haviZsultan
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If you agree that such values are in fact Islamic, why don't you simply call it 'the Islamic spirit', rather than 'secular'?
Because secularism is the name of a philosophy and Islam a religion. Both can clearly run together. If you look at history, that of Ibn Rushd and Mutazilites you will know that secularism can work well with Islam. If it wasn't true 44 million muslims would not be in Europe.
Secularism doesn't have a monopoly on fairness. In fact, many injustices have been perpetrated under secular regimes.
I agree with this. But modern times require evolution. Secularism is that evolution.
I agree with you that what many people consider to be 'secular values' are also supported by Islam, such as justice and non-discrimination. In fact, these were Islamic values before modern secularism even existed. There is no need to use 'secular' as a suffix to everything.
The secular system itself was devised by a man named Ibn Rushd.
This whole idea of secularism being necessary for a fair society is a fiction sponsored by the West - just because historical circumstances favoured secularism for them doesn't mean we must follow the same path.
It got rid of church injustices and Christian fanaticism. Before adopting secularism they were committing attrocities left and right. There were innocents declared witches and heretics. People would kill in the name of religion. Very much like muslims are today.
I agree. I am not an opponent of Islam. I am just saying that religion, any religion can compliment secularism. It is the nature of the world now.Islam also provides a path to a fair society, and that doesn't mean marginalising minority religious groups within our country.
I think you mean lack of civilised debate on religion, and lack of ijtehad, has led to the decline of Islamic Society.
Yes that was a mistake. Ijtehad and Mongol invasion is associated with Iqbal for the fall of Islam. Ijtehad is just this what we are doing and I am glad we are having this debate. It is debate, religious debate where no one assumes he is superior and there is no fanaticism in the debate. However the stand of mullahs today-saying that even talk of blasphemy laws being ammended is equivalent to committing blasphemy is very far from it.
It is truly sad how we have gone from the age of Ibne Sina, Al Haytham, Razi, and countless others, to this.
At least we are condemning this. But the next logical step is reforming the system. That can only be done when people understand that secularism is not an Anti Islamic concept.
Iman, Ittehad, Nazm was the slogan of Pakistan's creation, and currently we are weak in all three of those key areas.
When religion is imposed you lose track of what is important. The economy, philosophy, education all get left behind. What matters to the population is thekedari of their version of Islam. Is the pyjama above the ankles while praying, is the beard there, are our girls wearing hijab. Concentration on these nominal problems is making us weaker. It is in itself discrimination that we have a fund for hajj but not for Hindus going for yatra or zikris going to their holy places. Islam is a religion of equality and every muslim follows his religion independently-his relation only with Allah, no need of a middleman mullah there. This fits snugly with the wider concept that Islam is in the heart, not seen or needed outward, precisely why confining religion to your own homes and masjids is necessary. It is our personal choice, how much or how little we want to follow religion, otherwise Allah would not have said, "to you be your faith, to me be mine."
Yes, even Iman - if they had Iman and truly feared the day of Judgement, they wouldn't be able to do such things.
Sir jee please don't fall into the trap of such Sectarianism. You know as well as I do that there is no shortage of Barelvis and Deobandis who support such actions and the blasphemy laws. Labels like 'Wahhabi' are often used by molvis to discredit people with a different opinion - these labels mean nothing now.
Wahabism's birth is marked by violence. But I agree that there is no shortage of fanatics in other sects either.
The problem is not however the fact that these people don't have iman. They are full of it and so are the suicide bombers-full of the belief that they are righteous. Its the mindset they are fed on and it cannot change unless we challenge it and alter the laws of the land as well as the poisonous education we give our people. That killing a person in the name of Islam is perfectly right. As I said I do not support blasphemy personally but call for a completely different reaction towards it. There is no point asking for blood. Debating and somehow winning him over with the fallen person is better than killing.
I believe in following the Quran and Hadith, and in Ijtihad and civil discussion for religious matters. Apparently, according to some people, this makes me a 'Salafi-Wahhabi', even though I am completely against this blasphemy law and so on.
I agree that is an excuse. But we all have to oppose this cursed law. It is based on fanaticism. As I said, the prophet himself would not like muslims to kill in the name of blasphemy unless there is a severe physical form of opposition.
I think its imperative that we have debate, and in that case some sects might come under criticism for being open to terrorism or atleast being hardliners.What is the point of these labels except for creating meaningless divisions and getting brothers to hate brothers?