Islam, Modernity and the Concept of Progress (Islam, Pemodenan dan Konsep Kemajuan)

Authors

  • Nor Farhain Zaharani Postgraduate Student, Department of History and Civilization, International Islamic University Malaysia.
  • Elmira Akhmetova Assoc. Prof. Dr, Department of History and Civilization, International Islamic University Malaysia.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31436/jia.v18i3.1087

Abstract

This paper aims to review definitions and scope of modernity and analyze it in the context of a specific religion, Islam. The paper then highlights the harmony between progress and Islam based on the historical examples from the glorious eras of Islamic civilization in Andalusia and the Abbasid caliphate, in which modernity and religion were complementary in producing the novel innovations of that time. Knowledge creation and technological advancements were strongly pursued during that time by numerous renowned Muslim scholars, intellectuals and philosophers. This paper then examines the current situation in the Muslim world. The majority of Muslim nations are backward, impoverished and stagnant due to rigidity and restrictions in political and intellectual freedom, in addition to gender inequality and discrimination. As the paper finds, these unprecedented qualities are not a part of Islamic teachings, but the consequential effect of post colonialism and the politicization of religion by certain squatters using Islam for political interests and purposes. 

Keywords: Modernity, Islam, Islamic Civilization and innovations, Muslim Spain, Abbasid Caliphate, Modernity today, Islam and modernity.                                                                                                                 

Abstrak

Penulisan ini bertujuan untuk mengulas definisi, dan skop kemodenan seta menganalisa hubungan antara modernisasi dengan agama iaitu, Islam. Terbukti pemodenan boleh wujud dengan keharmonian antara kemajuan dan Islam itu sendiri dengan mengaplikasikan contoh sejarah daripada zaman kegemilangan tamadun Islam seperti di Andalusia dan Abbasiyah dimana pemodenan dan agama saling berkait rapat antara satu sama lain untuk menghasilkan inovasi yang terbaik pada waktu itu. Penciptaan ilmu pengetahuan dan kemajuan teknologi tercetus dengan kelahiran ulama, ahli intelek dan ahli falsafah Muslim. Selain itu, bahagian berikut bagi penulisan ini mengkaji situasi masa kini di dunia Islam dimana majoriti negara Islam dikatakan mundur, dibelenggu kemiskinan dan berfikiran jumud disebabkan ketegasan dan pembatasan didalam kebebasan berpolitik dan intelek, kesaksamaan jantina dan diskriminasi. Penulisan ini menemui, sifat sifat negatif tersebut tercetus bukan berdasarkan daripada ajaran Islam, tetapi kesan daripada pasca penjajahan dan pempolitikan berlandaskan agama daripada puak tertentu yang menggunakan Islam atas tujuan kepentingan politik.

Kata Kunci: Pemodenan, Islam, Tamadun Islam dan inovasi, Muslim Sepanyol, Khalifah Abbasiyah, Kemodenan hari ini, Islam dan pemodenan.

References

Akhmetova, Elmira. “The Arab Spring, Good Governance and Citizens’ Rights.” Islam and Civilisational Renewal Vol 5, 3 ( 2014):334-350

Akhmetova. Elmira, “Defining Civilisation and Religion,” IAIS Journal of Civilisation Studies Vol 1(1) (2008):74-88

Ali Mirsepassi. Intellectual Discourse and the Politics of Modernization. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000

Bennett. C, Muslim and Modernity. London: Continuum, 2005

Brien, O. P. “Islamic Civilization and (Western) Modernity.” Comparative Civilization Review, 65, Fall (2011):18-32

Burke, E. “Islam at the Center: Technological Complexes and the Roots of Modernity.” Journal of World History, Vol 20, No.2 (2009):165-186

Constable, R. O. To Live Like a Moor: Christian Perceptions of Muslim Identity in Medieval and Early Modern Spain. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018

Corruption Perceptions Index, Transparency International: the global co-alition against corruption. Accessed on August 6 2020. https://www.transparency.org/en/cpi/2019

Dogan, Nezahat. “Gender Inequality in Muslim Majority Countries: Myth versus Facts.” Acta Oeconomica 66, No 2 (2016):213-231

Eisenstadt. S.N. “Modernity and Modernization,” Sociopedia 25(1)(2010):1-15

Ezad Azraai Jamsari, Mohd Aliff Mohd Nawi, Adibah Sulaiman, Roziah Sidik, Zanizam Zaidi, Mohamad Zulfazdlee Abul Hassan Ashari. “Ibn Firnas and His Contribution to the Aviation Technology of the World.” Advances in Natural and Applied Sciences, 7(1), (2013):74-78

Fachri Aidulsyah. “The Paradigm of Quran as the Main Element of Is-lamic Civilization.” Tsaqafah, Vol 16, No 1 (May 2020):127-146

Gole, N. “Snapshots of Islamic Modernities.” Daedalus 129, 1 (Winter 2000):91-117

Huntington, S. “The Clash of Civilization?” Foreign Affairs, Vol 72, No. 3 (Summer 1993):22-49

Keyman. E. F. “Modernity, Secularism and Islam: The Case of Turkey,” Theory, Culture & Society 24(2) (2016):215-234

Khalid, Masud, Salvatore. A.B, V. M, Islam and Modernity Key Issues and Debates. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2009

Menocal, R. M. “Culture in the Time of Tolerance: Al-Andalus as a Model for Our Time.” (2000):1-11

Moten, Abdul Rashid. “Modernity, Tradition and Modernity in Tradition in Muslim Societies.” Intellectual Discourse, 19, 1 (2011):1-13

Mozaffari, Mehdi. “Can a Declined Civilization be Re-Constructed?” International Relations 14, No 3 (1998):31-50

Muhammad Hifdil Islam. “Islam and Civilization (Analysis Study on the History of Civilization in Islam.” Jurnal Al-Insyirah: Jurnal Studi Keis-laman, Vol 5, No 1 (2019):22-39

Oguz, Gonul. “Beyond Secularism: Faith, Identity, and Difference: The Turkish Case,” Istanbul Universitesi Iktis Fakultesi Mecmuasi, vol 62 (2012): 191-214

Pew-Templeton Global Religious Futures Project. Accessed 26 November 2011.

http://www.globalreligiousfutures.org/countries/malaysia#/?affiliations_religion_id=0&affiliations_year=2010&region_name=All%20Countries&restrictions_year=2016

Roziah Sidek, Mat Sidek, Izziah Suryani Arshad & Kaseh Abu Bakar, “The Role and Contribution of Women in Andalusian Muslim Civiliza-tion’, Australian Journal of Basic and Applied Sciences 7(4): 323-327

Said. E, Orientalism. London: Penguin Books, 1985

Seth, S. “Is Thinking with ‘Modernity’ Eurocentric?,” Cultural Sociology Vol 10(3) (2016):385-398

Sharon, L.S . “Modernity.” Encyclopedia Britannica. Accessed July 31, 2020. https://www.britannica.com/topic/modernity

Smidi. A & Shahin. S, “Social Media and Social Mobilisation in the Middle East”, India Quarterly, Vol 73, No 2 (2017):196-209

Syed Hussein Alatas, “Religion and Modernization in Southeast Asia”, European Journal of Sociology Vol 11(2) (1970):265-296

Tijani Ahmad Ashimi. “Islamic Civilization: Factors behind Its Glory and Decline.” International Journal of Business, Economics and Law, Vol 9, 5 (April 2016):180-184

Veer, P. “The Modernity of Religion,” Social History Vol 20, No 3 (1995):365-371

Willfried, S. “Multiple Modernity, Nationalism and Religion: A Global Perspective.” Current Sociology Vol. 51, 3 (2003):265-286

Downloads

Published

2021-12-31

How to Cite

Zaharani, N. F., & Akhmetova, E. (2021). Islam, Modernity and the Concept of Progress (Islam, Pemodenan dan Konsep Kemajuan). Journal of Islam in Asia (E-ISSN 2289-8077), 18(3), 205–230. https://doi.org/10.31436/jia.v18i3.1087

Issue

Section

English Articles