A SHAVIAN AND A THEOLOGIAN
An illuminating conversation between

George Bernard shaw (The sceptic)
&
His Eminence Mohammad Abdul Aleem Siddiqui (The spritualist)

HIS Eminenece Mohammad Abdul Aleem Siddiqui Al-Qaderi, the eminent Muslim divine, who was on a visit to Mombasa, interviewed George Bernard Shaw, world-revnowed Irish savant, who was passing through on his way to South Africa on a holiday.

The Union Castle liner, Linlithgow, by which he was travelling, stopped for three days at the Island, and George Bernard Shaw was a guest of the Resident Magistrate of Mombasa, a distant relative whom he had never met before. When His Eminence arrived at the bungalow of the Magistrate, on Wednesday morning, the 17th of April, 1935, George Bernard Shaw at once came out to receive him.

George Bernard Shaw, a well-built medium-statured, erect and imposing figure, a gentleman of noble mien, was smiling, not the smile of the sceptic that flickers round the corners of the lips, but one of real welcome suffused his face, and there was nothing Shavian about him, if the phonetic pun be permissible, for even his chin was not shaved, and a long, flowing beard, on the contrary, imparted a serene dignity to his, falsely represented Freudian features. Full of vim and vigour, if it were not for the grey colour of his hair, beard, and eyebrows, he could scarcely be credited with the four score years, which strange to say, he carried with a most youthful buoyancy.

As His Eminence, a venerable figure in his dignified Arabic robes, comparatively very young, for he was only forty-three, although his grey hair due to chronic catarrh and unceasingly intense mental strain made him look much older, stepped out of the car, there was a hearty exchange of greetings, after which His Eminence expressed his great pleasure at meeting him. The Grand Old Man immediately rejoined that having heard about his missionary exploits and his novel way of preaching Islam, he himself was very eager to know him, and it was indeed a very happy coincidence that they had met there that day.

The conversation which followed was very interesting, though devoid of Shavian shafts and sarcasms, perhaps because the usual roles of interviews with George Barnard Shaw were reversed in this case; for it was George Bernard Shaw who asked the question of the interviewer, and listened attentively to the prompt, lucid and informative replies of His Eminence.

As an indirect account of the lively discussion might rob it of its personal touch, it is perferable that the stalwarts are made to speak for themselves.

George Bernard Shaw: I regret, I was not able, on account of a previous engagement, to attend your lecture last night, although I was very keen on doing so. You spoke on the Philosophy of Peace, but, as a Muslim, it would have been more appropriate if you had delivered a lecture on the Philosophy of War, for Islam doubtless, has spread at the point of the sword.

His Eminence: This is a common misunderstanding regarding Islam. I was dealing with this problem only last night, and I am really surprised that this myth, which has been thoroughly exploded by now, should receive any notice from a scholar of your calibre. How-ever, I may briefly tell you now that the literal meaning of the very word "Islam" is peace.

An authentic record of the teachings of Islam in their pristine purity has been preserved intact in the Qur’an and the Traditions. They go to establish, beyond the shadow of a doubt, that Islam permits the use of the sword only when wantonly attacked and compelled to defend itself. Besides, there is an explicit injunction in the Holy Qur’an that:-

"There is no coercion in religion"

thus clearly forbidding the use of force or compulsion in matters of religion.

As a matter of fact, I entertain the same conviction regarding the teachings of genuine Christianity, for our sense of reasoning tells us that if they be revelations and their source of emanation be consequently Divine they cannot but emphatically veto any manner of violence in respect of belief and enjoin its inculcation by means of arguments and rational discourses. As far as Islam is concerned the Qur’an distinctly says:-

                "So that he who perisheth hereafter may perish after
                demonstrative evidence, and that he who liveth may
                live by the same evidence."

The method that Islam teaches for its propagation, and to which its acceptance by all reasonable men and its spread to all the corners of the world in the past and the present is due, consists of the Qur’anic dictum :-

            "Invite people to the Way of your Lord with wisdom and mild
             exhortation, and dispute with them in the most conciliating manner."

History bears testimony to the fact that Christ was declared consubstantial with the rather by the Council of Nice, convened by Constantine in Bithynia in the year 325 A.C., and to enforce the belief in the Divinity of Christ, there followed a most horrid and inhuman slaughter of thousands of innocent people who refused to accept the dogma, not only in Europe, but in the sacred city of Jerusalem as well; but in spite of it all, I can never hold the real Christianity responsible for it. Of course, those representatives of the Church who wanted to impress the hearts of the people with their will, can be rightly saddled with all the blame.

Similarly, the sanguinary wars, known as Crusades, were the outcome of the Machiavellian machinations of such interested ecclesiastical groups of men, who, realising that the uncompromising preaching of the oneness of God by Islam was a great obstacle in their path and their self-fabricated Divine authority was at stake, launched an unscrupulous compaign against Islam and Muslims. They instigated the credulous mediaeval Europe to wage the so-called "holy wars" against Islam and Muslims, by circulating blood-curdling tales of imaginary atrocities by Muslims on Christians, describing the Muslims as infidels and inveterate enemies of their religion, property and persons. Obviously, therefore, these Church dignitaries alone can be held liable to account for the cruel, protracted, futile wars and not the original teachings of Christianity or Islam and the Muslims.

Further, if we grant as a supposition, that some Muslim rulers and tribes, actuated by the lust of conquest, became aggressors, long after the advent of Islam and let slip the dogs of war for self-aggrandisement, we can, in fairness, condemn those individuals for the reprehensible acts, and surely not Islam.

In this connection, I happen to have made certain remarks recently in one of my speeches at Durban, and, as they are very pertinent, I would like to repeat them to you, (So saying, His Eminence read out the following passage from a booklet which he was carrying with him:-

"If certain nations, immersed in paganism and superstition and ignorant of the real teachings of religion, wage wars in its name, the crime is theirs, and no blame can be ascribed to religion. Were not millions of human beings killed during the Great War in the name of peace, justice and the laudable object of safeguarding the rights of weaker nations ? Should we then condemn these humane and noble qualities because some states-man abused these terms and sanctioned the in-human slaughter for the attainment of their own selfish ends ?"
George Bernard Shaw: There is no doubt that the Roman Church fanatics were, to a great extent, responsible for the sad events, and the pure teachings of Christianity have no concern with their occurrence. It may also be admitted, that a great many misunderstandings prevail regarding Islam, and that it is being widely misrepresented, but do the Muslim masses agree with your interpretation, and do they believe that Islam was not, and should not be, spread by force ?

His Eminence: Every Muslim is bound to endorse it, for whatever I say is precisely what the Qur’an says, and my own views or conceptions have nothing to do with it. Many books have been written on this subject, and Syed Amir Ali, Sir Syed Ahamed Khan, Allama Shible and other learned Doctors of Islamic Theology have exhaustively dealt with all the aspects of this problem in their books.

George Bernard Shaw: I know that there is a considerable amount of concord between Islam and Christianity !

His Eminence: The Correspondence is not merely nominal or superficieall, for the Qur’an expressly predicates that when the ultimate source or origin of an inspired or revealed and Divine religion is the Being of God, unanimity in such revelations is indispensable. Islam has been conceived as a new religion, but according to the Qur’an itself, the religion preached by it is the same that was promulgated by all the true Prophets and, from Abraham right up to Jesus, God deputed them, one and all, for the dissemination of much the same teachings.

It was only because their original teachings were tempered with ad corrupted, and their authenticity became dubious, that the Almighty God sent the last Prophet, and the last Book, to re-state, confirm and complete His original Message. The Holy Qur’an has made this quite clear by saying that:-

"We ordained for you the religion with which We commanded Noah, and which We have revealed unto thee (O Muhammad)!, and with which We commanded Abraham and Moses and Jesus, saying: Observe this religion and be not divided therein."
George Bernard Shaw: The translations of the Qur’an which I have read, certainly go to substantiate your statements. I very much prefer the treanslation made by one who has adopted a different variation of the arrangement of the verses to that which is generally followed by other translators. I had it always with me during my tour of Morocco and Algeria, and my occasional references to its contents proved to be a perennial source of diversion and curious amusement to the Muslims of those lands. It is one of the editions of "Every Man’s Library", and I have commended its wide publicity to some of the publishers.

His Eminence: The translation you allude to is that of Mr. Rodwell !

George Bernard Shaw: Yes

His Eminence: There is no doubt that Mr. Rodwell has expended a great deal of energy and industry in translating the chapters of the Qur’an in their chronological order, but as his knowledge of the Arabic literature and Islamic history was not sufficiently wide and profound, a considerable number of translated passages are so misleading and contain such flagrant mistakes (which I by no means attribute to a deliberate intent onhis part, but as I have already said, they may be the said spheres) that they are likely to create wrong impressions about Islam.

As far as the translations of the Qur’an are concerned, I would recommended you to read "The Meaning of the Glorious Koran" by Mr. Marmaduke Pickthall, and I am sure that its persual will enable you to appreciate considerably more the exquisite beauty, the sublime transcendence and the appealing and impressive style of the Qur’an’s perspective. However, I do not imply that it is a perfect version of the original, for you yourself can aptly judge, being an admittedly splendid writer, that, in spite of the translator being the ablest and the best, he can never transmit the force and brilliance of your original writings into his translations.

George Bernard Shaw: It is quit true that the spirit of the original cannot be transplanted into its translation in another language, and the same is the case with the translations of the Bible, but they have now achieved a very high standard, and the process of raising it still higher is being continued.

His Eminence: Although the translations of the Bible may attain the highest stage of perfection from the standpoint of language, one cannot say, under any circumstances, that they contain the original message of Christianity, or are the genuine versions of the teachings of Jesus Christ for the original message, as you know, in its unalloyed purity, as delivered by Jesus, is no more extant. The result of the numerous lections of the Bible, and the absence of the original manuscript, is confusion worse confounded, and a seeker after truth cannot quench his thirst at its hydriod font, whilst the Qur’an, in contrast, has been preserved in such a manner, that there has not been the slightest change, not even to the extent of a letter or a dot. Hence if we want to know the real teachings of Christianity, we must look for them in the Qur’an.

George Bernard Shaw: Has there been really no alteration in the Qur’an, and is it absolutely preserved in its original form ? Did Prophet Muhammad know how to write, and is his writing in existence ?

His Eminence: There is a complete and authentic record of each and every chapter, nay, even of every verse, or I might say, of every word of the Qur’an. The Prophet, immediately following the revelation of a verse or verses to him, used to send for the special scribes appointed for the purpose and dictate the same to them. When transcribed, he would ask them to recite what they had written and, after listening to and verifying it, would explain to them its meaning.

The manuscripts in the handwriting of one of the most honoured and trusted among the scribes, by name Zaid bin Sabit, are preserved intact in the archives of Constantinople and Medina, and all the editions of the Qur’an in the world are their exact copies, not differing among themsellves even in point of a comma or a dash.

George Bernard Shaw: What ! are there punctuation marks in the Qur’an ?

His Eminence: The punctuation marks in the English language merely comprise commas, colons, semi-colons, full-point, etc., but the principles of Qur’anic elocution comprehend numerous signs of a different kind. For instance, a stop is compulsory in certain places, whilst it is optional in others; some endings are to be fully pronounced, whilst others are quiescent, etc. The correct accents, pronunciations, accurate halts, etc., are so intricate and difficult of acquisition, that the Qur’anic elocution has been evolved into a distinct art, and copious volumes have been written on its theory and practice.

George Bernard Shaw: All this is rather astonishing and new to me. I was also surprised to learn that you delivered a speech on "Islam and Science" at Nairobi. What I find difficult to understand is how you can possibly present the picture of Heaven and Hell, which is portrayed in the Qqur’an, in a manner convincing to persons conversant with science, whose minds are inured to accept nothing without visible or palpable proof.

I hold the Prophet of Arabia in great esteem and I can quit understand that it would have been impossible to restrain and wean that illiterate, ignorant and perverse race, sunk in the miasma of utter moral depravity, from committing the most heinous of crimes, and imbue its people with enthusiasm to strive after righteousness and assimilate high morals and virtues, without projecting such a terrible and intensely awe-inspiring spectacle of Hell and an equallly captivating and enticing image of a land flowing with milk and honey to represent Heaven before their vision.

I also very much admire the forcible and striking diction of the Qur’an. What elegant grace and beauty characterises that passage which depicts the dreadful scene of the doomsday field, and, when dealing with infanitcide, dramatically leaves off at the question:-

                "For what crime wert thou slain ?"

to the innocent child that was buried alive or put to death. In my opinion, it is the most effective way of the people.

But I am afraid I am digressing, for I would very much like to know how the problem of Heaven and Hell can possibly be elucidated in the light of Science.

His Eminence: You are a master of the art of writing, and your enchanting and novel literary productions with your magical pen revolutionise the mentality of the readers. I am sure you will agree with me on this point, that material language cannot possibly act as an apt vehicle for the accurate conveyance of the significance and reality of spiritual problems

and phenomena without the help of metaphors and similes, and these at best can serve to frame analogies.

One must, therefore, bear this fat in mind and make due allowance for the mode of expression in describing Hell and Heaven in the Qur’an. Simultaneously, however, with such illustrations that confine their appeal to physical senses, God Almighty stipulates in the clearest terms not to be too inquisitive regarding the true nature of the blessings of Heaven.

"So no one knows what is in store for them of that which will refresh     the eyes."
And, according to the Traditions, we should, under no circumstances, think of them in any way comparable to the objects of this world:-

"The reality of their constitution has been neither witnessed by any human eyes, nor have the ears listened to words capable of expressing it; it is, indeed, beyond the pale of human imagination, and even a perfunctory surrogate of it cannot be visualised."

How can it be asserted in the face of this pronounced explanotion that the blessings of Heaven resemble in any way, whatsoever, the things that please us or contrubute to our happiness in this world. The truth of the matter, on the contrary, is that just as a consequence of compliance with natural or physical laws, material progress and comfort, commensurate with the degree of comprehension and execution, follow as a matter of course, so in proportion to allegiance or adherence to moral and spiritual laws and their translation into practice, one attains the utmost possible spiritual bliss and beatitude, and likewise their violation entails spiritual torture and tribulation.

Now if, according to the law of progress, everything heading for advance, there must naturally be a zenith of it, and beyond that there must be no point of further progress. Comfort or happiness and grief or suffering are two states which a person experiences in this life; hence there must be an extreme point of both these states. This very exterme point of pleasure or bliss is called Heaven, and the extreme point of pain or sorrow, Hell.

Just as there are material media that are either conducive to happiness or instrumental in inflicting suffering in this world, so must there be some kind of media to procreate that state of bliss or generate pain and suffering in the other world. A metaphorical word-picture of the former has been sketched to portray Heaven, and the tremendously appalling and dreadful portrait of torments has been drawn to symbolise Hell. Now this other world which we clal spiritual or celestial is neither like this material world, nor is it purely spiritual, having no connection, whatsoever, with matter, and where there are only souls utterly free from matter.

The human being, body and soul together, is responsible or accountable for his activities Hence the soul in partnership with the quintessence of this very physical organism will meet with the kind of happiness or grief suitable to the conditions obtaining in that world.

Now it only remains to define matter, but as you know, this is not possible even at the present stage of scientific progress. For, what matter really is, is a conundrum that has not been solved in spite of the attempts made by the best human brains. Far from succeeding in analysing it chemically, the greatest scientists have not been able even to picture its reality. The culminating point of scientific research up to date is the establishment of the Theory of Protons and Electrons, according to which the wave radiations of these are thebasis of the universe, and every physical body in its solid form is the result of those very radiations.

This is what the magazine The World of Wwonder says about matter: "Matter seems very solid, but men of science tell us that if all the spaces in the atoms that make up our bodies were done away with, and the nucleus and electrons of the atoms were concentrated into a mass, the whole matter of a grown man’s body would be so small that it could not be seen with the naked eye".

Hence, if it is possible for a scientist to accept without positive proof that an average electron flies round its nucleus several thousand million million times every second, and base the formation of solid physical organisms on their wave radiations, there should be no difficulty for him to imagine the soul and body in a form suitable to the conditions of the kind of happiness or grief to be met with in the great Beyond. A very hazy picture of those states can be said to reflect itself in those weird experiences of ours which we call dreams.

George Bernard Shaw: This is really a very beautiful, eloquent and gratifying explanation, but will the present day Muslims be prepared to accept it ?

His Eminence: This description is by no means a concoction of my brain, but, as I have already said, it is propouded by the Qur’an. I cannot claim any credit, even for the manner of description, because my great predecessors, Imams Fakhruddin Razi, Ghazzali, and Mohiuddin-ibne-Arabi, when addressing enlightened philosophers like you, expressed themselves in similar terms. If I may say it in the oriental style, I have only gathered a few crumbs from their tables of magnificent feasts.

All the teachings of Islam are rational; there are no mysteries and dogmas. They only require to be explained in a proper light ot transfuse their correct sense. It is difficult to understand the literature of any art with which we are not conversant. Hence, in order to grasp and asssimilate the problematical points related to any art, we must first acquire knowledge and cultivate intimate acquaintance with that particular art. If we then seek their solution in the light of this knowledge we shall easily understand them.

(At this stage Mr. Shaw’s hostess came in, and Mr. Shaw introduced His Eminence to her. Addressing Mr. Shaw, she said that it was almost time for him to leave for the docks. Mr. Shaw said he must certainly make a move then, and, turning to His Eminence, said: )

George Bernard Shaw: Your conversation is so very interesting and informative, that I would like to have the privilege of enjoying0 your company for years, but, unfortunately, I have to leave now.

His Eminence: I also ardently desire to have the benefit of exchanging views with such a cultured and learned scholar as yourself, particularly when I find that an inadequate acquaintance with the teachings of Islam from unauthentic and perhaps tainted sources has evoked such a positive and optimistic statement form you regarding Islam, that:-

"The future religion of the educated, cultured and enlightened people will be Islam."
I Would like to speak to you about the profound philosophy and psychological truths the Qur’an expounds, so that a gifted and erudite savant of your parts and genius, perfectly familiar with the tastes and mental tendencies of the civilised world, can present them to it in an effective and desirable manner.

George Bernard Shaw: I am really very sorry that I could secure such a short time for speaking to a learned sage like yourself.

His Eminence: I am, however, grateful even for this opportunity and avail myself of the occasion to present to you the printed copies of two of my lectures on "Religious and Scientific Progress of the World", and "Spiritual Culture in Islam", which I recently delivered at Durban. I also give you this booklet on "Islam" By my friend, Mr. Elias Burney, M.A., Professor of Economics at the Usmania University, Hyderabad, Deccan, who has made a classified collection of the Qur’anic verses under variious heads with explanatory notes. You will, please, read them and communicate to me on any point form these or any other book connected with Islam, and I shall try my level best to elucidate them and meet shall try my level best to elucidate them and meet your criticisms, if any, in the light of Qur’anic teachings.

George Bernard Shaw: I have been very pleased to make your acquaintance, and it will be the most precious of all memories of this trip of mine.

(Bidding farewell to each other, His Eminence wishing George Bernard Shaw a bon vayage, they parted, and George Bernard Shaw was seen standing on the verandah waving his hand till the car went out of sight.)

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