Academization of Pious Learning: A Student’s Quest in Religious Education
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. “Traditional” as Opposed to “Academized” Courses
3. Knowing, Being and Believing in Islam
The privileging of historicity in discourse analysis over and above metaphysics, the attempt to reveal the groundedness of the Islamic Other’s religious discourse in solely this-worldly considerations is tantamount to a refutation of the metaphysical mode of thought, and pre-emptively denies the right of the Other to hold onto metaphysics.
- So they found one of Our servants
- On whom We had bestowed
- Mercy from Ourselves
- And whom We had taught
- Knowledge from Our own Presence.
- Moses said to him:
- “May I follow thee,
- On the footing that thou teach me something
- Of the (higher) Truth Which thou has been taught?
If faith and reason find themselves in contradiction (…), either faith is wrong or reason is deficient, or faith is deficient and reason is wrong. Qur’anically speaking, faith and reason, the rational intellect (‘aql) and belief (īmān), are an inseparable generative mechanism of a serious relationship with God.
4. “Devastating” Academic Approach
During the exams I subscribed to this online Facebook group containing various shuyūkh [religious scholars] from Belgium and France, where someone asked the question: “Where is Allāh?” and the answers astonished me! I didn’t understand anything from it! Due to the courses in the mosque I had learned that God is up there, on his Throne10, but that wasn’t at all what these people were saying. It seemed as though these people were talking about a different religion!
- He it is Who has sent down to thee the book
- In it are verses basic or fundamental
- Clear (in meaning) (muhkamāt)
- They are the foundation of the book.
- Others are not entirely clear (mutashābihāt)
- But those in whose hearts is perversity
- follow the part thereof that is not entirely clear.
- Seeking discord, and searching for its interpretation
- But no one knows its true meanings except Allāh.
- And those who are firmly grounded in knowledge say
- “We believe in it, the whole of it is from our Lord”
- And none will grasp the Message except men of understanding.
- Verily those who plight their fealty to thee
- Plight their fealty in truth to Allāh:
- The Hand of Allāh is over their hands:
- Then any one who violates his oath
- Does so to the harm of his own soul
- And any one who fulfills what he has covenanted with Allāh,
- Allāh will soon grant him a great reward.
The sitting is not unknown, but how is un-thinkable. But it is obligatory to believe it and a reprehensible innovation to ask questions concerning this topic.
5. Changes in the Rational and Agentive Subject
What you properly take to be rational, at least in the sense of warranted, depends of what sort of metaphysical and religious stance you adopt. It depends on what kinds of beings you think human beings are, what sorts of beliefs you think their noetic faculties produce when they are functioning properly, and which of their faculties or cognitive mechanisms are aimed at the truth…. And so the dispute as to whether theistic belief is rational (warranted) can’t be settled just by attending to epistemological considerations; it is at bottom not merely an epistemological dispute, but an ontological or theological dispute.(Plantinga, cited in Alston 2006, p. 83)
6. Repercussions on Authority Formation
“I realize that religious knowledge is not the same as academic knowledge,” Fatma started, “but I nonetheless feel that teachers should say everything, starting from the beginning. They should show intellectual honesty. How can you know you’re on the right path if you don’t know everything?”“But the teachers who defend that you should start with one school [of thought],” the female teacher reacts, “feel that a lot of people aren’t ready yet to look for themselves elsewhere. I also think that a lot of people still feel really scared to act wrongly, to choose wrongly.” […]“I find it problematic,” Fatma continued, “that our teachers [by which she means male and female] aren’t educated properly or don’t have a diploma.”The teacher reacts: “I agree that some teachers don’t evolve. For me that is a big problem as well; there cannot be any stagnation. But I sometimes feel that the institute in which you’re engaged right now [i.e., the academized institute] becomes elitist. They should be careful in not dividing the community.”
There are lots of students who arrive in search of a shaykh. In their conception, having Islamic knowledge means having a shaykh. And as a professor, they put us in the position of shaykh to whom one should obey. Me, personally, I try to fight that idea. I try to make them understand that we aren’t here in a relationship of shaykh and disciples, but in an academic vision that seeks to build mutual knowledge between a professor and his students. The students take part in the construction of knowledge by their critical approach. (…) We are aware of the fact that lots of students who visit us are disappointed somehow; they are looking for clear-cut knowledge on what (not) to do, but unfortunately, previous educational initiatives have habituated people that this is what Islamic knowledge is all about; that Islamic knowledge is really a practical knowledge that you can practice immediately, without theory or reflection. Which is the image we want to alter: that Islamic knowledge is also a knowledge of reflection, very theoretical too. There is a very complex relationship between theory and practice, which coincide in Islamic history.(Extract from interview in the spring of 2015).
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
Primary Source
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1 | This was part of a PhD project at the Catholic University of Leuven (2013–2017), for which I have followed over 200 classes in fiqh (Islamic law), sirah (biography of the Prophet Muhammad), tafsīr (Quran exegesis), tajwīd (Quran recitation), al-akhlāq (ethics), usūl al-fiqh (legal studies), ‘aqīdah (creed), Hadīth (traditions of the Prophet and his Companions) and kalām (systematic theology). Half of the courses I attended were gender-mixed, whereas half were women-only. In addition, I conducted interviews with fellow students and teachers, complemented by individual or group talks during, before, after or outside of class. As an anthropologist, I wanted to grasp what kind of knowledge was being transferred and how this relates to personal and communal processes of piety and authority formation. |
2 | Note that the concept of internal reform (islāh), renewal (tajdīd) or revival has a long history in the Islamic tradition (Amir-Moazami and Salvatore 2003, p. 55). The term islāh is cited in the Quran under different derivations (more on this, see: Merad et al. 2012). Current reform or revivalist movements in Islam are often traced back to the famous Muslim modernist reformers at the end of the 19th century: Jamāl al-Dīn al-Afghāni (d.1897), Muhammad ‘Abduh (d.1905) and Muhammad Rashīd Ridā (d.1935). In a time of decolonization and the formation of nation-states, they gathered around the notion of islāh to think about ways to reform the Islamic society through a public engagement in the name of Islam. This was “certainly inspired by a variety of sources of influence [such as Western nation-state frameworks and discourses], but nonetheless rooted in a genuine sense of belonging to a tradition” (Amir-Moazami and Salvatore 2003, pp. 56–57). In the context of the Brussels courses I followed, the concept of “reform” (“se reformer”) was used to depict the ethical, pious self-disciplining process the courses aspired to initiate. Through these individual efforts of Muslim subjects, the entire Muslim community could ultimately be reformed. |
3 | “Sacred” does not mean to indicate “that which is completely set apart” from the profane, in a Durkheimian way. In the words of the Malaysian Islamic philosopher, Syed Naquib al-Attas: “Islam does not concede to the dichotomy of the sacred and the profane; the worldview of Islam encompasses both al-dunyah [the visible world] and al-akhirah [the invisible world], in which the dunyah-aspect must be related in a profound and inseparable way to the akhirah-aspect, and in which the akhirah-aspect has ultimate and final significance” (Al-Attas 1995, p. 1). My use of the depictions “sacred / religious knowledge” here indicates the object of knowledge, which belongs to the sphere of al-akhirah and differs from knowledge about the profane or al-dunyah. According to this logic, Abdullah Sahin recalls the historic division at Islamic madrassahs between religious sciences (naqliyāt), auxiliary sciences (alliyyāt) and philosophical and natural sciences (aqliyāt) (Sahin 2018). |
4 | This is a famous collection by Imam al-Nawawi (d. 1277). He was a Shāfi’i jurist, and collected these forty (though actually forty-two) Hadīths that are said to contain the most important values of Islam. Many commentaries on it have been written by scholars throughout the ages. Today, courses are often organized around the Forty Hadīth Nawawi, which are translated in multiple languages. |
5 | For more on this aspect of “listening” in order to “mold the heart”, see among others: (Hirschkind 2006). |
6 | Note how this does not coincide with the so-called insider–outsider dichotomy (Grimmit 1994). For more on this, see Groeninck and Welmoet 2020, in the introductory editorial to this Special Issue. |
7 | Alfred Schütz made a distinction in levels of knowledge between “the man on the street”, the “well-informed citizen” and the “expert”. Whereas the “expert’s knowledge is restricted to a limited field but therein it is clear and distinct,” the “man on the street has a working knowledge of many fields which are not necessarily coherent with one another”. It contains “a knowledge of recipes indicating how to bring forth in typical situations typical results by typical means.” The “informed citizen”, then, “stands between the ideal type of the expert and that of the man on the street. (...) To be well informed means to him to arrive at reasonably founded opinions in fields which as he knows are at least mediately of concern to him although not bearing upon his purpose at hand” (Schütz 1946, pp. 465–466). |
8 | In We Have Never Been Modern (Latour [1991] 1993), Bruno Latour argued against modern dichotomies like human and non-human, nature and society, material and immaterial. He explained that the modernist work of “purification” that would entail a complete dichotomous separation from nature and society, the material from the immaterial, the object from subject, has never taken place. Nature and society “expunging from each the traces of the other” (Pickering 1994, p. 257), have in reality never stopped coproducing each other, creating multiple “hybrids of nature and culture” (Latour [1991] 1993, p. 27; Pickering 1994, p. 257). |
9 | Besides reason, gnosticism and contemplation have a strong tradition in Islamic Sufism. In that case, the focus lies mostly on the heart (qalb), through which the intensity of conviction and faith might become even higher (Frank 1994, pp. 24, 40; Bakar [1998] 2012, p. 194). |
10 | As in the Qur’ānic verse: “Your Guardian Lord is Allāh, Who created the heavens and the earth in six days, then He settled Himself on the Throne” (Q. 7: 54). |
11 | More on the historical discussion among Qur’ānic scholars on the abrogating and abrogated verses, see (Burton 1985, 2016). |
12 | “He is the Creator of the heavens and the earth: He has made for you pairs from among yourselves, and pairs among cattle: By this means does He multiply you. There is nothing whatever like unto Him, and He is the One that hears and sees.” (Q. 42: 11) |
13 | More on the different stances towards the attributes of God: see among others Gilliot’s work on the tafsīr from al-Ṭabari (1990, p. 233. See also: Kindberg n.d.; Syamsuddin 1999; Shah 2019). |
14 | Leirvik has indicated this process with the concept of “self-formatting” by Muslim actors “who identify with the intellectual tradition of modern university theology” (Leirvik 2016, p. 129). The latter is a heritage from the Protestant Reformation, as it “connotes Protestant theology as done in the framework of a secular university, infused with liberal values conventionally associated with Northern European Protestantism. The term university theology is also strongly associated with academic freedom, albeit in constructive interaction with the religious tradition in question. Correspondingly, university theology (…) combines a practice-oriented insider perspective with a critically oriented outsider perspective” (Ibid.) For more on this dichotomy between “insider and confessional” versus “outsider and secular”, see Groeninck and Boender (2020) in the introduction to this Special Issue. |
15 | Referring back to the terminology used in the introductory editorial to this Special Issue (Groeninck and Boender 2020): this thus shows how this new assemblage consisting of specific entities (such as the institute, the teacher and the students) and their expression (the “academized” knowledge transmission) had within itself both territorializing (for instance, of the “norm of academization”) and deterritorializing forces (internal criticism, debate, and risk of fitna within the community) (Deleuze and Guattari 1987, pp. 87–88; DeLanda 2006, pp. 12–13; Weheliye 2014, pp. 46–49). |
16 | Potentiality, or “dynameis”, in Aristotle’s Metaphysics IX (Makin 2006) is understood here as “the abilities one acquires through specific kinds of training and knowledge” (Mahmood 2005, p. 147). Or in the words of Agamben: “The potentiality that interests him [Aristotle] is one that belongs to someone who, for example, has knowledge or an ability. In this sense, we say of an architect that he or she has the potential to build, of the poet that he or she has the potential to write poems” (Agamben 1999, p. 179, cited in Mahmood 2005, p. 147, n. 44). As further recapitulated by Agamben, Aristotle perceives such potentiality in terms of a hexis, a “having”, “on the basis of which he can also not bring this knowledge into actuality (me energein)” (Agamben 1999, pp. 179–180). |
17 | The historical tension between “rational” and “textual” approaches has been present in the development of usūl al-fiqh since the early days of Islamic jurisprudence (Hallaq 2005). Since the early ninth century (third century after the Prophet Muhammad) the different understandings of the authority of the Texts and trustworthiness of human reason led to two opposing movements not only in jurisprudence, but in theology as well; the most extreme ends of which were identified with juridical “rationalists” and “traditionalists” in the field of fiqh, and with Mu’tazilites and Hanbalites in the field of kalām. |
18 | Contemporary Belgian and French reformist thinkers, like Rachid Benzine (l’Observatoire du Religieux (Benzine 2004) and Michaël Privot (European Network Against Racism (Privot 2015, 2016a, 2016b)), argue for the necessity of rethinking the Islamic textual paradigms. Central to this effort is a complete hermeneutical deconstruction of the texts in order to historicize and analyse them “in the context of the cultural, political and ideological domain of the period in which it was first revealed and then later interpreted and put into practice” (Mahmood 2006, p. 339). As Privot writes together with Benzine in December 2015, the means thereto are: “Using every classical and contemporary method that is at our disposal: linguistics, semiotics, anthropology, epigraphy, historical critique … It’s only by using these scientific methods that we will be able to regain access to the Qur’ānic imaginary and to unravel what could have been the Prophet’s intention while addressing him to his surroundings. That means we have to re-read the Text from the position of the historical world that surrounded it, instead of making contemporary projections unto the Text” (Benzine and Privot 2015.) |
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Groeninck, M. Academization of Pious Learning: A Student’s Quest in Religious Education. Religions 2020, 11, 309. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11060309
Groeninck M. Academization of Pious Learning: A Student’s Quest in Religious Education. Religions. 2020; 11(6):309. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11060309
Chicago/Turabian StyleGroeninck, Mieke. 2020. "Academization of Pious Learning: A Student’s Quest in Religious Education" Religions 11, no. 6: 309. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11060309
APA StyleGroeninck, M. (2020). Academization of Pious Learning: A Student’s Quest in Religious Education. Religions, 11(6), 309. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11060309