| The Importance of Education amongst Indian Muslims |
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The importance of education is quite clear. Education is the knowledge of putting one's potentials to maximum use. One can safely say that a human being is not in the proper sense till he is educated. This
importance of education is basically for two reasons. The
first is that the training of a human mind is not complete
without education. Education makes man a right thinker. It
tells man how to think and how to make decision. The
second reason for the importance of education is that only
through the attainment of education, man is enabled to receive
information from the external world; to acquaint himself with
past history and receive all necessary information regarding
the present. Without education, man is as though in a closed
room and with education he finds himself in a room with all
its windows open towards outside world. This
is why Islam attaches such great importance to knowledge and
education. When the Qur'an began to be revealed, the first
word of its first verse was 'Iqra'
that is, read. Education is thus the starting point of every
human activity. A
scholar (alim) is accorded great respect in the hadith.
According to a hadith the ink of the pen of a scholar is more
precious than the blood of a martyr. The reason being that a
martyr is engaged in defense work while an alim (scholar)
builds individuals and nations along positive lines. In this
way he bestows a real life to the world. The
Qur'an repeatedly asks us to observe the earth and the
heavens. This instills in man a desire to learn natural
science. All the books of hadith have a chapter on knowledge (ilm).
In Sahih Bukhari there is a chapter entitled "The virtue
of one who acquires ilm (learning) and imparts that to
others." How
great importance is attached to learning in Islam can be
understood from an event in the life of the Prophet. At the
battle of Badr in which the Prophet gained victory over his
opponents, seventy people of the enemy rank were taken
prisoner. These prisoners of war were literate people. In
order to benefit from their education the Prophet declared
that if one prisoner teaches ten Medinan children how to read
and write, this will serve as his ransom and he will be set
free. This
was the first school in the history of Islam established by
the Prophet himself with all its teachers being non-Muslims.
Furthermore, they were all war prisoners. There was all the
risk that after their release they will again create problems
for Islam and Muslims. This Sunnah of the Prophet shows that
education is to be received whatever the risk involved. On
the one hand Islam places great emphasis on learning, on the
other, all those factors which are necessary to make progress
in learning have provided by God. One of these special factors
is the freedom of research. One example of it is that in
Mecca, the birthplace of the Prophet, dates were not grown.
Afterwards the Prophet migrated to Medina, the city of dates.
One day the Prophet saw that some people were atop the date
trees busy in doing something. On being asked what they were
engaged in, they replied that they were pollinating. The
Prophet suggested them not to do so. The following year date
yield was considerably very low. The Prophet enquired them of
the reason. They told him that the date crop depended on
pollination. Since he suggested them to do otherwise, they had
refrained from that. The Prophet then told them to go on doing
as they used to, and that, "You know the worldly matters
better than me." In
this way, the Prophet of Islam separated scientific research
from religion. This meant that in the world of nature, man
must enjoy full opportunity to conduct free research and adopt
the conclusions arrived at after the research. Placing such
great emphasis on knowledge.
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| By Maulana Wahiduddin Khan |
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