Islamization of Education

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Ghulam Nabi Saqeb

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Abstract

The Sixth International Conference on Islamic Education held
A.D. September 20-25, 1996/6-11 jamad al-Awwal, 141 7
A.H. at lslamia College, Gatesville, Cape Town, South Africa
After World War 11, most colonized Muslim countries achieved independence.
During their days of struggle for independence, all major
political parties in Muslim lands had committed themselves to liquidate
their inherited, ill-conceived, divisive, and un-Islamic systems of education
and to replace them with truly Islamic ones. But after independence,
while politicians in power (constrained for whatever reasons) remained
reluctant to bring about the promised changes, academics were, by and
large, not clear as to how to Islamize education. The most that they could
propose was installation of lame-duck departments of Islamic studies
within the inherited systems, established parallel to the predominantly
secular departments, thereby perpetuating a discredited, dualistic form of
education that was generating split personalities among the Muslim youth.
This remained the shape of education in the Islamic world during
decades after independence in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. It was in
these circumstances that King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah/Makkah,
under the dynamic leadership of Dr. Muhammad Abduh Yamani and Dr.
Abdullah Omar Nasseef obtained approval from the then king, Khalid
bin Abdulaziz, to hold the First World Conference on Islamic Education
in Makkah. For two years, its organizing committee under the chairmanship
of Shaykh Ahmad Salah Jamjoom and comprising Professor Syed
Ali Ashraf, Dr. Abdullah Muhammad Zaid, and Dr. Ghulam Nabi Saqeb,
worked day and night, along with renowned colleagues such as Professor
Muhammed Qutb, Professor Muhammad Al-Mubarak (now deceased),
Professor Hussain Hamed Hassan, and others to examine all issues related
to the task. The Conference held in Makkah al-Mukarramah in 1977
was a tremendous event. Attended by some 350 Muslim scholars from ...

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