Jihad and The Islamic Law of War
Jihad and The Islamic Law of War
Jihad and The Islamic Law of War
contents
Overview 1. 2. 3. Does jihad mean holy war? What is the role of non-violent jihad? Do Muslims go to war against others merely because they are non-Muslim? v 1 4 9 11 13 16 21 24 27 31
4. What are the Five Basic Rights of Islamic law, and how do they relate to war? 5. What does the Quran say about jihad and ghting?
6. When do Muslims make treaties? 7. What is the distinction between pre-emption and aggression?
8. What is the difference between TheAbode of Islam and TheAbode ofWar? 9. Is forced conversion an Islamic teaching? 10. What is the sword verse?
contents 11. What are the basic rules of combat as laid down in Islams authoritative texts? 12. What is the status of non-Muslims under Islamic rule? 13. What is the jizyah, or poll-tax, on non-Muslims? 14. Does orthodox Islam sanction rebellion against political authority? 15. How does the Islamic law of war come to be violated? Conclusion Further Reading Notes
35 37 43 47 53 64 69 71
overview
what is the Islamic law of war and peace? This crucial question underlies all discussion of jihad, perhaps the most misrepresented of ideas in the Wests understanding of Islam. Holy war,1 a faith spread by the sword,2 Islamofascism,3 indel,4 and many of the other catch phrases so popular in the uninformed debate on this topic only serve to muddle the issue. It is therefore useful, and even imperative, to explain what jihad is, what it means to Muslims, and how it relates to the concrete issues of war and peace. Since one cannot hope to understand a law by studying the actions of those who break it, we will not discuss here the actions of individuals, but focus on the very sources of Islamic law itself as they relate to jihad, war, and peace.Acts of violence and situations of peace can only be judged, from the point of view of Islam and the Shariah (Islamic law), on how fully they accord with the principles set down by the Quran, the teachings of the Prophet, and the precedent set by the tradition of religious scholars through the centuries.
v
overview
Naked assertions by individuals who claim to speak in the name of Islam without a foundation in these authoritative sources and principles must be examined in light of those very sources and principles, and not accepted at face value. What follows is an attempt to describe the most important issues surrounding the Islamic law of war and peace, and to lay out the mainstream, traditional Islamic position, comprised of three essential principles: Non-combatants are not legitimate targets. The religion of a person or persons in no way constitutes a cause for war against them. Aggression is prohibited, but the use of force is justied in self-defense, for protection of sovereignty, and in defense of all innocent people. We will expand upon these principles in what follows.
vi
question 1
the community was forced to ponder the conduct of war. The early history of Islam, unlike that of Christianity, was marked by overwhelming military and political success. However, rather than stamp a permanently warlike character on Islam, the very fact that Muslims received revelation and guidance from the Prophet on matters of war established a set of rules and legal precedent that set clear and unmistakable boundaries.As Christians came to learn after they had gained political power, in a world full of evil and human passions war was inevitable, and even followers of Christs teaching of turning the other cheek were forced to formulate a concept of just war. They lacked, however, the advantage of a clear and binding precedent that not only provide that jus ad bellum, or the conditions under which a just war could be waged, but jus in bellum, the rules on how the ghting itself is carried out. This is precisely what the Quran, the life and teachings of the Prophet, and the actions of the early community gave to Islamic law. The term holy war is thus inaccurate and unhelpful, implying that for Muslims war has a kind of supernatural and unreasoned quality removed from the exigencies of the world. On the contrary, Islamic law treats war as a sometimes necessary evil, whose conduct is constrained by concrete goals of justice and fairness in this world. If warfare has any worth (and indeed, those martyred while ghting justly in the way of God are promised Paradise), it
3
question 2
ends thirteen years later with the hijrah, while the Medinan period begins with hijrah and ends ten years later with the Prophets death in 632 of the common era. In the Meccan period the Muslims were a minority religious community amongst the primarily polytheistic pagan Arabs, and possessed no political power or protection aside from that which was provided by their familial bonds.They did not constitute a formal organization, but rather were a self-selected group of individuals who were bound to each other spiritually, and who were often verbally and physically abused for their practices and their belief in the one God. During this period the Prophet was neither judge nor ruler, but guide and teacher, and brought news of the true nature of things, especially as it concerned the oneness of God and the inevitable Day of Judgment.The commands and prohibitions during these years were of a spiritual nature, such as performing prayer and keeping away from unclean things, and there was no earthly punishment for going against them. Once the Prophet and Companions emigrated to Medina, the Prophet took on the power to govern politically over the Muslims and non-Muslims of Medina. He became both a spiritual and temporal leader, and as such became responsible for both the spiritual and material needs of the people, whereas in the Meccan period his primary mission was to be a bringer of glad-tidings and a warner
5
question 2
patientindeed your Lord, after that, is forgiving, merciful (AlNahl 16: 110). Verse 25:52 is universally considered to be Meccan by traditional exegetes of the Quran,5 and Ibn Abbas pointed out that struggle with it means to struggle using the Quran, that is, with the truth contained therein against the false beliefs of the pagans. Verse 16:110 is thought by some to be Medinan, but the majority of exegetes consider the emigration mentioned to refer to the ight of some of the Muslim community to seek asylum with the King of Abyssinia, which occurred in the Meccan period. The Prophet himself praised non-violent jihad. He said, The best struggle (jihad) is to speak the truth before a tyrannical ruler,6 and, The best struggle is to struggle against your soul and your passions in the way of God Most High.7 Some have questioned the authenticity of the hadith which describes the Prophet returning from a battle with the Companions and saying, We have returned from the lesser struggle to the greater struggle, which is often cited by those seeking to recover the traditional meaning of jihad. If the hadith is indeed inauthentic, the meaning is still found in the aforementioned hadith that places the struggle against the soul above all other struggles. Moreover there are numerous other hadith which place the efforts required in the spiritual life above the rewards of physical combat. The Prophet once said, Shall I tell you of your best deed,
7
question 3
the mere fact of their being non-Muslims. As we shall see, Muslims fought for the protection of their basic rights: the right to life, property, honor, and most importantly the right to believe and practice their faith. Their grievances against their enemies were expulsion from their homes and seizure of their property; persecution in the form of torture and murder; and pressure to give up their faith in the one God and the Prophet Muhammad. Acursory knowledge of the life of the Prophet will show that one need not go into theology to explain why Muslims fought their enemies. The fact that Muslims were persecuted, reviled, tortured, pitted against their own families, exiled, embargoed, and killed provides more than enough justication for their resort to force.
10
question 4
4
what are the five basic rights of islamic law, and how do they relate to war?
the question of protecting religion in war is a crucial one, for indeed he law of war in Islam is a subset of all Islamic law (the Shariah), and as such it must conform to the principles of that encompassing law. Jurists of the (overwhelming majority) orthodox tradition have, in codifying the law, identied those fundamentals which the law must protect and which Muslims cannot violate. These are usually called The Aims of the Law (maqasid al-shariah), but in effect they amount to the Five Basic Rights. They are: (1) Religion; (2) Life; (3) Mind; (4) Honor; (5) Property. Muslims have always understood the value of the outward (the restrictions and prohibitions of the law) to derive ultimately from its protection of the inward (the human beings relationship with God and his own true nature), hence the traditional place of religion as the rst Basic Right before the law. It is one reason why the Prophet placed the remembrance of God above all other acts. Yet Islamic law, and ipso facto the law of war, must take into account the other Basic Rights. The Right to Life includes safety from murder, torture, terror, and starvation. The Right to Mind encompasses the Islamic prohibition of
11
12
question 5
5
question 5
of believers) that which is past will be forgiven them; but if they return (thereto) then the example of the men of old hath already gone (before them, for a warning). /And ght them until persecution is no more, and religion is all for God. But if they cease, then lo! God is Seer of what they do. (Al-Anfal 8:38-39) Read as a whole, and not selectively quoted out of context, these verses make it clear that Muslims ght because they have been wronged; because they have been persecuted, which is seen as worse than killing; because they have been made to renounce their religion; and because they have been driven out of their homes. Muslims must ght their enemies not because of who they are, but because of what they have done to them and continue to do to them. It must be remembered that the Prophet began preaching while still a respected and admired member of his community. It was the teachings he brought which the Quraysh saw as a threat, not the Prophet himself as a man, nor his followers as a group. He never threatened the Quraysh (other than warning them of the Day of Judgment) or used any kind of coercion whatsoever. The young Muslim community began to suffer persecution under the Quraysh because Islam was seen as a threat to their own pagan religion and to Meccas role as a place of pilgrimage
15
question 6
God; if they turn back (to enmity) then take them and kill them wherever ye nd them, and choose no friend nor helper from among them, / Except those who seek refuge with a people between whom and you there is a covenant, or (those who) come unto you because their hearts forbid them to make war on you or make war on their own folk. Had God willed He could have given them power over you so that assuredly they would have fought you. So, if they hold aloof from you and wage not war against you and offer you peace, God alloweth you no way against them. /Ye will nd others who desire that they should have security from you, and security from their own folk. So often as they are returned to hostility they are plunged therein. If they keep not aloof from you nor offer you peace nor hold their hands, then take them and kill them wherever ye nd them.Against suchWe have given you clear warrant. (Al-Nisa 4:89-91) And if they break their pledges after their treaty (hath been made with you) and assail your religion, then ght the heads of disbeliefLo! they have no binding oathsin order that they may desist. / Will ye not ght a folk who broke their solemn pledges, and purposed to drive out the messenger and did attack you rst ? What! Fear ye them ? Now God hath more right that ye should fear Him, if ye are believers. / Fight them! God will chastise them at your hands, and He will lay them low and give you victory over them, and He
17
question 6
The principles surrounding treaties is also seen in this verse: Tell those who disbelieve that if they cease (from persecution of believers) that which is past will be forgiven them; but if they return (thereto) then the example of the men of old hath already gone (before them, for a warning). /And ght them until persecution is no more, and religion is all for God. But if they cease, then lo! God is Seer of what they do. (Al-Anfal 8:38-39) To command the state of non-violence through the observance of an established treaty with non-Muslim polytheists shows that the Muslim community was willing, and indeed commanded, to live in a state of peace with their neighbors even if those neighbors practiced a religion other than Islam.When the Muslims are commanded to ght those who break their treaties, it is the breaking of the treaty that invites warfare, not the fact that the treaty-breakers are polytheists. The Prophet made several important treaties with the non-Muslim communities around Medina, and these were of more than one kind. Perhaps the best known is the treaty of Hudaybiyah, where the Muslim community made a truce with the Quraysh tribe allowing the Muslim community to make a pilgrimage to Mecca the following year.This treaty was noteworthy for its pragmatism: the Prophet
19
question 6
example of the Prophet shows, Muslims can make treaties with their enemies, even if they are polytheists, and they are expected by God to keep to their treaties. If hostilities resume with treaty-breakers, it is not because the treatybreakers are non-Muslim but because they have re-entered a state of hostility. This in fact occurred on more than one occasion, notably the treaty of Hudaybiyah, which was meant to last ten years but which was rendered void by Meccans actions against the Muslim community. In short, in Islam treaties are not predicated on theology or religious identity. Rather, like treaties anywhere, they rely on the two parties faithfully adhering to the terms. As in all transactions in Islamic law, such as buying and selling, and even marriage, the religion of the person making a treaty has no legal bearing on the force of the treaty. An agreement with a Muslim is no more or less binding than an agreement with a non-Muslim, whether it is a rental contract or the UN Charter.
question 7
the case of the attack at Mutah, tribes to the north (which were under the protection of the Byzantines) showed their hostility against the Muslims by taking the egregious step of killing the Prophets emissary. In the Tabuk campaign Muslims set out based on information that the Byzantines were preparing to attack. There exists a saying in Arabic, When the Byzantines are not campaigned against, they campaign. This saying should remind us that the modern concepts of pre-emptive war and aggression must be understood in their proper context. Until the twentieth century, war was an accepted right of all states. Indeed, in 1928 the Kellogg-Briand pact was the rst major systematic attempt to renounce war as an instrument of national policy. Over the course of the 20th century the Kellogg-Briand Pact was followed by the Nuremberg Principles, the Charter of the United Nations, and the Geneva Conventions, all of which laid the foundation for current international law. These agreements constitute binding treaties between the signatories. They make military aggression between states illegal, and among other things forbid the acquisition of territory by war, dene war crimes during the conduct of war, and govern the treatment of prisoners, civilians, and combatants. Such questions were already an important part of Islamic law for more than a thousand years. Though the content of the law was differentreecting a different
23
what is the difference between the abode of islam and the abode of war?
from the point of view of Islamic law, any Muslim signatory to the Charter of the UN and the Geneva Conventions is just as bound to abide by them as the Prophet was to abide by the treaties he completed with the pagan Quraysh and with other tribes ofArabia and beyond. The military encounters between political entities in the past cannot be judged by the same standards that we judge such encounters today, because in the absence of an explicit renunciation of international agreements all nations are in a de facto treaty with all others, though the situation is not usually framed in those terms. The classical laws of jihad
24
question 8
assumedcorrectlythat the default position between states was a state of war, hence the name Dar al-Harb, or Abode of War, which is usually set in contrast to Dar alIslam or the Abode of Islam. This has been widely understood to mean that Muslims consider themselves obligated to wage war on all non-Muslim lands until they become part of Dar al-Islam, but this is not at all the case. The label the abode of war signies that the land in question is not in treaty with the Muslims and that hostilities can break out at any time. Recall that war was universally acknowledged as something states did to get what they wanted; there was no idea of violating international law or of becoming a rogue state. From the point of view of current international law, all states were in a sense rogue states because there was no mechanism for enforcing or even dening the rules of war, aside from customary practices such as the receiving of emissaries. Thus the explicit rules of the Islamic law of jihad were not imposed from without, as has been the case for states in the twentieth century, but were realized from within. The state of affairs in 7th century Arabia and the surrounding areas made this state of war the rule rather than the exception. Unless an explicit treaty was made between two groupsin the case of Arabia, these fundamental units were usually tribesthen one could expect an attack at any time. The Quran reects the awareness of the early
25
question 8
universal treaties of today. The terms Dar al-Islam and Dar al-Harb are not terms from the Quran or from the teachings of the Prophet, but grew out of the work of jurists coming to terms with the new international prole of Islam. As such, they also coined terms such as dar alsulh (abode of reconciliation) and dar al-ahd (abode of treaty), referring to those lands not ruled by Islam but with which the Islamic state had some sort of peace agreement. Such designations were common from the Abbasid period all the way through to the Ottoman Empire in the 20th century. From the point of view of Islamic law, the gradual adoption and advancement of moral principles in international law is a welcome development, and brings the world closer to the Quranic ideal of non-aggression and peaceful coexistence. And if they incline to peace, incline unto it, and trust in God. Lo! He, even He, is the Hearer, the Knower. (Al-Anfal 8:61) This idealization of peace is also echoed in the Prophets command, Do not be hopeful of meeting the enemy, and ask God for well-being.11 9
question 9
tion on the consumption of alcohol. At issue here is whether a previous command to preach peacefully is cancelled by a later command to ght people until they accept Islam. Among the verses which refer to preaching the truths in the Quran and inviting non-Muslims to Islam are the following: Remind them, for thou art but a remembrancer, / Thou art not at all a warder over them. / But whoso is averse and disbelieveth, / God will punish him with direst punishment. (Al-Ghashiyah 88:21-23). But if they are averse, We have not sent thee as a warder over them.Thine is only to convey (the message). (Al-Shura 42:48). Whether We let thee see something of that which We have promised them, or make thee die (before its happening), thine is but conveyance (of the message). Ours the reckoning. (Al-Rad 13:40). Obey God and obey the messenger, and beware! But if ye turn away, then know that the duty of Our messenger is only plain conveyance (of the message). (Al-Maidah 5:92). Some of these verses are Medinan, which means that they were revealed after permission was given to the
29
question 10
others fall into a separate category addressed by such verses as There is no compulsion in religion and God forbids you not, with regard to those who ght you not for (your) religion nor drive you out of your homes, from dealing kindly and justly with them (Al-Mumtahanah 60:8). A second group of scholars holds that the command enshrined in There is no compulsion in religion is universal and applies to everyone, be they idol-worshippers or Jews or Christians. In both cases the only possible scope for the people is limited to those with whom the Prophet was engaged in conict at the time. The majority of scholars thus do not consider that the people in this hadith refers to all people everywhere.
10
question 10
that the second verse is abrogated by the rst, but this is an abuse of the principles of abrogation, and twists verses of the Quran to mean what we want them to mean. In fact, it would be impossible for 9:5 to call for ghting against others solely based on their belief without it abrogating no less than 140 other verses calling for peace with those who do not ght against Muslims, even if they are pagans. Indeed, it would have to abrogate the verse immediately following it, 9:6. The verse There is no coercion in religion is not a command, but a statement of fact, of the same grammatical form as There is no god but God. Recall that this verse, according to one account, was revealed in the context of people over whose religious preferences the Muslims had no controlchildren of theirs who were among an exiled tribe. It is a description of what religion is in relation to the human will. In Quranic exegesis, only commands can be abrogated, not truths. Thus by denition there is no way that There is no coercion in religion (a statement, or khabar) can become Let there be coercion in religion (a command, or amr). In fact, among the four Sunni schools of jurisprudence only one, the Shai school, contains the view that a persons belief can be a reason for ghting against them. This view, however, is mitigated by the fact that an opposite view, in agreement with the majority, is also attributed to Shai. Moreover, it is also important to note that two similar33
question 11
lems become compounded through mistranslation and, in some cases, deliberate misinformation.
11
what are the basic rules of combat as laid down in islams authoritative texts?
the fundamental rules of combat are not academic extractions cleverly derived from history, but are explicitly laid out in Islams authoritative texts: Fight in the way of God against those who ght against you, but begin not hostilities. Lo! God loveth not aggressors. (AlBaqarah 2:190) When the Prophet dispatched his armies he would say, Go in the name of God. Fight in the way of God [against] the ones who disbelieve in God. Do not act brutally. Do no exceed the proper bounds. Do not mutilate. Do not kill children or hermits.15 Once, after a battle, the Prophet passed by a woman who had been slain, whereupon he said, She is not one who would have fought. Thereupon, he looked at the men and said to one of them, Run after Khalid ibn al-Walid [and tell him] that he must not slay children, serfs, or women.16 In another hadith the Prophet says
35
question 12
addresses the rights of animals and the natural environment. 12
question 12
substantial amount of autonomy as regards religious and cultural matters, often with the power to adjudicate certain disputes in their own separate system of courts.This was an extremely common arrangement, which began from the time of the Prophet and the rst caliphs and continued until the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire in the 20th century. The protected people were not required to contribute to the military protection of Dar al-Islam, but they were subject to a poll-tax specic to them, most commonly known as the jizyah but which had other names as well. In the second case, there exists an arrangement with the Islamic state that the dhimmi state will exist in peace with the Islamic state and will not help or support any enemy of Islam. Examples of this include the Prophets arrangement with the people of Bahrain, who were Zoroastrians, and with the Christians of Najran. Under such an arrangement, the people remain completely autonomous and run their own affairs. They remain under the protection of the Islamic state, with no responsibility to provide active protection in return. The Islamic state no right to any of their wealth or property except for the jizyah. The following is the text of the agreement between the Christians of Najran and the Prophet: Najran and their followers are entitled to the protection of God and to the security of Muhammad the
39
question 12
and the believers. So long as they pay the poll-tax, nothing but good shall befall them.21 Perhaps most famous of all is the agreement between Umar ibn al-Khattab and the people of Jerusalem: This is the assurance of safety (aman) which the servant of God Umar, the Commander of the Faithful, has granted to the people of Jerusalem. He has given them an assurance of safety for themselves, for their property, their churches, their crosses, the sick and healthy of the city, and for all the rituals that belong to their religion.Their churches will not be inhabited [by Muslims] nor will they be destroyed. Neither they, nor the land on which they stand, nor their crosses, nor their property will be damaged. They will not be forcibly converted The people of Jerusalem must pay the poll-tax like the people of [other] cities, and they must expel the Byzantines and the robbers 22 Such agreements also applied to other religions as well. This is the treaty made between the Prophets Companion Habib ibn Maslamah and the people of Dabil: In the Name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful.This is a treaty of Habib ibn Maslamah with the Christians, Magians [i.e., Zoroastrians], and Jews
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question 12
maintenance of their houses of worship, and even handling their own affairs (especially matters such as marriage, divorce, and inheritance). Under Islamic rule, dhimmis enjoyed true cultural and religious independence, and were in no way compelled to adopt the culture or religion of their rulers. Despite their theological differences with the members of other faiths, Muslims did not consider the conquered peoples to be fundamentally inferior and in need of edication in order to be truly civilized. Military conquest did not entail or require the conversion of the conquered people. Islamic law provided Muslims with a ready-made and legally binding way of dealing with nonMuslims without robbing them of their selfhood, their language, or their religion.
13
question 13
Look to the protected people around you who are old and weak and who are no longer able to earn a living and pay them from the treasury of the Muslims such as will do them good. For indeed I have learned that the Commander of the Believers Umar ibn alKhattab once passed an old man who was begging at peoples doors. He said, We have been unfair to you. We used to take jizyah from you when you were young, then neglected you when you were old. Then he said, Pay him from the treasury of the Muslims such as will do him good.26 Moreover, the word jizyah itself simply derives from a root meaning part, referring to the fact that it is taken as a part of the wealth of the protected peoples. In fact, the use of the word jizyah is not even required. The historian al-Tabari relates that some members of the Christian community asked Umar ibn al-Khattab if they could refer to the jizyah as sadaqah, literally charity, which he agreed to. It is also worth noting in this context that in most cases the jizyah taken was actually less than the zakat, or alms, paid by Muslims, which the dhimmis were not required to pay since the zakat is a religious requirement for Muslims only. Another aspect of the debate over the status of protected peoples is the practice of requiring protected peoples to dress in some way that was recognizably distinct from
45
question 14
demand for obedience and deference from the protected people was geared, not towards some egotistical exaltation of Islam, but towards a just order where everyones rights could be protected without undue advantage being taken. In the modern context, there is nothing in Islamic law which would preclude Muslims living as equal citizens in a state run by a democratically elected government, so long as their fundamental religious rights were protected. 14
question 14
gion like the pilgrimage to Mecca or the fasting in Ramadan. He may also act in a way that conclusively proves his kufr, such as openly worshipping an idol. Such words and actions, if they were not mitigated by other factors, would constitute proof for the rulers state of unbelief. However, it is crucial to make a distinction, as traditional Islam does, between apostasy, which is a denial of truth, and sin or even simple error, which a failure to live up to it. Thus, rejecting the principle of the ve daily prayers (which are performed with some variations amongst all Muslims) constitutes a negation of Islam itself, while being too lazy to pray is a sin. Mocking and degrading the Prophet is a rejection of Islam, but calling the mufti a silly fellow is, at worst, a sin. Prostrating before an idol in worship is a rejection of Islam, but rising when a respected elder enters the room is religiously neutral or even commendable. In traditional Islam, the sinner is allowed to respect the law and regret his weakness; by contrast, the disbeliever disregards the law in order to indulge his weakness. In any ethical system, the should or ought follows the is, which is to say that the truth always precedes and determines moral judgment. Kufr endangers that truth, and destroys the basis for morality, while sin is a failure to live up to that truth. Indeed, the very identication of an act as a sin is a kind of afrmation of the truth which that sin fails to live up to.
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question 14
and obey their command. Even if they beat you and take your wealth, listen and obey.28 In another hadith he was asked, Messenger of God, should we not oppose him by the sword? He said, No, not so long as the Prayer is established among you. If you see something you hate in your ruler, hate his action, but do not cease to be obedient.29 It becomes clear, then, that Islam does not expound a utopian ideology of a perfect world order. The Islamic tradition places paradise in the hereafter, not in this world, and recognizes that it is only within mens power to maximize the level of justice in the world while maintaining a balance between the spiritual and the worldly. In a perfect world, the ruler would be just, wise, and pious, and would deal fairly with people while doing his part to protect their spiritual welfare. However, in such cases where a choice must be made between spiritual well-being and worldly justice, Islam chooses the former. Man may gain the world and lose paradise, while a man who gains paradise loses nothing in the ultimate sense.Thus a tyrant who taxes excessively and unreasonably punishes dissent, while maintaining the structure and tradition of faith (so long as the Prayer is established among you), is superior to a ruler who makes the trains run on time but whose program up-roots the very pillars of faith.
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question 15
who work in a governmental or bureaucratic structure beneath him automatically become unbelievers whose blood can be shed. This unbelief by association is often taken to absurd extremes, to the point where people who pay taxes are considered to be complicit in the crimes of a state. Some have gone so far as to say that anyone who lives in a society which does not conform to their vision of Islamic law is guilty of kufr (unbelief), since they passively accept it instead of actively ghting against it. 15
question 15
maximum, religion is a private affair, and should have nothing to say about human relations. Islamic civilization is something to be left behind, while modern Western civilization is to be emulated to the extent possible. Modernists and Modern Secularists: Islam must adjust and change and learn the lessons of modernity; apologists holding that faith is valuable as a guide to ethics, but Islamic teachings should change with the times. The values of the modern West are generally seen as the norm to which the Islamic world should adjust itself. Traditionalists: Islam is the source of meaning and guidance for the inward and outward life. Islamic civilization is a source and treasure of intellectual, spiritual, and artistic nourishment. Loyalty to this tradition in no way precludes living sensibly and justly in the todays world, and indeed the tradition offers considerable exibility in terms of forms of government and is a guarantor of basic rights. Puritanical literalists: (Usually referred to as religious fundamentalists or Islamists) Both traditional Islamic civilization and secular ideologies are failures. Muslims must pass over most of the civilization and
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question 15
the post-religious values which are so powerful today, nor of the religious extremism of the fundamentalists.The takris and the secular fundamentalists represent a still smaller sliver of the worlds Muslim population. All told, there are no more than 150,000 militant takris (including both the Sunni and Shii strands) worldwide. These are thus less than one hundredth of 1% of all Muslims (that is, less than 0.01%), or less than one in every ten thousand Muslims. Secular fundamentalism also usually has little traction with the general population and isparadoxicallylimited to small rebel groups, such as the PKK in Turkey and the MEK (Mujahedin-e khalq) in Iran, and various establishment elites in a small number of Muslim countries. That which we call fundamentalism today (puritanical literalism) has several salient characteristics vis--vis traditional Islam. First, puritanical literalists generally ignore or explicitly reject most of the classical learned tradition of jurists and theologians, and limit themselves to their own interpretation of the Quran, the hadith, and the rst three generations of Muslims, which they take as authoritative (as do all Muslims). Second, they ignore or reject most of the philosophy, mysticism, and artistic production of Islamic civilization.This results in a kind of anti-intellectualism and in a dry literalism. Third, they view religion almost entirely as a project of social engineering combined
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question 15
Falling into the fatal trap of any utopian ideology, both the secular and religious fundamentalists invert the traditional priorities and subjugate all values to the attainment of the utopia. Lenins notorious statement, You cannot make an omelet without breaking eggs, enshrines the notion that the perfect worldhere on earthjusties any crime, and describes the authoritarian approach of these two extremes to the rest of the world. Thus, the bombing of innocent Muslims by a Muslim or non-Muslim state can be justied in the name of democracy and freedom (or in another context the liberation of the worlds workers, or the ascendancy of the Arian race) which means that some are chosen to die so that the rest may live in freedom. Also, the bombing of innocent Muslims by non-state actors can be justied because they stand in the way of establishing an Islamic state, or, in a perverted twist of spiritual logic, the killing of innocent Muslims in a terrorist attack is not really a crime because they will go to Paradise as a result of being innocent victims in an attack justied by its ends. Neither secular fundamentalists nor their religious counterparts can reasonably claim an ultimate set of values by which to act, despite appearances to the contrary.When one can justify any act in the name of a worldly utopia then one has passed into pure utilitarianism. This utilitarianism allows the secular fundamentalist to declare, without a hint of irony, that freedom (the lives of some) must be sacriced
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question 15
by rejecting that tradition or treating it as irrelevant. Even though Islamic law declares attacks against non-combatants, forced conversion, and naked aggression to be illegal, life within traditional Islamic civilization, with its integrated spirituality and nobility, would have made them generally unthinkable as well. The case of Bin Ladens fatwa ordering Muslims to kill both soldiers and civilians is illustrative of the problems involved. Bin Laden is trained as a civil engineer, not an authority in Islamic law, and it takes little investigation to uncover that his interpretations of Islamic law are uninformed and self-serving. He can only draw the conclusions he draws by utterly ignoring everything Islamic law has had to say about such questions. Using Bin Ladens takri cutand-paste method, one can make the Quran and hadith say anything at all. That every top authority on Islamic law in the world rejects both Bin Ladens conclusions and his temerity in declaring a fatwa is, lamentably, often never mentioned in theWest. But such condemnation is not necessarily a problem for Bin Laden and his compatriots, because they never felt obligated to pay attention to traditional Islamic law in the rst place. Ostensibly they claim to be following the Quran and the teachings of the Prophet, but their method amounts to a cherry-picking of sources to arrive at a conclusion that was decided beforehand. It is misleading to
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question 15
reform Islam, they throw the baby out with the bath water, losing the natural checks against aggression and injustice in the process of jettisoning those aspects of the tradition they nd unhelpful to their projects. Though not advocating such abuses themselves, the modernists and puritanical literalists leave the door open to the violation of basic human rights at the hands of the takris and the secular fundamentalists. Modernism did not create Hitler, but it removed the barriers, religious and cultural, which would have made his rise an impossibility. Similarly, puritanical literalism did not create Bin Laden, but it weakened the immune system, as it were, of Islamic society, leaving some within it susceptible to the contagion of takrism. By marginalizing traditional, mainstream Islam, one does not wipe out the poison. One loses the antidote.
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conclusion
as with any religion or system of law, when it comes to the Islamic law of war there is a gap between the ideal and its application in the world. It is possible to sift through the long history of war and peace in Islamic civilization and nd examples where political powers and even religious scholars have acted and espoused views which are anti-thetical to the spirit and letter of the teachings of Islam outlined above regarding war and peace. Indeed, it has happened that Muslims have created situations amounting to forced conversion, or killed innocents in battle, or treated the members of other religions with contempt and cruelty. Yet there is an important difference between the outing of high ideal and the institution of a vicious teaching. If abuses have occurred in the application of the Islamic laws of war, these exist in spite of those teachings, not because of them. Moreover, a fair reading of Islamic history will show that in the majority of cases the Islamic law of warwith its principles of justice, sparing of innocents, and idealization of peacewere largely held to, and very often the conduct of Muslims in war exhibited the highest standards of chivalry and nobility. Moving forward from the time of the Prophet and Companions to the Crusades, we observe the gure of Salah al-Din al-Ayyubi, known to the West as Saladin, a
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gure of almost proverbial gallantry in battle and kindness in victory. The reconquest of Jerusalem by Saladin was as memorable for its mercy as was the initial Christian conquest for its brutality, mirroring the mercy the Prophet showed to his enemies when he entered victorious into Mecca near the end of his life. But one need not go so far back in history to nd such examples. In the colonial era several Muslim resistance movements distinguished themselves by their high standards of conduct in their opposition to European aggression. Among them were Imam Shamil (d.1871), the Lion of Daghestan, in his thirty year war against Russian domination, and Emir Abd al-Qadir al-Jazairi (d.1883), in his battle against French imperialism. Both men were distinguished scholars of Islam and spiritual leaders, in addition to being almost legendary military commanders. Steeped in the legal and spiritual tradition of Islam, these heroes won the grudging admiration of their enemies. Emir Abd al-Qadir, having fought the French for so many years, risked his life defending the Christians of Damascus, and made no distinction between his defense of Algerian Muslims and his protection of the Christians of Damascus against his fellow Muslims. For these warriors, their wise courage and stern compassion were necessary outgrowths of the Quran and the teachings of the Prophet. They would not have recognized the Islamic principles of combat they so steadfastly
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conclusion
vert by force. (3) Muslims are expected to live in peace with their neighbors whenever possible, and must respect treaties, but this never precludes the right to pre-emptive or responsive self-defense. Indeed, fourteen centuries ago Islam drew a line between pre-emption and aggression, allowing the former (as in the Prophets campaigns at Khaybar and Mutah) and condemning the latter (Fight in the way of God against those who ght against you, but begin not hostilities. Lo! God loveth not aggressors) (Al-Baqarah, 2:190). In sum, God asks neither that Muslims be belligerent nor that they be pacist. Rather, they must love peace but resort to force when the cause is just.
2009, The RoyalAal al-Bayt Institute for IslamicThought, Jordan
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David Dakake. The Myth of a Militant Islam, in Islam, Funda-mentalism, and the Betrayal of Tradition, edited by Joseph Lum- bard (WorldWisdom, Bloomington, Indiana, 2004), pp. 3-37: Discusses the Bin Laden fatwa, the nature of authority in Islam, and the laws of Jihad. Khaled M. Abou El Fadl. The Great Theft : Wrestling Islam from the Extremists (HarperCollins, 2005): Valuable for its discussion of puritanical literalism vs. traditional law. Mohammad Hashim Kamali. Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence (Islamic Texts Society, 2005): One of the most complete and accessible introductions to Islamic law. Also valuable for its discussion of the sword verse (pp. 223-225). Reza Shah Kazemi. Recollecting the Spirit of Jihad, in Islam, Fundamentalism, and the Betrayal of Tradition, edited by Joseph Lumbard (World Wisdom, Bloomington, Indiana, 2004), pp.121-142:Addresses the spiritual dimensions of jihad and the case of Emir Abd al-Qadirs resistance against the French and his protection of Syrian Christians. Vincenzo Oliveti. The Myth of the Myth of a Moderate Islam, in Islamica Magazine, no.15 (2006). An excellent treatment of common allegations of Islamic endemic violence.
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(in arabic)
Abdullah Bin Bayyah. Al-Irhab: Al-Tashkhis wal-hulul: A discus-sion of terrorism. See also: www.binbayyah.net Muhammad Said Ramadan al-Buti. Al-Jihad l-Islam (Damas-cus: Dar al-Fikr, 2005): An excellent overall discussion of the issues pertaining to jihad, from an eminent scholar and recog-nized authority, including the laws of war, protected peoples, political rebellion, preaching Islam (dawah), treaties, and forced conversion. Ali Jumuah. Questions and Answers on Jihad in Islam (Egypt, Supreme Council for IslamicAffairs, n.d.).
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1. An archival search of the NewYorkTimes for holy war or jihad shows that this term is still a standard translation of jihad, very often taking the form jihad, or holy war. Or one can enter the term holy war into a search on Google News and see that it is still a widespread translation of jihad. Even sympathetic and responsible authors perpetuate the equation between the two, such as Juan Cole, Sacred Space and Holy W (I. B.Tauris, 2002).The publishing world is full of ar pro-vocative title such as Peter Bergens, Holy War, Inc.: Inside the Secret World of Osama bin Laden (Free Press, 2002). This phrase even found its way into a speech by the Pope in September 2006, albeit in the form of a quotation from a Byzantine emperor.Though the Pope said he regretted the reaction, he never disavowed the statement nor did he apologize for it. This term was even used by President Bush (in a speech before the National Endowment for Democracy in October 2005), and for a time became popular with certain right-wing intellectuals and media talking heads, though it fell out of favor after signicant criticism as an empty propaganda term, having been used to describe people and groups as disparate as al-Qaeda, the government of Iran, and Syria.The rst is a stateless terrorist group who hate Shiis, the second is a Shii religious state, and the third is a secular state run by an Alawi elite ruling over a Sunni majority.The fact that one term mean all these things signies that it is devoid of any
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3.
notes
Roland), where the indels are the Muslims in the Holy Land. It also appears in the King JamesVersion in 2 Corinthians 6:15, And what concord hath Christ with Belial? or what part hath he that believeth with an indel? and 2 Corinthians 6:14-16 But if any provide not for his own, and specially for those of his own house, he hath denied the faith, and is worse than an indel. This term is noteworthy because Muslims themselves almost never use the word indel to translate kar (preferring unbeliever, disbeliever, denier), yet critics of Islam regularly accuse Muslims of this or that view in relation to indels. For example, a contemporary convert to Christianity from Islam, Nonie Darwish, has written a book, Now They Call Me Indel (Sentinel HC, 2006). Has anyone actually called her that specic word, or is it her own trans-lation? The word indel effectively conjures the emotional impact of this term as a part of theWests collective memory, disregarding the fact that the term has no resonance for a Western Muslim, and means something signicantly different from kar.Another book byAyaan HirsiAli, another former Muslim, bears the title Indel (Free Press, 2007), implying that this is the label she now bears from some undened group of Muslims.Actually, as an atheist the term Latin-based word indel more strongly demarks her relationship with Christianity than with Islam. 5. Often misunderstandings about the Quran can be easily cleared up by referring to the classical and recognized Quranic commentaries, such as those of al-Tabari (Jami al73
8. Ibn Majah, al-Sunan, Kitab al-Adab. 9. Ibn Kathir relates that many famous early gures of Islam such as Ibn Abbas, Mujahid, Muqatil ibn Hayyan, Qataadah and others said that this is the rst verse revealed concerning jihad. Tafsir al-Quran al-Azim(Riyadh: Dar al-Salam, 1998), vol.3, p.103. 10. Al-Bukhari, al-Sahih, Kitab al-Maghazi.
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11. Ibid., Kitab al-Tamanni. 12. Ibid., Kitab al-Iman. 13. The second caliph, Umar ibn al-Khattab, had a Christian servant namedAsbaq.When Umar invited him to Islam, the servant refused, to which Umar replied, quoting the Quran, There is no compulsion in religion, and then said, Asbaq, if you were to accept Islam I would have entrusted you with some of the Muslims affairs. In another incident, Umar said to an old woman who had not accepted Islam, Become Muslim, old woman, become Muslim. God sent Muhammad with the truth. She replied, I am an old woman who is close to death. Umar said, Dear God, bear witness! and he rec-ited There is no compulsion in religion. (Buti, p.52) 14. Once a polytheist askedAli if they would be killed if one of them were to come to Prophet with some need or to hear the Word of God.Ali replied in the negative, and quoted 9:6 on asylum for the polytheists. (Buti, p. 57 quoting from al-Jami li-ahkam al-Quran, 8:76) 15. Ibn Kathir, Tafsir al-Quran al-Azim (Riyadh 1998) pp.308-9. Many of the selections and translations of this section are taken from David Dakake, The Myth of a Militant Islam, in Islam, Fundamentalism, and the Betrayal ofTradition, edited by Joseph Lumbard (WorldWisdom, Bloomington, Indiana, 2004), pp.3-37. 16. See IbnTaymiyyah al-Siyasa al-Shariyyah Islah al-Rai wal-
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