What personalities have had the most impact on you (both alive and in the past) and how?
Sound Vision: What personalities have had the most impact on you (both
alive and in the past) and how?
Abdul Wahid: Undoubtedly, I must start with my parents, may Allah bless
them. They were hardworking people and lived a simple and frugal life. Their
knowledge of Islam - so far as book knowledge was concerned was not great but
they had a strong and passionate attachment to the diin. They were very
practical people and lived through difficult times and it was at their hands
that we acquired a wide variety of skills - from building to planting crops and
rearing animals and small scale trading - and the values that we cherish. My
father for example would prefer to go without something than to borrow. Debt was
something he avoided like the plague. This is why it took him about twelve years
to build the house that we lived in, brick by brick. My mother could count very
well and although she only learnt to read and write late in life, she was
determined that we should have an education.
I had my first job as a primary school teacher in Trinidad and I was put under
the supervision of two excellent teachers, one of whom was Mr Sadick Ramzan Ali
from whom I learnt a great deal. He was a constant source of encouragement and
maintained high professional standards, He was also involved in youth and
community work and living the life a Muslim seemed easy and natural for him. He
performed all his duties well without having any ‘airs and graces'.
I went to London, after a one year stay in Egypt at the Al-Azhar - with the
intention of doing a degree in English Literature. I did a pre-university course
in History. One of my teachers was a Mr Dean, an Englishman who always seemed to
wear the same chequered jacket, patched at the elbows. He taught European and
English Social History as if people mattered. He was a socialist and partly
under his influence I joined the Labour Party in the mid-sixties but left it in
disgust over the Wilson's government handling of the Rhodesia question. Anyway,
this Mr Dean made me look at the world in a way I had never done before and
opened up perspectives which as a very insular person coming from a very small
island, were new to me. He made me realize the importance of history and how
very little I knew of how the world as we knew it was shaped. It was largely
through him that I decided to change from English and Latin to History at
university.
My first years at University reading history with special reverence to the
Middle East (in addition to Arabic and French) were often times of acute
anguish. The head of our department was Professor Bernard Lewis who is now at
Princeton. He is a very sophisticated person with a powerful and often sharp
pen. His book, The Arabs in History, was a standard text. Reading it was very
painful. I did not know at the time that he was an ardent Zionist. Many of the
other teaching staff there were also not at all exactly partial to Islam and
Muslims. I searched the university library shelves for books and writings that
would give me some alternative to the received wisdom that was being handed down
to us. It was at this time that I came across a little booklet called
‘English-speaking Orientalists' by Dr Abdul Latif Tibawi, a meticulous
Palestinian scholar who had a persuasive and at times an acerbic pen. This
booklet restored my faith. I later had on a few occasions the pleasure of
meeting Dr Tibawi who originally came from Palestine . He didn't suffer fools
gladly even if they were professors and experts. He set himself very high
academic standards. He output was great, both in Arabic and English. Later,
while working as a journalist, it was nice to know that he read some of my
published pieces on the Middle East and made some encouraging (dare I say ‘favorable')
comments. He remains one of the largely unsung Muslim academics. He was run over
by a car at a pedestrian crossing close to the University where he worked. He
had a house in Surrey called ‘Sakinah' or Tranquility. May Allah grant him
tranquility.
Another person who has had a great impact on me was a fellow student, Ebrahimsa
Mohammed. He is a quiet, unassuming person and one of the most well-informed and
practical persons around. He came to London from Penang in Malaysia to study
law, His law studies fell by the wayside as he took it upon himself to look
after the needs of students who started coming to the UK in substantial numbers
from the early sixties onwards. He made it his business to get to know Muslim
students in all parts of the country, put them in touch with one another and
where they needed help, financial or otherwise, he would arrange something. He
was one of the founders and early presidents of FOSIS - The Federation of the
Students Islamic Societies in the UK & Eire. I had the privilege of being
its General Secretary under his presidency. I can honestly say that I learnt
more from being in this milieu than from the academic courses at university.
Brother Ebrahimsa not only knew students but scholars and activists at all sorts
of levels in Britain, from the big names in the Muslim world - Muhammad Natsir,
Mawdudi, Said Ramadan, philantropists like Ebrahim Bawany, Malcolm X and many
others including even even more notorious guys like Michael X. He is extremely
widely read and maintains an abiding and passionate interest in making the best
use of resources and in helping the poor and downtrodden. One of my recent
meetings with him was at a gardening centre in north London shovelling horse
manure - he is very much into organic foods and healthy eating.
Another person who has had an enormous impact on me and many student
contemporaries is Dr Jafer Sheikh Idris from the Sudan. We got to know him in
the late sixties when he was a Ph. D in England doing a thesis on Causality. We
were part of something called the London Islamic Circle and met every Saturday
at the old Regents Park Mosque. Over a period of several weeks Dr Jafer gave us
a series of talks on the Quran. These were the most wonderful talks and study
sessions that I had ever listened to and participated in. In one of them, Dr
Jafer talked about the thematic coherence of the Quran and this had the effect
of banishing any notions of the Quran as a haphazard and repetitive book with
all sorts of things and themes thrown together in a random (a common impression
of those who read mere translations). In addition, it had the effect of spurring
us to study the Quran in its original Arabic.
We also learnt a great deal from Dr Jafer who has a clear and incisive mind. And
you can't meet someone more charming and approachable, someone who could talk to
little children and hold his own against the best philosophers at the same time.
Dr Jafer is still active in educational work and we pray that Allah will give
him the strength and the zeal to allow some of his great gifts to continue to
rub off on others.