On April 2, 2006,
M. Cherif Bassiouni, a professor and the president of the
International Human Rights Law Institute at DePaul University
College of Law, wrote an
op-ed in
the Chicago Tribune on apostasy (leaving a religion),
asserting that it is not a capital crime in Islamic law.
He wants to clarify
for the public what Islam really says in light of the Abdul Rahman
case in Afghanistan. Rahman was being
prosecuted
for leaving Islam and converting to Christianity, a "crime" that
carries the death penalty. After an international outcry from free
governments around the world, Rahman
safely arrived
in Italy.
What Bassiouni
published in the mainstream media says too much and too little at
the same time, depending on whether he makes Islam appear positive
or omits facts that make it appear negative. Since the publication
of these highly selective articles in the national media is on a
rapid rise, they must not go unchallenged. The purpose of my reply
is not to put down Islam, but to expose all of it to the
public-the unpleasant parts that Bassiouni left out and that have
a secure basis in the sound and original source documents of
Islam, especially the Quran.
For clarity, I have
divided up my reply into six main sections with my own subtitles
that are not found in the editorial.
In with the
old and the new
Starting off,
Bassiouni writes:
A Muslim's
conversion to Christianity is not a crime punishable by death
under Islamic law, contrary to the claims in the case of Abdul
Rahman in Afghanistan.
While there is
long-established doctrine that apostasy is punishable by death,
that has also long been questioned by Islamic criminal justice
scholars, including this writer.
There are 1.4
billion Muslims who live in more than 140 countries. They
constitute the great majority in 53 countries that declare
themselves to be Muslim states. Most of these states have
constitutions that guarantee freedom of religion, as does the
Afghani constitution. Most of these states have criminal codes
that do not include apostasy as a crime. Among them are:
Algeria, Egypt, Indonesia, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Malaysia,
Morocco, Syria, Tunisia and Turkey.
Other Muslim
countries, however, criminalize apostasy on the basis of
doctrinal constructs established in the 7th and 8th Centuries,
which have been mildly questioned over the years or simply
sidestepped. States that recognize it as a crime punishable by
death include Iran, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Sudan.
However, there are no known cases in recent times in which
someone charged with apostasy in these countries has been put to
death.
Analysis:
(1) Bassiouni says
that apostasy is not a crime in Islamic law; however, this implies
that it rises above executing apostates, but it does not. As we
shall see, some Islamic constitutions declare that their source of
legislation is Shari'a. This is sacred law rooted in the Quran and
hadith or traditions and developed in the classical period. The
science of interpreting and applying Shari'a is called fiqh. It is
this area that may be reformed more easily than Shari'a.
To begin with, the
School of Law founded by Shafii (d. 820) is today "prominent in
Egypt, Palestine, and Jordan, with a significant following in
Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Hejaz (western Saudi Arabia), Pakistan, and
India, and Indonesia" (Oxford Dictionary of Islam). Thus,
its influence is extensive.
So what does this
School say about apostates? The following medieval manual compiled
mainly by Ahmad ibn Naqib al-Misri (d. 1368), Reliance of the
Traveler: A Classic Manual of Islamic Sacred Law, (rev. ed.,
trans. Nuh Ha Mim Keller, Beltsville, Maryland: Amana, 1994),
summarizes rulings in the Shafii School. Here are only four
reasons out of twenty that constitute apostasy, which demands
death:
. . . (16) to
revile the religion of Islam; (17) to believe that things
themselves or by their own nature have causal influence
independent of the will of Allah; . . . (19) to be sarcastic
about any ruling of the Sacred Law;
This last law
leaves no room for ambiguity about the ultimate goal of Islam:
(20) or to deny
that Allah intended the Prophet's message . . . to be the
religion followed by the entire world.
Such
interpretations of the Quran and hadith may be considered archaic
or may be questioned today by modern Muslim legal scholars (as
Bassiouni implies), but these kinds of stringent interpretations
still guide conservative judges and legalists, like the ones who
were prosecuting Abdul Rahman. So it must be exposed. But no one
should quarrel with Bassiouni if he knows that moderates are in
fact challenging these archaic interpretations that are
"established in seventh and eighth century constructs." This
reform is especially important outside of the comfortable and free
US and inside Islamic nations, where oppression really occurs. But
the next two points do not promise optimism for change.
(2) Bassiouni
writes that many constitutions around the Islamic world guarantee
freedom of religion. But these two constitutions, to cite examples
of the nations that he lists as permitting religious freedom, say
that their main source of legislation is sharia:
Egypt:
Art. 2: Islam is
the Religion of the State. Arabic is its official language, and
the principal source of legislation is Islamic Jurisprudence (Sharia).
Syria:
Article 3 [Islam]
(1) The religion
of the President of the Republic has to be Islam.
(2) Islamic
jurisprudence is a main source of legislation.
To his credit,
Bassiouni has insightfully described conflicting ideologies, old
and new. Various other Articles in Islamic constitutions seem to
guarantee religious freedom. But Shari'a, on the other hand, is
embedded in these constitutions if not explicitly, then by
centuries of custom and practice. Egypt and Syria say that it is
the principal "source of legislation." How can they eliminate this
ancient foundation? Recall that this sacred law is taken directly
from the Quran and sound traditions about Muhammad himself and is
therefore set in concrete, so Islamic nations are reluctant to
leave it behind. However, as we shall see below, the Quran and the
sound hadith are extreme in many matters like executing apostates.
How will the old and the new be reconciled? Can they be if this
involves leaving the Quran and hadith behind?
(3) This brings to
our next point, the most important one. The Quran itself is also
filled with seventh-century "doctrinal constructs." Does Bassiouni
have any suggestions about that? Yes, but not one that I had hoped
for. He says that his holy book comes down from God (see "Last of
God's revelations?" below). If Islamic law must be based on it,
then why should we be hopeful that Muslim countries will improve
their constitutions, legislation, and human rights? How this
ideological competition (old v. new) will be resolved in the final
analysis is anyone's guess.
(4) Bassiouni says
that "States that recognize [apostasy] as a crime punishable by
death include Iran, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Sudan.
However, there are no known cases in recent times in which someone
charged with apostasy in these countries has been put to death."
In reply, however,
this report says that 150 Muslims charged with converting to
Christianity have been detained in maximum security prisons-in
Egypt, the nation that Bassiouni extols as guaranteeing religious
freedom:
. . . There is
also an article of the Penal Code which prosecutes actions
susceptible of endangering national unity or social peace which
is often used by the authorities against Muslims wishing to
convert to Christianity. More than 150 Muslims charged with
converting to Christianity have been detained in
maximum-security prisons accused of threatening national
security and unity.
It is true that
they have not suffered death (so far), but why is it good to be
technically correct when humans are actually suffering imprisoned
in Islamic countries? Why is freedom of religion and of conscience
even a debate in Islamic nations today? The answer goes back to
the Quran itself, the traditions (hadith), and classical Shari'a,
none of which guarantee freedom in religion, as the Quranic verses
and the hadiths cited below will demonstrate.
(5) Bassiouni
writes that in strict nations like Iran "there are no known cases
in recent times in which someone charged with apostasy has been
put to death." However, Reverend Soodmand was hanged in 1990:
Reverend Hossein
Soodmand was a Muslim who had converted to Christianity in 1964
and acted as pastor and evangelist in the Evangelical Christian
Church. He was arrested in 1989 and charged with apostasy and
insulting Islam through his own conversion and by his efforts to
convert other Muslims. He was sentenced to death by a
Revolutionary Court in Meshed and despite pleas for clemency by
fellow pastors to the Dayro-E-Tasalamat (a Muslim cleric acting
as Ombudsman, literally "he who hears the cries of the
oppressed"), he was executed by hanging on 3rd December 1990 at
the insistence of the Ombudsman.
Source for both reports. Go also to this
website that
tracks the persecution of Christians around the world, citing many
cases in Islamic countries.
Islamic
punishments
Bassiouni writes:
The principal
category of crimes in Islam is called hudud. These crimes are
referred to in the Koran and thus require prosecution. They are:
adultery, theft, transgression (physical aggression), highway
robbery, slander and alcohol consumption. Apostasy is included
in this list by most scholars, but not by a few others. The
Koran refers to it as follows: "And whoever of you turns [away]
from his religion [Islam] and dies disbelieving, their works
have failed in this world and the next [world]. Those are the
inhabitants of fire: therein they shall dwell forever." Surat
(chapter) al-Ma'eda, verse 35. This verse does not criminalize
the turning away from Islam, nor does it establish a penalty.
Analysis:
(1) One of the most
excessive aspects of Islamic law derived from the Quran and the
hadith is its punishments for crimes like highway robbery and
theft, and for sins like adultery. I have already written on most
of the topics in Bassiouni's quick list. The following punishments
are derived from the Islamic holy book and the sound hadiths.
Death for adultery
Death for homosexuality
Crucifixion or mutilation for highway robbery
Mutilation for male and female thieves
Whipping for alcoholism and gambling
Literal eye for eye
(2) Bassiouni
quotes Sura (Chapter) 5:35 as if it were the only verse in the
Quran that deals with apostates. But here are other verses: Suras
2:217; 3:72, 86-87, 90; 4:137; 5:54; 16:106; 33:14; 47:25-27;
73:11; and 74:11. He notes, correctly, that 5:35 says that
punishment for apostates is reserved for Judgment in the Last Day.
It must be conceded that these other verses also leave punishment
in Allah's hands.
However, two verses
put punishment in Muhammad's hands. The so-called hypocrites
embraced Islam with reservations. Sometimes they supported
Muhammad from a geographical and religious distance, for example,
in saying prayers the Muslim way. At other times, they seemed to
help the enemies of Islam (see Abul A'La Maududi, The Meaning
of the Quran, vol. 1, pp. 361-62, notes 116-117).
In Sura 4:88-89
Allah tells the Prophet how to deal with these particular
hypocrites.
4:88-89 Then what
is the matter with you that you are divided into two parties
about the hypocrites? Allah has cast them back (to disbelief)
because of what they have earned. Do you want to guide him whom
Allah has made go astray? And he whom Allah has made to go
astray, you will never find for him any way (of guidance) 89
They wish that you reject (Faith), and thus that you all become
equal (like one another). So, take not Auliya (protectors or
friends) from them, till they emigrate in the way of Allah (to
Muhammad). But if they turn back (from Islam), take (hold of)
them and kill [q-t-l] them wherever you find them . . . . (Hilali
and Khan, parenthetical insertions are theirs; mine in brackets)
We should note two
facts from these verses. First, Allah himself made the hypocrites
go astray, yet he orders them killed. Second, the Arabic verb
qatala is used (root is q-t-l), and this word means exclusively to
fight, kill, war, battle, or slaughter. Its meaning is much
narrower than that of jihad, though this latter word also includes
bloodshed.
Verse 90 goes on to
say that if these nominal Muslims seek peace, not war, then Allah
has not opened a way for Muhammad to fight them. He must allow
them to live in their state of hypocrisy. However, as verse 89
says, if they turn back both from emigrating and Islam, then they
shall be battled. So there is no ambiguity about Muhammad's policy
on full apostates-death.
For other passages
in the Quran that permit Muhammad to punish apostates, go
here.
What the sacred
Traditions actually say
Bassiouni writes:
Turning away from
Islam, which is translated as apostasy, would not have been
considered a crime, except the Prophet Muhammad (praise be upon
him) in the 7th Century applied the death penalty to a Muslim
who turned away from Islam. Historians of the Sunnah, the
tradition established by the Prophet and deemed binding upon all
Muslims, failed to note a significant fact about that case-that
person not only had a change of faith, but decided to join the
enemies of Islam at a time of war, thus making it a crime of
high treason. Such a crime exists in all legal systems, many
with the death penalty.
Analysis: Bassiouni
by ommission of the others almost implies that there is only one
case of apostasy in the Sunnah. But the following hadiths,
representing many others, say nothing about an apostate joining
the enemies of Islam at a time of war.
(1) Malik (d. 795)
was the founder of a major School of Law and taught Shafii. Malik
is widely used among Sunnis, so says the Oxford Dictionary of
Islam. He is also considered a highly reliable collector of
hadith. He records this straightforward tradition:
Yahya related to
me from Malik . . . that the Messenger of Allah . . . said, "If
someone changes his deen [religion] - strike his neck!" (online
source)
(2) Bukhari (d.
870) is one of the most reliable collectors and editors of
hadith, if not the most reliable. He records this tradition
traced back to Muhammad himself in a legal context. It gives
three reasons for shedding a Muslim's blood. Allah's Apostle
said, "The blood of a Muslim who confesses that none has the
right to be worshipped but Allah and that I am His Apostle,
cannot be shed except in three cases: In Qisas [like-for-like
punishment] for murder, a married person who commits illegal
sexual intercourse and the one who reverts from Islam (apostate)
and leaves the Muslims." (Bukari
)
(3) In this hadith
accepted by Bukhari, Muhammad sends a Muslim to go on an
inspection tour of Yemen. The Muslim envoy notices a Jew in
chains. Why?
. . . The Prophet
then sent Mu'adh bin Jabal after him [to Yemen] and when Mu'adh
reached him, he spread out a cushion for him and requested him
to get down (and sit on the cushion). Behold: There was a
fettered man beside Abu Muisa. Mu'adh asked, "Who is this
(man)?" Abu Muisa said, "He was a Jew and became a Muslim and
then reverted back to Judaism." Then Abu Muisa requested Mu'adh
to sit down but Mu'adh said, "I will not sit down till he has
been killed. This is the judgment of Allah and His Apostle (for
such cases) and repeated it thrice. Then Abu Musa ordered that
the man be killed, and he was killed . . . (Bukhari;
see a short parallel
here)
This legal decision
was reached during Muhammad's lifetime, and this envoy and judge
says that execution for apostasy "is the judgment of Allah and His
Apostle." This Jew had not joined the enemies of Islam at a time
of war.
(4) If the envoy
and judge in Yemen understood Muhammad's policy while the Prophet
was alive, what about Muhammad's family, specifically Ali (his
son-in-law) and Ibn Abbas (his cousin and highly reliable
transmitter of the traditions)? What did Ali do to some
"atheists"? He burned them alive. What would Ibn Abbas have done?
. . . The news of
this event reached Ibn Abbas who said, "If I had been in his
[Ali's] place, I would not have burnt them, as Allah's Messenger
forbad it, saying, 'Do no punish anybody with Allah's punishment
(fire).' I would have killed them according to the statement of
Allah Messenger, 'Whoever change[s] his Islamic religion, then
kill him.'" (Bukhari, Apostates, no. 6922; online
source)
Thus, the Islam of
Ali and Ibn Abbas, Muhammad's family, would not tolerate freedom
of religion. Only Allah may punish someone with fire-in hell (see
Sura 5:35, above, quoted by Bassiouni).
(5) Finally, after
Muhammad dies of a fever in AD 632, the tribes in Arabia revolted
against Islam. Evidently, they honored this religion only because
the Prophet grew in military prowess. But shortly after he died,
they dropped their allegiance to him. However, his right-hand
companion Abu Bakr was appointed successor or Caliph upon
Muhammad's death (ruled AD 632-634). This is how he deals with the
revolt.
When Allah's
Apostle died and Abu Bakr became the caliph some Arabs renegade
(reverted to disbelief) (Abu Bakr decided to declare war against
them) . . .
Umar questions his
policy, but Abu Bakr explains why it is just to fight apostates.
Abu Bakr said,
"By Allah! I will fight those who differentiate between the
prayer and the Zakat as Zakat is the compulsory right to be
taken from the property (according to Allah's orders) By Allah!
If they refuse to pay me even a she-kid which they used to pay
at the time of Allah's Apostle. I would fight with them for
withholding it" Then 'Umar said, "By Allah, it was nothing, but
Allah opened Abu Bakr's chest towards the decision (to fight)
and I came to know that his decision was right." (Bukhari;
parallel hadiths:
here and
here)
Zakat is the forced
"charity" tax that flows into Islamic coffers. Thus, besides
theological reasons for fighting the "apostates," Abu Bakr has
both eyes trained on their resources, down to their last she-kid.
For more hadiths
that are not cited here, see this
article.
Only
tolerance and forgiveness?
Bassiouni writes:
The first
[overlooked factor] relates to the Koran, the highest binding
source of Islamic law, which contains a fundamental principle
stated in unequivocal terms: "Let there be no compulsion in
religion," Surat Al-Baqarah, verse 256. Surely this overarching
principle cannot be transgressed by forcing a person under
penalty of death to espouse Islam even after such a person
professes to have renounced it.
The second
overlooked factor relates to the Prophet's Sunnah, which is the
second source of law. In another case, the Prophet reached a
different outcome. In this case, which shows the considerate and
gentler face of Islam, a man was brought to the Prophet and
accused of turning away from Islam. He was seen throwing his
spear into the sky and screaming, "I want to kill you God!" The
Prophet inquired of the man if that was true, and then asked for
his reasons. The man said that God had killed his beloved one
that he was soon to marry, and that he wanted to kill God for
that. The Prophet, addressing the accusers, said, "Is it not
enough for you that he believes in God enough that he wants to
kill him?" And he let the man go.
Analysis:
(1) Bassiouni
quotes from the overused but obsolete Sura 2:256, which says that
there is no compulsion in religion. This sura (chapter) is
regarded as the earliest one after Muhammad emigrated from Mecca
to Medina in AD 622. Muhammad wanted to be accepted by all
peoples, so the verse reflects this desire. But Bassiouni fails to
mention an unpleasant verse in Sura 9 (and there are many). This
sura is the last one to be revealed in its entirety, and many
Muslims believe that it abrogates or cancels earlier verses that
seem to promote only tolerance. Verse five in Sura 9 unveils
Muhammad's violent policy against polytheists. They either convert
or die.
9:5 Then, when
the sacred months have passed, slay the idolaters wherever ye
find them, and take them (captive), and besiege them, and
prepare for them each ambush. But if they repent and establish
worship and pay the poor-due, then leave their way free. (Pickthall)
So there is
compulsion in Islam, after all.
(2) Bassiouni cites
a tradition in which Muhammad forgives a grieving man who threw a
spear at Allah. It should be carefully noted, however, that
Muhammad never changed his legal policy on apostasy in this sad
case. Rather, he simply disagreed with the man's accusers. The man
still believed that Allah existed; otherwise, why bother throwing
a spear at him? But what would have happened if Muhammad had
agreed with the man's accusers? The five hadiths quoted in the
previous section remove any doubt. The man would have been killed.
The last of
God's revelations?
Bassiouni writes:
The Koran is the
last of God's divine revelations and it is specifically stated
therein that Islam is the continuation of Judaism and
Christianity." [After quoting 2:136, which says that Muhammad
honors Old Testament Prophets and Jesus, Bassiouni concludes]:
"It would be contrary to this recognition to criminalize, let
alone execute, a person who embraces Judaism or Christianity."
Analysis:
(1) Bassiouni
asserts that the Quran is "the last of God's revelations." Though
I am neither a Sikh nor a Latter-Day Saint (Mormon), these two
religions have holy books that appear long after the Quran. Nanak,
founder of Sikhism, has the Guru Granth Sahib, and Joseph
Smith has the Book of Mormon, believed to be brought down
by an angel. Bassiouni is entitled to declare his beliefs, but
members of other religions are equally entitled to disagree.
(2) He quotes Sura
2:136, which teaches that Islam recognizes various prophets from
the Old Testament and even Jesus himself. Thus, Islam is
open-minded about Judaism and Christianity-never mind that the
Quran erroneously demotes Jesus to a mere prophet. (Go
here for the New Testament's teaching on Christ). However, it
is not hard to find polemical and intolerant verses in the Quran,
near each verse that seems to preach "peace and love."
For example, the
very next verse (Sura 2:137) reveals which message is the best one
(Islam):
And if they
[Christians and Jews] believe in the like of that which ye
believe, then they are rightly guided. But if they turn away,
then are they in schism. . . (Pickthall).
Thus, the Jews and
Christians are in schism-not Muhammad and his Muslims. As the
later religion, it may be fairly said that Islam is in schism. But
for Muslims, Islam must come out on top. It may be true that
Biblical Christianity regards later revelations as suspect, but
Bassiouni implies that Islam rises above such quarrels, and this
is inaccurate.
To go beyond Sura
2, these verses lump Jews and Christians or People of the
Scripture (= the Bible) together with polytheists, and their
destiny is the fires of hell, as "the worst of created beings"
(verse 6).
98:1 Those who
disbelieve among the People of the Scripture and the idolaters
could not have left off (erring) till the clear proof came unto
them, 2 A messenger from Allah, reading purified pages 3
Containing correct scriptures. 4 Nor were the People of the
Scripture divided until after the clear proof came unto them. 5
And they are ordered naught else than to serve Allah, keeping
religion pure for Him, as men by nature upright, and to
establish worship [salat or prayer five times a day] and to pay
the poor-due [zakat]. That is true religion. 6 Lo! those who
disbelieve, among the People of the Scripture and the idolaters,
will abide in fire of hell. They are the worst of created
beings. (Pickthall, my insertions in brackets)
Also, Sura 9:29
says that Muhammad should fight against the People of the
Scripture.
9:29 Fight
against such of those who have been given the Scripture as
believe not in Allah nor the Last Day, and forbid not that which
Allah hath forbidden by His messenger, and follow not the
Religion of Truth, until they pay the tribute [jizya] readily,
being brought low. (Pickthall)
This verse says
nothing about a real and physical harm done to Islam. Nonetheless,
Muhammad gave three options to the Christians and Jews in the
north during his Tabuk Crusade to fight against Byzantine
Christians in late AD 630: (1) fight and die; (2) convert; (3) or
submit and pay the second-class-citizen jizya tax for the
"privilege" of living under Islam.
So why should a
Christian or Jew trust the seeming "peace and love" verses in the
Quran?
(3) Moreover, the
claim that Islam is a continuation (read:
improvement) of Christianity is empirically and demonstrably
false, as far as Jesus and the New Testament are concerned. The
Quran ordains and endorses the following policies and practices.
Chapter and verse follows each point.
* An accuser of
sexual sins must bring four witnesses; if not, he gets eighty
lashes (24:4);
* Husbands are a
degree above their wives in status (2:228); reliable hadiths say
the majority of the inhabitants of hell are women due only
because of their "harshness and ingratitude"
* A male gets a
double share of the inheritance over that of a female (4:11);
* A woman's
testimony counts half a male testimony because she may "forget."
Reliable hadiths say this law is based on the "deficiency of a
woman's mind"
* A wife may
remarry her ex-husband if and only if she marries another man,
they have sex, and then this second man divorces her (2:230);
* Muhammad has
special marriage privileges (as many women as he desires), which
only he enjoys (33:50);
* A Muslim man
may be polygamous with up to four wives (4:3);
* Muhammad gets
twenty percent from his seventy-four raids and wars in ten years
(8:1, 41);
* Muhammad
bought off converts (9:60);
* Husbands may
hit their wife or wives (4:34);
* Mature men may
marry and consummate their marriage with prepubescent girls
(64:4);
* Slavery is
endorsed: Muhammad himself traded in slaves and
owned black slaves ; and Muslim men may have sex with
slave-girls (47:4; 4:24; 23:5-6; 70-29-30);
* Sexual sinners
must be whipped (24:2), and sound hadiths say adulterers and
homosexuals must be executed;
* Critics of
Islam and Muslims may be killed (33:59-61);
* The Quran
endorses the massacre of Jewish men and pubescent boys and the
enslavement of the women and children (33:25-27);
* Jihadists buy
status in this life and in the afterlife (4:74; 4:95-96;
9:38-44, 86-87, and 111; 61:10-11)
This list is all
about physical acts here on earth, not about abstract doctrines.
These acts and legal decrees can be measured and evaluated with
our own eyes and sound reason, and how do they come out? Not very
well, to say the least.
Further, it may be
fairly asked: Did Jesus and his Apostles and the New Testament
authors say or do these things? Not even close. If the Quran is
"the last of God's final revelation" to humanity, then God must
hate us, especially women. Truthfully, humanity can do a lot
better than the Quran. It is filled with seventh-century
"doctrinal constructs" (Bassiouni's words), so we must leave it
far behind us in the new millennium.
If readers suspect
that these verses have been taken out of context, they may click
on the following articles that in turn have long and several
supporting articles behind each item on the list:
here,
here,
here, and
here . These verses are clear and unambiguous. Does the Old
Testament command some severe punishments? Yes, but there are not
practiced anywhere today. And go
here to find out why they no longer apply in the New
Testament.
Possible
solutions
Bassiouni writes:
Regrettably,
contemporary Muslim scholars do not sufficiently address
controversial issues long-established in tradition for fear of
having to face the wrath of the traditional religious
establishments in the Muslim world. And they are also reluctant
to do so in this country, because of consistent attacks against
Islam by certain religious and political groups who have their
own agenda. The media have regrettably abetted this agenda by
negative portrayals of Islam and Muslims. Admittedly, such
situations as in Afghanistan, the horrendous crimes committed by
the jihadists in Iraq, indiscriminate bombings, aerial attacks
in the U.S., suicide bombings in Europe and Israel, lend
credence to anti-Islam negativism.
Analysis: Bassiouni
must be commended for exhorting his fellow Muslim scholars to
address controversial issues like executing apostates, "long
established in tradition." But the word "tradition" implies that
these issues are not found in the Quran or Islamic law, but they
are.
(1) Be that as it
may, he offers two reasons why Islamic scholars "do not
sufficiently address controversial issues long-established in
tradition," both abroad and in the US.
First, it is "for
fear of having to face the wrath of the traditional religious
establishments in the Muslim world."
In reply, no one
should have a quarrel with his first reason. Moderates may have to
pay with their lives. So their fear is understandable.
Second, "And they
are also reluctant to do so in this country, because of consistent
attacks against Islam by certain religious and political groups
who have their own agenda. The media have regrettably abetted this
agenda by negative portrayals of Islam and Muslims."
In reply, however,
this is odd logic. Muslim moderates will be attacked here in the
US if they challenge harsh Islamic laws and even the violent
verses in the Quran? No one should doubt that all Americans and
others citizens of the whole world would applaud and support
moderate Muslims if they did this.
(2) Bassiouni also
says that the violence coming out of the Islamic world lends
credence to the negative portrayal in the media: "the jihadists in
Iraq, indiscriminate bombings, aerial attacks in the U.S., suicide
bombings in Europe and Israel."
Who could disagree
with this? It is indeed the violence that comes first, the media
portrayal, second.
Conclusion
(3) Bassiouni
concludes with these words:
Muslim scholars
must assume their responsibilities in responding to such
negativism, and also by condemning the wrongs committed in the
name of Islam.
Let's hope that the
Muslim response to negativism comes in a way that tells the
violent radicals to stop. Condemning their acts is a first step.
Let's also hope for many Muslim reformers to go out and change
Islamic countries.
In the meantime, in
his editorial, Bassiouni left out too much and put too much in his
editorial-both of the wrong sort. The Quran itself-let alone the
traditions and Islamic law-has bigoted and intolerant verses that
command killing the tolerant and unbigoted. The Quran itself has
too many harsh laws that are established in seventh century
"doctrinal constructs." It is good if moderate Muslims reform and
update Islamic law, but what about the Quran itself? It is good
for Bassiouni to challenge his fellow Muslims to respond, but if
they cannot see the true source of the problems (the Quran), then
how can reform move forward?
On the other hand,
how can moderates renounce verses in their holy book when they
believe that it is "the last of God's divine revelations," and
when they also blithely believe that it benefits humanity?
The problem with
Bassiouni's editorial is that it does not disclose all of Islam.
Too many uninformed readers may accept its peaceful countenance or
facade. But it hides a sword behind its back.
For the sake of
truth and peace, if Bassiouni would like to do the right thing,
then he should expose the sword of Islam for the whole world to
see. But his editorial leaves the sword hidden.
Contact
James Arlandson