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	<title>A Fils for Your Thoughts &#187; Islamist</title>
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		<title>Why Islamization is unIslamic</title>
		<link>http://www.afilsforyourthoughts.com/blog/2008/05/01/why-islamization-is-unislamic/</link>
		<comments>http://www.afilsforyourthoughts.com/blog/2008/05/01/why-islamization-is-unislamic/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 May 2008 05:50:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Haider</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Islam]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Islamist]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kuwait]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.afilsforyourthoughts.com/?p=85</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The call for the Islamization of the law is unIslamic, for a number of reasons.

As a process, Islamization fails to apply the actual process the Prophet (peace be on him and his family) used to promote Islam. While the Prophet sought to change the people's values and culture before fulfilling a political role, the Islamists seek to mould society with the threat of the law.

Islamization is based on an understanding of the nature of Islamic law that conflicts with what the Prophet taught. Islamists claim that Islamic law is unchanging, and that it is applicable in every place at every time. However, Islamic law went through several changes during the time of the Prophet. Prominent Muslim figures, such as Imam Ali and Caliph Umar, recognized that Islamic law was open to change, and Islamic laws can be suspended, given the circumstances the Muslims find themselves in.

The Islamists have incorrectly applied some Islamic teachings to contemporary issues. For example, the week-end shift in Kuwait, from Thursday-Friday to Friday-Saturday was rejected by Islamists because they considered it imitation of the Jews (by observing Saturday a day of rest), and that the Prophet has warned us about imitating the Jews. What the Islamists overlooked is what sort of imitation the Prophet warned us about. It was not in their religious observances, but in the ways in which they disobeyed God's instructions.

We cannot assume that Islamization is the implementation of Islamic law, as is, while ignoring the degree to which it has been distorted by Islamists, in their approach and understanding of Islam.
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In my previous post on <a title="The Islamization of the Law - Fils Post" href="http://www.afilsforyourthoughts.com/blog/2008/04/28/the-islamization-of-the-law/">the Islamization of the law</a>, I explained why the argument for Islamization is both misleading and meaningless. In this article, I would like to explain why Islamization is unIslamic.<span id="more-85"></span></p>
<p><strong>The Process</strong></p>
<p>Before I discuss the issue of Islamization thoroughly, we need to remember that Islamization is the process of installing Islamic law as the source of legislation. This means that Islamic law was not the law, and the case is made for its adoption by the country, not in 5 or 10 year&#8217;s time, but now.</p>
<p>For the Islamists, it is not part of their vision to see Islamic law being used in the country in the distant future, but this is at the top of their agenda, and they are pushing for it at every chance they get.</p>
<p><strong>The Rise of Islam</strong></p>
<p>While the case is made by the Islamists that Islamic law is the solution we are in desperate need of to tackle our personal, social, economic and political problems, they overlook the fact that the process of Islamization that they are promoting is contrary to the way in which Islam itself was promoted by the Prophet (peace be on him and his family).</p>
<p>Islamists want to make use of the law in order to change people&#8217;s moral conduct. But the Prophet never approached morality in this way. Islam did not begin as a government or any other political establishment. It began as a moral movement that promoted a re-evaluation of society&#8217;s beliefs and customs, and offered a worldview that promoted individual thought and upright character.</p>
<p>Islamic scholars usually draw a distinction between the verses of the Holy Koran that were revealed in Mecca (i.e. during the early days of Islam) and the ones revealed in Medina (i.e. the later stages of Islam) because the former concentrated more on beliefs, principles and moral virtues, whereas the latter dealt with civil law, warfare, political relations, etc. The process of Islamization reverses the formula, and rather than begin with moral guidance through rational persuasion, they seek to promote morality through political force.</p>
<p><strong>The Law and the Culture</strong></p>
<p>It is important to bear in mind that the rise of Islam demonstrates the Islamic way of bringing about social reform. In other words, it presents us with the <strong><em>process</em></strong> we must use, if we wish to act in accordance with Islam. We cannot simply work towards the end results (Islamic beliefs, upright conduct, etc) while overlooking how these issues are meant to be approached. And we certainly cannot look for shortcuts, which is what the Islamists are looking for.</p>
<p>By using the threat of force, the Islamists hope that they can mould society in any way they wish. They completely ignore the validity of their process, and do not take into consideration the role culture plays in a society.</p>
<p>Islam sought to change the culture before it established the law. The Prophet wanted to change the way people thought, not by intimidation or compulsion, but with reason. He wanted to change their conduct, not by force or with threats, but by setting an example and encouraging others towards the values he was promoting.</p>
<p>The prohibition of intoxicants is usually given as an example of how Islamic law did not immediately demand that alcohol be banned from Muslim society. The Prophet gave the reasons for why people should not drink alcohol, but he did not prevent people from drinking, nor did he punish them for drinking.</p>
<p>Islam came to instill the values that are proper to a prosperous society, and the law came later on to codify the moral values that society upheld and consented to.</p>
<p>Looking at the Islamist approach to politics, we find that the Islamists seek to add more restrictions on people so they can develop in them the values the Islamists associate to Islam. In other words, the less people know, the less choices they have and the less they can do, the more moral they can become.</p>
<p>There is total disregard for the current values that people uphold, no use of reasoning to promote &#8220;Islamic&#8221; values and no consideration for the consequences their policies will have on people&#8217;s personal adoption of Islamic values. Islam has to be obeyed, no matter what people think or how they feel about it.</p>
<p>Is this an Islamic attitude?</p>
<p><strong>Understanding the Law</strong></p>
<p>Apart from the fact that the Islamist agenda ignores the actual process the Prophet used to introduce Islam in Arabia, it also makes unsubstantiated claims about the nature of Islamic law and misinterprets the law through false principles and wrong application of Islamic teachings. We will look at all these issues, and relate them to some positions the Islamists in Kuwait took regarding a couple of issues.</p>
<p><em>&#8220;Islamic law is unchanging&#8221;</em></p>
<p>The most popular claim Islamists make regarding the nature of Islamic law is that it is unchanging, and is suitable for all times and all places. This is a claim Islamists find difficult to think beyond or without. It forms the framework of their thinking, and they cannot understand Islam in any other way. They view change as something negative (which is one of the reasons why they are conservatives) and think that it creates uncertainty and undermines Islamic teachings. Besides, God knows the nature of man and his needs, and God&#8217;s knowledge cannot become outdated.</p>
<p>But this is a claim that the Prophet neither made nor acted on. Islamic law went through several changes during the time of the Prophet, and the study of Islamic law takes into account the abrogated verses (Ar. <em>mansukh</em>, i.e. the verses whose application is replaced) and the abrogating verses (Ar. <em>nasikh</em>, i.e. the verses that came to replace the abrogated verses). This is something stated in the Holy Koran, and Islamic teachings don&#8217;t hide this fact.</p>
<p>So if Islamic law went through several changes during the time of the Prophet, is it appropriate for us to say that from the Prophet&#8217;s death onward, Islamic law cannot be changed?</p>
<p>For us to answer this question appropriately, we must take into account why Islamic law should be open to change.</p>
<p>It is narrated that Imam Ali (peace be on him) was asked about the Prophet&#8217;s instruction for the Muslims to dye their hair, and whether Muslims were still obliged to do so. Imam Ali replied that, during the early days of Islam, the Muslims were a minority and subject to abuse. The Prophet encouraged the Muslims to dye their hair so that they can appear more youthful in relation to the rest of society, and thereby presenting themselves as a strong community. But after the Muslims became powerful, it is no longer necessary to give such an impression.</p>
<p>It is also recorded that the second caliph, Caliph Umar, suspended corporal punishments during a drought.</p>
<p>What both incidents show is, at least, an understanding of Islam amongst prominent Muslim figures that Islamic law was open to change, given the <em>conditions</em> in which the Muslims live. And not only do Islamists overlook conditions (conditions are subject to change, and Islamists do not like change), they also ignore the <em>context</em> in which Islamic law was implemented during the time of the Prophet. &#8220;Why did the Prophet give such a ruling?&#8221; is not a question Islamists tend to ask, which distorts their understanding and, therefore, implementation of Islamic law.</p>
<p><em>Islam in Context</em></p>
<p>In a lengthy narration on the abrogated and abrogating verses, Imam Ali pointed out that many Islamic rulings were not based on universal laws, but were an extension of the existing customs of Arabia. This, Imam Ali explained, was part of God&#8217;s mercy in that He did not introduce laws to a people that they were unable to cope with, or which strongly conflicted with their expectations.</p>
<p>And while Islamists may rationalize the universal applicability of Islamic law, they must be aware of the rulings which are bound by the society in which Islam was born, and which prominent Islamic figures, such as Imam Ali, who is regarded as one of the key interpreters of Islam, did not claim to be universal.</p>
<p><em>Distorted Teachings</em><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<p>As I have already mentioned in the article &#8220;the Islamization of the Law,&#8221; the interpretation of Islamic law is a crucial element that we need to address before we can claim that the law we are promoting is actually Islamic (i.e. in accordance with God&#8217;s message).</p>
<p>There are many principles that need to be taken into consideration when interpreting Islamic law, and I have only touched on some of them. But to help explain the Islamist interpretation of Islamic law, I would like to look at two issues that were raised in Kuwait by Islamists:</p>
<p><em>Banning Valentine&#8217;s</em>: Apart from the fact that this is a top-down approach to promoting Islam, the Islamists wanted to ban the celebration of Valentine&#8217;s because they considered it indecent, and because it is a celebration that Islam does not recognize. Not every interpretation of Islam would accept these arguments. For one thing, celebrating Valentine&#8217;s is only indecent depending on the individuals celebrating it. No one can claim that it is indecent for a married couple to celebrate Valentine&#8217;s.</p>
<p>As for Valentine&#8217;s being a non-Muslim celebration does not immediately cast it off as forbidden for the Muslims to celebrate. Islamists have low tolerance for celebrations and occasions that do not belong in the Islamic calendar. Some even object to celebrating birthdays, including the Prophet&#8217;s birthday, because it&#8217;s a day that the Prophet himself did not observe.</p>
<p>But, again, the interpretation of Islamic teachings does not make it clear whether the Islamist interpretation is justified or not, and it certainly cannot speak on behalf of all Muslims.</p>
<p><em>Opposing the weekend shift</em>: When Kuwait wanted to shift its weekend from Thursday-Friday to Friday-Saturday, the Islamists opposed the move, and claimed that regarding Saturday a holiday is Islamically forbidden, because it imitates the Jews, which the Prophet has warned the Muslims about.</p>
<p>What the Islamists failed to recognize is what sort of imitation the Prophet has warned the Muslims about. The Jews worship a single God, but does that mean the Muslims have to be different, and worship two gods? The Jews observe a day of rest, so does this mean the Muslims cannot regard Friday a day of rest?</p>
<p>The imitation the Prophet warned us about is not in their observance of the Sabbath, or any other religious ritual, but it is in the ways they have deviated from God&#8217;s instructions. The Islamists have incorrectly applied an Islamic teaching to an issue to which the teaching did not apply.</p>
<p>We, therefore, see that the Islamist call for Islamization is not what the Islamists make it out to be. It is not a pure application of Islamic law, since they have dismissed the Islamic process of promoting Islam, they do not understand the nature of Islamic law, nor interpret its teachings correctly. Rather than be drawn towards Islamization by judging the call from a distant, we must try to understand exactly what is meant by it, and to listen carefully to what is being called for.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>The Islamization of the Law</title>
		<link>http://www.afilsforyourthoughts.com/blog/2008/04/28/the-islamization-of-the-law/</link>
		<comments>http://www.afilsforyourthoughts.com/blog/2008/04/28/the-islamization-of-the-law/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 28 Apr 2008 16:39:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Haider</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Islamist]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kuwait]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.afilsforyourthoughts.com/?p=84</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The call for the Islamization of the law is both misleading and meaningless.

Islamization is the adoption of Islamic law (Sharia) as the sole source of legislation in a country. It is based on the acceptance that Islamic law is divine, and because "the Creator knows more about the creation than the creation knows itself," it will have the most positive effect on society. All social, political and economic ills Muslims are facing is attributed, by the Islamists, to the fact that Islamic law is not the source of legislation in Islamic countries.

The call for Islamization is misleading, because it overlooks the problem of interpretation: which interpretation of Islamic law will we consider divine? If this issue is not addressed, and we accept the wrong interpretation of the law, then we would have effectively accepted a "man-made" law as divine.

The fact that Islamization doesn't have a clear meaning on what kind of law is being called for makes it a meaningless pursuit. Those who support Islamization don't exactly know what kind of law they are calling for, or know how it will be implemented.

The popularity of Islamization rests on the hope that the Islamists can deliver on their promises, while failing to realise that Islamization is both misleading and meaningless.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One of the most meaningless and misleading agendas ever to make an appearance on the political stage is the call for the Islamization of the law. In this post, I wish to explain why this is the case, as well as explain the popularity of such a call in many Muslim countries.<span id="more-84"></span></p>
<p><strong>What is Islamization?</strong></p>
<p>In essence, Islamization is changing the source of a country&#8217;s civil law from a secular source to Islamic law (<em>Sharia</em>). Many Muslim countries regard Islamic law as one of the sources of legislation, whereas Islamization demands that it becomes the sole source of legislation. Islamization is the <em>process</em> of adopting Islamic law as the law of the land. This is an important point to bear in mind. Islamization does not only defend the use of Islamic law as the source of legislation, but makes a case for its adoption as such. In other words, it is not simply in favour of Islamic law, but makes a case against its alternatives.</p>
<p>The case is made for the Islamization of the law based on the argument that God, who has revealed the religion of Islam, has also revealed to us the laws by which we should govern our lives and our social affairs. And since we are Muslims, we are expected to judge and rule according to God&#8217;s laws, and no other law. Besides, since God is our creator, He is more acquainted with our needs and knows what the most suitable political system for us is. Man-made laws, on the other hand, are limited by the ignorance of those who made up the law.</p>
<p>Secular law, according to the Islamists, is based on ignorance and a limited view of existence. Secular law is perceived as materialistic and lacking a broader vision that encompasses spirituality and morality. Besides, secular law either perceives the government, or the citizens, as the authority in the country, whereas the Islamists regard God as the ultimate authority. Therefore, the law should be dictated by Him, and to accept an alternative is a sign that we are undermining God&#8217;s authority and ignoring His blessings, of providing us with a political system that is designed according to His knowledge of mankind. &#8220;<em>The Creator knows His creation more than His creation knows itself</em>.&#8221;</p>
<p>The fact that Islamic law is not the source of legislation in Muslim countries is viewed by the Islamists as the primary source of the ills that the Muslims are living through. By adopting Islam as the source of the law, we will be able to overcome our political, economic and social problems. Without Islam as the source of law, the Muslims are destined to fall and face further ills and agonies.</p>
<p>This is the foundation of the argument for the Islamization of the law. But if we dig deeper into the message being presented, we will realise how misleading and meaningless it is.</p>
<p><strong>Why is it Misleading? </strong><br />
<em><br />
The Problem of Interpretation</em></p>
<p>The argument for the Islamization of the law is overly simplistic. It is based on the claim that our understanding of Islam is correct, and that we have understood the message of Islam and its laws precisely how God wants us to understand it. In other words, how we will implement Islamic law will be the way that God wants us to implement it. The only obstacle standing in the way of an Islamic heaven on earth is the acceptance of Islamic law as the source of legislation. Everything else, apart from possible corruption, will be Islam in practice.</p>
<p>However, the very fact that Muslim scholars disagree over what constitutes Islamic law, and that the schools of thought in Islam disagree on almost every possible issue in Islamic law, should be a sign that what we consider to be &#8220;Islamic law&#8221; might not be what God intended the law to be. If we have misunderstood God&#8217;s law, it is no longer divine. It does not come with God&#8217;s sanction. Our understanding of the law must exactly match what God has ordained. Any distortion in the interpretation of Islamic law renders it man-made. There is no escaping this fact.</p>
<p>The questions that we should ask are: What interpretation of Islam will we recognize as God&#8217;s law? Why would we accept this interpretation over every other interpretation? Will all Muslims be judged according to one interpretation, or will each sect be judged according to its own interpretation of the law?</p>
<p>The claim that Islamic law is divine, only according to the interpretation of the Islamists, is far-fetched. In the least, the Islamists need to offer proof for why their version of the law is divine. To simply make the claim in order to win support for their agenda is misleading. Before calling for the Islamization of the law, the issue of interpretation should be addressed.</p>
<p>The distinction is made by the Islamists between God&#8217;s law and man-made law, when the issue of interpretation reveals that &#8220;God&#8217;s law&#8221; could be just as &#8220;man-made&#8221; as any other law, if it is misinterpreted. But a law that is enacted with divine authority, when it lacks God&#8217;s sanction, is much worse than any man-made law, because it will commit injustices in the name of God, and quash any opposition to the oppression, in the name of God.</p>
<p><em>Misrepresenting the Alternatives</em></p>
<p>Islamists don&#8217;t represent secular laws as they are, but they attach labels to them to undermine their credibility. The issue of &#8220;man-made&#8221; law is intended to undermine the value found in secular laws, since their origin is human ignorance (as if humans are incapable of reaching valid conclusions through reason and observation). As I have mentioned above, Islamic law can be just as man-made, depending on how accurate the interpretation of it is, but presented as though it was divine, making it far more dangerous than any secular law.</p>
<p>The greatest danger found in the call for the Islamization of the law is the blame it places on Western political systems for the social ills found in Western countries. In other words, it is taken for granted that the political system causes moral corruption, with total disregard for the role culture plays in society. That is, the incidents of rape, crime, violence, substance abuse, etc. aren&#8217;t considered social ills, but the consequences of the political systems found in the West. This is not only a grave misrepresentation, but goes to show <em>how</em> the Islamists plan on reforming society. I will re-visit this issue in a future post.</p>
<p><em>Defining the Problems and the Solutions</em></p>
<p>It is important to note that the political and social problems taken into consideration when presenting the case for Islamization are defined according to Islamist terms. Segregation is a clear example of this. Does Islam actually prohibit interaction between the opposite genders? And are mixed schools (or mixed gatherings, in general) to blame for the social problems that the Islamists have claimed them to cause?</p>
<p>The case for Islamization defines its own problems and its own solutions. Before accepting these definitions we must question their credibility.</p>
<p><strong>Why is it meaningless?</strong></p>
<p>For an agenda to be meaningful, it must have a specific meaning. It cannot hold more than one conflicting meaning. An agenda that &#8220;means everything&#8221; means nothing. Therefore, the very fact that Islamization doesn&#8217;t actually define which interpretation of Islamic law is being referred to, what this will practically mean and how will the law be executed makes the issue of Islamization completely meaningless.</p>
<p>Those who support Islamization, in the name of implementing God&#8217;s laws, do not know what they&#8217;re getting themselves into, what kind of political system they are calling for and what sort of society they will be living in.</p>
<p><strong>Why is the Call to Islamization Popular?</strong></p>
<p>The primary reasons for the popularity of Islamization is that it is both misleading and meaningless. People accept the claim that it is a call to the implementation of God&#8217;s laws, without realising how complex a task it is to actually define what God&#8217;s laws are. They assume that, as Muslims, it is their obligation to judge by God&#8217;s law, and readily accept the call of anyone who seems to demand that we fulfill our obligation.</p>
<p>Everyone who accepts the call to Islamization has associated his or her own understanding to &#8220;Islamization.&#8221; They offer their own explanations to what sort of society they would be living in, and what kind of laws will be enacted, but fail to realise that those in power may have an entirely different understanding to what &#8220;Islamic law&#8221; actually is.</p>
<p>The popularity of the call to Islamization is the crossroads between hope and the desire for change, and those who have placed their hope in Islamization believe that the Islamists can deliver on their promises, as though God Himself has promised a positive outcome.</p>
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		<title>Owning Islam</title>
		<link>http://www.afilsforyourthoughts.com/blog/2008/02/11/owning-islam/</link>
		<comments>http://www.afilsforyourthoughts.com/blog/2008/02/11/owning-islam/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 10 Feb 2008 21:36:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Haider</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Islamist]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.afilsforyourthoughts.com/blog/2008/02/11/owning-islam/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I was once having a religious discussion with an Islamist, who I had a &#8220;few&#8221; disagreements with. I was extremely polite and presented all the reasoning for my arguments. I expressed my sincere intention to know what the basis for his beliefs were. But rather than give his reasoning and explain the justifications for his [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I was once having a religious discussion with an Islamist, who I had a &#8220;few&#8221; disagreements with. I was extremely polite and presented all the reasoning for my arguments. I expressed my sincere intention to know what the basis for his beliefs were. But rather than give his reasoning and explain the justifications for his beliefs, he simply replied:<span id="more-43"></span></p>
<p>&#8220;I have no time to waste with Shia.&#8221;</p>
<p>This came as a total shock to me. When I was an Islamist, I jumped at every opportunity to spread my ideas. I wanted people to know more about my beliefs, and the more they challenged my beliefs, the more effort I put in to explain them. Their religion or beliefs did not deter me from giving people my full attention. I would even write up a lengthy reply to people who seemed to have no concern for the truth and did not even consider changing their beliefs. Preachers usually struggle to prepare an audience, before their audience can be receptive to their message. They would speak against adhering to religious beliefs out of custom and tribal loyalty, so that they can set the stage for open-minded dialogue. And there I was, prepared to listen to what this Islamist had to say, only to be turned away and rejected for belonging to a sect that he despised.</p>
<p>Imagine if Prophet Muhammad (peace be on him and his family) was to reject people, and not &#8220;waste his time&#8221; with them, simply because they were athiest, or did not believe in his prophethood! The Prophet struggled to find people that would listen to him, but this Islamist refused the audience of a person who was more than willing to listen and consider what was being said.</p>
<p>I believe the main reason for this attitude was that the Islamist believed that Islam belonged to him, and he was free to choose who he will let into Islam or not. Since he has a grudge on Shia, he does not want them to embrace Islam, as he sees it. He does not believe that their well-being is worth his efforts.</p>
<p>Another crucial reason is that he was unable to provide me with a valid response to the points that I raised, or may have been personally offended when I politely pointed out his ignorance. Both reasons are a shortcoming on his part, and not mine. If he is ignorant, then he should gain knowledge, or admit that he does not know how to adequately respond to my arguments. This does not mean that I won the argument, but that he does not want to take part in the discussion, because he lacks the necessary knowledge. To be personally offended by what I said shows that he&#8217;s not prepared to engage in discussion at all, whether with me or anyone else with any view that he would disagree with. Communication requires a certain character. You can&#8217;t simply express opinions without expressing them in the right way or with the right attitude. A person who preaches Islam should exemplify Islamic morality.</p>
<p>What I find extremely irritating about many Islamists is that they assert the truth of their beliefs yet lack any commitment to the Prophet&#8217;s personality. They put a lot of emphasis on what the Prophet used to wear, but pay little attention to his attitude and the way he delivered his message.</p>
<p>We shouldn&#8217;t see Islam as property that we own or a club that we run. Islam is God&#8217;s message to mankind, and we should deliver that message to all those who seek it, regardless of our contentions with their beliefs or their lifestyle.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Islamism &#8211; A Topic to Discuss</title>
		<link>http://www.afilsforyourthoughts.com/blog/2008/02/08/islamism-a-topic-to-discuss/</link>
		<comments>http://www.afilsforyourthoughts.com/blog/2008/02/08/islamism-a-topic-to-discuss/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 08 Feb 2008 06:11:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Haider</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Islamist]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.afilsforyourthoughts.com/blog/2008/02/08/islamism-a-topic-to-discuss/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Islamists are gaining greater attention in the global arena, as well as the local stage, which is why I have decided to add a new category to this blog called Islamist. I take particular interest in Islamism because I used to believe in it, but have since changed my outlook.
When I first became religious, I [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Islamists are gaining greater attention in the global arena, as well as the local stage, which is why I have decided to add a new category to this blog called <strong>Islamist</strong>. I take particular interest in Islamism because I used to believe in it, but have since changed my outlook.<span id="more-41"></span></p>
<p>When I first became religious, I believed that Islam is a comprehensive religion that should deal with all aspects of life. And since politics is no small matter in our lives, I did not understand why many Muslim scholars did not talk about politics or aspire to implement Islam on a national or international level. I felt that Islam wasn&#8217;t being given the role it was meant to take if it is only confined to rituals and supplications. Islam is more than that, and limiting it to such issues was very confusing to me, which is why I was drawn to scholars and groups that aspired to base civil law on Sharia law. After all, God knows how we should run our affairs better than us. The Creator is more acquainted with his creation than his creation are acquainted with themselves and the world they live in. It simply made sense that Islam should govern political affairs, and not be governed by politics.</p>
<p>The three primary reasons why I have abandoned this outlook are:</p>
<p><strong>1) It&#8217;s too simplistic:</strong> The idea that Islamic law is the unadulterated word of God is a far-fetched claim. For one thing, Islamic scholars can hardly reach an agreement on any matter related to Islamic law. The very fact that there are differences of interpretation should get us to ask: Which interpretation is correct? How important is interpretation to the understanding of the law? In other words, if our interpretation of God&#8217;s law is incorrect, no matter how perfectly preserved the text is, we cannot claim that the message we are preaching is the word of God, or the law we are promoting is what God wants us to act on. If the interpretation is incorrect, the message loses its divinity.</p>
<p>It is interesting to note that during the caliphate of Imam Ali (peace be on him), an Islamist group known as the Khawarij (dissenters) opposed Imam Ali&#8217;s authority, and called for a government based on the teachings of the Holy Koran. Their slogan was: &#8220;<em>Dominion belongs to God</em>,&#8221; (<em>Ar. la hukma illa lillah</em>) which Imam Ali referred to as &#8220;<strong><em>a true statement with which they mean a falsehood</em></strong>&#8221; (<em>Ar. kalimatan yuradu biha batil</em>). This group believed that the Holy Koran was sufficient, and they began committing heinous crimes in the name of implementing the authority and teachings of the Holy Koran.<br />
<strong>2) The Islamist mindset: </strong>Many Islamists embraced Islamism because it offers them the certainty that they desire, without introducing any complications that they don&#8217;t want to consider. Their opinion is correct, and anyone who disagrees is either ignorant, or a coward or a sinner who does not wish to give up his sinful ways. Understanding human nature, or considering the consequences of their policies do not appeal to their mindset. They don&#8217;t want to doubt their beliefs. If their policies don&#8217;t work it&#8217;s because they were implemented incorrectly, or that people are not ready for their policies yet. I am willing to entertain doubt rather than block out information or accept a belief with conviction, but only out of ignorance. Just as I expect people of different faiths to re-evaluate their beliefs, and to assess them from an objective point of view, I am willing to re-evaluate my beliefs and to look at them objectively. Of course Islam is the greatest religion according to Islam, and Christianity is the greatest religion according to Christianity. But what do our experiences tell us? Many Islamists seek the comfort that clear-cut beliefs bring. They don&#8217;t want to have the responsibility of thinking and can rest assured that what they are taught and have come to accept are absolute truths. This is an assumption I&#8217;m not willing to make. My loyalty, ultimately, is to the truth, and it&#8217;s not in my character to look for shortcuts or to evade facts in order to maintain a sense of certainty.</p>
<p><strong>3) Shift in focus: </strong>When I was an Islamist, my primary concern was on promoting moral <em>conduct</em> and establishing Islamic teachings to their fullest extent. However, I have come to realise that morality is meaningless without the freedom to exercise choice. If people are <em>forced</em> to pray, <em>forced</em> to fast, <em>forced</em> to express the opinions and &#8220;convictions&#8221; an Islamic government approves of, <em>forced</em> to suppress their doubts, <em>forced</em> to live according to the dictates of Islam (or Islam, according to the interpretation of the Islamic government), then should people really be rewarded for their actions? If their conduct is not a reflection of their beliefs and character, then what is the point of the actions they perform? Rather than focusing on <em>how</em> people behave, my focus turned to <em>why</em> they behave the way they do and if they have adopted their behaviours out of personal choice. Free will is central to morality, and there can be no morality without it.</p>
<p>Islamists also tend to focus on our <em>duty</em> to follow Islamic edicts, without any concern for the purpose of these edicts and who they should serve. I now believe that the beneficiary of Islam is not God, but us. God doesn&#8217;t benefit from our worship, but we do. Therefore, our focus shouldn&#8217;t be how to serve Islam, but to discover how Islam can serve us. This is a massive shift in outlook, which many Islamists might consider blasphemy for even contemplating.</p>
<p>I find two narrations to be very interesting in this respect:</p>
<p>- When Imam Ali was asked to become a caliph, he refused to do so, asking: &#8220;<em><strong>How can I enforce a government, which the hearts are not willing to accept?</strong></em>&#8221; In other words, Imam Ali wasn&#8217;t prepared to establish an Islamic government if people didn&#8217;t want it. Today&#8217;s Islamists would say: &#8220;<em>You will have an Islamic government, whether you like it or not!</em>&#8221;</p>
<p>- There is a saying by one of the Imams that <em>you cannot assume that a person is religious if he was never put in a situation where he is able to sin</em> (paraphrasing). This is because being religious does not simply mean behaving in a certain way. It means holding convictions and acting according to them, regardless of the situation. And where one is offered the opportunity to commit a sin, he will not do so, out of his own choice, because it clashes with his values. To enforce behaviours or to prevent people from making choices does not promote morality, it obliterates it from the picture.</p>
<p>I believe that honesty and knowledge are the key components to understand Islam the way it should be understood. We cannot make claims that we support only by our ignorance. We should be prepared to re-evaluate what we know based on the new information that we receive. We must be willing to change our beliefs if they are not true, rather than insist that they are true out of fear of falling into doubt. Islamism is a broad topic that deserves further discussion and deliberation, which is why I have introduced this new category, in the hope of discussing this topic further.</p>
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