In The Name Of Allah Most
Gracious Most Merciful
Assalaamu alaykum wa rahmatuallahi wa barakatuhu
SHARIAH:
THE WAY OF JUSTICE
By:
Khurram Murad
INTRODUCTION
Adroitly
manipulated exposure to the imagery of a whip cracking on a
naked back and a veil enshrouding a woman’s face has led many to
believe that the Shari’ah , the divine code of Muslim
conduct, is in reality no more than a collection of values and
practices that are primitive, uncivilized and barbaric. What to
a Muslim is the object of his longing and endeavour has been
very subtly projected as a relic from the dark ages which
enslaves the woman and inflicts punishments on the criminal
which are cruel, inhuman and degrading.
The Qur’an most
certainly does prescribe corporal punishment for certain serious
social crimes and it does lay down the principle of retribution,
or qisas; it is very emphatic, too, about the crucial
role of the family in human society and therefore insists on
assigning different well-defined roles to men and women; and it
does lay down many other regulations and laws and expects
Muslims to obey the eternally valid injunctions of God and His
Prophet.
But will these
and similar provisions of the Shari’ah really plunge society
back into darkness? Are they inhuman and barbaric? Are they an
indicator of Islam’s inability to keep pace with the demands of
human progress? The issues need to be examined seriously to
determine the place and valued of the Shari’ah and its
provisions in the ultimate order of human civilization and
happiness. The need for this examination is especially acute in
the view of the dogmatic position adopted by the West on these
questions. A host of Western writers have said it, and the media
continue to harp on the same theme: unless Islam is prepared to
relent on these and other legal provisions of the Shari’ah ‘
there can and will be no accommodation; only a
continuation of Western rejection of Islam’. Such vehemence
makes one wonder whether the loud chorus about the Shari’ah, and
such of its specific provisions as pertain to women and
punishment, is in all cases the result of genuine
misunderstanding and moral indignation, or whether the issue is
merely being used by some as a whipping-boy to settle scores
with Islam – old and new.
No apologies or
excuses are needed to explain away or make acceptable to the
West what has been so clearly laid down by the Qur’an and the
Prophet in this regard and what has been so consistently
accepted and adhered to by Muslims. There should be no place in
dialogue with the West for such tortuous, self-deprecating
arguments as: ‘polygamy is permitted, but the conditions of
justice attached to it makes it effectively prohibited’. Or:
‘Corporal punishment is prescribed but hedged in with such
unworkable requirements of evidence that it is virtually
impossible to carry it out. Or, at least, it cannot be carried
out unless an "ideal" just society is established, when it will
in any case become unnecessary’.
Why those who
advance this specious logic should think that God would lay down
things which were impossible to practice is not made clear. As
if He does not know how to say what He means, and say it
clearly! Such excuses are unfair to the Qur’an and the Prophet,
and an affront to their wisdom, and at the same time illogical
and implausible to the unconvinced.
TOWARDS
BETTER UNDERSTANDING
I do not intend
to convince everyone, for this is humanly impossible; nor offer
excuses, for they are neither necessary nor convincing. What I
therefore wish to attempt is to discuss the place of justice in
the Shari’ah and the basis and nature of the provisions
regarding women and criminal punishment in a way that may at
lest generate understanding and tolerance, if not agreement. It
should be recognised that the discussion here can be only brief
and general, and perhaps will not do full justice to Islam’s
position on important and complex issues like the place of women
in Muslim society.
SHARI’AH:
THE TRUE EMBODIMENT OF JUSTICE
Specific
provisions of the Shari’ah can be properly understood only in
the context of its total scheme – its conceptual basis, primary
objectives and goals and overall framework.
CONCEPTUAL
BASIS
Shari’ah
literally means ‘way to water’ – the source of all life – and
signifies the way to God, as given by God. It is
the Way which encompasses the totality of man’s life. Being
God-given, the Sharia’ah is the manifestation of His infinite
mercy. It is thus also the only true embodiment of, and the best
way to, justice.
THE SOURCE
OF JUSTICE
Man’s quest for
justice without recourse to divine help, and failure to find it,
is the most persistent and tragic theme of human history. For
justice, an ideal deeply cherished, ardently desired and
ceaselessly pursued by mankind from the very first day of its
existence on this planet, can never be truly conceptualised nor
practiced unless it is rooted in the belief in One God.
He, the
infinitely Merciful and Absolutely Just, has created everything
with a purpose and in perfect harmony and balance. He has also
guided every creation so that it fulfils that purpose. The whole
universe and all creation is sustained on this foundation.
Justice for man, therefore, as for everything else in creation,
lies in obeying God by doing what He has laid down as ‘right’
and avoiding what He has laid down as ‘wrong’. It is only God
who can establish in the intricate network of interrelationships
and roles, mutual rights and obligations and consequent rewards
and punishments on the basis of absolute standards of justice.
That is the reason divine guidance is frequently called the
‘Balance’ in the Qur’an (al-Rahman 55: 1 - 9). All other sources
of knowledge and modes of determination, whether scientific
enquiry, pure reason or empiricism, suffer from one deficiency
or another, being rooted in human imperfection.
JUSTICE:
THE SUPREME PURPOSE
Justice is the
supreme purpose and ruling spirit of the Shari’ah. It provides
the framework for the entire corpus of Islam, shaping and
moulding its beautiful configurations. The paramount purpose for
which the Prophets were sent and struggled all their lives was
to guide man to achieve justice.
‘We sent our
messengers with clear signs, and sent down with them the Book
and the Balance so that men may conduct themselves with justice’
(al-Hadid 57:25)
This is also the
very ideal for which the community of Islam, the Ummah, exists
as a separate entity. ‘Thus We made you a just community,
that you be witnesses to mankind’ (al-Baqarah 2:143). And
again: ‘O Believers, be you upholders of justice, witnessing
for God alone’ (al-Nisa’ 4:135).
Indeed, no
conception of Islam and Muslim should be possible without
justice. Justice, in Islam, lends meaning and colour to all
human endaevours, both on an individual level and as a societal
ideal, extending from now into eternity. It servers as the
ultimate criterion for the internal ordering of the soul and the
external regulation of relationships. The Qur’an repeatedly
emphasises that Zulm – wrongdoing – has absolutely no
place in Islam.
ULTIMATE
CRITERION OF JUSTICE
The Shari’ah
itself is therefore the ultimate criterion of justice and mercy,
and cannot and ought not to be measured against changing human
standards.
‘And perfect are
the words of your Lord in truthfulness, and in justice; His
words cannot be changed; He is the All-hearing, All-knowing’
(al-An’am 6:116).
Having been given
by God, through the last of His prophets, and, therefore, for
all time to come, it could not be otherwise.
Changes in human
understanding, progress in standards of civilization, which is
considered to be linear in time, and advances in technology are
all supposed to generate genuine pressures on the Shari’ah to
change or to give up those parts which do not seem to rhyme with
the late twentieth century time. But what has really changed?
Has man changed? Essential human nature, its motives and drives,
its emotions and desires have remained virtually unchanged
throughout the ages. Technology has certainly advanced and some
ways of looking at the world have altered but no new definitions
of concepts like ‘cruelty’, ‘civilized’, ‘justice’, ‘equality’
have emerged to command universal adherence. Man’s lusts and
fears, hopes and anxieties, loves and hates, aspirations,
yearnings and longings remain what they have always been.
Similarly, the idea that something which evolves later in time
is necessarily superior to that which preceded it is also
untenable. The only absolute and universal criteria can be those
given by God, the All-knowing, whose words are above any change.
OBJECTIVES
AND FRAMEWORK
PLACE OF
THE INDIVIDUAL
The overall
scheme of the Shari’ah and its various specific provisions are
largely determined by the way Islam resolves the perennial
question of tension between the individual and society and the
fundamental and crucial role it assigns to the family.
The concept of
the individual and the emphasis on his achievement is not the
product of modern Western thought, as many people have tried to
make the world believe. The individual has always been the
cornerstone in Islam’s total scheme and plan of justice, though
in a way fundamentally different from the Western concept. His
status and achievement neither depend upon nor can be measured
by the standards of ‘consumption’. In the sight of God, real
human progress is moral, not material; its real measure is
possible in the life Hereafter, not in this world.
This theme is so
patently obvious and prominent in the Qur’an that it requires no
substantiation. On the Day of Judgement, it will be individuals
in their personal capacities, and not groups and societies, who
will be held fully responsible and accountable for what they
have done in their earthly lives. ‘Everyone of them will come
to Him on the Day of Resurrection, all alone’ (Maryam 19:95).
And: ‘Now you have come to Us, alone, just as We created
you the first time!’(al-An’am 6:94).
This is because
it is the individual who has been given free will, a moral sense
and the knowledge of right and wrong. It is therefore also
important that he should be fully enabled to achieve his purpose
and realise his potential. This seems to be the primary thread
running through the entire fabric of the Shari’ah. His life,
person, freedom, possessions and honour are sacred and
inviolable: no human being, not even the most powerful ruler,
has the right, privilege or authority, unless acting in
accordance with the law of God, to take anyone’s life, harm
anyone physically, take away their possessions or violate their
honour.
IMPORTANCE
OF SOCIETY
Having said that,
it is important to recognise that the individual lives in a
society without which he can neither survive nor find
fulfillment. Social order and its good are not separate from or
in conflict with individual good. Both should stand together –
fused and harmonious, co-operating and assisting – in the
service of their One God. Both are inter-dependent and in
equilibrium. Both have their well-defined functions and orbits
to follow. ‘It behooves not the sun to overtake the moon, nor
does the night outstrip the day. Each floats in its orbit’ (Yasin
36:40). Also the balance is provided by divine guidance in
the tensions between various components oh human life – between
the individual and society, between man and woman. The
congregational nature of all forms of worships – whether
prayers, charity, fasting or pilgrimage – and great stress on
the formation of the Ummah as an integrated whole amply reflect
Islam’s concern for society and its employment as a means of the
individual’s development, purification and self-realization.
THE FAMILY
The family is the
most fundamental unit in the total scheme of social order in
Islam. It enjoys the highest status and the most prestige. It is
the fount of the human race, its culture, society and
civilization. Procreation is made possible because of
sexualisation and it is institutionalised in the family.
Similarly the family achives the development of the individual
and his transition into society.
The family is a
divinely inspired institution in the sense that it came into
existence with the creation of man. ‘O Mankind, remain
conscious of your duty to your Lord, who created you of a single
soul; and, of like nature, created its mate; and from the pair
of them created and spread many men and women’ (al-Nisa’ 4:1).
A man and woman, only because they are different and yet
complementary, are capable of forming the unity of family, which
is essential for the fulfillment of the individual and the
realization of the common good. The family is thus the cradle of
the individual and the cornerstone of society.
The family is
Islam cultivates and strengthens faith in One God. It preserves
and communicates values and culture. It provides a stable
environment for the development and fulfillment of the
individual and enriches the lives of all its members, providing
each the caring and sharing which he or she needs.
However, like any
other social institution, the family can survive only if the
roles within it are clearly differentiated and strictly
followed.
As only women are
capable of bearing children, even if no other differences
between men and women are accepted, Islam assigns to the female
the primary responsibility for home and family; while man is
assigned the primary responsibility for life outside the home.
Every institution needs a head and the role of head of the
family and responsibility for its economic support also devolve
on the male. Despite this primary division, men have the duty to
share household burdens and women are not debarred from roles
outside the home. And within the home, the woman shares the
power and responsibilities of the head of the family, and may
even become one if circumstances so require.
NATURAL
SEQUELS
It therefore
follows that any act which vitiates against the individual or
which tends to weaken or isrupt the social order, especially the
family, is no less a serious crime than, say, high treason
against the state. The Shari`ah has accordingly made every
possible arrangement to ensure, within the constraints of human
limitations and imperfections, that the individual is not
hampered in seeking in his fulfillment and carrying out the
purpose of his creation; that the two pillars of the family, man
and woman, continue to participate in and strengthen the family
in accordance with the roles assigned to them; and that the
social fabric is not damaged by any single person’s vandalism.
The role assigned
to both man and women by the Shari’ah and the arrangements it
makes to protect and reinforce these roles, can only be
appreciated in the above perspective. Similarly, the severe
penalties for extra-marital sex, theft, libel and drinking, and
the prescription of requital, or qisas for murder and
physical injury, must be seen in the context of this overall
scheme of life.
WOMAN
ROLES
WITHIN THE FAMILY
The social roles
assigned by the Shariah to man and woman within the family
emanate from one simple but profound reality: the two are
biologically and sexually different; only the woman can bear
children. Other important psychological, physical and social
differences follow from this. But even if, for the sake of
argument, these other genuine difference are dismissed as having
been ‘socially caused’, the reality of this biological and
sexual difference is impossible t deny.
Obviously the
role of bearing children is one that the woman can neither shirk
nor transfer, unless the ear of test-tube babies is ushered in
or mankind decides to extinguish itself. Sex difference,
reproduction, role of differentiation, sexual morality, survival
of the family, healthy child development and the health and
strength of society are closely inter-linked and mutually
dependent phenomena, in which sex-based role differentiation is
the key to the stability of the entire system. If it is
abandoned, the whole chain will snap: sexual morality will
collapse, personality disorder will be rampant, anarchy and
chaos will the order of the day. In short, the family will
vanish.
There is no
convincing case however for saying that role differentiation is
socially caused; on the contrary, the cumulative weight of all
evidence, whether from pre-history or history, indicates
unmistakably that every society has chosen to do things the same
way, even the contemporary West, which is so vociferous in
professing ‘equality of the sexes’. No society is on record
which has ever progressed without placing woman in full charge
of the home.
DIFFERENT
BUT NOT INFERIOR
Hence the
principle in the Shari'ah: the woman's place is in the home.
However, it is very important to note that to be different is
NOT to be inferior. Islam attaches no stigma to being a woman;
there is no inferior nature, no myth of Fall and no
responsibility for original sin. To bear and rear children is no
disgrace either. To rule over and manage the kingdom of home -
that haven of human happiness and progress - is no mean
achievement. Home and children can be degrading and a burden
only in a society which chooses to make them so. In Islam,
domesticity is not a devalued sphere of human life, nor is home
in any way inferior to public life. Indeed, the very epithet
'confined to the four walls of the home' is absurd to a Muslim,
as the home in Islam, far from being a place to be looked down
upon with contempt, is more important and sacred than even a
parliament building or a university, and certainly more
prestigious, creative and rewarding than the shop floor or
secretarial desk, where two thirds of 'emancipated' women
finally end up working.
EQUALITY,
NOT SIMILARITY
Equality is one
of those human yearnings which usually elude definitions. Its
translation into roles, rules and norms has always been
subjective. Unfortunately, it is being used by modern feminists
as a slogan in their campaign to erase all role differentiation.
It is being used, too, as a smokescreen from behind which to
direct the barrage of attacks against the Shari'ah for its
various provisions regarding women.
That equality is
a profound human urge and a genuine human ideal is beyond doubt.
What is equally true and obvious is that equality of role does
not necessarily mean similarity of role. Once equality is
confused with similarity, the only possible conclusion is: 'A
truly equal two-sexed society is unimaginable'. Ending role
differentiation is bound to have catastrophic consequences as
already noted, for the interlinked phenomena of sexual morality,
the family, reproduction, child-rearing, personality development
and society, as is already evident in the West. Even such an
apparently relatively minor phenomenon as the spread of
contraceptive techniques has been profoundly instrumental in
promoting extra-marital sex, changing sex values, upsetting and
confusing roles, disrupting the family and devaluing
child-rearing and home life. Population control may have been
achieved but a glaring questing mark over the final destiny of
the human race has appeared.
Islam recognizes
the obvious differences between man and woman and shapes their
social roles accordingly, but it lays no less emphasis on the
similarity of their essential natures as human beings and on
their right to equality of opportunity to find fulfillment
through their roles in this world and, finally and more
importantly, in the eyes of their God in the life hereafter.
According to the Shari'ah, man and woman are equal as human
beings and have an equal number of mutual obligations and
rights. The family unit has the man as its head, for no
institution can survive without a head,; but this is no way
makes the woman unequal to man. She is not obligated even to
take her husband's name and lose her identity. Her share in
inheritance is one-half of the male share, but she is under no
obligation to make any financial contribution to the maintenance
of the family.
Many specific
provisions of the Shari'ah regarding the rights and obligations
of women, their conduct and behaviour, their dress and
segregation, marriage and divorce laws and work outside the home
can be better understood in this light. But, what is equally
important to bear in mind is that some of the prevalent
practices in the Muslim societies today, that have come into
vogue as a result of centuries of decadence and stagnation as
well as un-Islamic influences, should not be used to understand
and judge Islam.
SEX
OUTSIDE MARRIAGE
Sex, in Islam is
not a taboo to feel guilty about. It is a natural and creative
urge, a God-given gift. But the bond of marriage must be tied
before enjoying the pleasures of sex, which are the rewards for
the responsibilities that the man and woman bear in rearing a
family; these joys lighten the burden and cement and bind the
relationship. To seek sex outside the limits set by God is a
sin, to seek it within these limits is therefore an act of
worship.
If sex inside and
outside marriage were equally legitimate or easily available,
the sacred institution of the family would be gradually
destroyed. Islam therefore not only completely prohibits all
forms of sexual deviation and pre and extra-marital sex; it
arranges to make them highly inaccessible and also severely
punishable. Hence the regulations about covering various parts
of the body and the social mixing of the sexes.
POLYGAMY
Polygamy is
permitted by the Qur'an; though it is not enjoined, as some
people apparently believed. Justice is enjoined, as far as is
humanly possible, otherwise one should remain monogamous. Thus,
disadvantages of a polygamous marriage are recognized, but not
to the extent of prohibiting it legally. This legal provision
can be properly understood only in the context of Islam's
position on two important issues, as already explained. Firstly,
that the family is the cornerstone of human society and any
extra-marital sex is completely prohibited. Married life is the
most desirable way of life - Islam wants a woman to be a wife
and never a mistress. Both man and woman have to make some
sacrifice to make a success of family life. Secondly, Islam's
law is for all times to come and should therefore, as far as is
practical, cater for all possible social and individual
situations. Legal provision, like a total ban on divorce or
polygamy may indeed result in far more serious consequences than
they may solve. Even in countries where polygamy is illegal, it
may be argued, monogamy is fairly rare, so sex outside marriage
is considered as polygamy, as it should be.
It is left to the
societies and individuals , within the freedoms and prohibitions
laid down by Islam, to regulate their conduct as they may
desire. What is important to note is that it takes a woman, in
addition to a man, to make a polygamous marriage; for no
marriage in Islam can never take place without her consent. And
the first wife can also claim a divorce if she cannot live with
the situation. Hence it is entirely within the power of
individuals virtually to eliminate polygamy without recourse to
law.
MARRIAGE
AND DIVORCE
Women's consent
is an essential legal condition for marriage in Islam. If such
consent is not being obtained in Muslim societies today, the
problem is a result of social circumstances, not of the legal
provisions of the Shari'ah. The situation must change once the
Shari'ah is implemented.
It is certainly
simple in theory for a man to divorce his wife in Islam. But it
is found to be very difficult for him to do so in practice; the
very low rate of divorce is enough to prove this. Indeed, the
power to divorce is more of a responsibility to save the
marriage. Among the things permitted by God, divorce is the most
disliked by him, said the Prophet. On the other hand, while the
woman cannot pronounce divorce like the man, it is not difficult
for her to obtain one, even on the ground of her husband's
physical appearance not being to her liking.
WORK
OUTSIDE THE HOME
To preserve the
role differentiation and to retain the incentives for
strengthening the family, Islam discourages women from working
outside the home. This discouragement in no way prejudices a
woman's right to own property, to conduct business, to receive
and impart education, to engage in cultural and creative
activities, and even take up job when necessary. Yet to ask
woman to work outside the home is indeed to make her unequal; it
is to ask her to take on the enormous stress of doing two jobs.
The urge to work
is only natural, but work as the center of life is one product
of a society which is consumption-oriented and where status
depends on earning capacity. Women work today, not only through
economic necessity, but because they are under other subtle
pressures; accusations of wasting their talents on 'degrading'
domestic chores, lack of status, boredom and isolation. In
Islam, as we have already noted, the whole orientation of the
individual and society is radically different. Work is still
very important, but the real goal in life is to please God.
PUNISHMENTS
Punishments have
always been considered an integral part of the concept of
justice. Indeed, a common man would find it hard to think of
justice as something very different or separate from rewarding
or punishing people according to how well or badly they observe
the body of the mutual rights and obligations obtaining in their
society. But if the concept of punishment is universal, the
controversies surrounding it are nonetheless intense. We shall
now look at some basic Islamic principles concerning
punishments.
BASIC
PRINCIPLES
Man is
responsible for his actions: this simple truth provides the
whole basis for the justification of punishment. For, to fulfil
the purpose of this creation, he has been granted the freedom to
choose and act, and the moral sense to distinguish between right
and wrong. Responsibility goes with knowledge and freedom.
Punishment cannot therefore be meted out to anyone for someone
else’s actions, for acts intended but not performed or for acts
done under duress or while not of sound mind. Everyone must be
equal before the law and their guilt must be established by the
due process of justice.
REPENTANCE
AND PUNISHMENT
Punishment in
Islam has nothing to do with the notions of atonement, expiation
or wiping away of sin. A crime is essentially an act of
injustice to one’s own self, a sin against God. It can be wiped
away only by God, and that He does when a person turns to Him,
truly repentant and seeking forgiveness. Between man and God,
therefore, the total emphasis is on repentance, and punishment
can be no substitute for it. But a crime is also an act against
the social order and in this sphere mere repentance cannot be a
substitute for punishment which is a means of protecting and
strengthening the society.
PROPORTIONAL JUSTICE
It is important
to note that there is no concept in Islam of the punishment
being exactly and justly proportional to the crime. Absolute and
truly proportional justice would require the exact and complete
evaluation of such complex factors as intentions and motives,
the surrounding circumstances, the causes and repercussions-
factors which human judges must consider but cannot evaluate
fully and which only God, in the new moral order to be set up in
the life after death, can measure. Islamic punishments are not
therefore to be judged on the scales of proportional and full
retribution. They are however laid down by the Being who is
infinitely Merciful and Wise, and are therefore more suitable
for the particular crimes than what can be prescribed by any
human legislatures or judges.
PART OF A
WHOLE
Most importantly,
punishments are only a part of a vastly larger integrated whole.
They can neither be properly understood, nor successfully or
justifiably implemented in isolation. First, law is not the
main, or even major, vehicle in the total framework for the
reinforcement of morality; it is the individual’s belief, his
God-consciousness and taqwa, - that inherent and innate
quality which makes him want to refrain from what displeases God
and do what pleases Him. Second, justice is a positive ideal
which permeates and dominates the entire community life; it is
not merely an institutionalized means of inflicting punishment.
Third, and consequently, a whole environment is established
where to do right is encouraged, facilitated and found easy and
to do wrong is discouraged, inhibited and found difficult. All
men and women are enjoined, as their foremost duty, to aid,
exhort and commend each other to do good and to avoid evil.
FUNCTIONAL
NATURE
Penalties in
Islam are more of a functional nature, to regulate and deter.
God has laid down a body of mutual rights and obligations which
are the true embodiment of justice. He has also laid down
certain bounds and limits to be observed and maintained for this
very purpose. If men and nations desire to move in peace and
safety on the highways of life, they must stick to the ‘traffic
lanes’ demarcated for them and observe all the ‘signposts’
erected along their routes. If they do not, they not only put
themselves in danger, but endanger others. They therefore
naturally make themselves liable to penalties –not in vengeful
retribution – but to regulate the orderly exchanges in man’s
life in accordance with justice.
It is a
significant contribution of Islam that these penalties are
called hudud (boundaries) and not punishments: they are
liabilities incurred as a result of crossing the boundary set by
God. An important consequence of these hudud having been
laid down by God, and not by man, is that it is beyond human
authority to reduce or supercede them out of a sense of mercy
greater than that of God; nor can a tyrant or autocrat add to
them out of a greater sense of strict justice. For no one can be
more merciful or wiser or more just than God himself.
Another important
function which these punishments serve is educative, and thus
preventive and deterrent. The Qu’ran alludes to this aspect when
it describes them ‘as exemplary punishment from God’ (al-Ma’ida
5:38). Punishments are thus designed to keep the sense of
justice alive in the community by a public repudiation of the
acts violating the limits set by God. They are expected to build
up in the society a deep feeling of abhorrence for transgression
against fellow human beings, and therefore against God - a
transgression which, according to the Qur’an, is the root cause
of all disorders and corruption in human life.
RETRIBUTION - QISAS
Apart from
punishments for transgressions like extra-marital sex, theft,
libel and drinking, the Qur’an also provides for the principle
of qisas – retribution. When a person causes physical
injury or harm to a fellow human being, Islam gives the injured
party the right of equal requital – the well-known principle of
‘an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth’. This procedure is
persistently labeled by critics as primitive and uncivilized. In
the Islamic view of history, it is worth pointing out, what is
primitive has never been necessarily uncivilized. The first man
was given all necessary knowledge and guidance, and though he
may have been technologically backward compared to the twentieth
century, he definitely was not humanly backward. Uncivilized is
what man thinks and does in deviating from the divine order.
In the eyes of
the Qur’an ‘in retribution (qisas) lies the source of
life for you’. The reasons are obvious. First, the right of
retribution belongs to individuals, not society or the state;
this simple shift in responsibility results in a profound and
far reaching change in the whole system of implementing justice.
The state does not have to intervene every time two human beings
are involved in a dispute. Thus, instead of starting an
irreversible process of trial and punishment, it leaves the
ground open for settlement between individuals, without
interference by impersonal bureaucratic machinery, though under
no circumstances can the individual take the law into his own
hands.
The injured
person in his turn may forgo his right to retribution by
forgiving, or may agree to accept a monetary or token recompense
instead. The Qu’ran, in fact, highly recommends the act of
forgiving. Thus, under qisas punishment is avoidable
without burdening the executive or judiciary with the dilemma of
whether to exercise mercy. As against a court which must act
according to law once a case is brought before it, an individual
is free to act as he wishes. Justice has to be blind, but an
individual may take circumstances into account, and suspend
judgement in the hope of being forgiven by God in the hereafter.
Very few realize hat the principle of qisas even allows
capital punishment to be avoided.
MERCY AND
LENIENCY
Having prescribed
punishments and imposed strict and meticulous, though not
impossible, conditions of evidence, Islam has built in a whole
range of principles and precepts which reflect not a frenzied
desire to flog and stone but a compassionate urge to avoid and
eschew. Islam does not allow either the state or individuals to
spy upon people unless well-founded suspicion exists that a
crime is being committed or a fellow human being’s rights or
interests are in jeopardy. Nor is it obligatory to report every
crime. Where possible, settlements outside court are preferred.
The punishment is swiftly over; the guilty man and his family do
not have to live with the kind of lengthy public stigma that
they would have had to endure in the case of a prison sentence
at the end of a trial. The imposition of divinely prescribed
hudud enhance, and not diminish, the individual’s dignity
and stature in society and before God.
ALLEGED
CRUELTY
As to the alleged
cruelty of physical penalties, one wonders if to deprive
a man of his freedom -- his most precious and valuable
possession – and his right to act and continue to make moral
choices , to live with his family, to work and support them is
not more cruel. Indeed, a prison term can inflict untold misery
on innocent people whose lives are intertwined with the life of
the prisoner. Prison becomes a school for hardening criminal
behavior and a breeding ground for recidivism. Why should it be
considered more cruel for a man found drug trafficking to be
given ten lashes than to be sent to languish in prison for, say,
ten years.
REFORM
SYNDROME
Why does Islam
want to punish and not reform? The question is fallacious, for
in Islam every institution of society is value oriented and owes
a responsibility towards the moral development of every person
from the cradle to the grave. Reform is therefore a pre-crime
responsibility and not a post-crime syndrome and nightmare.
Islam makes every effort to ensure that inducement to commit
crime is minimal. Once the crime is committed, the best place
for reform is in the family and in society, where a criminal is
to live after punishment, and not in a prison where every inmate
is a criminal; unless of course a society considers itself to be
more corrupt and less competent to effect reform than a jail!
Against this, the ‘modern, enlightened’ approach is to provide
every inducement to crime by building a society based on
conspicuous consumption; to make society, education and every
other institution ‘value – free’ and then to try to reform a
criminal by segregating him and keeping him in a prison.
PROCEDURAL
JUSTICE
Sentences in
Islam are certainly harsh, but still more strict and severe are
the procedures laid down to be observed before a man may be
convinced. These procedures are modeled on the paradigm of the
Day of Judgement, when even God, though he is All-knowing, and
Just, will not punish anybody unless He establishes his guilt.
To let nine criminals go free is preferable to convicting one
innocent man, said the Prophet.
CONCLUSION
The Shari’ah
is an integrated homogenous whole. Once one understands its
basic concepts, objectives and framework, one cannot but
conclude that it is capable of creating the most human and just
society, a peace and blessing for mankind. Difficulties only
arise when critics try to measure the ocean of divine knowledge,
wisdom and justice with their own thimble of pedestrian criteria
and standards.
Today’s Muslim
societies are not model societies — they are infested with ills
and evils – yet the comparatively stable family life, absence of
delinquency, low crime rates, much greater freedom from drugs
and alcoholism, warmth of brotherhood, generosity and mutual aid
and help – all these are the legacies of that divinely given
code of life, the way to Justice, which once they used to adhere
to, and yearn to have the change to return to – the Shari’ah.
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