Fazlur Rahman Malik

Fazlur Rahman Malik
فضل الرحمان ملک
Personal
Born(1919-09-21)21 September 1919
Died26 July 1988(1988-07-26) (aged 68)
Chicago, Illinois, United States
ReligionIslam
NationalityPakistani
EraContemporary Islamic philosophy, 20th-century philosophy
RegionIslam
MovementDeobandi
Main interest(s)Islamic Modernism, ijtihad
Notable work(s)Avicenna's Psychology, Islamic Methodology in History, Islam and Modernity: Transformation of an Intellectual Tradition
Alma materPunjab University (MA)
Oxford University (PhD)
Muslim leader

Fazlur Rahman Malik (Urdu: فضل الرحمان ملک; September 21, 1919 – July 26, 1988), commonly known as Fazlur Rahman, was a modernist scholar and Islamic philosopher from today's Pakistan. Fazlur Rahman is renowned as a prominent liberal reformer of Islam, who devoted himself to educational reform and the revival of independent reasoning (ijtihad).[1] His works are subject of widespread interest and criticism in Muslim-majority countries.[2][3][4][5] He was protested by more than a thousand clerics, faqihs, muftis, and teachers in his own country and banished.[5][1]

After teaching in Britain and Canada, Fazlur-Rahman was appointed head of the Central Institute of Islamic Research of Pakistan in 1963. Although his works were widely respected by other Islamic reformers, they were also heavily criticized by conservative scholars as being overtly liberal.[1] This was quickly exploited by opponents of his political patron, General Ayub Khan, and led to his eventual exile in the United States. He left Pakistan in 1968 for the United States where he taught at the University of California, Los Angeles and the University of Chicago.

  1. ^ a b c d Sonn, Tamara. (1995). "Rahman, Fazlur". In John L. Esposito. The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern Islamic World. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Bektovic, Safet. Towards a neo-modernist Islam. Journal Studia Theologica - Nordic Journal of Theology. p.160-178.
  3. ^ Hourani, Albert. "A Disturbance of Spirits (since 1967)." In A History of the Arab Peoples. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Belnap Press of Harvard University Press, 1991.
  4. ^ Corruptors of Religion, Fazlur Rahman and his Supporters in Turkiye
  5. ^ a b The Fazlur Rahman Meeting