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Monday 30 May 2016

HUDUD: CENTRAL TO ISLAM?


By Mr PhD Chandra Muzaffar
Sunday Star/29 May 2016
About Chandra Muzaffar
History has shown that the mere imposition of hudud laws cannot overcome the ills of Muslim societies or preserve the quintessence of Islamic civilisation.
Changing times: In the post-colonial period, a huge portion of the Muslim populace has chosen to re-assert what it perceives as its Muslim identity via attire, food, laws and so on. — AP
This is an edited version of an essay published in Chandra Muzaffar's Rights, Religion and Reform. 

Books and Essays

What is Hudud?
Hudud (Arabic: حدود udūd, also transliterated hadud, hudood; singular hadd, حد, literal meaning "limit", or "restriction") is an Islamic concept: punishments which under Islamic law (Shariah) are mandated and fixed by God. The Shariah divided offenses into those against God and those against man…read more>>>
I had noted that the ideology of Malay supremacy is the single most critical issue affecting Malaysia. The Malay supremacy ideology was always morphed with Islamic supremacy. In recent years, with the split in the Malay community becoming a significant permanent feature, the debate has shifted away from the Malay race to the Islamic religion…
Introduction. Hudud in Malaysia: The Issue in Stake is chosen for our book review. This book was edited by Rose Ismail. She is one of members …
The theology essay below has been submitted to us by a student in order to help you ... Hudud Laws are the deterrent penalties prescribed by Syariah laws for...



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THE proponents of hudud laws have created the erroneous impression that hudud laws are central to Islam, that they define the character and identity of an Islamic state and society.
If we examined the growth and spread of Islam, how Islamic civili­sation sustained its dynamic spirit for centuries, and what led to its eventual decline, we get a different picture of the role of hudud in the religion.
The spread of Islam from Spain to China within one hundred years of Prophet Muhammad’s death more rapid than the spread of any other religion in history was not due to some inherent attraction to hudud laws. Islam came as a liber­ator to all sorts of people suffering from oppression and persecution.
This was how the religion was perceived by the Persians, for instance, just as it brought a meas­ure of equality to the Egyptians who for centuries had been groan­ing under the yoke of unjust social structures maintained by the Greeks and Romans.
Or, in the words of H.G. Wells, “Islam prevailed because it was the best social and political order the times could offer. It prevailed because everywhere it found politi­cally apathetic peoples, robbed, oppressed, bullied, uneducated and unorganised and it found selfish and unsound governments out of touch with any people at all. It was the broadest, freshest and cleanest political idea that had yet come into actual activity in the world and it offered better terms than any other to the masses of mankind.”
It was primarily because of what it did for human dignity and social justice that Islam flourished as a great world civilisation between the eighth and fourteenth centu­ries.
There was, however, another reason too. A vast corpus of knowl­edge applied to commerce and the economy, science and education, the military and administration gave Islamic civilisation the strength and resilience to with­stand various trials and tribula­tions. Hudud, understood today as modes of punishment associated with criminal law, cannot claim to have helped preserve the quintes­sence of Islamic civilisation.
Even the decline of Islamic civili­sation has no direct or indirect link to the observance or non-obser­vance of hudud laws.
As distinguished Muslim think­ers like Shah Waliullah have point­ed out, elite corruption and oppres­sion, apart from the devastation wrought by external invasions, were largely responsible for the downfall of Muslim empires in his­tory.
It is worth noting that most of these empires and kingdoms faith­fully carried out hudud ordinanc­es. In fact, there are a few exam­ples of Muslim regimes today which adhere strictly to hudud and yet their people remain trapped in poverty, ignorance and ill health.
One of these hudud oriented societies in West Asia has an incredibly high rate of illiteracy, in spite of its huge oil revenue. It is also totally autocratic, does not even observe minimal public accountability and denies the ordi­nary people any form of participa­tion in government. The ills of this and other Muslim societies cannot be overcome through the mere imposition of hudud laws.
Though it is only too obvious that the colossal challenges con­fronting most Muslim societies today cannot be resolved through the promulgation of hudud ordi­nances, a significant segment of the ulama continues to believe that allegiance to these laws demon­strates fidelity to the faith.
This is why they are even pre­pared to label as murtad (apos­tates) those who question the rele­vance of hudud to the eternal Islamic mission of protecting human dignity and promoting social justice.
Before we try to understand this attitude of some contemporary ulama, it is important to emphasise that by questioning the relevance of the modes of punishment pre­scribed in hudud one is not chal­lenging the notion of right and wrong that underpins Islamic law or the Syariah.
For a Muslim, murder or theft or adultery or consuming liquor would always remain morally rep­rehensible. Preserving and protect­ing the basic moral structure of the Quran embodied in its eternal val­ues and principles is essential to the defence of Islam’s fundamental ethical foundation and framework.
Muslim reformers who regard various types of punishment in hudud ordinances as contextual have never been known to raise doubts about the validity and the authenticity of Quranic values and principles.
Indeed, some of them would even argue that the obsession with meting out punishment in hudud legislation in various Muslim coun­tries today is inimical to the spirit of encouraging the wrongdoer to repent and reform which is ger­mane to the Quran and the exam­ple of the Prophet (the Sunnah).
After all, hudud itself is essential­ly a reminder to the human being of the importance of observing cer­tain boundaries, certain restraints, in one’s personal and social con­duct. It is a way of persuading the human being to function within a moral realm.
Hudud, in its philosophical sense, is not a rigid, dogmatic set of rules and regulations.
Unfortunately, an important sec­tion of contemporary ulama do not see hudud or Islamic law from this perspective. The vast majority, whatever their sect or inclination, adopt a legalistic, traditionalist approach to Islam.
Laws - not universal values or eternal principles - in their opinion embody the sanctity of the religion.
It explains why laws - though only about 300 out of 6,666 verses in the Quran deal with various types of laws - are given so much prominence in the writings of the ulama. By overemphasising laws, the ulama, who alone exercise authority over interpretation, enhance their own power.
It is a power derived to a great extent from their role as the custo­dians of the whole tradition of Islamic law. And, in applying the Syariah to the contemporary situa­tion, the ulama invariably adopt an unthinking, uncritical approach.
Consequentiy, the Syariah in its entirety, and not just its Quranic root, is seen as divine and sacred.
Indeed, there are rules and regu­lations in the Syariah, including some pertaining to the hudud, which are not in consonance with either the letter or the spirit of the Quran.
For instance, the Quran does not prescribe any specific punishment for sukr (intoxication) but hudud laws do. Similarly, the Quran does not lay out any punishment for apostasy, though it condemns it in the strongest terms. In hudud, it is punishable by death.
It is significant that most Muslims today accept these hudud punishments as divinely ordained. It goes to show that in reality, legal­ist, traditionalist Islam has a more powerful grip upon the Muslim mind than the Quran itself.
This is not an accident. It is a product of both history and con­temporary developments. As the compassion and egalitarianism of early Islam slowly declined,
Muslim rulers sought to legitimise their power through the manipula­tion of Islamic forms, symbols and laws.
Very often; the ulama who served these rulers helped to but tress the latter’s authority by for­mulating harsher modes of punish­ment for certain crimes or by pro­viding more rigid interpretations to existing laws which often went beyond what the Quran, the prima­ry source of legislation in Islam, and the Sunnah, its ancillary source, had intended in the first place. Consequently, a certain rigid­ity began to develop vis-a-vis the Syariah and public administration.
The situation was exacerbated by a catastrophic event which has had a profound impact upon the entire development of Islamic civi­lisation after the thirteenth centu­ry.
This was the wanton destruction of Baghdad in 1258 by the Tartars led by Hulagu Khan. Baghdad was not only the greatest centre of learning in the Muslim world. In its time, it was undoubtedly a beacon of knowledge for the whole world. It was not just Baghdad which was destroyed; the Tartars, in an earlier wave of attacks, had annihilated other illustrious centres of art, cul­ture and learning like Bukhara, Khwarizm, Samarkand, Balkh, Merv and Nishapur.
As a result of these invasions which “shook the world of Islam to its very foundations,” a conserva­tive mood took root within Muslim communities in that part of the world. Because they had lost so much of their intellectual and cul­tural heritage, they were deter­mined to preserve and protect what was left. They became afraid of reform and change. They were reluctant to question the wisdom of certain laws in the Syariah for­mulated by their ulama.
Another major setback occurred a few centuries later. The colonisa­tion of almost the entire Muslim world by Western powers starting from the sixteenth century onwards, further strengthened the conservative trend within the reli­gion.
Having lost control over their lands and their destinies, Muslims became very cautious towards ideas and practices from alien sources which might erode their collective identity as a religious community.
This fear of losing their identity has become even more pro­nounced in the post-colonial peri­od. It is a fear which is not without justification. For Western domina­tion and control of Muslim socie­ties continues unabated.
Indeed, Western cultural and psychological penetration of Muslim and other non-Western societies today is so much deeper than what it was at the height of colonialism.
A huge portion of the Muslim populace has chosen to respond to the challenge by re-asserting what it perceives as its Muslim identity via attire, food, laws and so on. Adhering strictly to hudud and Syariah as they had evolved in the early centuries of Islam is part of this re-assertion.
While it is important to re-assert one’s identity as a way of protect­ing Muslim autonomy and inde­pendence, it does not follow that this should lead to an unthinking, uncritical acceptance of each and every aspect of hudud and Syariah.
Such an attitude will be disas­trous for the Muslim community. For there are elements in the Syariah connected with basic human rights, the roles and rights of women, the rights of non-Mus­lim minorities and international relations which have to be reappraised in order to bring them into some harmony with the eternal, universal Quranic commitment to human dignity and social justice.
Hudud laws and other aspects of criminal justice should also be seen in that light.
This is a position which has been taken by some of the most out­standing thinkers in Islam.
Shah Waliullah, for instance, argued that “every age must seek its own interpretation of the Quran and the traditions”. He believed that “one of the major causes of Muslim decay was rigid conformity to interpretations made in other ages”.
Another recent thinker, the late Fazlur Rahman, pointed out, “To insist on literal interpretation of the rules of the Quran, shutting one’s eyes to the social change that has occurred and that is so palpa­bly occurring before our eyes, is tantamount to deliberately defeat­ing its moral-social purpose and objectives. It is just as though, in view of the Quranic emphasis on freeing slaves, one were to insist on preserving the institution of slavery so that one could earn merit in the sight of God by freeing slaves. Surely the whole tenor of the teaching of the Quran is that there should be no slavery at all.”
It is this sort of fundamental re-thinking that is urgently needed in the Muslim world today. Chandra Muzaffar.
Source: Sunday Star/Focus/29 May  2016 / page 20




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The Straits Times 
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Other Sources: New Straits Times Online, MalayMail Online, HarakahDaily, TheSunDaily, BeritaHarian, UtusanMalaysia, MalaysiaKini

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