খালিদ বলে বেড়াতো শুধু ইসলামেই মুক্তি তা নয় বরং যে কোন ধর্ম মানলেই মুক্তি পাওয়া যায়
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Explanation:
Abstract
Using the concept of Tawhīd—a cardinal Islamic belief, as a point of departure and as a theoretical framework, this paper examines the Islamic roots and theological foundations for the ideas and practices of liberation, peacebuilding, justice, and nonviolence within Islam. It argues that the notions of pacification, equality, freedom, and fairness hold a central place in Islam because such ideas are deeply rooted in the concept of tawhīd. Unlike most studies that tend to put emphasis merely on analyses tawhīd through theological and eschatological explanations (theocentric framework), this paper examines it from the lens of anthropocentrism by understanding and interpreting it as a "principle of unity" for liberation, justice, and peace, while still acknowledging its theocentric dimension. In short, this article lays emphasis on analysis of tawhīd as an "anthropocentric theism." In the concept of tawhīd, this paper underlines the significance of the unity of God, the unity of the many streams of revelation, the unity of humanity, and ultimately the unity of existence (Wahdat al-Wujūd), principles on which freedom, conciliation, egalitarianism, and nonviolence are grounded.
Journal Information
Islamic Studies is an internationally peer reviewed research journal, published by Islamic Research Institute, Islamabad, Pakistan, since 1962. It publishes research articles, notes, comments, review-articles and book-reviews in all disciplines of Islamic Studies including the Qur’an, Hadith, Tafsir, Sirah, ‘Ilm al-Kalam, Jurisprudence, Fiqh, Law, Religion, Philosophy, Psychology, Anthropology, Sociology, Culture, Civilization, Economics, Language, Literature, History, Science and Technology. Its contributors include some of the very best scholars from across the world. Articles and book-reviews published in Islamic Studies are abstracted or indexed in: Science of Religion, Index Islamicus, Public Affairs Information Service (PAIS), Internationale Bibliographie der Rezensionen (IBR), Muslim World Book Review, Middle East Journal, ATLA Religion Database, Religion Index One (RIO) and Index to Book Reviews in Religion (IBRR). Islamic Studies is archived in databases of JSTOR, EBSCOhost and ProQuest. It is among the journals approved by Higher Education Commission of Pakistan for research publications. Editor: Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq Deputy Editor: Muhammad Ahmad Munir Assistant Editors: Muhammad Islam and Brian Wright
Publisher Information
Islamic Research Institute, established in 1960 under a constitutional provision, initially worked as a research unit of Government of Pakistan. It was attached to the newly-established Islamic University, Islamabad as its research arm in 1980. When the University received its new charter as International Islamic University, in 1985, the Institute remained its part. The main objectives of the Institute are to develop a methodology for research in the various fields of Islamic learning; to identify contemporary problems and to study/interpret the teachings of Islam in the context of the intellectual and scientific progress of the modern world in order to assist the Pakistani society and the Muslim Ummah to live according to the imperatives of Islam. The results of the work are published in Institute’s Arabic, Urdu and English quarterly journals; books; monographs and research reports. The Institute also organises seminars, conferences and workshops to achieve and promote its objectives.