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Ma Zhu

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ma Zhu (馬注) (1640 – after 1710) was a Chinese Hanafi-Maturidi scholar.[1][2] Ma was noted for his combining of Confucian and Islamic values in his philosophy.[3][4]

Biography

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Ma was born in Yongchang Fu in Yunnan Province during the reign of the Qing dynasty. His father died when Ma was young. He is claimed to be a descendant of Ajall Shams al-Din Omar, a Muslim Mongol general, and of the Prophet Mohammed Sallallahu ‘Alaihi Wa Salam.[5]

Philosophy

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Ma Zhu's philosophy focused heavily on social relations and interactions between the sexes. He theorized that, per Confucian and Islamic values, an ideal society would be one in which men dominated public affairs while women would serve in a subservient role as domestic helpmates.[3] The philosopher opposed women performing roles outside of the home, stating "even a talented woman should not take care of non-domestic affairs". Ma took inspiration for his ideal role for women from the story of Adam and Eve, in which Allah created Eve from the flesh of Adam.[3] This indicated to Ma that men and women were not intended to be of equal standing in society. Ma wrote:

"Husband and wife are one entity. However, created out of her husband, the wife should naturally obey him. Their love is locally described as dear as that between brothers and sisters."

— Qingzhen Zhinan (清真指南)

Ma's philosophy also denoted the distinctions between the traditional Chinese paired forces of ming () and xing (), and yin and yang. According to Ma, ming represented what was preordained by Allah, while xing represented by what was acquirable though social conditioning and exposure to earthly human existence.[3] Similarly, in Ma's view yin represented the earthly acquired and yang represented the divinely innate. Parts from both were required to form any human. Ma also believed that women should strive to be similar to famous women in Islam, he mentioned Moleyan (Maryam), Khadiyah, and Fatima as examples to follow.[3]

Ma also advocated for both men and women to pursue an Islamic education.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "الماتريدية وآثارها في الفكر الإنساني بدول طريق الحرير.. الصين نموذجًا". Alfaisal Magazine.
  2. ^ "الحنفية الماتريدية في بلاد الصين". midad.com.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Jaschok, Maria; Shui, Shui Jingjun (11 October 2013). The History of Women's Mosques in Chinese Islam. Routledge. ISBN 9781136838804.
  4. ^ Brill Academic Publishers. (11 October 2013). The encyclopaedia of Islam. ISBN 9781136838736. OCLC 232958476.
  5. ^ Three eminent Chinese ‘Ulama’ of Yunnan https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/02666959008716154?journalCode=cjmm19
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