Encyclopedia of Islam


renewal and reform movements



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renewal and reform movements


is not offered by the Quran and Sunna. Although 

conservative ulama have regarded this method of 

legal reasoning cautiously, preferring the conven-

tions of legal tradition, it has been accepted as one 

of the methods of fiqh, to greater or lesser degree, 

since the ninth century. Islamic studies scholars 

have also asserted that renewers and reformers do 

not really wish to simply return to the Golden Age 

of the past, but that they actually seek to invoke 

the past in order to bring about a better present 

and future. This claim has validity, but it over-

looks movements that idealize “pristine” Islam 

to such an extent that it leads to religio-political 

extremism, oppressive laws, armed violence, and 

human rights violations that actually undermine 

the prospects for improved conditions in the pres-

ent and future.

Two main types of renewal and reform move-

ments have arisen in Islamicate lands since the 

18th century. One of these, sometimes called the 

“modernist movement,” has sought to initiate 

change by interpreting the Quran and the sunna 

in ways that help Islamicate societies more readily 

adapt modern European learning and political lib-

eralism. This trend is visible among Egyptian and 

Ottoman ulama who had become familiar with 

European 

science


 and society during the colonial 

era, including Rifaa Rafi al-Tahtawi (d. 1873), 

J

amal


 

al

-d



in

 

al



-a

Fghani


 (d. 1897), and m

Uham


-

mad


  a

bdUh


 (d. 1905). Islamic modernism was 

spearheaded in i

ndia

 by s


ayyid

  a


hmad

  k


han

 (d. 


1898) in the wake of the successful British sup-

pression the 1857 Sepoy revolt. However, whereas 

al-Afghani’s modernism assumed an overtly anti-

colonial coloring, Ahmad Khan was attempting to 

bridge the gap between Muslims and the British 

in order to win a more favorable place for them 

in the colonial administration. Abduh, initially 

sympathetic to al-Afghani’s views, later took a 

more gradualist approach to reform, which won 

him the support of the British authorities who 

governed  e

gypt


 in the late 19th and early 20th 

centuries. Ahmad Khan’s modernism paved the 

way for the Muslim leadership that emerged in 

the Indian independence movement in the 20th 

century. It went in two directions, however. One 

group of modernists joined to promote the cre-

ation of an independent p

akistan


, while another 

supported the cause of the Indian National Con-

gress, which wanted to create a united Indian 

nation. Said Nursi (d. 1960) was one of the most 

important leaders of Islamic reformism in t

Urkey


,

but he eventually clashed with a

tatUrk

 (d. 1938), 



who promoted a strong secular brand of Turkish 

nationalism, and he was exiled from the country. 

Other important modernist reform movements 

arose in North Africa, i

ran

, and i


ndonesia

.

Muslim modernists assert that many of the 



core principles of Western science and moral-

ity originated in Islamicate civilization. Reform, 

therefore, was a matter of reviving what they 

defined as the original Islamic heritage that had 

become corrupted by popular ignorance and 

backward-thinking ulama. They thought that this 

was the best way to protect their cultures from 

colonial domination by European powers. Their 

efforts were aimed at educated Muslims who 

were tempted to abandon their Islamic heritage 

to follow the European secular path promoted by 

Muslim rulers seeking to rapidly modernize their 

armies and governments with the help of foreign 

advisers and legal codes. Many of the modernists 

turned their attention to educational reform and 

took advantage of print culture to disseminate 

their ideas.

The second type of renewal and reform move-

ment in Islam is that which directly attacks beliefs 

and practices in Muslim societies that are believed to 

be un-Islamic; it opposes or resists Euro-American 

influence and reasserts core Islamic values. This 

kind of movement, sometimes called “revivalist,” 

seeks to achieve its ends partly through doctrinal 

education (

daawa

) in the Quran and sunna, and 

partly through overt political action aimed at 

Islamizing secular governments and pressing them 

to uphold the sharia. This brand of renewal also 

employs armed 

Jihad

 to achieve its aims. One of 



the earliest and best known of these movements 


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