dc.description.abstract |
Maryam Jameelah is an American Jewish lady who, after her conversion to
Islam, migrates to Pakistan on the invitation of Abul A'la Maududi. She is studied
mostly as a scholar of modern Western thought. Less information is available
regarding her conversion, however. Her writings indicate that her criticism of
Western civilization is directly connected to her conversion. Therefore, this
research aims to analyze her conversion and its relationship with her criticism of
Western civilization. Notably, the complexity of the analytical study of any
conversion process is augmented due to the involvement of various underlying
motifs, events, and types of conversion. Therefore, Lewis Ray Rambo's heuristic
stage model of conversion is used for understanding of psychological, sociological,
historical, religious, and anthropological aspects of her conversion. Rambo uses the
inter-disciplinary approach to formulate his heuristic model that consists of seven
stages including context, crisis, quest, encounter, interaction, commitment, and
consequences. This research finds out that adopting many religious traditions,
groups, and movements, Jameelah is converted multiple times in her life. Her
'multiple conversions' reveal that it is her quest for the complete satisfaction that
moves her from one religious fold to another. Her study of Islam provides her such
satisfactory answers that end the process of her multiple conversions. After
converting to Islam, she does not convert to any other religion. During her life in
Pakistan, she is inclined towards Sufism and starts practicing it. Analysis of her
'multiple conversions' figures out that findings related to the context, crisis, and
quest stages of Rambo’s model are almost the same in each of her conversion
process whereas some differences are observed in other stages of her conversions.
Regarding her criticism of Western civilization, it is observed that during
her life in America, she feels the strong impact of secular culture on religion.
Numerous factors such as the Reform Judaism especially the work of Moses
Mendelssohn, the Western mood of living, the industrial revolution, love of natural
beauty, the nonobservant attitude of parents, the genocide of red Indians, and love
of classical music make her hate modernism and Western civilization. She claims
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that modernism or westernization are two sides of the same coin. When she
discovers that, being influenced by the theory of evolution, modern scholars are
trying to deny the presence of ideals such as permanence and absolute truth in the
real life, she decides to spend the rest of her life in defending them by criticizing
modern philosophies. In sum, her criticism of Western civilization can be divided
into two types. Firstly, she criticizes Western civilization and its impact on Islam
by evaluating its philosophical foundations. Secondly, she criticizes the reformers
of Islam through hundreds of her book reviews. Moreover, she criticizes both
Muslim and non-Muslim scholars of Islam alike maintaining that Islam does not
need any sort of reforms or changes. She suggests embracing traditional orthodoxy
in all world religions. |
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