|
THE QUESTION OF DRESS
Syed Abul A'la
Maududi
(This article was originally
written in 1929 for the journal Mar’arif of Azam Garh. In 1940 it was
reprinted in the journal Tarjumanul Qur’an. It was subsequently included in
the author’s book Tafheemat (vol. II), from where it has been translated)
Viewed exclusively in relation to the natural
need which first prompted man to use it, with the cultural super additions
to it left out of account, the thing called dress would appear to have just
two functions.
-
To provide a covering—since man has an
innate sense of shame and modesty—for certain parts of the body; and
-
To protect the body against the impact of
the weather.
A dress which meets these twin needs should,
in its simple form, be the dress of all places since the bodies of all human
beings, as also the obvious and convenient methods of covering them, are
alike. At most, for climatic reasons, there could be this difference that
the warm regions have dresses which are lighter and cover a lesser part of
other body, and the cold regions’ dresses which are heavier and cover a
greater part of the body.
Available information about the earliest human
being also shows that in the times when dress catered only to the original,
natural needs of man, it had no great diversity of shapes. The little
diversity it did have was due largely to climatic difference. But as human
consciousness developed and man marched towards civilization, as new
resources were discovered and industries set up, and as that human faculty
called taste became cultivated, certain super additions were made to the
original dress. And since the new influences had varied in quality and
magnitude from nation to nation, the super additions which different nations
made to the original dress came to be different as well.
EIGHT DETERMINANTS
It is impossible to enumerate all the major
and minor factors which cause the birth, change, and evolution of
variously-shaped dress among various peoples. In a span of several thousand
years, the collective life of nation and the personal lives of the members
of each nation come under countless influences, internal and external, which
are nowhere recorded. Some of them are too subtle to be perceived even. But
if we skip details and concentrate on the principal factors which accustom
different nations to different styles of dress, we shall find that they
divide into eight categories.
1.
Geographical conditions, which
compel the inhabitants of a country to adopt a particular kind of dress and
living.
2.
Moral and religious nations,
whose divergence make nations use dissimilar dresses.
3.
Taste, the natural faculty of
taste is, in the case of each nation, worked upon by peculiar influences.
It, therefore, develops in each nation differently. As a result the likes
and dislikes of nations differ.
4.
The mode of life, which, too,
develops distinctively in the case of each nation, conforming as it does to
the distinctive geographical, economic, intellectual, and moral conditions
of that nation. Consequently, each nation uses a dress which is best suited
to her mode of life.
5.
The economic situation. This
includes a nation’s general means of living, her vocations and industries,
her strong or weak financial position, etc. The dress of each nation is
closely related to the state of her economy and change with a change in the
latter.
6.
Culture and refinement. Each
nation exists on a certain level of culture and refinement and her dress
necessarily keeps to that level.
7.
National traditions, by means of
which one generation inherits from another a particular style of living and
dress, and, altering that style here and there, bequeaths it to the coming
generation. This continuity in the phenomena of life is actually a guarantee
of continued national existence. Naturally, it is held dear by every nation.
8.
Extraneous influences, which are
exercised upon the thoughts and living patterns of every nation as she come
into contact with other nations. But the nature and extent of these
influences are determined largely by the political, intellectual, and moral
climate of the nation in question.
These are the main factors which have a
rigorous control not only over the dress of a nations but over her whole
social life. The dress of each nation is the product of their combined
operation.
TWO FUNDAMENTAL FACTS
Two basic facts emerge from the foregoing analysis.
One, that dress is not merely an external
device for covering and protecting the body, it is also rooted deep in the
psychology, culture, civilization, traditions, and social setting of a
nation. It is as a matter of fact, a manifestation of the spirit which
informs the body of a nation. It is through her dress that a nation
articulates her nationality and introduces herself as a collectivity before
the world.
Two, that the above mentioned factors, with
the exception of the first (geographical conditions) are, in respect of
every nation, undergoing a constant, though imperceptible, change. Slowly
but surely, their change and evolution affect not only the dress but the
whole gamut of the national life. A little elaboration will make this point
clear.
When a nation advances in the field of
knowledge and the arts, achieves enlightenment of thought, develops her
industry, commerce, and craftsmanship, attains economic prosperity, make
closer contacts with other nations and learns from their morality, culture,
and mode of living various kinds of lessons, then a natural process of
evolution is touched off in her social life: her sentiments change, her
taste and manners improve, and her way of life acquires grace and elegance.
She devises new methods to meet the newly-arisen needs and express her
respect for the national traditions in more benefiting forms. With gradual
development taking place in all spheres of life, her dress, in stuff and
style, becomes more tasteful, attractive, and decorous. At no stage of this
evolutionary process is the need felt to summon a conference or Parliament
and push through it a resolution which would prescribe a particular shape or
style of dress for the whole nation. Automatically, under the impact of the
jointly operating social factors, the old forms of dress are modified, new
forms come into vogue, and the national taste and temperament, in keeping
with their true inclination, go on refining the dress.
CHANGE, NATURAL AND UNNATURAL
This, then, is the only natural way in which a
national dress is born, changed, and evolved. There is an artificial or
unnatural way also, namely, compelling a nation to abandon her dress and
take some other nation’s dress as her own. As for change, it would occur in
both cases. But there is a world of difference between the two types of
change of a tree. As a tree grows, its colour, size, fruit, leaves, flowers,
and branches change constantly. In spite of all these changes, however, the
“selfhood” of the tree remains unimpaired. If it is a banana tree, it will
remain such till the end. If it is a mango tree, it will continue to be one
throughout the various stages of its growth. It will take in much soil,
water, air, heat, and sunshine, but will thoroughly assimilate whatever it
takes in.
The other kind of change is exemplified by a
tree which began as a banana tree but on which were suddenly stuck the bark,
twigs, and leaves of a mango tree. No one can tell what this queer specimen
actually is—mango or banana! Stunts like this do not produce any genuine and
profound change. They in fact impede natural evolution. But people who
possess no insight into social problems and have a superficial way of
looking at things, childishly think that if the external features of a
nation’s dress and living are altered, the nation herself will change in
some real sense.
THE CASE FOR A CHANGE OF DRESS
The arguments generally advanced in favour of
a change of dress are as follows.
A change of this kind transforms the mentality
of a backward nation. It replaces her inaction by action. No sooner is the
dress of the decadent age cast off than all the inner weaknesses and the
interests associated with that age do the vanishing trick. And no sooner
does a nation slip into the new dress---especially if it has been taken from
a developed nation—than her psychology and way of life undergo a radical
change: she gets a spontaneous feeling of being developed and is accepted by
the advanced nations as a peer and equal. Once she adopts the mode of life
of the advanced nations, she becomes civilized, practical and enterprising
like them. It follows that, in order to become civilized and efficient, it
is both necessary and useful to adopt the dress and living of the civilized
and efficient nations.
THE FLAW IN THE REASONING
Such are the arguments—and there are no doubt many other
arguments like these—which are adduced in favour of changing the national
dress. But they are all flimsy; no deep thinking or insight underlies them.
It is sought to reinforce them by citing in their support some renowned
personalities, with the expectation that their names, the moment they are
pronounced, will strike an instant awe into the listeners.
(It should be kept in
mind that this article was written in 1929, at a time when the rulers of
certain Muslim countries were putting their nations on the path of
“development” by forcibly changing their dresses. In India also, certain
sections of people were urging the use of this recipe for progress.).
But the fact remains that quoted authorities hardly
possess any greater wisdom and insight than do the quoting followers. Both
are intellectually shallow and academically inferior. A military general
whose successful strategy in an emergency prevents the destruction of a
nation must be esteemed and admired. But the honour accorded to him should
strictly commensurate with his accomplishment. Moreover, he should be
honoured only in the capacity in which he has made that accomplishment. But
to elevate him to an unmeritedly high plane and to describe him as a
thinker, reformer, and architect of civilization is to commit a folly of the
same magnitude as when an able engineer who has secured a town against
floods by raising embankments is eulogized as a genius and saviour in every
sense and is named for the directorship of education and health also.
THE CASE AGAINST A CHANGE OF
DRESS
So far the problem has been dealt with in
principle. The discussion, it is hoped, has sufficiently exposed the error
of the pro-changers. But it seems that the misunderstanding bred by the
trend of the times are a little hard to banish. I therefore feel that the
case against changing the national dress should be stated with greater
explicitness.
-
The shape and style of a dress are not in
themselves something lasting or permanent. They are rather the result of
the combined working of a large number of natural and social factors. If
this fact is granted, it will also have to be admitted that the style of
dress natural to a nation is the one produced by the working of those
factors, and that it would be extremely unnatural to replace it by a style
which has not been produced in that way.
-
There is a close affinity between a nation’s
dress and her mode of life. The latter, again, has many sorts of
correlations with the cultural life of that nation. These correspondences
are able to survive the changes in the dress and mode of life when the
changes have occurred naturally. But if the dress and mode of life are
changed artificially and compulsorily, or only the dress is thus changed,
chaos strikes the entire social life, because the other departments of
life fail to keep step with the change, and, consequently, suffer in the
harmony of interrelationships.
-
For a dress to be decent, handsome, and
congruous with a developed state of existence, it is essential that the
nation should as a whole make progress and grow to be a cultured,
tasteful, enlightened, and practical-minded nation. Her advancement in
that direction will be accompanied by an improvement in her dress. As she
covers the stages of development, she will, naturally and unconstrainedly,
better some of its old things, and, borrowing certain other things from
outside, will adapt them to serve her turn. To disregard this natural
method of improvement and, instead, abruptly change the dress is like
attempting to leap out of one state into another. No real transformation
can be brought about in social life by such funny jumps.
-
To upgrade a nation’s living and dress
before she has developed socially and to raise her to an undeservedly high
position is just like making a minor reach puberty by placing him in an
explosive situation and giving him special foods and drugs. The havoc that
this extraordinarily attained puberty will play with the young innocent’s
mental and physical mechanism is only too obvious and gives an idea of the
disturbance and anarchy which will afflict the mind, morality, and social
set-up of a nation on her being compulsorily “civilized”.
-
To weigh down a nation with a dress and a
living which are too much for her economy is tantamount to ruining her.
For she will then try to adopt not only the dress and living of the richer
nations but their norms and mores also, and that will have a disastrous
effect upon her.
-
Dress, language, and script are the basic
elements of a nation’s individuality. Without them her individuality
suffers corrosion and a time comes when she is totally absorbed into other
nations. It is this fact which explains why certain nations, now called
extinct nations, disappeared from the face of the earth. Their extinction
does not mean that their members all perished. It means that those nations
failed to retain their individuality. They either themselves knocked down
the props of their individuality or allowed them to collapse. Their
members went on adopting the dress, language, script, and social manners
of other nations and so ended up by ‘losing their identity. A like fate
awaits the nations who are taking the stupid measures of their unwise
leaders as a guarantee of progress.
-
A nation who adopts the dress and living of
another nation in fact betrays deep inferiority feeling. She owns that she
is low and contemptible. She acknowledges that she possesses nothing of
which she could be proud. That her forebears were incapable of leaving
behind anything which she could preserve without bringing shame on
herself. That her taste is too vulgar, her mind too obtuse, and her
creative faculties too mean to devise a proper mode of life for her. That,
in order to pass herself off as a civilized nation, she is prepared to
borrow indiscriminately from other nations, whom she regards as her model.
That her own existence during the thousands of years has been no better
than the existence of beasts since she has failed to produce anything
commendable or worthy of survival. It is obvious that no nation with a
modicum of self-respect would make a spectacle of her self like that.
History, current as well as past, bears witness that a nation puts up with
such ignominy only in one of the following two cases: when, in every
field, she has suffered defeat after defeat at the hands of other nations
and finally knuckled under (E.g. India, Turkey, Egypt, Iran); and when she
possesses no glorious traditions; no culture worth the name, and no
high-grade creative powers and is a parvenu among the nations of the world
(Japan, for instance).
-
The only thing which a nation may, in fact
must, borrow from another is the results of the latter’s researches, the
fruits of her creative activities, and those practical methods of hers
which have led her to success. Any lessons that can be learnt from her
history, morality, and administration must be learnt. The causes of her
rise and success must be canvassed and all things of use picked up since
these are the common heritage of mankind. To slight and spurn them on
nationalistic grounds is mere prejudice. But to disregard them and borrow
from a nation her foods, wearing apparel, and living style and to consider
these a means of progress is crass stupidity. What sensible person would
for a moment think Europe owes her advancement to jackets and petticoats,
skirts and waistbands, hats and bonnets? Or that she has developed because
she makes a liberal use of powder and rouge and lipstick? If it is not
things like these which have made Europe developed, then why do the
advocates of reform and progress make their first rush for them? Why does
it not sink into their heads that the splendour of European life is due to
efforts put in unremittingly through centuries? Why do they fail to
understand that any nation who works industriously, resolutely, and
perseveringly would achieve a quality of life as enviable as the quality
of European life?
These arguments make it amply clear that the
nation who adopts the dress and living of another nation behaves
unreasonably and unnaturally. In normal circumstances nobody would even play
with the idea of abandoning the general lifestyle prevalent around him and
adopt in its place the lifestyle of an alien people. Such thinking is the
product of abnormal circumstances only and is comparable to the act of
eating earth by some women in their period of pregnancy, or to the condition
of the man who has a defective eye structure and to whom, therefore,
everything looks askew.
THE VIEW OF THE SHARIAH
So far we have been treating the subject from
the social standpoint only. Now we shall approach it from the angle of the
Shariah and see what Islam has to say about it.
The religion of Islam is in complete harmony
with nature. In every matter it takes up a position which is supported by
common sense and vindicated by sound thinking. Take an unjaundiced view of
things and you are sure to reach the conclusions which Islam has already
arrived at Islam does not force man to wear a particular kind of dress and
choose a particular mode of life. However, purely from the ethico-social
viewpoint, it enuciates a few principles and wants every nation to amend her
dress and living in accordance with them.
The first principle relates to satr or essential concealment.
Islam thinks it morally necessary that all male persons, to whatever nation
or country they may be belonging, should conceal the bodily parts between
the navel and the knees; and that all female persons, no matter what region
of the earth they are inhabiting, should cover the whole of their bodies
except the face, hands, and feet.
(It should be noted that, in regard to women, this injunction relates to
satr and not to hijab. Satr implies what a woman must conceal from all which
includes her father and son) except her husband. Hijab means more than that.
It draws a distinction between the closely related and the unrelated males.
Islam does not permit women to go about displaying their charms and graces
outside the limits of their domestic life.
And “face” means just face and not half of
the breast; “hands” means hands up to the wrists and not arms bared up to
the shoulders; “feet” means up to the ankles and not uncovered legs).
If a nation’s dress is not meeting these conditions,
Islam would require it to be altered in the light of this principle. Once
the conditions are fulfilled, Islam will deem its object achieved and will
not concern itself with what type of dress that nation wears.
Secondly, Islam asks men to keep from wearing silk dress and
golden and silver jewellery, and both men and women to avoid using dresses
which are luxurious and showy and suggest conceit and vanity. The
magnificent trailing costumes
(Worn, for example, by kings, popes,
priests, judges of the high courts, and other high-ranking officials on
ceremonial occasions, and by brides on the eve of marriage. A costume of
this kind is so long that quite a few men have to walk behind holding it up.
The Prophet said:” On the Day of judgement, God would not look at the person
who conceitedly trails his dress on the ground.”)
which give a swelled head to their wearers are, in the
eyes in Islam, condemnable. The prestigious and ostentatious dresses which
some men wear only to create a lordly impression on the common people or to
flaunt their riches are also forbidden. Nor does Islam like those flashy
garments which engender attitudes of luxury worn in your country or society
and it becomes an Islamic dress.
In the third place, Islam wants the human dress to be free
from all those symbols of idolatory and polytheism which have been adopted
by any religious sect. These would include the Cross, the Hindu cross
thread, pictures, and other un-Islamic emblems. Besides introducing these
ethical and cultural reforms, Islam thinks it necessary that the Muslim’s
dress should have some distinguishing mark so that they do not get mixed up
with non-Muslims, are able to recognize fellow Muslims easily, and succeed
in cementing the bonds of their social life. No specific mark or symbol has
been recommended for this purpose by Islam. The matter has been left to be
determined by the people themselves. When the Islamic Movement got under way
in Arabia, the Prophet and the other Muslims used to wear the customary
national dress of Arabia. But the Prophet wanted the Muslims to be
distinguished in appearance from non-Muslims, so he instructed them to wear
turbans along with caps (Abu
Dawud, Tirmidhi, and Mustadrik contain the following tradition; “That which
sets us off from polytheists is caps with turbans”.
This tradition has led some to
suppose that wearing caps with turbans is a sunnah and so constitutes a
permanent law to be universally observed by Muslims. But this is a
misunderstanding. The sunnah simply is that the Muslims, when they are
living amidst a nation consisting chiefly of non-Muslims, should in some way
distinguish their dress.)
The common Arabs wore either turbans or caps, one to the
exclusion of the other. Wearing turbans and caps at the same time thus
became typical of Muslims and adequately served the purpose of telling the
followers of the New Movement from the common people of Arabia. Later on,
when the whole of Arabia embraced Islam, it no longer remained necessary to
retain this mark of distinction because now the Arabian dress itself had
become Islamic and none of its wearers was a disbeliever or polytheist any
more.
Likewise, when Islam started gaining ground in
Iran and other countries, it was at first considered essential that the
converts to Islam should either wear the Arabian dress or add to their old
national dress some distinguishing mark, (e.g. a turban or a cloak of
special type.). For their dress at that time was the dress of non-Muslims
and had they continued to wear it without any distinguishing symbol, a
separate collective existence of theirs could not have been made possible.
But when most of the people of those countries entered into the fold of
Islam and their national dresses were modified in accordance with the
specification noted earlier, those dresses all became Islamic dresses. In
modern times also, the national dresses of the countries all or most of
whose people have adopted Islam are, with all their variety, Islamic
dresses. Where the Muslim and non-Muslim communities are mixed, any dress
which identifies its wearer as a Muslim is an Islamic dress. And where the
whole population consists of non-Muslims, every convert to Islam should add
to his dress some recognized Islamic sign so as to distinguish himself from
non-Muslims.
Imitation
At this point we are faced with the question
of tashabbuh or limitation. Imitation means assuming the likeness of
someone. It is of four kinds, and below we shall discuss each kind in the
light of Islam.
-
Imitation of one sex by the other. Men’s
imitation of women and women’s imitation of men represent a deviation from
the course of nature and are symptomatic of a diseased mentality. Islam,
therefore, a condemns it. The Prophet has cursed the men who wear feminine
dress and the women who wear masculine dress. Every sane person would do
exactly the same. Femininity in men and masculinity in women are, in any
form, detestable and revolting.
-
Imitation by one nation of another.
Sometimes a nation as a whole adopts the style of appearance of another
nation. This, again, is an irrational attitude and is developed in a
nation invariably at the time when she touches the nadir of indignity. It
is severely censured by Islam. The way in which, during the period of the
companions, such imitation was curbed and the conquered nations checked
from taking to Arabianism in the Islamic spirit truly expressed.
-
Individual’s imitation of another nation.
When some members of a nation imitate the ways of another nation, they
give evidence that they have a weak and unstable nature, that their
character is like a liquid which assumes the shape of its container. Such
behaviour is morally reprehensible and may be compared to a shameless
fellow’s claiming kindred with an unrelated person. The claimer of false
kinship and the imitator both deserve reproach, the one because he thinks
it a shame to be the son of his real father, and the other because he
believes that it is unworthy to belong to the nation he was born into and
that honour could be achieved only by being related to an alien nation.
Culturally also such conduct is wrong because
the people who take a foreign nation as their ideal become rootless and, in
the end, belong neither to the nation they were born into nor to the one
they wish to belong to. That explains why the Companions, especially the
Caliphs Umar and Ali, upbraided those Muslims who, while living in foreign
countries, had abandoned the beduoine dress and, bedazzelled by the
glamorous cultures of Rome and Iran, had started using Roman and Iranian
dresses.
4. Muslims
imitation of the disbelievers. Such imitation is injurious to the collective
existence of Muslims. It alienates Muslims from one another and obstructs
the cooperation which Islam desires to exist among them. Besides, it is an
indication that a person who is a Muslim has a quite strong leanings towards
non-Muslims. Politically, the danger is that the man who presents the
appearance of a non-Muslim would be taken for and treated as a disbeliever
by the Muslims. For these reasons the Prophet has advised Muslims to shun
this kind of imitation. He said: “Oppose the Zoroastrians”. These words,
found in so many traditions, clearly show that the Prophet wanted the
Muslims should be able to recognize their brethren and treat them as such.
The Prophet also remarked that he would not responsible for the Muslim who
lives among non-Muslims. He meant that if, in a war, such a Muslim is taken
for an enemy and killed by the Muslims, he himself would be to blame for his
death. And when then Prophet said that he who imitates any people is one of
them, he again meant that the imitator is to be regarded as a member of the
nation he imitates and treated like the members of that nation.
-Tarjumanul Qur’an
Zil Qa’adah
1258/January 1940 C.E.
EUROPEAN DRESS
(This is a part of an article written in
1939 in criticism of the address which a well-known religious scholar, on
his return to India after a long exile, delivered while presiding over the
Calcutta session of the Jamiat Ulama-e-Bengal. In this address he advised
the Muslims to adopt Indian nationalism on the one hand and European dress
on the other.)
Queer fish these
Eastern nationalist! Vigorously preaching nationalism on the one side, they
feel, on the other, no qualms about adopting the dress and culture of an
alienation or country. And that is not all. They make so earnest attempts to
popularize the foreign culture and dress among their people as if it formed
an article of their nationalistic creed. And, where they can have their way,
they do not hesitate to impose these things upon the people. In India, Iran,
Egypt, Turkey—every where they follow the same line of action.
But “nationalism”—if
that word connotes national self-respect also—naturally demands that a man
stick to the dress and culture of his own nation, feel great and superior
about them, and learn to take pride in them. Where this sentiment is totally
lacking, goodness knows where nationalism comes into the picture from.
Nationalism and lack of national self-respect exclude each other completely.
But our Eastern nationalists excel in yoking opposites together. As a matter
of fact, a man needs to have a judicious mind and a sound vision to guard
him self against contradictions in thought and practice. And if a man
possesses these qualities, why on earth must be leave the straight and
smooth path of nature and embrace, of all things, nationalism?
The direct, clear, reasonable, and natural
approach which it is possible to adopt in any matter--- that is what is
called Islam. And Islam, just as it holds no brief for the exaggerated and
inflated version of nationality, i.e. nationalism, lends no support to
anything which breaks the legitimate, natural bonds of nationality, sponges
out the individuality or distinguishing marks of nations, and cultivates
base morals in the members of a nation.
The Quran tells us that although all men have
a common origin, God has set up two types of distinctions between them: the
one between the male and the female, and the other between families, tribes
and nationalities.
O mankind! Lo! We have
created you male and female, and have made you nation and tribes that ye may
know one another.. (XLIX: 13)
And that He createth
the two spouses, the male and the female. (LIII: 45)
These two kinds of distinctions are at the
bottom of social existence and man civilization, and the Divine Scheme calls
for their maintenance. The distinction between man and woman has been made
so that a psychological attraction may exist between them. It follows that
their distinguishing characteristics must be fully preserved. The
distinction between nations has been made so that human beings are divided
into such social groups as would facilitate cooperation among them. Again,
it is essential that each social division or cultural group should have some
distinguishing marks by means of which its members may recognize,
understand, and become intimate with one anther and differentiate
t6hemselves from the members of the other groups. Obviously, the only marks
of this kind could be language, dress, living patterns, culture and
civilization. The need to preserve them is thus urged upon by nature
itself.
That is why imitation has
been interdicted by Islam. There is a tradition in which the Prophet has
cursed the woman who wears masculine dress and the man who puts on feminine
dress. (Mustadrik,
vol.iv, p.194.) In
another tradition he cursed the men who imitate women and the women imitate
men. (Bukhari,
“Kitabul-libas) The
reason for this tough-line approach is that such imitation suppresses and
diminishes the psychological attraction which God has caused to exist
between the two sexes, whereas Islam wants that attraction to be retained.
Likewise, the abolishing or mixing up of the cultures, practices, and
dresses of nations is against the interests of collective existence.
Consequently, Islam is opposed to this also. When national distinction is
unnaturally blown up into nationalism, Islam makes jihad against it. For it
is nationalism which gives birth to stupid chauvinism, savage prejudices,
and ruthless imperialism. But Islam is at enmity only with nationalism and
not with nationality. Denying nationalism, it wants to keep nationality
intact and is as much opposed to abolishing it as it is opposed to inflating
it out of proportion. In order to understand Islam’s balanced and moderate
attitude in this regard, the following transmissions should be read
carefully.
1.
A Companion of the Holy Prophet
asked: “What is partisanship? Is loving one’s tribe (or nation)
partisanship?” The Prophet said: “No partisanship is to support one’s tribe
(or nation) in oppression”(Ibn
Majah)
2.
The Prophet said: “He who
assumes the likeness of any people is one of them.”(Abu
Dawud)
3.
The Caliph Umar wrote to Utbah
bin Farqad, Governor of Azerbaijan: “Take heed of wearing the dress of
polytheists” (i.e. the people of Azerbaijan).
(Muslim, “Kitabul-libas waz-zeenah”.)
4.
The Caliph Umar had issued
orders to all his governors not to allow the non-Muslims citizens to use the
dress or present the appearance of Arabs. So much so that, on making peace
with the people of certain regions, a regular clause forbidding those people
to wear the dress of Arabs was inserted in the treaty.
(Abu Yusuf, Kitabul Kharaj.)
5.
The Arabs who were posted in
Iraq, Iran etc., in connexion with military or civil service, were
continually reminded by the Caliphs Umar and Ali to take care of their
speech and refrain from speaking foreign tongues.
(Baihiqi)
These precedents make it plain that the
internationalism espoused by Islam does not aim to intermix nations by
wiping out their distinguishing characteristics. Islam wants nations to
preserve their identity and traits and to establish among themselves such
bonds of morality, culture, beliefs, and ideas as would eliminate
international tensions, frictions, prejudices, and oppression and promote
brotherhood and cooperation.
There is another reason why Islam holds
imitation is contempt. A nation forswears her national characteristics only
when she has deteriorated mentally and degenerated morally. The man who
readily accepts the influence of others and takes on their colour while he
gives up his own must be morbidly fickle, docile, and impressionable.
Unchecked, that malady will get worse; and if it turns into an epidemic, the
entire nation will catch a psychological illness; she will suffer from moral
enervation and her mind will grow too weak to take the strain of a sound and
solid ethical system. Islam hates to see any nation nursing this
psychological disease. It therefore tries to protect against it not only
Muslims but, where possible, non-Muslims also because it does not like moral
infirmity to be found in any human being.
It is among the vanquished
and subjugated peoples that this disease spreads most widely. Not only are
they morally weak, they lower themselves in their own eyes. They regard
themselves contemptuously and hope to win esteem by imitating their rulers,
whom they take as models of virtue, excellence, nobility, refinement, and
anything else they can think of Slavery so eats away their humanity that
they become willing to parade their disgrace, and so far from feeling
ashamed of this act, take positive pride in it
(Should anybody doubt our statement, he may
note the difference between the Englishmen and Indians in India itself. A
handful of Englishmen scattered and dispersed, have been living amidst tens
of millions of Indians for two hundred and fifty years. But your will not
find a single Englishman who has taken to the Indian dress. On the contrary,
it is still difficult to number the Indians who dutifully mimic the
Englishmen and who take pains to copy not only the latter’s dress but their
speech and behaviour also. What explanation, after all, will be offered for
this?
It should be remembered that the present
article was written in 1939, when India was one country and a long-time
colony of the British. However, what has been said in this footnote remains.
True even after the passage of more than a quarter century. John Bull is
gone but the condition of his bondsmen has not changed.)
Islam, which aims to redeem man from degradation and invest him with
nobility and honour, would do its best to prevent his falling into the deep
most pit of indignity. That precisely is why the Caliph Umar sternly forbade
the non-Arab nations, after they had come under the rule of the Islamic
Government, to imitate the Arabs. Had they been allowed to develop slavish
traits and habits, Islamic jihad would have lost its sense and purpose. When
the Prophet charged the Muslims with the banner of Islam he did not want
them to become overlords of those nations and train them in servility.
For these reasons, Islam is against the
idea of a nation becoming a replica of another nation and trying to copy the
latter’s dress and mode of living. As for the cultural borrowing and lending
that naturally takes place between nations in contact with one another,
Islam not only approves of it but encourages it. It is not Islam’s wish to
wall nations off from one another by creating prejudices among them and thus
preclude any kind of cultural or other exchanges between them. The Holy
Prophet wore the Syrian gown which was an article of the Jewish dress. A
tradition reads: “He (the Prophet) performed the ablution while having a
Syrian gown on.” He also put on the narrow-sleeved Roman cloak which was
worn by Roman Catholics. The Naushirwani mantle, described in a tradition as
the Persian royal mantle, was also in his use. Umar donned the burnous,
which is a kind of high cap and forms a part of the Christian monks’ dress.
Use of odd things like these is a matter quite different from imitation.
Imitation is when a man’s total appearance resembles that of another nation
and it becomes difficult to tell his nation by taking a look at him. On the
contrary, what we have termed borrowing and lending implies only that one
nation may borrow from another something good and suitable and assimilate it
into her style of appearance, the style of appearance, even after that
assimilation, on the whole remaining the same.
(Tarjumanul Quran, 1358 H/1939 C.E.)
|