Two Non-Muslims’ Opinions on Shari‘ah
TWO statements
on Shariah, made in February and March, 2008 by two prominent leaders in the UK and US have
generated a storm of protest and praise. Both the statements and the reaction
they generated are of interest to the students of history and Western civilization.
They help us gauge the state of religious freedom and open mindedness in the
Western world today. The first was from Rowan Williams, the
archbishop of Canterbury.
He did not suggest that all personal matters for Muslims in the UK be
so governed. He would pick and choose which personal matters would be so
privileged and which would not, in effect awarding the right to second guess
the Shariah to the Church of England whose law is an integral part of the law
in the UK.
Islamic inheritance laws, for example, would not be permitted under his
proposal. Personal matters like marriage and divorce Muslims in the UK could be
allowed to be governed by the Shariah of-course,
to propose even this much he had to say that the Shariah was not all that bad
after all, despite all the propaganda against it. He wrote: In conclusion, it
seems that if we are to think intelligently about the relations between Islam
and British law, we need a fair amount of 'deconstruction' of crude oppositions
and mythologies, whether of the nature of sharia or the nature of the
Enlightenment. ¯ In other words we have told a lot of lies about the Shariah
for all these centuries. Now the circumstances require us to engage with the
Muslims in a different manner and therefore we have to acknowledge some of our
lies and distortions as lies and distortions. The response to this modest proposal
was a tsunami of protests and condemnations. There were calls from wide areas
of British media and leadership for retraction and even resignation by the
archbishop.
The second statement came from Harvard Law professor and Islamic
expert Noah Feldman in an article in the New
York Times in March. Feldman who reportedly is fluent in both Arabic and Hebrew
has deep interests in the Muslim world. He worked as a consultant for the
occupation in Iraq and
drafted the constitutions of occupied Iraq
and occupied Afghanistan.
He keeps a close eye on the developments in the Muslim world and knows that the
people there have been longing for the rule of Shariah. He wants to satisfy
this thirst without giving up the objectives of occupation. For this he has
come up with a brilliant two-step approach. One, acknowledge that Shariah has
had a bad press and that it has been a source of good in the past. Two,
practically take all that praise back by suggesting that today Shariah is no
longer a viable option in the form it has been applied in the past. Today it
will have to be implemented using secular institutions manned by non-scholars.
He tactfully presents this proposition so it appears that this is not something
being imposed by a colonial master. Rather this state has been arrived at by
the doings of the Muslim societies and leaders themselves. Naturally, like
Williams, he had to praise the Shariah for its past glory. He noted that
Shariah meant rule of law and was responsible for the check on the powers of
the rulers. Without Shariah, there would have been no Haroun al-Rashid in Baghdad, no golden age of Muslim Spain, no reign of
Suleiman the Magnificent in Istanbul.
¯ His article also generated a storm of criticism in the US. In both cases Muslims were
overjoyed at the generous support for the Shariah offered by these notables.
Their statements were reproduced at countless Muslim web sites in deep
appreciation. Unfortunately, reading the two gentlemen more carefully would
dampen that enthusiasm. To begin with, none of them offered their suggestion as
a matter of principle. Williams clearly gave the rationale that it would be a
prudent policy for better community cohesion. Religious freedom is not a
principle but a policy matter. And the problem with policies is that they are
dictated by policy goals and are subject to change as the goals or the
perceived means of attaining them change. While community cohesion is a noble
goal, Williams has his eyes set on another not-so-noble a goal as well. He
calls it transformative accommodation. His accommodation for the Shariah is
aimed at transforming it. The idea is to set up mechanisms for exerting
internal pressures on Shariah authorities to transform the Shariah. This he
hopes to achieve when a party to a dispute finds a greater award from a secular
court instead of the Shariah court and is tempted to choose that. When people
shop around for legal judgments in a competitive market¯ this will help improve
the law according to him. One wonders if he would be willing to use that as a
general recipe to improve all law or is the special treatment reserved only for
the Shariah. Feldman is equally interesting in his efforts to separate the
Shariah from the true Shariah experts, i.e. the scholars. It is clear that his
support for the Shariah is premised on the condition that the authority to
decide Shariah rulings is vested in secular parliamentarians and judges and not
the scholars. However he ingeniously lays the blame for the loss of authority
of the scholars on the Ottoman rulers and their attempt to codify Islamic laws
in the 19th century. Codification meant that scholars were no longer needed to
interpret them, he claims. It is like claiming that codification of laws should
lead to unemployment for lawyers and judges. The fact is that codification or
no codification, Islamic scholars" being the experts of Islamic law"
would always be needed to interpret Islamic law. The real reason for the
current state of affairs in the Muslim world is its colonial past (and present)
but Feldman says not a word about that. Do we need to remind him that Lord
Macaulay, who introduced British Penal Code in India, had boasted in his 1835
Minutes on Education that Muslim books of jurisprudence would soon be history?
Although his prediction did not come true, his purpose hardly needs any
elaboration. Feldman also knows the value of decorative clauses like the
repugnancy clause (No law will be made against the Shariah) he put in the Afghanistan and Iraq constitutions. It sounds good
and assures the masses that the constitution is Islamic, but in effect is
worthless. First, there is a world of difference between saying that all laws
will flow from the Shariah (as the Shariah requires while he has been careful
in keeping such a statement out of those constitutions) and the repugnancy
clause. Second, the mechanism for deciding which laws are against the Shariah
is sufficiently and deliberately so weak that it could not even prevent the
signing of the notorious CEDAW (Convention on the Elimination of all forms of
Discrimination Against Women) by these countries. As is well-known, that fancy
name is a cover for a hideous attempt to replace Islamic Shariah with the one
made at the UN. The allocation of a quota for women seats in the Iraqi and
Afghan parliaments, which is mentioned by Feldman with a great sense of
achievement, is another example of a Shariah¯ imposed by the occupation.
Despite Feldman charming words, it is difficult to swallow that an occupation
that has engineered the deaths of hundreds of thousands of women and children
is exactly interested in their welfare. What all this boils down to is that
their support for the Shariah is actually aimed at undermining it without
appearing to be doing so. It is difficult to get enthusiastic about such
support. It was this Shariah that gave Jews, Christians, and other non-Muslims
living in the Islamic state freedom to be governed by their own religious laws
as interpreted by their religious authorities in all personal matters.
It did so as a matter of principle. It has done so since the seventh century.
Fast forward to the twenty-first century and contrast this with the current
suggestion that a fraction of those freedoms be allowed Muslims in the West.
The proposal was laced with questionable intents and even then met with open
hostility. To both Williams and Feldman we say that we appreciate that you have
shown some realization that the Shariah has been maligned to the max by a
vicious media in the West. The honourable thing would then be to openly
recognize this fact and sincerely try to make up for the damage done. But this
cannot happen unless you recognize freedom of religion the way Islam did. As a
matter of principle, not policy.
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