Bosnian President Mr. Bakir Izetbegovic on
Islam and its Contributions to Civilizations
Dr. Mozammel Haque
Mr.
Bakir Izetbegovic, the Member of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina,
toured the beautiful new building of the Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies
(OXCIS), Oxford, on 28 October, 2013. The building was only in the planning
stages when he visited the Centre twelve years ago, that was in April, 2001, he
came with his father, Alija Izetbegovic who gave a lecture at the Centre
entitled “Bosnia on the Historical Border.”
Bosnian President at the Oxford
Centre for Islamic Studies
Mr.
Bakir Izetbegovic gave a lecture at the Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies,
Oxford, entitled “The Quest for Dignity, Freedom and Democracy in the Islamic
World: A Bosnian Muslim’s Perspective” at the Examination Schools, Oxford, on
28 October 2013. This write-up is based entirely on the lecture delivered by
the President of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
I am grateful to the Bosnian Ambassador in the UK, Mr; Mustafa
Mujezinovic, and his staff for their cooperation and I am also grateful to the
Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies for inviting me to attend the lecture.
Alija Izetbegovic
Bosnian President started his lecture with an
introduction to the former President of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Alija
Izetbegovic, saying, “In his rich and eventful life my father was many things:
a writer, a dissident, a statesman. If I had to describe the essence of his
vocation and commitment, I would say he was a fighter for freedom, equality and
dignity of Muslims, and for the proper understanding of Islam. He had visions
and dreams of the awakening of Muslims from centuries of lethargy, and of the
return of the Islamic world to the centre stage of history.”
He quoted from one of his early works, Alija Izetbegovic
wrote: “The entire Muslim world is in a state of ferment and change. No matter
what this world will look like after these changes make their first upward
cycle, one thing is certain: it will no longer be the world of the first half
of this century. The age of passivity and stagnation has passed forever. For, a
world of 700 million people, with tremendous natural resources, occupying a
first class geographical position, the world which is heir to colossal cultural
and political traditions and the bearer of the living Islamic mission, cannot
long remain in a position of subjection. There is no power that can prevent the
new Muslim generation from putting an end to this abnormal state.”
Forty four years have passed since these words were written,
said Bosnian President Bakir Izetbegovic and continued, “The number of Muslims
in the world has since doubled. The economic power of the Ummah has grown
tenfold. The number of schools, students and teachers in some parts of the
Islamic world has increased hundredfold. The flourishing of the Islamic world
has begun to disrupt its ossified structures of power. We are witnessing social
fractures, revolutions and conflicts. Profound social and political changes
that have been fermenting for decades are finally moving in the direction of
creating free societies and democratic structures of government. A
well-educated, free-thinking generation of Muslims is yearning for free
societies instead of closed ones, the rule of law instead of the rule of one
person, democracy instead of authoritarianism, justice and fairness instead of
oppression and corruption. No force can stop this generation from winning
freedom, taking charge of their destiny and taking part in shaping the world of
the future. No matter all the staggering, mistakes, crises, and stalemates,
this process is irreversible and unstoppable.”
Inclusive Islam
Bosnian
President said, “The spirit of Islam is inclusive. It acknowledges all that is
good and progressive. It is not destructive. It builds and upgrades. Anything
that makes the world better and liberates human creativity cannot be against
Islam. Anything that is truly Islamic cannot be against freedom, progress and
the liberation of human potential.”
Muslim contribution to universal
culture and civilization
He
also mentioned, “In not so distant past, Muslims made colossal contributions to
the development of universal culture and civilization because that generation
of Muslims accepted, with joy and curiosity, and then cultivated, the knowledge
discovered in the conquered territories. One Byzantine emperor noted with
amazement that an Arab general, whom he called "barbarian,” sought, as a
term of armistice, the right to purchase Greek manuscripts. Cultural,
scientific, and technological ideas and advances could not be prevented from
disseminating even then, in the time when the territories and nations were
strictly separated.”
Formula of inclusiveness and integration
“There
is an intense battle of ideas and ideologies, which permeate, collide and
create synergies,” mentioned Mr. Bakir Izetbegovic and said, “Muslims must
engage in this battle. We must remain open to dialogue. We must not be poisoned
by the bitterness accumulated through centuries of physical and spiritual
domination by the West. We must not fall into the trap of radicalism. We must
not give in to the desire for revenge. We must not fear the other and the
different. We must not subscribe to the dangerous ideologies of isolation,
introversion and exclusiveness. We have to look for a formula of inclusiveness,
for a functional combination of the original Islamic values and the best of
values we consider Western and modern. European Muslims play a special role in
the quest for this formula of integration and inclusiveness because we are in
direct contact with and immersed in Western culture, and because we have a
special interest in reconciling the traditional within and the modern around
us.”
Europe is not the birthplace of
Any monotheistic religion
Europe is not the birthplace of any monotheistic
religion. President Izetbegovic mentioned, “When we talk about Islam and
Muslims in Europe, it is necessary to immediately refute the view that Europe
is exclusively Christian and that European culture is exclusively
Judeo-Christian. It is especially important to refute the dangerous fallacy
about the alleged cultural and civilizational conflict between the supposedly
progressive Christian Europe, on one hand, and supposedly retrograde
Islamic-Oriental threat, on the other hand.”
“Europe
is not the birth place of any of the great monotheistic religions. Jesus Christ
was neither born, nor did he preach in Europe. All three great monotheistic
religions came from the same source, from the same, relatively narrow
geographic region. Most importantly, all three religions brought nearly
identical messages and teach identical basic values. Islam is no stranger to
Europe. Nor is Islam alien to the spirit of Europe,” said Bosnian President
Islam intensely present in Europe
Quite
the contrary, he said, “there probably would not be what we know today as the
spirit of Europe without Islam’s contribution to the formation of European
identity and culture. Islam has been intensely present in Europe for over 1,300
years, having arrived in some of its parts more than two centuries before
Christianity. The Umayyad Caliphate was established on European soil in the
early eighth century. The Islamic state had reached heights in philosophy,
science, technology and state organization by the time Christianity expanded to
eastern, central and northern Europe. Islam influenced the formation of
spiritual and cultural identity in north-eastern Europe through the Golden
Horde and the Crimean, Kazan and Astrakhan Khanates; and in south-eastern
Europe through the vital and powerful Ottoman Empire.”
Humanistic revival in the West
Islamic
thought introduced historical science and scientific method and laid the
foundation of the Italian Renaissance. Bosnian President said, “Islamic thought
initiated the humanistic revival in the West, introduced historical science and
the scientific method, helped Scholastics reconcile philosophy with faith,
stimulated Western mysticism, laid the foundations of the Italian renaissance,
and directed modern European thought until Kant. Muslims were the bearers of
progress in that era. They were the bridge between the philosophy and knowledge
of the ancient Greece and the science of the Western world. Much has been
written and said, including at this Centre, about the contributions of Islamic
scholars to medicine, mathematics, astronomy, chemistry, geography,
architecture and finance. All of this clearly confirms that Muslims are the
co-creators, and thus co-owners, of European culture and civilization.”
We must harmonize our actions
with His (God’s) Will
Concluding
his lecture, Bosnian President said, “We belong to a living faith whose return
to the global stage will mark the twenty-first century, a faith that will have
to contribute to stopping negative global trends. The growing power of
humankind brings progress and prosperity. Yet, the selfish side of that power
cuts into the very substance on which our future depends – our physical habitat
and our spiritual essence. Our world is changing at a speed and in a direction
that is worrysome. There is ever more violence, alienation, injustice,
inequality, intolerance, pollution and depletion of natural resources. And
there is ever less goodness, justice, compassion, humanity, solidarity, healthy
relations and family life.”
“The
direction in which the world is going must be changed. Ideologies that do not
respect God, or are against God, are obviously not capable of doing that. It
can be done only by those who respect the One who created the world and the
order of things within it. The wondrous planet on which we live and die is
completely unique in the universe. There is nothing like it in the sight of the
most powerful telescopes. We are used to it, so this wonder no longer
astonishes us,” said Bosnian President and added, “Everything on this planet is
a testimony to the Almighty Creator’s touch and His intent to make a home for
us. He endowed us with a miraculous gift: free will in a world that is
completely determined. We must show appreciation and responsibility. We must
harmonize our actions with His Will. We must bear this gift properly, with
devotion. Particularly those of us He calls the Devoted.”
No comments:
Post a Comment