Reflections The Crisis of Thought and Ijtihad T d h i J. a1 'Alwdni The Muslim mind experienced a crisis of thought when, duting the early centuries of the Islamic eta, ijtihad began to be viewed as limited to legal matters rather than as a methodology for dealing with all aspects of life. This limited understanding engendered a malaise that allowed taqlid to attain such prominence and tespectability that its cancetous, con- stricting, and irrelevant fiqh spread throughout Muslim life. Had ijtihad retained mote of its lexical meaning and cteativity, and had fiqh been considered only one of its uses, perhaps Muslims would have overcome many of the problems that confronted them. However, this patticulari- zation of ijtihad confined the Muslim mind, and taqlid eventually led to the paralysis of its creative abilities. Had ijtihad remained a way of life for Muslims as Allah commanded, they would not have fallen behind in establishing the Islamic sciences necessary for their society and civilization. They also would not have had to watch the reins of leadership fall pass to the West, whose most impor- tant qualification was its ability to engage in creative and scientific tea- soning. Although its intellectual tradition was tainted with pagan Greek influences, the West achieved world leadetship. Had Muslims taken up those sciences and laid the foundations of society on the basis of tawbd (unity), the face of the earth would be different today and the state of ci- vilization itself would be fat more felicitous than it is at present. Before ijtihad was confined to the purely legalistic framework of fiqh, the Muslim mind was enlightened, eager to deal with all manner of thought, and able to meet challenges, generate solutions, and achieve its goals. Had it not been for taqlid and its subduing of the Muslim mind, that mind would have achieved great things. Certainly, a mind with its beginnings in the verse, "Read! in the name of your Lord Who created . . ." should be mote than able to renew the ummah's mentality, to con- tinually adjust to changing circumstances, and to initiate the sciences of civilization at a time when the West was o v e m by wild forest tribes. What Do We Mean by Ijtihad? For the teasons indicated above, we ate calling for a new type of ijti- had. Rather than the ijtihad specified by the scholars of u s d , which will T6M J. al 'AlwM is a member of the Fiqh Academy of the Organization of the Islamic Conference, chaiman of the Fiqh Council of North America, and president of the Inter- national Institute of Islamic Thought in Hemdon, Virginia. This articie was translated from the original Arabic by Yusuf DeLorenzo, mT Research. a1 'AlwW: The Crisis of Thought and Ijtihad 235 be dealt with in a later article, we speak of an ijtihad that is more of a methodology for thought. Such an understanding would allow the Muslim mind to participate in an intellectual jihad, a jihad launched with the aim of generating ideas and building a new Muslim identity, mentality, and personality. This jihad would apply to all fields of knowledge and would seek to make the ummah qualified to shoulder its responsibilities as re- gards vicegerency (khilffuh) and also to be a median nation (wasatQah). While such an ijtihad would apply to legalistic, juridical, and juris- prudential fiqh, it would also apply to such new fonns of fiqh as the fiqh of religiosity (fiqh ul tuduyyun) and dialogue (du'wuh), as well as to all fields requiring the ummah's attention and creative thinking. Ijtihad: The Ally of Jihad Both "ijtihad" and "jihad are derived from the lexical root, "j-h-d," and both seek the same goal: releasing all beings from devotion to the created so that they may be free to practice devotion to the Creator, to take them from the injustice of religious deviation and superstition to the justice of Islam, and from the restrictions of the physical world and limited thinking to the wide horizons of Islam and the Qur'an. It is for this reason that ijtihad is counted among the pillars of Islam in the same way that jihad is. Without jihad there would be no ummah, and without ijtihad the ummah would have no vitality. Thus both may be considered as essential and continual responsibilities. Once taqlid in matters of fiqh established itself as a pervasive intel- lectual attitude, all that remained of ijtihad was its extremely rare use- maybe once in a century-in individual Muslim thinkers and scholars. Their role was of inestimable importance and was, in some ways, as im- portant as that of modem parliamentary and democratic institutions. Ijtihad was the methodological means that allowed Muslims to con- front ignorance, oppression, and deviation. But when it was abandoned by the Muslims themselves, all manner of trouble beset them. In closing the doors to ijtihad, Muslims believed that they were solving their legis- lative problems. In reality, however, all they succeeded in doing was crippling their own intellectual powers. Even so, there has never been a time when the call to revive ijtihad was entirely silenced. Such calls were never enough to extract the ummah from the intellectual crisis in which it had become mired and, as a result, ijtihad was left mainly to heretics and deceivers, and, finally, to orientalists. If a true Muslim were to articu- late ideas to which people were unaccustomed or to announce hisher readiness to practice ijtihad, he/she would become an immediate target of ridicule and other abuse by the supporters of taqlid. The ummah must understand that ijtihad provides it with the funda- mental means to recover its identity and to reestablish its place in world 236 The Amencan Journal of Islamic Social Sciences. 102 civilization. Without ijtihad, the Muslim mind will never rise to the levels envisioned for it by Islam, and the ummah will not take its rightful place in the world. Unless the call to ijtihad becomes a widespread intellectual trend, there is little hope that the ummah will be able to make any useful contribution to world civilization or correct its direction, build its own cultute, or reform its society. To liberate the Muslim mind, the ummah needs ijtihad in every aspect of its life. If it is to play its pmrdained role, it must undertake a new reading of the Qur'an and the Sunnah, study its past, analyze its ptesent and, by means of these, ensure its future. Right or Wrong, the Mujtuhid is Rewarded No mete caiI, announcement, or advertisement will result in ijtihad or produce a mujtuhid. Such developments depend upon the preparation of needed intellectual and cultural atmospheres, for a rnujtuhid is one of the ummah's most gifted and accomplished scholars. When the Prophet spoke of ijtihad and how one who petformed it cottectly received a double reward, and how one who made a mistake received one reward, he was addressing an ummah that understood that only a few people could undertake it. The resulting responsibility was so great that even those few individuals who dated to undertake it did not always announce their opinions if they seemed contrary to those of majority or the tulers. It is obvious that any mention of ijtihad and its importance should be accompanied by serious efforts to bring about the right sort of intellectual and cultural atmosphere. The first step towards this goal is to create an environment of complete fteedom of thought and expression. If people lack the courage to petfotm jihad, they find it even more difficult to per- form ijtihad and accept the consequent responsibilities. How many intel- lectual positions ate mote difficult to defend than military positions? In the present stmightened circumstances, no one who can generate sound ideas or petfotm even partial ijtihad should hesitate to announce the results of hisher ijtihad. N o one who is aware of the fact that there is a reward even for those whose ijtihad is incottect has an excuse to re- ftain from playing a role or from giving the ummah the benefit of hisher ideas and creativity. After all, it is possible that those ideas might ,become the foundations of a new cultural and intellectual order within the ummah. Not should anyone continue to listen to those who warn of the dangers inherent in allowing ijtihad to be undertaken. The ummah has heard all of their arguments, and nothing they say has been of any help. The Lexical and Technical Meanings of Ijtihad In the Atabic dictionaty, the toot "j-h-d" is defined as the exertion of effort on a matter that requites it. In all of its different applications, the al ‘Alwh-: The Crisis of Thought and Ijtihad 237 term denotes the expenditure of mental and intellectual effort. A mujta- hid, therefore, is a serious scholar who researches and studies all of the sources, information, statistics, and available material about a subject until he/she is satisfied that he/she has done everything in his/her power to learn about the subject in question. After expending all of that effort, it may reasonably be assumed that hisher opinion is reliable. This is why a1 G&li defined ijtihad as “the expending, on the part of a mujtahid, of all what he/she is capable of in order to seek knowledge of the Shari‘ah’s injunctions.” In a further clarification of this definition, he then wrote: “Complete ijtihad happens when the mujtahid expends all of hisher energies in seeking, to a point where he/she is satisfied that no more can be done.” This definition refers to ijtihad in the field of law and indicates that the effort expended must be exhaustive and emanate from those who are qualified. If an unqualified person undertakes these same efforts, one cannot say that ijtihad has been performed. How Can the Problems of Taqlid and Dependency Be Overcome? In order to extract ourselves from the clutches of taqlid so that we can create the circumstances under which ijtihad can flourish, we must define carefully our intellectual premises. In doing so, however, we must be careful to avoid the modem western paradigm which, for too many reasons to list, has become the center of every academic circle and the starting place for the majority of modem thinkers. One major reason for doing so is that the western paradigm is based on secular materialism, an outlook that rejects revelation outright. It views only that which can be measured or quantified as a suitable subject for serious study. Those who have come under the influence of the West define knowledge as informa- tion acquired either through the senses or experimentation. All of the con- temporary social sciences and humanities, as well as the natural sciences, are founded on this premise. It is for this reason that modem theories on politics, society, economics, and ethics have their roots in the same defi- nition. Secularism, therefore, has become the basis for all intellectual and academic research, analysis, and synthesis. Thinkers and scholars the world over have now accepted the secular paradigm of knowledge. The acceptance of this western model has only served to increase the ummah’s intellectual dependency. At the same time, it has helped to era- dicate whatever traits distinguished nonwestem cultures and civilizations from their counterparts in the West, and has perhaps had a role in the latter’s outright plundering of the former. Unless the mentality of depen- dency is overcome, there can be no ijtihad or intellectual ingenuity.