uAl-Ghazali
Introduction:
Abu Hamid Mhammad bin Muhammad bin Muhammad bin Ahmad, surnamed al-Imam-ul-Jalilm,
Hujjat-ul-Islam and Zainuddin, was born at Ghazzalah near Tus in 1058. He is
one of the greatest and distinguished original philosophers not only in the
history of Muslim philosophy but also in the history of human thought. He was
educated at Tus proper in the early years of his career and later on he shifted
to Jurjan, and then finally migrated to Nishapur to imbibe wisdom and
philosophy by sitting at the feet of perhaps the most versatile genius of his
time, Abul-Maali Muhammad al-Juwaini Imam-ul-Haramain, who was invited back
from Hijaz to preside over one of the great colleges founded by Nizam-ul-Mulk
Tusi. He was accepted first as the pupil and the assistant by the Imam.
Al-Ghazali won great fame and prominence because his philosophical doctrines
and consequently as a great sage of the age, he was called to the court of
Nizam-ul-Mulk Tusi while still in his twenties. He was the intellectual adviser
and chief canonist till 1091 when he was formally appointed to the great
foundation of Baghdad.
Introduction:
Abu Hamid Mhammad bin Muhammad bin Muhammad bin Ahmad, surnamed al-Imam-ul-Jalilm,
Hujjat-ul-Islam and Zainuddin, was born at Ghazzalah near Tus in 1058. He is
one of the greatest and distinguished original philosophers not only in the
history of Muslim philosophy but also in the history of human thought. He was
educated at Tus proper in the early years of his career and later on he shifted
to Jurjan, and then finally migrated to Nishapur to imbibe wisdom and
philosophy by sitting at the feet of perhaps the most versatile genius of his
time, Abul-Maali Muhammad al-Juwaini Imam-ul-Haramain, who was invited back
from Hijaz to preside over one of the great colleges founded by Nizam-ul-Mulk
Tusi. He was accepted first as the pupil and the assistant by the Imam.
Al-Ghazali won great fame and prominence because his philosophical doctrines
and consequently as a great sage of the age, he was called to the court of
Nizam-ul-Mulk Tusi while still in his twenties. He was the intellectual adviser
and chief canonist till 1091 when he was formally appointed to the great
foundation of Baghdad.
Al-Ghazali
was aptly considered a mujaddid and reckoned at par with the four Imams. There
have been many philosophers and scholars in Islam and other religions, but the
distinct caliber of one of great philosophers ushered a unique era of knowledge
of his age. He left behind indelible impressions because of his immortal works
and philosophical-cum-political doctrines which have still influence upon this
modern age. In 1095, he had discontinued his work of teaching in Baghdad. His
mind continually in a state of doubt, probably found no satisfaction in
dogmatic predictions. Sherwani said, “Baghdad did not see very much of Ghazali
and it seems that deep thought, coupled with murder of his patron Nizam-ul-Mulk
Tusi and the death of Malik Shah in 1092, all these things had a tremendous
effect on his psychology.”
For
about ten years, in the period of utter disillusionment, Al-Ghazali extensively
traveled here and there to imbibe wisdom and intellect from every source,
dividing his time between pious exercises and literary work. Al-Ghazali
remained in fretful years because of state politics which took a serious turn.
He died in Tus on 19th of December, 1111. His closing years were chiefly
devoted to pious contemplation and the study of the Traditions, which as a
youth he could never remember. A beautifully complete and rounded life in which
the end comes back to the beginning.
Principle
political works of Al-Ghazali are as follows:
1. Munqidh Min ad-Dalal (Deliverance from
Waywardness)
2. Ihya-ul-Ulam (Renaissance of Sciences)
3. Tibr-ul-Masbuk (Molten Gold)
4. Sirr-ul-Alamain (The Mystery of the Two
Worlds)
5. Fatihat-ul-Ulum (Introduction to
Sciences)
6. Kimiya-i-Sa’adat (Alchemy of Goodness)
7. Iqtisad Fil-I’tiqad (Moderation in
Belief)
8. Kitab-ul-Wajiz (a hand book of Fiqah,
canon law)
Contribution
of Al-Ghazali
to
Islamic Political Thought
Al-Ghazali
is undoubtedly an outstanding and remarkable political scholar in Islam. His
philosophy is an expression of his own personality. He abandoned the attempt to
understand this world. But the religious problem he comprehended much more
profoundly than did the philosophers of his time. Dr. T. T. Debeer said, “These
were intellectuals in their methods, like their Greek predecessors, and
consequently regarded the doctrines of Religion as merely the products of the
conception of fancy or even caprice of the law givers. According to them
Religion was either blind obedience, or a kind of knowledge which contained
truth of an inferior order. On the other hand, Al-Ghazali represents Religion
as the experience of his inner being; it is for him more than Law and more than
Doctrine, it is the Soul’s experience.”
Al-Ghazali’s
philosophical analysis, logical positivism and religious empiricism have
profoundly influenced every age of philosophy and religion and even today,
modern student of the political history seeks inspiration in solving all
philosophical and political inquiries. His liberalism and intellectualism
completely dominated Western Philosophy and even Western thinkers preserved
main elements of his great philosophy in their works. Europe, about the end of
the eleventh and beginning of the twelfth century of the Christian era, was in
the abyss of degradation and political degeneration. This period is dubbed by
one of the greatest of modern political scientists as “essentially
unpolitical”.
In
the contemporary age of Al-Ghazali, Europe was engulfed in perpetual
controversy between Pope and the Emperor. This controversy led to political
cleavage and intransigents and wreckers mutilated all traits of progress and
prosperity. There was nothing but blood, destruction and wars, which snapped
all resources and economy. Poverty and wrangling had become regular features of
the day. At that time, East was at the pinnacle of glory and progress.
It
is certainly difficult to agree with unfounded and sweeping statement of Hitti
that Al-Ghazali constructed such a scholastic shell for Islam that all its
future progress became arrested within it. If the progress of the West
consisted as it is said in breaking a similar shell within context of his own
religion then quite a few hammer strokes therein were wrought by the hands of
the Muslim thinkers of which the uppermost hand was the hand of Al-Ghazali.
This anybody might see for himself by making a close study of Al-Ghazali’s
influence on the West.
Al-Ghazali
as a great savant was decidedly superior to some of those who had gone before
him. For while he had become conversant with the working of the political
system when he was attending the court of his patron, Nizam-ul-Mulk Tusi, Prime
Minister of Suljuqi Kings, Al-Ghazali, while living in such surroundings had
made a close study of the problems of politics. It was his efforts to leave off
his luxurious life and write most of his works from a mental point of vantage
in Syria or Arabia or else in the seclusion of his paternal hearth and home.
Al-Ghazali is definitely superior to Al-Mawardi in being analytical as well as
comparative in his arguments.
Sherwani
was of the view that “A student of the history of political theories is aware
of the great gap which seems to exist between the decline of Roman thought
about the beginning of Christian era till about the thirteenth century, when
thought seems dull, constitutions unscientific and people lethargic and
pleasure-loving. Knowledge would be the richer and chains of thought more
continuous if that artificial blank were to be filled by such giants of wisdom
as Mawardi, Nizam-ul-Mulk Tusi and Al-Ghazali. Even in oriental thought,
Al-Ghazali’s place is certain. His greatness lies partly in having successfully
refilled the desired outlined by brilliant Islamic colors, although they were
not destined to last very long, giving place once again, and finally to
barbaric hues.”
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