MUSLIM CONVERT - 1
Muhammad Asad
Muhammad Asad (born Leopold Weiss in July 1900 in what was then Austro-Hungarian
Lwów in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, now Lviv in Ukraine; died 1992) was a Jew
who converted to Islam and later served as one of the first Pakistani
ambassadors to the United Nations.
Biography
Asad was a descendant of a long line of rabbis. However, his father was a
barrister. He received a thorough religious education. He was proficient in
Hebrew from an early age and was also familiar with Aramaic. He studied the Old
Testament, as well as the text and commentaries of the Talmud, the Mishna and
Gemara. Furthermore, he delved into the intricacies of Biblical exegesis, the
Targum.
So, after abandoning university in Vienna, Asad (or Weiss, as he was then
called) had drifted aimlessly around 1920s Germany, even working briefly for the
expressionist film director Fritz Lang. By his own account after selling a
jointly written film-script, he blew the windfall on a wild party at an
expensive Berlin restaurant, in the spirit of the times. He got his first
journalism published through sheer chutzpah while working as a telephone
operator for an American news agency in Berlin. Using the simple expedient of
ringing up her Berlin hotel room, he obtained an exclusive interview with the
visiting wife of the Russian author Maxim Gorky, and the story was taken up by
his employers.
Weiss later moved to the British Mandate of Palestine, staying in Jerusalem at
the house of an uncle, the psychoanalyst Dorian Weiss. He picked up work as a
stringer for the Frankfurter Zeitung, selling articles on a freelance basis. His
pieces were noteworthy for their understanding of Arab fears and grievances
against the Zionist project. Eventually contracted as a full-time foreign
correspondent for the paper, his assignments led him to an ever deepening
engagement with Islam, which after much thought led to his religious conversion
in 1926. He spoke of Islam thus:
"Islam appears to me like a perfect work of architecture. All its parts are
harmoniously conceived to complement and support each other; nothing is
superfluous and nothing lacking; and the result is a structure of absolute
balance and solid composure."
His travels and sojourns through Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Iran (he wrote many
insightful articles on Shiism), and also Afghanistan and the southern Soviet
Republics, were viewed with great suspicion by the Colonial Powers. One English
diplomat in Saudi Arabia described him in a report as a "Bolshevik", and it is
true that he took a close interest in the many liberation movements that were
active at this time with the aim of freeing Muslim lands from colonial rule. He
ended up in India where he met and worked alongside Muhammad Iqbal, the
poet-philosopher, who had proposed the idea of an independent Muslim state in
India, which later became Pakistan.
During WWII he was interned there by the British as an enemy alien. His parents
meanwhile, were murdered by the Nazis in the Holocaust. Because of his
out-spoken support for the Pakistan Movement, after Independence and the
Partition of 1947, Asad was appointed Pakistani ambassador to the United
Nations[dubious – discuss], as well as working with the Pakistani Foreign
Ministry from 1949 till the early 1950s.[dubious – discuss] He is credited with
drafting the Objectives Resolution, which became the Preamble to the
Constitution of Pakistan.[dubious – discuss] Towards the end of his life,
disturbed by a emerging fanaticism of some of his fellow Muslims.[dubious –
discuss], he moved to Spain and lived there with his second wife, the Muslim
convert Paola Hameeda Asad, until his death in 1992. He was buried in the muslim
cemetery of Granada.
Asad wrote several books, and a biography of his early life has been published
in German, Leopold Weiss alias Muhammad Asad. Von Galizien nach Arabien
1900-1927 by Gunther Windhager (Bohlau Verlag 2002}. Weiss's own version of this
period is Road to Mecca, an account of his Middle Eastern travels and his
conversion, as well as his thoughts on the growing Zionist movement. He also
wrote The Message of The Qur'an, a translation and brief commentary on the
Muslim holy book based on his own knowledge of classical Arabic and on the
authoritative classical commentaries. It has been acclaimed as one of the best,
if not the best, translations of the Quran into English, although it has been
criticised by some traditionalists for its Mutazilite leanings. He also wrote a
translation and commentary on the Sahih Bukhari, the most authoritative
collection of Hadith. In addition, he wrote This Law of Ours where he sums up
his views on Islamic law and rejects decisively the notion of taqlid, or strict
judicial precedent which has been accepted as doctrine by most Muslim sects
except the Salafis. He also makes a plea for rationalism and plurality in
Islamic law, which he sees as the true legacy of the salaf or earliest
generations of Muslims. In his book Islam at the Crossroads, he outlines his
view that the Muslim world must make a choice between living by its own values
and morality or accepting those of the West, in which case, they would always
lag behind the West, which had had more time to adjust to those values and
mores, and would end up compromising their own religion and culture. There are
some playfully cryptic references to him in the recent bestseller The
Orientalist by Tom Reiss (Random House 2005), and some slightly more sinister
ones in the English translations of W.G. Sebald.
He is father of Talal Asad, an eminent anthropologist specialized in religious
studies and postcolonialism.
Works
• Road to Mecca
• The Message of The Qur'an
• Translation and commentary on the Sahih Bukhari
• This Law of Ours
• Islam at the Crossroads
Writings of Muhammad Asad on Islam: Article by Dr. Aabroo Aman Andrabi
The writings of Muhammad Asad on Islam and the Muslims span almost a century,
from the 1920’s to the 1980’s. These writings include: Unromantisches Morgenland
(The Unromantic Orient), Frankfurter Zeitung, Palestine, 1924; Islam At the
Cross Roads, New York, 1934; The Road To Mecca, New York, 1954; The Principles
of State and Government In Islam, California Press, 1961; Sahih al –Bukhari: The
Early Years of Islam, Arafat Publication, Srinagar, Kashmir, 1935; Translation
of the Qur’an into the English language with explanatory notes. The Message of
the Qur’an, Dublin, 1980 and This Law of Ours, Dacca, 1980. He also brought out
a journal, Arafat. This journal, was published from Lahore before partition in
the late forties. Muhammad Asad’s first book as a committed Muslim was Islam at
the Cross Roads, published first in New York in 1934 and dedicated to the young
Muslims. The text went through repeated printings and editions both in India and
Pakistan. Muhammad Asaf translated it into Urdu in 1991 under the title Islam Do
–Rahe Par. More importantly, however, it appeared in an Arabic translation in
Beirut in 1946 under the title of al–Islam ‘ala muftaqir al–turuq. It went
through numerous editions in the 1940’s and 50’s. Then in 2001, it was published
in India by Goodword Books under the original title, ‘Islam at the Cross Roads’.
The book consisting of 141 pages, is divided into 8 chapters, and has a preface.
The chapters are as follows:
1. The Open Road of Islam;
2. The Spirit of the West;
3. The Shadow of the Crusades;
4. About Education;
5. About Imitation;
6. Hadith and Sunnah;
7. The Spirit of Sunnah; and
8. Conclusion.
This work can be described as a diatribe against the materialism of the west or,
as Muhammad Asad put it, a case of “Islam Versus Western Civilization”. Towards
the end of 1952, Muhammad Asad resigned from the Pakistan Foreign Service and
started to write. He wrote extensively and in August 1954 there appeared in
America a remarkable book of his entitled, "The Road to Mecca". The book
immediately won critical acclaim. This third book of Muhammad Asad was also
published in London in 1954 under the same title and was reprinted by the
Islamic Book Trust, Petaling Jaya, Malaysia, in 1996. This edition comprises 375
pages and is divided into twelve chapters:
1. Thirst
2. Beginning of the Road
3. Winds
4. Voices
5. Spirit and Flesh
6. Dreams
7. Midway
8. Jinns
9. Persian letter
10. Dajjal
11. Jihad
12. End of the Road.
This book is not biographical in nature, though in the opinion of some people,
it is an autobiography of Muhammad Asad. There are many parts of this book which
are concerned with his life and seem to be autobiographical.
On April 14, 2008 City Government of Vienna has named a square near UNO offices
after his name "Muhammad Asad Platz". Moreover, the first Islamic school in
Austria is being established in Vienna and it also has been named after his name
called "International School Center - Muhammad Asad (www.is-ma.at)"
Subject areas: Arabia, Biographies, History (World), Islam, Jewish Studies,
Middle East, Pakistan, Politics, Religion
Documentary
A documentary on Muhammad Asad has been released in 2009 which is directed by
Georg Misch and filmed in Austria, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Morocco and Spain. A
well made documentary has won the following awards:
2009 Jerusalem Film Festival 2009 Dubai Film Festival Jury Award, 2008 FIDADOC
Film Festival (Morocco) Best Cinematography Award, 2008 Diagonale Festival of
Austrian Films 2008 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Film Festival
2008 Vancouver International Film Festival
For more information go to : http://www.icarusfilms.com/new2009/mecc.html