The passing of Imam W.D. Mohammed, may God have mercy upon him and
grant him Paradise, has brought the Blackamerican Muslim community
face to face with a reality that it has been more comfortable with
ignoring than coming to terms with. Imam Mohammed's death has
signaled the end of the era of charismatic leadership in which the
rank and file can look to a single leader to settle all major
questions and chart the Community's course for the future. Rather
than being decided by a single voice, that future will have to be
negotiated by the collective understandings and perspectives of the
Community's learned. This implies, of course, general agreement on
who is learned and what the rules of engagement are. If the
criterion is set too high, it will marginalize valuable voices and
confirm an already widespread distrust of religious knowledge and
those who claim to represent it. If it is set too low, it will open
the Community to the ravages and abuses of those who think that the
role of religion is to sanction their and or the dominant culture's
every undisciplined whim and passion.
In the years leading up to his death, Imam Mohammed strove mightily
and with great farsightedness to empower his Community to carve out
a dignified existence for themselves, to transition to what I have
referred to as the "Third Resurrection," whereby, individually and
collectively, the Community is able to negotiate American reality in
light of the Qur'an and Sunna. For the most part, however, the Imam
had to go it alone, with few contributions from Blackamerican Muslim
scholars outside his own movement.
Here we come to an embarrassingly sad fact about the state of
Blackamerican Islam. For decades, Blackamerican Muslims have been
venturing abroad to learn Arabic and the Islamic religious sciences.
Yet, this has translated into little benefit and even less
interfacing with the Community of Imam W.D. Mohammed — despite that
community's historically unique role in indigenizing Islam among
Blackamericans. When we think across the spectrum of the most noted
Blackamerican Muslim scholars – from myself to Zaid Shakir, from
Aminah Wadud to Aminah McCloud – what we see is a veritable brain-
drain out of the Blackamerican community into discourses and
activities whose primary beneficiaries are not Blackamerican Muslims
and or whose primary focus is not Blackamerican Muslim problems or
concerns. Of course, there are exceptions, both in terms of
individuals who contradict this description and in terms of some of
the activities of the scholars named. But the fact that these are
exceptions points to the reality that I am trying to describe:
Blackamerican Muslim scholars have a closer relationship with the
immigrant community than they have with the community of Imam W.D.
Mohammed.
To be fair, there are understandable reasons for this:
- it is
easier (and safer) to direct the Islamic sciences to the realities
of the Muslim world and by extension the perspective of Muslim
immigrants;
- Muslim immigrants have more financial wherewithal to
support such activities as lecturing, teaching and writing;
- the
immigrant community has a greater ability to validate scholars as
scholars; and
- the media (which plays an enormous role in setting
the Muslim agenda in America) tends overwhelmingly to focus on
immigrant issues.
Beyond all of this, however, there lurks a far
more subtle, sadder and less talked about reality that has for
decades plagued the relationship between the followers of Imam W.D.
Mohammed and the rest of the Blackamerican Sunni community.
I remember Philadelphia in the late 70s and early 80s, when Imam
Mohammed was in this midst of his history-making transition. Those
of us converts who had been blessed with greater access to (what we
thought was) traditional learning would deride the way members of
the World Community of Al-Islam in the West recited al-Fatihah, joke
about how they gave salams and relish their inability to keep up
with us on all of the irrelevant minutia on which we so self-
righteously prided ourselves. We were better than them; for we were
real Sunnis, not half-baptist wannabes. For all our `knowledge,'
however, we were completely devoid of wisdom and even more ignorant
of the Sunna of Muhammad (SAWS). Of course, our high-handed
arrogance would produce over time an understandable counter-
arrogance. To the Imam's community, we were confused, self-hating
Negroes, wannabe Arabs, fresh off the back of the bus onto the back
of the camel. If what we displayed was what the so-called Islamic
sciences were supposed to be about, they would have little use for
them. Ultimately, this would lead to a quiet resentment, mistrust
and even hostility, not only towards us but also towards the so-
called Islamic tradition that we so dismally (mis)represented. Of
course, there were those from Imam Mohammed's community who managed
to transcend some of this alienation. But this was far more the
exception than it was the rule.
I may be wrong, but I suspect that Philadelphia was no anomaly in
this regard, that this was a fairly widespread phenomenon across the
country. The death of Imam Mohammed, however, has now forced us all
to take collective responsibility for this toxic state of affairs.
Imam Mohammed may be succeeded by another leader; but he is not
likely to be replaced; for who could fill his shoes? The new
leadership, therefore – not unlike Blackamerican Muslim leadership
in general — will have to find ways to spread greater Islamic
literacy among the rank and file, to empower them to engage the
religion on their own, in order to enable them to sustain their
commitment to it. As for the rest of the Blackamerican Sunni
community – especially the scholars – I pray that Allah will inspire
us and show us the way to mend this relationship. And I ask Allah
(and the followers of Imam Mohammed) to forgive me for whatever I
may have contributed to our mutual estrangement.
This is not time for a blame game; there is enough blame to go
around – on all sides. The time now is for us to put all our "hidden
differences" aside and come together to work for the glory of God.
In concrete terms, perhaps this year's MANA conference in
Philadelphia could be the starting point of a broad-based dialogue.
And if not the MANA conference, perhaps the conference held by Imam
Mohammed's community next year could be the forum. The important
point is that we find a way to move beyond where we are now, that we
come together in safe space where we can air our differences,
establish bonds of mutual respect, identify our common objectives
and strengths and renew our commitment to upholding the truth, as
Allah says, "even if against ourselves."
In the meantime, may Allah shower his mercy upon our beloved Imam W.
D. Mohammed. May He keep him firm in the grave and raise him among
those who have earned His pleasure. May He reward him richly for all
that he has done and sacrificed for Islam in this land. And may He
bless and guide us to overcome our insecurities through
strengthening our bond with Him. May He empower us to conquer the
evil whisperings of our souls and grant us the resolve to resist the
temptations of Satan. And may He gift us the wisdom to prepare
ourselves for a Day on which neither wealth nor progeny will avail,
and none shall be spared save those who come to God with a purified
heart.
-----
Dr. Sherman Jackson is an Arthur F. Thurnau Professor of Near
Eastern Studies, Visiting Professor of Law and Professor of Afro-
American Studies at the University of Michigan. He is the author of
several books including Islam and the Blackamerican, The Boundaries
of Theological Tolerance in Islam and Islamic Law and the State: The
Constitutional Jurisprudence of Shihab al-Din al-Qarafi as well as
numerous essays.