• MAKING
GLOBALIZATION WORK • DE-GLOBALIZE
THE JIHAD • THE THIRD
WAVE'S THIRD WAY • PLANET OF
SLUMS • THE GLOBAL
IDEOLOGY OF FEAR • THE
OTHER • POST-NATIONAL LITERATURE •
COLLAPSE
OR MASSIVE CHANGE? • THE RISE
AND FALL OF AMERICA'S SOFT POWER •
THE
SCIENTIFIC IMAGINATION • PUBLIC
DIPLOMACY • THE
HEADSCARF CONTROVERSY • SCULPTURE
AND THE NEW SCIENCE • BIOTECH AND
THE NEW BABEL • WAR
THROUGH THE BACK DOOR • ANTIAMERICANISM •
THE RISING
SOFT POWER OF CHINA & INDIA •
THE BUSH
DOCTRINE • FAIRNESS
IN A FRAGILE WORLD • AMERICA'S
MIGHT • ISLAM IN
THE 21ST CENTURY • ANTIGLOBOS •
HOT
PEACE • MODUS
VIVENDI • LOOKING
NORTH • FROM WELL
HAVING TO WELL BEING •
POST-HUMAN HISTORY • GLOBAPHOBIA •
THE GLOBAL
MIND • AFTER
KOSOVO • FROM
VIETNAM TO KOSOVO •
DEGLOBALIZATION? • THE RISE OF
THE MEDIA- INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX •
BOOM
[NUCLEAR] AND [BUST] ECONOMIC IN
ASIA • BEYOND
CAPITALISM • ASIAN
CRISIS • CHINA: THE
ASIAN RENAISSANCE • SLOW IS
BEAUTIFUL • ECLIPSE
OF THE BIG PICTURE • AFTER THE
END OF HISTORY • THE EAST
IS RED AGAIN • HALF-A-HEGEMON • THIRD
WAVE TERRORISM • HEIMAT •
Fall
1987 • Winter
1987 • Spring
1986 •
Fall-Winter '84-'85 • Spring
1984
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The
Islamic Counter-Reformation
Professor Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na'im was a member of the
Faculty of Law at the University of Khartoum in the Sudan and a leading
member of an Islamic reformist group called the Republican Brothers until
he was imprisoned without charge in 1983-1984 by then Sudanese President
Numiery. In 1985, Numiery executed the leader of the Republican
Brothers, Mahmoud Mohammed Taha, for "apostasy." Subsequently, An-Na'im
translated Mohammed Taha's The Second Message of Islam (Syracuse
University Press).
In the following, Professor An-Na'im, now on
the law faculty at Emory University, argues that the effort to reform
Islam in accord with human rights and civil liberties must be based on the
earliest message of Islam, the "Mecca message."
AUTHORS' NOTE: It would be totally inappropriate
for me to consent to presenting this Universalist and inclusive vision of
Islam introduced by a Sudanese Muslim reformer since the early 1950s,
without registering my strongest protest against the military campaign of
the United States of America that is killing innocent civilians in
Afghanistan for the sins of their oppressors.
I remain fully
committed to Taha's vision and continue to do my best to realize it.
Nevertheless, and precisely because of that commitment, I also believe
that the illegal, immoral and inhumane campaign by the US against the
people of Afghanistan constitutes a fundamental betrayal of any
possibility of the rule of law and respect for human rights in
international relations, which are the underlying premise of Taha's ideas.
In this context, I don't wish my representation of Taha's vision to be
seen as saying that all will be well if only "moderate Muslims struggle
for an Islamic reformation."
Taha proposed a paradigm shift in
Islamic religious and legal thinking, including the total repudiation of
the notion of jihad as aggressive war, on the premise that we all now live
in a world that is governed according to the rule of law in international
relations and protection of human rights and humanitarian legal
principles. It is therefore particularly discouraging that the US, as the
world's sole superpower chooses to deliberately and persistently violate
those civilized principles.
Nevertheless, I do hereby consent to
the re-publication of this article, first published in spring 1987,
because I refuse to allow American exceptionalism and unilateralism to
defeat Taha's humane and civilized vision. -Abdullahi An'Naim,
November 1, 2001
Cairo-The tragedy of Islam today is that the
Muslim leadership has locked itself into being intimidated by its
extremist elements. These Muslim leaders, whose moral bankruptcy and
weakness are represented by the opulent lifestyles of the Saudi Sheikhs,
live on the fringes of Islam as well as Western civilization. They lack
the essence of either. In that sense, they are twice as corrupt and twice
as Satanic as radical Muslims claim the West to be.
As a result, a
few militant and highly motivated gangsters-real criminals-are holding
Muslim cultures and Muslim leadership hostage.
The primary
motivation of radical Muslims is a reaction to Western neocolonialism and,
more significantly, Western cultural domination. The revolt against
Western cultural domination is legitimate, but how that revolt develops is
the key question for Islam today.
The complete and immediate
implementation of Shari'a (the historic code of Islam), which is what
radical Muslims such as the Taliban demanded, is the least Islamic
position for a Muslim to adopt today. To try to build a new Islamic
identity in this way is tantamount to saying that Islam stands for
repression and discrimination at home and aggressive war abroad.
In
order to sustain and strengthen the Islamic faith, Muslims need to
reassert in a modern context the fundamental truths of the Koran and the
Prophet's original Mecca message which was based on broad principles of
justice and equality. Only by removing the serious inconsistencies between
their historical Islamic self-identity and the realities of the modern
world can Muslims effectively challenge Western domination. If they fail,
they will lose their Islamic identity and tradition
altogether.
COUNTER-REFORMATION BEFORE REFORM | The benefits
of Western secularism for the Muslim world, such as technology, human
rights and civil international relations, are only superficially
entrenched. In the Iranian revolution, these frail acquisitions of
civilization were swept away wholesale because they were not indigenous or
legitimized from within Islam itself.
The Islamic world never
experienced the Enlightenment or had its own Reformation out of which the
Islamic equivalent of Western concepts of democracy, human rights and
civil liberties could have developed. The emergence of a bourgeoisie and
heightened individual consciousness which presaged these great European
movements did not arise in the Muslim context until the present
day.
Today, Islam is in a period of pre-Reformation. Paradoxically,
the coming Islamic Reformation has its roots in the Muslim reaction to the
muted influences of European modernity.
In the 19th century,
Muslims thought they could reap the benefits of the European Enlightenment
by emulating it-such as in Turkey and Egypt with the adoption of the
European codes. Elitist Muslims saw that they could neutralize the rising
expectations of the masses in this way. This has continued up to the
present time.
Today, because advanced communications and
transportation enable Muslims to travel, read and watch television, they
readily see that their institutions and doctrines are extremely inadequate
in terms of even superficially emulating the West. However, this surface
modernization has raised the economic expectations and heightened the
political frustration of Muslims because of the lack of freedoms at
home.
At the same time it has made Muslims feel that they have lost
touch with their own Islamic identity and tradition. Especially in the
wake of decolonization, they understand that national self-determination
must be of an Islamic nature. Caught in a kind of limbo between tradition
and modernity, Muslims have found themselves where their leaders have
taken them-superficially Islamic and superficially modern.
One
attempt to resolve this dilemma has been the great Islamic
"counter-reformation." This reaction against Western influence and the
search for an historical Islamic identity is precisely why the Reformation
will ultimately come about. The historical model promoted by Iran has
remained an ideal which Muslims sentimentalize and glorify, believing that
it can miraculously overcome all their problems. When it is seen to fail,
a new Islamic identity that accommodates human rights and international
law will come about. In this sense, our counter-Reformation is the prelude
to the Islamic Reformation.
Meanwhile, the situation grows worse.
There may be a great deal of killing and human suffering before things get
better. Fundamentalism is growing. We have been visited with the
experiences of Iran, Pakistan, the Sudan and Afghanistan. Egypt remains a
target. It is extremely significant because it is the most vital and
vigorous center of learning in the whole Muslim world. If Egypt should
fall, many other Muslim countries would fall very quickly. Khomeini types
or Sunni fundamentalists like the Muslim Brothers, who are also in Syria
and Tunisia, are likely to succeed unless Muslims can develop progressive
reforms that are Islamically genuine.
However, it is an optimistic
and religiously determined path we are taking. We believe all this human
suffering has been visited upon us to excite our religious imagination, to
sharpen our intellect and our moral response. It has prepared us for the
next step-realization that Islamic self-identity based on Shari'a is an
historically dated identity that needs to be reformed.
SHARI'A
and HUMAN RIGHTS | Shari'a is the law of Islam developed by early
jurists from basic sources: the Koran-which Muslims believe to be the
final and literal word of God, and the living example of the Prophet
Himself. Shari'a is very broad and comprehensive. It includes worship
rituals-how to pray, cleanliness for worship, how to fast and rules for
social etiquette-how to dress and how to wash. There is no inconsistency
with these rituals and questions of human rights.
What is a problem
with Shari'a is that part which has to do with penal law, rights and civil
liberties and the treatment of minorities, non-Muslims and women. It is
these aspects of the Islamic code that have tended to hit the Western
headlines-the quick-justice amputations for theft or veils on
women.
For political expediency, some Muslim governments emphasize
the penal aspects as window dressing to publicize their commitment to
Shari'a without genuinely being committed to other, more important rules
about economic and social justice and legitimate political power. For
example, if there were a genuine commitment to Shari'a in Saudi Arabia,
the hereditary monarchy would be rejected as illegitimate because,
according to Shari'a, the personal lifestyle and conduct of the ruler are
alone the basis for his claim to rule.
Unfortunately, because they
are afraid of creating the conditions for civil strife, many Islamic
jurists have been co-opted by the regimes in power and have contributed to
the distortion of Islam.
REFORM: THE CONTRIBUTION OF THE WEST
| The first Islamic state was established in Arabia, around 622, in
the city of Medina after the Prophet Mohammed's migration from Mecca. It
is only in the last 100 years that the historical model of Shari'a, based
on the circumstances of Medina, has lost its legitimacy and moral
validity. The notion of aggressive jihad has become morally untenable as a
means of conducting international relations; and the rise of the modern
human rights movement has tumbled the moral foundations of segregation and
discrimination against women and non-Muslims.
Human rights and the
international rule of law were contributions to civilization from the
West. Since the West has had a very significant role in developing the
totality of the human experience, Muslims are entitled, even required, to
take advantage of these positive achievements.
In each cycle of the
growth of civilization, a new contribution is added to the total course of
human experience. The ancient Romans incorporated what the Greeks had
contributed. Roman civilization was, in turn, developed and promoted by
Muslims. Then Muslims handed it back to Europe. The Islamic task now is to
reconcile human progress with traditions; to reject the remnants of
colonial domination and spiritual corruption, of whatever source, while
accepting the standards of economic and political justice and the rights
of individuals.
For example, as Muslims, we should accept female
equality. That is a universal value. But the way we develop our indigenous
response to this challenge is our business. Mahmoud Mohammed Taha, the
leader of the Republican Brothers in the Sudan who was executed by
President Numiery, was first imprisoned for challenging the colonial
authorities who had arrested a woman for circumcising her daughter.
Although Taha opposed the practice of circumcision as a means of
subordinating women, he felt that such an unhealthy and oppressive
practice should be countered by indigenous medical and moral education,
not by the imposition of European norms by colonial authorities.
As
Muslims, we should also accept the full human dignity of non-Muslims and
their right to be equal citizens. The very ideas of the national state,
constitutional government, limitations of power and equality regardless of
sex or religion are part of the universal values to which Islamic law must
adapt.
However, regarding penal law, I cannot find a way, in
principle, to abolish what is perceived to be the harshest aspects of the
law-amputations and floggings. But we can de-emphasize their importance as
primary instruments of justice while we place the highest priority on
social and economic justice.
Penal law should not be applied in the
spirit of vengeance and intimidation. For example, in the Jewish tradition
there is still a wide range of about 50 offenses punishable by death, but
Jewish jurists have developed pre-requirements and procedural safeguards
that effectively preclude application of penalties. Human judgment
cannot abolish the offense because it is a matter of religious principle,
but human judgment can decide whether the conditions for enforcement of
the penalty have been satisfied.
SUPERFUNDAMENTALIST REFORM |
In considering the reform of Islam, it is useful to think in terms of
the combined roles played by Thomas Aquinas and Martin Luther in the
adaptation of Christian tradition to the development of the modern world.
This analogy illustrates both the commitment to tradition and fundamental
religious notions, while at the same time seeking reformation and a
challenge to orthodoxy.
In Mecca, for the 13 years before His
migration to Medina, the Prophet received the ?rst part of the Koran-the
Mecca part. This Mecca period established the moral and ethical foundation
of the Muslim community.
Because this peaceful and voluntary Mecca
message of fundamental social and economic egalitarianism was violently
rejected in Mecca and Arabia in general, the Mecca message was not
suitable for that stage of human development. Thus, the Prophet's
migration to Medina not only signified a tactical move to seek a more
receptive environment, but also a shift in the content of the message
itself.
The rest of the Koran-the Medina message-which later became
codified in Shari'a as the model for an Islamic state by the majority of
Muslims, was a step backward. For example, there are many verses in the
Koran from the Mecca message which say there is no compulsion in matters
of religion or belief and people should be left to decide for themselves
whether they want to believe or not believe. In the Medina message, there
are verses that say one should go out and fight infidels wherever one
finds them and kill them. There are verses which say one should fight
Christian and Jewish believers, making them submit to Muslim rule or be
subjugated by force.
Now, according to Islamic belief, each
message, including Judaism and Christianity, is valid only to the extent
that it is relevant and applicable to changing people's lives. So, it was
very necessary, logical and valid in that context for the Prophet to apply
the Medina message. But the Medina message is not the fundamental,
universal, eternal message of Islam. That founding message is from
Mecca.
So, the reformation of Islam must be based on a return to
the Mecca message. In order to reconcile the Mecca and Medina messages
into a single system, Muslim jurists have said that some of the Medina
verses have abrogated the corresponding earlier verses from Mecca.
Although the abrogation did take place, and it was logical and valid
jurisprudence at one time, it was a postponement, not a permanent
abrogation. If we accept the process as a permanent abrogation, we will
have lost the best part of our religion-the most humane and the most
universal, egalitarian aspects.
The Mecca verses should now be made
the basis of the law and the Medina verses should be abrogated. This
counter-abrogation will result in the total conciliation between Islamic
law and the modern development of human rights and civil liberties. In
this sense we reformers are superfundamentalists.
The key to our
reformation will be a positive and receptive attitude toward the totality
of the human experience. What we find to be consistent with our
fundamental principles, we accept, whatever the source.
For
example, the democratic component of Western experience, not the
capitalistic component, is a positive aspect. The social component of the
Marxist experience, not the atheist or totalitarian aspect, is a positive
aspect. We would not accept the humanism of the Western Enlightenment
unqualified. We accept that God is the Creator in the first place; Man the
creator only in the second place-to the extent that he is a reflection of
the original Creator. For this reason, the Islamic religious orientation
would remain even in a neutral state that retains a functional separation
between state and religion.
If universal values are not adapted
from within indigenous traditions, reform only foments the very cultural
reaction witnessed in the Islamic world today.
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