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An Experiment of Islamic Renovation The "Call for Islamic Revival" By Gamal El Banna The first
reference to the idea of an Islamic revival appeared in the chapter on
"A new understanding of religion" in the book "New
Democracy" produced by Gamal El Banna in 1946. He criticized the wave
of enthusiasm that followed the rise of the Moslem Brotherhood at the
time. He warned them "not to believe in faith, but to believe in the
human being". His idea was further developed in his call for revival:
"Islam targeted the human being, but the Muslim scholars targeted
Islam". However, the
developments that followed upon that book, especially the military coup
led by Abdel Nasser did not provide the adequate climate for that call to
thrive. Furthermore, Gamal El Banna himself was throughout the fifties and
sixties preoccupied with trade unionism before he returned again to the
issue of Islam. And yet in 1952 he produced his book "The
responsibility of decadence between the peoples and the rulers, as
explained in the Holy Koran." He also founded
the Egyptian association for the care of prisoners and their families
(1953-1955), which created a revolution in the reform of prison conditions
and resulted in a confrontation with the authorities. However he returned
to Islamic topics in the eighties and when he produced a number
of Islamic books addressing various Islamic issues such as (Islam and
rationalism) and (No and no
again.. No to the imitating scholars and no to pretentious advocates of
enlightenment), in addition to several studies of contemporary Islamic
propositions (Islamic movements: pros and cons) and (A message to Islamic
advocates) etc. He concluded those studies with his main work entitled
(Towards a new Islamic jurisprudence) in three volumes in which he
criticized fundamentalist Fikh and called for a new one, the foundations
of which he presented in the third volume. The call for
Islamic revival is a very unique and distinct call from all the rest
because of the following reasons: First: The call
for Islamic revival believes in openness and interaction with all
cultures, knowledge and civilizations, not from a position of weakness or
imitation or fabrication or selectivity, but on an original Koranic base.
Gamal El Banna demonstrated that the Koran considers wisdom to be one of
the origins of Islam side by side with El Kitab (The Book). He elaborated
that this attitude opens up a wide horizon for acquiring knowledge and
inspiration from all available sources. It also allows us to draw on all
cultures and civilizations, including a different attitude towards women,
art, economics and politics. This, he claims, is precisely what Muslims
did during the time of their renaissance before the door of Ijtihad was
closed. In addition to
that creative, open approach towards the original principles of the
religion, Gamal El Banna's all encompassing culture and knowledge
supported this approach further. Since the publication of his first book
(Three obstacles on the way to Glory: Ignorance, poverty and illness) in
1945 he never stopped reading. His readings included both old and
contemporary European political thought, socialism and the history of
popular and reformist movements etc. It is here that Gamal El Banna
differs much from traditional Islamic advocates, whose culture is limited
to old Islamic references or the "heritage" in the
interpretation of Hadith and Fikh. The
publications of Gamal El Banna included a 300-page book on the (Birth and
decline of the Weimar Republic) and another on (Workers' opposition during
the time of Lenin) which was originally written by Ms. Kolontai. Gamal El
Banna translated the book, adding to it an elaborate introduction that is
almost as long as the original book. Among his other publications are a
book on the history of workers' movements in Egypt (700 pages), a textbook
in three volumes on trade union rights and liberties in addition to
a book that documents his experience in prison reform and providing care
for prisoners. Second: The
call for Islamic revival is a radical one. It is not a call for a partial
reform or an attempt at patching up traditional Islamic knowledge. On the
contrary, it puts aside all ancient and old knowledge, which is usually
considered the reference for all Islamic advocacy and refers directly to
the Koran without adherence to any of the acknowledged or traditional
interpretations. It laid different foundations for Fikh other than those
set by El Shafei, and formulated objectives for Islamic jurisprudence
other than those proposed by El Shatbi and proposed an original theory of
Sunni revelation that avoided the crisis of Sunna, which has dominated Islamic
thought and Fikh for a long time. Only a call for an Islamic revival could
have forwarded this , since all other Islamic scholars were one way or the
other associated with fundamentalist thought or other contemporary
traditional schools or disciplines, foremost "religious
institutions" such as El Azhar in Egypt and Hozat in Iran etc.
Furthermore many of those schools were associated with the ruling regimes.
Third: This
radical renovation, which constitutes a revolution in Islamic thought, can
hardly be charged with any of the many charges that are usually attributed
to "innovators". Such charges range from being spies or
fascinated by the West, superficiality of analysis or lack of mastery of
the subject. Gamal El Banna comes from a family that is well established
and renowned in Isamic advocacy. All through his life he maintained a
clean record and based his ideas on evidence that drew on the Koran, on
common sense and logic and life realities. Furthermore he is a self
sufficient and independent man with no ambition for high rank positions or
posts since God almighty granted him the financial resources that saved
him the need for work, that provided him with financial security and
enabled him to cover the expenses of his writings and advocacy. It is therefore
that his writings can be only challenged by ignoring and withholding them. The fact of the
matter is that the Call for Islamic Revival is the only call that offers a
comprehensive cultural Islamic plan. It addresses every aspect of society,
each in a separate book that demonstrates an original vision on women,
trade unions, economy poletics etc. All those visions are derived from a
single original source and hence are free of fabrication and
contradictions. In addition to
his Islamic books (about 40 in number) Gamal El Banna produced the
following publications during the period 2001-2002. 1.
Strategy for Islamic Da'awa (advocacy) in the 21st
century as foreseen in the Call for Islamic Revival. 2.
Our first demand is FREEDOM. 3.
Revolutionizing the Koran. 4.
Plurality in a Moslem society. 5.
The veil. Also
forthcoming is a book entitled "Islam: a religion and a nation.. not
a religion and a state". It settles the issue of governance in Islam,
which has created much debate and controversy for long periods of time. For
more information: Gamal El Banna 195 El Geish street, 11271, Cairo - Egypt Telefax: 00 202 593 6494 e-mail: gamal_albanna@infinity.com.eg
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