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ISLAM
AND
COMMUNISM
by
MAULANA AFTAB-UD-DIN AHMAD
Editor: “The Light” Lahore — Pakistan
www.aaiil.orgCONTENTS
FOREWORD
INTRODUCTION see
Marxist Philosophy —Marxist Economics—Marxist
Theory of State and Revolution—The Islamic Socio -
Economic System.
CHAPTER I
ECONOMIC NEEDS— SUBJECTIVE AND
OBJECTIVE
Religion and Class-war—Islam and Eradication “of
poverty.
CHAPTER IL
ASSUMPTIONS AND PRINCIPLES OF COMMUNISM
Dreams and Realities -The Correct Structure of
Society—Communism and _ Internationalism—The
Economic View of Life.
CHAPTER Il
COMMUNISM IN PRACTICE
The October Revolution—Communism and Sex-
Morality —Capital and Capitalism—Moral not Eco-
nomic—State and National Economy—A Study in
Comparison.
19
43
66FOREWORD
Maulana Aftab-ud-Din Ahmad (1901 - 1951), the author
of Islam and Marxism, was a distinguished scholar, specialist
in Comparative Religion, and missionary of Islam to East and
West. He was for many years the Imam of the Woking
Mosque and Secretary of the Woking Muslim Mission, Woking
(Surrey, England), He also edited the monthly Islamic
Review (from both Woking and Lahore) and the weekly
Light (Lahore).
Maulana Aftab-ud-Din Ahmad believed in simple living
and high thinking and sincerely and earnestly practised
what he preached. He was the least dogmatic of the Teligious
scholars and was amazingly liberal and progressive in his
views. He always kept an open mind, was receptive to new
ideas, and ever ready to embrace truths wherever he found
them. He combined a genuine interest in mysticism (Sufism)
and mystical insight with modern, enlightened, scientific
approach to religion. His deep commitment to Islam made
him genuinely sympathetic to man and inspired him to work
to the utmost for the welfare and happiness of human
beings.
Maulana Aftab-ud-Din Ahmad had considerable know-
ledge of modern thoughts and intellectual and social move-
ments of the twentieth century and showed sympathetic
understanding of the problems and difficulties of the moderr
youth. He had given deep thought to the problem of presznt-
ing Islam to the modern young men and women in a manner
that they could understand and appreciate.
Islam and Marxism was originally published as a series
of articles in the Light Weekly during 1951. The Communist
ideology and movement have undergone considerable changes
since then, but the central thesis here presented is as valid
today as it was in 1951.
THE PUBLISHERSINTRODUCTION
Nobody today is likely to dispute the fact that Com-
munism is an important force in our modern world. Not
only are there nearly sixty million Communists (in the
precise sense of members of Communist parties) spread
throughout the world, but more than a third of the total
population of the earth lives under Communist governments,
and outside that area the ideas of Communism are an in-
escapable challenge to all thinking people.
No single man invented Communism. But of all Com-
munist thinkers Karl Marx is by common consent the greatest
as well as the most influential. Marx was at once a philoso-
pher, a historian, a sociologist, an economist, and an active
controversialist in the struggles which characterized his
lifetime. He outlined a framework of the future course of
events on which he based prescriptions for strategy on the
part of those who wished to change the nature of society.
There are, according to Lenin, three sources and three
component parts of Marxism: (1) the Marxist philosophy,
(2) the Marxist economics, and (3) the Marxist theory of
state and revolution.
Marxist Philosophy
In the background of the philosophy of Marx is Hege-
lian dialectic and nineteenth century materialism. Materi-
alism before Marx had developed on mechanistic lines.
According to this view, matter from all enternity had followed
unchangeable mathematical laws of motion. Marx did not
agree with the mechanistic view of matter because it left
no room for development. The purpose of Marx was neither
metaphysical nor epitemological. He was primarily a
revolutionary. The purely mechanical explanation of the
universe did not fit into his purpose. As a revolutionaryMarx was naturally attracted to Hegelian dialectic because
it depicted conflict and change as the essence of existence.
He therefore combined materialism with Hegelian dialectic
to produce his theory of Dialectical Materialism.
According to Hegel, reality is dynamic and rises to
higher forms by perpetual creation of opposites (thesis and
antithesis) and a subsequent synthesis of the conflicting
factors. This process of conflict goes on, according to Hegel,
in reality as well as in thought. Thus there is progressive
unfoldment of the Absolute Idea in the universe. Karl Marx
rejected the idealistic nature of the philosophy of Hegel
and replaced the Absolute Idea with Eternal Nature con-
ceived as matter, though he retained the basic pattern of the
Hegelian dialectic. “To Hegel’, wrote Marx in the first
volume of Capital, “the process of thinking, which under the
name of ‘Idea’ he even transforms into an independent sub-
ject, is the demi-urgos (the creator, the maker) of the real
world.... With me, on the contrary, the idea is nothing else
than the material world reflected by the human mind and
translated into forms of thought.’ The ultimate reality
is, thus, material but dynamic and perhaps even purposive.
While thus expounding philosophical materialism,
Karl Marx carried it through to the end, extending its mode
of understanding nature to the understanding of human
society. Just as a man’s knowledge, according to Marx,
reflects nature (i.e., matter in a state of development), which
exists independently of him, so also the social understanding
of man (that is, his various views and teachings: philosophi-
cal, religious, moral, political, etc.) reflects the economic
structure of society. In this way Marx arrived at an economic
interpretation of history. Marx’s theory of Historical Materi-
alism states that the economic system prevalent at any given
time is the substructure of society which is primary, and
that religion, laws, ethics, political system and other insti-4
tutions form the superstructure, which is secondary, being
determined by the former. From the point of view of produc-
tion and distribution, Marx divides human history into five
stages—the primitive communist or cooperative stage, the
stage of slavery, feudalism, capitalism, and socialism. The
progress has taken place inevitably from stage to stage,
according to. the dialectical principle. Marx states that capi-
talism contains within itself the germ of its opposition and,
by the inexhorable process of history, capitalism must give
way to socialism.
Marx, it has been pointed out, took over the triad of
thesis, antithesis and synthesis from Hegel, which he found
to be true of material nature. Nevertheless, Marx endows
matter which should, on the strict materialist theory, have
neither values nor purposes, with purposive dialectical move-
ment in which every stage of synthesis is higher than the
thesis and the antithesis. This means introducing through
the backdoor an idealist principle while professing to banish
all idealism as unscientific. :
The rapid progress of the physical sciences and tech-
nology in the ninetheenth century had led to the concept
that all reality was material and that even the mind of man
was but a refulgence of the material brain and had no inde-
pendent substantive reality. Many scientific thinkers of that
age were inclined towards materialism. Marx’s philosophy
is a typical product of the intellectual climate of the nine-
teenth century. Since then, in the twentieth century, many
new discoveries have been made by scientists that have
brought about radical change in human outlook and thought.
Great scientists like Eddington, James Jeans and Einstein
have in their books expounded the idealistic implications of
modern science and made it possible for many modern scien-
tific thinkers to return to religion and believe in God.The design, harmony and purposiveness in the universe;
the miracle of life; the instincts in the animals by which they
are guided successfully in the course of their lives; the reason,
free-will and conscience in man; his capacity to distinguish
between right and wrong, good and bad, true and false,
and his will to fight against his own desires, which he judges
as evil, and even to lay down his life for an ideal—all these
are indisputable proofs of the existence of God. The fact
is that belief in the existence of God is an inescapable
demand of moral consciousness. In order that morality may
be a conscious and rational pursuit, it is necessary that the
universe should be a Moral Order. And it cannot be a Moral
Order unless there is a Moral Creator and Ruler, who has
created it for a moral end and endowed it with a moral
constitution, and who governs and rules it for the fulfilment
of a moral purpose. Indeed, morality has no valid and in-
violable sanction except in the belief in the existence of God.
Above all, God’s existence is the stern demand of the spiri-
tual consciousness of humanity, which found its most
vigorous expression in the lives of numberless spiritual
luminaries throughout human history, which influenced
human destiny in a manner as no other force did. Ultimately,
the surest proof of the spiritual nature of the ultimate
reality (as opposed to the materialist view of Marx) and of
the existence of God is God’s revelation of Himself to those
who sincerely and earnestly seek Him and to the prophets of
many nations and ages.
Scientific method and reason are undoubtedly valuable
sources of knowledge and of great practical. use to man,
but they have their limitations. Scientific method and reason
can tell us nothing about the ultimate reality, the meaning
of the universe, the purpose of man’s existence, the mystery
of life and death and many other similar questions that have
persistently appeared in the mind of man and are of vital
interest and importance to him. They can tell us nothing at6
all about values like truth, beauty and goodness. The answers
to these questions come to man only by means of what Iqbal
called Religious Experience, the highest form of which is
God’s revelation to the prophets.
Marx’s view that the economic factor is the primary
factor (the substructure) in human society, and that the reli-
gious beliefs and moral values are parts of the superstructure
which is determined by the economic system at a given
time, is a falsification of history. This theory totally ignores
the role of great prophets, saints and idealists in history.
Again and again it has been seen that a new religious faith,
revealed through a prophet, has brought about revolutionary
changes and reforms in the socio-economic system, rather
than being itself determined by the latter. The fact is that
man is a being endowed with intelligence and this develops
as he rises in the scale of civilization. Through it he provides
himself with the means of subsistence, and at the same time
with the political system, the laws, art forms and the like
that he regards as necessary for his security and well-being.
The two are parts of the same process, and there is no
occasion to bring them into opposition and to make the one
dependent upon the other. If it be that the way in which men
think and the various institutional and other forms to which
their ideas give rise are influenced by the manner in which
they make their living, the converse is equally true. It must
be conceded that Karl Marx has made an important contri-
bution to human thought by emphasizing the importance of
the economic factor, which had been seriously neglected,
but he has given it an undue prominence and thus over-
simplified.the complexity of the social situation.
Marxist Economics
Marx accepts in its entirety the doctrine which
embodies the orthodox English economics of the nineteenth
century, that labour is the source of value, develops it, andthen bases upon it conclusions which are almost exact
antithesis of those drawn by the orthodox economists.
Like most of the writers who preceded him, Marx
attributed the economic value of commodities to the labour
expended on them. This was in essence Ricardo’s view.
Marx developed this view by adding that in order to produce
value the labour must be socially necessary. Value in
exchange, as markets develop, may be measured in money
terms, but if all illusions and deceptions of money are.
penetrated, the consumer who wishes to use an article is
merely ‘paying for the socially necessary labour that went
into it. Money is the intermediary.
The capitalist, however, is not buying articles for use,
he is buying articles for resale. A cotton-mill owner buys
yarn, spindles and the labour of the workers. Each of these
components of the final product costs him the price of the
labour that went into it. But he manages to sell the product
of his mill for more than it cost him. If he did not then there
would be no profit in the transaction. From where does this
extra value come? It is created by the labour of the workers.
What the employer pays the worker is only enough to keep
the worker alive (Here is the Malthus-Ricardo “Iron law
of Wages”). But what he collects from the customer is the
true value of labour put into the article. There is a great dif-
ference between the true value of the labour put into the
article by the labourer and what the capitalist pays the
labourer as his wages. The difference between the two is
what Marx calls “surplus value”, which is created by the
labour of the worker but is appropriated by the capitalist
as his profit. Thus, the capitalist, in the process of accumu-
lating wealth for himself, robs and exploits the worker.
Let us assume, for example, that it would take only a
half working-day’s work to produce the mifiimum of sub-8
sistence of a wage-earner for a whole day. Since the employer
need offer no more than is required to maintain the supply
of labour, he will pay a wage equivalent of the minimum
of subsistence, or for a half day’s work. But does he require
his employee to work only half a working-day? By no means;
he insists that the worker shall put in, not four hours (half
a working day), but eight hours (a full working day), though
he pays him wages equivalent to the value of the labour of
only half a working day. Or suppose the employer introduces
new machinery that will double the output of the worker
in a day. Does he then double the wages? Not at all; he keeps
the surplus value for himself. Only in such ways is privately
owned capital accumulated, since if the capitalist paid out
to the worker all the value created by the latter, he would
accumulate nothing.
By thus putting together the classical theory of value
and the classical theory of wages, Marx demonstrated the
inevitability of exploitation of the worker by the capitalist
in a system where the means of production are privately
owned (i.e., in a capitalist system). Marx predicted that the
natural laws of capitalist development would lead to the
elimination of neutrals in the class struggle, so that a rela-
tively few capitalists, on the one hand, would confront a
vast propertyless class of workers, or “proletariat”, on the
other. This division of people into opposing forces would
come about through the spread of industry and big business,
which would gradually absorb farmers of the land, take away
the occupation of handicraftsmen and small tradesmen,
and concentrate the ownership of capital in fewer and fewer
hands. As the development of capitalism approaches its
climax the working class would be subject to increasing
misery. In the end, capitalism would falter and collapse as
a solven system from its own “internal contradictions”. It
could maintain itself only by continual extension into new
sectors of production in the countries where it was strongest,9
and into new areas of the world. Marx regarded monopolies,
cartels and colonialism as advanced stages of capitalism.
After Marx, Lenin expounded the theory that ‘Imperialism’
was the final, the ‘highest’ stage of capitalism. Eventually
capitalism would have spread its blight so widely that there
would be no more territory for it to conquer and exploit.
In the meantime it would be subject to more and more
periodic crises, caused by glutting of markets and accom-
panied by general unemployment.
It would be futile to deny the greatness of Karl Marx
as a political economist or the truth of his general theory
of capitalist exploitation. But that does not mean that all
his ideas are equally true or that his theory is completely
valid even today when capitalism itself has changed radically
from what it was in Marx’s lifetime. Modern economic
thought has cast doubt on the classical explanation of ‘value’
as proceeding from labour time. Its derivative, the surplus
value theory, therefore, also goes by the board and removes
one of the principal planks from the Communist bark. It
would be arbitrary to assign all surplus value to the efforts
of labour, to the exclusion of the persons who provide land,
capital and machines or the entrepreneur and the manager.
Karl Marx regarded his political economy to be a
science. One recognised test of any scientific theory is the
valid predictions by use of its logic. A favourite and obvious
method of criticising Marx’s economics is to demonstrate the
historical errors in his predictions. Agriculture has not be-
come subject to concentrated industrial ownership; indepen-
dent businessmen and self-employed persons greatly out-
number big capitalists, the “industrial proletariat” proper,
far from being almost all-inclusive, is not even a majority in
most countries. The working class has not suffered increasing
misery, but has enjoyed, in most industrial nations, rising
trend of real wages and higher standards of living ever since10
the middle of the nineteenth century. There have been severe
depressions, inflation and unemployment, but no proof
exists that depressions are, on the average, deeper or longer
than when Marx wrote. The proletariat has not carried out
a socialist revolution in any higher industrial state; what
goes by the name of Communism has won its victories
chiefly in backward and marginal regions.
Marxist Theory of State and Revolution
Karl Marx is in a very real sense the father of socialism.
Before Marx there had, of course, been numerous theorists
who, dissatisfied with the existing society, had found vent
for the dissatisfaction in criticising capitalism and planning
ideal utopias in which property was held in common and in-
justice was unknown. Some, like Robert Owen, had even
attempted to give their ideals concrete expression, by the
formation of model communities whose inhabitants were
required to live the particular kind of life which the founder
of the community considered to be the best life for men.
But “utopian socialism”, writes Lenin, “could not show
a real way out.” It was unable to explain the essence of wage
labour under capitalism, to discover the laws of its develop-
ment, or to find that social force capable of becoming the
creator of a new society.”
Marx, then, is the first socialist writer whose work can
be termed scientific. He not only sketched the kind of
society which he desired, but described in detail the stages
through which it must evolve. He considered the collapse
of capitalism and the socialist revolution to be the inevitable
results of the “Internal contradictions” of capitalism and of
class struggle. In the famous Communist Manifesto, Marx
and Engels wrote:
“The history of all hitherto existing society is the his-
tory of class struggles.il
“Freeman and slave, patrician and plebian; lord and
serf, guild-master and journeyman, in a word, oppressor and
oppressed, stood in constant opposition to one another,
carried on an uninterrupted, now hidden, now open fight,
a fight that each time ended, either in a revolutionary re-
constitution of society at large, or in the common ruin of
the contending classes.......-
“The modern bourgeois society that has sprouted from
the ruins of feudal society has not done away with class
antagonism. It has but established new classes, new con-
ditions of oppression, new forms of struggle in place of the
old ones.
“Qur epoch, the epoch of the bourgeoisie, possesses,
however this distinctive feature: it has simplified the class
antagonisms. Society as a whole is more and more splitting
up into two great hostile camps into two great classes directly
facing each other: Bourgeoisie and Proletariat.”
Marx pointed out that the bourgeoisie and the pro-
letariat have no interests in common. Between them is a
gulf which only a revolution involving a complete transfor-
mation of society can bridge. The ultimate Marxist-Commu-
nist aim—that is, the emancipation of humanity and the
abolition of classes—would be realized in two distinct stages:
(1) Following the revolution and seizure of power by the
Communist party, representing the proletariat, there would
be a transitional socialist stage based on the domination of
the state by the working class; (2) then will come a Commu-
nist, classless stage, in which the state as a repository of
authority would vanish. .
In the first (the socialist) stage, constitutional means
would be abandoned, the machinery of the existing state12
superceded, and a revolutionary dictatorship of the prole-
tariat proclaimed. In the economic sphere, the private owner-
ship of the means of production would be abolished and
important industries and services would be brought under
public ownership and control, industry would be carried
on for the purpose of administring to the needs of.the com-
munity, and not with the object of making profits for indi-
viduals; the motive of social service, which is at present
thwarted by the capitalization of industry, would be sub-
stituted for the incentive of private profit, and the principle
governing the society will be “From each according to his
ability, to each according to his work’’. Modern Communists
have never hesitated to emphasize the severity and bitter-
ness of the struggle which will accompany the overthrow of
the capitalist class. Armed violence will be necessary on the
part of the workers, not only to dispossess the capitalists,
but’ to resist counter-revolutions designed to restore them,
from within as well as from without.
In the final (the Communist) stage, there will be no
classes and the state will become superfluous. Being an orga-
nization formed on a class basis to advance class interests,
the state ceases to have any raison d’etre as soon as it has
suppressed class distinctions. It will then, in Lenin’s words,
“wither away”, giving place to a free society of voluntary
associations formed for the transaction of public business.
. The principle which will govern this society will be “From
each according to his ability, to each according to his need”’.
There are two aspects of the Marxist theory of the state
and the revolution, as sketched above, which the conscience
of mankind finds most disturbing: (1) the doctrine of class
struggle; and (2) the dictatorship of the proletariat.
To begin with, the notion of class struggle is a myth,
and the very exhortation to the workers to unite is an13
admission that there is no natural proletarian solidarity, as
is attested by the relations in any particular country between
white and coloured labour, skilled and unskilled labour, etc.
Still less is there an identity of interests between workers
in different countries. Measures which perpetuate the poverty
of workers in one country are beneficial to those in another;
while in no advanced country will the workers accept cheap
foreign labour. And, again, all experience has hitherto proved
that whenever the existence of any country appears to be
threatened from without, its preservation is regarded as the
dominant interest by all classes. And yet on the basis of this
myth of class struggle the Marxists create hatred between
yarious sections of the society and stir up troubles and re-
volutions which result in terrible cruelty, bloodshed and
destruction.
The critics of Marxism have not failed to point out that
the application of Marx’s revolutionary doctrine leads to a
greater tyranny than that which they overthrow. The dicta-
torship of the proletariat in fact means the dictatorship of
the Communist party bosses, who, soon after the revolution
settles down, become, as Milvan Dijilas has ably shown, a
New Class and begin dominating and oppressing the masses
of people just as any ruling class in former times has done.
Marxism was an ideology of protest against the evils of
capitalist industrialization, but it has become instead the
ideology of state-industrialization leading to centralized
controls, postponement of consumption and rapid economic
growth, as in Russia. The workers in that state, where the
Communist experiment was first tried, are now subservient
to a dominant governing class—the party —which has acquir-
ed ownership of all property, in effect. The most formid-
able objection to the Communist system is that it leads
to compulsive regimentation of all activities and no place
is left for individual initiative and freedom of thought and
action. Against the party line no one can think, say or14
do any thing. The workers can have no right to strike, for,
in theory, that would be a strike against themselves. Under
such a system the personality of man has little chance of
fulfilment in all its reaches. Marx had predicted that ulti-
mately the state would wither away. But the fact is that in
- Communist countries the state is all powerful and the ideals
of classless society and stateless democracy have receded
farther than ever. What has withered away in Communist
countries is not the state, but individual personality, human
rights and basic freedoms.
The Islamic socio-economic system
Like the other great faiths, Islam totally rejects the
materialist philosophy of Karl Marx and believes in an
Omnipotent, Omniscient, Omnipresent, All-wise, All-good,
All-just, All-merciful and All-loving God, Who is not only
the Creator, Sustainer and Ruler of all the worlds, but also
the supreme Guide to man. He is a living God Who reveals
Himself to man and guides him to the right path. Islam
believes in the immortality of the human soul, in man’s
personal responsibility for his actions, and in the life after
death. It exhorts, encourages and strengthens man to become
good and to do good, and has its modes of worship as means
to spiritual and moral ends. But what distinguishes Islam
from other faiths is that it is not a religion in the narrow
sense of the word: it is a complete way of life. It is concerned
not only with salvation in the next world, but also with
establishing a just and harmonious social order in this world.
It guides man not only in the matter of faith, but also in the
right management of political, economic and international
affairs. It does not have one set of principles and values for
the private life of man and another, quite different, set of
principles and values for his public life.
In the economic field Islam ensures social justice and
equality without smothering individual freedom and initia15
tive. Islamic collectivism strikes a happy medium between
the two extremes of Jaissez faire capitalism, which leads to
uneven and inequitable distribution of wealth, and state
capitalism (Communism), the totalitarian supremacy of a
party or state such as would crush individual personality and
tum man into a conditioned antomaton.
In Islam the individual and the society have their rights
as well as obligations marked out for them. To God, of
course, belongs all that is in the heavens and the earth. He
alone is the Absolute Owner of Wealth. While not completely
abolishing private property, Islam imposes several limitations
on it.
The first limitation on the right of ownership over
property is imposed by the dictum that all property in the
hands of man is in the nature of a trust for carrying out
God’s purposes. As individual men are not the absolute
owners of the property (God alone being the Absolute
Owner), so they can be in all fairness deprived of it by the
state if they are not observing the limits of God in the
interest of social justice.
The second limitation on the right of ownership over
property is that it should have been acquired by lawful
methods. Islam considers all unearned income as unlawful.
“Man shall have nothing except that for which he has worked
and laboured”’, says the Holy Qur’an (53 : 39). It upholds
the dignity of work and labour. The Holy Prophet, peace
and blessings of Allah be upon him, said, “No man eats
better food than that which he eats out of the work of
his own hands”. Among the business practices and incomes
declared illegal are ali dishonest and underhanded dealings,
blackmarketing, profiteering, inordinate and unjustified
raising of prices, speculation in goods and commodities,
gambling, usury,“monopoly. Above all, Islam checks exploit-16
ation by the interdiction of Riba, which is “money bred of
money” ié., the augmentation of one’s wealth, not by any
productive activity or work, but by investing or lending it
to others so as to appropriate for oneself, the fruits of the
labour of others. Says the Holy Qur’an: “‘O you who believe,
Do not devour Riba, doubling and redoubling, and be careful
of your duty to God that you may be successful’ (3 : J29).
“And whatever you lay out for Riba, so that it may increase
in the property of men, it shall not increase with God, and
whatever you give in charity, desiring God’s pleasure —these
it is that shall get manifold’? (30 : 39). Islam severely con-
demns the exploitation of man by man, depriving a man of
the full return of his labour, and appropriation by any man
or group of men of wealth produced by the workers.
The third limitation is imposed by the Quranic declara-
tion that in all property owned by individuals there is a de-
finite share of the needy and the less fortunate. No individual
has the right to use his lawfully earned wealth on himself
till he has given to the needy and the poor the share due to
them. This takes two forms in Islam: (a) compulsory capital
levy on savings, called Zakat, and (b) Voluntary charity and
aid given to the deserving to eradicate human want and
misery. In fact, according to Islam, a man has the right only
to so much as is required to fulfil his needs. Whatever is in
excess of his own needs must be spent in the way of God,
which, in the teminology of the Quran, means the welfare
of the community as a whole.
The fourth limitation is on the manner of spending
one’s income or wealth. Islam condemns profligate expendi-
ture on the one hand and niggardliness on the other. It wants
that all men should live simply and shun luxuries. It is
strongly opposed to riotous living and all kinds of unhealthy
and improper pleasures and pastimes. In all fields and spheres
of life (including the sphere of earning and spending money)17
man must observe the moral values and pursue the high ideals
prescribed by Islam.
Some properties requiring exploitation in the interests
of the community as a whole are recognised as communal
property, ¢.g., air, running waters, mountains, forests,
pastures, natural springs, mines and mineral wealth, energy
resources, etc. Cooperative marketing, consumer stores and
co-operative farming can be resorted to as means of social
amelioration. Besides, other properties and means of produc-
tion can also be treated as national or communal properties
on payment of adequate compensation to the owners of the
properties involved (if they were honestly and legally acquir-
ed by them by their own productive labour) if the interests
of the community as a whole call for such action. The Islamic
state must regulate trade, commerce, industrial enterprises,
distribution of income between employer and employee
{so as to prevent exploitation) and take steps to establish
social justice and bring about equitable distribution of wealth
as part of comprehensive economic planning.
Just as in the economic sphere Islam seeks to put an
end to capitalist exploitation as well as to “‘state tyranny”
under Communism, so in the political sphere the Islamic
system is different both from the bourgeouis democracies
of capitalist states on the one hand, and from the “‘dictator-
ship of the proletariat” (euphemistically called “people’s
democracy”) of the Communist states, on the other. Islamic
democracy starts, with the conviction of the basic unity of
all humanity. In an Islamic state all human beings are equal
and have equal rights and obligations. The ultimate object
of the Islamic democracy is the freedom of individual
self-realisation. The object of life is the unification of the
human will with the will of God as revealed through the
moral and spiritual experiences of the prophets, mujaddids,
and saints. But this surrender has to be achieved freely,18
not by coersion. For Islam the state is not a super-individual
entity or deity to be glorified and worshipped, it is only a
means to enable the individuals to live in peace and security,
to exercise their freedoms in ways that appear to them desir-
able to prevent them from exploiting one another, to ensure
equality of opportunity, fundamental human rights and basic
needs of life to all. The Islamic laws are claimed to be valid
for all times and all climes and this is ensured by the prin-
ciple of Ijtihad which is the principle of dynamic progress.
This takes care of the variables of life and enables Muslims
to frame a corpus of subsidiary laws, in the light of and
within the limits set by the Quranic principles, so as to retain
harmony with the vicissitudes of changes in time and place.
The collective functions in the Islamic system are to be
discharged by representatives of people (elected by universal
franchise) by mutual consultation in a spirit of service and
co-operation for the individual and general good. The Islamic
state is under a duty to afford equal opportunities for prog-
tess, both spiritual and material, to all its citizens. All
individuals enjoy the freedom of thought and expression.
The non-Muslims living in an Islamic state have the same poli-
tical and economic rights and opportunities as the Muslims.
They have full freedom to profess, practice and preach their
respective faiths. Islam postulates equality before law and
equality of opportunity for all, for no privileged classes are
countenanced within its foid. There are no intermediaries
between God and man and there is no official priestly class.
The Islamic polity is also free from colour prejudice and race-
prejudice. It does not believe in narrow-nationalism. Islamic
brotherhood transcends geographical and political boundaries
and embraces within it as equals men of all races, colours,
cultures and nationalities.CHAPTER-I
- ECONOMIC NEEDS — SUBJECTIVE AND OBJECTIVE
In attempting to solve problems, a start is often made at
the wrong end of things. All factors that exist in the outside
world are taken into consideration, but the most potent of all
factors, the one that lies within our own selves, is invariably’
ignored. It is difficult to say whether it is just an oversight
or a deliberate evasion of a task which appears insuperably
hard, Whatever it be, there is little doubt that it is overlook-
ing a factor which is the most essential of all. Economic
needs there undoubtedly are and we appreciate the tacit
belief of our communist friends that there is enough in the
world for every one to be satisfied with. In a way, it is believ-
ing in a wise providence. But there is certainly a world of
difference between genuine need and greed. The one can be
satisfied but not the other. And so it is our firm belief that
all attempts at an equitable and satisfying distribution of
life’s provision must be frustrated so long as the greed in man
remains uneradicated. If you analyse jealousy, the basic
element in class war, you will find it nothing but a kind of
uneasiness arising out of a sense of scantiness of one’s pro-
vision. This sense, of course, is awakened in man through
a comparison with the possessions of others, but its source
lies within his own self. And this sense of scantiness should
not be regarded a limited or a conditional thing. Left to it-
self, it brooks no limitation and suffers no condition. Lack
of self-culture has produced a class of people in our modern
civilization who are jealous almost of every one. They are
jealous not only of those who are better than themselves but
also of those who are on the same level with themselves.
So even if a complete equality of possession and amenities ©
be brought about—a consummation still an elusive dream —
‘he feeling of jealousy, from a psychological calculation, will
be rampant all the same. Nay, if we go deeper we may20
discover that it is the very same feeling that causes what
we call the exploitation of the weak and the simple-minded
by the strong and the resourceful. The spirit of grabbing is
only the ugliest form of jealousy. The velocity of what is call-
ed struggle for existence, accelerated beyond a certain point,
makes one feel jealous of the very existence of others. To
such a perverted man the only justification for any other
person’s existence is the latter’s abject subservience to bis
own existence and comfort and power. So the root cause of
all injustices and iniquities is this feeling of jealousy which
again has its source in the greed of the human mind. This
does not mean that man is by nature greedy. Greed is only a
perverted form of the urge of acquisition and love of posse-
ssion. In its original uncorrupted form it is the mother of
all earnings, enterprises, and inventions. It is the indiscri-
minate and unregulated exercise of this faculty that produces
greed, The true urge for acquisition is judicious. It knows
what things can be acquired without disturbing the social
peace as also what is really useful to himself and to others.
And if it fails in its objective it feels neither any dejection
nor any annoyance. Whereas greed is rash and desperate and
when baffled it becomes either down-hearted or furious.
Preponderance of greed in a man or a society shows that
there is lack of guidance or training in the exercise of this
very fundamental and beneficial urge. of the human mind.
It makes the individual or the society not only unfit to earn
fairly but also a stranger to the art of spending. The needed
training in this respect can be provided by religion alone. One
should enter a sound religious system to prevent the whole-
some faculty of acquisition from turning into greed. The
system of Islam had a very successful experiment carried out
in this respect at the hand of the Holy Prophet Muhammad.
Islam created a society of people who not only scru-
pulously maintained in the course of their economic activities,
the distinction between what is lawful and wholesome and21
what is not but also were “neither extravagant nor parsi-
monious and (kept) between these the just mean”. By a
presistent self-culture, described in the words: ‘“‘And the
servants of the Beneficent are they who walk on the earth in
humility, and when the ignorant address them, they say,
Peace! And they who pass the night prostrating themselves
before their Lord and standing’ (The Quran, 25 : 63 - 64),
they had freed their minds from the contamination of greed.
They were a people of vigorous action, self-reliant and
enterprising, a fact which shows that they had a keen sense
of economic needs. But they were neither marauders nor
pirates nor imperialists, because they successfully banished
all greed from their minds. In other words, they were aware
of the distinction between a true sense of need and the false
craving called greed. Guided by the prophetic genius of their
master they realised that the subjective aspect of man’s
economic life was even more important than the objective
one. And if we of this age, with all our sincerity, leave this
fact out of consideration and confuse genuine need with the
greed of man, we shall never satisfy his economic needs and
banish either individual or class jealousy. There can, then be
no peace on this score anywhere at any time in the world.
To be clear, the sense of need in an imaginative mind
is more often a mental phenomenon than a physical fact.
It hardly needs any pointing out that civilized existence
makes one aware of ever newer “needs” and lack of a corres-
ponding moral culture aggravates this awareness to a degree
that if one man is given the wealth and comfort of the whole
world, to the exclusion of all others, one will still need more.
The most sensible attitude should, therefore, be to be satisfi-
ed with the actual necessities of physical existence and, if
anything more, whatever may fall to one’s lot without much
craving for it. But this needs a self-culture, that comes only
through devotional practices. It is only through such a
culture that a man can confine his sense of need to the thingsactually needed for his physical existence and to what may
come to him without being jealous of others. It is to this
moral attainment that the Holy Qur’an refers when it says:
“And whoever is saved from the greediness of his soul,
these it is that are the successful” (64 : 16).
It is exactly here that our economists have blundered.
In the beginning of their speculations they just evaded this
subjective aspect of economic needs. But as they proceeded
in formulating their theories they came positively to
repudiate the claim of inner culture on the peaceful settle-
ment of the economic demands of man. The result is before
us. The economic classes. are engaged in a war of mutual
annihilation. Not able either io hide or avert this unpleasant
fact these economists and social thinkers have come forward
to console us by their specious dictum that this horrible
state of things is a necessary stage in the social evolution of
mankind, as if burning hatred from both sides has by itself
ever given birth to love and amity between two contending
parties. A more depressing and helpless philosophy cannot be
imagined. Possibly it is a logical conclusion to the theory of
“the survival of the fittest” deduced from a mal-observation
of the animal world. Man is but too apt to read facts in the
light of his own predilections. Civilized humanity, however,
is getting tired of these “theories,” advanced as principles
of social action. It is coming gradually to realise that it is
not for the scientists and economists to adumberate rules
of social behaviour and that a higher type of people is needed
to handle this rather delicate and responsible task. It is
dawning on thinking humanity that questions of social
relationships can be properly solved by leaders who have an
understanding of the power of the mind over matter. It is
being increasingly appreciated now that the so-called needs
of man are more often unreal than real and that they can be
considerably reduced. by a suitable culture of the mind.
Such a reduction, if it comes to be accomplished, will not23
only facilitate an equitable distribution of wealth but also
give man that inner happiness which he actually seeks
through his passionate pursuit of wordly comfort and posse-
ssion. Given a correct vision of the subjective aspect of our
economic needs, we shall be able to distinguish between
the real needs and the artificial ones, as also between the
right means of their satisfaction and the wrong ones. The
effort for the supply of real needs to every one born of
human parents is undoubtedly a praiseworthy one. But
unless due attention is paid to the subjective aspect of the
question, artificial needs unleashing the unbounded greed
of man will defeat the very object of this noble effort. As
we have already remarked, it is the uncontrolled greed in
man that lies at the root of all exploitation. If, therefore, we
are able to create a standard of culture that makes it dis-
honourable to give expression to the weakness of greed in
man, we shall have stopped the tyranny of exploitation at
its origin. Neither is it an impossible task to attempt. All
prophets—the founders of religion—have attempted it and
have succeeded in their attempts. It is all a question of
determination and a vigorous action on such a determination.
It is, moreover, the only correct way to achieve the object
in view.
Unfortunately the rules of our current civilization not
only condone the exhibition of greed but even regard it as
quite decent to arouse and excite greed in others under
cover of art, entertainment, business propaganda and the
like. We all own and even admire misguided people who
misguide a whole world by an appeal to its fancy for econo-
mic needs. We concede that in the course of this avalanche
of debasing propaganda; certain things are introduced in the
everyday life of man, which are truly beneficial to him and
have accordingly a really economic value. But their propor-
tion is ever so small ‘compared to. those numerous: other
things of which the value lies only in the fancy of man. As24
a matter of fact, it may be truly said that a modern man is
overwhelmed with his sense of “needs” thanks to the in-
sidious and licensed propaganda of those who control and
manage our civilized life through thoughts and suggestions
as much as through manufacture. And while this state of
things continues to exist, we in our simplicity still hope to
bring satisfaction to the mind of man in respect of his econo-
mic needs through outside regulation and management of
things. Surely this is nothing better than running after the
will-o’-the -wisp.
Analyse a modern mind and it will be found to consist
principally of two things: (1) An extreme dissatisfaction with
life owing to unfulfilled “economic needs”; and (2) a dread
of poverty, in the sense of the lowering of the standard of
life.
Whether at any time in the future, the state will be in a
position to enforce the rule “to each according to his needs”
is yet a question of speculation. Far from approaching that
ideal state of things, we find a contrary tendency in states
that profess a faith in this ideal. The reason is not far to seek.
To ascertain individual needs in all their details is a task too
stupendous to be undertaken by a human state at any time
in history.
And unless and until this ideal is attained, the external
arrangements cannot bring any relief to the mind of man on
these two scores if the collective mind of society is not in-
structed to look down upon any expression of or any appeal
to the greed in man. In the absence of this training the raging
dissatisfaction on the basis of fancied economic needs
together with the dread of poverty will paralyse the urge of
civilized existence and letting loose anti-social feelings in
the minds of men will disrupt even social life itself. Rightly
has the Holy Quran called the latter a disease, /.e., dread of25
poverty, the work of the devil: “The devil threatens you with
poverty” (2 : 268). Indeed, if the chief function of the devil
is to jeopardise the prospect of man through wrong sugges-
tions, this dread of poverty must be regarded as the ‘most
potent of its weapons in accomplishing its object in these
days. This dread chases a modem man all throughout his
life and haunts his mind perpetually like the proverbial
sword of Damocles. It paralyses all his energy for good and
noble deeds. It makes him self-centred and cowardly. Above
all, it makes him dissatisfied with his fellow beings and even
with his own self. And what is poverty to the vast majority
of these people? It is mostly a fall in the existing standard
of living. What a boon of our much vaunted civilization!
Indeed, we have mistaken the weed for the plant and are
frightened by a ghost of our own creation. It is obvious,
that freedom from this false fear will make mankind heal-
their economically as well as morally. It will be ridding
humanity of an evil spirit, so to speak. But this cannot be
accomplished but through a sound religious culture of the
mind.
Religion and Class War
One may agree or differ with the view that the history
of social humanity, as known to us, is a history of class war
or class struggle, but there is no denying the fact that class
antagonism exists in an acute form in the present-day soci-
ety. The hatred and ill-feeling between different economic
classes have assumed fearful proportions. And when it is
said that class antagonism is a very old story, it really means
no more than that material comforts have a great attraction
for-men and that it affords a strong ground for mutual
jealousies. It would be equally true to say that sex also
furnishes a strong ground for jealousy. The stories of Helen
of Troy, of Cleopatra, of Sita, or of Draupadi, are repeated
every day in different forms. The police records will disclose
the exact proportion between the wealth-crimes and sex-26
crimes. The one may be more fundamental and universal an
urge than the other, but they both lead to jealousy and bad
blood. Absolute equality of worldly possessions, in spite of
Telentless wars, both class and international, still remains
a distant ideal. It cannot be denied that the basis of class war
exists today as it did centuries ago, and, for all we know,
it may continue to exist for all times to come. But this does
not mean that the relationship between the classes will or
should continue to be of the same bitter nature as we witness
to-day. Things must improve if humanity is not to experience
a social cataclysm. Jealousy and class hatred will raise its
head here and there, in every case of human possession and
assertion, but they ought to be kept submerged beneath a
higher and better feeling, and should be controlled by a more
refined standard of the values of things. No sane person can
assert that the materialistic tendency can ever be altogether
eliminated from human nature and hence the view that
jealousy and class struggle on this score is as old as the
historical man is correct in its own way. We are prepared to
go further and say that it is as old as man himself —even the
primitive man—who lived in supposedly small communistic
groups. In spite of all this it would be incorrect to say that
this is the only tendency working in the social life of man.
Concurrently with this tendency is the idealistic tendency in
man which curbs its fury by a sublime diversion. It has been
the role of religion to keep this idealistic tendency alive in
man. And it is only when religion has failed to play its part
efficiently that the other tendency becomes predominant
and gives one the impression that it is the only and the most
basic tendency in man. It must be recognised that efficiency
and talent has a value of its own. In the absence of a higher
standard it demands a material valuation. An efficient man,
a talented person, a high-thinking personage, would demand
a “good living” as we call it—one may say “high living”.
But analysing the nature of man one can see that he does
not necessarily want this kind. of valuation. He derivesgreater satisfaction from less concrete valuation of his gifts.
He may as well feel satisfied with such an abstract thing as
honour and esteem, As a matter of fact, man has been found
to give away his material possession to see such an abstract
return for his service. Indeed, even to-day, when materialism
reigns supreme, there does not appears to be anything poss-
essed by man more valuable than his honour. The highest
security that a man can give to his fellow being is his “word
of honour”. In a society artificially built, such as our modern
society is, honour seems to be indissolubly connected with
material possession. We honour a man only when he happens
to have an appreciable possession of material wealth. But
it is so because there is no device in our days to detach
honour from material wealth. This task of detachment has
always rested with the people of religion. It is the religious
leaders that, possessing a high vision of things and able to
maintain an abstract measure of valuation, set an example of
how high efficiency and high thinking can be maintained
in the midst of material simplicity. They embrace what is
called poverty in popular parlance but it is a self-imposed
one. The communistic programme aims at evolving this
type of man, but has so far failed in creating this class.
A man of this type is extremely efficient and deserves highest
material return, but he exchanges it for an abstract prize —
the esteem and regard of people. Through him the centre
of honour is shifted from affluence to asceticism, from the
aristocracy and the bourgeois to the proletarian quarters.
It is with reference to this self-imposed poverty that the Holy
Prophet Muhammad is reported to have said: “Poverty is
my pride. * Yes, one who has experienced this kind of
poverty, is undoubtedly proud of it. But to create such a
valuation of efficiency in one’s mind and have it established
in, and recognised by, the society, one needs a higher kind of
culture which religion alone can provide. And as a point of
fact religion in all ages has provided this culture. It is only
when the religious culture has waned in a particular society28
and its religious teachers have themselves fallen victims to
the general worldly standards of valuation, that the society
js left with this as the sole standard. Then a keen competition
for material possession, and consequent jealousy, becomes
the order of the day. Having no example of high thinking
and plain living, people vie with one another in high living on
the slightest pretext of efficiency, or, even without any such
pretext, not only because high living is enjoyable in itself
but more so because it is the only, though artificial, criterion
of honour and respectability in society. Christianity has
suffered this fate. From early times in its history the Chris-
tian clergy has been betraying a weakness for worldly power
and possession. The continuous struggle of the Church with
the State, the Pope’s love of power, the Church’s anxiety for
worldly possession, are all matters of history. Not once do
we find during this period the clergy establishing their
supremacy on pure spiritual grounds. With the separation
of the Church from the State, the political ambitions of the
clergy were all dashed to the ground. But the money greed
continued and the clergy found its melancholy satisfaction
in the fact that they were classed with the aristocracy every-
where. They discarded their real role of combining the
mental vigour, and moral refinement of the ideal bourgeois
with the material surrounding of the natural proletariat. Had
they stuck to their allotted position they would not only
have been a consolation and an encouragement to the “have
nots” but would also been a whip for the “haves.” By creat-
ing an abstract standard of honour, they could have mini-
mised the honour and prestige of the people of wealth. The
jealousy between the economic classes could thus have been
prevented from assuming any fearful proportions. But the
weakness of the flesh, deplored by Master, prevented the
Christian clergy from playing their part faithfully. They
failed in their mission and would not allow their flock to
come in contact with another religious tradition that could
remoye these drawbacks. The history of the Holy Prophet29
Muhammad, and his Successors in spiritual office, was shut
out from the knowledge of Christian nations. No wonder,
the laymen in Christendom should develop a system of society
that “has stripped off its halo every occupation hitherto
honoured and looked upto with reverent awe...has converted
the physician, the lawyer, the priest, the poet, the man of
science, into its paid wage-labourer, has torn away from the
family its sentimental veil and has reduced the family relation
to mere money-relation.”(The Communist Manifesto).
For all these outrageous changes in man’s social psy-
chology, the entire responsibility rests with the priestly
class. They were expected to rise above the money value of
things and set a standard of moral values for the people at
large. But they themselves became victims of the “money
value” and the whole structure of society was inevitably
reduced to this despicable depth. Material possession thus
became the sole standard of man’s honour and class-war
became inevitable.
What then is the remedy? Is it to fan the flame of class-
war, as is proposed by Marxism, and thus to annihilate the
bourgeois by force? Let sane humanity give some thought to
the question before plunging headlong into any action.
Let us remember that efficiency must have its price,
and economical living, the true basis of capital, must have its
reward, When nature has gifted a man with a talent, does it
beseem man or even lie properly in his power to deny him
the credit for it? Indeed, to deny it will be to upset the order
of nature. Then if you do not reward thrift, you will be
penalising a virtue, which, apart from its moral values, is the
only safety-valve in man’s grim struggle for existence.
Give unskilled labourer his human rights, and maintain
him in his human dignity by all means. Rather give a vir-30
tuous labourer more respect and honour than to a skilled but
unscrupulous labourer. But still the skilled labourer must
have his due and thrifty worker must have his reward.
Let us not be frightened by the fact that capital has led
to Capitalism with all its current evils. The tragedy of Capi-
talism is no fault of capital as such or of thrift out of which it
grows. It is rather due to a lack of proper guidance in the
accumulation of capital and its use in trade and commerce.
If Europe had adopted Islam as a code of social conduct
when it took to large-scale production and international
distribution, this calamity would never have befallen huma-
nity. We should not forget that suppression of any tendency
by violence, has never succeeded in the world; it has always
fostered animosity and suppressed rage bursting out into a
counter fury.
The remedy, therefore, does not lie in this direction.
Efficiency, talent and economical living must be rewarded
in some way or other. For an ordinary man with no higher
vision of things, money or worldly possession can be the
only measure of such a reward. But the matter should not be
left there. Let religion do its work and create a value higher
and truer than the material. Let civilized humanity be intro-
duced to a religion which has a living tradition for creating
such a value, a religion of which the leaders have always been.
proud of their altruistic and self-imposed poverty —meaning
extreme simplicity of living, in spite of their extraordinary
talents and the capability of producing enormous wealth.
In other words, let the tradition of Islam be widely known
to Europe.
Nor would we be confused to find this class struggle
as a recurring phenomenon in history. This repetition merely
2stablishes that Divine intervention in human affairs is a
recurring need of humanity. This feature of history can31
confuse only those who believe that Divine Will has ceased
to be revealed after a certain point in history. Muslims
believe in a God Who is never indifferent to human affairs
and repeats His guidance from age to age. Thus, so long as
the effect of one guidance continues, struggle of the classes
is kept within its bounds. Classes do exist, as they must.
The less fortunate do feel uneasy. The more fortunate do
exhibit some arrogance as it is natural for them to do. But
the higher values of life created by religion do not allow this
uneasiness and this arrogance to break all bounds of moral
consideration. These feelings are controlled and checked
together with other passions of men, in the interest of
ordered social life-and the common interest of humanity. A
time comes, however, when the religious inspiration received
through one revealed guidance ebbs in a particular society.
The teachers of religion themselves become worldly-minded.
Greed and avarice sway their minds as much as those of other
people. The society is thus left with only one standard where-
with to judge a man’s worth and honour, the standard of
material possessions! When such a state of things prevails,
the antagonism between the classes naturally becomes acute.
The higher class becomes more wealth-conscious and the
lower more jealous. But all that such a situation indicates
is that a fresh intervention of God has become necessary to
re-establish the discarded moral values of things, as a sublime
diversion from the raging competition in the field of money
possessions: Believers in the providential care of God look
for and do find this Divine intervention coming at the proper
moment, and illuminate their souls with the light thus pro-
vided. The rest of the world tums to it only after prolonged
and painful experiences in other directions.
It has also been suggested that a kind of evolution is -
noticéd in this class-struggle, that it does not appear in the
same hue and colour at every fresh appearance, that classes
show a steady progressiveness with the progress of history.32
This again will confuse such people of religion as do not be-
lieve in the evolution of human social relationship. Islam
believes in such an evolution. Islam inculcates that from the
Patriarchal to the International life there has been a steady
progress in the social consciousness of man and that this is
one reason why religious guidance is repeated from time to
time, that a progressive revelation is needed to meet the new
social conditions. With the advancement in social conscious-
ness, social evils assume an advanced appearance too. People
who would stick to a guidance vouchsafed at the clan or
tribal period of history, may regard religion inadequate for
an advanced stage of social consciousness. But to a Muslim
the case is very different. He finds his religion quite abreast
of the international age and finds therein ample provision
for mitigating the bitterness seizing the economic classes of
this evolved stage in human social consciousness. It is for the
world to turn to the religious leaders of Islam to be benefited
by this Divine light and guidance.
Islam and the Eradication of Poverty
Only one man in history has tried to define poverty and
it is he who has prayed to God to be spared the ignominy
of poverty. It is the Holy Prophet Muhammad, (peace and
blessings of Allah be upon him).' The fact is that when you
specify the barest necessity of human life you really define
poverty, as it is deficiency in the barest necessity that,
strictly speaking, constitutes poverty. Without this specifi-
cation it is difficult to say what poverty is. Equal distri-
bution of the national wealth, the object of Communism,
may still leave the members of a nation poor. Seen from the
point of view of a higher standard of life, under the socialistic
administration, far from poverty being eradicated, a whole
nation may be regarded as suffering from poverty. The
lL. “O Allah! I seek refugee in Thee from infidelity and poverty” — Al-Nasai.33
reformers may only have the satisfaction of making all the
members of the nation share the poverty, instead of it being
shared by a section of people; but poverty may still be
regarded as a feature of the nation’s life. Take the case of
India. An average middle class man here lives in conditions
which will be unbearable to an average so-called poor man in
England. If to-day India is socialised, we do not expect the
standard to be raised higher than the middle class man level.
And if the dream of the Western socialists comes true and the
whole of the world is socialised, and equal provision be made
for inhabitants of fertile productive countries as well as for
those of barren and unproductive ones, the standard of living
may, for all we know, have still to be lowered. So judging
by the current capitalistic standard, the whole world may in
that case be regarded as suffering from poverty. It is essential
therefore for a correct understanding of the true nature of
the economic disease, called poverty, to come to a decision
as to what constitutes poverty, i.e. the absence or shortage
in the barest necessity of life. In the absence of this, eradi-
cation of poverty will ever remain an unrealised dream. In
the words of the Holy Prophet Muhammad (peace and
belessings of Allah be upon him): “The son of man has no
better right than that he should have a house wherein he may
live and a piece of cloth whereby he may hide his nakedness,
and a piece of bread and some water” (Tirmizi)
And in the absence of a better and a more sensible
standard, the world will have to accept this as the correct
standard to judge the presence or absence of poverty in a
nation or an individual. Neither does it need any facts and
figures to convince one that taking this as the measure of
poverty, poverty can indeed be eradicated from the world.
But if you leave the matter to the unbounded desire of man,
you will never remove poverty either from an individual
or from a nation; far less from humanity. Indeed, the more
you think of it, the greater will appear to you the essnetial34.
need of specifying this barest necessity of human life.
Because, unless you first settle it, you cannot start on any
programme for the eradication of poverty. While once you
settle this question the movement for the socialisation of
property and national wealth ioses its sting of extremism,
and the compromise between capital and labour becomes a
practical proposition. Because, any system that guarantees
this barest necessity to the most unlucky man or woman in
the realm, can be regarded as having rooted out poverty from
its body politic. Systems of society may vary from nation
to nation and from country to country, but so long as they
agree to guarantee this minimum necessity of human life to
its individual members, they may be regarded as having
conceded the principal demand of Socialism. And for all we
know, no enforcement of a dead level of equality is needed
to ensure this minimum. As a matter of fact, the idea of abso-
lute communism may be regarded as already dead, seeing
that Russia itself has discarded it. So, all that really remains
of this social commotion of the 20th century is this question
of the eradiction of poverty.
Now, this responsibility for the provision of the mini-
mum need of the individual may wholly, categorically and
unconditionally rest with the Government, which as we have
always contended is an unwieldy affair, or the responsibility
may indirectly and ultimately rest with it. In the Islamic
system the responsibility of the state is of the latter type.
Had the European social systems acknowledged this much
of responsibility of the state one can say, without any fear
of contradiction, that the extremism of Marxism would
never have come into existence.
Living in a world which condones poverty making
it almost an invariable feature of social life it is difficult
for a modern man to believe that poverty may be an excep-
tion and an accident even in a society where there is no35
enforced socialism. And the Islamic Society is exactly the
type of society where it is really an accident. Yes, in a
Society where man’s mind works normally, inspired by an
enlightened philosophy and code of life and social behaviour
follows normal rules of conduct, poverty in the sense enun-
‘ciated above is an accident just like any other accident, such
as a motor-car accident or the accident of drowning. And it
needs no wild imagination to comprehend that even in a
perfectly organised socialistic state, such accidents of want
of food or barest clothing or barest residence may not be
altogether non-existent. The only thing to see is whether it
is really an accident taking place in spite of all the effort to
avert it or a course of things allowed to happen by sheer
callousness or by lack of will to control and stop it alto-
gether. Since a wrong social feeling and social behaviour in
the West has produced a state of things that condones
poverty and in a way enjoys it, it is wrong to suppose that
poverty is a rule with all other societies and not an accident
with them. As a rule it may be abolished even by force, but
as an accident it will be there so long as accident of all sorts
will continue to take place owing to the inherent imper-
fections of human control of things. Thirteen hundred years
of experience has shown that in Islam poverty has never
been a rule, unless it be in a society that has been de-Isla-
mised through its close contact with outside cultures. The
standard of living may be low in a particular Islamic society
but to call it poverty in the true scientific sense of the term
will be a mistake if not an international attempt to confuse
issues. The social system of Islam does not allow any indi-
vidual to go without food or minimum dress or residence.
The institution of the mosque apart from other institutions
which are many, is a guarantee against such a mishap. Any
wayfarer or homeless person can stay in the mosque and has
to be fed by the congregation if he so stays, and clothed as
well if indeed he needs that too. But while waging ruthless
and ceaseless war against true poverty, Islam has created36
a mentality in its followers which makes it honourable to
give and not to take, either from an individual or from a
collective body, call it state or whatever you like. This sense
of self-respect, if you will think over it, is the only guarantee
of economic stamina in a nation. Devoid of it, it may tum
into a nation of shameless indofents. It needs a positive
effort to banish poverty from a nation. Islam started this
double war in the beginning of its history, and succeeded
quickly to achieve its object. It is reported in authentic
history that at the time of Caliph Umar, one could not find
a person that would receive any help; every one was in a
position and a mood to give and not to receive. This, indeed,
is the ideal society towards which Western Socialism called
Sovietism is vaguely groping. The hand that gives, whether
individual or collective, is better than the hand that takes
whether individually or collectively. That is a dictum of the
Prophet Muhammad, (peace and blessings of Allah be upon
him). It is a strange understanding indeed that whereas
private charity is deemed as derogatory to a man’s self-
respect the Western mind does not revolt at the idea of
collective charity, viz, the help that comes from the state.
Perhaps it will be said that the private rich man shows an
arrogance while giving the help but that again is lack of
culture. Any man who has any experience of the Islamic
Society, will readily aver that the giver in Islam assumes the
humility of a beggar whereas it is a common experience to
see a beggar assuming the pride of a giver. It is not unoften
that one sees a beggar reprimanding a rich man who has not
given anything to him or whose gift falls short of his expec-
tations. No doubt, this is carrying a thing too far but it is
a case of virtue carried to an excess becoming vice. In Islam
it is honourable not to ask from any one but from God, the
Sustainer of the Universe. But if one does need any help he
is never made to feel the small man that he will be if he
becomes a member of the Christian community.37
In Islam it is the foremost duty of the state to see that
no poverty in its true sense exists anywhere in the nation,
but not always through direct interference. And here comes
in another question that has been unnecessarily puzzling the
minds of our Christian friends of the West.
State is neither a curse nor a punishment nor indeed the
sole vehicle of collective social expression. It is a self-felt
need of the individual. State is a provision made by the
individual himself for guiding and controlling himself in
moments of forgetfulness or excitement. It is an essential
need and yet not the supreme need of social life. In normal
condition of things, the native social feeling of man guided
by his practical common-sense is enough guidance for social
behaviour. State interference in such a condition will do
more harm than good. It will stunt the growth of the nation
mentally, morally, economically and politically. The state,
however, must look after the cases of accident. Islam favours
that view of the question which stands for as little state
interference as possible, but it insists that its range of inter-
ference must cover all cases of accident.
Like all other accidents, the accident of poverty must be
its duty to avert and to redress. The State is accordingly
held responsible for the provision of food, clothes and resi-
dence to the individual if he cannot provide for these himself.
. But it must not be burdened with the entire duty of feeding,
clothing and housing the whole population. That will be a
task too unwieldy and cramping at the same time. It will,
moreover, be an unsuitable approach to the question to
paralyse the instincts springing from biological elements of
animal life, because on these lines, as Islam rightly holds,
lies the moral and spiritual evolution of man. It is note-
worthy that whereas other religions as they exist today
discard animal instincts as wholly Satanic, Islam. considers
these as the very basis of spiritual faculties. According38
to this religion original animal instincts properly guided and
controlled are transformed into moral qualities which in
their turn give birth to spiritual life 4n man. As we see it,
Marxism has its moral source in the other, i.e. non-Islamic
theology and believes animal instincts as of the devil and
productive of nothing but evil. That is why it is so anxious
to crush the animal instincts of family affection and natural
group loyalty. It may be that it possesses no means whereby
to utilise them to the advantage of man but that was a
weakness of Christianity as well. But just because you cannot
handle a thing, is it wise to kill it particularly when you find
some other systems using it to the great advantage of huma-
nity? It is not only wrong but arrogant. So at bottom with
all its abhorrence for religion and theology, Marxism is
blindly following Christian theology. It would appear as if
one can never get rid of theology particularly when one is
dealing with human conduct and character. You have to go
by some theory or other about the potentialities and draw-
‘backs of human nature; you must have some conception of
the ultimate aim of human social life and this is entering in
th field of theology. Let, therefore, no one be seduced into
the belief that Marxism involves no religious belief and has
nothing to do with Christianity. Let it be realised that
although Marxism has repudiated some mystical beliefs
of Christianity it has faithfully adopted what really matters
in that faith viz., the conception of human nature and its
ultimate goal. Its conception of state and the idea of its
jurisdiction is a natural and logical sequel to the Christian
conception of human nature. It wants to credicate poverty
by force because it cannot trust the good sense of man. It
regards poverty as natural state because it regards human
nature instinctively callous. It fails like Christianity to see
that man’s callousness towards some has its paradoxical
counterpart somewhere in the opposite quality of exor-
bitant love for some others. It is the want of balance and
proportion that cause the mischief. If one religion has faild