| The Need for a Sound System
of Education
Moiz Amjad
Translated by Nadir Aqueel Ansari
They say that a Saljuq monarch one day
assembled his royal aids and remarked: `We have an expanding domain. We
are doing whatever is possible for the welfare of our subjects. But, we
are aware that we are not without foes. Foes that are lurking around our
borders waiting for the opportunity when they can charge upon us and
disrupt the system. We wish that the prime minister may address this need
and think out a plan to thwart their designs. The state would be too
pleased to spend whatever amount is required to protect the Muslim state
against the enemies of Allah. We have full faith in our prime minister and
he has the mandate for whatever he deems appropriate. We only want him to
ensure that our enemies should never turn towards this kingdom with
nefarious designs.' After quite some time the ministers again met before
the throne to review the performance of the prime minister. The king
began: `Relying on you, we had assigned you a responsibility. To help you
discharge it, we spent from the treasury without any hesitation and you
were given all the authority. We expected you to arrange arms and
ammunition, establish factories to manufacture weapons, set up
institutions for military training, infuse the spirit of Jihad among our
young men and make this kingdom invincible for our enemies. But we have
yet to see any signs of the scale and manner that would merit the
execution of this colossal job.
The prime minister replied with contentment
that he has already done the needful and nothing remained to be done nor
did he think anything else was required. The king stared and said: `What?
Have you done anything at all? There are no signs of it !'
To this the prime minister replied thus and
indeed his reply has a great lesson for all the nations who in any degree
are concerned about their future. He said: `Your Majesty, I have built
strong forts for the defence of the brains of the state. All the money has
been spent honestly in the right cause. God willing, none will be able to
cast a malafide look on our country. The forts I have raised are
unprecedented in any other domain. The armies I have raised, the
consummate commanders our soldiers have, are unheard of elsewhere. I have
spread a network of institutions for education throughout the kingdom. The
breed that we will nurse in these institutions, given their comprehension
of the spiritual and temporal worlds, their command on the disciplines and
arts and given their morals and character, no enemy would dare think of
assaulting this nation. It is my conviction that a nation which bears a
sound moral character and has received proper education, and whose
objectives in life are effectively conveyed to the next generation, has a
very safe and secure future.'
The Institute of Policy Studies Islamabad
conducted a survey of the English medium schools in Pakistan to explore
the cultural and religious trends of their students. The findings were
astounding. Fifty five percent students do not wish to continue living in
Pakistan. In a few schools, this percentage was as high as 63. Only 57%
students could read Allama Iqbal; those who could figure out his poetry
were much less. 85% students loved to read English novels. Only 24%
offered daily prayers.
Lamenting on the findings of this survey,
"Tameer-i-Millat Foundation" comments:
"Painful as these are, the results provide a glimpse into the
future -- a future that will turn every thing upside down -- a new crop of
men and women will emerge who will serve not their nation but others, who
would hate themselves for what they would not be, who will romanticize
about the West, investing it with everything good and looking at their own
people as despicable scum of the earth."
Man is not born equipped with education and
skills. God has provided for his education essentially through the
following three means:
His intuition is an important pool of knowledge wherein God has
stored many realities in a way that they gradually manifest themselves in
his personality as he grows. The concepts of part and whole, love and
hatred, and many other concepts of space and time he does not need to
learn because God has imprinted them in his very nature and he receives
them and realizes them, as he grows, as a matter of instinctive realities.
He also receives information through his senses which he then
understands, analyses and classifies to deduce results. These results have
precipitated a long history of discoveries and inventions.
The third source of his knowledge is Revelation through which he
has received many divine directions. Man has been showered with this
blessing from the day he arrived on this planet till the days of Prophet
Muhammad (sws), when this source attained finality.
Enriched by these three streams, man has
created an illustrious history of human achievements. He has a treasure of
experiences. Every community and society, in varying degrees, maintains a
legacy of all the three sources including the divine revelation. This is
particularly true in case of Muslims who proudly claim that they have the
God given law in its final, perfect and complete form.
It is our natural obligation to transmit
this treasure of experiences to the next generation. Rather this is one of
our prime responsibilities to arrange for its transmission to the
succeeding generations. An author has underlined this fact when he
attempts to define education in the following words:
"Education: A debt due from present
to future generations."
("Peter's Quotations", George Peabody, Pg159) (ref)
What have we earned?
What do we have with us?
How do we apply our minds to realities and how do we try to approach them?
What history do we have behind us?
What lessons has it taught us?
What shape have we given to our sciences and arts?
What do we believe in and how have we evolved it through modifications?
How do we define our value system?
Actually we process all these and fuse them
into a host of sciences and disciplines and then try to hand them over to
our succeeding generations in a gradual manner. We want them to carry on
this legacy, enrich it, examine it and if necessary modify and amend it
and thus contribute to the enrichment of our collective knowledge.
Obviously, all this will not happen spontaneously, and not without a lot
of effort and without evolving a system for it.
History, sciences and experience are the
building blocks of the social psyche of a community and consequently of
the individuals who depend on the community for the development of their
personality. The social fabric is woven and maintained on the strength of
these traditions and mores. It is from this fabric, that state, society,
culture and civilization rise and flourish.
It is quite obvious that without our
efforts to ensure communication of our experiences, values and knowledge
to the future generation, the baffling progress in sciences, rise of
civilization and culture, advances in arts and disciplines could not have
been realized. We would still be living the lives of cavemen, clothed in
leaves, burning fire by rubbing stone, eating wild bushes and raw meat and
drinking unclean water. So we have compelling reasons to believe that
whatever progress we have made could only be realized through safe,
organized and honest transfer of our experiences and knowledge to the
subsequent generations.
Besides conveying sciences and experiences,
it is also imperative for every society to make over to its successors,
its ideals, beliefs and values. A western intellectual, Dean Willian R.
Inge, points out: "The aim of education is the knowledge not of
fact, but of values."
("Peter's Quotations", Dean William, Pg161)
The "Encyclopedia Britannica"
asserts: "Education
can be viewed as the transmission of the values and accumulated knowledge
of the society."
("History of Education", Vol 6 , Pg 316, Ed 1973)
It, therefore, becomes our vital
responsibility to evolve a system to safely and effectively transmit our
goals and ideals to our descendants. It is as significant as the need to
evolve a political system, an economic system or a system of social
relationships and values.
This is what education and training
signifies.
If
you wish to predict the future of a nation, the easiest and surest way of
doing it would be to study its education system. Actually the system of
education of a nation determines its destiny. It determines the value
system of the future generations, their mental and moral outlook, their
fields of interest and the form they will assume within the span of next
twenty or thirty years.
This outstanding significance of the system
of education demands every nation to be sensitive about it at all levels
-- at the individual level, at the level of a family and at the level of
the state. We should remain alive to the fact that if a society grows
irresponsible about its system of education and training, its future is
jeopardized and, to say the least, looms on the bounds of uncertainty.
Bearing this in mind, when we turn to the
education system of our country we feel sorry to say that this subject has
been the victim of extreme and blatant negligence and laxity of our
rulers, elders and intellectuals. After fifty years of trials and errors,
a perusal of the education policy shows that probably it is only aimed at
spreading literacy and short of which no higher ideals have been thought
of. It is not based on principles. Its authors do not know what do they
want to convey to their descendants. They are hopelessly oblivious of the
fact that their policy making is actually determining (or should we say
undermining) the future prospects of a nation.
Syed Abul Aala Maudoodi points out: "The
children of every nation are actually the judicial order sheet for its
future. Nature sends it blank and the nations are asked to write a
judgement to mark their future on it in their own hand. But we are that
bankrupt nation that hands over this order sheet to others so that they
may write on it whatever they wish, be it a death sentence for us."
("Ta`leemat", Pg 58)
What traits do we want to nurse in our
people?
What type of human beings are we aiming at?
What kind of citizens do we require?
What role do we expect them to play as a member of the Muslim Ummah?
What type of Ummah are we interested in building?
We have to search for the answers to these
questions and on those answers would rest the ideals and objectives of our
system of education and training.
If we seek the answers to these questions
from the Holy Quran, we would immediately realize that we should aim at
the formation of an Ummah that can shine as an ideal for both, individual
and collective righteousness. It flows from this statement that to achieve
this goal we must make the development of individual character the
cornerstone of our education policy. Sciences, economics and other
disciplines are to us mere instruments to realize this collective
objective. Two institutions are critical for the building up of morals and
character of a nation: mother's training and education at school.
No individual or institution in a nation
can match the role of the mother towards the evolution of its character.
There is no training institution greater that the lap of a mother. It has
no substitute. It is the first school the child is exposed to, from where
he learns the first lessons, internalizes values and determines his
objectives in life. In other words, a mother lays the first building
blocks for the child's character and moral makeup.
The second training institution is the
school which the child attends. This system of education is actually the
stream from where the society gets clean drinking water. If it gets turbid
and starts stinking, then you never know which parts of the society may
also start stinking any moment. This institution is so important that even
the mothers are being trained and educated by it. Therefore, it is high
time to study and analyze our education system minutely and all its
aspects need to be examined with reference to our national goals and
objectives. The state should underline its functions and obligations to
improve the existing arrangement and at the same time every individual
should also come up to play his due role.

with permission from:
Renaissance
http://pakpowerpage.com/db/jump.cgi?ID=2258 |