(Phone: 410-435-5000)
P.O. Box 356, Kingsville, MD 21087
[$10 
for one year. $1 for sample]
Disclaimer: The views expressed are not necessarily shared by the 
editors.
Critical responses up to 250 words are accepted
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
KHILAFAT-o-MULUKIAT (Caliphate and Monarchy): Too Great a Book for small minds
by Kaukab Siddique, Ph.D
Maulana Maudoodi (r) had the rare genius of bringing into focus the original era of 
Islam, 
teaching the Qur'an as understood by the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) himself 
and the sahaba (the Prophet's blessed companions). Like the thought of 
Iqbal and Mohomed Ali Jinnah, Maudoodi's writings went through various 
stages of development. I consider his book KHILAFAT-o-MULUKIAT the 
pinnacle of his achievement as a thinker and leader of Islamic 
resurgence. The book, first published in October 1966, was too radical 
even for Jamaate Islami but over the years its ideas have percolated 
worldwide into the international Islamic movement's ideology.
Maudoodi was targeted by two groups of obscurantist forces. On the one 
hand, there were the petty mullahs who wrote tracts claiming that the 
learned Maulana had insulted hazrat Usman (r) and hence was to be 
seen as crypto-shia. On the other hand, the secularist groups saw his 
writing as a threat to their entire concept of Islam as a private 
religion. This unholy alliance of the petty mullah and the secularist, 
in a low level crude and school-boy style, can be seen in the hate 
bulletins S.M. and his father keep issuing against Maudoodi.
These persons are quite incapable of understanding Maudoodi's greatest 
book. Before I deal with their petty attacks, let us look at the book 
KHILAFAT-o-MULUKIAT as a whole. It has three important aspects which put 
it in a class by itself:
1. Maudoodi points out from the Qur'an and the 
Hadith 
what constituted the original concept of Islamic government as 
established by the Prophet (pbuh) himself and as understood by the 
sahaba. In this aspect, he lists Qur'anic verses and authentic hadith. 
Owing to these original teachings, MUSLIMS SEE THE RIGHTLY GUIDED 
CALIPHATE (khilafate rashida) as qualitatively different from the rule 
of the Ummayads, Abbasids and later destinies. THIS DIFFERENTIATION IS 
KEY TO OUR UNDERSTANDING OF ISLAMIC HISTORY.
2. HOW and WHY did Caliphate lapse into monarchy and hereditary rule? This 
is a very sensitive issue because the kings have left a lasting 
impression on the history of Muslims and do not encourage a critical look 
at their illegitimacy.
3. Once KINGSHIP had consolidated itself, what methods could Muslim use 
to change it or overthrow it? The issue of ARMED UPRISING against 
kingship which claims to be Muslim and permits the practice of the 
basics of Islam is again a difficult issue. Maudoodi was brilliant in 
his analysis of this issue and took Imam Abu Hanifa's example to discuss 
the issue.
Now look at S.M.'s petty attack on the erudite Maulana. S.M. begins by 
abusing the man of God. This is not surprising because no enemy of Islam 
is expected to respect Maudoodi. Then S.M. tries to defend his father's 
attack on KHILAFAT-o-MULUKIAT. I had pointed out that S.M.'s father has 
probably not read the book because he claims that it is an account of the 
fighting between the Banoo Umayya and the Banoo Hashim. S.M. skips this 
point (that his father's thesis is incorrect) and then tries to claim 
that the book IS a graphic account of Kerbala and other tragedies. For 
this purpose, S.M. quotes SIX LINES from page 180 of the book. If S.M. 
had taken the trouble to read the footnote at the end of page 180, he 
would have seen that these six lines are Maudoodi's summary of the 
following:
Tabari's Tarikh, vol.4, p.309 to 356, Ibn Athir's vol.3, p. 282 to 299 
and Al Bidaya vol.8, p.170 to 204.
Thus Maudoodi had the powerful understanding to summarize 98 pages of 
history in 6 lines. Thus the six lines were definitely not GRAPHIC 
because Kerbala, though central to Islamic thought, was not Maudoodi's 
topic in this book. [Perhaps S.M. does not know the meaning of "graphic." 
In this context, it means "lively description" and Maudoodi was 
definitely not being graphic in his references to various tragedies.]
As if S.M. was not dense enough in his basic surmise, he goes on to 
prove that the book is beyond his secular view of Islam (which simply 
means kufr). Maudoodi quoted Qur'anic verses to indicate that the 
SOVEREIGNTY of ALLAH mentioned in the Qur'an is not separate from Allah 
as sovereign and ruler in the establishment of Islamic community and 
government. Thus Maudoodi was uncovering the great fracture in Muslim 
thought, which is the inability to apply overarching concepts to 
practical matters of political formulation. S.M. thinks these verses 
are "irrelevant" to Islamic political teachings. I would suggest that 
S.M might learn a lot about Islam if he humbly looks at the words of 
the Qur'an again.
WHEN IT COMES TO HADITH NARRATIONS and HADITH LITERATURE used in early 
Islamic history, S.M., like any westernized, mentally colonized person, 
reveals his inability to study or to understand. Poor S.M. took the 
trouble to scan a part of page 318 of Khilafat-o-Mulukiat to make the 
claim that Maudoodi is admitting that hadith narrations are NOT 
reliable. Quite the contrary! Maudoodi's statement would be easily 
acceptable for anyone who knows hadith. Here I'll try to help S.M. to 
write better next time and not make such a fool of himself:
1. Maudoodi is saying that Hadith related to AHKAM, on which rules of 
haram and halal are based, are scrutinized with great care as to the 
authenticity of their narrators and the continuity of their chains of 
narration. 
2. By contrast, the same severe tests of continuity are not applied to 
narrations about history and events in the early era of Islam.
[This clear contrast between rules for the acceptance of normative hadith 
and narrations about historic events is well known to anyone who has 
studied hadith literature.]
Maudoodi's point cannot be refuted. The same historians who wrote about 
the tragedy of Kerbala also wrote about the great achievements of Abu 
Bakr, Umar, Usman and Ali (Allah be pleased with them). They honestly 
presented the good things the Ummayads did (we know from them about Umar 
ibn Abdul Aziz) and also criticized the crimes of the Abbasids under 
whose rule they lived.
The silliest of S.M.'s claims is the idea that Maudoodi wrote this book 
"to please Shi'ites."
Nothing could be further from the truth. The book is NOT about Shi'a 
and Sunni. It deals with the much more important issue of Caliphate 
without which the Muslim ummah cannot emerge from its decline.
I would urge S.M. not to join hands with petty maulvies to create fitna 
between Shias and Sunnis. There are differences between the two which 
need to be kept within the limits of civil discourse. Both Shias and 
Sunnis follow Allah and His Prophet (pbuh). Both have the same qibla and 
the same Book. Both accept the Sunnah. Like Maudoodi, our scholars 
should look objectively at Islamic history and honestly condemn MONARCHY 
as alien to Islam. We want caliphate based on Shoora. We do not want a 
false god of MARKAZE MILLAT (as taught by G.A. Pervez) or an attempt to 
fob off dictatorship as the equivalent of Qur'an and the Prophet (pbuh)!
Maudoodi, like Iqbal, has been misunderstood by small minds. The 
resurgent Islamic movement must learn from Maudoodi, not uncritically or 
slavishly but wisely, just as an intelligent son looks at a wise father 
and tries to do better than him.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2002-11-10 Sun 16:32ct