Everything about Fazlur Rahman totally explained
Fazlur Rahman Malik (
Urdu:
فضل الرحمان ملک) (
September 21,
1919 –
July 26,
1988) was a well-known scholar of
Islam; M. Yahya Birt of the Association of Islam Researchers described him as "probably the most learned of the major Muslim thinkers in the second-half of the twentieth century, in terms of both classical Islam and Western philosophical and theological discourse."
Rahman was born in the
Hazara area of
British India (now
Pakistan). His father,
Maulana Shihab al-Din, was a well-known scholar of the time who had studied at
Deoband and had achieved the rank of
alim, through his studies of Islamic law (
fiqh,
hadith,
Qur'anic
tafsir, logic, philosophy and other subjects).
Rahman studied
Arabic at
Punjab University, and went on to
Oxford University where he wrote a dissertation on
Ibn Sina. Afterwards, he began a teaching career, first at
Durham University where he taught
Persian and Islamic philosophy, and then at
McGill University where he taught Islamic studies until 1961.
In that year, he returned to Pakistan to head up the Central Institute of Islamic Research which was set up by the Pakistani government in order to implement Islam into the daily dealings of the nation. However, due to the political situation in Pakistan, Rahman was hindered from making any progress in this endeavour, and he resigned from the post. He then returned to teaching, moving to the
United States and teaching at
UCLA as a visiting professor for a few years. He moved to the
University of Chicago in 1969 and established himself there becoming the Harold H. Swift Distinguished Service Professor of Islamic Thought. At Chicago he was instrumental for building a strong
Near Eastern Studies program that continues to be among the best in the world. Rahman also became a proponent for a reform of the Islamic polity and was an advisor to the
State Department. He died in 1988.
Since Rahman's death his writings have continued to be popular among scholars of Islam and the Near East. His contributions to the University of Chicago are still evident in its excellent programs in these areas. In his memory, the
Center for Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Chicago named its common area after him, due to his many years of service the Center and the University of Chicago at large.
Publications
- Islam, University of Chicago Press, 2nd edition, 1979. ISBN 0-226-70281-2
- Islam and Modernity: Transformation of an Intellectual Tradition, University of Chicago Press, 1982. ISBN 0-226-70284-7
- Major Themes of the Qur'an, Biblioteca Islamica, 1994. ISBN 0-88297-051-8
- Revival and Reform in Islam (ed. Ebrahim Moosa), Oneworld Publications, 1999. ISBN 1-85168-204-X
- Islamic Methodology in History, Central Institute of Islamic Research, 1965.
- Health and Medicine in the Islamic Tradition, Crossroad Pub Co, 1987. ISBN 0-8245-0797-5 (Hardcover), ISBN 1-871031-64-8 (Softcover).
- Riba and Interest
, Islamic Studies (Karachi) 3(1), Mar. 1964:1-43.
- Shariah
, Chapter from Islam [AnchorBook, 1968], pp. 117-137.
Further Information
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