Monday, April 9, 2012
Alghozali, Who is he?
AL-GHAZALI, ABU HAMID (1058-1111)
al-Ghazali is one of the greatest Islamic Jurists, theologians and
mystical thinkers. He learned various branches of traditional Islamic
religious sciences in his home town of Tus, Gurgan and Nishapur in the
northern part of Iran. He was also involved in Sufi practices from an
early age. Being recognized by Nizam al-Mulk, the vizir of the Seljuq
sultans, he was appointed head of the Nizamiyyah College at Baghdad in
AH 484AD 1091. As the intellectual head of the Islamic community, he was
busy lecturing on Islamic jurisprudence at the College, and also
refuting heresies and responding to questions from all segments of the
community. Four years later, however, al-Ghazali fell into a serious
spiritual crisis and finally left Baghdad, renouncing his career and the
world After wandering in Syria and Palestine for about two years and
finishing the pilgrimage to Mecca, he returned to Tus, where he was
engaged in writing, Sufi practices and teaching his disciples until his
death. In the meantime he resumed teaching for a few years at the
Nizamiyyah College in Nishapur
Al-Ghazali explained in his autobiography why he renounced his brilliant
career and turned to Sufism. It was, he says, due to his realization
that there was no way to certain knowledge or the conviction of
revelatory truth except through Sufism. (This means that the traditional
form of Islamic faith was in a very critical condition at the time.)
This realization is possibly related to his criticism of Islamic
philosophy. In fact, his refutation of philosophy is not a mere
criticism from a certain (orthodox) theological viewpoint. First of all,
his attitude towards philosophy was ambivalent; it was both an object
and criticism and an object of learning (for example, logic and the
natural sciences). He mastered philosophy and then criticized it in
order to Islamicize it. The importance of his criticism lies in his
philosophical demonstration that the philosophers' metaphysical
arguments cannot stand the test of reason. However, he was also forced
to admit that the certainty, of revelatory truth, for which he was so
desperately searching, cannot be obtained by reason. It was only later
that he finally attained to that truth in the ecstatic state (fana') of
the Sufi. Through his own religious experience, he worked to revive the
faith of Islam by reconstructing the religious sciences upon the basis
of Sufsm, and to give a theoretical foundation to the latter under the
influence of philosophy. Thus Sufism came to be generally recognized in
the Islamic community. Though Islamic philosophy did not long survive
al-Ghazali's criticism, he contributed greatly to the subsequent
philosophization of Islamic theology and Sufism.
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