Dialog:
A SENSE OF THE SACRED:
BUILDING BRIDGES BETWEEN ISLAM AND THE WEST
H.R.H. Charles, Prince of Wales
H.R.H. Prince Charles of England
delivered the following speech on December 13, 1996, at the fiftieth
anniversary celebration of the Wilton Park, a respected institute in
England for the study of international issues.
* * *
I hesitated a long time before suggesting that it might
be worth trying to use this occasion to hold a seminar on a Sense of the
Sacred and its relevance to the problem of understanding between the
Islamic and Western worlds… But I am encouraged by the fact that,
whenever I have summoned up my courage to speak about this subject…
it seems always to have struck an extraordinary chord, and captured a
remarkable degree of attention. My belief is that in each one of us there
is a distant echo of this sense of the sacred, but that the majority of us
are terrified to admit its existence for fear of ridicule and abuse. This
fear of ridicule, even to the extent of mentioning the name of God, is a
classic indication of the loss of meaning in so-called Western
civilization.
I start from the belief that Islamic civilization at its best, like many
of the religions of the East - Judaism, Hinduism, Jainism and Buddhism -
has an important message for the West in the way it has retained a more
integrated and integral view of the sanctity of the world around us. I
feel that we in the West could be helped to rediscover those roots of our
own understanding by an appreciation of the Islamic tradition’s deep
respect for the timeless traditions of the natural order. I believe that
process could help in the task of bringing our two faiths closer together.
It could also help us in the West to rethink, and for the better, our
practical stewardship of man and his environment — in fields like
health-care, the natural environment and agriculture, as well as in
architecture and urban planning. I want very briefly to explain why this
might be so.
Modern materialism in my humble opinion is unbalanced
and increasingly damaging in its long-term consequences. Yet nearly all
the great religions of the world have held an integral view of the
sanctity of the world. The Christian message with, for example, its deeply
mystical and symbolic doctrine of the Incarnation, has been traditionally
a message of the unity of the worlds of spirit and matter, and of God's
manifestation in this world and humankind. But during the last three
centuries, in the Western world at least, a dangerous division has come
into being in the way we perceive the world around us. Science has tried
to assume a monopoly - even a tyranny - over our understanding. Religion
and science have become separated, with the result, as William Wordsworth
said, "Little we see in nature that is ours". Science has
attempted to take over the natural world from God, with the result that it
has fragmented the cosmos and relegated the sacred to a separate, and
secondary, compartment of our understanding, divorced from the practical
day to day existence.
We are only now beginning to gauge the disastrous
results of this outlook. We in the Western world seem to have lost a sense
of the wholeness of our environment, and of our immense and inalienable
responsibility to the whole of creation. This has led to an increasing
failure to appreciate or understand tradition, and the wisdom of our
forebears accumulated over the centuries….
In my view, a more holistic approach is needed in our
contemporary world. Science has done the inestimable service of showing us
a world much more complex than we ever imagined. But in its modern,
materialist, one-dimensional form, it cannot explain everything. God is
not merely the ultimate Newtonian mathematician or the mechanistic
clockmaker. Francis Bacon said that God will not produce miracles to
convince those who cannot see the miracle of a growing blade of grass and
falling rain. As science and technology have become increasingly separated
from ethical, moral and sacred considerations, so have the implications of
such a separation become more somber and horrifying— as we see, for
example, in genetic manipulation…
I believe there is a growing sense of the danger of
these materialist presumptions in our increasingly alienated and
dissatisfied world. Some may say that the tide is, perhaps, beginning to
turn, but I fear there are large herds of conventional sacred cows
blocking the path. Some scientists are slowly coming to realize the
awe-inspiring complexity and mystery of the universe. But there
remains a need to rediscover the bridge between what the great faiths of
the world have recognized as our inner and our outer worlds, our physical
and our spiritual nature. That bridge is the expression of our humanity.
It fulfills this role through the medium of traditional knowledge and art,
which have civilized mankind and without which civilization could not long
be maintained. After centuries of neglect and cynicism the transcendental
wisdom of the great religious traditions, including the Judaeo-Christian and
the Islamic, and the metaphysics of the Platonic tradition which was such
an important inspiration for Western philosophical and spiritual ideas, is
finally being rediscovered.
I have always felt that tradition is not a man-made
element in our lives, but a God-given intuition of natural rhythms, of the
fundamental harmony which emerges from the union of those paradoxical
opposites which exist in every aspect of nature. Tradition reflects the
timeless order of the cosmos, and anchors us into an awareness of the
great mysteries of the universe so that, as Blake put it, we can see the
whole universe in an atom and eternity in a moment. That is why I believe
Man is so much more than just a biological phenomenon resting on what we
now seem to define as "the bottom line" of the great balance
sheet of life according to which art and culture are seen increasingly as
optional extras in life. The view is so contrary, for example, to the
outlook of the Muslim craftsman or artist, who was never concerned with
display for its own sake, nor with progressing ever forward in his own
ingenuity, but was content to submit a man's craft to God. That outlook
reflects, I believe, the memorable passage in the Qur’an, "withersoever
you turn there is the face of God and God is all embracing, all knowing".
While appreciating that this essential innocence has been destroyed, and
destroyed everywhere, I nevertheless believe that the survival of
civilized values, as we have inherited them from our ancestors, depends on
the corresponding survival in our hearts of that profound sense of the
sacred and the spiritual.
Traditional religions, with their integral view of the
universe, can help us in an important way to rediscover the importance of
the integration of the secular and the sacred—as I tried to argue in my
speech in Oxford in 1993 on Islam and the West. The danger of ignoring
this essential aspect of our existence is not just spiritual or
intellectual. It also lies at the heart of that great divide between the
Islamic and Western worlds over the place of materialism in our lives. In
those instances where Islam chooses to reject Western materialism, this is
not, in my view, only a political affectation or the result of envy or a
sense of inferiority. Quite the opposite. And the danger that the gulf
between the worlds of Islam and the other major Eastern religions on the
one hand, and the West on the other, will grow ever wider and more
unbridgeable is real, unless we can explore together practical ways of
integrating the sacred and the secular in both our cultures in order to
provide a true inspiration for the next century.
This rediscovery of an integrated view of the sacred
could also help us in areas of important practical activity. In Medicine,
whatever some scientists might say, the rupture between religion and
science, between the material world and a sense of the sacred, has too
often led to a bunkered approach to healthcare, and to a failure to
understand the wholeness and manifest mystery of the healing process.
Hospitals need to be conceived and, above all, designed to reflect the
wholeness of healing if they are to help the process of recovery in a more
complete way…
Our Environment has suffered beyond our worst
nightmares, in part because of a one-sided approach to economic
development which, until very recently, failed to take account of the
inter-relatedness of creation. Little thought was given to the importance
of finding that sustainable balance which worked within the grain of
nature and understood the vital necessity of setting and respecting
limits. This, for example, is why protection of our environment is a
relatively recent concern; and why organic and sustainable farming are so
important if we are to use the land in a way which will safeguard its
ability to nourish future generations.
A third area in which this separation of the material
and spiritual has had dramatic consequences is Architecture. I
believe this separation lies at the heart of the failure of so much modern
architecture to understand the essential spiritual quality and the
traditional principles that reflect a cosmic harmony, from which come
buildings with which people feel comfortable and in which they want to
live. That is why I started my own Institute of Architecture. Titus
Buckhardt wrote: "It is the nature of art to rejoice the soul, but
not every art possesses a spiritual dimension". We see this
spirituality in traditional Christian architecture. It also infuses
the intricate geometric and arabesque patterns of Islamic art and
architecture, which are ultimately a manifestation of Divine Unity, which
in turn is the central message of the Qur'an. The Prophet Mohammed himself
is believed to have said "God is beautiful and He loves beauty."
Look at urban planning. The great historian, Ibn Khaldun, understood that
the intimate relationship between city life and spiritual tranquillity was
an essential basis for civilization. Can we ever again return to such
harmony in our cities? As civilizations decay, so do the crafts, as Ibn
Khaldun again wrote.
All these principles come down in the end to a battle
for preserving sacred values. It is a battle to restore an understanding
of the spiritual integrity of our lives, and for reintegrating what the
modern world has fragmented. Islamic culture in its traditional form has
striven to preserve this integrated spiritual view of the world in a way
we have not seen fit to do in recent generations in the West. There is
much we can share with that Islamic world view in this respect, and much
in that world view which can help us to understand the shared and timeless
elements in our two faiths. In that common endeavor both our modern
societies, Islamic and Western, can learn afresh the traditional views of
life common to our religions, as well as the sacred responsibilities we
have for the care and stewardship of the world around us.
In my Oxford speech in 1993, I argued for a much
greater effort to be made to encourage understanding between the Islamic
and Western worlds. My firm belief in the importance of that process has
not changed. The harm that will be done to both cultures if ignorance and
prejudice persist - or grow - will be incalculable. There are many ways in
which this understanding and appreciation can be built. But even if we
begin with a simple understanding of the sacred, which permeates every
aspect of our world, there is the potential for establishing new and
valuable links between Islamic civilization and the West. Perhaps, for
instance, we could begin by having more Muslim teachers in British
schools, or by encouraging exchanges of teachers. Everywhere in the world
people are seemingly wanting to learn English. But in the West, in turn,
we need to be taught by Islamic teachers how to learn once again with out
hearts, as well as our heads. The approaching millennium may be the ideal
catalyst for helping to explore and stimulate these links, and I hope we
shall not ignore the opportunity this gives us to rediscover the spiritual
underpinning of our existence. For myself, I am convinced that we cannot
afford, for the health and sustainability of a civilized existence, any
longer to ignore these timeless features of our world. A sense of the
sacred can, I believe, help provide the basis for developing a new
relationship of understanding which can only enhance the relations between
our two faiths —and indeed between all faiths— for the benefit of our
children and future generations.
Courtesy
www.alhewar.com
Islam
og Vesten, Prince Charles 1993.
Prince
Charles of Arabia
MIDDLE EAST QUARTERLY Sept. 1997