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Ebrahim E. I. Moosa
January 2016 Ebrahim E. I. Moosa Keough School of Global Affairs Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies University of Notre Dame 100 Hesburgh Center for International Studies, Notre Dame, Indiana, USA 46556-5677 [email protected] www.ebrahimmoosa.com Education Degrees and Diplomas 1995 Ph.D, University of Cape Town Dissertation Title: The Legal Philosophy of al-Ghazali: Law, Language and Theology in al-Mustasfa 1989 M.A. University of Cape Town Thesis Title: The Application of Muslim Personal and Family Law in South Africa: Law, Ideology and Socio-Political Implications. 1983 Post-graduate diploma (Journalism) The City University London, United Kingdom 1982 B.A. (Pass) Kanpur University Kanpur, India 1981 ‘Alimiyya Degree Darul ʿUlum Nadwatul ʿUlama Lucknow, India Professional History Fall 2014 Professor of Islamic Studies University of Notre Dame Keough School for Global Affairs 1 Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies & Department of History Co-director, Contending Modernities Previously employed at the University of Cape Town (1989-2001), Stanford University (visiting professor 1998-2001) and Duke University (2001-2014) Major Research Interests Historical Studies: law, moral philosophy, juristic theology– medieval studies, with special reference to al-Ghazali; Qur’anic exegesis and hermeneutics Muslim Intellectual Traditions of South Asia: Madrasas of India and Pakistan; intellectual trends in Deoband school Muslim Ethics medical ethics and bioethics, Muslim family law, Islam and constitutional law; modern Islamic law Critical Thought: law and identity; religion and modernity, with special attention to human rights and pluralism Minor Research Interests history of religions; sociology of knowledge; philosophy of religion Publications Monographs Published Books What is a Madrasa? University of North Carolina Press Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2015): 290. -
IBN QAYYIM Al-JAWZIYYAH 202
IBN QAYYIM al-JAWZIYYAH 202 60. Geburtstag (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, Mi$r al-isl#m! (Cairo: D!r al-Thaq!fah al- 2008), 15-56 (contains the edition of a taqr!" "Arabiyyah, 2003), 149-230; by Ibn Nub!tah); Everett K. Rowson, “An Alexandrian Age in Geert Jan van Gelder, “The Conceit of Pen and Fourteenth-Century Damascus: Twin Com- Sword: On an Arabic Literary Deabte,” Jour- mentaries on Two Celebrated Arabic Epis- nal of Semitic Studies 32 (1987): 329-60; tles,” Maml%k Studies Review 7 (2003): 97- "Awa# al-Ghub!r$, “al-Tan!%% f$ shi"r Ibn 110. Nub!tah al-Mi%r$,” in his Dir#s#t f! adab IBN QAYYIM al-JAWZIYYAH (1292 – 1350) LIVNAT HOLTZMAN Bar Ilan University WORKS Kit#b al-$al#h wa-&ukm t#rikih# (The Book of Prayer and the Legal Ruling on One Who Early Works Fails to Perform It); al-Fut%&#t al-qudsiyyah (The Jerusalem Tri- al-Tiby#n f! aqs#m al-Qur(#n (Explaining the umphs, not extant); Oaths in the Qur’an); al-Tu&fah al-makkiyyah (The Precious Gift from al-W#bil al-$ayyib min al-kalim al-*ayyib (The Mecca, not extant); Heavy Shower of Good Utterances); al-Mawrid al-$#f! (The Clear Spring, not extant); Hid#yat al-&ay#r# f! ajwibat al-yah%d wa’l- Ma'rifat al-r%& (Knowledge of the Soul, not na$#r# (Guiding the Bewildered, on Re- extant); sponses to the Jews and Christians); Tahdh!b Sunan Ab! D#(%d (The Neat Arrange- Kashf al-ghi*#( 'an &ukm sam#' al-ghin#( (Lift- ment of the Hadith Collection of Ab& D!'&d); ing the Veil from the Legal Ruling on Listen- al-Man#r al-mun!f f! ’l-$a&!& wa’l-)a'!f (The ing to Singing). -
An Analysis of Ibn Al-'Arabi's Al-Insan Al-Kamil, the Perfect Individual, with a Brief Comparison to the Thought of Sir Muhammad Iqbal
v» fT^V 3^- b An Analysis of Ibn al-'Arabi's al-Insan al-Kamil, the Perfect Individual, with a Brief Comparison to the Thought of Sir Muhammad Iqbal Rebekah Zwanzig, Master of Arts Philosophy Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Faculty of Philosophy, Brock University St. Catharines, Ontario © May, 2008 JAMES A GffiSON LIBRARY BROCK UNIVERSITY ST. CATHARINES ON 'I I,, >-•• Abstract: This thesis analyzes four philosophical questions surrounding Ibn al-'Arabi's concept of the al-iman al-kamil, the Perfect Individual. The Introduction provides a definition of Sufism, and it situates Ibn al-'Arabi's thought within the broader context of the philosophy of perfection. Chapter One discusses the transformative knowledge of the Perfect Individual. It analyzes the relationship between reason, revelation, and intuition, and the different roles they play within Islam, Islamic philosophy, and Sufism. Chapter Two discusses the ontological and metaphysical importance of the Perfect Individual, exploring the importance of perfection within existence by looking at the relationship the Perfect Individual has with God and the world, the eternal and non-eternal. In Chapter Three the physical manifestations of the Perfect Individual and their relationship to the Prophet Muhammad are analyzed. It explores the Perfect Individual's roles as Prophet, Saint, and Seal. The final chapter compares Ibn al-'Arabi's Perfect Individual to Sir Muhammad Iqbal's in order to analyze the different ways perfect action can be conceptualized. It analyzes the relationship between freedom and action. \ ^1 Table of Contents "i .. I. Introduction 4 \. -
Jihad, War, & Peace
2 | Is Islam a Conquest Ideology? On Jihad, War, & Peace Author Biography Shaykh Abu Aaliyah (Surkheel Sharif) is an imam, author, translator, and Director of The Jawziyyah Institute. Abu Aaliyah has studied the Islamic sciences (theology, law, and spirituality) with a number of scholars, and has been involved in Islamic teaching both in the UK and abroad since the late 1980s. He has authored a number of books including The Golden Rule of Differing and The Exquisite Pearl, and has translated several books from Arabic to English. He has an MA in Islamic Studies, serves as an imam for Eman Foundation in London, and has appeared on radio and TV. Some of his lectures, articles, essays and videos can be found at thehumblei.com, www.facebook.com/Jawziyyah and www.twitter.com/Abu_Aaliyah. Abu Aaliyah lives in London with his wife and four grown children. Disclaimer: The views, opinions, findings, and conclusions expressed in these papers and articles are strictly those of the authors. Furthermore, Yaqeen does not endorse any of the personal views of the authors on any platform. Our team is diverse on all fronts, allowing for constant, enriching dialogue that helps us produce high-quality research. Copyright © 2018. Yaqeen Institute for Islamic Research 3 | Is Islam a Conquest Ideology? On Jihad, War, & Peace Abstract Does the construct of jihad equate to ‘perpetual war’ in Islam's grand political mostly about blood and ﷺ scheme? And was the life of the Prophet Muhammad gore and body counts? These are the core issues addressed here. Muslim scholars have long identified two types of jihad (lit. -
Defining Shariʿa the Politics of Islamic Judicial Review by Shoaib
Defining Shariʿa The Politics of Islamic Judicial Review By Shoaib A. Ghias A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the Requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Jurisprudence and Social Policy in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in Charge: Professor Malcolm M. Feeley, Chair Professor Martin M. Shapiro Professor Asad Q. Ahmed Summer 2015 Defining Shariʿa The Politics of Islamic Judicial Review © 2015 By Shoaib A. Ghias Abstract Defining Shariʿa: The Politics of Islamic Judicial Review by Shoaib A. Ghias Doctor of Philosophy in Jurisprudence and Social Policy University of California, Berkeley Professor Malcolm M. Feeley, Chair Since the Islamic resurgence of the 1970s, many Muslim postcolonial countries have established and empowered constitutional courts to declare laws conflicting with shariʿa as unconstitutional. The central question explored in this dissertation is whether and to what extent constitutional doctrine developed in shariʿa review is contingent on the ruling regime or represents lasting trends in interpretations of shariʿa. Using the case of Pakistan, this dissertation contends that the long-term discursive trends in shariʿa are determined in the religio-political space and only reflected in state law through the interaction of shariʿa politics, regime politics, and judicial politics. The research is based on materials gathered during fieldwork in Pakistan and datasets of Federal Shariat Court and Supreme Court cases and judges. In particular, the dissertation offers a political-institutional framework to study shariʿa review in a British postcolonial court system through exploring the role of professional and scholar judges, the discretion of the chief justice, the system of judicial appointments and tenure, and the political structure of appeal that combine to make courts agents of the political regime. -
A View from Pakistan Clark B
University of St. Thomas Law Journal Volume 7 Article 9 Issue 3 Spring 2010 2010 Can Islamizing a Legal System Ever Help Promote Liberal Democracy?: A View from Pakistan Clark B. Lombardi Bluebook Citation Clark B. Lombardi, Can Islamizing a Legal System Ever Help Promote Liberal Democracy?: A View from Pakistan, 7 U. St. Thomas L.J. 649 (2010). This Article is brought to you for free and open access by UST Research Online and the University of St. Thomas Law Journal. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ARTICLE CAN ISLAMIZING A LEGAL SYSTEM EVER HELP PROMOTE LIBERAL DEMOCRACY?: A VIEW FROM PAKISTAN CLARK B. LOMBARDI* I. INTRODUCTION1 Over the past twenty-five years, academics have written a great deal about the relationship between Islam and democracy and between Islam and human rights. In the course of the scholarly discourse, debate has emerged as to whether the thickly liberal rule of law can survive in a society where the legal system is undergoing Islamization. Commentators can generally be divided into pessimists and cautious optimists. Pessimists suggest that, regrettably, Islamic values are essentially incompatible with the thickly lib- eral rule of law.2 The cautious optimists disagree.3 Cautious optimists argue * Associate Professor of Law, Adjunct Associate Professor of International Relations, Uni- versity of Washington. The author dedicates this article to the memory of his mother, Rosemarie Benner Lombardi, 1936–2009, relentlessly enthusiastic, supportive, and ever willing to think “outside the box.” 1. The research for this article grows out of an earlier research project whose findings were published in Clark B. -
Legal, Judicial and Interpretive Trends in Pakistan
Development of Khul‘ Law: Legal, Judicial and Interpretive Trends in Pakistan Muhammad Ahmad Munir Institute of Islamic Studies McGill University, Montreal January 2020 A thesis submitted to McGill University in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy © Muhammad Ahmad Munir, 2020 Table of Contents Abstract ................................................................................................................................................. 5 Résumé .................................................................................................................................................. 5 Acknowledgements .............................................................................................................................. 6 A Note on Transliteration .................................................................................................................... 8 Introduction .......................................................................................................................................... 9 The Question of Ijtihād: What is Ijtihād? ........................................................................................... 13 The ‘Ulamā’ in Modern Pakistan......................................................................................................... 19 Literature Review ................................................................................................................................. 26 Chapter Outline ................................................................................................................................... -
A Comparative Study of Ibn ‘Arabi and Al-Ghazali
American Journal of Undergraduate Research www.ajuronline.org Gender and Sexuality in Medieval Islamic Mysticism: A Comparative Study of Ibn ‘Arabi and al-Ghazali Emily Dovel* History Department, University of Portland, Portland, OR Student: [email protected]* Mentor: [email protected] ABSTRACT Mysticism, defined as a direct experience with God that cannot occur through intellectual knowledge, has the potential to offer women opportunities disallowed by a patriarchal society. Because mysticism exists outside of religious institutions and hierarchies, female mystics could receive opportunities for public expression often prohibited by Medieval Islamic societies. Islamic Mysticism, or Sufism, has a long history of prominent female mystics. However, Sufi thought in the 12th and 13th centuries was certainly affected by the misogynistic influences of the greater society. In order to explore the ideological conflict within medieval Sufism, between the potential for gender egalitarianism within mysticism and the influences of patriarchy, this paper examines the theology of two prominent Sufi mystics, Ibn ‘Arabi and al-Ghazali, and proposes some explanations for the large disparity between the two Sufis’ opinions on gender and sexuality. Specifically, al-Ghazali fully supports the subjugation of women, and even equates the perpetuation of patriarchy to religious piety. This paper argues that, living under the politically turbulent and authoritarian reign of the Seljuks in Iraq, during the late 11th and early 12th centuries, al-Ghazali was particularly disinclined to question traditional orthodoxy, particularly with regard to gender. Ibn ‘Arabi, by contrast, accepts the spiritual, intellectual, and legal equality of women to a remarkable extent. Raised in Muslim Spain in the late 12th and early 13th centuries, Ibn ‘Arabi was exposed to female mystics as teachers and experienced little political pressure to conform to traditional doctrine. -
Towards a Model of Muslim Women's Management Empowerment
administrative sciences Article Towards a Model of Muslim Women’s Management Empowerment: Philosophical and Historical Evidence and Critical Approaches Eugenie Samier 1,* and Eman ElKaleh 2 1 School of Education, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow G4 0LT, UK 2 Admissions and Registration Department, Zayed University, Dubai P.O. Box 19282, United Arab Emirates; [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected] Abstract: This paper constructs a culturally appropriate model for Muslim women’s empowerment in management and leadership positions that addresses sustainability goals of quality education, gender equality, economic growth and reducing inequalities, as well as national and cultural differences from Western women’s empowerment models. The approach to model building begins with two sources of evidence for women’s empowerment—first, the empowerment of women recognised in the Qur’an and Sunnah, and in the historical-biographical record, particularly in the early Islamic period that draws to some extent on hermeneutics. This is followed by identifying four approaches that can be used in constructing a comprehensive model of Muslim women’s empowerment: Bourdieu’s social, cultural and intellectual capital theory; multiple modernities theory that recognises societal diversity; cultural security arguments for the preservation of cultures; and postcolonial critiques that argue for diversity through decolonising. The main argument of this paper is that sustainability goals cannot be achieved without a model appropriate to the valuational, cultural and societal context in which women are educated and work. The final section of this paper proposes a multidimensional and Citation: Samier, Eugenie, and Eman ElKaleh. 2021. Towards a Model of multilevel model that can be used as a guidance for empowering Muslim women in management Muslim Women’s Management and leadership positions. -
IQBAL REVIEW Journal of the Iqbal Academy, Pakistan
QBAL EVIEW I R Journal of the Iqbal Academy, Pakistan October 1978 Editor Muhammad Moizuddin IQBAL ACADEMY PAKISTAN Title : Iqbal Review (October 1978) Editor : Muhammad Moizuddin Publisher : Iqbal Academy Pakistan City : Lahore Year : 1978 Classification (DDC) : 105 Classification (IAP) : 8U1.66V12 Pages : 77 Size : 14.5 x 24.5 cm ISSN : 0021-0773 Subjects : Iqbal Studies : Philosophy : Research IQBAL CYBER LIBRARY (www.iqbalcyberlibrary.net) Iqbal Academy Pakistan (www.iap.gov.pk) 6th Floor Aiwan-e-Iqbal Complex, Egerton Road, Lahore. Table of Contents Volume: 19 Iqbal Review: October 1978 Number: 3 1. IQBAL’S LECTURE ON IJTIHAD ......................................................................... 4 2. ELEGIAC NOTE IN IQBAL’S POETRY ............................................................ 13 3. IQBAL—A VIEW OF POLITICO-CULTURAL PERSPECTIVE ................. 38 4. QUAID-I AZAM AND ISLAMIC CULTURE..................................................... 44 5. IQBAL’S RELATION WITH THE BRITISH IMPERIAL POWER .............. 56 6. A STUDY OF LOCKE’S ATTACK ON INNATE KNOWLEDGE IN COMPARISON TO DESCARTES AND LEIBNIZ .......................................... 59 7. BOOK REVIEWS ....................................................................................................... 75 IQBAL’S LECTURE ON IJTIHAD Muhammad Khalid Masud Iqbal’s lecture on ijtihād (“The Principle of Movement in the Structure of Islam”) constitutes the sixth chapter in his Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam. The first six of the seven chapters in this book were delivered as lectures in the Universities of Madras, Hyderabad and Aligarh during the years 1928 and 1930. Although much has been written about these lectures, yet the one on ijtihād has not earned as much scholarly attention as it deserved. It has been evaluated variably by commentators, mostly with a slight regard for the originality of its thought. The reasons for the complacency or indifference of the scholars to this lecture are worth investigating. -
Muhammad Khalid Masud
ISIM NEWSLETTER 3 / 9 9 ISIM 3 Institutional News NATHALM.DESSING ISIM’s New Academic Director Muhammad Khalid Masud phone, and the use of toothbrushes, estab- book Iqbal’s Reconstruction of Ijtihad (Lahore, of existing scholarly analysis of Muslim poli- lished his enduring interest in methodology 1995). His extensive international experience tics. Supporting James Piscatori, he suggests and the impact of social change on Islamic also includes a stay in Nigeria from 1980 to that many scholars resort to impressionistic law. The questions posed by such novelties 1984, where he was senior lecturer at the Cen- and general statements, for example in as- could not be solved within the framework of tre for Islamic Legal Studies at the Ahmadu suming that the nation-state constitutes an the widely accepted theory concerning the Bello University in Zaria. There he taught Ma- appropriate unit of analysis in the Muslim 'usûl al-fiqh, developed by Al-Shâficî and fur- likite law and had the opportunity to become world. He has also co-edited a volume entitled ther refined by subsequent Muslim scholars. acquainted with Malikite law in practice. He Islamic Legal Interpretation: Muftis and Their According to them, there are four sources of was a member of the Committee on the Com- Fatwas (Harvard University Press, 1996). This is evidence in Islamic law: the Koran, tradition parative Study of Muslim Societies, Social a collection of analytical studies of specific fat- Professor Muhammad Khalid Masud has recently literature (hadîth), consensus (ijmâc), and rea- Science Research Council, New York, from was on various issues contributed by several been named Academic Director of the ISIM for three soning by analogy (qiyâs). -
Catalogue CONTENTS
THE ISLAMIC TEXTS SOCIETY Catalogue CONTENTS QUR’ĀN, SĪRA & ḤADĪTH The Comprehensive Exposition of the Interpretationof the Verses of the Qurʾān 4 The Holy Qur’ ān: Translations of Selected Verses 5 Muhammad: His Life Based on the Earliest Sources 6 The Life of the Prophet Muhammad 7 Al-Nawawī’s Forty Hadith 8 Forty Hadith Qudsi 9 Ḥadīth Literature: Its Origin, Development & Special Features 10 ISLAMIC LAW & JURISPRUDENCE Copyright in Islamic Law 11 Muslims in non-Muslim Lands: A Legal Study with Applications 12 Al-Shāfiʿī’s Risāla: Treatise on the Foundations of Islamic Jurisprudence 13 Language and the Interpretation of Islamic Law 14 On Schacht’s Origins of Muhammadan Jurisprudence 15 Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence 16 Islamic Commercial Law: An Analysis of Futures and Options 17 Citizenship & Accountability of Government: An Islamic Perspective 19 The Right to Education, Work and Welfare in Islam 20 The Right to Life, Security, Privacy and Ownership in Islam 20 Freedom of Expression in Islam 21 Equity and Fairness in Islam 21 Freedom, Equality and Justice in Islam 22 The Dignity of Man: An Islamic Perspective 22 THE GHAZĀLĪ SERIES Al-Ghazālī on Poverty and Abstinence 24 Al-Ghazālī on Invocations and Supplications 25 Al-Ghazālī on the Manners Relating to Eating 26 Al-Ghazālī on the Lawful and the Unlawful 27 Al-Ghazālī on Conduct in Travel 28 Al-Ghazālī on Disciplining the Soul & on Breaking the Two Desires 29 Al-Ghazālī on Patience and Thankfulness 30 Al-Ghazālī on Love, Longing, Intimacy and Contentment 31 Al-Ghazālī on Intention,