More than simply tafsir maudhuiy

November 25th, 2009

Farahi was born in Phreha (hence the name “Farahi”), a village in the district of Azamgarh (Uttar Pradesh, India). He belonged to a distinguished family, and was a maternal cousin of the famous theologian-historian Allama Shibli Nomani (1858-1914).

After studying Arabic, Persian, and Islamic sciences with several prominent religious scholars-Shibli Nomani was one of them-Farahi, about twenty years of age, secured admission to the reputed Aligarh Muslim College in order to study modern disciplines of knowledge. His recommender was Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan (1817-1897), the founder of the college. In his letter addressed to the principal, an Englishman, Sir Sayyid wrote that he was commending him a young man who was a greater scholar of Arabic and Persian than the professors of the college. While a student at the college, Farahi rendered parts of the At-Tabaqat al-Kubra of Abu Abd Allah Muhammad ibn Sad az-Zuhri (784-845) into Persian. The translation was found to be so good that Sir Sayyid had it included in the collage syllabus.Farahi obtained his B.A from AIlahabad University.

For the next many years, Farahi taught Arabic at various institutions, including Aligarh and Dar-ul-Ulum., Hyderabad. During his stay in Hyderabad, Farahi conceived the idea of establishing a university where all religious and modern sciences would be taught in Urdu. The scheme he prepared for this purpose later materialized in the form of Jamiah Usmaniyyah, Hyderabad. He subsequently came to Sara-e-Mir, a town in Azamgarh, where he took charge of the Madrasa-tul-Islah (“School for {Muslim}Reform”), an institution based on the educational ideas of Shibli Numani and Farahi. Farahi had served as chief administrator of the school since its inception, but other engagements had until now kept him from becoming actively involved in its affairs.

From 1925, when he came to Sara-e-Mir, to 1930, the year of his death, Farahi devoted most of his time and energy to managing the affairs of the Madrasa-tul-Islah and teaching there. A few students-Amin Ahsan Islahi was one of them – received special training from him; they were supposed to become the bearers of his thought.

An erudite scholar, Farahi commanded knowledge of a number of languages, among them Hebrew and English. He learnt Hebrew from the German Orientalist Josef Horovitz (1874-1931) who was professor of Arabic at the Aligarh Muslim College Horovitz studied Arabic with Farahi.

Farahi’s chief scholarly interest was the Quran, the focal point of all his writings. Most of his published works are in the form of notes that were later complied by his students. Among his books, besides the three already mentioned, are: Mufradat al Quran (“Vocabulary of the Quran”), Asalib al Quran (“Style of the Quran”) Jamhara-tul-Balaghah (“Manual of Quranic Rhetoric”) and Iman fi Aqsam il Quran (“Study of the Quranic Oaths).

From Wikipedia:

Hamiduddin Farahi

Hamiduddin Farahi (1863-1930) was a celebrated Islamic scholar of Indian subcontinent known for his groundbreaking work on the concept of Nazm, or Coherence, in the Quran. He was instrumental in producing scholarly work which proved that the verses of the Quran are interconnected in such a way that each Surah, or Chapter, of the Quran forms a coherent structure, having its own central theme, which he called umood (the theme which stands out). He also started writing his own exegesis, or tafsir, of the Quran which was left incomplete due to his death in 1930. The Muqaddimah, or the Introduction, to this tafsir is an extremely important work on the theory of Nazm-ul-Quran.

Early life

Farahi was born in Phreha (hence the name “Farahi”), a village in the district of Azamgarh, Uttar Pradesh, India. He was a maternal cousin of the famous theologian-historian Shibli Nomani (1858-1914). He studied at Aligarh Muslim College at the recommendation of Sir Syed Ahmad Khan (1817-1897). In his studies, he proved himself to be an expert in Arabic and Persian languages. He completed his B.A. from Allahabad University.
[edit] As a teacher

After finishing his studies, Farahi taught Arabic at various institutions, including M.A.O. College and Dar-ul-Ulum, Hyderabad. While at Aligarh, he learnt Hebrew from the German Orientalist, Joseph Horovitz (1874-1931), who was a Professor of Arabic at the M.A.O. College. During his stay in Hyderabad, Farahi conceived the idea of establishing a University where all religious and modern sciences would be taught in Urdu. The scheme he prepared for this purpose later materialized in the form of Jamiah Uthmaniyyah, Hyderabad. He subsequently came to Sara-e-Mir, a town in Azamgarh, where he took charge of the Madrasatul Islah (School for Reform), an institution based on the educational ideas of Shibli Nomani and Farahi. Farahi had served as chief administrator of the school since its inception, but other engagements kept him away from becoming actively involved in its affairs. From 1925, when he came to Sara-e-Mir, to 1930, the year of his death, Farahi devoted most of his time and energy to managing the affairs of the Madrasa-tul-Islah and teaching there. A few students – Amin Ahsan Islahi was one of them – received special training from him and later became the bearer of his torch.
[edit] Recognition of his work

Farahi is well known to most scholars of the sub-continent, who have acknowledged his outstanding contribution to Islamic thought and learning.

Maulana Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi writes, “It has been generally accepted that in recent times, very few have reached the position Allama Farahi has been blessed with by the Almighty as far as deliberation on the Qur’an is concerned. He has spent the major portion of his life pondering on the meanings of this Book, and has written such a masterful commentary on the Qur’an that it is difficult to find its parallel even in the early period…” [1]

Maulana Shibli Nomani writes, “It is generally believed that a talented person can in no way remain unknown to the world. Experience as well as history bear testimony to this. However, each rule has an exception. Maulvi Hameed Uddin … is a good example of such an exception … In this age, his treatise “Tafseer Nizaam-ul-Quran” is as essential and beneficial to Muslims as pure water is to the thirsty and exhausted.”[2]

Maulana Syed Sulaiman Nadvi writes, ” … The Ibni Taimiyah of this age has died on 11 November 1930 — someone whose brilliance is very unlikely to be surpassed now and whose comprehensive command of oriental and occidental disciplines is a miracle of this era. A profound scholar of the Qur’an … a unique personality … an embodiment of piety … an unfathomable sea of knowledge … an institution within himself … a literary genius … a researcher of progigious intellect … It is a matter of great sorrow that such a brilliant personality graced the world and then perished, but the world could not recognize its grandeur … “[3]

Maulana Manazir Ahsan Gilani writes, “… the revivalist movement launched by Shah Wali Ullah [in the eighteenth century], in recent years has drawn inspiration from “Tafseer Nizaam-ul-Qur’an” the work of a distinguished scholar, Maulana Hameed Uddin Farahi. Among other features of this commentary (ie relationship between the Qur’an and the Bible, and various literary discussions), its salient feature is the unprecedented attempt in it to bring out the coherence between the verses. It is this coherence which sometimes provides enough evidence that the Qur’an is a Divine Book.” [4]

Maulana Abdul Majid Daryabadi writes, “In this age, Allama Hameed Uddin Farahi is the most outstanding personality as far as Qur’anic Studies are concerned. He not only occupies a distinguished position among the scholars of recent times, but, in fact, has discovered some new principles for the interpretation of the Qur’an. The foremost among them is his philosophy of coherence in the Qur’an.”[5]
[edit] Works

Most of Farahi’s work is in Arabic. Farahi’s chief scholarly interest was the Quran, the focal point of all his writings. Most of his published works are in the form of notes that were later compiled by his followers such Maulana Amin Ahsan Islahi and Allama Khalid Masud and others. Some of the books he wrote are:

* Mufradat al Quran (“Vocabulary of the Quran”)
* Asalib al Quran (“Style of the Quran”)
* Jamhara-tul-Balaghah (“Manual of Quranic Rhetoric”)
* Im’an Fi Aqsam al-Qur’an (A Study of the Qur’anic Oaths)
* ‘في من هو الذبيح’ (Fi man huwa al-Dhabih: Which of Abraham’s son was Sacrificed?)

Nizam al-Qur’an (Coherence in the Qur’an, a commentary on the Qur’an

Shopping Cart Dilemma

November 25th, 2009

I have gone through the experience of using two shopping cart solutions, Magento and Zen Cart.

To understand Zen Cart, you should understand OSCommerce. Coming from the CMS world, I see OSCommerce as akin to Drupal. From the perspective of a pro developer, it is highly flexible and robust. To noobs like me, it seems very crude and basic. Just like Drupal, OSCommerce can give you a lot of options but comes with very little default features.

Zen Cart is like Wordpress. Very organized structure and highly optimized performance. Enough features for the small to medium sized e-commerce website. Easy to work with for rookie developers.

When I came on board, I worked on Magento. It was my own suggestion as I had heard many good opinions about it. Magento has almost every feature you can think of. Unfortunately, it is very CPU and DB intensive, making it extremely sluggish on shared hosting services (BlueHost in my case). Magento is comparatively new and therefore very buggy and the online stores I built running Magento (3 of them in all) experienced a lot of downtime. I see it as the Joomla! equivalent of shopping carts.

The reason I stuck with Magento was to prepare myself for a big move on the organiztion’s main online store that was running on Zen Cart. Magento had the feature of building multiple store fronts and store sites sharing a single database. This is a powerful feature that can allow you to churn out many specialized sites on top of the present site without much increase in required store management.

As I have preferred Wordpress over Drupal and Joomla, I also like Zen Cart over OSCommerce and Magento. I really love Magento’s features, but there doesn’t seem to me any future in it for me simply due to its sluggish performance (or, expensive hosting) and unstable releases. Unlike Wordpress though, Zen Cart development has somewhat come to a standstill for the past two years.

I don’t want to revert back to a two year old technology in Zen Cart, yet its alternative Magento lives in the future rather than the present. I am at a dead end.

Siddiq Fadzil

November 23rd, 2009

This man is such a uniquely “Quranic” thinker among the Malays. I admire the tafsir maudhuiy approach very much. As I’ve lately distanced myself a bit from ivory tower intellectuals, I find Siddiq Fadzil as an ideal public intellectual, astounding statesman and orator. Of course there is always something to disagree with almost any scholar, I really admire the leadership of Siddiq Fadzil.

See some quotes and works by him here on this site - http://drsiddiqfadzil.blogspot.com/

Well said

November 22nd, 2009

“While we have simple internet students who can rattle off the latest attacks on al-Junaid, we are impoverished when it comes to finding one who can write a book of creed that deals with the problems of our youth in the West. Thus, he is equipped to save the 7th century Muslims from the Hashwiyah, but defenseless to answer the attacks of Dawkins, Crone and the cult of materialism in his own time.” (–Sh. Suhaib Webb)

The 4G war: LTE vs WiMAX

November 5th, 2009

The race for 4G wireless internet is heating up. On one side is Verizon-backed LTE technology. The opposing corner sees Sprint driving the push for Clearwire’s WiMAX infrastructure. As a CLEAR retailer, I am hopeful that WiMAX will prevail. If not for two years, at least until the next year.

Basically, WiMAX is an extension of Wi-Fi. Instead of covering ten feet as in WiFi, WiMAX would cover ten miles. As for LTE, it is seen as more of an improvement of UMTS 3G technology.

As can be seen, WiMAX has a headstart as it has already rolled out in various countries around the globe. My home country of Malaysia has P1 WiMAX. The aforementioned Clearwire has been in business in Europe. In America, Clearwire is slowly providing various major cities with WiMAX. Chicago must be the biggest city to have WiMAX right now, along with Dallas and Philadelphia.

A major reason for the slow development of 4G in America, I think, is the monopoly of Comcast for cable internet. Other than that, many buildings, hotels, and coffee shops provide wi-fi hotspots. If one is not covered by cable or hotspots, there is always 3G. Therefore, the need for 4G was not as immanent as in Malaysia where we see DSL-based Streamyx time and again embarrassingly bottlenecked. Hence the emergence of various 3G modems from Celcom, Maxis and Mimos’ p1 WiMAX. As a contrast, cable internet is only just beginning to come out, first in Pahang.

Coming back to the debate of LTE vs WiMAX, the author in this website sees LTE emerging victorious. His reason is the fact that LTE is a more natural evolution and upgrade of present UMTS infrastructure. On top of that, backing LTE is Verizon, a far larger telecom company than WiMAX-backing Sprint. However, an excellent comment below the article suggests otherwise. Technologically superior, WiMAX has been widely adopted worldwide (see list here), and will take an early lead in USA. Sprint too, is in a revival of sorts whereas Verizon has lacked creative marketing of late.

I will look back on this debate as being an active participant in pushing for WiMAX at the local level through CLEAR and my retail site, onlinesuperfast.com (aka 4gwirelessdeals.com and clearinchicago.com). Having said that, as a retailer, I can also offer LTE-based solutions in the future too. Competition always benefit us.

Cheapest Place for CLEAR 4G Wireless Internet

November 2nd, 2009
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This is for the coward at heart

October 11th, 2009

Quoted from a book I bought years ago at Toronto’s RIS. Says the Brazilian Catholic new-age novelist Paolo Coelho,

Pitiful is the person who is afraid of taking risks. Perhaps this person will never be disappointed or disillusioned; perhaps she won’t suffer the way people do when they have a dream to follow. But when that person looks back — and at some point everyone looks back — she will hear her heart saying, “What have you done with the miracles that God planted in your days? What have you done with the talents God bestowed on you? You buried yourself in a cave because you were fearful of losing those talents. So this is your heritage: the certainty that you wasted your life.”

Pitiful are the people who must realize this. Because when they are finally able to believe in miracles, their life’s magic moments will have already passed them by.

By the River Piedra I Sat Down and Wept

Blog Muqabalah

October 9th, 2009

Tuan Muqabalah telah menerbitkan beberapa esei yang sangat baik di mana saya perturunkan beberapa mutiara kata beliau untuk perkongsian:

Beza Political Activist dan Politician:

Political activist adalah individu yang berminat untuk melihat perubahan (ke arah kebaikan) berlaku di dalam masyarakat , sementara politician adalah individu yang berminat untuk mendapatkan kuasa politik (semada untuk dirinya atau kelompoknya). Kedua kelompok ini mungkin berkongsi (over-lapped) di beberapa aktiviti dan pandangan, dalam hal-hal yang lain (terutama tentang kepentingan dan matlamat memegang kuasa serta keutamaan dari segi nilai dan faham) mereka berbeza jauh.

Tentang aqidah politik:

..gambaran dalam masyarakat yang politik itu mempunyai huraian aqidahnya yang tersendiri. Antaranya huraian aqidah sunni, athari, shi’ah, muktazilah(rasionalis yang melampau) tidak lagi dianggap pokok-pokok fahaman yang perlu digarap, dilurusi dan diselaraskan, tetapi memberi sokongan kepada mana-mana parti politik itu yang dianggap memperjuangkan sesuatu cita-cita politik itulah syarat terasas untuk dapat berkongsi apa yang dianggap perkara aqidah. Seakan-akan duduk dalam sebuah organisasi parti yang sama itu bererti berkongsi aqidah yang sama, atau lebih dahsyatnya rosaklah aqidah seseorang sekiranya tidak bersama menyokong parti-parti tertentu..

Pandangan Ikhwanul Muslimin terhadap da’wah dan politik

Ikhwan al-Muslimin telah menjelaskan dengan terperinci pada website Ikhwan on-line yang parti tajaan mereka bukanlah parti agama, tetapi ‘civil party’, dengan maksud dalam skop politik ianya mendukung butiran perlembagaan nasional dan tidak mengaitkan hukum-hukum agama dalam meraih sokongan. Mereka mengakui parti mereka berinspirasikan ajaran Islam dan budaya rakyat Masir. Keanggotaannya terbuka kepada golongan muslim dan bukan muslim. Cita-cita mereka untuk mendirikan agama dalam masyarakat akan diteruskan dalam kerja-kerja dakwah mereka di atas platform Ikhwan al-Muslimin, dan bukannya platform parti politik mereka. Mereka membuat garis pemisah antara kegiatan dan matlamat parti mereka yang dihadkan oleh butiran perlembagaan dan peraturan negara daripada kerja-kerja dakwah yang tidak mempunyai sempadan.

Tentang pesta Aidil Fitri:

Kadang-kadang kita bimbang suasana kita menyambut hari yang begitu meriah sehingga ianya seakan-akan bertentangan dengan semangat Ramadan. Dua tiga hari di awal Syawal seakan-akan berperanan untuk menghapuskan kesan-kesan sebulan latihan intensif dalam Bulan Ramadan. Aduhai malangnya kita!

Kita bukan setakat tidak lagi bersembahyang terawih dan tahajjud selepas Ramadan, bahkan kita bimbang yang kita mulai meninggalkan sembahyang berjamaah.

Menjelaskan keutamaan pengislahan diri dengan memetik kata-kata Hassan Al-Banna (entri yang sangat baik untuk dihadam keseluruhannya – klik)

apabila jiwa manusia itu baik, maka baiklah pula pandangan mereka terhadap sistem yang ada. Apabila jiwa manusia itu fasad, maka fasadlah pandangannnya kepada sistem yang ada hatta walaupun nizam yang ada itu baik pada zatnya.(secara intrinsic-nya baik).

Sesungguhnya seorang qadi yang adil, wahai saudara, mungkin di depannya undang-undang yang zalim, bagaimanapun jiwanya yang baik dan keikhlasannya kepada keadilan serta kecintaannya kepada keadilan akan membawanya untuk mengeluarkan dari butiran dari undang-undang yang zalim itu hukuman yang adil.. Mungkin kita temui seorang qadi yang fasad jiwanya, yang mengikut hawa nafsunya di depan undang-undang yang adil, tetapi kefasadan jiwanya membawanya untuk mengeluarkan dari butiran undang-undang yang adil itu hukuman yang zalim yang sesuai dengan nafsunya.

Kritik Kemaraan gelombang PR

Kalaulah PR kelihatan akan terus mara ke hadapan, sebenarnya itu hanyalah persepsi kita sahaja. Sukar untuk PR bergerak ke depan, tetapi yang menyebabkan kita berilusi yang PR mara kehadapan adalah disebabkan BN yang mundur ke belakang, seolah-olah kita dalam pengalaman apabila dua gerabak keretapi berselisih, sebuah keretapi undur sementara yang satu lagi berhenti. Penumpang-penumpang yang berada di atas gerabak yang berhenti diam itu merasakan yang gerabaknya telah bergerak ke hadapan.

Perumpamaan golongan yang kononnya membawa tajdid:

Mereka berusaha untuk meremehkan golongan ulama dengan mendatangkan sesuatu perbincangan yang terpencil dalam kitab yang tertentu (bukanpun rujukan utama dalam mazhab) dan dijadikan seolah-olah ianya adalah isi utama kitab-kitab feqah mazhab. Lalu diserang perkara itu seolah-olah itulah musuh yang besar dan sangat mengancam. Umpama Don Quixote yang berkhayal dan membayangkan yang bangunan kincir angin itu adalah raksasa besar serta ganas dan dia terus menyerangnya bertubi-tubi dan lembingnya! Masyarakat kita juga punya Don Quixote, dan seperti Don Quixote dia juga ada pengikut yang setia. Don Quixote menunggang kuda, dan yang ini mungkin ada bahtera!

Nak lagi? Sila ziarah http://muqabalah2009.blogspot.com

An Economic Justification For Mass Media’s Islamophobia

October 8th, 2009

We begin with the assertion that it is a no brainer as to who controls America’s mass media. People in power want to consolidate power through the employment of mass media to create propaganda, subliminal messages, etc… People in power also need trillions of dollars in political campaigns to remain in power.

Let’s take an example. The Chicago Cubs baseball team averages 40,000 fans attending their games at Wrigley Field. Us Chicagoans all know that beer is perhaps the sole reason people go to Cubs games. Baseball games are pretty much a beer party, especially if the stadiums are close to college campuses (in the case of Chicago, it is not many blocks away from Loyola, DePaul, UIC and Northwestern).

Let’s estimate that half of the crowd drink beer, so that’s 20,000 bottles. But they normally drink at least two bottles, so that makes it 40,000 bottles of beer. If each beer costs $5, beer companies makes a staggering $200,000 per game. Multiply that to 160 baseball games per year, they would earn more than $300million of revenue from Cubs fans alone!

This is not to counting the remaining 30 big teams of Major League Baseball. What about the other major sports in America? Basketball, football, hockey, NASCAR, … What about all the other festivals in America? We know from statistics that drunk driving accidents during Christmas and New Year is at least as high as the sum total drunk driving accidents throughout the year. We could thus approximate the amount of alcohol consumption at this time is perhaps 50% of all alcohol consumption throughout the year.

The point being made is that billions and trillions of dollars are made from the alcohol industry. Companies involved in this industry would surely not mind giving billions to politicians to do anything they can to continue and even expand their business.

Given this fact, there is no other religion in the world more ardently prohibits alcohol consumption than Islam. Likewise is the case with gambling, pornography, hedonist entertainment and other vices. So this perhaps provides an economic reason for Islamophobia in America. What this also implies is that portrayal of Islam in the media can never be neutral.

Facebook

October 7th, 2009

Alert! Special guest at the MSD-Chicago Eid Ceremony, Dato Seri Dr Jamaluddin Jarjis, the new embassador of Malaysia to the United States, stated in his speech to the students that he is using a fake name in Facebook to unearth talented Malaysian students in America to be placed in top American corporations. Ah, better bloat my Facebook…

As a side note, you can catch a recording of the live performance of Purdue’s Hujan at the same ceremony on Facebook. Somewhat of an irony though, that the crowd cheered them sing the humanitarian-themed song of M Nasir’s Salam Dunia, when it was invoking us to reflect on the world’s suffering.