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Islam, Society and Modernity
By Prof. Khalid Masud
During the huge public
discourse, especially in the
aftermath of 11 September 2001,
Muslim mind-set toward modernity
frequently came into question. A
whole theology bas came into
being on the question whether
Islam and modernity are
compatible to each other.
Neither the question nor the
arguments are new. Similar
debates arose in the nineteenth
century when the Western nations
colonized Muslim lands.
Unfortunately, the terror and
violence that accompanied
modernization distorted the
image of modernity. Today also,
the debate on modernity is
deflected by the political
events that are marred by
violence, terror and
destruction. The focus of debate
shifts the emphasis from the
quest of modernity to political
concerns. It is in the wake of
such concerns that modernity is
defined in universalistic and
essentialist terms and Islam and
Muslims are characterized as
incompatible to modernity.
I find it more fateful that some
Muslims have this thesis with
religious zeal and reject
modernity as a Western ideology.
To me, Modernity is an
historical process and an
outcome of a cumulative
contribution by all human
cultures towards the present
stage of development in human
history. It is in this sense
that there is not one but
several modernities; various
traditions transform into
varying modernities. Second, the
Western and Muslim societies
were not always as
self-righteous as they are
today. In fact in the early
nineteenth century when the
Western nations landed on the
shores of Muslim lands, they
were fascinated by the mystique
of the orient.
In India, for instance, Warren
Hastings chose the title of
Nawwab Bahadur for himself.
English historians are fond of
telling the stories of 'English
Nabobs' who lived and dressed
like Indian Muslims. More than
500 Europeans mastered Urdu
language to the extent that they
are acclaimed as Urdu Poets by
the historians of Urdu
literature. The' English
residents of Delhi frequently
visited Shah Abdul Aziz the
famous scholar in the city.
James Skinner requested amulets
from Shah Abdul Aziz for the
health of her children. Some of
Shah's contemporaries raised
questions about one of the
Shah's relative who had taken
employment with the British.
Shah could however, satisfy
these inquirers that Islam did
not forbid relations with the
English because they were people
of the book. He could also
explain that a Muslim could sit
and eat with the English. I am
not saying that the Muslims and
the English ad no problems. Of
course, on bath sides there were
also people who were reluctant,
but the significant fart is that
an Islamic scholar and a
religious leader could justify
cultural relations between the
Muslims and the Westerners.
Today also, the number of Muslim
citizens, not immigrants and
temporary labour, in the Western
countries is significantly
higher than ever. On the other
hand, the presence of Western
culture in Muslim societies is
equally evident in daily urban
life, in schools, in media and
in various cultural aspects.
In the following pages, I would
like to analyze three aspects in
Islamic tradition that have
provided Islamic intellectual
tradition the cultural
flexibility sufficient to cape
with contemporary challenges:
secular sciences, jihad,
pluralism and human rights.
SECULAR SCIENCES
We may say that Islam's
encounter with the West began
quite early when Greek
intellectual tradition carne to
the Muslim society in the ninth
century under the Abbasid caliph
Mamun. It generated a debate
about the legitimacy of studying
Greek
sciences but the fart that a
movement in favour of Greek
sciences continued to flourish
throughout the Islamic history
is by itself an evidence of
Islam' s cultural compatibility.
This movement generated a
controversy deep into the
religious issues about the
nature of the Qur'anic
revelation and the role of
reason. Opposition to this
movement finally triumphed as
"orthodoxy", but not without
recognizing the necessity of
studying Greek secular sciences.
Al-Ghazali, a twelfth century
Muslim thinker, who wrote a
refutation of this philosophical
movement in Islam and who
separated purely "religious"
from other sciences, was also
responsible for introducing
Greek logic in the "pure
religious sciences". The science
of Kalam (roughly, Islamic
theology) born out of the need
to refute foreign ideas was
regarded as the science of Da'wa
and Jihad. This science relied
heavily on Greek logic, rhetoric
and metaphysics.
The science of Kalam continued
to engage Muslim philosophers in
the controversy about reason and
revelation in Islam. The
controversy came to be known in
Europe through Latin
translations of Averroes.
Islamic philosophical
investigations into revelation
attracted the European religious
thought to appreciate the
rationalist tradition.
No doubt, opposition in the
Muslim community to rational
sciences continued, but at the
same time a considerable number
of Greek texts or their Arabic
adaptations on Astronomy,
Geography, Calculus, Mechanics
etc., became part of the Muslim
religious curriculum. They were
called "Ma'qulat" (rational
sciences) in contrast to pure
religious text studies, which
were called "Manqulat". Abu'l
Hasan Ali Nadwi, a twentieth
century Muslim educationist in
India, in bis book on Islamic
encounter with the West, admired
the Muslim way of adapting Greek
sciences to the need of Muslim
society in the ninth century as
a model for assimilation of
modern Western sciences into
Muslim education today.
The Greek sciences, especially
logic and metaphysics shaped the
Muslim worldview, which Muslim
modernists like Jamal al-Din
Afghani and Muhammad Iqbal found
responsible for Muslim
stagnation. Iqbal argued that
the classical Greek thought of
statism was opposite to the
Qur'anic dynamism. It is
paradoxical that some religious
institutions of learning
insisted in the nineteenth and
twentieth century on preserving
traditional curricula which
include some of the Greek
secular sciences, but refused to
introduce new sciences. The
situation is gradually changing
and these institutions are
adopting new secular sciences as
well. Often, the modernists have
argued that modern sciences are
in fact Muslim sciences which
came to Europe in the middle
ages.
In the twentieth century the
dispute about whether Muslims
should learn Western sciences
was settled with reference to Da
'wa and jihad. Some Algerian
students approached Mufti Abdul
Aziz b. Muhammad b. al-Siddiq in
Morocco in 1985. They narrated
that some Ulama forbade studying
secular sciences because they
would influence young Muslim
minds in favour of the West. The
students asked if migration to
Europe for work and for studies
was permissible. Mufti al-Siddiq
recited the Qur'anic verse "Let
not the unbelievers think that
they have surpassed, they could
not be weakened. Against them
make ready your strength to the
utmost of your power (8: 59-60).
He explained that the verse
requires Muslims to travel to
the West and learn the sciences
and technology that gives west
the superiority. Muslim must
learn these sciences to build
their strength.
I must add that this verse is
very basic to the modern Jihad
discourse. It is used to justify
the continuous obligation of
jihad. Here, the Mufti employed
it to justify modernization of
Islamic education. The verse is
also employed to justify the
need for modernization of
society, state and particularly
the Muslim armies.
JIHAD
The above mentioned verse was
also cited to justify
modernization of Ottoman armies,
warfare and weapons. A Muslim
jurist Mufti Shihabuddin Alusi
(d. 1853) was reluctant to allow
the use of firearms. It was, for
him, against the conventional
warfare. Other jurists disagreed
because it would put Muslim army
in a weak position. Resistance
to seeking help from
non-Muslims, especially hiring
non-Muslim army instructors to
train Muslim soldiers was also
easily dismissed on similar
grounds.
Rashid Rida (d. 1935) insisted
on modernizing Muslim armies.
How could Muslims remain
restricted to the use of arrows
and swords against an enemy who
used guns and rifles? To Rashid
Rida, the Qûr'anic verse obliged
Muslims to build up strength
superior to their enemies. No
modern Muslim scholar is today
opposed to the modernization or
Westernization of Muslim armies.
In fact, the directors of a
panel of researchers in the
Third Mediterranean Social and
Political Research Meeting,
Florence March 2002 proposed to
explore the reference to jihad
as justification of modernizing
armies in the following
words:"The study of the founding
discourses and the ideological
controversies that presided over
the creation of modern armies
raises questions about the
foundations of Nizam
legitimating, in the light of
the generic mission of Jihad".
The notion of Jihad was thus
quite naturally used for
justifying modernization and
reform of Muslim society. The
principle of jihad was extended
even to things and matters,
which were other wise,
prohibited. It opened space for
modernization of Muslim society,
especially legitimizing women's
place for women in public as
nurses and teachers.
The principle of Jihad also gave
birth to the movement of reform
in Muslim societies in
eighteenth century and
afterwards. These movements
condemned social practices that
promoted superstition,
extravagance, pessimism and
annihilism. They also initiated
reforms within Islam that
challenged the religious
authority of traditional schools
of Islamic law and the Sufi
orders. Some of these movements
in Africa revolted against the
traditional political systems
and established Islamic states.
The principle of Jihad became
the mainstay for the struggle
for independence against the
colonial rule. The traditional
Ulama who were reluctant to join
politics were obliged to
participate in the struggle in
the name of Jihad. The Western
capitalism also found Jihad
useful in the cold war. It
became the rallying point
against communism and socialism.
The word Mujahidin became a
common word in the Western
societies. Alliance of the
Mujahidin with the West
introduced to them new ideas and
technology and the need
modernize Muslim societies.
The need for change of political
system with militant force led
these Mujahidin groups to
reconstruct a new ideology of
Jihad. It advocated militant
solutions of political
conflicts. After the collapse of
the Soviet Union, the West was
no longer interested in Jihad or
Mujahidin. The rise of this
extremist view of Jihad led to
its privatization and sectarian
violence.
PRIVATE JIHAD
One of the many setbacks to
Islamic law during the colonial
period is its privatization.
Unfortunately, this
privatization continued after
the independence of Muslim
countries. The idea has become
so entrenched in the modern
Islamic thinking that it has
gravely damaged the conception
of its role as a public and
international law. I will
illustrate this point with
reference to a university
dissertation on Jihad.
'Ali b. Nafi' al-Ulyani, in his
doctoral thesis in 1984, defines
Jihad as follows: "The word in
simple usage means killing
infidels for the supremacy of
the word of God and cannot be
interpreted otherwise unless
there is an evidence for a
different meaning".
(117).
The aims and objectives of
Jihad, according to him, include
making people submit to God
alone, protection of Islamic
state, killing infidels, and
terrorizing infidels and to
humiliate them, among other
things.
In his words: "In modern times,
some persons trained by the
colonialists and who have chosen
the life of humiliation and
helplessness to that of honor
and Jihad, have doubted the role
of Jihad in the spread of Islam.
They assume that it was due to
peaceful preaching without Jihad
that Islam spread in the early
period and it is the best way
today as well. They have rather
extended their argument to claim
that spread of Islam by Jihad is
an allegation against Islam that
must be defended. Their teachers
in this intellectual distortion
are the Orientalists. The most
famous among them is the
evil-minded Orientalist Thomas
Arnold who wrote a book entitled
"Preaching of Islam". This book
was aimed to kill the spirit of
Jihad among the Muslims". (261).
Al-'Ulyani describes that Jihad
is generally divided into two
types. (1). Jihad al-talab
wa'l ibtida, which means to
calI upon (tatallub)
the infidels in their land to
Islam, and fighting (killing)
them if they do not submit to
the rule of Islam. This type is
regarded as fard kifaya
(collective duty) and becomes
individual duty, when there is a
general declaration of war or
the Imam calls for it (124). (2)
Al-jihad al-difa 'i
(defensive Jihad) is the second
type, which is regarded as
fard 'ayn. He questions
this division and concludes that
Jihad difa 'i
(defensive Jihad) is a bid'a
munkara (a reprehensible
innovation).
He then condemns the following
as those who committed this
heresy of defining Jihad to be
defensive: Abd al-Wahhab
al-Khallaf, Mahmud Shaltut,
Muhammad Abd Allah Diraz, Wahba
Zuhayli, Muhammad Izza Darwaza,
Hamid Sultan; Ali Ali Mansur,
Jamal al-Banna, Abd al-Khaliq
al-Nawawi, Muhammad Ra'fat
Uthman. I need not to stress
that all of them are well known
religious thinkers and are
respected for their scholarship.
This trend of privatization can
be traced to the inclusion of
Amr bi 'l-ma 'ruf in
the books on Islamic Criminal
Law. I illustrate here with
reference to 'Abdul Qadir
'Awda's (shahid 1954)
Al-tashri' al-Jina'i al-Islami,
which has become popular text
in law faculties.' Awda argues
that Jihad, Zakat,
and enforcement of Hudud
(penalties) are not only duties
of a state but also of an
individual. It is an individual
obligation to use physical force
to correct evil. He, therefore,
allows an individual to
inflict punishment on convicted
criminals. He argues that
enforcement of Hudud is
an obligation for the Muslim
Umma as a whole, not only for
the state. The Islamic legal
principle of Ihdar
(violability, meaning loss of
rights and protection) is not
available for non-Muslims and
apostates. Islamic law provides
legal protection only on the
basis of
Iman (faith) and
Aman (pact), 'Awda
maintains. The life and property
of a non-Muslim are violable if
he or his people have no
agreement of protection with
Muslims. An apostate, a Muslim
who forsakes Islam, also loses
all rights and becomes violable.
According to 'Awda, any Muslim
can kill a Harbi (a
non-Muslim without a pact of
protection) or an apostate
without criminal liability.
'A wda extends the law of
violability also to persans
sentenced in the Hudud crimes.
If a Muslim kills a person
convicted for Zina,
rebellion and robbery, he is not
criminally liable for murder.
'A wda's concept of the
principle of violability (Ihdar)
of life differs significantly
from the classical jurists. For
instance, according to Hanafi
School, a person who kills an
apostate must be punished for
taking law into his own hands
('Awda 1979,635). The Maliki
school calls for punishment in
this case in addition to
diya (compensation for
murder ('Awda 1979, 635).
Similarly, according to Maliki,
Hanafi and Hanbali schools, the
murder of a persan convicted for
Zina may not be treated
as homicide but may be punished
for taking law in his own hands.
The Shafi 'i jurists regard the
person criminally liable for
murder (' Awda 1979,639).
'A wda disagrees with the views
of these schools and justifies,
in a sense, taking law into
one's own hand: " If courts do
not sentence an apostate, as it
commonly happens in Muslim
countries today, these
institutions have no authority
to punish a person who kills an
apostate (in obedience to
Shari 'a). The killer
cannot be accused of violating
the authority of these
institutions because they have
not undertaken the
responsibility of enforcing
Shari 'a laws. Since they
have forsaken Shari 'a,
individuals cannot be held
responsible if they implement
these laws on their own" ('Awda
1979, 636).
Muslim orthodoxy condemned these
views as religious extremism.
Muslim governments started
taking legal actions against
these movements. These groups
were however too well organized
and financially too strong to be
controlled by Muslim
governments. While the
governments in Egypt, Pakistan
and Saudi Arabia banned these
extremist Jihad organizations,
the Ulama were engaged in
distinguishing jihad from
extremism, militarism, violence
and terror.
These inner controversies in the
Muslim world on Jihad came to be
known to the world only after
the 11 September. ln fact this
debate was already going on in
Muslim societies. That is why
the condemnation of the
terrorist attack was immediate
and unanimous. Sa'id Ramadan
al-Buti, in bis Al-Jihad fi 'I
Islam (1993) rejected the use of
Jihad for political change,
revolution, and to change the
government. The right Islamic
legal term for this activity was
Baghy (revolt and disobedience).
Islamic law allowed revolt if it
could be justified rationally.
The use of violence and force
without specific political
objective was also distinct from
Jihad. Islamic law called it
Haraba (terror) which was a
crime and condemnable.
In Iran the Shi'i thinker
Mutahhari refuted the extremist
argument that Jihad was an
absolute obligation and that the
Muslims must always be at war
with non-Muslims. Jihad was a
positive concept. That is why in
Iran the term Jihad was used for
social reconstruction. Jihad
Sazindagi (1979) aimed at
modernization of rural Iran,
roads, schools, health,
electricity etc.
PLURALISM
Pluralism favours the freedom of
individual. It questions the
traditional monopoly of certain
persons, groups or institutions
to prescribe ethical values
authoritatively.
Pluralism derives ifs legitimacy
and acceptance by justifying
universal values in local
contexts. This is particularly
significant in today's world of
globalism. A powerful group,
nation or country cannot impose
its values on others without
generating the feelings of
frustration and resentment among
the weaker groups and countries.
Globalism can succeed only on
the basis of ethical pluralism.
Generally, Islamic law is
regarded as the only Islamic
moral tradition. Islam as a
moral tradition bas never been
monolithic (1). Quite early in
its history, it developed
several approaches to moral
issues. These approaches vary in
their sources of
authority, methods of
interpretations and emphasis.
They sometimes oppose one
another but often continue to
function side by side, even
complementing each other. It is
therefore well in order to
review, even if briefly, these
various moral traditions in
Islam.
The Hadith literature reflects a
very significant moral
tradition. It offers the Prophet
Muhammad and his companions as
models for moral behaviour. This
tradition does refer to the
pre-Islamic tribal Sunna but
only to elaborate its approval
or disapproval by early Muslims.
The outstanding aspect of this
ethical tradition is that it is
essentially religious and
authenticity oriented. However,
the fact that this tradition
produced dozens of compendia,
each of them accepted by Muslims
as authoritative, stresses the
principle of ethical pluralism
within the tradition itself.
Pre-Islamic tribal values like
manliness, honor, forbearance
and tolerance were part of the
Arab Sunna tradition that
operated at the level of custom
and usage in the literary moral
tradition called Adab. The Adab
tradition represents a humanist
moral approach to morality. Most
probably, writings in this
tradition were initiated by Ibn
Muqaffa'
(d. 756), and carried on by
several other writers like Ibn
Qutayba (d. 889), al-Mawardi,
(d. 1058) and Qalqashandi (d.
1418). The Adab tradition
expresses itself in the literary
genre. The Adab literature is
composed as guides for the
rulers or civil servants, or
mirrors for the prince. It lays
down the ideal model behaviour
for them. This tradition is more
open as it derives its ethical
values from diverse sources:
pre-Islamic Arabic as well as
Persian literature, Qur'an,
history of Islam, ancient
Persian history and Greek and
Indian Literature. Ibn Muqaffa'
translated into Arabic
Kalila wa Dimna, a
book on moral stories
originating in India. The Adab
tradition continues in arts and
literature but also as etiquette
literature providing code of
ethics for various professions
such as musicians(2).
The philosophical tradition in
Islam dealt with the ethical
issues on a more abstract level
than the Adab tradition. One of
the essential questions with
which this tradition engaged
itself was about the question of
ethical obligation and its
origins. The issue was whether
it was only religion that
defined rights and obligations
or the human reason on its own
could also differentiate between
ethically good and bad. The
Muslim philosophers explored the
nature, of Prophethood,
revelation, role of reason and
other such themes. From Ibn Sina
(d. 1037) to Ibn Rushd (d.
1198), the Muslim philosophers
generally argued that there was
no conflict between reason and
revelation. The most interesting
example of the discussion of
this problem is the treatises by
the title Hayy bin Yaqzan
(3) (The Living, son of
Awake) by Ibn Sina and Ibn
Tufayl (d. 1185). Ibn Tufayl's
story presents Hayy as a human
child growing up on an island
among animals, without any
contact with humans. By instinct
and experience he develops a
moral code for himself. Later,
he finds out that his moral
values were not different from
the religious values in the
neighboring island with human
habitat. Jurist philosophers
like Abu Ishaq al-Shatibi (4)
and Shah Waliullah (5) also hold
that hum an reason reaches
similar conclusions during the
absence of revelation.
Rushdi Rashid has argued that
Algebra presented a new
rationality that provided a new
intellectual strategy to find
new solutions. It opened new
vistas into the realm of the
impossible. Algebra, employing
the multidisciplinary methods of
geometry and arithmetic,
demonstrated that approximate
and impossible solutions could
also be true solutions of a
problem.
The philosophical tradition
developed a system of practical
or applied ethics that came to
be known as Akhlaq. It
received its recognition as
Islamic ethics proper as early
as eleventh century. It is a
synthesis of pre-Islamic Arab
moral values, Qur'anic teachings
and has Persian, Indian and
Greek elements in it.
Miskawayh's (d. 1030)
Tahdhib al-Akhlaq offers a
comprehensive and systematic
treatment of ethical values in
this tradition. It is quite
obviously influenced by Greek
ethical literature. Miskawayh
explains that Greek ethics is
more in accord with Islamic
teachings than the pre-Islamic
Arab morality. Jalal al-Diu
al-Dawwani (d. 1501) and Nasir
al-Diu alTusi (d. ) followed
Miskawayh in their writings on
ethics. Their books, popularly
known as and respectively, were
used as textbooks in the
religious institutions.
The Sufi moral tradition is more
popular than the other Islamic
moral traditions. The Sufis were
critical of the literal and
exoteric approach to obligations
by the jurists and theologians.
Al- Harith al-Muhasibi (d. 857)
wrote Kitab al-ri 'ava fi
huquq Allah (The book of
observance of the rights of
God). He treats ethical
obligations as surrender to the
will of God. He speaks of moral
values such as Taqwa
(fear of God), Tawba
(retum to God), and Mahabba
(love) etc. Muhasibi stresses
abiding by the laws of
prescription and prohibition in
the Qur'an and Sunna, but he
stresses on a more conscious
effort to contraI the self from
its propensity toward evil.
Ghazali ( d.llll) also followed
Miskawayh in his ethical
writings. His books on ethics,
namely
Ihva 'Ulum al-Din
and Kimivai Sa 'adat
have been more popular among
Muslim readers than bis other
works.
The Sufis became more and more
critical of legal and
theological approach to
obligations in later local
traditions. The folk literature
stresses on inner and humanist
meanings of obligations, and on
tolerance, love and sincerity.
Kalam (theology) is another
tradition that dealt with the
moral questions. This tradition
also came to engage very early
with the question whether the
ethical values of good and bad
were known only by revelation
and religion or human reason
can also discover them. The
Mu'tazila school maintained that
the ethical values were rational
and the revelation never
contradicted them. The Mu'tazila
developed an entire system of
theology and jurisprudence on
this basis. They believed in the
principle of justice to the
extent that they argued that it
was an obligation even for God.
The revelation, specifically the
Qur'an, was not sempitermal
because it conformed to the
findings of human reason. The
Mu'tazila came into conflict
with other Muslims, especially
the Hadith groups who accused
them of denying Divine
Attributes. Asha'ira, a group of
theologians that broke away from
the Mu'tazila denounced the
theology of human reason. The
Mu'tazila lost the caliph al
support they had in the initial
period and other groups gained
strength. The Kalam tradition,
however, is not monolithic; it
also developed multiple voices.
It was not pluralist in the
strict sense as each group
c1aimed authenticity only for
itself.
Fiqh (legal ethics) developed
initially as multiple local
customary legal traditions. The
plurality of views in the Fiqh
traditions is proverbial. The
Hadith tradition questioned the
authenticity of Fiqh traditions
and described it as mere
opinions (
ra 'y) as opposed to
the Hadith which was based on
scientific knowledge ('ilm).
The Fiqh traditions
produced more than nineteen
schools, all of them recognizing
each other's legal validity. The
multiplicity of views continues
within the schools and is
regarded as a blessing. The
principle of legal reasoning (
ijtihad) encourages
difference of opinion considered
religiously rewardable even in
case of error. Adherence to
these different
schools of law is reflected in
the diverse personallaws in
Muslim societies.
It is significant to note that
the caliphs in early Islamic
history were quite apprehensive
about the conflicting views of
the Muslim jurists that produced
diverse court judgements.
Several Abbasi caliphs and later
other Muslim rulers tried to
unify laws. Resistance to such
attempts often came from the
Muslim jurists themselves. They
feared that such attempts would
mean state interference in this
tradition. They wanted to
preserve their freedom. They did
consider their works enforceable
by the state, but they never
agreed to codify them as state
laws. As a result, Muslim
societies have been continuously
practicing legal pluralism
before the advent of modern
nation state. The rural and
tribal areas continued their
local customary laws, sometimes
even non-Muslim laws (as for
example in Mughal and Ottoman
villages). ln cities as well,
there were different type of
courts. The courts of complaints
differed from ordinary courts
even in their procedural laws.
Different state institutions
like police also had their own
legal system and procedures.
The Hisba (public sensor) courts
had jurisdiction in business
ethics in the market as weIl as
in offences against public
marals.
Fiqh soon came to stand for
Shari'a (Divine law) and defined
moral as well as legal
obligations. This position of
the Fiqh came about ,mostly with
the jurists functioning as
Muftis. A Mufti, even today, may
be asked about any matter under
the sun and he is supposed to
explain God's law on the points
in question. Consequently, Fiqh
assumed a dominating position. A
Mufti's response, called Fatwa,
offered a social construction of
Shari' a, as most often it
referred to a concrete social
question. Fatwa reviews a moral
practice with reference to the
Shari'a ideal. Most often we
find Muftis also adjusting
ideals to practice in view of
the prevailing social
conditions.
These practices are frequently
assimilated in the tradition in
such a way that they are
sometimes hard to distinguish. I
shall refer to some fatwas to
illustrate this point in the
next section.
To conclude, Islam as a moral
tradition favours pluralism on
two bases. Firstly because it
appeals to human reason. The
Qur'an attaches pivotal
significance to individual
rational choice and
responsibility. "There is no
coercion in religion. The truth
stands out clear from Error" ...
(Qur'an, 2:256). "By the soul,
and the order given it, He has
inspired it to its wrong and to
its good" (Qur'an, 91: 7-8). "To
each is a goal to which he turns
it. Then strive for what is
good..." (2: 178). "Say, 'The
Truth is from your Lord', then
believe who wills and deny who
wills (18: 29). The emphasis
here is not so much that ethical
values are rational and
scientific but that they are
reasonable to be understood as
such by humans. Since the level
of understanding may differ from
person to person and from
community to community
multiplicity of views is
inevitable.
The second basis of pluralism is
social acceptance of these
values. This basis also
regulates the dissent. The
Qur'an calls good Ma'ruf (well
kn,own) and evil Munkar
(rejected), which points to the
fact that normativity is based
on social acceptance or
rejection. The social dialectics
develop the acceptable
definition of ethical values.
HUMAN RIGHTS
There are two Muslim
declarations on Human rights:
The Universal Islamic
Declaration of Human Rights
(UIDHR) issued by the Islamic
Council, a non government Muslim
organization in London, in 1981
and the Cairo Declaration of
Human Rights in Islam (CDHRI),
issued by the Foreign Ministers
of Muslim
countries in Cairo in 1990.
Compared with the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights
1948, the area of common grounds
between the Muslim documents and
UDHR is larger than that where
they differ. The two documents
share respectively 20 and 14
themes of rights with those
mentioned in the UDHR. It is
also significant to note that
UIDHR, which is a non-state
declaration, has more in common
with UDHR than CDHRI which is a
state document.
The themes where the Muslim
documents differ with UDHR are
as follows: Freedom of thought
and expression, protection of
life, penal laws, marnage, and
holding of public office. On the
whole, I find in both documents
an attempt to come closer to the
global community. The same trend
is reflected in numerous Muslim
writings on Human rights which
stress on a larger area of
common perspectives (6). They
suggest uniformity with an
emphasis on diversity. ln other
words, diversity in these
writings stresses the
possibility of localizing the
universals. Here, universal
rights are mentioned in Islamic
language, often claiming that
Islam is the first religion to
award these human rights.
In my view, these debates on
Islam and human rights have been
missing a very essential point:
the ethical aspect of the human
rights. A movement for global
ethics hopes to fill this gap. I
find Muslim anxieties emerging
from the perspectives of
national sovereignty and
security on the one band and
from religious and cultural
perspective on the other band.
Most human rights are restricted
or violated by Muslim
governments in the name of
national security, and they
object to international
criticism as a violation of
their national sovereignty.
Concern for national security
cannot justify violation of the
freedom and dignity of man.
However, when the US, Britain,
and Israel, to name a few
current examples, violate human
rights and justify them in the
name of national security, the
question arises: what is global,
national interest or ethical
principles? UDHR document is
quite ambivalent; it stresses
the universality of hum an
rights as well as the principle
of the sovereignty of the nation
and nation state. I agree with
Myer that it is a challenge of
methodology, but it is not only
for Muslims. It is a challenge
for us all to define and apply
human rights as truly universal
principles, and not as an
instrument for cultural,
economic and political hegemony
of the powerful. For this
purpose Human Rights have to be
rooted in ethics that protects
the weak and the poor also.
There is a wide range of
diversity among Muslim scholars
on human rights. This diversity
is informed by a very complex
understanding of tradition and
change. One notices three major
trends in the Muslim writings on
this subject : Neo conservative,
Islamic modernists and
Progressive Muslims.
Neo-conservative Muslim thinkers
that emerged in probably 1970s
and their full impact was
visible in 1980s. They are doser
to conservative in sharing same
cultural values. They differ
with them however, because they
have developed a new
jurisprudence and they
frequently use modern Western
thought categories presenting
and justifying their
conservative values. Abdul
Wahhab Abdul Aziz al-Shishani's
book on Human Rights in Islam
represents this group. Shishani
speaks about a major paradigm
shift in the concept of state in
the modern period. This concept
stresses protecting the rights
of the individual (7). Revising
the authoritative sources of
Islamic law Shishani adds six
more to the classical four: the
Qur'an, the Sunna (the rulings
and practice of Prophet
Muhammad), Qiyas (analogies from
the above two), and Ijma'
(consensus of the jurists).
Normativity of Islamic laws is
grounded on the principles that
suit human nature; they are not
based on customs of a people(8).
This explanation illustrates
this neo-conservatism. Unlike
traditional jurists, who regard
revelation by itself normative,
this new trend justifies it on
the basis of its suitability to
human nature. AIso, unlike
modemists, this trend dismisses
historicity and social process
as an explanation for the
development of Islamic law.
Also, unlike traditional
conservatives who insist on
continuing the legal tradition
of the schools of law, this new
trend calls for Ijtihad (legal
reasoning beyond the confines of
schools).
In contrast to conservatives,
Islamic modernists believe that
modernity is compatible to
Islam. Like Neo-conservatives
they stress on Ijtihad against
strict adherence to the Islamic
legal tradition, but they define
it as "reinterpretation" or
reconstruction (9). They believe
that the classicallegal
doctrines were product of
historical and social contexts
and therefore there is a need
for reform. Their methodology
consists of explaining the
historical and social contexts
of the basic Islamic texts,
including the Qur'an, and to
reinterpret them in view of
modern needs.
Progressive Muslims describe
themselves as distinct from
conservative and liberals
because they regard Muslim
liberals have relativised
Islamic values and operate in a
framework informed by the
Western impact. They are
committed to three basics:
social justice, pluralism and
gender justice.(10) A
progressive Muslim engages with
tradition in light of modernity,
but at the same s/he is critical
of the arrogance of modernity.
Progressive Muslims are
contesting injustice, exposing
violations of human rights and
freedom, standing up to
increasing hegemonic Western
political, economic, and
intellectual structures that
perpetuate an unequal
distribution of resources around
the world.
Progressive Muslims distinguish
themselves on the one band from
conservative Muslims who adhere
to the authority of the schools
of law, and from
neo-conservatives, including
Wahhabis and neo-Wahhabis, the
followers of fourteenth century
Muslim Syrian thinker Ibn
Taymiyya and an eighteenth
century Arabian reformer
Muhammad b. Abdul Wahhab. Safi
describes Wahhabi as a
reactionary theological movement
based on a trivial ideology
(11). On the other band,
Progressive Muslims distinguish
themselves from secularists and
"modemists", who look to the
prevalent notion of Western
modemity as something to be
imitated and duplicated in
toto.
Progressive Muslims have
developed a methodology which is
different from other groups.
They call it "multiple
critique", because it is
critical of bath tradition and
modernity. For example, veiling
or hijab is not
subjugation of women in all
cases (12). In most cases,
veiling is accepted as a
strategy of negotiating the
rights to work. "In Iran and
Egypt, for example, as in other
parts of the Muslim world, the
wearing of the
hijab has
neutralized public space for
many traditional families, thus
making it more acceptable for
women to occupy such space"
(13).
CONCLUDING REMARKS
Coming back to the public
discourse on modernity with
which I began this essay, I must
note that this discourse
expressed its concern about not
only the Muslim attitude but
also about the Western ambiguity
in its commitment to modernity.
The twentieth century had seen
the end of the cold war and the
beginning of a peace process in
the various parts of the world.
The humankind was supposed to be
moving in the twenty first
century to an era when conflicts
would be resolved by reasoning
and negotiations, not by use of
violence. No one could expect
the 11 September colossal
violence against humanity to
happen in this era. Most of us
could not expect a war also. The
perception that Islam was not
compatible with modernity and
that the Muslims were opposed to
the values and symbols of
Western civilization, was not
sufficient to justify a war
against Muslims. It was claimed
that the war on Afghanistan was
not a war against Islam, but' it
was still a war. ln spite of
this explanation and despite the
fact that almost all Muslim
countries allied with the USA in
this war the image of Islam as
the main obstruction to
modernity looms large.
Fortunately, this voice did not
dominate the public discourse
this time.
A considerably sizeable segment
of this discourse remains
critical of how the West,
particularly the government
agencies in the United States
have functioned during this time
of crisis. The way the wars were
imposed on Afghanistan and Iraq
has damaged the fragile
achievements of modernity. This
criticism has insisted that the
resort to terrorizing the
terrorists has only proved that
the West also did not believe in
the values of modernity. Refusal
to negotiate with Afghanistan,
marginalization of the United
Nations, and the use of the
extremely destructive weapons
against a country that had been
already devastated by long wars
and against the people who were
already on the verge of
extinction by famine, do not
reflect a commitment to the
values of modernity. The culture
of modernity upholds that
killing criminals cannot
eliminate crime. That is the
reason why modernity opposes
capital punishments. Islam's
incompatibility with modernity
is also explained on the ground
that Islamic penal law allows
corporal punishments. The
discussion in this public debate
urges for investigating the
causes of terrorism in order to
eliminate terrorism. The debate
suggested that terrorism was
caused by the frustration felt
on the failure of political
solution. The US hegemonic
foreign policy, especially its
indifference to the political
impasse in the Middle East,
contributed to this frustration.
Islam alone cannot be blamed for
the failure of modernity today.
(1) See R Walzer, "Akhlak", in
The Enç;dopedia cf Islam, New
Edition (Leiden, 1986), Vol. 1,
pp. 325-329.
(2) Barbara D. Metcalf (Ed.),
Moral Candua and Authmit:y, The
Place if Adah in South Asian
Islam (Berkeley. University of
Califomia Press, 1984),
especially Brian Silver, "The
Adab of Musicians", pp. 315-329.
(3) See A-M Goichon, "Hayy b.
Yakzan", in
The Encyclopedia of Islam,
New Edition (Leiden, 1986), Vol.
3, pp. 330-334.
(4) Muhammad Khalid Masud,
Shatibi's Philosophy of Islamic
Law (Kuala Lumpur, 2000,
Islamabad, 1995), p. 157 ff.
(5) Shah Waliullah,
Huiiatullah al-Baligha
(Lahore: Maktaba Salafiyya,
N.D.).
(6) I would like to mention the
following two books written
respectively from traditional
and liberal perspectives. Abd al
Wahhab Abd al-Aziz al-Shishani,
Huquq al-insan wa
hurriyatihu al-asasiyya fi al-nizam
al-Islami wa al-nuzum almu'asara
(Rights of man and his basic
Freedoms in the Islamic System
and the Contemporary Systems,
Riyadh: al-Jam'iyyat al-Ilmiyya
al-malikiyya, 1980); Ali Abd
al-Wahid Wafi, Huquq al-Insan
fi'l Islam (Human Rights in
Islam, Cairo: Nahda Misr, 1999,
sixth edition).
(7) Sishani 1980, 5.
(8) Shishani 1980. 300.
(9) For instance Muhammad Iqbal
(d. 1938), a Muslim thinker who
influenced Muslim thinking in
the subcontinent used the term
"reconstruction". See Muhammad
Khalid Masud, Iqb:d's
reconst'Y'tlItian ifljtihad
(Lahore: Iqbal Academy, 2003,
second edition).
(10) Safi 2003, 2.
(11) Safi 2003, 27 f.n. 3.
(12) Ibid. 151-154.
(13) Ibid. 153, citing Ziba
Mir-Hosseini.
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