There is no doubt that the doctrine of predestination, as
enunciated by the Ash’arites, who maintain that man absolutely lacks liberty
and freedom is dangerous. It paralyses the spirit and will of man. This
doctrine encourages the oppressors and binds the hands of the credulous
oppressed. Those who are able to occupy wrongly a position which they do not
deserve or acquire wealth by unlawful mean, always talk of the blessing and
favour of Allah. They say that He favours whomsoever he likes. His bounty is
endless. That is the plea advanced by them to justify their unlawful gains. The
under-privileged do not dare to make any protest, because they think that their
protest would amount to raising objection against what Allah has ordained.
Hence they endure their lot patiently. This doctrine provides the unjust an
easy pretext of absolving himself of the responsibility of his misdeeds. The
persecuted believes that whatever befalls him, is directed from Allah and
therefore to fight against any act of injustice and tyranny is not only absurd
but is also immoral.
A believer in predestination does not care to promote his
personality, to reform his moral conduct and to control his actions because he
disbelieves in the system of cause and effect and gives no heed to the
relationship between man, his deeds and his spiritual and moral personality on
the one hand and his happy or miserable future on the other. He leaves
everything to his fate.
POLITICAL MISUSE
History show that during the Umayyad period the rulers
made full use of the doctrine of fate and destiny. They were staunch supporters
of predestination, and persecuted those who preached self-respect, liberty and
free will. That is why this sentence became proverbial: “Predestinarianism and
anthropomorphism are the doctrines of the Umayyads and justice and monotheism
are the doctrines of the Alawis.”
The earliest supporters and advocates of human liberty and
free will during the Umayyad period were Ma’bad al-Juhani, an Iraqi and a
Syrian known as Ghaylan of Damascus. These two persons were known for their honesty,
integrity and faith. Ma’bad took part in the uprising of Ibn al-Ash’ath and was
killed by Hajjaj. Ghaylan was hanged by order of Hisham ibn Abd al-Malik, who
received a report about what he preached.
In his history of scholastic theology Shibli Nu`mani says:
“Though the stage was now fully set for the eruption of schisms in Islam, they
started under political impetus. As during the Umayyad period injustice and
tyranny were rampant, naturally the people were agitated and commotion existed
everywhere. But whenever anybody made any complaint, the partisans of the
government tried to silence him by saying that everything was ordained by Allah
and none should utter a word against His will. “We believe that good fortune
and ill-fortune both are from Allah”.
Ma’bad Juhani was a very bold and frank man. One day he
asked his teacher, Hasan Basri if the question of fate and destiny as raised by
the Umayyads, was right. Hasan said: “They are the enemies of Allah. They are
liars”.
The Abbasids were the political enemies of the Umayyads.
Their policy was different. Some of them, especially Mamun and Mu’tasim
supported the Mu’tazilities who believed in human liberty. Still a new leaf was
turned from the time of Mutawakkil, and official support was given to the doctrine
of predestination. Since then the Ash’arite creed became popular in the Muslim
world.
There is no doubt that the popularity and influence of the
Ash’arties had a great impact on the Muslim world. Though the other sects, such
as the Shi’ah did not officially follow them, yet even they could not escape
from being influenced by them. The Shi’ah doctrine differs from that of the
Ash’arites, though it is not in cent per cent agreement with that of the
Mu’azilites also. Anyhow in the Shi’ah literature in Arabic and Persian there
is not so much mention of human liberty as of man’s being subject to his
destiny, though the Imams of the Holy Family have expressly declared that the
belief in fate is not on the whole inconsistent with the idea of human
volition.
The words, fate and destiny have become awful and
frightening because with the domination of the Ash’arite school in the Muslim
world and it’s influenced over Islamic literature, these words have become
synonymous with compulsion, lack of liberty and illogical control of human
actions and behavior by an invisible force.