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by Dr. Robert D. Crane
Part One: The Challenge
Specialists in the study of comparative legal systems and
their supporting religious frameworks have always been interested
in the origins of religion as a cause of conflict. Recently,
many have become even more interested in the future of religion
as a cure for such conflict.
Recently, a powerful alliance of four disparate movements
has come together to form a unified foreign policy in response
to the new world disorder that emerged following the relative
stability of the half-century-long Cold War. This quadruple
alliance consists of two rationalistic trends that have originated
during the past half century. These may be designated as the
permanent foreign policy establishment, which seeks stability
through the balance of power, and the movement known as neo-conservatism,
which seeks to project America's power to build a better world.
The other two movements may be called anti-rationalistic
in the sense that a closed ideology trumps objective reason
in understanding and dealing with the complex forces in the
world. The origins of these two date back more than a century.
They are the movement known as Evangelical or apocalyptic
millenarianism, and the movement that one might call simply
secular Zionism, as distinct from the older mainline Jewish
concept of spiritual Zionism.
These four movements or trends differ in their potential to
resolve conflicts and reduce the underlying causes. They differ
especially in their understanding of Islam. They range in
descending degree of openness from the permanent foreign policy
establishment, perhaps best typified by Henry Kissinger, to
the secular Zionists. The former have been basically indifferent
to Islam, either because they thought that it might become
useful in countering political radicalism or because they
assumed that it is a declining force in the world and no longer
will play a real role in orchestrating the global future.
The secular Zionists, on the other hand, fear Islam as the
only real threat to the security of Israel.
The alignment of the irrational led by Jerry Vines, past
president of the Southern Baptist Convention, and the Reverend
Jerry Falwell, with the proudly rational, neo-conservative
movement, led by William Kristol's Weekly Standard, is an
unprecedented development in American intellectual history,
much to the consternation of the permanent foreign policy
establishment, but much to the delight of the those who fear
for the security of Jews in their ancestral homeland.
Until their alignment after 9/11 in an alliance with the
neo-conservatives, the extremists among the millenarian Evangelicals,
namely, those who attacked Islam as a warlike religion and
the person of the Prophet Muhammad by calling him a bandit
and a pedophile, were a fringe phenomenon in American society.
As these radicals have moved from the fringe into the mainstream,
the formerly mainstream Evangelicals have concluded that these
extremists are hijacking their own religion and that the moderates
must actively counter the extremism that can compromise Christian
love.
On May 7th, 2003, the National Association of Evangelicals
convened a summit conference of forty leaders, representing
43,000 congregations, to address the issue of whether they
should focus their efforts on countering or converting Muslims.
Their conclusion was that the mission of proselytizing must
have top priority and that this necessarily conflicts with
the radical efforts to brand Islam and the Prophet Muhammad
as inherently evil and violent.
As Protestant extremism declines in the aftermath of the
successful war in Iraq, the negative assessment of Islam as
a religion has been taken up by neo-conservative leaders within
the Catholic Church. One of the most articulate of such leaders
appears to be Michael Novak, one of the top intellectuals
in America's first policy think-tank, The American Enterprise
Institute.
In the April, 2003, issue of America's leading journal on
religion in public life, First Things, Novak published a seminal
article, "The Faith of the Founding." In this lead
article he brilliantly portrays the essential teachings of
the traditionalist movement, led originally by Edmund Burke,
that led to the founding of the Great American Experiment.
He becomes controversial, however, in his contention that
even though some Muslims may be good, Islam is inherently
bad and un-American because it does not recognize a direct
relationship of the person with God and therefore can have
no conception of human rights or of government limited by
recognition of the sovereignty of God.
This represents an entirely new approach to Islam, because
it is based not on generalizing from the action of extremist
Muslims but on denial of what centuries ago the greatest Muslim
scholars, all imprisoned for their beliefs, considered to
be the three basic fundamentals of Islam as a religion. The
newest strategy apparently is to single out these essential
truths of Islam, deny that they exist, and assert that their
absence constitutes the Islamic threat. This sophisticated
strategy may be more effective over the long run than are
the simplistic claims of Pat Robertson and Franklyn Graham
that Muslims are bandits.
The challenge to American Muslims, especially after 9/11,
is to explain the difference between Islam as a religion and
Muslims as its supposed practitioners.
Equally important is the challenge for Muslims to put their
own house in order by marginalizing the extremism that can
give rise to violence and by taking advantage of the post-Iraq
environment to end the poverty and oppression that feed such
extremism. American policymakers can not afford to deal only
with benign theoretical formulations, when the facts on the
ground, strikingly demonstrated by 9/11, are so malignant.
Part Two: The Response
Over the long run, the most productive initiative by the
still largely silent majority of Muslims in marginalizing
Muslim extremists is to fill the intellectual and spiritual
void that serves as an ocean in which the extremists can swim.
This initiative can provide the favorable environment needed
for Muslims to ally with like-minded Christians and Jews in
order to show that classical Islam and classical America are
similar, even though many people do not understand or live
up to the ideals common to both.
This is the only way to convince the extremists that their
confrontational approach to the "other" is not necessary;
that the threat mentality of those who think only about their
own survival and are obsessed with catastrophe and conspiracy
can backfire; and that only those can truly prosper over the
long run who can transcend their own self-centered interests
in order to develop an opportunity mentality together with
those who are no longer merely the "other" but now
are a single pluralist community.
In order to fill the intellectual void, Muslims need to
emphasize the universal Islamic principles, the maqasid al
shari'ah, which spell out precisely what Michael Novak says
do not exist in Islam. These maqasid, following the methodology
instituted by the Prophet Muhammad and perfected in the architectonics
pioneered six centuries ago by the master of the art, Al-Shatibi,
are considered to consist of seven responsibilities, the practice
of which actualize the corresponding human rights.
The first one, known as haqq al din, provides the framework
for the next six in the form of respect for a transcendent
source of truth to guide human thought and action. God instructs
us in the Qur'an, wa tamaat kalimatu Rabika sidqan wa 'adlan,
"and the word of your Lord is perfected in truth and
justice." Recognition of this absolute source of truth
and of the responsibility to apply it in practice are needed
to counter the temptations toward relativism and the resulting
chaos, injustice, and tyranny that may result from de-sacralization
of public life.
Each of these seven universal principles is essential to
understand the next and succeeding ones. The first three operational
principles, necessary to sustain existence, begin with haqq
al nafs or haqq al ruh, which is the duty to respect the human
person. The ruh or spirit of every person was created by God
before or outside of the creation of the physical universe,
is constantly in the presence of God, and, according to the
Prophet Muhammad, is made in the image of God. This is the
basis of the intimate relationship between God and the human
person as expressed in the Qur'anic ayah, "We are closer
to him than is his own jugular vein."
This is also the basis of the prayer offered by the Prophet
and by countless generations of Muslims for more than a thousand
years: Allahumma, inna asaluka hubbaka wa hubba man yuhibbuka
wa hubba kulli 'amali yuqaribuni ila hubika, "O Allah!
I ask You for Your love and for the love of those who love
You. Grant that I may love every action that will bring me
closer to You."
At the secondary level of this principle, known as hajjiyat
or requirements, lies the duty to respect life, haqq al haya.
This provides guidelines in the third-order tahsinniyat for
what in modern parlance is called the doctrine of just war.
The next principle, haqq al nasl, is the duty to respect
the nuclear family and the community at every level all the
way to the community of humankind as an important expression
of the person. This principle teaches that the sovereignty
of the person, subject to the ultimate sovereignty of God,
comes prior to and is superior to any alleged sovereignty
of the secular invention known as the State.
This principle teaches also that a community at the level
of the nation, which shares a common sense of the past, common
values in the present, and common hopes for the future, such
as the Palestinians, Kurds, Chechens, Kashmiris, the Uighur
in China, and the Anzanians in the Sudan, has legal existence
and therefore legal rights in international law. This is the
opposite of the Western international law created by past
empires, which is based on the simple principle of "might
makes right."
The third principle is haqq al mal, which is the duty to
respect the rights of private property in the means of production.
This requires respect for institutions that broaden access
to capital ownership as a universal human right and as an
essential means to sustain respect for the human person and
human community. This principle requires the perfection of
existing institutions to remove the barriers to universal
property ownership so that wealth will be distributed through
the production process rather than by stealing from the rich
by forced redistribution to the poor. Such redistribution
can never have more than a marginal effect in reducing the
gap between the inordinately rich and the miserably poor,
because the owners in a defective financial system need not
and never will give up their economic and political power.
The next three universal principles in Islamic law concern
primarily what we might call the quality of life. The first
is haqq al hurriya, which requires respect for self-determination
of both persons and communities through political freedom,
including the concept that economic democracy is a precondition
for the political democracy of representative government.
The secondary principles required to give meaning to the
parent principle and carry it out in practice are khilafa,
the ultimate responsibility of both the ruled and the ruler
to God; shura, the responsiveness of the rulers to the ruled,
which must be institutionalized in order to be meaningful;
ijma, the duty of the opinion leaders to reach consensus on
specific policy issues in order to participate in the process
of shura; and an independent judiciary.
The second of these last three maqasid is haqq al karama
or respect for human dignity. The two most important hajjiyat
for individual human dignity are religious freedom and gender
equity. In traditional Islamic thought, freedom and equality
are not ultimate ends but essential means to pursue the higher
purposes inherent in the divine design of the Creator for
every person.
The last universal or essential purpose at the root of Islamic
jurisprudence, which can be sustained only by observance of
the first six principles and also is essential to each of
them, is haqq al 'ilm or respect for knowledge. Its second-order
principles are freedom of thought, press, and assembly so
that all persons can fulfill their purpose to seek knowledge
wherever they can find it.
This framework for human rights is at the very core of Islam
as a religion. Fortunately, this paradigm of law in its broadest
sense of moral theology is now being revived by what still
is a minority of courageous Muslims determined to fill the
intellectual gap that has weakened the Muslim umma for more
than six hundred years, so that a spiritual renaissance in
all faiths can transform the world.
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