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GUARDIANS OF THE NATURAL ORDER
FAZLUN KHALID outlines the Islamic approach to environmental protection
In our eagerness to 'progress' and 'develop' we have lost sight
of the finite and delicate nature of planet Earth and of humanity's
place in it. Islamic teaching offers an opportunity to understand
the natural order and to define human responsibility. It could be
said that the limits of the human condition are set within four
principals - Tawheed, Fitra, Mizan and Khalifa.
Tawheed is the fundamental statement of oneness of the Creator,
from which everything else follows. It is the primordial testimony
to the unity of all creation and to the interlocking grid of the
natural order of which humanity is an intrinsic part.
God says of himself in Qur'an:
Say; He is God, One, God,
The Everlasting Refuge
112:1-2
And about creation:
To Him belongs whatsoever is
in the heavens and the earth,
all obey his will
And it is He who originates creation,
30:25
The whole of creation - being the work of one Originator - works
within one stable pattern, however complex it may be. Another verse
in the Qur'an refers to the heavens and the Earth as extensions
of God's throne, thus conveying the idea that creation was designed
to function as a whole. Each of its complimentary parts, including
humankind, plays its own self-preserving role, and in so doing supports
the rest.
The Fitra describes the primordial nature of creation itself and
locates humankind in it.
The Qur'an says:
So set thy face to the religion, a man of pure faith-
God's original upon which He originated mankind.
There is no changing God's creation .
That is the right religion;
but most men know it not-
30:29
God originated humankind within his Creation, which He also originated.
Humanity is then inescapably subject to God's immutable laws, as
is the rest of creation. Creation cannot be changed: global warming
can be seen, in this light, as the Earth's endeavor to maintain
a balance in the face of the human assault against it.
The Mizan is the principle of the middle path. In one of its most
eloquent passages the Qur'an describes creation thus:
The All-Merciful has taught the Qur'an.
He created man
and He taught him the explanation.
The sun and the moon to a reckoning,
and the stars and the trees bow themselves;
and heaven - He raised it up and set the balance.
Transgress not in the balance,
and weigh with justice, and skimp not in the balance.
And earth - He set it down for all beings,
therein friuts and palm trees with sheaths,
and grain in the blade, and the fragrant herbs.
Of which your Lord's bounties will you and you deny?
55: 1-12
God has singled out humans and taught them reason - the capacity
to understand. All creation has an order and a purpose. If the sun,
the moon, the stars, the trees and the rest of creation did not
conform to the natural laws - 'bow themselves' - it would be impossible
for life to function on Earth. So we have a responsibility not to
deny the 'Lord's bounties' and actively to recognize the order that
is around us, for ourselves, as much as for the rest of creation.
Khalifa- or the role of stewardship - is the sacred duty God has
ascribed to the human race. There are many verses in the Qur'an
that describe human duties and responsibilities, such as the following
which aptly summarizes humanity's role:
It is He who has appointed
You viceroys in the earth
6: 165
Humankind has a special place in God's scheme. We are more than
friends of the Earth - we are its Guardians. Although we are equal
partners with everything else in the natural world we have added
responsibilities. We are decidedly not its lords and masters.
We may deduce from these four principles that creation although
quite complex and yet finite, only works because each of its component
parts does what is expected of it - in the language of the Qur'an,
submits to the Creator. Humanity is inextricably part of this pattern.
The role of humans - who uniquely have wills of their own and are
thus capable of interfering with the pattern of creation - is of
guardianship. This added responsibility imposes limits on their
behaviour and should lead to conscious recognition of their own
fragility. They achieve this by submitting themselves to the divine
law.
Until quite recently the human race - both rebels and conformists,
the ignorant and the enlightened, whether in small self-governing
communities or vast empires, barbarian tribes or points of high
civilization - functioned unconsciously within natural, unwritten
boundaries. It had an intuitive disposition to live within the Fitra,
though this was only achieved by conscious recognition of the existence
of a superior force, the divine. This was an existential reality,
neither idyllic nor utopian.
We are clearly no longer functioning within these limits. Two events
in the 16th and 17th century Europe allowed the human species to
break free of the natural patterning of which it had always been
part. One was the appearance of the Cartesian world view, which
propounded a dualism that separated mind and matter and allowed
for development of science on purely mechanistic lines. Cartesian
scepticism brushed aside the accumulated wisdom of the ages and
sowed the seeds of doubt. From then on humanity began to worship
itself: in Descartes' own words humans were 'lords and masters of
creation'. They now had reason on their side to support them in
their acts of predation.
This period also saw the laying of the foundations of the banking
system to which we are all now in thrall. Bankers have, in Islamic
terms, sabotaged the Mizan of creation by not only charging interest
but by doing so on money which they create endlessly out of nothing.
This explosion of artificial wealth provides the illusion of economic
dynamism: but in reality it is parasitic. Endless credit devours
the finite Fitra. If kept up, this would eventually result in the
Earth looking like the surface of the moon.
People who lived in the pre-Cartesian dimension, that was before
we were told that nature was there to be plundered, were basically
no different from us. They had the same positive and negative human
attributes, but the results of human profligacy were contained by
the natural order of things, which transcended technological and
political sophistication and even religious disposition. Excess
in the natural order was contained because it was biodegradable.
When old civilizations, however opulent, profligate, greedy, or
brutal died, the forest just grew over them. They left no pollutants,
damaging poisons or nuclear waste. By contrast, and assuming we
survive as a species, archeologists excavating our present rampant
civilization are going to have one or two problems ...
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The Qur'anic references are from The Koran Interpreted by A.J.
Arberry, 1983. The World Classics Series, Oxford University Press.
Fazlun Khalid is Founder Director of the Islamic Foundation for
Ecology and Environmental Sciences.
This article was first published in the Journal of the United Nations
Environmental Programme (UNEP), Our Planet, Vol.8 No.2, July 1996.
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