The Qur'anic
Phenomenon
By Malek Bennabi
This work was not able to
see the light normally; indeed it is the reconstruction of an
original destroyed under special circumstances. We believe, we
have saved the essential; the development of an analytic method
in the study of the Qur'anic phenomenon.
Practically this method
strives to serve two aims: to give on the one hand the young
Algerian Muslim an occasion to meditate seriously on his
religion, and on the other to suggest a timely reform in the
spirit of classical commentary. Indeed, it is necessary to
realise that in Algeria, as in all Arab countries, the cultural
revolution is passing through a phase: "The Muslim renaissance"
which receives all its technical ideas from the western culture,
particularly and notably by means of the Egyptian awakening.
These technical ideas not only influence the new material life,
which is adapted more and more by young Muslims, they also
concern in a less susceptible manner, it is true, the spiritual
things of the soul-the spiritual life in a word.
In fact, it is amazing,
most of the young Muslims today receive their religious build-up
and even sometimes their religious impetus, by means of the
writings of European specialists. The number of Islamic studies,
which appear in Europe, from the pen of eminent orientalists are
a fact undeniable. But can one imagine the important place which
this type of activity occupies in the movement of modern ideas
in Muslim countries? There is in this general crisis an aspect
which interests, in particular, the aim of this study, namely:
the influence of the work of orientalists on the religious
spirit of our young university graduates-either by bibliographic
necessity or by simple intellectual affinity-to refer to some of
these western sources even for personal Islamic information. In
fact the local sources of information are devoid of their
cultural treasures, appearing henceforth at the bottom of the
national libraries of Europe.
It is curious to note the
complacency, in Egypt especially, which helps the most wild
ideas coming out of the universities in the West. Unquestionably
the most instructive example in this respect is the hypothesis
formulated by an English orientalist on "Jahillian poetry".
There would be nothing excessively abnormal if, from the moment
of publication, the hypothesis of Margoliouth had not received
the keen appreciation from the Arabic reviewers and from certain
theses of young Arab doctors. It has even acquired the value of
a positive criterion, noticeably in the study of Dr. T. Sabbagh
on the "METAPHOR" in Qur'an. This author systematicaly refuses,
from now on, to consider the Jahillian poetry as a positive
domain of Arab philology. Up to this point, "The miracle of the
Qur'an" was based on the major argument of the transcendence of
the "Word of God" on the "speech" of man. Hitherto, the
commentary had recourse to the style to prove the miracle of the
Qur'an on a rational basis. But in drawing conclusions from the
Margoliouth hypothesis, as in the case of Dr. Sabbagh, it is
exactly this basis which would be in error. Since then, the
problem of interpretation of the Qur'an would be posed on an
extremely important point for the belief of a Muslim, namely:
the proof of the miracle of the Qur'an. In any case the
intellectual revolution would not have lacked to lead our
university youngsters to assert, sooner or later, the weakness
in the classical criterion, which had so far furnished the
arguments in favour of the supernatural origin of the Qur'an.
For a mind with a Cartesian bend, of what value can be an
argument proving hitherto purely subjective?
Indeed no Muslim, Algerian
in particular, could from now on compare objectively a Qur'anic
verse to the period of rhythm or the rhyme of the pre-Islamic
era. Long since we have ceased to possess the spirit of Arabic
language to be able to draw a judicious conclusion from a
literary comparison. Long time ago our belief on this point was
satisfied by a principle of authority which hardly agrees with
the demands of the spirit of the elite hitherto infatuated with
positivism. Hereafter, hence the problem of the commentary is
posed in a new angle.
The subject of our study
is related, partially, to this doctrine under the relation of
the rational conviction with the intellectual conviction, placed
first under the aegis of theology. Otherwise, we would like to
furnish directly the necessary rational base for this
conviction, at any rate, to open methodically and broadly the
religious debate in order to lead the Algerian intellectual to
build himself this base necessary for his faith.
The method followed here
is to tie the particular case of Islam to religious phenomena in
general, to place its prophet as the ultimate in the chain of
prophetic movement and to place the Our'anic doctrine as the
outcome of the stream of monotheistic thought. Consequently,
this consists of deducing from the Qur'an, from the
phenomenological point of view, an authentic criteria for Islam
as a revealed religion. But we cannot neglect to establish the
tie, dialectically necessary between the chapters of this study,
to pre-establish a first criteria devoted to the messenger,
Mohammed, since the second criteria is devoted to the message of
the Qur'an. Such are the outlines of the method, which we would
like to put at the disposal of the young Algerian intellectual
to help him establish the rational basis of his religious faith.
The Religious
Phenomenon
That the human conscience
faced the metaphysical problem thus and with such regularity, at
all its phases of evolution, is itself a problem, which the
sociologists wished to resolve by characterising man as "an
essentially religious animal". Two divergent theoretical
consequences follow from this basically objective definition:
-
Is man "a religious
animal" in an inborn instinctive manner, as a consequence of
an original disposition of his nature?
-
Or else has he acquired
this quality by a sort of psychic osmosis, propagated by
entire humanity, begun by an initial cultural accident which
occurred among a group of humans?
Precisely these are the
two basic theses which arise out of the problem put by the
religious phenomena. Of course it would be naive to strive to
resolve this philosophical antagonism by a mathematical
solution, as some of our estranged intellectuals would wish,
probably by an oblivious scientism, or by some elementary
principles of Positive science itself. Be that as it may, once
the fundamental principle of a system is established the system
must remain rigorously compatible with it; coherent in all its
consequences.
Now the two questions,
which we have just put, as a consequence of the religious
phenomenon, do not expose religion by means of science, as one
may tend to believe. Science does not prove the inexistence of
God. Not any more-we concede it on principle-his existence. The
debate here is between two religions, between theism and
materialism; between the religion which has postulated God and
that which has postulated matter. The aim of this chapter is to
compare these two philosophical systems: that which regards the
religious sense of man as an original part of his nature-an
idea, which is recognised in many aspects as an essential factor
of all civilisations: and that which treats religion as a simple
historical accident of human culture. And its conclusion would
moreover be supported by conclusions from following chapters,
which will bring forward also a sort of posterioric proof,
furnished by the prophetic phenomenon and the Qur'anic
phenomenon, which places religion at the level of a cosmic
phenomenon, next to the physical laws.
The Prophetic
Movement
In the preceding chapter
we have already established the necessity of putting simply a
postulate; here we proceed to examine a particular aspect of
monotheism, which-while bringing forth with it from the mouths
of Prophets, its transcendental proof-becomes itself a criterion
for the totality of the religious phenomenon.
Since Abraham, some
individuals, moved by an irresistible force had come
periodically to talk to people, in the name of an absolute
truth, of which they were said to have a personal and exclusive
knowledge by a mysterious means-revelation. These men claim
themselves to be envoys of God, sent to carry this word to the
people, who couldn't listen to it directly. The exclusiveness of
this revelation and the convincing character of the mission of a
prophet constitute a special aspect of prophethood, which is the
essential basis of monotheism and its phenomenological evidence.
By the unique testimony of the prophet, the prophethood appears
as an objective phenomenon, independent of the human "me" which
expresses it. The problem precisely is to find out whether this
is something purely subjective and not an objective phenomenon
as magnetism, for example. The existence of magnetism is shown
to us by a loadstone needle, which exhibits qualitatively and
quantitatively the specific aspects of magnetism. But we can
only establish the prophethood by means of the testimony of a
prophet and the contents of the written message he has brought
to propagate. Hence the problem is psychological on the one hand
and historic on the other. It should be remarked that the
mission of the prophet is not an isolated fact, it is a
continuous phenomenon which repeats itself regularly between two
fringes of history with Abraham and Muhammad.
The continuity of a
phenomenon, which repeats itself periodically is already a
useful scientific evidence, to admit in the principle its
existence, under the conditions always to verify this by
compatible facts with reason or by the nature of the principle.
Now from the phenomenological point of view, if a case of a
particular prophethood explains or establishes nothing, its
repetition under certain conditions justifies the general
existence of the phenomenon in a manner already more scientific.
Hence it remains to examine seriously the type of this
repetition, in order to distinguish its special character, from
the general law, which can control the totality of the
phenomenon.
One has no valid reason to
accept a priori, the prophethood as a psychological accident
affecting the history of one human "me". One has also no reason
to claim directly the intervention of a pathological factor to
explain the prophethood by the personal equation of the prophet
in affirming that it is or it could be due to over-excited
nerve, or of exalted imagination, or of thought directed by some
purely subjective phenomenon.
If it were possible for
physicists to make a sample of iron talk under the influence of
magnetism, undoubtedly, they would be very happy to ask a lot of
precise information rather than deducing it all from known
facts, or from some hypothesis which are not rigorously
supported by calculation. However, the prophet is a subject who
can talk to us of his internal state, who even argues it, first
of all for his personal conviction and later for the external
service of his mission. If there is prophethood, first of all it
ought to be considered as the disturbing cause which breeds in a
human "me" the irresistible attraction of a mission, whose
motives and aims could not be explained by this "me". That is
why the knowledge of the phenomena by the prophet himself is
essential for a critical study of the subject. Jonas, Jeremiah,
Mohammed are such subjects who are as much individuals and who,
at first, wished to voluntarily avoid the prophetic call. They
resisted, but finally they were carried away by their call.
Their resistance emphasises, however, the polarisation between
free will and determinism which bent their wills and subjected
their "me". In these indications, there is already a strong
presumption for an objective thesis of prophethood.
The Rational
Criterion
Mohammed is an illiterate,
whose very meagre knowledge could have come to him only from his
material environment. In this chivalrous, idolatrous and nomad
atmosphere the social and metaphysical problems were never
raised. The knowledge of Arabs on the life and thought of other
people is insignificant, as can be clearly inferred from pre-isiamic
poetry, which forms in this respect a precise source of
information. Hence while leaving for his retreat of Ghar Hira,
Mohammed could only have the ordinary knowledge of the usual
ideas of a primitive milieu. Now the revealed knowledge just
shakes up his superficial knowledge, doubly formed by the
general ignorance and the very "Ummia" (illiteracy) of Mohammed.
It is necessary to visualise the surprising meaninglessness that
is expressed in this "read" which is the first word of the
revelation. Mohammed is an illiterate; this order shakes him up
naturally, since it is so contrary to his being an "ummi". He
timidly replies "I can't read". But what a sudden shock for a
positive spirit like his!
When, at the subsequent
revelation, the voice ordered him to preach, he wonders with
anxiety
" I. Who shall believe in
me?" There is surprise of the unexpected and an uncertainty of
conviction in this question. Moreover the revelation is
interrupted for some time. He begins to wish for it, even
desperately call for it. But the revelation does not come.
Mohammed finds the worst times of his moral crisis at Mount Hira.
Further from diminishing, his uncertainty increases tragically.
He complains to his sweet wife. She tries to console him but
with no avail. Finally, after two years the revelation resumes
and brings the supreme and the only consoling expression, The
Word, to him.
Now he has an infinitely
more objective certainty on this point. But this long wait so
anguishing and the unexpected joy which followed it, should be
the psychological conditions most favourable to this graceful
state of his mind, when there was not any shadow of uncertainty.
In fact it was the extreme uncertainty of Mohammed, which
obliged him to torment himself and followed the intellectual
process which resulted in the final certainty.
The Literary
Aspect of Qur'an
The literary aspect of the
message, which was the principal subject of study for the
classical commentators, loses its importance more or less in our
time, which is more scientific than literary. in fact, since we
do not have adequate material that contains the spirit of pre-Qur'anic
language, we could not judge relevantly the transcendence of the
style of the Qur'an. However, there is a verse carrying
historical information of the utmost importance on this point.
In this verse the Qur'an explicitly claims this transcendence,
with which it intends to overcome the literary spirit of the
period. It throws a stupefying challenge at its contemporaries
as follows: "Bring a single sura similar (to this) and ask for
the support of men and jinns, if you wish".
History does not record
that this challenge had ever been met. One can conclude from
this that the challenge has existed without response and hence
that the literary "miracle" had effectively overcome the spirit
of the particular period. But as far as we are concerned, there
are also some other sources, leading to a conclusion even on
this particular aspect of the question. The bedouin spirit is
essentially music loving; its aspirations, its moments and its
progress are all translated in the rhythmic musical expression
of the Arabic verse, whose metre could be as short or as long as
the step of a camel. It does not treat any mystical or
metaphysical obsession, and it also ignores the dialectical
subtleties and the abstractions of philosophical, scientific or
religious thought. Its terminology corresponds to the simple
requirements of the internal and external life of a bedouin and
not of a settler.
Such are the
characteristics of this Jahillian, idolatrous nomadic language
which the Qur'an nevertheless, bends to its own spirit in order
to express a universal thought. Moreover for expressing this
thought the Qur'an adapts the form of blank verse, something new
in Arabic rhyme: it frees itself from the metre and it is
amplified. . . .
Thus when the Qur'an was
revealed it was not a progressive evolution for Arabic, but
something like a revolutionary explosion: such a philological
phenomenon is unique in the history of languages. With a single
jump, Arabic had become, from its primitive dialectical stage, a
language technically organised to carry the thought of a new
culture and a new civilisation.
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