert the faith
into a political phenomenon[viii].
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Another figure who has followed the same pattern as Khan is Javed Ahmad
Ghamidi, the modernist Islamic thinker from Pakistan, who has also provided a
sort of antitode to Mawdudi's Political Islam. Though Ghamidi was one of
Mawdudi’s very own students, he too began to have an intellectual dispute with
the Jamaat’s leadership when he felt that his personal understanding of Islam
brought him to entirely different conclusions as Mawdudi.
opposite? I believe it is due to the fact like every flawed ideology, Islamism too - Talibans once
'children of Madudi'
has produced its own internal critics – those who once faithfully adhered to it, now enemies
then realised the erroneous nature of it and subsequently went on to refute it. Just - Zia's era social
freedom highly slacked
as there are a number of ex-communists (Leszek Kołakowsk, Ignazio Silone, now
Wolfgang Leonhard, etc.) who totally discredited the communist ideology, the - JI student-wing
Klashinkov culture
same appears to have happened with Political Islam. Some of my colleagues who ...curtailed
also partake in this discourse often ask me if Political Islam has any future, to - Maududi own son
Haider Farooq is
which I reply that I do not think that it does; in fact, I feel that it might be in its against JI political
agenda & calls it
last stages. Of course, I am no clairvoyant, and I do not claim to give an absolute 'need of time' aka
cold war relic
account of what may happen in the future. But I feel this way because much like
Marx, who did not envision his utopian society as a society of Gulags, Mawdudi
did not imagine his ideal Islamic society as a constant source of turmoil and
infighting.
On the contrary, he believed Islam’s political nature was so appealing that it could
convincingly attract the rest of the world suffering from the cultural degradation One exceptional case
was of Jewish-US
caused by Liberalism, secularism, and socialism (at least, that is how he viewed born lady
Maryam Jameelah...
it). He was successful in disseminating his political vision of Islam amongst But was she a diagnosed
mental case?
Muslims because it resonated with the Muslim psyche of the twentieth century.
That no longer seems to be the case since Islamist manifestations have done
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bludgeon, went on not just to abandon it but also offer a critical account of their
previously held ideology.
In his book, Khan deduces that the Islamist extremism in the world today is a
natural corollary of Mawdudi’s interpretation of Islam. I believe he is right in
making this assertion because even if Mawdudi himself favored a gradual
approach, relying on the “natural law” to take its course, some of his heirs realised
that they may have to wait forever if they leave the quest of political Islam to such
gradualism. And they appear to have done to Mawdudi’s Political Islam what
Communists did to Marxism, that is, to discredit the doctrine of historical
determinism, and replace it with a revolutionary will to seize political power. His
own party remains committed to constitutional politics but has only become more
unpopular with the passage of time.
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interpretation than John Calvin? But by pitting his profound biblical conservatism
against scholasticism, he destroyed trust in the continuity of the Church as a
source of interpretation of the doctrine. For the task of interpretation, he left to
future generations only the very secular reason he so vigorously had condemned.
In fact, he unconsciously contributed to the creation of an intellectual
environment that soon nurtured the advocates of natural religion and the deists[x].
Similarly, Mawdudi, with his deep probing into the western thought, started a
process that led to the opposite of what he actually intended; some of his own
acolytes ended up reconciling East and West.
[ii] The writer mentioned here is Mahirul Qadri: Mawdudi and the Making of
Islamic Revivalism, Seyyed Vali Reza Nasr, P#33.
[iii] Sayyid Abul A’la Mawdudi, Islamic Law and Constitution, P#48.
[v] “Tanqeehat”, a collection of Essays that Mawdudi wrote during the 1930’s,
first published in 1939.
[vii] Abu’l-Hasan Ali Nadwi: Mawdudi and the Making of Islamic Revivalism,
Seyyed Vali Reza Nasr, P#62.
[ix] Islam and the State: A Counter Narrative( Javed Ahmad Ghamidi), State and
Government - Javed Ahmad Ghamidi.
[x] The Polish Philosopher, Leszek Kołakowski, wonderfully explores this irony
of intellectuals in his book, “Modernity on Endless Trial”.
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