At the moment the Muslim world, that
stretches from Morocco to Indonesia, has two parallel systems of education.
We have a system of religious education and a network of secular institutions
besides it. These two major streams are further subdivided into a variety
of bodies which can actually be termed as separate identities. For instance,
the institutions of secular education in Pakistan can be categorized as
below:
1. Institutions established in the
public sector.
2. Schools and colleges managed by
the Christian missionary organizations.
3. Indigenous institutions in the
private sector designed on the pattern of Christian Mission Schools, such
as the Beacon House and City School systems.
4. Private English medium schools
in the urban concentrations managed strictly on commercial lines.
5. Schools and colleges established
by particular communities such as Agha Khanis and Ahmadies.
Each of these categories comprises
a plethora of varieties distinguished by their syllabuses, ambiance,
facilities, pay scales of staff and the financial status of the students
they serve. For example, the first group consists of the following types
of institutions:
1. Ordinary schools with Urdu as medium
of instruction.
2. Model schools with English as medium
of instruction.
3. English medium Public Schools at
the District and Divisional level and traditional Public Schools set in
the British tradition (eg. The Lawrence College.)
4. Cadet schools and colleges.
5. Degree colleges with English or
Urdu as media of instruction.
The distribution of religious schools
is not by any means less diverse. They are not schools of Islamic theology
and doctrine as such but are distinctly divided with reference to their
sectarian affiliations. The stamp of their respective schools of thought
is so marked that they are identified as such and prefer to introduce themselves
accordingly. The religious institutions in Pakistan fall into the following
categories:
1. Schools of the Deobandi creed.
2. Schools of the Barailvi school
of thought.
3. Schools in the Ahl-i- Hadees tradition.
4. Shia schools of religious instruction.
This goes to show that we do not have
a single uniform and harmonious system of education at the national level.
The existing set up of education is fragmented and distorted by the limitations
imposed by local and foreign intrusions and prejudices rampant in various
strata, groups and sects of the society. The students graduating from these
schools are not different merely on the bases of their abilities and educational
background, but also possess distinct personalities, subcultures, manners,
attitudes and values which they proclaim, and as a result they step into
the world of practicalities carrying wide ranging and diverse philosophical
concepts about the past, present and future of the country. In the presence
of these differences, we can only afford a rhetoric on solidarity, unity,
love, sympathy and discipline but the realization of these values require
an achievement bordering a miracle.
Pakistan had inherited the legacy
of social and political fragmentation into Sindhi, Baluchi, Punjabi, Pathan
and Muhajir communities right from the beginning. We promoted estrangement
among these communities instead of cementing them. Having sown the seeds
of divergent objectives among them, we nursed hatred among them by infusing
the complexes of superiority one case and deprivation in another. It would
be an outrageous example of our naivete to expect that all these
conscious and unconscious measures on our part would breed love and affection
amongst the various sections of the society.
No collective objectives can be achieved
without creating an esprit de corps by cultivating an atmosphere throbbing
with unity, solidarity and harmony. It is impossible to achieve any goals
even in a small team of sportsmen in the existing state of chaos, what
to speak of any national achievements. The number of horses, however large
it may be, will not help increase the speed of a cart unless all of them
are pulling it in the same direction. The rapidly expanding network of
schools cannot ensure a bright future for our nation unless a result oriented
education system is introduced which can create consensus on all issues
of national importance. If that is not ensured, then every new school would
only add to the degree of chaos prevailing in the society and further darken
the prospects of hope and improvement.
The disorder and chaos in the education
system at the national level has spawned numerous problems all of which
cannot be addressed here. We would like to mention and discuss the more
important ones only, which have proved to be more grave for us.
I. Schisms and Fragmentation in the Nation
Our education system has largely contributed
towards dividing our society into religious and secular groups which are
further subdivided on the bases of language, class distinction and social
status. There is no doubt that all of us wish and pray for the unity of
the Ummah. We would like to get rid of sectarian differences. We would
expect every Muslim to rise above his personal interests and devote himself
for the larger and more lofty national objectives by overlooking petty
differences. But a society which has been divided into numerous air tight
compartments in this manner, allows no hope for such a harmony.
II. Spiritual and Temporal Divide
Pakistan is a Muslim majority country.
All the citizens appreciate that Islam is not a religion restricted to
a particular class or party. All Muslims own it at the individual
level as a matter of personal conviction. It is, therefore, impossible
to believe that we can as a nation remain oblivious to the need of religious
education. Only a nation inclined to maintain a distinct clergy for the
performance of religious rites and rituals can afford to segregate religious
and secular streams of education. That would be a nation where a predominantly
large section of the society is alienated from religion and for which religion
is no more a live phenomenon. Even a rudimentary knowledge about Islam
would show that it neither allows Papacy, nor a professional clergy, nor
a tribe like Levies.
Every Muslim should be interested
in knowing the fundamentals of Islam. It is his responsibility to have
an awareness about it to a degree matching his abilities and faculties.
No doubt, to be a religious scholar, it requires a full-time devotion
and a lot of hard work, but nevertheless a layman must get some basic religious
education. While analyzing our education system, Syed Abul'ala Maudoodi
describes the concept of `separation of God and Caesar' in the following
words:
"The separation of spiritual and temporal worlds
is essentially a Christian concept or it might as well be Buddhist or Hindu
in origin. Islam is diametrically opposed to this proposition. We cannot
commit a greater blunder than accommodating this segregation in our education
system in our society and in our state. We do not believe in having
a religious education system and a secular one also at the same time. On
the contrary, we believe that our entire education should be religious
and secular simultaneously -- secular in the sense that we should
understand the world and be able to manage its affairs, and religious in
the sense that we should understand the world from the religious view point
and manage it in the light of the religious guidance we have. Islam does
not belong to that class of religions which demand that we may manage the
world in the manner we wish and only annex a set of religious beliefs and
rituals as an appendix. Islam cannot remain contented with the status of
an appendix only. It steps forward to become the sole guide in all fields
of life and a model for our lives in totality. Islam does not restrict
itself to metaphysics but addresses all the issues of human life. It explains
the status of man in this world and defines his objectives in a normative
way. It describes his attitude in this world and the principles he should
follow. It emphasizes that this world is like a field in which man will
sow now, and its crop he will reap in the Hereafter. Islam helps the man
learn sowing properly in the world so that he may get a rich crop in the
Hereafter. Such a religion cannot tolerate the separation of secular and
religious education. It cannot accept a system where the education is predominantly
secular with a small insignificant appendix of religious instruction tagged
with it. It demands that the entire education should be shaped by our religious
views. When we teach philosophy, it should be done with an Islamic view
so that we may get Muslim philosophers. When we teach science, it should
be done in the light of the Islamic view of the world so that we may produce
Muslim scientists. When our students study economics they should be equipped
with the determination and skills to give us an Islamic economic system.
When they study political science, they should become crusaders in the
cause of building up an Islamic political system. Our law graduates should
be able to uphold the universal principles of justice taught by Islam.
In this way, Islam wishes to eliminate the distinction of religious and
secular education and build the system on the basis of divine guidance
only. Once we are able to achieve this comprehensive education system,
we would no more require a separate arrangement for religious education.
The same colleges would provide us religious scholars and modern directors
and secretaries at the same time." ("Taa'leemaat", Pgs 143-145)
On the other side, the religious scholars
in an Islamic society are not allowed to withdraw from the world and live
like hermits. According to the Quran, the prime responsibility of a religious
scholar is to spread the message of God in his nation. Anyone blessed
with the knowledge of God's message has been entrusted with the assignment
to communicate it further. He should keep the people warned of the consequences
of ignoring God's dictates and should give them the good news of salvation
as a result of carrying them out. This means that if he has to work and
operate in his society he must be able to speak their language and should
know their attitude towards and their doubts about religion. With this
plan in mind, if we analyze a system where the religious schools are alienated
right from the beginning from the rest of the society, how can our religious
leaders appreciate the problems and the skepticism generated by secular
education. The Ulema would consequently grow complete strangers to our
society, its language, attitude, approach, lifestyle and manners. As a
result, it would become absolutely impossible for them to communicate and
converse with the people or to invite them to Islam.
So it is not possible for any Muslim
country to raise the edifice of education on a shaky foundation marked
by separate systems for religious and secular education.
III. Language Based Distinctions
Another casualty faced by our education
system is the further subdivision of our secular institutions into schools
of English and Urdu media of instruction which is giving birth to two distinct
social classes.
Just as it is not feasible for a society
to raise a distinct class of religious experts and keep them alienated
from the rest of the sections of the society, it is also not advisable
to dissect the society into groups based on languages. And only a
little more thinking will show that such a grouping does not confine itself
to difference in language on, but goes ahead to breed two separate cultures
marked by different ways of living and behaviour and different values.
The students of English medium schools
are deeply fond of the western thought, ideas and life style. Since the
very beginning, they are brought up in an atmosphere which promotes an
inferiority complex about their civilization, culture and traditions. Their
ideals are the achievement of the highest status outlined by the west.
They are also specially welcome in our society. Fluency in English language
is invariably construed as intellectual acumen. That is why all avenues
to good jobs, higher education and key posts in the country are reserved
for them. After freedom from the Britishers in 1947, we have been ruled
to date by these "Neo-Britishers" .
The students from the Urdu medium
schools are deemed as second grade citizens. The way the students from
English medium schools are received with open arms every where, induces
them with a deep sense of inferiority. They are neither eastern nor western
in the values they profess. Despite good performance at the school level,
they are in a thick soup at college level only because of their deficiency
in the English language, because all professional college education in
Pakistan is essentially in English. In other words, we get entire generations
of youth destined to become clerks only, irrespective of their latent
and unexplored abilities.
IV. Discrimination on the Basis of the
Financial Status of the Students
A just society must ensure the protection
and sanctity of fundamental rights of all its members and should desist
from discriminating among them on the basis of their wealth and resources.
All of them should get equal opportunities of health, shelter, basic education,
justice and access to all basic needs of life without any reference to
their class. Our existing system of education is grossly deficient
in this respect. As a result of this discrimination which our education
system allows, we have evolved a class that is maintaining its hegemony
in the society by virtue of its special education. The deprived classes
equipped with poor education have no hope that they would ever be able
to shatter this hegemony.
While commenting on this discrimination,
professor Muslim Sajjad writes:
This system has been bequeathed to the Muslim
countries by the colonial rule. The colonial rulers wielded the weapon
of education successfully to raise a special class in the local society
that is loyal to them, reflects their culture and faith, and is totally
alienated from the local `aborigines'. For this purpose, schools with special
syllabuses and facilities were established for loyalist lords, feudal leaders
and counts. Christian missions were encouraged to set up schools to make
inroads into intelligent students by imparting cultural and religious training.
On the other hand, ordinary second class schools were established where
the downtrodden families would send their children to get ready for the
jobs of clerks, stenos, revenue officials and postmen. Special training
colleges for army were initiated for elite families to get commissioned
in the army. Someone has remarked: `The nation was divided by according
separate treatment to students in the light of their family background
and social status. They were led to different tracks with different directions,
facilities, and different destinies, as if education were a salable
commodity classified as superior and inferior. This disintegration initiated
such a vicious circle that the traditional family broke down to give way
to new financial and social classes. New units of culture appeared. People
of the same nation started drifting in different orbits. They segregated
their habitats. The sphere of their social contacts underwent a change.
Their shopping markets, recreation resorts, focus of interest, way of living,
mode of conversation, dress and manners, dining etiquette and manners to
move around, articles of daily use and even the yardsticks of thought were
divided. Solidarity, unity, harmony and cooperation got confined to respective
classes and groups.
The tragedy of the situation in Muslim countries
is the perpetuation of this state of affairs even long after they got freedom,
and even when it is in stark contradiction to the fundamental teachings
and cultural ethos of Islam. How can a religion withstand such an education
system when it proclaims justice and social equality?
If someone is up to relating the history of education,
he will find that the Muslims are founders of the concept of providing
equal opportunities of education to all strata of the society. For centuries,
the Muslims maintained a sprawling network of schools and mosques where
all citizens had equal opportunities of education. The system of education
was uniform and homogeneous, and it did not contribute towards fragmentation
of the society into classes, but helped the citizens to submit to one God
and get a place in the fraternity of the Muslim Ummah. It is correctly
said that the Muslims were the first to democratize the education system.
The citizens were considered equal while studying in the school just
as they were not discriminated against while praying in a mosque. The right
of the poor to get education was established and could not be denied. If
any modern state attempts to introduce an Islamic Education System, it
must incorporate equal opportunities for every citizen to reach the highest
stations of social status through education. An Islamic society may comprise
all types of subjects, poor and affluent, but just as they are all treated
equally in the eyes of the law and are entitled to fundamental rights without
any discrimination, similarly they should have equal opportunities to get
educated. An Islamic state should employ the education system as a tool
to achieve social justice with wise strategies that ensure the fulfilment
of this objective. A just educational arrangement has two facets. One that
no citizen however poor and suppressed he may be, should be left out of
the ambit of the state umbrella of education, and second that no privileged
citizen or class of citizens should be allowed to have an exclusive opportunity
to the gateway to success and prized jobs through the ladder of expensive
and elite education institutions. It would mean that an Islamic state should
not allow any special institutions of this sort that are instrumental in
maintaining the hegemony of the privileged. Admission to higher education
and entry to good jobs should be regulated in a manner that only the more
competent is able to come up through a just competition based on merit.
Unless a society enforces the principle of `equal opportunities of education
for all' in letter and spirit, it is not possible to meet the requirements
of justice and nor can we get rid of the legacy of the colonial age, which
is still proliferating chaos and disruption in our Ummah and is seriously
impeding its progress." ("Islaami Riyaasat main Nizaam-i-Ta`leem", Pgs
94-96)
V. Commercialization of Education
As a result of the degeneration of
our education system, as pointed above, schools in our society are not
being established out of motivation for social service or nation building.
They are a means to mint money. Education is no more a noble mission; it
is only a business. Now the capitalists set up schools and colleges under
the cloak of social service and start amassing tax free wealth. Well known
and reputed institutions are totally oblivious of human values, what to
speak of Islamic morals. These are schools with fees rocketing sky high
and with teachers incompetent and morally bankrupt. Proficiency of students
in spoken English only is the sole target. The moral and scientific training
of the students is grossly deficient. They are infused with the spirit
of self interest and materialism instead of loyalty to the country,
Ummah and Islam. They are taught to aim at winning lucrative jobs and a
respectable status only, and not at learning skills and attaining ability.
O
The flaws of our education system outlined
above owe a lot to the absence of clear cut . The system is a masterpiece
of aimlessness. No doubt, the policy makers must have kept an objective
for the purpose of formulation of the policy. But a study of the form in
which it has unfolded itself over the last decade shows that it has no
focus worth the name. Someone has correctly remarked that unless you have
determined your destination, you will remain euphoric that you are approaching
it regardless of the path you chose. Unless we are clear about our objectives,
we cannot realize whether each step we tread takes us closer or farther
from our destination.
Our education system has no destination.
We do not know where we are carrying our youth. We are not teaching our
children to get men like Abu Hanifa, Shafa'ee, Shiblee, Farahi, Iqbal or
Jinnah. It is pathetic that even after half a century of the exodus of
Britishers from the subcontinent we have not been able to define our goals.
Are not we contended with teaching a few words of English and Urdu and
a few facts of Science and mathematics to our students ?
We should have defined our objectives
on the very first day. Instead we adopted the dual system of secular and
religious education prevalent before freedom, without any modifications.
We failed to apply our minds to the fact that the British system was aimed
at totally different objectives, tailored for entirely different conditions
and with different motives. The fact is that none of these two systems
(religious and secular) possesses the capability to serve any respectable
and free nation wishing to remain free of parochial and sectarian divisions.
As far as our orthodox religious schools
are concerned, they are founded on centuries old concepts. There is a common
misunderstanding about them that they are probably upholding the lofty
ideals of our conservative religious traditions in education. This is not
true. In fact the `religious' education system that we have inherited was
a system developed to train civil servants for the Muslim rulers of the
later middle ages. It became redundant with the British occupation of India.
But since it was a vehicle for the transfer of our cultural heritage to
the next generation and it also contained some religious element to meet
the requirements of a common observing Muslim, many Indian Muslims were
convinced about the need to preserve it under the alien rule, which would
in turn preserve their ancestral heritage, national solidarity and cultural
existence. But as the time passed the system lost its utility and finally
its graduates could find no livelihood except to make a living by
managing the mosques.
So far for our orthodox education
system! We are trying to get qualified religious scholars and teachers
from these institutions, a purpose for which they were never designed.
As pointed out earlier, they were designed to get civil servants for the
seventeenth century Muslim rulers. Then, the state law relied on the Hanafi
interpretation of the Shariah, and that is why the Hanafi law and jurisprudence
along with some basic religious syllabus was also included to facilitate
the functions of the Qazis (Judicial Officers). It is out of ignorance
that we consider the system of these Madaaris to be religious in nature.
Now let us have a look on the modern
system of education which is a unique colonial gift for the Indian Muslims.
Obviously, we do not expect the British to have designed these schools
in a manner that they be helpful in preserving and promoting Muslim culture
in India. They also did not intend to set up schools with the same objectives
that they cherished while founding schools in England. They did not want
bureaucrats who were suitable for the task of managing a free national
state -- a type of people they probably needed back in England
and not in India. They wanted people who could become lifeless tools in
the hands of the overseas rulers. They needed people who could understand
their language, their principles, and who could materialize the British
plan of expansionism in India according to their laid down strategy.
For these reasons, they might have
taught many subjects, but the subject of religion could hardly find any
place in the curriculum. The students, therefore, gradually got estranged
from religion and religious values. When it was somehow noticed by the
government, they decided to add a component of religious dose to the existing
setup. Thereafter, a patch of Islamic Studies was superimposed on the syllabus
by the order of the government. It was a step towards reformation. It was
presumed that this measure would sufficiently protect our Muslim students
from the apprehended bad influence of western education. But experience
proved otherwise.
Here we are not going to indulge in
the lengthy discussion on the number and variety of demerits with which
both these systems are pregnant. We only want to draw the attention of
our readers to the fact that even a cursory study of both these systems
shows that while adopting and enforcing them in a free Islamic country,
the rulers had no objective before them. Had they defined their objectives
with any degree of certainty, only then they would have considered the
possibility of achieving them through these systems.
We know it quite well that Islam places
a few demands on us as individuals and a few others as a society, state
and Ummah. We have to frame our lives in the light of all these religious
tenets. All these dictates of the Quran are specifically meant to help
in "Tazkiya-i-Nafs" of Muslims. This entails our moral and spiritual cleansing
and development at the individual level. Islam intends to build a clean
and morally sound personality. It asserts that the Prophets were sent for
this purpose and this was the intention of all divine revelations and divine
laws. It holds promise in the Hereafter for those who keep themselves away
from all immoralities this world offers and continue to observe the commands
of Allah. On the other hand, at the level of the Ummah, Islam wishes to
create an Ummah that can proclaim truth before the entire world on the
strength of its character and the social justice it establishes. So that
no human being in the world is left with any excuse to deny the Truth.
The Quran terms it `The testimony of the Ummah before the people'.
The way the Holy Prophet (sws) testified
the faith before us, the way he finalized the Hujjat (Argument to substantiate
the Truth) by his personality, the way he presented before us his life
as a perfect model, the way the Muslim world considers his conduct, character
and etiquette, a lighthouse of guidance for them, similarly we have to
rise with all these values at the collective level and have to proclaim
and testify the Truth before the entire world as an Ummah.
According to the explicit provisions
of the Quran, we cannot testify the truth of the God's will before the
world unless we are "The Muslim Ummah" (Ummat-i-Muslimah), "The Ummah that
observes the golden mean" (Ummat-i-Wasat), "The Best of the Nations" (Khair-i-Ummah)
and "The People of Abraham" (Millat-i- Ibraheem). It would require such
a complete and total submission to Islam that a stranger would immediately
realize the reality Islam is, by coming across us. The moment he sees us,
he comes to know what we believe in, what are our ideals and laws, and
what concepts do we cherish about politics, society, economics and criminal
administration. When the Muslim community dazzles with these traits and
all teachings of Islam are manifest in their true form, as they were in
the days of the Pious Caliphate, every observer immediately follows what
Islam stands for. Now sermons and lectures are not required; discussions
and rhetoric are superfluous.
So the goal of our religion is to
get a pious soul at the individual level, and an Ummah testifying truth
before the world, at the national level. It would automatically flow from
these premises that our education system should also have the same goal.
It should have the following two objectives:
-- It has to groom people who are
outstanding in their character, conduct, morals and habits and at the same
time should be rising stars in thefield of sciences and arts.
- It has to lead people to the
stage when as a nation and Ummah we are shining forth as a lighthouse of
piety and truth before the entire world and become Islam incarnate.
Therefore, we have to devise an education
system tailored for these objectives. We have to include everything that
may assist us in the realization of these objectives and at the same time
we have to scrape away anything that may be detrimental to these targets.
Anyone having even a slight interest
in the solidarity of our country cannot imagine having an army with a multiplicity
of command divided among Punjabis, Sindhis, Baluchis, Pathans and Muhajirs.
These armies may as well defend their own communities but will rather damage
the country itself, instead of providing any meaningful defence. Exactly
in the same manner, the institutions who are training armies to defend
the ideological boundaries of our country cannot deliver the goods if they
continue to be divided along the lines of sectarianism, ethnicity and class
distinctions.
Therefore, it is indispensable to
have a uniform education system for the entire country. Each and every
clause and provision of the system should be thoroughly studied and finalized
by the Parliament. Then it should be implemented uniformly throughout the
country and every citizen, whether affluent or destitute, whether a villager
or an urbanite, should have equal opportunity and access to it. The teaching
staff should be paid salaries according to a uniform scale and we should
have a uniform syllabus at the national level. If the private sector wants
to come forward to contribute, it should be given clear-cut parameters
to bring itself in conformity with the national system. There should be
no difference of kind and quality among the governmental and private institutions
and the vulgar commercialization of education should be actively discouraged.
(Translated by Nadir Aqeel)
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