This paper offers a number of valuable insights gained from a long engagement with Islamic as well as global issues, with traditional as well as contemporary concerns. It not only surveys the field along with the powers and challenges at work, but also charts a way out of the present impasse. More immediately, it offers an updated review of the progress of the Islamization of Knowledge project and a timely clarification of the very concept itself. Clearly, that concept, though responsible for generating worldwide debate and action, has been so often misinterpreted and/or inflated. The gradational nature of the Islamizing project is all too obvious, and was never far from the minds of the authors of the 1982 declaration. It would certainly have been juvenile to think otherwise. And yet there is a need now to stress, as the present paper does, the ambitious (but also imperative) nature of the enterprise. For, despite the highly commendable effort invested in further elaboration and, in some brave instances, attempted implementation of the concept, the process of the Islamization of Knowledge remains at an initial, some might even say, prenatal stage. Much work needs to be done, many talents galvanized and resources pooled, institutions set up or reorganized, etc., before a truly genuine and sustainable realization of the concept can be said to have begun. Such a realistic vision needs to accompany and inform every stage of the way. To be lulled into a false or premature sense of achievement is a costly setback at a time when standing idly by for a day may have serious consequences for decades to come.
Dr. Anas Al-Shaikh-Ali, CBE, FRSA holds a Ph.D. in American Studies and has also taught on literature and translation at universities in the Middle East. He has been recognized in the Queen’s Birthday Honours list for June 2009 by being awarded a CBE (Commander of the Civil Division of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire). He is the Chair of the UK branch of the Association of Muslim Social Scientists (AMSS) and founding trustee and former Chair of the Board of Trustees of the Forum Against Islamophobia and Racism (FAIR) in the UK. He is an Academic Advisor and Director at the London Office of International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT). At AMSS, Ali leads the organization's efforts to promote the Islamic position in various academic disciplines. At FAIR, Ali documents and works against Islamophobia and other forms of discrimination; in addition, he directs IIIT's Translation Department. Ali was one of the signatories in October 2007 of A Common Word Between Us and You, a letter addressed to Christian leaders in an appeal for peace and cooperation among the two world religions.