There are many misconceptions about
Islam merely because the minority voice (which is shouting the loudest)
is heard, while the other voices remain silent. Without sounding as if I
am an ‘Islam Apologist’, maybe I should share with you the views of
other Muslim scholars -- which is a far departure from the voices of
those 4,000 people who participated in the ‘assembly of 1,000,000’
yesterday.
NO HOLDS BARRED
Raja Petra Kamarudin
If the foregoing discussion has any validity, then one has to infer
that the concept of an Islamic state must be completely abandoned if
sanity is to return to Muslim political discourse.
One should
rather speak about a state for the Muslims, or an Islamic political
community. One must also abandon the illusions about the millennium
promised by the revival of a utopian polity in which a righteous and
saintly ruler will miraculously emerge to restore the long lost golden
age of Islam. Nor is it wise to shift our millennial hopes to the newly
emerged Islamic movements, and expect that their accession to power will
automatically bring an era of divine justice and saintly rule. There is
simply no alternative to attaining these objectives the hard way, by
doing what is needed to achieve them.
Wisdom dictates that we
should be pessimistic about the qualities of our rulers, something which
should not be too difficult, given our experiences. The institutions of
a Muslim polity, and the rules devised to govern it, should therefore
be based on expecting the worst.
Human experience shows that
democracy, broadly defined, offers the best possible method of avoiding
such disappointment in rulers, and affords a way of remedying the causes
for such disappointments once they occur.
The value of this
approach is that it does not make the attainment of dignity and freedom
of Muslim individuals contingent on the setting-up of a utopian Islamic
state which we may never live to see. It also removes the grounds on
which the current tyrannies ruling the Muslim world are justified.
The
tyrants lording it over the Muslims today, aided and abetted by their
foreign allies, justify their existence by fear of Muslim `fanatics' who
want to coerce others into adopting an unacceptable lifestyle. This
lame excuse for tyranny must be removed by affirming our commitment to
democracy as the governing principle of the Muslim polity in all its
stages.
The state for Muslims must be a principle of liberation
based on pluralism, with no coercion involved other than the minimum
inherent in the principle of community itself. The raison d'etre of a political community is to assure the peaceful coexistence among its members.
A
Muslim political community is therefore an institution required to
ensure that Muslims live in peace and harmony with one another, with
other communities within the territory ruled by their polity and with
other nations and communities on our planet. This peaceful co-existence
has to be based on the rules of equity and fairness, and must not force
Muslims to live contrary to their principles.
The central
misunderstanding of current Muslim political thought is the confused
belief that a state based on Islamic principles is one which forces
people to live according to Islam. In truth, the purpose of an Islamic
political community is to enable individual Muslims to live according to
Islam, and to protect them from coercion which tends to subvert their
commitment to Islam.
All the current references to the
`imposition of sharia' or the Islamic state, whether by Islamic thinkers
or opponents of Islam, actually misunderstand the issue completely.
Sharia can rule truly only when the community observing it perceives
this as a liberating act, as the true fulfilment of the self and moral
worth of the community and each individual within it, for sharia can
never be imposed. When it is imposed, it is not sharia. When only
coercion underpins sharia, it becomes hypocrisy.
A Muslim polity
must also defend the right of Muslims to live freely according to the
dictates of their consciences, by force if necessary, for a Muslim state
must use all its resources to fight injustice and tyranny inside and
around it. We cannot expect the commitment to peace to be a licence for
the toleration of all evils in the name of avoiding conflict.
This
was the central mistake of classical Muslim political theory, which has
neither succeeded in avoiding conflict nor in achieving justice.
Therefore, it is essential to strive for justice as the only firm basis
for permanent peace and harmony.
To attain these goals, the
Muslim state must rely primarily on the responsibility and active role
of the individual within the community. It reasserts the value of the
individual without preaching individualism. Classical Muslim political
thought relegated the individual to the status of a non-entity by the
postulation of vacuous and imprecise concepts such as that of ahl al-Hal wal Aqd and fard kifaya.
These
confused notions provided the basis for the endorsement of practical
secularism, or for making the legality of all Muslim social activity
dependent on the will of a despot.
It must be reaffirmed that the
individual does not need the state to be a Muslim. He creates the state
as a Muslim, and he creates it voluntarily to further enhance his
Islamic life. The opinion given by al-Ghazali and others about the
necessity of the state - any state - as the precondition of the legality
of Muslim social life is the opposite of the truth. A despotic and
illegal regime does not bestow legitimacy on subsidiary actions. On the
contrary, it marks everything it touches with the stamp of illegality.
For Muslims, to have no state at all is better than to have an illegal
one.
“Who Needs An Islamic State?” By Dr Abdelwahab El-Affendi
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