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Apostasy in Islam

Apostasy in Islam (Arabic: ردة, riddah or ارتداد, irtidād) is commonly defined as the abandonment of Islam by a Muslim, in thought, word, or through deed. It includes not only explicit renunciations of the Islamic faith by converting to another religion[1] or abandoning religion,[1][2][3] but also blasphemy or heresy by those who consider themselves Muslims,[4] through any action or utterance which implies unbelief, including those who deny a "fundamental tenet or creed" of Islam,[5] (such as suggesting jinn are not real).[Note 1][7][8] An apostate from Islam is known as a murtād (مرتدّ).[1][9][10][11][12]

While classical Islamic jurisprudence calls for the death penalty of those who refuse to repent of apostasy from Islam,[13] what statements or acts qualify as apostacy and whether and how they should be punished, are disputed among Islamic scholars,[14][3][15] while punishment is strongly opposed by Muslim, Non-Muslim and secular supporters of the universal human right to freedom of faith.[16][17][Note 2][19][20]

Until the late 19th century, the majority of Sunni and Shia jurists held the view that for adult men, apostasy from Islam was a crime as well as a sin, punishable by the death penalty,[3][21] but with a number of options for leniency (such as a waiting period to allow time for repentance;[3][22][23][24] enforcement only in cases involving politics,)[25][26][27] depending on the era, the legal standards and the school of law. In the late 19th century, the use of legal criminal penalties for apostasy fell into disuse, although civil penalties were still applied.[3]

As of 2021, there were ten Muslim-majority countries where apostasy from Islam was punishable by death,[28] but legal executions are rare.[Note 3] Most punishment is extra-judicial/vigilante,[30][31] and most executions are perpetrated by jihadist and "takfiri" insurgents (al-Qaeda, ISIL/ISIS/IS/Daesh, the GIA, and the Taliban).[13][32][33][34] Another thirteen countries have penal or civil penalties for apostates[31]  – such as imprisonment, the annulment of their marriages, the loss of their rights of inheritance and the loss of custody of their children.[31]

In the contemporary Muslim world, public support for capital punishment varies from 78% in Afghanistan to less than 1% in Kazakhstan;[Note 4] among Islamic jurists, the majority of them continue to regard apostasy as a crime which should be punishable by death.[22] Those who disagree[14][3][36] argue that its punishment should be less than death, should occur in the afterlife,[16][37][38][39] (human punishment being inconsistent with Quranic injunctions against compulsion in belief),[40][41] or should apply only in cases of public disobedience and disorder (fitna).[Note 5]

Etymology and terminology

Apostasy is called irtidād (which means relapse or regress) or ridda in Islamic literature.[43] An apostate is called murtadd, which means 'one who turns back' from Islam.[44] (Another source – Oxford Islamic Studies Online – defines murtadd as "not just any kāfir (non-believer)", but "a particularly heinous type".)[45] Ridda can also refer to secession in a political context.[46] A person born to a Muslim father who later rejects Islam is called a murtadd fitri, and a person who converted to Islam and later rejects the religion is called a murtadd milli.[47][48][49] Takfir (takfeer) (Arabic: تكفير takfīr) is the act of one Muslim excommunicating another, declaring them a kafir, an apostate. The act which precipitates takfir is termed mukaffir.

Scriptural references

Quran

The Quran mentions apostasy in many of its verses, expressing God's anger, impending punishment, and refusal to accept repentance towards those who have left the faith. Traditionally, the verses that are thought to "appear to justify coercion and severe punishment" for apostates (according to Dale F. Eickelman),[50] including the traditional capital punishment, are as follows:[51]

But those who reject Faith after they accepted it, and then go on adding to their defiance of Faith, – never will their repentance be accepted; for they are those who have (of set purpose) gone astray.

— Quran 3:90

Make ye no excuses: ye have rejected Faith after ye had accepted it. If We pardon some of you, We will punish others amongst you, for that they are in sin.

— Quran 9:66

He who disbelieves in Allah after his having believed, not he who is compelled while his heart is at rest on account of faith, but he who opens (his) breast to disbelief – on these is the wrath of Allah, and they shall have a grievous chastisement.

— Quran 16:106

Say, ... hindering ˹others˺ from the Path of Allah, rejecting Him, and expelling the worshippers from the Sacred Mosque is ˹a˺ greater ˹sin˺ in the sight of Allah.

— Quran 2:217

O believers! Whoever among you abandons their faith, Allah will replace them with others who love Him and are loved by Him. They will be humble with the believers but firm towards the disbelievers ...

— 5:54

Indeed, those who believed then disbelieved, then believed and again disbelieved – ˹only˺ increasing in disbelief – Allah will neither forgive them nor guide them to the ˹Right˺ Way.

— 4:137

... whoever trades belief for disbelief has truly strayed from the Right Way.

— 2:108

You are not ˹there˺ to compel them ˹to believe˺, But whoever turns away, persisting in disbelief, then Allah will inflict upon them the major punishment.

— 88:22–24

But if they repent, perform prayer, and pay alms-tax, then they are your brothers in faith. This is how We make the revelations clear for people of knowledge. But if they break their oaths after making a pledge and attack your faith, then fight the champions of disbelief – who never honour their oaths – so perhaps they will desist.

— 9:11–12

They long that ye should disbelieve even as they disbelieve, that ye may be upon a level (with them). So choose not friends from them till they forsake their homes in the way of Allah; if they turn back (to enmity) then take them and kill them wherever ye find them, and choose no friend nor helper from among them.

— Quran 4:89

Other scholars have pointed out that there is no mention in the Quran of the need to force an apostate to return to Islam, nor any specific corporal punishment to apply to apostates in this world[52][53][54][Note 6] – let alone commands to kill apostates – either explicitly or implicitly;[56][57][58][59]

In fact, other verses emphasize mercy and lack of compulsion in belief:[60]

There is no compulsion in religion; truly the right way has become clearly distinct from error; therefore, whoever disbelieves in the Shaitan and believes in Allah he indeed has laid hold on the firmest handle, which shall not break off, and Allah is Hearing, Knowing.

— Quran 2:256

Say, "The truth is from your Lord": Let him who will believe, and let him who will, reject (it): for the wrong-doers We have prepared a Fire whose (smoke and flames), like the walls and roof of a tent, will hem them in: if they implore relief they will be granted water like melted brass, that will scald their faces, how dreadful the drink! How uncomfortable a couch to recline on!

— Quran 18:29

And if your Lord had pleased, surely all those who are in the earth would have believed, all of them; will you then force men till they become believers?

— Quran 10:99

Therefore do remind, for you are only a reminder. You are not a watcher over them.

— Quran 88:21–22

He said: "O my people! See ye if (it be that) I have a Clear Sign from my Lord, and that He hath sent Mercy unto me from His own presence, but that the Mercy hath been obscured from your sight? Shall we compel you to accept it when ye are averse to it?

— Quran 11:28

Indeed, those who believed then disbelieved, then believed and again disbelieved – ˹only˺ increasing in disbelief – Allah will neither forgive them nor guide them to the ˹Right˺ Way.

— Quran 4:137

Hadith

The classical shariah punishment for apostasy comes from Sahih ("authentic") Hadith rather than the Quran.[61][62] Writing in the Encyclopedia of Islam, Heffening holds that contrary to the Qur'an, "in traditions [i.e. hadith], there is little echo of these punishments in the next world... and instead, we have in many traditions a new element, the death penalty.[44]

Allah's Apostle said, "The blood of a Muslim who confesses that none has the right to be worshipped but Allah and that I am His Apostle, cannot be shed except in three cases: In Qisas for murder, a married person who commits illegal sexual intercourse and the one who reverts from Islam (apostate) and leaves the Muslims."

Ali burnt some people and this news reached Ibn 'Abbas, who said, "Had I been in his place I would not have burnt them, as the Prophet said, 'Don't punish (anybody) with Allah's Punishment.' No doubt, I would have killed them, for the Prophet said, 'If somebody (a Muslim) discards his religion, kill him.'"

A man embraced Islam and then reverted back to Judaism. Mu'adh bin Jabal came and saw the man with Abu Musa. Mu'adh asked, "What is wrong with this (man)?" Abu Musa replied, "He embraced Islam and then reverted back to Judaism." Mu'adh said, "I will not sit down unless you kill him (as it is) the verdict of Allah and His Apostle."

Other hadith give differing statements about the fate of apostates;[38][63] that they were spared execution by repenting, by dying of natural causes or by leaving their community (the last case sometimes cited as an example of open apostasy that was left unpunished).[64]

A man from among the Ansar accepted Islam, then he apostatized and went back to Shirk. Then he regretted that, and sent word to his people (saying): 'Ask the Messenger of Allah [SAW], is there any repentance for me?' His people came to the Messenger of Allah [SAW] and said: 'So and so regrets (what he did), and he has told us to ask you if there is any repentance for him?' Then the Verses: 'How shall Allah guide a people who disbelieved after their Belief up to His saying: Verily, Allah is Oft-Forgiving, Most Merciful' was revealed. So he sent word to him, and he accepted Islam.

There was a Christian who became Muslim and read the Baqarah and the Al Imran, and he used to write for the Prophet. He then went over to Christianity again, and he used to say, Muhammad does not know anything except what I wrote for him. Then Allah caused him to die and they buried him.

A bedouin gave the Pledge of allegiance to Allah's Apostle for Islam and the bedouin got a fever where upon he said to the Prophet "Cancel my Pledge." But the Prophet refused. He came to him (again) saying, "Cancel my Pledge.' But the Prophet refused. Then (the bedouin) left (Medina). Allah's Apostle said: "Medina is like a pair of bellows (furnace): It expels its impurities and brightens and clears its good."

The Muwatta of Imam Malik offers a case were Rashidun (rightly guide) Caliph Umar admonishes a Muslim leader for not giving an apostate the opportunity to repent before being executed:

Malik related to me from Abd ar-Rahman ibn Muhammad ibn Abdullah ibn Abd al-Qari that his father said, "A man came to Umar ibn al-Khattab from Abu Musa al-Ashari. Umar asked after various people, and he informed him. Then Umar inquired, 'Do you have any recent news?' He said, 'Yes. A man has become a kafir after his Islam.' Umar asked, 'What have you done with him?' He said, 'We let him approach and struck off his head.' Umar said, 'Didn't you imprison him for three days and feed him a loaf of bread every day and call on him to tawba that he might turn in tawba and return to the command of Allah?' Then Umar said, 'O Allah! I was not present and I did not order it and I am not pleased since it has come to me!'

— Al-Muwatta,

The argument has been made (by the Fiqh Council of North America, among others) that the hadiths above – traditionally cited as proof that apostates from Islam should be punished by death – have been misunderstood. In fact (the council argues), the victims were executed for changing their allegiances to the armies fighting the Muslims (i.e. for treason), not for their personal beliefs.[66] As evidence, they point to two hadith, each from a different "authentic" (sahih) Sunni hadith collection[Note 7] where Muhammad calls for the death of apostates or traitors. The wording of the hadith are almost identical, but in one, the hadith ends with the phrase "one who reverts from Islam and leaves the Muslims", and in the other it ends with "one who goes forth to fight Allah and His Apostle", (in other words, the council argues the hadith were likely reports of the same incident but had different wording because "reverting from Islam" was another way of saying "fighting Allah and His Apostle"):

Allah's Apostle said, "The blood of a Muslim who confesses that none has the right to be worshipped but Allah and that I am His Apostle, cannot be shed except in three cases: In Qisas for murder, a married person who commits illegal sexual intercourse and the one who reverts from Islam (apostate) and leaves the Muslims."

Allah's Apostle said: "The blood of a Muslim man who testifies that there is no god but Allah and that Muhammad is Allah's Apostle should not lawfully be shed except only for one of three reasons: a man who committed fornication after marriage, in which case he should be stoned; one who goes forth to fight Allah and His Apostle, in which case he should be killed or crucified or exiled from the land; or one who commits murder for which he is killed."

What constitutes apostasy in Islam?

Scholars of Islam differ as to what constitutes apostasy in that religion and under what circumstances an apostate is subject to the death penalty.

Conditions of apostasy in classical Islam

Al-Shafi'i listed three necessary conditions to pass capital punishment on a Muslim for apostasy in his Kitab al-Umm. (In the words of Frank Griffel) these are:

  • "first, the apostate had to once have had faith (which, according to Al-Shafi'i's definition, means publicly professing all tenets of Islam);
  • secondly, there had to follow unbelief (meaning the public declaration of a breaking-away from Islam), (having done these two the Muslim is now an unbeliever but not yet an apostate and thus not eligible for punishment);[Note 8]
  • "third, there had to be the omission or failure to repent after the apostate was asked to do so."[68][67]

Three centuries later, Al-Ghazali wrote that one group, known as "secret apostates" or "permanent unbelievers" (aka zandaqa), should not be given a chance to repent, eliminating Al-Shafi'i's third condition for them although his view was not accepted by his Shafi'i madhhab.[69][67]

Characteristics

Describing what qualifies as apostasy Christine Schirrmacher writes

there is widespread consensus that apostasy undoubtedly exists where the truth of the Koran is denied, where blasphemy is committed against God, Islam, or Muhammad, and where breaking away from the Islamic faith in word or deed occurs. The lasting, willful non-observance of the five pillars of Islam, in particular the duty to pray, clearly count as apostasy for most theologians. Additional distinguishing features are a change of religion, confessing atheism, nullifying the Sharia as well as judging what is allowed to be forbidden and judging what is forbidden to be allowed. Fighting against Muslims and Islam (Arabic: muḥāraba) also counts as unbelief or apostasy;[70]

Kamran Hashemi classifies apostasy or unbelief in Islam into three different "phenomena":[71]

Issues in defining heresy

While identifying someone who publicly converted to another religion as an apostate was straightforward, determining whether a diversion from orthodox doctrine qualified as heresy (or blasphemy) or something permitted by God could be less so. Traditionally, Islamic jurists did not formulate general rules for establishing unbelief, instead, compiled sometimes lengthy lists of statements and actions which in their view implied apostasy or were incompatible with Islamic "theological consensus".[3] Al-Ghazali,[79] for example, devoting "chapters to dealing with takfir and the reasons for which one can be accused of unbelief" in his work on The Criterion of Distinction between Islam and Clandestine Unbelief.[80][81]

Some heretical or blasphemous acts or beliefs listed in classical manuals of jurisprudence and other scholarly works (i.e. works written by Islamic scholars) that allegedly demonstrate apostacy include:

  • to deny the obligatory character of something considered obligatory by Ijma (consensus of Muslims);[82][83]
  • revile, question, wonder, doubt, mock or deny the existence of God or Prophet of Islam or that the Prophet was sent by God;[82][83]
  • belief that things in themselves or by their nature have a cause independent of the will of God;[82][83]
  • to assert the createdness of the Quran, to translate the Quran;[84]
  • According to some to ridicule Islamic scholars or address them in a derisive manner, to reject the validity of Shariah courts;[84]
  • Some also say to pay respect to non-Muslims, to celebrate Nowruz the Iranian New Year;[84]
  • Though disputed to express uncertainty such as "'I do not know why God mentioned this or that in the Quran'...";[85]
  • Some also say include for the wife of an Islamic scholar to curse her husband;[85]
  • to make a declaration of Prophethood (i.e. for someone to declare that they are a prophet. In early Islamic history, after Muhammad's death, this act was automatically deemed to be proof of apostasy – because Islam teaches Muhammad was the last prophet, there could be no more).[86] (This view is alleged to be the basis of the rejection of the Ahmadiyya as apostates from Islam.)[86][87][88]

While there are numerous requirements for a Muslim to avoid being an apostate, it is also an act of apostasy (in Shafi'i and other fiqh) for a Muslim to accuse or describe another devout Muslim of being an unbeliever,[89] based on the hadith where Muhammad is reported to have said: "If a man says to his brother, 'You are an infidel,' then one of them is right."[90][91]

Historian Bernard Lewis writes that in "religious polemic" of early Islamic times, it was common for one scholar to accuse another of apostasy, but attempts to bring an alleged apostate to justice (have them executed) were very rare.[92]

The tension between desire to cleanse Islam of heresy and fear of inaccurate takfir is suggested in the writings of some of the leading Islamic scholars. Al-Ghazali "is often credited with having persuaded theologians", in his Fayal al-tafriqa, "that takfir is not a fruitful path and that utmost caution is to taken in applying it", but in other writing, he made sure to condemn as beyond the pale of Islam "philosophers and Ismaili esotericists". Ibn Hazm and Ibn Taymiyyah also "warned against unbridled takfir" while takfiring "specific categories" of theological opponents as "unbelievers".[93] Gilles Kepel writes that "used wrongly or unrestrainedly, this sanction would quickly lead to discord and sedition in the ranks of the faithful. Muslims might resort to mutually excommunicating one another and thus propel the Ummah to complete disaster."[94]

The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), for example, takfired all those who opposed its policy of enslaving members of the Yazidi religion. According to one source, Jamileh Kadivar, the majority of the "27,947 terrorist deaths" ISIL has been responsible for (as of 2020) have been Muslims it regards "as kafir",[Note 9] as ISIL gives fighting alleged apostates a higher priority than fighting self-professed non-Muslims—Jews, Christians, Hindus, etc.[96] An open letter to ISIL by 126 Islamic scholars includes as one of its points of opposition to ISIL: "It is forbidden in Islam to declare people non-Muslim unless he (or she) openly declares disbelief".[97]

There is general agreement among Muslims that the takfir and mass killings of alleged apostates perpetrated not only by ISIL but also by the Armed Islamic Group of Algeria and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's jihadis[78] were wrong, but there is less unanimity in other cases, such as what to do in a situation where self-professed Muslim(s) – post-modernist academic Nasr Abu Zayd or the Ahmadiyya movement – disagree with their accusers on an important doctrinal point. (Ahmadi quote a Muslim journalist, Abdul-Majeed Salik, claiming that, "all great and eminent Muslims in the history of Islam as well as all the sects in the Muslim world are considered to be disbelievers, apostates, and outside the pale of Islam according to one or the other group of religious leaders".)[Note 10] In the case of the Ahmadiyya – who are accused by mainstream Sunni and Shia of denying the basic tenet of the Finality of Prophethood (Ahmadis state they believe Mirza Ghulam Ahmad is a mahdi and a messiah)[99] – the Islamic Republic of Pakistan has declared in Ordinance XX of the Second Amendment to its Constitution, that Ahmadis are non-Muslims and deprived them of religious rights. Several large riots (1953 Lahore riots, 1974 Anti-Ahmadiyya riots) and a bombing (2010 Ahmadiyya mosques massacre) have killed hundreds of Ahmadis in that country. Whether this is unjust takfir or applying sharia to collective apostasy is disputed.[100]

Overlap with blasphemy

The three types (conversion, blasphemy and heresy) of apostasy may overlap – for example some "heretics" were alleged not to be actual self-professed Muslims, but (secret) members of another religion, seeking to destroy Islam from within. (Abdullah ibn Mayun al-Qaddah, for example, "fathered the whole complex development of the Ismaili religion and organisation up to Fatimid times," was accused by his different detractors of being (variously) "a Jew, a Bardesanian and most commonly as an Iranian dualist")[101] In Islamic literature, the term "blasphemy" sometimes also overlaps with kufr ("unbelief"), fisq (depravity), isa'ah (insult), and ridda (apostasy).[102][103] Because blasphemy in Islam included rejection of fundamental doctrines,[104] blasphemy has historically been seen as an evidence of rejection of Islam, that is, the religious crime of apostasy. Some jurists believe that blasphemy automatically implies a Muslim has left the fold of Islam.[105] A Muslim may find himself accused of being a blasphemer, and thus an apostate on the basis of one action or utterance.[106][107]

Collective apostasy

In collective apostasy, a self-proclaimed Islamic group/sect are declared to be heretics/apostates. Groups treated as collective apostates include zindiq, sometimes Sufis, and more recently Ahmadis and Bahais.[108] As described above, the difference between legitimate Muslim sects and illegitimate apostate groups can be subtle and Muslims have not agreed on where the line dividing them lies. According to Gianluca Parolin, "collective apostasy has always been declared on a case-by-case basis".[108]

Fetri and national apostates

Among Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and others in Ja'fari fiqh, a distinction is made between "fetri" or "innate" apostates who grew up Muslims and remained Muslim after puberty until converting to another religion, and "national apostates" – essentially people who grew up non-Muslim and converted to Islam. "National apostates" are given a chance to repent, but "innate apostates are not.[109]

Children raised in apostasy

Orthodox apostasy fiqh can be problematic for someone who was raised by a non-Muslim (or non-Muslims) but has an absentee Muslim parent, or was raised by an apostate (or apostates) from Islam. A woman born to a Muslim parent is considered an apostate if she marries a non-Muslim,[110][111] even if her Muslim parent did not raise her and she has always practiced another religion; and whether or not they know anything about Islam, by simply practicing the (new) religion of their parent(s) they become apostates (according to the committee of fatwa scholars at Islamweb.net).[112]

Contemporary issues of defining apostasy

In the 19th, 20th and 21 century issues affecting shariʿah on apostasy include modern norms of freedom of religion,[3] the status of members of Baháʼí (considered unbeliever/apostates in Iran) and Ahmadi faiths (considered appostates from Islam in Pakistan and elsewhere),[3] those who "refuse to judge or be judged according to the shariʿah,"[3] and more recently the status of Muslims authorities and governments that do not implement classical shariʿah law in its completeness.

Punishment

 
Execution of a Moroccan Jewess (Sol Hachuel) a painting by Alfred Dehodencq

There are differences of opinion among Islamic scholars about whether, when and especially how apostasy in Islam should be punished.[14][3][44]

From 11th century onwards, apostasy of Muslims from Islam was forbidden by Islamic law, earlier apostasy law was only applicable if a certain number of witnesses testify which for the most past was impossible.[113][114][115] Apostasy was punishable by death and also by civil liabilities such as seizure of property, children, annulment of marriage, loss of inheritance rights.[3] (A subsidiary law, also applied throughout the history of Islam, forbade non-Muslims from proselytizing Muslims to leave Islam and join another religion,[116][117][113][114][115] because it encouraged Muslims to commit a crime). Starting in the 19th century the legal code of many Muslim states no longer included apostasy as a capital crime, and to compensate some Islamic scholars called for vigilante justice of hisbah to execute the offenders (see Apostasy in Islam#Colonial era and after).

In contemporary times the majority of Islamic jurists still regard apostasy as a crime deserving the death penalty, (according to Abdul Rashied Omar),[22] although "a growing body of Islamic jurists" oppose this,[Note 11] (according to Javaid Rehman)[14][3][36] as inconsistent with "freedom of religion" as expressed in the Quranic injunctions (Quran 88:21-88:22)[40] and Quran 2:256 ("there is no compulsion in religion");[29] and a relic of the early Islamic community when apostasy was desertion or treason.[41]

Still others support a "centrist or moderate position" of executing only those whose apostasy is "unambiguously provable" such as if two just Muslim eyewitnesses testify; and/or reserving the death penalty for those who make their apostacy public. According to Christine Schirrmacher, "a majority of theologians" embrace this stance.[118]

Who qualifies for judgement for the crime of apostasy

As mentioned above, there are numerous doctrinal fine points outlined in fiqh manuals whose violation should render the violator an apostate, but there are also hurdles and exacting requirements that spare (self-proclaimed) Muslims conviction for apostasy in classical fiqh.

One motive for caution is that it is an act of apostasy (in Shafi'i and other fiqh) for a Muslim to accuse or describe another innocent Muslim of being an unbeliever,[89] based on the hadith where Muhammad is reported to have said: "If a man says to his brother, 'You are an infidel,' then one of them is right."[119][120]

According to sharia, to be found guilty the accused must at the time of apostasizing be exercising free will, an adult, and of sound mind,[3] and have refused to repent when given a time period to do so (not all schools include this last requirement). The free will requirement excludes from judgement those who embraced Islam under conditions of duress and then went back to their old religion, or Muslims who converted to another religion involuntarily, either force or as concealment (Taqiyya or Kitman) out of fear of persecution or during war.[121][122]

Some of these requirements have served as "loopholes" to exonerate apostates (apostasy charges against Abdul Rahman, were dropped on the grounds he was "mentally unfit").[123]

Death penalty

In classical Islamic jurisprudence

Traditional Sunnī and Shīʿa Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh) and their respective schools (maḏāhib) agree on some issues—that male apostates should be executed, and that most but not all perpetrators should not be given a chance to repent; among the excluded are those who practice magic (subhar), treacherous heretics (zanādiqa), and "recidivists".[3] They disagree on issues such as whether women can be executed,[124][125][126] whether apostasy is a violation of "the rights of God",[3][127] whether apostates who were born Muslims may be spared if they repent,[3] whether conviction requires the accused be a practicing Muslim,[3] or whether it is enough to simply intend to commit apostasy rather than actually doing it.[3]

Vigilante application

In contemporary situations where apostates, (or alleged apostates), have ended up being killed, it is usually not be through the formal criminal justice system, especially when "a country's law does not punish apostasy." It is not uncommon in some countries for "vigilante" Muslims to kill or attempt to kill apostates or alleged apostates (or force them to flee the country).[7] In at least one case, the high profile execution of Mahmud Muhammad Taha, the victim was legally executed and the government made clear he was being executed for apostasy, but not the technical "legal basis" for his killing was another crime or crimes,[7] namely "heresy, opposing the application of Islamic law, disturbing public security, provoking opposition against the government, and re-establishing a banned political party."[131] When post-modernist professor Nasr Abu Zayd was found to be an apostate by an Egyptian court, it meant only an involuntary divorce from his wife (who did not want to divorce), but it put the proverbial target on his back and he fled to Europe.[7][8]

Civil liabilities

In Islam, apostasy has traditionally had both criminal and civil penalties. In the late 19th century, when the use of criminal penalties for apostasy fell into disuse, civil penalties were still applied.[3] The punishment for the criminal penalties such as murder includes death or prison, while [3][132] In all madhhabs of Islam, the civil penalties include:

(a) the property of the apostate is seized and distributed to his or her Muslim relatives;
(b) his or her marriage annulled (faskh) (as in the case of Nasr Abu Zayd);
(1) if they were not married at the time of apostasy they could not get married[133]
(c) any children removed and considered ward of the Islamic state.[3]
(d) In case the entire family has left Islam, or there are no surviving Muslim relatives recognized by Sharia, the apostate's inheritance rights are lost and property is liquidated by the Islamic state (part of fay, الْفيء).
(e) In case the apostate is not executed – such as in case of women apostates in Hanafi school – the person also loses all inheritance rights.[38][39][not specific enough to verify] Hanafi Sunni school of jurisprudence allows waiting till execution, before children and property are seized; other schools do not consider this wait as mandatory but mandates time for repentance.[3]
Social liabilities

The conversion of a Muslim to another faith is often considered a "disgrace" and "scandal" as well as a sin,[134] so in addition to penal and civil penalties, loss of employment,[134] ostracism and proclamations by family members that they are "dead", is not at all "unusual".[135] For those who wish to remain in the Muslim community but who are considered unbelievers by other Muslims, there are also "serious forms of ostracism". These include the refusal of other Muslims to pray together with or behind a person accused of kufr, the denial of the prayer for the dead and burial in a Muslim cemetery, boycott of whatever books they have written, etc.[136]

Supporters and opponents of death penalty

Support among contemporary Preachers and scholars
 
Legal opinion on apostasy by the Fatwa committee at Al-Azhar University in Cairo, concerning the case of a man who converted to Christianity: "Since he left Islam, he will be invited to express his regret. If he does not regret, he will be killed according to rights and obligations of the Islamic law." The Fatwa also mentions that the same applies to his children if they entered Islam and left it after they reach maturity.[137]

"The vast majority of Muslim scholars both past as well as present" consider apostasy "a crime deserving the death penalty", according to Abdul Rashided Omar, writing circa 2007.[22] Some notable contemporary proponents include:

  • Abul A'la Maududi (1903–1979), who "by the time of his death had become the most widely read Muslim author of our time", according to one source.
  • Mohammed al-Ghazali (1917–1996), considered an Islamic "moderate"[138] and "preeminent" faculty member of Egypt's preeminent Islamic institution – Al Azhar University − as well as a valuable ally of the Egyptian government in its struggle against the "growing tide of Islamic fundamentalism",[139] was "widely credited" with contributing to the 20th century Islamic revival in the largest Arabic country, Egypt.[140] (Al-Ghazali was on record as declaring all those who opposed the implementation of sharia law to be apostates who should ideally be punished by the state, but "when the state fails to punish apostates, somebody else has to do it".[141][140]
  • Yusuf al-Qaradawi (b. 1926), another "moderate" Islamist,[142] chairman of the International Union of Muslim Scholars,[143] who as of 2009 was "considered one of the most influential" Islamic scholars living.[144][145][146]
  • Zakir Naik, Indian Islamic televangelist and preacher,[147] whose Peace TV channel, reaches a reported 100 million viewers,[148][149] and whose debates and talks are widely distributed,[150][151][149] supports the death penalty only for those apostates who "propagate the non-Islamic faith and speak against Islam" as he considers it treason.[152][150]
  • Muhammad Saalih Al-Munajjid, a Syrian Islamic scholar, considered a respected scholar in the Salafi movement (according to Al Jazeera);[153] and founder of the fatwa website IslamQA,[154] one of the most popular Islamic websites, and (as of November 2015 and according to Alexa.com) the world's most popular website on the topic of Islam generally (apart from the website of an Islamic bank).[155][156][157]
Opposing the death penalty for apostasy

Rationale, arguments, criticism for and against killing apostates

The question of whether apostates should be killed, has been "a matter for contentious dispute throughout Islamic history".[164]

For the death penalty

Throughout Islamic history the Muslim community, scholars, and schools of fiqh have agreed that scripture prescribes this penalty; scripture must take precedence over reason or modern norms of human rights, as Islam is the one true religion; "no compulsion in religion" (Q.2:256) does not apply to this punishment; apostasy is "spiritual and cultural" treason; it hardly ever happens and so is not worth talking about.

  • Abul A'la Maududi said that among early Muslims, among the schools of fiqh both Sunni and Shia, among scholars of shari'ah "of every century ... available on record", there is unanimous agreement that the punishment for apostate is death, and that "no room whatever remains to suggest" that this penalty has not "been continuously and uninterruptedly operative" through Islamic history; evidence from early texts that Muhammad called for apostates to be killed, and that companions of the Prophet and early caliphs ordered beheadings and crucifixions of apostates and has never been declared invalid over the course of the history of Islamic theology (Christine Schirrmacher).[134]
    • "Many hadiths", not just "one or two", call for the killing of apostates (Yusuf al-Qaradawi);[165][166]
    • Verse Q.2:217 – "hindering ˹others˺ from the Path of Allah, rejecting Him, and expelling the worshippers from the Sacred Mosque is ˹a˺ greater ˹sin˺ in the sight of Allah" – indicates the punishment for apostasy from Islam is death (Mohammad Iqbal Siddiqi),[167] Quranic verses in general "appear to justify coercion and severe punishment" for apostates (Dale F. Eickelman).[50]
    • If this doctrine is called into question, what's next? – ritual prayer (salat)? fasting (sawm)? even Muhammad's mission? (Abul A'la Maududi).[168]
  • It "does not merit discussion" because [the advocates maintain] apostasy from Islam is so rare, (Ali Kettani),[169] (Mahmud Brelvi);[170][171] before the modern era, there was virtually no apostasy from Islam (Syed Barakat Ahmad);[172]
    • the punishment is "rarely invoked" because there are numerous qualifications or ways for the apostate to avoid death (to be found guilty they must openly reject Islam, have made their decision without coercion, be aware of the nature of their statements, be an adult, be completely sane, refused to repent, etc.) (Religious Tolerance website).[173]
    • or because the verse only forbids compulsion to believe "things that are wrong", when it comes to accepting the truth, compulsion is allowed (Peters and Vries explaining a traditional view);[Note 12]
    • Others maintain that verse Q.2:256 has been "abrogated", i.e. according to classical Quranic scholars it has been overruled/cancelled by verses of Quran revealed later, (IOW, compulsion was not allow in the very earliest days of Islam but this was changed by divine revelation a few years later) (Peters and Vries explaining traditional view).[175]
    • Because "the social order of every Moslem society is Islam", apostasy constitutes "an offense" against that social order, "that may lead in the end to the destruction of this order" (Muhammad Muhiy al-Din al-Masiri);[176]
    • Apostasy is usually "a psychological pretext for rebellion against worship, traditions and laws and even against the foundations of the state", and so "is often synonymous with the crime of high treason ... " (Muhammad al-Ghazali);[177]
Against death penalty

Arguments against the death penalty include: that some scholars throughout Islamic history have opposed that punishment for apostasy; that it constitutes a form of compulsion in faith, which the Quran explicitly forbids in Q.2.256 and other verses, and that these override any other scriptural arguments; and especially that the death penalty in hadith and applied by Muhammad was for treasonous/seditious behavior, not for a change in personal belief.

  • How can it be claimed that there was a consensus among scholars or community (ijma) from the beginning of Islam in favor of capital punishment when a number of companions of Muhammad and early Islamic scholars (Ibn al-Humam, al-Marghinani, Ibn Abbas, Sarakhsi, Ibrahim al-Nakh'i), opposed the execution of murtadd? (Mirza Tahir Ahmad);[178]
    • in addition there have been a number of prominent ulema (though a minority) over the centuries who argued against the death penalty for apostasy in some way, such as ...
      • The Maliki jurist Abu al-Walid al-Baji (d. 474 AH) held that apostasy was liable only to a discretionary punishment (known as ta'zir) and so might not require execution;[163]
      • The Hanafi jurist Al-Sarakhsi (d. 483 AH/ 1090 CE)[179][180] and Imam Ibnul Humam (d. 681 AH/ 1388 CE)[181] and Abd al-Rahman al-Awza'i (707–774 CE),[182] all distinguished between non-seditious religious apostasy on the one hand and treason on the other, with execution reserved for treason;
      • Ibrahim al-Nakhaʿī (50 AH/670 – 95/96 AH/717 CE) and Sufyan al-Thawri (97 AH/716 CE – 161 AH/778 CE) as well as the Hanafi jurist Sarakhsi (d. 1090), believed that an apostate should be asked to repent indefinitely (which would be incompatible with being sentenced to death).[163][183]
  • There are problems with the scriptural basis for sharia commanding the execution of apostates
    • Quran (see Quran above)
      • Compulsion in faith is "explicitly" forbidden by the Quran ('Abd al-Muta'ali al-Sa'idi);[184] Quranic statements on freedom of religion – 'There is no compulsion in religion. The right path has been distinguished from error' (Q.2:256) (and also 'Whoever wants, let him believe, and whoever wants, let him disbelieve,' (Q.18:29) – are "absolute and universal" statement(s) (Jonathan A.C. Brown),[57] (Grand Mufti Ali Gomaa),[158] "general, overriding principle(s)" (Khaled Abou El Fadl)[185] of Islam, and not abrogated by hadith or the Sword Verse (Q.9:5); and there can be little doubt capital punishment for apostasy is incompatible with this principle – after all, if someone has the threat of death hanging over their head in a matter of faith, it cannot be said that there is "no compulsion or coercion" in their belief (Tariq Ramadan).[186]
      • Neither verse Q.2:217, (Mirza Tahir Ahmad),[187] or any other Quranic verse says anything to indicate an apostate should be punished in the temporal world, aka dunyā (S. A. Rahman),[188] (W. Heffening),[189] (Wael Hallaq),[190][55] (Grand Ayatollah Hussein-Ali Montazeri);[161] the verses only indicate that dangerous, aggressive apostates should be killed, (Mahmud Shaltut),[163] (e.g. "If they do not withdraw from you, and offer you peace, and restrain their hands, take them and kill them wherever ye come upon them" Q.4:90), (Peters and Vries describing argument of Islamic Modernists);[191][192]
      • Another verses condemning apostasy – Q.4:137, "Those who believe then disbelieve, then believe again, then disbelieve and then increase in their disbelief – God will never forgive them nor guide them to the path" – makes no sense if apostasy is punished by death, because killing apostates "would not permit repeated conversion from and to Islam" (Louay M. Safi);[60] (Sisters in Islam);[193]
    • Hadith and Sunnah (see hadith above)
      • "According to most established juristic schools, a hadith can limit the application of a general Qur'anic statement, but can never negate it", so the hadith calling for execution cannot abrogate the "There is no compulsion in religion" verse (Q.2:256) (Louay M. Safi);[Note 13]
      • The Prophet Muhammad did not call for the deaths of contemporaries who left Islam (Mohamed Ghilan)[194] – for example, apostates like "Hishâm and 'Ayyash", or converts to Christianity, such as "Ubaydallah ibn Jahsh" – and since what The Prophet did is by definition part of the Sunnah of Islam, this indicates "that one who changes her/his religion should not be killed" (Tariq Ramadan);[186]
      • another reason not to use the hadith(s) stating “whoever changes his religion kill him” as the basis for law is that it is not among the class of hadith eligible to be used as the basis for "legal rulings binding upon all Muslims for all times" (Muhammad al-Shawkani (1759–1834 CE));[194] as their authenticity is not certain (Wael Hallaq);[190] the hadith are in a category relying "on only one authority (khadar al-ahad) and were not widely known amongst the Companions of the Prophet," and so ought not abrogate Quranic verses of tolerance (Peters and Vries describing argument of Islamic Modernists);[195]
      • The hadith(s) "calling for apostates to be killed are actually referring to "what can be considered in modern terms political treason", not change in personal belief (Mohamed Ghilan),[194] (Adil Salahi);[Note 14] punishment of collective conspiracy and treason against the government (Enayatullah Subhani);[197] (Mahmud Shaltut);[Note 15] and in fact, translating the Islamic term ridda as simply "apostasy" – a standard practice – is really an error, as ridda should be defined as "the public act of political secession from the Muslim community" (Jonathan Brown);[198]
  • The punishment or lack for apostasy should reflect the circumstances of the Muslim community which is very different now then when the death penalty was established;
    • Unlike some other sharia laws, those on how to deal with apostates from Islam are not set in stone but should be adjusted according to circumstances based on what best serves the interests of society. In the past, the death penalty for leaving Islam "protected the integrity of the Muslim community", but today this goal is no longer met by punishing apostasy (Jonathan Brown);[198]
    • the "premise and reasoning underlying the sunna rule of death penalty for apostasy were valid in the historical context" where 'disbelief is equated with high treason' because citizenship was 'based on belief in Islam', but doesn't apply today (Abdullahi An-Na'im, et al.);[199][200] the prescription of death penalty for apostasy found in hadith was aimed at prevention of aggression against Muslims and sedition against the state (Mahmud Shaltut);[163] it's a man-made rule enacted in the early Islamic community to prevent and punish the equivalent of desertion or treason (John Esposito);[41] it is probable that the punishment was prescribed by Muhammad during early Islam to combat political conspiracies against Islam and Muslims, those who desert Islam out of malice and enmity towards the Muslim community, and is not intended for those who simply change their belief, converting to another religion after investigation and research (Ayatollah Hussein-Ali Montazeri).[161]
    • the concept of apostasy as treason is not so much part of Islam, as part of the pre-modern era when classical Islamic fiqh was developed, and when "every religion was a 'religion of the sword'" (Reza Aslan);[201] and every religion "underpinned the political and social order within ... the states they established" (Jonathan Brown);[198] “…the premodern period was an era in which citizenship was defined by religion. In the worlds of Islam and Christendom alike, to declare allegiance to another religion while continuing to reside in the land where one’s original religion was dominant, was to renounce allegiance to one’s co-religionists in a way tantamount to treason” (Intisar Rabb);[202][deprecated source] "This was also an era in which religion and the state were one unified entity. ... no Jew, Christian, Zoroastrian, or Muslim of this time would have considered his or her religion to be rooted in the personal confessional experiences of individuals. ... Your religion was your ethnicity, your culture, and your social identity... your religion was your citizenship."[201]
      • For example, the Holy Roman Empire had its officially sanctioned and legally enforced version of Christianity; the Sasanian Empire had its officially sanctioned and legally enforced version of Zoroastrianism; in China at that time, Buddhist rulers fought Taoist rulers for political ascendancy, (Reza Aslan);[201] Jews who abandoned the God of Israel to worship other deities "were condemned to stoning" (Jonathan Brown).[198]
    • transcending tribalism with religious (Islamic) unity could mean prevention of civil war in Muhammad's era, so to violate religious unity meant violating civil peace (Mohamed Ghilan).[194]
    • capital punishment for apostasy is a time-bound command, applying only to those Arabs who denied the truth even after having Muhammad himself explained and clarified it to them (Javed Ahmad Ghamidi).[203]
    • now the only reason to kill an apostate is to eliminate the danger of war, not because of their disbelief (Al-Kamal ibn al-Humam 861 AH/1457 CE);[181] these days, the number of apostates is small, and does not politically threaten the Islamic community (Christine Schirrmacher describing the "liberal" position on apostasy);[118] it should be enforced only if apostasy becomes a mechanism of public disobedience and disorder (fitna) (Ahmet Albayrak).[42]
  • In Islamic history, laws calling for severe penalties against apostasy (and blasphemy) have not been used to protect Islam, but "almost exclusively" to either eliminate "political dissidents" or target "vulnerable religious minorities", (Javaid Rehman)[204] which is hardly something worthy of imitating.
  • Executing apostates is a violation of the human right to freedom of religion, and somewhat hypocritical for a religion that enthusiastically encourages non-Muslims to apostatize from their current faith and convert to Islam. (Non-Muslims and liberal Muslims)

Middle way

At least some conservative jurists and preachers have attempted to reconcile following the traditional doctrine of death for apostasy while addressing the principle of freedom of religion. Some of whom argue apostasy should have a lesser penalty than death.[16][37][38][39]

At a 2009-human rights conference at Mofid University in Qom, Iran, Ayatollah Mohsen Araki, stated that "if an individual doubts Islam, he does not become the subject of punishment, but if the doubt is openly expressed, this is not permissible." As one observer (Sadakat Kadri) noted, this "freedom" has the advantage that "state officials could not punish an unmanifested belief even if they wanted to".[205]

Zakir Naik, the Indian Islamic televangelist and preacher[147] takes a less strict line (mentioned above), stating that only those Muslims who "propagate the non-Islamic faith and speak against Islam" after converting from Islam should be put to death.[152][150]

While not speaking to the issue of executing apostates, Dar al-Ifta al-Misriyyah, an Egyptian Islamic advisory, justiciary and governmental body, issued a fatwa in the case of an Egyptian Christian convert to Islam but "sought to return to Christianity", stating: “Those who embraced Islam voluntarily and without coercion cannot later deviate from the public order of society by revealing their act of apostasy because such behavior would discourage other people from embracing Islam.” (The Egyptian court followed the fatwa.)[206]

In practice: historical impact

From the Middle Ages to the early modern period

The charge of apostasy has often been used by religious authorities to condemn and punish skeptics, dissidents, and minorities in their communities.[53] From the earliest times of the history of Islam, the crime of apostasy and execution for apostasy has driven major events in the development of the Islamic religion. For example, the Ridda wars (civil wars of apostasy) shook the Muslim community in 632–633 AD, immediately after the death of Muhammad.[53][207] These wars caused the split between the two major sects of Islam: Sunnis and Shias, and numerous deaths on both sides.[208][209] Sunni and Shia sects of Islam have long accused each other of apostasy.[210]

The charge of apostasy dates back to the early history of Islam with the emergence of the Kharijites in the 7th century CE.[211] The original schism between Kharijites, Sunnis, and Shias among Muslims was disputed over the political and religious succession to the guidance of the Muslim community (Ummah) after the death of Muhammad.[211] From their essentially political position, the Kharijites developed extreme doctrines that set them apart from both mainstream Sunni and Shia Muslims.[211] Shias believe ʿAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib is the true successor to Muhammad, while Sunnis consider Abu Bakr to hold that position. The Kharijites broke away from both the Shias and the Sunnis during the First Fitna (the first Islamic Civil War);[211] they were particularly noted for adopting a radical approach to takfīr (excommunication), whereby they declared both Sunni and Shia Muslims to be either infidels (kuffār) or false Muslims (munāfiḳūn), and therefore deemed them worthy of death for their perceived apostasy (ridda).[211][212][213]

 
Roderick is venerated in Christianity as one of the Martyrs of Córdoba

Modern historians recognize that the Christian populations living in the lands invaded by the Arab Muslim armies between the 7th and 10th centuries AD suffered religious persecution, religious violence, and martyrdom multiple times at the hands of Arab Muslim officials and rulers;[214][215][216][217] many were executed under the Islamic death penalty for defending their Christian faith through dramatic acts of resistance such as refusing to convert to Islam, repudiation of the Islamic religion and subsequent reconversion to Christianity, and blasphemy towards Muslim beliefs.[215][216][217] Notable Christian converts to Islam who reportedly reverted to Christianity and were executed under the Islamic death penalty for this reason include "Kyros", who was executed by burning in 769 CE, “Holy Elias” in 795 CE, and “Holy Bacchus” in 806 CE.[218] The martyrdoms of forty-eight Christian martyrs that took place in the Emirate of Córdoba between 850 and 859 CE[219] are recorded in the hagiographical treatise written by the Iberian Christian and Latinist scholar Eulogius of Córdoba.[215][216][217] The Martyrs of Córdoba were executed under the rule of Abd al-Rahman II and Muhammad I, and Eulogius' hagiography describes in detail the executions of the martyrs for capital violations of Islamic law, including apostasy and blasphemy.[215][216][217]

Historian David Cook writes that "it is only with the 'Abbasi caliphs al-Mu'taṣim (218–28 AH/833–42 CE) and al-Mutawakkil (233–47 /847–61) that we find detailed accounts" of apostates and what was done with them. Prior to that, in the Umayyad and early Abbasid periods, measures to defend Islam from apostasy "appear to have mostly remained limited to intellectual debates"[220] He also states that "the most common category of apostates" – at least of apostates who converted to another religion – "from the very first days of Islam" were "Christians and Jews who converted to Islam and after some time" reconverted back to their former faith.[221]

Some sources emphasize that executions of apostates have been "rare in Islamic history".[29] According to historian Bernard Lewis, in "religious polemic" in the "early times" of Islam, "charges of apostasy were not unusual", but the accused were seldom prosecuted, and "some even held high offices in the Muslim state". Later, "as the rules and penalties of the Muslim law were systematized and more regularly enforced, charges of apostasy became rarer."[92] When action was taken against an alleged apostate, it was much more likely to be "quarantine" than execution, unless the innovation was "extreme, persistent and aggressive".[92] Another source, legal historian Sadakat Kadri, argues execution was rare because "it was widely believed" that any accused apostate "who repented by articulating the shahada [...] had to be forgiven" and their punishment delayed until after Judgement Day. This principle was upheld "even in extreme situations", such as when an offender adopted Islam "only for fear of death" and their sincerity seemed highly implausible. It was based on the hadith that Muhammad had upbraided a follower for killing a raider who had uttered the shahada.[Note 16]

The New Encyclopedia of Islam also states that after the early period, with some notable exceptions, the practice in Islam regarding atheism or various forms of heresy, grew more tolerant as long as it was a private matter. However heresy and atheism expressed in public may well be considered a scandal and a menace to a society; in some societies they are punishable, at least to the extent the perpetrator is silenced. In particular, blasphemy against God and insulting Muhammad are major crimes.[224]

In contrast, historian David Cook maintains the issue of apostasy and punishment for it was not uncommon in Islamic history. However, he also states that prior to 11th century execution seems rare he gives an example of a Jew who had converted to Islam and used the threat of reverting to Judaism in order to gain better treatment and privilege.[225]

Zindīq (often a "blanket phrase" for "intellectuals" under suspicion of having abandoned Islam" or freethinker, atheist or heretic who conceal their religion),[226] experienced a wave of persecutions from 779 to 786. A history of those times states:[224]

"Tolerance is laudable", the Spiller (the Caliph Abu al-Abbās) had once said, "except in matters dangerous to religious beliefs, or to the Sovereign's dignity."[224]Al-Mahdi (d. 169/785) persecuted Freethinkers, and executed them in large numbers. He was the first Caliph to order composition of polemical works to in refutation of Freethinkers and other heretics; and for years he tried to exterminate them absolutely, hunting them down throughout all provinces and putting accused persons to death on mere suspicion.[224]

The famous Sufi mystic of 10th-century Iraq, Mansur Al-Hallaj was officially executed for possessing a heretical document suggesting hajj pilgrimage was not required of a pure Muslim (i.e. killed for heresy which made him an apostate), but it is thought he would have been spared execution except that the Caliph at the time Al-Muqtadir wished to discredit "certain figures who had associated themselves" with al-Hallaj.[227] (Previously al-Hallaj had been punished for talking about being at one with God by being shaved, pilloried and beaten with the flat of a sword. He was not executed because the Shafi'ite judge had ruled that his words were not "proof of disbelief."[227])

In 12th-century Iran, al-Suhrawardi along with followers of Ismaili sect of Islam were killed on charges of being apostates;[53] in 14th-century Syria, Ibn Taymiyyah declared Central Asian Turko-Mongol Muslims as apostates due to the invasion of Ghazan Khan;[228] in 17th-century India, Dara Shikoh and other sons of Shah Jahan were captured and executed on charges of apostasy from Islam by his brother Aurangzeb although historians agree it was more political than a religious execution.[229]

Colonial era and after

 
Muslim countries where the death penalty for the crime of apostasy is in force or has been proposed as of 2013.[230] Many other Muslim countries impose a prison term for apostasy or they prosecute it under blasphemy or other laws.[231]

From around 1800 up until 1970, there were only a few cases of executions of apostates in the Muslim world, including the strangling of a woman in Egypt (sometime between 1825 and 1835), and the beheading of an Armenian youth in the Ottoman Empire in 1843.[3] Western powers campaigned intensely for a prohibition on the execution of apostates in the Ottoman Empire. British envoy to the court of Sultan Abdulmejid I (1839–1861), Stratford Canning, led diplomatic representatives from Austria, Russia, Prussia, and France in a "tug of war" with the Ottoman government.[232] In the end (following the execution of the Armenian), the Sublime Porte agreed to allow "complete freedom of Christian missionaries" to try to convert Muslims in the Empire.[3] The death sentence for apostasy from Islam was abolished by the Edict of Toleration, and substituted with other forms of punishment by the Ottoman government in 1844. The implementation of this ban was resisted by religious officials and proved difficult.[233][234] A series of edicts followed during the Ottoman Tanzimat period, such as the 1856 Reform Edict.

This was also the time that Islamic modernists like Muhammad Abduh (d. 1905) argued that to be executed, it was not enough to be an apostate, the perpetrator had to pose a real threat to public safety.[164] Islamic scholars like Muhammad Rashid Rida (d. 1935) and Muhammad al Ghazzali (d. 1996), on the other hand, asserted that public, explicit apostasy automatically tened public order and hence; punishable by death. These scholars reconciled the Qur'anic verse "There is no compulsion in religion.." by arguing that freedom of religion in Islam doesn't extend for Muslims who seek to change their religion. Other authors like 'Abd al-Muta'ali al-Sa'idi, S.A. Rahman, etc assert that capital punishment for apostasy is contradictory to freedom of religion and need to be banished.[235]

 
Greek Christians in 1922, fleeing their homes from Kharput to Trebizond. In the 1910s and 1920s the Armenian, Greek, and Assyrian genocides were perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire.[236]

Efforts to convert Muslims to other religions were extremely unpopular with the Muslim community. Despite these edicts on apostasy, there was constant pressure on non-Muslims to convert to Islam, and apostates from Islam continued to be persecuted, punished and threatened with execution, particularly in eastern and Levant parts of the then Ottoman Empire.[233] The Edict of Toleration ultimately failed when Sultan Abdul Hamid II assumed power, re-asserted pan-Islamism with sharia as Ottoman state philosophy, and initiated Hamidian massacres in 1894 against Christians, particularly the Genocides of Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians, and crypto-Christian apostates from Islam in Turkey (Stavriotes, Kromlides).[237][238][239][not specific enough to verify]

In the colonial era, the death penalty for apostasy was abolished in Islamic countries that had come under Western rule or in places, such as the Ottoman Empire, Western powers could apply enough pressure to abolish it.[3] Writing in the mid 1970s, Rudolph Peters and Gert J. J. De Vries stated that "apostasy no longer falls under criminal law"[3] in the Muslim world, but that some Muslims (such as 'Adb al-Qadir 'Awdah) were preaching that "the killing of an apostate" had "become a duty of individual Moslems" (rather than a less important collective duty in hisbah doctrine) and giving advice on how to plead in court after being arrested for such a murder to avoid punishment.[240]

Some (Louay M. Safi), have argued that this situation, with the adoption of "European legal codes ... enforced by state elites without any public debate", created an identification of tolerance with foreign/alien control in the mind of the Muslim public, and rigid literalist interpretations (such as the execution of apostates), with authenticity and legitimacy. Autocratic rulers "often align themselves with traditional religious scholars" to deflect grassroots discontent, which took the form of angry pious traditionalists.[60]

In practice in the recent past

While as of 2004 apostasy from Islam is a capital offence in only eight majority-Muslim states,[230] in other states that do not directly execute apostates, apostate killing is sometimes facilitated through extrajudicial killings performed by the apostate's family, particularly if the apostate is vocal.[Note 17] In some countries, it is not uncommon for "vigilante" Muslims to kill or attempt to kill apostates or alleged apostates, in the belief they are enforcing sharia law that the government has failed to.

 
Penalties (actual or proposed) for apostasy in some Muslim-majority countries as of 2020.
  Death penalty
  Prison
  Converting a Muslim is a crime
  Loss of child custody/marriage

Background

More than 20 Muslim-majority states have laws that punish apostasy by Muslims to be a crime some de facto other de jure.[230] As of 2014, apostasy was a capital offense in Afghanistan, Brunei, Mauritania, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, the United Arab Emirates, and Yemen.[230] Executions for religious conversion have been infrequent in recent times, with four cases reported since 1985: one in Sudan in 1985; two in Iran, in 1989 and 1998; and one in Saudi Arabia in 1992.[230][29] In Mauritania, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and Yemen apostasy laws have been used to charge persons for acts other than conversion.[230] In addition, some predominantly Islamic countries without laws specifically addressing apostasy have prosecuted individuals or minorities for apostasy using broadly-defined blasphemy laws.[242] In many nations, the Hisbah doctrine of Islam has traditionally allowed any Muslim to accuse another Muslim or ex-Muslim for beliefs that may harm Islamic society, i.e. violate the norms of sharia (Islamic law). This principle has been used in countries such as Egypt, Pakistan and others to bring blasphemy charges against apostates.[243][244]

The source of most violence or threats of violence against apostate has come from outside of state judicial systems in the Muslim world in recent years, either from extralegal acts by government authorities or from other individuals or groups operating unrestricted by the government.[245][page needed] There has also been social persecution for Muslims converting to Christianity. For example, the Christian organisation Barnabas Fund reports:

The field of apostasy and blasphemy and related "crimes" is thus obviously a complex syndrome within all Muslim societies which touches a raw nerve and always arouses great emotional outbursts against the perceived acts of treason, betrayal and attacks on Islam and its honour. While there are a few brave dissenting voices within Muslim societies, the threat of the application of the apostasy and blasphemy laws against any who criticize its application is an efficient weapon used to intimidate opponents, silence criticism, punish rivals, reject innovations and reform, and keep non-Muslim communities in their place.[246][unreliable source?]

Similar views are expressed by the non-theistic International Humanist and Ethical Union.[247] Author Mohsin Hamid points out that the logic of widely accepted claim that anyone helping an apostate is themselves an apostate, is a powerful weapon in spreading fear among those who oppose the killings (in at least the country of Pakistan). It means that a doctor who agrees to treat an apostate wounded by attacker(s), or a police officer who has agreed to protect that doctor after they have been threatened is also an apostate – "and on and on".[248]

Contemporary reformist/liberal Muslims such as Quranist Ahmed Subhy Mansour,[249] Edip Yuksel, and Mohammed Shahrour have suffered from accusations of apostasy and demands to execute them, issued by Islamic clerics such as Mahmoud Ashur, Mustafa Al-Shak'a, Mohammed Ra'fat Othman and Yusif Al-Badri.[250]

Apostate communities

Christian apostates from Islam

Regarding Muslim converts to Christianity, Duane Alexander Miller (2016) identified two different categories:

  1. 'Muslims followers of Jesus Christ', 'Jesus Muslims' or 'Messianic Muslims' (analogous to Messianic Jews), who continue to self-identify as 'Muslims', or at least say Islam is (part of) their 'culture' rather than religion, but "understand themselves to be following Jesus as he is portrayed in the Bible".
  2. 'Christians from a Muslim background' (abbreviated CMBs), also known as 'ex-Muslim Christians', who have completely abandoned Islam in favour of Christianity.

Miller introduced the term 'Muslim-background believers' (MBBs) to encompass both groups, adding that the latter group are generally regarded as apostates from Islam, but orthodox Muslims' opinions on the former group is more mixed (either that 'Muslim followers of Jesus' are 'heterodox Muslims', 'heretical Muslims' or 'crypto-Christian liars').[251]

Atheist apostates from Islam

Writing in 2015, Ahmed Benchemsi argued that while Westerners have great difficulty even conceiving of the existence of an Arab atheist, "a generational dynamic" is underway with "large numbers" of young people brought up as Muslims "tilting away from ... rote religiosity" after having "personal doubts" about the "illogicalities" of the Quran and Sunnah.[252] Immigrant apostates from Islam in Western countries "converting" to Atheism have often gathered for comfort in groups such as Women in Secularism, Ex-Muslims of North America, Council of Ex-Muslims of Britain,[253] sharing tales of the tension and anxieties of "leaving a close-knit belief-based community" and confronting "parental disappointment, rejection by friends and relatives, and charges of "trying to assimilate into a Western culture that despises them", often using terminology first uttered by the LGBT community – "'coming out,' and leaving 'the closet'".[253] Atheists in the Muslim world maintain a lower profile, but according to the Editor-in-chief of FreeArabs.com:

When I recently searched Facebook in both Arabic and English, combining the word ‘atheist’ with names of different Arab countries I turned up over 250 pages or groups, with memberships ranging from a few individuals to more than 11,000. And these numbers only pertain to Arab atheists (or Arabs concerned with the topic of atheism) who are committed enough to leave a trace online.[252]

Public opinion

A survey based on face-to-face interviews conducted in 80 languages by the Pew Research Center between 2008 and 2012 among thousands of Muslims in many countries, found varied views on the death penalty for those who leave Islam to become an atheist or to convert to another religion.[35] In some countries (especially in Central Asia, Southeast Europe, and Turkey), support for the death penalty for apostasy was confined to a tiny fringe; in other countries (especially in the Arab world and South Asia) majorities and large minorities support the death penalty.

In the survey, Muslims who favored making Sharia the law of the land were asked for their views on the death penalty for apostasy from Islam.[35] The results are summarized in the table below. (Note that values for Group C have been derived from the values for the other two groups and are not part of the Pew report.)[35]

Middle East and North Africa
Country Group A:  % Muslims support sharia Group B: Support death for apostasy as a % of Group A Group C: Group B as % of all Muslims
Egypt 74 86 63.6
Palestine 89 66 58.7
Jordan 71 82 58.2
Iraq 91 42 38.2
Tunisia 56 29 16.2
Lebanon 29 46 13.3
South and Southeast Asia
Country Group A:  % Muslims support sharia Group B: Support death for apostasy as a % of Group A Group C: Group B as % of all Muslims
Afghanistan 99 79 78.2
Pakistan 84 76 63.8
Malaysia 86 62 53.3
Bangladesh 82 44 36.1
Thailand 77 27 20.8
Indonesia 72 18 13.0
Southeast Europe and Central Asia
Country Group A:  % Muslims support sharia Group B: Support death for apostasy as a % of Group A Group C: Group B as % of all Muslims
Russia 42 15 6.3
Tajikistan 27 22 5.9
Kyrgyzstan 35 14 4.9
Bosnia 15 15 2.3
Kosovo 20 11 2.2
Turkey 12 17 2.0
Albania 12 8 1.0
Kazakhstan 10 4 0.4
 
Visualisation of the total % of Muslims per country who support the death penalty for apostasy according to the 2013 Pew report's values.

Overall, the figures in the 2012 survey suggest that the percentage of Muslims in the countries surveyed who approve the death penalty for Muslims who leave Islam to become an atheist or convert to another religion varies widely, from 0.4% (in Kazakhstan) to 78.2% (in Afghanistan).[35] The Governments of the Gulf Cooperation Council (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Oman, Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait) did not permit Pew Research to survey nationwide public opinion on apostasy in 2010 or 2012. The survey also did not include China, India, Syria, or West African countries such as Nigeria.

By country

The situation for apostates from Islam varies markedly between Muslim-minority and Muslim-majority regions. In Muslim-minority countries "any violence against those who abandon Islam is already illegal". But in Muslim-majority countries, violence is sometimes "institutionalised", and (at least in 2007) "hundreds and thousands of closet apostates" live in fear of violence and are compelled to live lives of "extreme duplicity and mental stress."[254]

Universal Declaration of Human Rights

Laws prohibiting religious conversion run contrary[255] to Article 18 of the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which states the following:

Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.[256]

Afghanistan, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Pakistan and Syria voted in favor of the Declaration.[256] The governments of other Muslim-majority countries have responded by criticizing the Declaration as an attempt by the non-Muslim world to impose their values on Muslims, with a presumption of cultural superiority,[257][258] and by issuing the Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam—a joint declaration of the member states of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference made in 1990 in Cairo, Egypt.[259][260] The Cairo Declaration differs from the Universal Declaration in affirming Sharia as the sole source of rights, and in limits of equality and behavior[261][page needed][262][263] in religion, gender, sexuality, etc.[260][264] Islamic scholars such as Muhammad Rashid Rida in Tafsir al-Minar, argue that the "freedom to apostatize", is different from freedom of religion on the grounds that apostasy from Islam infringes on the freedom of others and the respect due the religion of Islamic states.[3]

Literature and film

Films and documentaries

Books by ex-Muslims

  • Qureshi, Nabeel (2014). Seeking Allah, Finding Jesus: A Devout Muslim Encounters Christianity. Zondervan. ISBN 978-0310515029.
  • Ham, Boris van der; Benhammou, Rachid (2018). Nieuwe Vrijdenkers: 12 voormalige moslims vertellen hun verhaal (New Freethinkers: 12 Former Muslims Tell Their Story). Amsterdam: Prometheus. p. 209. ISBN 978-9044636840.
  • Hirsi Ali, Ayaan (2007). Infidel: My Life (Mijn Vrijheid). Simon & Schuster UK. ISBN 978-0743295031.
  • Hirsi Ali, Ayaan (2011). Nomad: From Islam to America. Simon & Schuster UK. ISBN 978-1847398185.
  • Al-Husseini, Waleed (2017). The Blasphemer: The Price I Paid for Rejecting Islam (Blasphémateur ! : les prisons d'Allah). New York: Skyhorse Publishing. ISBN 978-1628726756.
  • Jami, Ehsan (2007). Het recht om ex-moslim te zijn (The Right to Be an Ex-Muslim). Kampen: Uitgeverij Ten Have. ISBN 978-9025958367.
  • Mohammed, Yasmine (2019). From Al Qaeda to Atheism: The Girl Who Would Not Submit. Free Hearts Free Minds. ISBN 978-1724790804.
  • Rizvi, Ali Amjad (2016). The Atheist Muslim: A Journey from Religion to Reason. New York: St Martin's Press. ISBN 978-1250094445.
  • Saleem, Aliyah; Mughal, Fiyaz (2018). Leaving Faith Behind: The journeys and perspectives of people who have chosen to leave Islam. London: Darton, Longman & Todd. p. 192. ISBN 978-0232533644.
  • Sultan, Harris (2018). The Curse of God: Why I Left Islam. Gordon Centre, Australia: Xilbris. ISBN 978-1984502124.[266]
  • Warraq, Ibn (2003). Leaving Islam: Apostates Speak Out. Amherst, New York: Prometheus Books. ISBN 978-1591020684.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ A professor at Cairo University, Nasr Abu Zayd, was found to be guilty of being an unbeliever by Egyptian courts in the 1990s. One of many reasons given by the Egyptian Court of Cassation "for rejecting Abu Zayd's claim to be a Muslim was that he denied the existence" of jinn, aka genies. In his writings he had argued that the reason for the presence of jinn in the Quran was "that they formed part of the culture of the Arabs at the time" when the book was revealed, and that "by appealing to Arab conceptions of communication between genies and humans ... the notion of divine revelation could be made intelligible to" the Arabs.[6]
  2. ^ The penalty of killing of apostates is in conflict with international human rights norms which provide for the freedom of religions, as demonstrated in such human rights instruments such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights provide for the freedom of religion.[18][7]
  3. ^ From 1985 to 2006, only four individuals were officially executed for apostasy from Islam by governments, "one in Sudan in 1985; two in Iran, in 1989 and 1998; and one in Saudi Arabia in 1992",[29] (these were sometimes charged with unrelated political crimes
  4. ^ Pew Research Center taken from 2008 and 2012[35]
  5. ^ Ahmet Albayrak writes in The Qur'an: An Encyclopedia that regarding apostasy as a wrongdoing is not a sign of intolerance of other religions, and it is not aimed at one's freedom to choose a religion or one's freedom to leave Islam and embrace another faith, on the contrary, it is more correct to say that the punishment is imposed as a safety precaution when conditions warrant the imposition of it, for example, the punishment is imposed if apostasy becomes a mechanism of public disobedience and disorder (fitna).[42]
  6. ^ Legal historian Wael Hallaq writes that "nothing in the law governing apostates and apostasy derives from the letter" of the Quran.[55]
  7. ^ (two of the Kutub al-Sittah or the six most important collections of hadith for Sunni Muslims)
  8. ^ for example Ibn Taymiyya wrote "not everyone who falls into unbelief becomes an unbeliever" Laysa kull man waqaʿa fi l-kufr ṣāra kāfir.[67]
  9. ^ killings have been directly by ISIL or through affiliated groups, from its inception in 2014 to 2020 according to Jamileh Kadivar based on estimates from Global Terrorism Database, 2020; Herrera, 2019; Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights & United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) Human Rights Office, 2014; Ibrahim, 2017; Obeidallah, 2014; 2015[95]
  10. ^ according to one "well known Muslim journalist of the Indo-Pak subcontinent, Maulana Abdul-Majeed Salik", "All great and eminent Muslims in the history of Islam as well as all the sects in the Muslim world are considered to be disbelievers, apostates, and outside the pale of Islam according to one or the other group of religious leaders. In the realm of the Shariah [religious law] and tariqat [path of devotion], not a single sect or a single family has been spared the accusations of apostasy."[98]
  11. ^ "More recently, a growing body of Islamic jurists have relied on Quranic verses which advocate absolute freedom of religion.[citation needed]
  12. ^ "Finally the argument is put forward that killing an apostate must be considered as compulsion in religion, which has been forbidden in K 2:256, though this verse was traditionally interpreted in a different way." Footnote 38: "According to some classical scholars this verse had been abrograted by later verses. The current interpretation of this verse, however, was that it forbids compulsion to things that are wrong (batil) but not compulsion to accept the truth"[174]
  13. ^ See for example al-Shatibi, al-Muafaqat (Beirut, Lebanon: Dar al-Ma'rifah, n.d.), vol. 3, pp. 15–26; quoted in [60]
  14. ^ "The sunnah, which is consistent with the Qur’an, reserves the death penalty for those who apostatised and treasonously fought against the Muslims"[196]
  15. ^ the prescription of death penalty for apostasy found in hadith was aimed at prevention of aggression against Muslims and sedition against the state[163]
  16. ^ Muhammad had been unimpressed by claims that the dead man had adopted Islam only for fear of death. 'Who will absolve you, Usama,` he asked the killer repeatedly, for ignoring the confession of faith?`" source: ibn Ishaq, Life of Muhammad, p. 667; al-Bukhari, 5.59.568; Muslim 1.176[222][223]
  17. ^ examples of countries where the government does not facilitate extra-judicial killings are Turkey, Israel, and parts of India.[241]

Citations

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Further reading

  • Ahmad, Mirza Tahir (1968). Murder in the Name of Allah. Guildford: Lutterworth Press. ISBN 978-0718828059. OCLC 243438689.
  • Cottee, Simon (2015). The Apostates: When Muslims Leave Islam. Hurst. p. 288. ISBN 978-1849044691.
  • Johnstone, Patrick; Miller, Duane Alexander (2015). "Believers in Christ from a Muslim Background: A Global Census". Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion. 11: 3–19.
  • Peters, Rudolph; De Vries, Gert J. J. (1976). "Apostasy in Islam" (PDF). Die Welt des Islams. 17 (1/4): 1–25. doi:10.1163/157006076X00017. JSTOR 1570336. S2CID 162376591.
  • Schirrmacher, Christine (2020). "Chapter 7: Leaving Islam". In Enstedt, Daniel; Larsson, Göran; Mantsinen, Teemu T. (eds.). Handbook of Leaving Religion. Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion. Vol. 18. Leiden: Brill Publishers. pp. 81–95. doi:10.1163/9789004331471_008. ISBN 978-9004330924. ISSN 1874-6691.
  • Jabir Alalwani, Taha (2011). Apostasy in Islam: A Historical and Scriptural Analysis. Translated by Nancy Roberts. International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT). ISBN 978-1565643635.
  • Subhani, M. E. Asad (2005). Apostasy in Islam. Global Media. p. 65. ISBN 978-8188869114.
  • Saeed, Abdullah; Saeed, Hassan (2004). Freedom of Religion, Apostasy and Islam. Burlington VT: Ashgate Publishing Company. pp. 38–39. ISBN 978-0754630838.

External links

  •   Quotations related to Apostasy in Islam at Wikiquote
  •   Media related to Apostasy in Islam at Wikimedia Commons
  • Apostasy, Freedom and Da'wah: Full Disclosure in a Business-Like Manner by Dr. Mohammad Omar Farooq
  • Al-Munajjid, Sheikh Muhammed Salih. "Why should a person who disbelieves after becoming Muslim be executed?". Retrieved 15 October 2009.
  • Eltahawy, Mona (20 October 1999). "Lives torn apart in battle for the soul of the Arab world". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
  • . Understanding Islam. 6 December 1998. Archived from the original on 1 January 2009. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
  • Apostasy: Oxford Bibliographies, Islamic Studies Andrew March (2010), Oxford University Press

apostasy, islam, this, article, about, general, description, examination, apostasy, from, islam, situation, those, accused, apostasy, from, islam, muslims, country, country, sociological, perspectives, muslims, muslims, organisations, muslims, list, muslim, or. This article is about a general description and examination of apostasy from Islam For the situation of those accused of apostasy from Islam ex Muslims by country see Apostasy in Islam by country For the sociological perspectives of ex Muslims see Ex Muslims For organisations by and for ex Muslims see List of ex Muslim organisations Apostasy in Islam Arabic ردة riddah or ارتداد irtidad is commonly defined as the abandonment of Islam by a Muslim in thought word or through deed It includes not only explicit renunciations of the Islamic faith by converting to another religion 1 or abandoning religion 1 2 3 but also blasphemy or heresy by those who consider themselves Muslims 4 through any action or utterance which implies unbelief including those who deny a fundamental tenet or creed of Islam 5 such as suggesting jinn are not real Note 1 7 8 An apostate from Islam is known as a murtad مرتد 1 9 10 11 12 While classical Islamic jurisprudence calls for the death penalty of those who refuse to repent of apostasy from Islam 13 what statements or acts qualify as apostacy and whether and how they should be punished are disputed among Islamic scholars 14 3 15 while punishment is strongly opposed by Muslim Non Muslim and secular supporters of the universal human right to freedom of faith 16 17 Note 2 19 20 Until the late 19th century the majority of Sunni and Shia jurists held the view that for adult men apostasy from Islam was a crime as well as a sin punishable by the death penalty 3 21 but with a number of options for leniency such as a waiting period to allow time for repentance 3 22 23 24 enforcement only in cases involving politics 25 26 27 depending on the era the legal standards and the school of law In the late 19th century the use of legal criminal penalties for apostasy fell into disuse although civil penalties were still applied 3 As of 2021 there were ten Muslim majority countries where apostasy from Islam was punishable by death 28 but legal executions are rare Note 3 Most punishment is extra judicial vigilante 30 31 and most executions are perpetrated by jihadist and takfiri insurgents al Qaeda ISIL ISIS IS Daesh the GIA and the Taliban 13 32 33 34 Another thirteen countries have penal or civil penalties for apostates 31 such as imprisonment the annulment of their marriages the loss of their rights of inheritance and the loss of custody of their children 31 In the contemporary Muslim world public support for capital punishment varies from 78 in Afghanistan to less than 1 in Kazakhstan Note 4 among Islamic jurists the majority of them continue to regard apostasy as a crime which should be punishable by death 22 Those who disagree 14 3 36 argue that its punishment should be less than death should occur in the afterlife 16 37 38 39 human punishment being inconsistent with Quranic injunctions against compulsion in belief 40 41 or should apply only in cases of public disobedience and disorder fitna Note 5 Contents 1 Etymology and terminology 2 Scriptural references 2 1 Quran 2 2 Hadith 3 What constitutes apostasy in Islam 3 1 Conditions of apostasy in classical Islam 3 2 Characteristics 3 3 Issues in defining heresy 4 Punishment 4 1 Who qualifies for judgement for the crime of apostasy 4 2 Death penalty 4 2 1 In classical Islamic jurisprudence 4 2 2 Vigilante application 4 3 Civil liabilities 4 4 Supporters and opponents of death penalty 4 5 Rationale arguments criticism for and against killing apostates 4 6 Middle way 5 In practice historical impact 5 1 From the Middle Ages to the early modern period 5 2 Colonial era and after 6 In practice in the recent past 6 1 Background 6 2 Apostate communities 6 3 Public opinion 7 By country 8 Universal Declaration of Human Rights 9 Literature and film 9 1 Films and documentaries 9 2 Books by ex Muslims 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Notes 11 2 Citations 12 Further reading 13 External linksEtymology and terminology EditApostasy is called irtidad which means relapse or regress or ridda in Islamic literature 43 An apostate is called murtadd which means one who turns back from Islam 44 Another source Oxford Islamic Studies Online defines murtadd as not just any kafir non believer but a particularly heinous type 45 Ridda can also refer to secession in a political context 46 A person born to a Muslim father who later rejects Islam is called a murtadd fitri and a person who converted to Islam and later rejects the religion is called a murtadd milli 47 48 49 Takfir takfeer Arabic تكفير takfir is the act of one Muslim excommunicating another declaring them a kafir an apostate The act which precipitates takfir is termed mukaffir Scriptural references EditQuran Edit The Quran mentions apostasy in many of its verses expressing God s anger impending punishment and refusal to accept repentance towards those who have left the faith Traditionally the verses that are thought to appear to justify coercion and severe punishment for apostates according to Dale F Eickelman 50 including the traditional capital punishment are as follows 51 But those who reject Faith after they accepted it and then go on adding to their defiance of Faith never will their repentance be accepted for they are those who have of set purpose gone astray Quran 3 90 Make ye no excuses ye have rejected Faith after ye had accepted it If We pardon some of you We will punish others amongst you for that they are in sin Quran 9 66 He who disbelieves in Allah after his having believed not he who is compelled while his heart is at rest on account of faith but he who opens his breast to disbelief on these is the wrath of Allah and they shall have a grievous chastisement Quran 16 106 Say hindering others from the Path of Allah rejecting Him and expelling the worshippers from the Sacred Mosque is a greater sin in the sight of Allah Quran 2 217 O believers Whoever among you abandons their faith Allah will replace them with others who love Him and are loved by Him They will be humble with the believers but firm towards the disbelievers 5 54 Indeed those who believed then disbelieved then believed and again disbelieved only increasing in disbelief Allah will neither forgive them nor guide them to the Right Way 4 137 whoever trades belief for disbelief has truly strayed from the Right Way 2 108 You are not there to compel them to believe But whoever turns away persisting in disbelief then Allah will inflict upon them the major punishment 88 22 24 But if they repent perform prayer and pay alms tax then they are your brothers in faith This is how We make the revelations clear for people of knowledge But if they break their oaths after making a pledge and attack your faith then fight the champions of disbelief who never honour their oaths so perhaps they will desist 9 11 12 They long that ye should disbelieve even as they disbelieve that ye may be upon a level with them So choose not friends from them till they forsake their homes in the way of Allah if they turn back to enmity then take them and kill them wherever ye find them and choose no friend nor helper from among them Quran 4 89 Other scholars have pointed out that there is no mention in the Quran of the need to force an apostate to return to Islam nor any specific corporal punishment to apply to apostates in this world 52 53 54 Note 6 let alone commands to kill apostates either explicitly or implicitly 56 57 58 59 In fact other verses emphasize mercy and lack of compulsion in belief 60 There is no compulsion in religion truly the right way has become clearly distinct from error therefore whoever disbelieves in the Shaitan and believes in Allah he indeed has laid hold on the firmest handle which shall not break off and Allah is Hearing Knowing Quran 2 256 Say The truth is from your Lord Let him who will believe and let him who will reject it for the wrong doers We have prepared a Fire whose smoke and flames like the walls and roof of a tent will hem them in if they implore relief they will be granted water like melted brass that will scald their faces how dreadful the drink How uncomfortable a couch to recline on Quran 18 29 And if your Lord had pleased surely all those who are in the earth would have believed all of them will you then force men till they become believers Quran 10 99 Therefore do remind for you are only a reminder You are not a watcher over them Quran 88 21 22 He said O my people See ye if it be that I have a Clear Sign from my Lord and that He hath sent Mercy unto me from His own presence but that the Mercy hath been obscured from your sight Shall we compel you to accept it when ye are averse to it Quran 11 28 Indeed those who believed then disbelieved then believed and again disbelieved only increasing in disbelief Allah will neither forgive them nor guide them to the Right Way Quran 4 137 Hadith Edit See also Malik ibn Nuwayrah Criticism of Hadith Abdullah ibn Saad and Ubayd Allah ibn Jahsh The classical shariah punishment for apostasy comes from Sahih authentic Hadith rather than the Quran 61 62 Writing in the Encyclopedia of Islam Heffening holds that contrary to the Qur an in traditions i e hadith there is little echo of these punishments in the next world and instead we have in many traditions a new element the death penalty 44 Allah s Apostle said The blood of a Muslim who confesses that none has the right to be worshipped but Allah and that I am His Apostle cannot be shed except in three cases In Qisas for murder a married person who commits illegal sexual intercourse and the one who reverts from Islam apostate and leaves the Muslims Sahih al Bukhari 9 83 17 see also Sahih Muslim 16 4152 Sahih Muslim 16 4154 Ali burnt some people and this news reached Ibn Abbas who said Had I been in his place I would not have burnt them as the Prophet said Don t punish anybody with Allah s Punishment No doubt I would have killed them for the Prophet said If somebody a Muslim discards his religion kill him Sahih al Bukhari 4 52 260Sahih al Bukhari 9 84 57Sahih al Bukhari 9 89 271Sahih al Bukhari 9 84 58Sahih al Bukhari 9 84 64 A man embraced Islam and then reverted back to Judaism Mu adh bin Jabal came and saw the man with Abu Musa Mu adh asked What is wrong with this man Abu Musa replied He embraced Islam and then reverted back to Judaism Mu adh said I will not sit down unless you kill him as it is the verdict of Allah and His Apostle Sahih al Bukhari 9 89 271 Other hadith give differing statements about the fate of apostates 38 63 that they were spared execution by repenting by dying of natural causes or by leaving their community the last case sometimes cited as an example of open apostasy that was left unpunished 64 A man from among the Ansar accepted Islam then he apostatized and went back to Shirk Then he regretted that and sent word to his people saying Ask the Messenger of Allah SAW is there any repentance for me His people came to the Messenger of Allah SAW and said So and so regrets what he did and he has told us to ask you if there is any repentance for him Then the Verses How shall Allah guide a people who disbelieved after their Belief up to His saying Verily Allah is Oft Forgiving Most Merciful was revealed So he sent word to him and he accepted Islam Al Sunan al Sughra 37 103 65 There was a Christian who became Muslim and read the Baqarah and the Al Imran and he used to write for the Prophet He then went over to Christianity again and he used to say Muhammad does not know anything except what I wrote for him Then Allah caused him to die and they buried him Sahih al Bukhari 4 56 814 A bedouin gave the Pledge of allegiance to Allah s Apostle for Islam and the bedouin got a fever where upon he said to the Prophet Cancel my Pledge But the Prophet refused He came to him again saying Cancel my Pledge But the Prophet refused Then the bedouin left Medina Allah s Apostle said Medina is like a pair of bellows furnace It expels its impurities and brightens and clears its good Sahih al Bukhari 9 89 316 The Muwatta of Imam Malik offers a case were Rashidun rightly guide Caliph Umar admonishes a Muslim leader for not giving an apostate the opportunity to repent before being executed Malik related to me from Abd ar Rahman ibn Muhammad ibn Abdullah ibn Abd al Qari that his father said A man came to Umar ibn al Khattab from Abu Musa al Ashari Umar asked after various people and he informed him Then Umar inquired Do you have any recent news He said Yes A man has become a kafir after his Islam Umar asked What have you done with him He said We let him approach and struck off his head Umar said Didn t you imprison him for three days and feed him a loaf of bread every day and call on him to tawba that he might turn in tawba and return to the command of Allah Then Umar said O Allah I was not present and I did not order it and I am not pleased since it has come to me Al Muwatta 36 18 16 The argument has been made by the Fiqh Council of North America among others that the hadiths above traditionally cited as proof that apostates from Islam should be punished by death have been misunderstood In fact the council argues the victims were executed for changing their allegiances to the armies fighting the Muslims i e for treason not for their personal beliefs 66 As evidence they point to two hadith each from a different authentic sahih Sunni hadith collection Note 7 where Muhammad calls for the death of apostates or traitors The wording of the hadith are almost identical but in one the hadith ends with the phrase one who reverts from Islam and leaves the Muslims and in the other it ends with one who goes forth to fight Allah and His Apostle in other words the council argues the hadith were likely reports of the same incident but had different wording because reverting from Islam was another way of saying fighting Allah and His Apostle Allah s Apostle said The blood of a Muslim who confesses that none has the right to be worshipped but Allah and that I am His Apostle cannot be shed except in three cases In Qisas for murder a married person who commits illegal sexual intercourse and the one who reverts from Islam apostate and leaves the Muslims Sahih al Bukhari 9 83 17 Allah s Apostle said The blood of a Muslim man who testifies that there is no god but Allah and that Muhammad is Allah s Apostle should not lawfully be shed except only for one of three reasons a man who committed fornication after marriage in which case he should be stoned one who goes forth to fight Allah and His Apostle in which case he should be killed or crucified or exiled from the land or one who commits murder for which he is killed Sunan Abu Dawood 38 4339What constitutes apostasy in Islam EditScholars of Islam differ as to what constitutes apostasy in that religion and under what circumstances an apostate is subject to the death penalty Conditions of apostasy in classical Islam Edit Further information Takfir Characteristics of apostasy in classical Islam Al Shafi i listed three necessary conditions to pass capital punishment on a Muslim for apostasy in his Kitab al Umm In the words of Frank Griffel these are first the apostate had to once have had faith which according to Al Shafi i s definition means publicly professing all tenets of Islam secondly there had to follow unbelief meaning the public declaration of a breaking away from Islam having done these two the Muslim is now an unbeliever but not yet an apostate and thus not eligible for punishment Note 8 third there had to be the omission or failure to repent after the apostate was asked to do so 68 67 Three centuries later Al Ghazali wrote that one group known as secret apostates or permanent unbelievers aka zandaqa should not be given a chance to repent eliminating Al Shafi i s third condition for them although his view was not accepted by his Shafi i madhhab 69 67 Characteristics Edit Describing what qualifies as apostasy Christine Schirrmacher writes there is widespread consensus that apostasy undoubtedly exists where the truth of the Koran is denied where blasphemy is committed against God Islam or Muhammad and where breaking away from the Islamic faith in word or deed occurs The lasting willful non observance of the five pillars of Islam in particular the duty to pray clearly count as apostasy for most theologians Additional distinguishing features are a change of religion confessing atheism nullifying the Sharia as well as judging what is allowed to be forbidden and judging what is forbidden to be allowed Fighting against Muslims and Islam Arabic muḥaraba also counts as unbelief or apostasy 70 Kamran Hashemi classifies apostasy or unbelief in Islam into three different phenomena 71 Converting from Islam to another religion or abandoning religion altogether 71 72 73 3 also described as explicit apostasy 3 Hashemi gives the example of Abdul Rahman an Afghan who was arrested in February 2006 and threatened with the death penalty in a lower court in Kabul for converting to Christianity 74 Blaspheming sabb 71 by a Muslim against God Islam its laws or its prophet 43 75 which can be defined in practice as any objection to the authenticity of Islam its laws or its prophet 71 76 Heresy 71 or implicit apostasy by a Muslim 3 where the alleged apostate does not formally renounce Islam 73 but has in the eyes of their accusers verbally denied some principle of belief prescribed by Qur an or a Hadith deviated from approved Islamic tenets ilhad 73 Accusations of heresy or takfir often involve public thinkers and theologians Mahmoud Mohammed Taha Nasr Abu Zayd Hashem Aghajari but can involve the collective takfir of a large group and mass killings 77 takfir of Algerians who did not support the Armed Islamic Group of Algeria in 1997 takfir of Shia by Abu Musab al Zarqawi in 2005 78 Not all types of apostasy are punishable by death Only major apostasy requires execution Issues in defining heresy Edit Further information Takfir While identifying someone who publicly converted to another religion as an apostate was straightforward determining whether a diversion from orthodox doctrine qualified as heresy or blasphemy or something permitted by God could be less so Traditionally Islamic jurists did not formulate general rules for establishing unbelief instead compiled sometimes lengthy lists of statements and actions which in their view implied apostasy or were incompatible with Islamic theological consensus 3 Al Ghazali 79 for example devoting chapters to dealing with takfir and the reasons for which one can be accused of unbelief in his work on The Criterion of Distinction between Islam and Clandestine Unbelief 80 81 Some heretical or blasphemous acts or beliefs listed in classical manuals of jurisprudence and other scholarly works i e works written by Islamic scholars that allegedly demonstrate apostacy include to deny the obligatory character of something considered obligatory by Ijma consensus of Muslims 82 83 revile question wonder doubt mock or deny the existence of God or Prophet of Islam or that the Prophet was sent by God 82 83 belief that things in themselves or by their nature have a cause independent of the will of God 82 83 to assert the createdness of the Quran to translate the Quran 84 According to some to ridicule Islamic scholars or address them in a derisive manner to reject the validity of Shariah courts 84 Some also say to pay respect to non Muslims to celebrate Nowruz the Iranian New Year 84 Though disputed to express uncertainty such as I do not know why God mentioned this or that in the Quran 85 Some also say include for the wife of an Islamic scholar to curse her husband 85 to make a declaration of Prophethood i e for someone to declare that they are a prophet In early Islamic history after Muhammad s death this act was automatically deemed to be proof of apostasy because Islam teaches Muhammad was the last prophet there could be no more 86 This view is alleged to be the basis of the rejection of the Ahmadiyya as apostates from Islam 86 87 88 While there are numerous requirements for a Muslim to avoid being an apostate it is also an act of apostasy in Shafi i and other fiqh for a Muslim to accuse or describe another devout Muslim of being an unbeliever 89 based on the hadith where Muhammad is reported to have said If a man says to his brother You are an infidel then one of them is right 90 91 Historian Bernard Lewis writes that in religious polemic of early Islamic times it was common for one scholar to accuse another of apostasy but attempts to bring an alleged apostate to justice have them executed were very rare 92 The tension between desire to cleanse Islam of heresy and fear of inaccurate takfir is suggested in the writings of some of the leading Islamic scholars Al Ghazali is often credited with having persuaded theologians in his Fayal al tafriqa that takfir is not a fruitful path and that utmost caution is to taken in applying it but in other writing he made sure to condemn as beyond the pale of Islam philosophers and Ismaili esotericists Ibn Hazm and Ibn Taymiyyah also warned against unbridled takfir while takfiring specific categories of theological opponents as unbelievers 93 Gilles Kepel writes that used wrongly or unrestrainedly this sanction would quickly lead to discord and sedition in the ranks of the faithful Muslims might resort to mutually excommunicating one another and thus propel the Ummah to complete disaster 94 The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant ISIL for example takfired all those who opposed its policy of enslaving members of the Yazidi religion According to one source Jamileh Kadivar the majority of the 27 947 terrorist deaths ISIL has been responsible for as of 2020 have been Muslims it regards as kafir Note 9 as ISIL gives fighting alleged apostates a higher priority than fighting self professed non Muslims Jews Christians Hindus etc 96 An open letter to ISIL by 126 Islamic scholars includes as one of its points of opposition to ISIL It is forbidden in Islam to declare people non Muslim unless he or she openly declares disbelief 97 There is general agreement among Muslims that the takfir and mass killings of alleged apostates perpetrated not only by ISIL but also by the Armed Islamic Group of Algeria and Abu Musab al Zarqawi s jihadis 78 were wrong but there is less unanimity in other cases such as what to do in a situation where self professed Muslim s post modernist academic Nasr Abu Zayd or the Ahmadiyya movement disagree with their accusers on an important doctrinal point Ahmadi quote a Muslim journalist Abdul Majeed Salik claiming that all great and eminent Muslims in the history of Islam as well as all the sects in the Muslim world are considered to be disbelievers apostates and outside the pale of Islam according to one or the other group of religious leaders Note 10 In the case of the Ahmadiyya who are accused by mainstream Sunni and Shia of denying the basic tenet of the Finality of Prophethood Ahmadis state they believe Mirza Ghulam Ahmad is a mahdi and a messiah 99 the Islamic Republic of Pakistan has declared in Ordinance XX of the Second Amendment to its Constitution that Ahmadis are non Muslims and deprived them of religious rights Several large riots 1953 Lahore riots 1974 Anti Ahmadiyya riots and a bombing 2010 Ahmadiyya mosques massacre have killed hundreds of Ahmadis in that country Whether this is unjust takfir or applying sharia to collective apostasy is disputed 100 Overlap with blasphemyMain article Islam and blasphemy The three types conversion blasphemy and heresy of apostasy may overlap for example some heretics were alleged not to be actual self professed Muslims but secret members of another religion seeking to destroy Islam from within Abdullah ibn Mayun al Qaddah for example fathered the whole complex development of the Ismaili religion and organisation up to Fatimid times was accused by his different detractors of being variously a Jew a Bardesanian and most commonly as an Iranian dualist 101 In Islamic literature the term blasphemy sometimes also overlaps with kufr unbelief fisq depravity isa ah insult and ridda apostasy 102 103 Because blasphemy in Islam included rejection of fundamental doctrines 104 blasphemy has historically been seen as an evidence of rejection of Islam that is the religious crime of apostasy Some jurists believe that blasphemy automatically implies a Muslim has left the fold of Islam 105 A Muslim may find himself accused of being a blasphemer and thus an apostate on the basis of one action or utterance 106 107 Collective apostasyIn collective apostasy a self proclaimed Islamic group sect are declared to be heretics apostates Groups treated as collective apostates include zindiq sometimes Sufis and more recently Ahmadis and Bahais 108 As described above the difference between legitimate Muslim sects and illegitimate apostate groups can be subtle and Muslims have not agreed on where the line dividing them lies According to Gianluca Parolin collective apostasy has always been declared on a case by case basis 108 Fetri and national apostatesAmong Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and others in Ja fari fiqh a distinction is made between fetri or innate apostates who grew up Muslims and remained Muslim after puberty until converting to another religion and national apostates essentially people who grew up non Muslim and converted to Islam National apostates are given a chance to repent but innate apostates are not 109 Children raised in apostasyOrthodox apostasy fiqh can be problematic for someone who was raised by a non Muslim or non Muslims but has an absentee Muslim parent or was raised by an apostate or apostates from Islam A woman born to a Muslim parent is considered an apostate if she marries a non Muslim 110 111 even if her Muslim parent did not raise her and she has always practiced another religion and whether or not they know anything about Islam by simply practicing the new religion of their parent s they become apostates according to the committee of fatwa scholars at Islamweb net 112 Contemporary issues of defining apostasyIn the 19th 20th and 21 century issues affecting shariʿah on apostasy include modern norms of freedom of religion 3 the status of members of Bahaʼi considered unbeliever apostates in Iran and Ahmadi faiths considered appostates from Islam in Pakistan and elsewhere 3 those who refuse to judge or be judged according to the shariʿah 3 and more recently the status of Muslims authorities and governments that do not implement classical shariʿah law in its completeness Punishment Edit Execution of a Moroccan Jewess Sol Hachuel a painting by Alfred Dehodencq There are differences of opinion among Islamic scholars about whether when and especially how apostasy in Islam should be punished 14 3 44 From 11th century onwards apostasy of Muslims from Islam was forbidden by Islamic law earlier apostasy law was only applicable if a certain number of witnesses testify which for the most past was impossible 113 114 115 Apostasy was punishable by death and also by civil liabilities such as seizure of property children annulment of marriage loss of inheritance rights 3 A subsidiary law also applied throughout the history of Islam forbade non Muslims from proselytizing Muslims to leave Islam and join another religion 116 117 113 114 115 because it encouraged Muslims to commit a crime Starting in the 19th century the legal code of many Muslim states no longer included apostasy as a capital crime and to compensate some Islamic scholars called for vigilante justice of hisbah to execute the offenders see Apostasy in Islam Colonial era and after In contemporary times the majority of Islamic jurists still regard apostasy as a crime deserving the death penalty according to Abdul Rashied Omar 22 although a growing body of Islamic jurists oppose this Note 11 according to Javaid Rehman 14 3 36 as inconsistent with freedom of religion as expressed in the Quranic injunctions Quran 88 21 88 22 40 and Quran 2 256 there is no compulsion in religion 29 and a relic of the early Islamic community when apostasy was desertion or treason 41 Still others support a centrist or moderate position of executing only those whose apostasy is unambiguously provable such as if two just Muslim eyewitnesses testify and or reserving the death penalty for those who make their apostacy public According to Christine Schirrmacher a majority of theologians embrace this stance 118 Who qualifies for judgement for the crime of apostasy Edit Further information Takfir Exemptions and extenuating circumstances As mentioned above there are numerous doctrinal fine points outlined in fiqh manuals whose violation should render the violator an apostate but there are also hurdles and exacting requirements that spare self proclaimed Muslims conviction for apostasy in classical fiqh One motive for caution is that it is an act of apostasy in Shafi i and other fiqh for a Muslim to accuse or describe another innocent Muslim of being an unbeliever 89 based on the hadith where Muhammad is reported to have said If a man says to his brother You are an infidel then one of them is right 119 120 According to sharia to be found guilty the accused must at the time of apostasizing be exercising free will an adult and of sound mind 3 and have refused to repent when given a time period to do so not all schools include this last requirement The free will requirement excludes from judgement those who embraced Islam under conditions of duress and then went back to their old religion or Muslims who converted to another religion involuntarily either force or as concealment Taqiyya or Kitman out of fear of persecution or during war 121 122 Some of these requirements have served as loopholes to exonerate apostates apostasy charges against Abdul Rahman were dropped on the grounds he was mentally unfit 123 Death penalty Edit Main article Capital punishment in Islam Further information Hudud and Violence in Islam In classical Islamic jurisprudence Edit Traditional Sunni and Shiʿa Islamic jurisprudence fiqh and their respective schools maḏahib agree on some issues that male apostates should be executed and that most but not all perpetrators should not be given a chance to repent among the excluded are those who practice magic subhar treacherous heretics zanadiqa and recidivists 3 They disagree on issues such as whether women can be executed 124 125 126 whether apostasy is a violation of the rights of God 3 127 whether apostates who were born Muslims may be spared if they repent 3 whether conviction requires the accused be a practicing Muslim 3 or whether it is enough to simply intend to commit apostasy rather than actually doing it 3 Ḥanafi school recommends three days of imprisonment before the execution although the delay before killing the apostates is not mandatory Apostasy from Islam is not considered a hudud crime 128 Unlike in other schools it is not obligatory to call on the apostate to repent 3 Apostate males are to be killed while apostate females are to be held in solitary confinement and beaten every three days till they recant and return to Islam 129 The death penalty for apostasy from Islam is limited for those who cause aggravated robbery or grand larceny ḥirabah after leaving Islam not for converting to another religion 130 Maliki school allows up to ten days for recantation after which the apostates must be killed Apostasy from Islam is considered a hudud crime 128 Both male and female apostates deserve the death penalty for leaving Islam according to the traditional view of the Maliki school 126 Unlike other schools the apostates must have a history of being good i e practicing Muslims 3 Shafiʿi school waiting period of three days is required to allow the apostates time to repent and return to Islam Failing repentance death penalty is the recommended form of punishment for both male and female apostates for leaving Islam 126 Apostasy from Islam is not considered a hudud crime 128 Ḥanbali school waiting period not necessary but may be granted Apostasy from Islam is considered a hudud crime 128 Death penalty is the traditional form of punishment for both male and female apostates for leaving Islam 126 Jaʿfari or Imami school Male apostates must be executed while female apostates must be held in solitary confinement until they repents and return to Islam 126 129 Apostasy from Islam is considered a hudud crime 128 The mere intention of unbelief without expression qualifies as apostasy 3 Unlike the other schools repentance will not save a defendant from execution unless they are national apostates who were not born Muslims but converted to Islam before apostasizing although it is disputed by some Muslim scholars Innate apostates who grew up Muslims and remained Muslim after puberty and until converting to another religion should be executed 3 109 Vigilante application Edit In contemporary situations where apostates or alleged apostates have ended up being killed it is usually not be through the formal criminal justice system especially when a country s law does not punish apostasy It is not uncommon in some countries for vigilante Muslims to kill or attempt to kill apostates or alleged apostates or force them to flee the country 7 In at least one case the high profile execution of Mahmud Muhammad Taha the victim was legally executed and the government made clear he was being executed for apostasy but not the technical legal basis for his killing was another crime or crimes 7 namely heresy opposing the application of Islamic law disturbing public security provoking opposition against the government and re establishing a banned political party 131 When post modernist professor Nasr Abu Zayd was found to be an apostate by an Egyptian court it meant only an involuntary divorce from his wife who did not want to divorce but it put the proverbial target on his back and he fled to Europe 7 8 Civil liabilities Edit In Islam apostasy has traditionally had both criminal and civil penalties In the late 19th century when the use of criminal penalties for apostasy fell into disuse civil penalties were still applied 3 The punishment for the criminal penalties such as murder includes death or prison while 3 132 In all madhhabs of Islam the civil penalties include a the property of the apostate is seized and distributed to his or her Muslim relatives b his or her marriage annulled faskh as in the case of Nasr Abu Zayd 1 if they were not married at the time of apostasy they could not get married 133 dd c any children removed and considered ward of the Islamic state 3 d In case the entire family has left Islam or there are no surviving Muslim relatives recognized by Sharia the apostate s inheritance rights are lost and property is liquidated by the Islamic state part of fay ال فيء e In case the apostate is not executed such as in case of women apostates in Hanafi school the person also loses all inheritance rights 38 39 not specific enough to verify Hanafi Sunni school of jurisprudence allows waiting till execution before children and property are seized other schools do not consider this wait as mandatory but mandates time for repentance 3 Social liabilitiesThe conversion of a Muslim to another faith is often considered a disgrace and scandal as well as a sin 134 so in addition to penal and civil penalties loss of employment 134 ostracism and proclamations by family members that they are dead is not at all unusual 135 For those who wish to remain in the Muslim community but who are considered unbelievers by other Muslims there are also serious forms of ostracism These include the refusal of other Muslims to pray together with or behind a person accused of kufr the denial of the prayer for the dead and burial in a Muslim cemetery boycott of whatever books they have written etc 136 Supporters and opponents of death penalty Edit Support among contemporary Preachers and scholars Legal opinion on apostasy by the Fatwa committee at Al Azhar University in Cairo concerning the case of a man who converted to Christianity Since he left Islam he will be invited to express his regret If he does not regret he will be killed according to rights and obligations of the Islamic law The Fatwa also mentions that the same applies to his children if they entered Islam and left it after they reach maturity 137 The vast majority of Muslim scholars both past as well as present consider apostasy a crime deserving the death penalty according to Abdul Rashided Omar writing circa 2007 22 Some notable contemporary proponents include Abul A la Maududi 1903 1979 who by the time of his death had become the most widely read Muslim author of our time according to one source Mohammed al Ghazali 1917 1996 considered an Islamic moderate 138 and preeminent faculty member of Egypt s preeminent Islamic institution Al Azhar University as well as a valuable ally of the Egyptian government in its struggle against the growing tide of Islamic fundamentalism 139 was widely credited with contributing to the 20th century Islamic revival in the largest Arabic country Egypt 140 Al Ghazali was on record as declaring all those who opposed the implementation of sharia law to be apostates who should ideally be punished by the state but when the state fails to punish apostates somebody else has to do it 141 140 Yusuf al Qaradawi b 1926 another moderate Islamist 142 chairman of the International Union of Muslim Scholars 143 who as of 2009 was considered one of the most influential Islamic scholars living 144 145 146 Zakir Naik Indian Islamic televangelist and preacher 147 whose Peace TV channel reaches a reported 100 million viewers 148 149 and whose debates and talks are widely distributed 150 151 149 supports the death penalty only for those apostates who propagate the non Islamic faith and speak against Islam as he considers it treason 152 150 Muhammad Saalih Al Munajjid a Syrian Islamic scholar considered a respected scholar in the Salafi movement according to Al Jazeera 153 and founder of the fatwa website IslamQA 154 one of the most popular Islamic websites and as of November 2015 and according to Alexa com the world s most popular website on the topic of Islam generally apart from the website of an Islamic bank 155 156 157 Opposing the death penalty for apostasyIntisar Rabb faculty director of the Program in Islamic Law at Harvard Law School Shafi i jurists Grand Mufti Ali Gomaa of Egypt 158 159 Fiqh scholar Taha Jabir Alalwani 1935 2016 160 Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri 1922 2009 161 Grand Ayatollah Hussein Esmaeel al Sadr 162 Javed Ahmad Ghamidi a Pakistani Muslim theologian Quran scholar Tariq Ramadan a Swiss Muslim academic philosopher and writer He was a professor of contemporary Islamic studies Reza Aslan an Iranian American scholar of religious studies and writer Jonathan A C Brown a Muslim American scholar of Islamic studies Rudolph F Peters Gert Vries scholars of Islam Khaled Abou El Fadl scholar of Islamic law S A Rahman a former Chief Justice of Pakistan Mahmud Shaltut the Grand Imam of Al Azhar 1958 1963 163 Rationale arguments criticism for and against killing apostates Edit The question of whether apostates should be killed has been a matter for contentious dispute throughout Islamic history 164 For the death penaltyThroughout Islamic history the Muslim community scholars and schools of fiqh have agreed that scripture prescribes this penalty scripture must take precedence over reason or modern norms of human rights as Islam is the one true religion no compulsion in religion Q 2 256 does not apply to this punishment apostasy is spiritual and cultural treason it hardly ever happens and so is not worth talking about Abul A la Maududi said that among early Muslims among the schools of fiqh both Sunni and Shia among scholars of shari ah of every century available on record there is unanimous agreement that the punishment for apostate is death and that no room whatever remains to suggest that this penalty has not been continuously and uninterruptedly operative through Islamic history evidence from early texts that Muhammad called for apostates to be killed and that companions of the Prophet and early caliphs ordered beheadings and crucifixions of apostates and has never been declared invalid over the course of the history of Islamic theology Christine Schirrmacher 134 Many hadiths not just one or two call for the killing of apostates Yusuf al Qaradawi 165 166 Verse Q 2 217 hindering others from the Path of Allah rejecting Him and expelling the worshippers from the Sacred Mosque is a greater sin in the sight of Allah indicates the punishment for apostasy from Islam is death Mohammad Iqbal Siddiqi 167 Quranic verses in general appear to justify coercion and severe punishment for apostates Dale F Eickelman 50 If this doctrine is called into question what s next ritual prayer salat fasting sawm even Muhammad s mission Abul A la Maududi 168 It does not merit discussion because the advocates maintain apostasy from Islam is so rare Ali Kettani 169 Mahmud Brelvi 170 171 before the modern era there was virtually no apostasy from Islam Syed Barakat Ahmad 172 the punishment is rarely invoked because there are numerous qualifications or ways for the apostate to avoid death to be found guilty they must openly reject Islam have made their decision without coercion be aware of the nature of their statements be an adult be completely sane refused to repent etc Religious Tolerance website 173 or because the verse only forbids compulsion to believe things that are wrong when it comes to accepting the truth compulsion is allowed Peters and Vries explaining a traditional view Note 12 Others maintain that verse Q 2 256 has been abrogated i e according to classical Quranic scholars it has been overruled cancelled by verses of Quran revealed later IOW compulsion was not allow in the very earliest days of Islam but this was changed by divine revelation a few years later Peters and Vries explaining traditional view 175 Because the social order of every Moslem society is Islam apostasy constitutes an offense against that social order that may lead in the end to the destruction of this order Muhammad Muhiy al Din al Masiri 176 Apostasy is usually a psychological pretext for rebellion against worship traditions and laws and even against the foundations of the state and so is often synonymous with the crime of high treason Muhammad al Ghazali 177 Against death penaltyArguments against the death penalty include that some scholars throughout Islamic history have opposed that punishment for apostasy that it constitutes a form of compulsion in faith which the Quran explicitly forbids in Q 2 256 and other verses and that these override any other scriptural arguments and especially that the death penalty in hadith and applied by Muhammad was for treasonous seditious behavior not for a change in personal belief How can it be claimed that there was a consensus among scholars or community ijma from the beginning of Islam in favor of capital punishment when a number of companions of Muhammad and early Islamic scholars Ibn al Humam al Marghinani Ibn Abbas Sarakhsi Ibrahim al Nakh i opposed the execution of murtadd Mirza Tahir Ahmad 178 in addition there have been a number of prominent ulema though a minority over the centuries who argued against the death penalty for apostasy in some way such as The Maliki jurist Abu al Walid al Baji d 474 AH held that apostasy was liable only to a discretionary punishment known as ta zir and so might not require execution 163 The Hanafi jurist Al Sarakhsi d 483 AH 1090 CE 179 180 and Imam Ibnul Humam d 681 AH 1388 CE 181 and Abd al Rahman al Awza i 707 774 CE 182 all distinguished between non seditious religious apostasy on the one hand and treason on the other with execution reserved for treason Ibrahim al Nakhaʿi 50 AH 670 95 96 AH 717 CE and Sufyan al Thawri 97 AH 716 CE 161 AH 778 CE as well as the Hanafi jurist Sarakhsi d 1090 believed that an apostate should be asked to repent indefinitely which would be incompatible with being sentenced to death 163 183 There are problems with the scriptural basis for sharia commanding the execution of apostates Quran see Quran above Compulsion in faith is explicitly forbidden by the Quran Abd al Muta ali al Sa idi 184 Quranic statements on freedom of religion There is no compulsion in religion The right path has been distinguished from error Q 2 256 and also Whoever wants let him believe and whoever wants let him disbelieve Q 18 29 are absolute and universal statement s Jonathan A C Brown 57 Grand Mufti Ali Gomaa 158 general overriding principle s Khaled Abou El Fadl 185 of Islam and not abrogated by hadith or the Sword Verse Q 9 5 and there can be little doubt capital punishment for apostasy is incompatible with this principle after all if someone has the threat of death hanging over their head in a matter of faith it cannot be said that there is no compulsion or coercion in their belief Tariq Ramadan 186 Neither verse Q 2 217 Mirza Tahir Ahmad 187 or any other Quranic verse says anything to indicate an apostate should be punished in the temporal world aka dunya S A Rahman 188 W Heffening 189 Wael Hallaq 190 55 Grand Ayatollah Hussein Ali Montazeri 161 the verses only indicate that dangerous aggressive apostates should be killed Mahmud Shaltut 163 e g If they do not withdraw from you and offer you peace and restrain their hands take them and kill them wherever ye come upon them Q 4 90 Peters and Vries describing argument of Islamic Modernists 191 192 Another verses condemning apostasy Q 4 137 Those who believe then disbelieve then believe again then disbelieve and then increase in their disbelief God will never forgive them nor guide them to the path makes no sense if apostasy is punished by death because killing apostates would not permit repeated conversion from and to Islam Louay M Safi 60 Sisters in Islam 193 Hadith and Sunnah see hadith above According to most established juristic schools a hadith can limit the application of a general Qur anic statement but can never negate it so the hadith calling for execution cannot abrogate the There is no compulsion in religion verse Q 2 256 Louay M Safi Note 13 The Prophet Muhammad did not call for the deaths of contemporaries who left Islam Mohamed Ghilan 194 for example apostates like Hisham and Ayyash or converts to Christianity such as Ubaydallah ibn Jahsh and since what The Prophet did is by definition part of the Sunnah of Islam this indicates that one who changes her his religion should not be killed Tariq Ramadan 186 another reason not to use the hadith s stating whoever changes his religion kill him as the basis for law is that it is not among the class of hadith eligible to be used as the basis for legal rulings binding upon all Muslims for all times Muhammad al Shawkani 1759 1834 CE 194 as their authenticity is not certain Wael Hallaq 190 the hadith are in a category relying on only one authority khadar al ahad and were not widely known amongst the Companions of the Prophet and so ought not abrogate Quranic verses of tolerance Peters and Vries describing argument of Islamic Modernists 195 The hadith s calling for apostates to be killed are actually referring to what can be considered in modern terms political treason not change in personal belief Mohamed Ghilan 194 Adil Salahi Note 14 punishment of collective conspiracy and treason against the government Enayatullah Subhani 197 Mahmud Shaltut Note 15 and in fact translating the Islamic term ridda as simply apostasy a standard practice is really an error as ridda should be defined as the public act of political secession from the Muslim community Jonathan Brown 198 The punishment or lack for apostasy should reflect the circumstances of the Muslim community which is very different now then when the death penalty was established Unlike some other sharia laws those on how to deal with apostates from Islam are not set in stone but should be adjusted according to circumstances based on what best serves the interests of society In the past the death penalty for leaving Islam protected the integrity of the Muslim community but today this goal is no longer met by punishing apostasy Jonathan Brown 198 the premise and reasoning underlying the sunna rule of death penalty for apostasy were valid in the historical context where disbelief is equated with high treason because citizenship was based on belief in Islam but doesn t apply today Abdullahi An Na im et al 199 200 the prescription of death penalty for apostasy found in hadith was aimed at prevention of aggression against Muslims and sedition against the state Mahmud Shaltut 163 it s a man made rule enacted in the early Islamic community to prevent and punish the equivalent of desertion or treason John Esposito 41 it is probable that the punishment was prescribed by Muhammad during early Islam to combat political conspiracies against Islam and Muslims those who desert Islam out of malice and enmity towards the Muslim community and is not intended for those who simply change their belief converting to another religion after investigation and research Ayatollah Hussein Ali Montazeri 161 the concept of apostasy as treason is not so much part of Islam as part of the pre modern era when classical Islamic fiqh was developed and when every religion was a religion of the sword Reza Aslan 201 and every religion underpinned the political and social order within the states they established Jonathan Brown 198 the premodern period was an era in which citizenship was defined by religion In the worlds of Islam and Christendom alike to declare allegiance to another religion while continuing to reside in the land where one s original religion was dominant was to renounce allegiance to one s co religionists in a way tantamount to treason Intisar Rabb 202 deprecated source This was also an era in which religion and the state were one unified entity no Jew Christian Zoroastrian or Muslim of this time would have considered his or her religion to be rooted in the personal confessional experiences of individuals Your religion was your ethnicity your culture and your social identity your religion was your citizenship 201 For example the Holy Roman Empire had its officially sanctioned and legally enforced version of Christianity the Sasanian Empire had its officially sanctioned and legally enforced version of Zoroastrianism in China at that time Buddhist rulers fought Taoist rulers for political ascendancy Reza Aslan 201 Jews who abandoned the God of Israel to worship other deities were condemned to stoning Jonathan Brown 198 transcending tribalism with religious Islamic unity could mean prevention of civil war in Muhammad s era so to violate religious unity meant violating civil peace Mohamed Ghilan 194 capital punishment for apostasy is a time bound command applying only to those Arabs who denied the truth even after having Muhammad himself explained and clarified it to them Javed Ahmad Ghamidi 203 now the only reason to kill an apostate is to eliminate the danger of war not because of their disbelief Al Kamal ibn al Humam 861 AH 1457 CE 181 these days the number of apostates is small and does not politically threaten the Islamic community Christine Schirrmacher describing the liberal position on apostasy 118 it should be enforced only if apostasy becomes a mechanism of public disobedience and disorder fitna Ahmet Albayrak 42 In Islamic history laws calling for severe penalties against apostasy and blasphemy have not been used to protect Islam but almost exclusively to either eliminate political dissidents or target vulnerable religious minorities Javaid Rehman 204 which is hardly something worthy of imitating Executing apostates is a violation of the human right to freedom of religion and somewhat hypocritical for a religion that enthusiastically encourages non Muslims to apostatize from their current faith and convert to Islam Non Muslims and liberal Muslims Middle way Edit At least some conservative jurists and preachers have attempted to reconcile following the traditional doctrine of death for apostasy while addressing the principle of freedom of religion Some of whom argue apostasy should have a lesser penalty than death 16 37 38 39 At a 2009 human rights conference at Mofid University in Qom Iran Ayatollah Mohsen Araki stated that if an individual doubts Islam he does not become the subject of punishment but if the doubt is openly expressed this is not permissible As one observer Sadakat Kadri noted this freedom has the advantage that state officials could not punish an unmanifested belief even if they wanted to 205 Zakir Naik the Indian Islamic televangelist and preacher 147 takes a less strict line mentioned above stating that only those Muslims who propagate the non Islamic faith and speak against Islam after converting from Islam should be put to death 152 150 While not speaking to the issue of executing apostates Dar al Ifta al Misriyyah an Egyptian Islamic advisory justiciary and governmental body issued a fatwa in the case of an Egyptian Christian convert to Islam but sought to return to Christianity stating Those who embraced Islam voluntarily and without coercion cannot later deviate from the public order of society by revealing their act of apostasy because such behavior would discourage other people from embracing Islam The Egyptian court followed the fatwa 206 In practice historical impact EditFrom the Middle Ages to the early modern period Edit The charge of apostasy has often been used by religious authorities to condemn and punish skeptics dissidents and minorities in their communities 53 From the earliest times of the history of Islam the crime of apostasy and execution for apostasy has driven major events in the development of the Islamic religion For example the Ridda wars civil wars of apostasy shook the Muslim community in 632 633 AD immediately after the death of Muhammad 53 207 These wars caused the split between the two major sects of Islam Sunnis and Shias and numerous deaths on both sides 208 209 Sunni and Shia sects of Islam have long accused each other of apostasy 210 The charge of apostasy dates back to the early history of Islam with the emergence of the Kharijites in the 7th century CE 211 The original schism between Kharijites Sunnis and Shias among Muslims was disputed over the political and religious succession to the guidance of the Muslim community Ummah after the death of Muhammad 211 From their essentially political position the Kharijites developed extreme doctrines that set them apart from both mainstream Sunni and Shia Muslims 211 Shias believe ʿAli ibn Abi Ṭalib is the true successor to Muhammad while Sunnis consider Abu Bakr to hold that position The Kharijites broke away from both the Shias and the Sunnis during the First Fitna the first Islamic Civil War 211 they were particularly noted for adopting a radical approach to takfir excommunication whereby they declared both Sunni and Shia Muslims to be either infidels kuffar or false Muslims munafiḳun and therefore deemed them worthy of death for their perceived apostasy ridda 211 212 213 Roderick is venerated in Christianity as one of the Martyrs of Cordoba Modern historians recognize that the Christian populations living in the lands invaded by the Arab Muslim armies between the 7th and 10th centuries AD suffered religious persecution religious violence and martyrdom multiple times at the hands of Arab Muslim officials and rulers 214 215 216 217 many were executed under the Islamic death penalty for defending their Christian faith through dramatic acts of resistance such as refusing to convert to Islam repudiation of the Islamic religion and subsequent reconversion to Christianity and blasphemy towards Muslim beliefs 215 216 217 Notable Christian converts to Islam who reportedly reverted to Christianity and were executed under the Islamic death penalty for this reason include Kyros who was executed by burning in 769 CE Holy Elias in 795 CE and Holy Bacchus in 806 CE 218 The martyrdoms of forty eight Christian martyrs that took place in the Emirate of Cordoba between 850 and 859 CE 219 are recorded in the hagiographical treatise written by the Iberian Christian and Latinist scholar Eulogius of Cordoba 215 216 217 The Martyrs of Cordoba were executed under the rule of Abd al Rahman II and Muhammad I and Eulogius hagiography describes in detail the executions of the martyrs for capital violations of Islamic law including apostasy and blasphemy 215 216 217 Historian David Cook writes that it is only with the Abbasi caliphs al Mu taṣim 218 28 AH 833 42 CE and al Mutawakkil 233 47 847 61 that we find detailed accounts of apostates and what was done with them Prior to that in the Umayyad and early Abbasid periods measures to defend Islam from apostasy appear to have mostly remained limited to intellectual debates 220 He also states that the most common category of apostates at least of apostates who converted to another religion from the very first days of Islam were Christians and Jews who converted to Islam and after some time reconverted back to their former faith 221 Some sources emphasize that executions of apostates have been rare in Islamic history 29 According to historian Bernard Lewis in religious polemic in the early times of Islam charges of apostasy were not unusual but the accused were seldom prosecuted and some even held high offices in the Muslim state Later as the rules and penalties of the Muslim law were systematized and more regularly enforced charges of apostasy became rarer 92 When action was taken against an alleged apostate it was much more likely to be quarantine than execution unless the innovation was extreme persistent and aggressive 92 Another source legal historian Sadakat Kadri argues execution was rare because it was widely believed that any accused apostate who repented by articulating the shahada had to be forgiven and their punishment delayed until after Judgement Day This principle was upheld even in extreme situations such as when an offender adopted Islam only for fear of death and their sincerity seemed highly implausible It was based on the hadith that Muhammad had upbraided a follower for killing a raider who had uttered the shahada Note 16 The New Encyclopedia of Islam also states that after the early period with some notable exceptions the practice in Islam regarding atheism or various forms of heresy grew more tolerant as long as it was a private matter However heresy and atheism expressed in public may well be considered a scandal and a menace to a society in some societies they are punishable at least to the extent the perpetrator is silenced In particular blasphemy against God and insulting Muhammad are major crimes 224 In contrast historian David Cook maintains the issue of apostasy and punishment for it was not uncommon in Islamic history However he also states that prior to 11th century execution seems rare he gives an example of a Jew who had converted to Islam and used the threat of reverting to Judaism in order to gain better treatment and privilege 225 Zindiq often a blanket phrase for intellectuals under suspicion of having abandoned Islam or freethinker atheist or heretic who conceal their religion 226 experienced a wave of persecutions from 779 to 786 A history of those times states 224 Tolerance is laudable the Spiller the Caliph Abu al Abbas had once said except in matters dangerous to religious beliefs or to the Sovereign s dignity 224 Al Mahdi d 169 785 persecuted Freethinkers and executed them in large numbers He was the first Caliph to order composition of polemical works to in refutation of Freethinkers and other heretics and for years he tried to exterminate them absolutely hunting them down throughout all provinces and putting accused persons to death on mere suspicion 224 The famous Sufi mystic of 10th century Iraq Mansur Al Hallaj was officially executed for possessing a heretical document suggesting hajj pilgrimage was not required of a pure Muslim i e killed for heresy which made him an apostate but it is thought he would have been spared execution except that the Caliph at the time Al Muqtadir wished to discredit certain figures who had associated themselves with al Hallaj 227 Previously al Hallaj had been punished for talking about being at one with God by being shaved pilloried and beaten with the flat of a sword He was not executed because the Shafi ite judge had ruled that his words were not proof of disbelief 227 In 12th century Iran al Suhrawardi along with followers of Ismaili sect of Islam were killed on charges of being apostates 53 in 14th century Syria Ibn Taymiyyah declared Central Asian Turko Mongol Muslims as apostates due to the invasion of Ghazan Khan 228 in 17th century India Dara Shikoh and other sons of Shah Jahan were captured and executed on charges of apostasy from Islam by his brother Aurangzeb although historians agree it was more political than a religious execution 229 Colonial era and after Edit Muslim countries where the death penalty for the crime of apostasy is in force or has been proposed as of 2013 230 Many other Muslim countries impose a prison term for apostasy or they prosecute it under blasphemy or other laws 231 See also Anti Christian sentiment in the Middle East Christianity in the Middle East Conversion of non Muslim places of worship into mosques and Persecution of Christians by ISIL From around 1800 up until 1970 there were only a few cases of executions of apostates in the Muslim world including the strangling of a woman in Egypt sometime between 1825 and 1835 and the beheading of an Armenian youth in the Ottoman Empire in 1843 3 Western powers campaigned intensely for a prohibition on the execution of apostates in the Ottoman Empire British envoy to the court of Sultan Abdulmejid I 1839 1861 Stratford Canning led diplomatic representatives from Austria Russia Prussia and France in a tug of war with the Ottoman government 232 In the end following the execution of the Armenian the Sublime Porte agreed to allow complete freedom of Christian missionaries to try to convert Muslims in the Empire 3 The death sentence for apostasy from Islam was abolished by the Edict of Toleration and substituted with other forms of punishment by the Ottoman government in 1844 The implementation of this ban was resisted by religious officials and proved difficult 233 234 A series of edicts followed during the Ottoman Tanzimat period such as the 1856 Reform Edict This was also the time that Islamic modernists like Muhammad Abduh d 1905 argued that to be executed it was not enough to be an apostate the perpetrator had to pose a real threat to public safety 164 Islamic scholars like Muhammad Rashid Rida d 1935 and Muhammad al Ghazzali d 1996 on the other hand asserted that public explicit apostasy automatically tened public order and hence punishable by death These scholars reconciled the Qur anic verse There is no compulsion in religion by arguing that freedom of religion in Islam doesn t extend for Muslims who seek to change their religion Other authors like Abd al Muta ali al Sa idi S A Rahman etc assert that capital punishment for apostasy is contradictory to freedom of religion and need to be banished 235 Greek Christians in 1922 fleeing their homes from Kharput to Trebizond In the 1910s and 1920s the Armenian Greek and Assyrian genocides were perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire 236 Efforts to convert Muslims to other religions were extremely unpopular with the Muslim community Despite these edicts on apostasy there was constant pressure on non Muslims to convert to Islam and apostates from Islam continued to be persecuted punished and threatened with execution particularly in eastern and Levant parts of the then Ottoman Empire 233 The Edict of Toleration ultimately failed when Sultan Abdul Hamid II assumed power re asserted pan Islamism with sharia as Ottoman state philosophy and initiated Hamidian massacres in 1894 against Christians particularly the Genocides of Armenians Greeks Assyrians and crypto Christian apostates from Islam in Turkey Stavriotes Kromlides 237 238 239 not specific enough to verify In the colonial era the death penalty for apostasy was abolished in Islamic countries that had come under Western rule or in places such as the Ottoman Empire Western powers could apply enough pressure to abolish it 3 Writing in the mid 1970s Rudolph Peters and Gert J J De Vries stated that apostasy no longer falls under criminal law 3 in the Muslim world but that some Muslims such as Adb al Qadir Awdah were preaching that the killing of an apostate had become a duty of individual Moslems rather than a less important collective duty in hisbah doctrine and giving advice on how to plead in court after being arrested for such a murder to avoid punishment 240 Some Louay M Safi have argued that this situation with the adoption of European legal codes enforced by state elites without any public debate created an identification of tolerance with foreign alien control in the mind of the Muslim public and rigid literalist interpretations such as the execution of apostates with authenticity and legitimacy Autocratic rulers often align themselves with traditional religious scholars to deflect grassroots discontent which took the form of angry pious traditionalists 60 In practice in the recent past EditWhile as of 2004 apostasy from Islam is a capital offence in only eight majority Muslim states 230 in other states that do not directly execute apostates apostate killing is sometimes facilitated through extrajudicial killings performed by the apostate s family particularly if the apostate is vocal Note 17 In some countries it is not uncommon for vigilante Muslims to kill or attempt to kill apostates or alleged apostates in the belief they are enforcing sharia law that the government has failed to Penalties actual or proposed for apostasy in some Muslim majority countries as of 2020 Death penalty Prison Converting a Muslim is a crime Loss of child custody marriage Background Edit More than 20 Muslim majority states have laws that punish apostasy by Muslims to be a crime some de facto other de jure 230 As of 2014 apostasy was a capital offense in Afghanistan Brunei Mauritania Qatar Saudi Arabia Sudan the United Arab Emirates and Yemen 230 Executions for religious conversion have been infrequent in recent times with four cases reported since 1985 one in Sudan in 1985 two in Iran in 1989 and 1998 and one in Saudi Arabia in 1992 230 29 In Mauritania Saudi Arabia Jordan and Yemen apostasy laws have been used to charge persons for acts other than conversion 230 In addition some predominantly Islamic countries without laws specifically addressing apostasy have prosecuted individuals or minorities for apostasy using broadly defined blasphemy laws 242 In many nations the Hisbah doctrine of Islam has traditionally allowed any Muslim to accuse another Muslim or ex Muslim for beliefs that may harm Islamic society i e violate the norms of sharia Islamic law This principle has been used in countries such as Egypt Pakistan and others to bring blasphemy charges against apostates 243 244 The source of most violence or threats of violence against apostate has come from outside of state judicial systems in the Muslim world in recent years either from extralegal acts by government authorities or from other individuals or groups operating unrestricted by the government 245 page needed There has also been social persecution for Muslims converting to Christianity For example the Christian organisation Barnabas Fund reports The field of apostasy and blasphemy and related crimes is thus obviously a complex syndrome within all Muslim societies which touches a raw nerve and always arouses great emotional outbursts against the perceived acts of treason betrayal and attacks on Islam and its honour While there are a few brave dissenting voices within Muslim societies the threat of the application of the apostasy and blasphemy laws against any who criticize its application is an efficient weapon used to intimidate opponents silence criticism punish rivals reject innovations and reform and keep non Muslim communities in their place 246 unreliable source Similar views are expressed by the non theistic International Humanist and Ethical Union 247 Author Mohsin Hamid points out that the logic of widely accepted claim that anyone helping an apostate is themselves an apostate is a powerful weapon in spreading fear among those who oppose the killings in at least the country of Pakistan It means that a doctor who agrees to treat an apostate wounded by attacker s or a police officer who has agreed to protect that doctor after they have been threatened is also an apostate and on and on 248 Contemporary reformist liberal Muslims such as Quranist Ahmed Subhy Mansour 249 Edip Yuksel and Mohammed Shahrour have suffered from accusations of apostasy and demands to execute them issued by Islamic clerics such as Mahmoud Ashur Mustafa Al Shak a Mohammed Ra fat Othman and Yusif Al Badri 250 Apostate communities Edit Christian apostates from IslamRegarding Muslim converts to Christianity Duane Alexander Miller 2016 identified two different categories Muslims followers of Jesus Christ Jesus Muslims or Messianic Muslims analogous to Messianic Jews who continue to self identify as Muslims or at least say Islam is part of their culture rather than religion but understand themselves to be following Jesus as he is portrayed in the Bible Christians from a Muslim background abbreviated CMBs also known as ex Muslim Christians who have completely abandoned Islam in favour of Christianity Miller introduced the term Muslim background believers MBBs to encompass both groups adding that the latter group are generally regarded as apostates from Islam but orthodox Muslims opinions on the former group is more mixed either that Muslim followers of Jesus are heterodox Muslims heretical Muslims or crypto Christian liars 251 Atheist apostates from IslamWriting in 2015 Ahmed Benchemsi argued that while Westerners have great difficulty even conceiving of the existence of an Arab atheist a generational dynamic is underway with large numbers of young people brought up as Muslims tilting away from rote religiosity after having personal doubts about the illogicalities of the Quran and Sunnah 252 Immigrant apostates from Islam in Western countries converting to Atheism have often gathered for comfort in groups such as Women in Secularism Ex Muslims of North America Council of Ex Muslims of Britain 253 sharing tales of the tension and anxieties of leaving a close knit belief based community and confronting parental disappointment rejection by friends and relatives and charges of trying to assimilate into a Western culture that despises them often using terminology first uttered by the LGBT community coming out and leaving the closet 253 Atheists in the Muslim world maintain a lower profile but according to the Editor in chief of FreeArabs com When I recently searched Facebook in both Arabic and English combining the word atheist with names of different Arab countries I turned up over 250 pages or groups with memberships ranging from a few individuals to more than 11 000 And these numbers only pertain to Arab atheists or Arabs concerned with the topic of atheism who are committed enough to leave a trace online 252 Public opinion Edit A survey based on face to face interviews conducted in 80 languages by the Pew Research Center between 2008 and 2012 among thousands of Muslims in many countries found varied views on the death penalty for those who leave Islam to become an atheist or to convert to another religion 35 In some countries especially in Central Asia Southeast Europe and Turkey support for the death penalty for apostasy was confined to a tiny fringe in other countries especially in the Arab world and South Asia majorities and large minorities support the death penalty In the survey Muslims who favored making Sharia the law of the land were asked for their views on the death penalty for apostasy from Islam 35 The results are summarized in the table below Note that values for Group C have been derived from the values for the other two groups and are not part of the Pew report 35 Middle East and North Africa Country Group A Muslims support sharia Group B Support death for apostasy as a of Group A Group C Group B as of all MuslimsEgypt 74 86 63 6Palestine 89 66 58 7Jordan 71 82 58 2Iraq 91 42 38 2Tunisia 56 29 16 2Lebanon 29 46 13 3 South and Southeast Asia Country Group A Muslims support sharia Group B Support death for apostasy as a of Group A Group C Group B as of all MuslimsAfghanistan 99 79 78 2Pakistan 84 76 63 8Malaysia 86 62 53 3Bangladesh 82 44 36 1Thailand 77 27 20 8Indonesia 72 18 13 0 Southeast Europe and Central Asia Country Group A Muslims support sharia Group B Support death for apostasy as a of Group A Group C Group B as of all MuslimsRussia 42 15 6 3Tajikistan 27 22 5 9Kyrgyzstan 35 14 4 9Bosnia 15 15 2 3Kosovo 20 11 2 2Turkey 12 17 2 0Albania 12 8 1 0Kazakhstan 10 4 0 4 Visualisation of the total of Muslims per country who support the death penalty for apostasy according to the 2013 Pew report s values Overall the figures in the 2012 survey suggest that the percentage of Muslims in the countries surveyed who approve the death penalty for Muslims who leave Islam to become an atheist or convert to another religion varies widely from 0 4 in Kazakhstan to 78 2 in Afghanistan 35 The Governments of the Gulf Cooperation Council Saudi Arabia UAE Oman Qatar Bahrain and Kuwait did not permit Pew Research to survey nationwide public opinion on apostasy in 2010 or 2012 The survey also did not include China India Syria or West African countries such as Nigeria By country EditMain article Apostasy in Islam by country The situation for apostates from Islam varies markedly between Muslim minority and Muslim majority regions In Muslim minority countries any violence against those who abandon Islam is already illegal But in Muslim majority countries violence is sometimes institutionalised and at least in 2007 hundreds and thousands of closet apostates live in fear of violence and are compelled to live lives of extreme duplicity and mental stress 254 Universal Declaration of Human Rights EditMain articles Human rights in Muslim majority countries and Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam Laws prohibiting religious conversion run contrary 255 to Article 18 of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights which states the following Everyone has the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief and freedom either alone or in community with others and in public or private to manifest his religion or belief in teaching practice worship and observance 256 Afghanistan Egypt Iran Iraq Pakistan and Syria voted in favor of the Declaration 256 The governments of other Muslim majority countries have responded by criticizing the Declaration as an attempt by the non Muslim world to impose their values on Muslims with a presumption of cultural superiority 257 258 and by issuing the Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam a joint declaration of the member states of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference made in 1990 in Cairo Egypt 259 260 The Cairo Declaration differs from the Universal Declaration in affirming Sharia as the sole source of rights and in limits of equality and behavior 261 page needed 262 263 in religion gender sexuality etc 260 264 Islamic scholars such as Muhammad Rashid Rida in Tafsir al Minar argue that the freedom to apostatize is different from freedom of religion on the grounds that apostasy from Islam infringes on the freedom of others and the respect due the religion of Islamic states 3 Literature and film EditFilms and documentaries Edit Leaving the Faith Former Muslims 2014 for Deutsche Welle Ex Muslim Leaving Religion 2015 Benjamin Zand for BBC News Islam s Non Believers 2016 Deeyah Khan for Fuuse Among Nonbelievers 2015 Dorothee Forma for HUMAN Non believers Freethinkers on the Run 2016 Dorothee Forma for HUMAN Rescuing Ex Muslims Leaving Islam 2016 Poppy Begum for Vice News Diary of a Pakistani Atheist 2017 Mobeen Azhar for BBC World Service 265 Becoming Ex Muslim The secret group for Aussies who ve left their faith 2017 Patrick Abboud for The Feed Books by ex Muslims Edit Qureshi Nabeel 2014 Seeking Allah Finding Jesus A Devout Muslim Encounters Christianity Zondervan ISBN 978 0310515029 Ham Boris van der Benhammou Rachid 2018 Nieuwe Vrijdenkers 12 voormalige moslims vertellen hun verhaal New Freethinkers 12 Former Muslims Tell Their Story Amsterdam Prometheus p 209 ISBN 978 9044636840 Hirsi Ali Ayaan 2007 Infidel My Life Mijn Vrijheid Simon amp Schuster UK ISBN 978 0743295031 Hirsi Ali Ayaan 2011 Nomad From Islam to America Simon amp Schuster UK ISBN 978 1847398185 Al Husseini Waleed 2017 The Blasphemer The Price I Paid for Rejecting Islam Blasphemateur les prisons d Allah New York Skyhorse Publishing ISBN 978 1628726756 Jami Ehsan 2007 Het recht om ex moslim te zijn The Right to Be an Ex Muslim Kampen Uitgeverij Ten Have ISBN 978 9025958367 Mohammed Yasmine 2019 From Al Qaeda to Atheism The Girl Who Would Not Submit Free Hearts Free Minds ISBN 978 1724790804 Rizvi Ali Amjad 2016 The Atheist Muslim A Journey from Religion to Reason New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 1250094445 Saleem Aliyah Mughal Fiyaz 2018 Leaving Faith Behind The journeys and perspectives of people who have chosen to leave Islam London Darton Longman amp Todd p 192 ISBN 978 0232533644 Sultan Harris 2018 The Curse of God Why I Left Islam Gordon Centre Australia Xilbris ISBN 978 1984502124 266 Warraq Ibn 2003 Leaving Islam Apostates Speak Out Amherst New York Prometheus Books ISBN 978 1591020684 See also EditAl Baqara 256 Apostasy in Christianity Apostasy in Judaism Ex Muslims of North America Islam and blasphemy List of former Muslims List of ex Muslim organisations Anwar Shaikh Superstitions in Muslim societies Takfir ZandaqaReferences EditNotes Edit A professor at Cairo University Nasr Abu Zayd was found to be guilty of being an unbeliever by Egyptian courts in the 1990s One of many reasons given by the Egyptian Court of Cassation for rejecting Abu Zayd s claim to be a Muslim was that he denied the existence of jinn aka genies In his writings he had argued that the reason for the presence of jinn in the Quran was that they formed part of the culture of the Arabs at the time when the book was revealed and that by appealing to Arab conceptions of communication between genies and humans the notion of divine revelation could be made intelligible to the Arabs 6 The penalty of killing of apostates is in conflict with international human rights norms which provide for the freedom of religions as demonstrated in such human rights instruments such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights provide for the freedom of religion 18 7 From 1985 to 2006 only four individuals were officially executed for apostasy from Islam by governments one in Sudan in 1985 two in Iran in 1989 and 1998 and one in Saudi Arabia in 1992 29 these were sometimes charged with unrelated political crimes Pew Research Center taken from 2008 and 2012 35 Ahmet Albayrak writes in The Qur an An Encyclopedia that regarding apostasy as a wrongdoing is not a sign of intolerance of other religions and it is not aimed at one s freedom to choose a religion or one s freedom to leave Islam and embrace another faith on the contrary it is more correct to say that the punishment is imposed as a safety precaution when conditions warrant the imposition of it for example the punishment is imposed if apostasy becomes a mechanism of public disobedience and disorder fitna 42 Legal historian Wael Hallaq writes that nothing in the law governing apostates and apostasy derives from the letter of the Quran 55 two of the Kutub al Sittah or the six most important collections of hadith for Sunni Muslims for example Ibn Taymiyya wrote not everyone who falls into unbelief becomes an unbeliever Laysa kull man waqaʿa fi l kufr ṣara kafir 67 killings have been directly by ISIL or through affiliated groups from its inception in 2014 to 2020 according to Jamileh Kadivar based on estimates from Global Terrorism Database 2020 Herrera 2019 Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights amp United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq UNAMI Human Rights Office 2014 Ibrahim 2017 Obeidallah 2014 2015 95 according to one well known Muslim journalist of the Indo Pak subcontinent Maulana Abdul Majeed Salik All great and eminent Muslims in the history of Islam as well as all the sects in the Muslim world are considered to be disbelievers apostates and outside the pale of Islam according to one or the other group of religious leaders In the realm of the Shariah religious law and tariqat path of devotion not a single sect or a single family has been spared the accusations of apostasy 98 More recently a growing body of Islamic jurists have relied on Quranic verses which advocate absolute freedom of religion citation needed Finally the argument is put forward that killing an apostate must be considered as compulsion in religion which has been forbidden in K 2 256 though this verse was traditionally interpreted in a different way Footnote 38 According to some classical scholars this verse had been abrograted by later verses The current interpretation of this verse however was that it forbids compulsion to things that are wrong batil but not compulsion to accept the truth 174 See for example al Shatibi al Muafaqat Beirut Lebanon Dar al Ma rifah n d vol 3 pp 15 26 quoted in 60 The sunnah which is consistent with the Qur an reserves the death penalty for those who apostatised and treasonously fought against the Muslims 196 the prescription of death penalty for apostasy found in hadith was aimed at prevention of aggression against Muslims and sedition against the state 163 Muhammad had been unimpressed by claims that the dead man had adopted Islam only for fear of death Who will absolve you Usama he asked the killer repeatedly for ignoring the confession of faith source ibn Ishaq Life of Muhammad p 667 al Bukhari 5 59 568 Muslim 1 176 222 223 examples of countries where the government does not facilitate extra judicial killings are Turkey Israel and parts of India 241 Citations Edit a b c Schirrmacher Christine 2020 Chapter 7 Leaving Islam In Enstedt Daniel Larsson Goran Mantsinen Teemu T eds Handbook of Leaving Religion Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion Vol 18 Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers pp 81 95 doi 10 1163 9789004331471 008 ISBN 978 9004330924 ISSN 1874 6691 No God not even Allah The Economist 24 November 2012 Archived from the original on 26 December 2017 Retrieved 9 January 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai Peters Rudolph Vries Gert J J De 1976 Apostasy in Islam Die Welt des Islams 17 1 4 1 25 doi 10 2307 1570336 JSTOR 1570336 By the murtadd or apostate is understood as the Moslem by birth or by conversion who renounces his religion irrespective of whether or not he subsequently embraces another faith Hashemi Kamran 2008 Part A Apostasy IRTIDAD Religious Legal Traditions International Human Rights Law and Muslim States Brill p 21 ISBN 978 9047431534 Retrieved 15 January 2021 Peters Rudolph Vries Gert J J De 1976 Apostasy in Islam Die Welt des Islams 17 1 4 2 4 doi 10 2307 1570336 JSTOR 1570336 Cook Michael 2000 The Koran a Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press a b c d e Brems Evams 2001 Human Rights Universality and Diversity Springer p 210 ISBN 978 9041116185 Retrieved 11 December 2020 a b Professor Nasr Hamed Abu Zaid Modernist islamic philosopher who was forced into exile by fundamentalists Archived 25 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine By Adel Darwish 14 July 2010 The Independent Adang Camilla 2001 Belief and Unbelief choice or destiny In McAuliffe Jane Dammen ed Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾan Vol I Leiden Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 1875 3922 q3 EQCOM 00025 ISBN 978 9004147430 Frank Griffel Apostasy in Editor Gerhard Bowering et al The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought ISBN 978 0691134840 pp 40 41 Diane Morgan 2009 Essential Islam A Comprehensive Guide to Belief and Practice ISBN 978 0313360251 pp 182 183 Ghali Hebatallah December 2006 Rights of Muslim Converts to Christianity PhD Thesis Department of Law School of Humanities and Social Sciences The American University in Cairo Egypt p 2 Archived PDF from the original on 4 September 2014 Whereas an apostate murtad is the person who commits apostasy rtidad that is the conscious abandonment of allegiance or renunciation of a religious faith or abandonment of a previous loyalty a b Poljarevic Emin 2021 Theology of Violence oriented Takfirism as a Political Theory The Case of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria ISIS In Cusack Carole M Upal M Afzal eds Handbook of Islamic Sects and Movements Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion Vol 21 Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers pp 485 512 doi 10 1163 9789004435544 026 ISBN 978 9004435544 ISSN 1874 6691 a b c d Abdelhadi Magdi 27 March 2006 What Islam says on religious freedom BBC News Archived from the original on 11 February 2017 Retrieved 14 October 2009 Friedmann Yohanan 2003 Chapter 4 Apostasy Tolerance and Coercion in Islam Interfaith Relations in the Muslim Tradition Cambridge University Press pp 121 159 ISBN 978 1139440790 a b c Ibrahim Hassan 2006 Abu Rabi Ibrahim M ed The Blackwell Companion to Contemporary Islamic Thought Blackwell Publishing pp 167 169 ISBN 978 1405121743 Human Rights Diplomacy Psychology Press 1997 p 64 ISBN 978 0415153904 Wood Asmi 2012 8 Apostasy in Islam and the Freedom of Religion in International Law In Paul Babie Neville Rochow eds Freedom of Religion under Bills of Rights University of Adelaide Press p 164 ISBN 978 0987171801 JSTOR 10 20851 j ctt1t3051j 13 Retrieved 9 January 2021 UN rights office deeply concerned over Sudanese woman facing death for apostasy UN News Centre 16 May 2014 Archived from the original on 17 April 2017 Retrieved 17 April 2017 Saudi Arabia Writer Faces Apostasy Trial Human Rights Watch 13 February 2012 Archived from the original on 17 April 2017 Retrieved 17 April 2017 Lewis Bernard 1995 The Middle East a Brief History of the Last 2000 Years Touchstone Books p 229 ISBN 978 0684807126 a b c d Omar Abdul Rashied 2009 The Right to religious conversion Between apostasy and proselytization In Mohammed Abu Nimer David Augsburger eds Peace Building by between and beyond Muslims and Evangelical Christians Lexington Books pp 179 194 ISBN 978 0739135235 Kecia Ali Oliver Leaman 2008 Islam the key concepts Routledge p 10 ISBN 978 0415396387 John L Esposito 2004 The Oxford dictionary of Islam Oxford University Press p 22 ISBN 978 0195125597 Asma Afsaruddin 2013 Striving in the Path of God Jihad and Martyrdom in Islamic Thought p 242 Oxford University Press ISBN 0199730938 Gerhard Bowering ed 2013 The Princeton encyclopedia of Islamic political thought associate editors Patricia Crone Wadid Kadi Devin J Stewart and Muhammad Qasim Zaman assistant editor Mahan Mirza Princeton N J Princeton University Press p 40 ISBN 978 0691134840 B Hallaq Wael 2009 Shari a Theory Practice and Transformations Cambridge University Press p 319 ISBN 978 0521861472 Death sentence for apostasy in nearly a dozen countries report says National Secular Society 16 November 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2022 a b c d Elliott Andrea 26 March 2006 In Kabul a Test for Shariah The New York Times Archived from the original on 11 January 2016 Retrieved 28 November 2015 Countries where apostasy and blasphemy laws in Islam are applied PDF Set My People Free a b c Marshall Paul Shea Nina 2011 Silenced How Apostasy amp Blasphemy Codes are Choking Freedom Worldwide Oxford Oxford University Press p 61 ISBN missing Baele Stephane J October 2019 Giles Howard ed Conspiratorial Narratives in Violent Political Actors Language PDF Journal of Language and Social Psychology Sage Publications 38 5 6 706 734 doi 10 1177 0261927X19868494 hdl 10871 37355 ISSN 1552 6526 S2CID 195448888 Retrieved 3 January 2022 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint url status link Rickenbacher Daniel August 2019 Jikeli Gunther ed The Centrality of Anti Semitism in the Islamic State s Ideology and Its Connection to Anti Shiism Religions Basel MDPI 10 8 The Return of Religious Antisemitism 483 doi 10 3390 rel10080483 ISSN 2077 1444 Badara Mohamed Nagata Masaki Tueni Tiphanie June 2017 The Radical Application of the Islamist Concept of Takfir PDF Arab Law Quarterly Leiden Brill Publishers 31 2 134 162 doi 10 1163 15730255 31020044 ISSN 1573 0255 Archived PDF from the original on 11 July 2019 Retrieved 25 October 2021 a b c d e Beliefs about Sharia Pew Research Center 30 April 2013 Archived from the original on 30 August 2014 Retrieved 30 August 2014 a b Sudan woman faces death for apostasy BBC News 15 May 2014 Archived from the original on 19 May 2014 There is a long running debate in Islam over whether apostasy is a crime Some liberal scholars hold the view that it is not Others say that apostasy is The latter is the dominant view in conservative Muslim states such as Sudan Saudi Arabia and Pakistan a b Forte D F 1994 Apostasy and Blasphemy in Pakistan Conn Journal of Int l Law Vol 10 pp 27 41 a b c d Zwemer Samuel M The Law of Apostasy The Muslim World 14 4 36 37 chapter 2 ISSN 0027 4909 a b c Kazemi F 2000 Gender Islam and politics Social Research Vol 67 No 2 pp 453 474 a b Abou El Fadl Khaled 2007 The Great Theft Wrestling Islam from the Extremists HarperOne p 158 ISBN 978 0061189036 a b c John Esposito 2011 What Everyone Needs to Know About Islam Oxford University Press p 74 ISBN 978 0199794133 a b Ahmet Albayrak writes in The Qur an An Encyclopedia that regarding apostasy as a wrongdoing is not a sign of intolerance of other religions and is not aimed at one s freedom to choose a religion or to leave Islam and embrace another faith but that on the contrary it is more correct to say that the punishment is enforced as a safety precaution when warranted if apostasy becomes a mechanism of public disobedience and disorder fitna Oliver Leaman The Qur an An Encyclopedia pp 526 527 a b Schirrmacher Christine 2020 Leaving Islam In Enstedt Daniel Larsson Goran Mantsinen Teemu T eds Handbook of Leaving Religion PDF Brill p 81 Retrieved 6 January 2021 a b c Heffening W 1993 Murtadd In C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs et al eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Vol 7 Brill Academic Publishers pp 635 636 doi 10 1163 1573 3912 islam SIM 5554 ISBN 978 9004094192 Adams Charles Reinhart A Kevin Kufr Oxford Islamic Studies Online Retrieved 2 January 2021 Lindholm Charles The Islamic Middle East p xxvi Mousavian S A A 2005 A Discussion on the Apostate s Repentance in Shi a Jurisprudence Modarres Human Sciences 8 Tome 37 pp 187 210 Mofid University Iran quote Shi a jurisprudence makes a distinction between an apostate who is born to Muslim parents murtad i fitri and an apostate who is born to non Muslim parents murtad i milli section 1 3 Advanced Islamic English dictionary Archived 22 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine Rasshirennyj islamskij slovar anglijskogo yazyka 2012 see entry for Fitri Murtad Advanced Islamic English dictionary Archived 22 October 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Edition Leiden Brill Eds Gudrun Kramer et al Vol 1 p 132 Dr M E Subhani 2005 Apostasy in Islam pp 23 24 New Delhi India Global Media Publications Quote This was an open case of apostasy But the Prophet neither punished the Bedouin nor asked anyone to do it He allowed him to leave Madina Nobody harmed him Sunan an Nasa i 4068 The Book of Fighting The Prohibition of Bloodshed Sunnah com Sayings and Teachings of Prophet Muhammad صلى الله عليه و سلم Archived from the original on 15 January 2018 Badawi Dr Jamal Is Apostasy a Capital Crime in Islam Fiqh Council of North America Archived from the original on 22 March 2017 Retrieved 30 October 2017 a b c Adang Camilla Ansari Hassan Fierro Maribel 2015 Accusations of Unbelief in Islam A Diachronic Perspective on Takfir Brill p 11 ISBN 978 9004307834 Retrieved 25 December 2020 Griffel Frank Toleration and exclusion al Shafi i and al Ghazali on the treatment of apostates Cambridge University Press 2001 p 348 Al Ghazali Fayasl al tafriqa bayn al Islam wa l zandaqa p 222 Schirrmacher Christine 2020 Leaving Islam In Enstedt Daniel Larsson Goran Mantsinen Teemu T eds Handbook of Leaving Religion PDF Brill pp 81 82 Retrieved 6 January 2021 a b c d e Hashemi Kamran 2008 Part A Apostasy IRTIDAD Religious Legal Traditions International Human Rights Law and Muslim States Brill p 23 ISBN 978 9047431534 Retrieved 15 January 2021 No God not even Allah The Economist 24 November 2012 Archived from the original on 26 December 2017 Retrieved 9 January 2018 a b c Morgan Diane 2010 Essential Islam a comprehensive guide to belief and practice Santa Barbara California Praeger pp 183 184 ISBN 978 0313360251 Munadi Sultan M 26 March 2006 Afghan Case Against Christian Convert Falters The New York Times Countries where apostasy and blasphemy laws are applied PDF Set My People Free Henkel Heiko Fall 2010 Fundamentally Danish The Muhammad Cartoon Crisis as Transitional Drama PDF Human Architecture Journal of the Sociology of Self knowledge 2 VIII Archived PDF from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 25 November 2012 Hashemi Kamran 2008 Part A Apostasy IRTIDAD Religious Legal Traditions International Human Rights Law and Muslim States Brill p 26 ISBN 978 9047431534 Retrieved 15 January 2021 a b Zarqawi s Anti Shi a Legacy Original or Borrowed Hudson Institute 1 November 2006 Retrieved 12 February 2021 Ess Josef 2006 The flowering of Muslim theology Cambridge MA Harvard University Press p 40 ISBN 978 0674022089 But added al Ghazali that applies only to Muslim apostates and one commits apostasy only when one denies the essential dogmas monotheism Muhammad s prophecy and the Last Judgment Al Ghazali Faysal al tafriqa bayn al Islam wa l zandaqa pp 53 67 Adang Camilla Ansari Hassan Fierro Maribel 2015 Accusations of Unbelief in Islam A Diachronic Perspective on Takfir Brill p 220 ISBN 978 9004307834 Retrieved 25 December 2020 a b c Ahmad ibn Naqib al Misri Nuh Ha Mim Keller 1368 Reliance of the Traveller PDF Amana Publications 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Keller 1997 Umdat as Salik by Ahmad ibn Naqib al Misri Reliance of the Traveller A Classic Manual of Islamic Sacred Law ISBN 978 0915957729 pp 596 598 Section O 8 7 The Book of the Prohibited actions Sunnah com reference Book 18 Hadith 222 Sunnah com Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 The Messenger of Allah ﷺ said When a person calls his brother in Islam a disbeliever one of them will certainly deserve the title If the addressee is so as he has asserted the disbelief of the man is confirmed but if it is untrue then it will revert to him In Saheeh al Bukhaari 6104 and Saheeh Muslim 60 it is narrated from Abd Allaah ibn Umar that the Prophet said If a man declares his brother to be a kaafir it will apply to one of them According to another report Either it is as he said otherwise it will come back to him a b c Lewis Bernard 1995 The Middle East a Brief History of the Last 2000 Years Touchstone p 229 ISBN 978 0684832807 Hashemi Kamran 2008 Part A Apostasy IRTIDAD Religious Legal Traditions International Human Rights Law and Muslim States Brill p 8 ISBN 978 9047431534 Retrieved 15 January 2021 Kepel Gilles Jihad the Trail of Political Islam London I B Tauris 2002 p 31 Kadivar Jamileh 18 May 2020 Exploring Takfir Its Origins and Contemporary Use The Case of Takfiri Approach in Daesh s Media Contemporary Review of the Middle East 7 3 259 285 doi 10 1177 2347798920921706 S2CID 219460446 This is our aqidah and this is our methodology Hazih Aqidatuna Wa Haza Manhajuna 2015 Al Himmah Publications cited in Kadivar Jamileh 18 May 2020 Exploring Takfir Its Origins and Contemporary Use The Case of Takfiri Approach in Daesh s Media Contemporary Review of the Middle East 7 3 259 285 doi 10 1177 2347798920921706 S2CID 219460446 Open Letter to Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi To the fighters and followers of the self declared Islamic State PDF operation pakistan 4 July 2014 Retrieved 2 January 2021 Musalmanon ki Takfir ka Mas alah by Maulana Abdul Majeed Salik pp 7 8 printed by 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University pp 77 78 Prohibition of Interfaith Marriage loc gov September 2016 Retrieved 23 April 2020 Sudan woman faces death for apostasy BBC News 15 May 2014 Retrieved 23 April 2020 The child of an apostate Muslim remains Muslim Fatwa No 272422 Islamweb net 8 November 2014 Retrieved 1 February 2021 a b Esposito John 1996 Islam and democracy Oxford UK Oxford University Press pp 72 73 ISBN 978 0195108163 a b Morgan Diane 2010 Essential Islam a comprehensive guide to belief and practice Santa Barbara California Praeger pp 87 182 184 ISBN 978 0313360251 a b Hackett Rosalind 2008 Proselytization revisited London Routledge pp 139 140 ISBN 978 1845532284 J Sperber 2000 Christians and Muslims The Dialogue Activities Theologische Bibliothek Topelmann Walter de Gruyter p 66 David Kerr 2000 Islamic Da wa and Christian Mission Towards a comparative analysis International Review of Mission Volume 89 Issue 353 pp 150 171 a b Schirrmacher Christine 2020 Leaving Islam In Enstedt Daniel Larsson Goran Mantsinen Teemu T eds Handbook of Leaving Religion PDF Brill p 86 Retrieved 6 January 2021 The Book of the Prohibited actions Sunnah com reference Book 18 Hadith 222 Sunnah com Retrieved 10 February 2021 The Messenger of Allah ﷺ said When a person calls his brother in Islam a disbeliever one of them will certainly deserve the title If the addressee is so as he has asserted the disbelief of the man is confirmed but if it is untrue then it will revert to him Hassan Muhammad Haniff April 2007 The Danger of Takfir Excommunication Exposing IS Takfiri Ideology Counter Terrorist Trends and Analyses 9 4 3 12 JSTOR 26351508 Retrieved 10 February 2021 Ibrahim R 2009 Gallagher J Patterson E eds Debating the War of Ideas Springer p 68 ISBN 978 0230101982 Muslims who were forced to choose between recanting Islam or suffering persecution were and still are permitted to lie by feigning apostasy J T Munroe 2004 Hispano Arabic Poetry Gorgias Press ISBN 978 1593331153 p 69 Afghan convert freed from 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Perspectives Martinus Nijhoff Publishers 2013 ISBN 978 9004233362 p 95 Wright Robin Sacred Rage The Wrath of Militant Islam p 203 Emon Anver 2012 Islamic law and international human rights law Oxford Oxford University Press pp 229 231 ISBN 978 0199641444 Brems Eva 2001 Human Rights Universality and Diversity Springer p 209 ISBN 978 9041116185 Retrieved 12 December 2020 a b c Schirrmacher Christine 2020 Leaving Islam In Enstedt Daniel Larsson Goran Mantsinen Teemu T eds Handbook of Leaving Religion PDF Brill p 85 Retrieved 6 January 2021 Cook David 2006 Apostasy from Islam A Historical Perspective PDF Journal of Arabic and Islamic Studies 31 277 Retrieved 6 January 2021 Adang Camilla Ansari Hassan Fierro Maribel 2015 Accusations of Unbelief in Islam A Diachronic Perspective on Takfir Brill p 14 ISBN 978 9004307834 Retrieved 25 December 2020 English This Fatawa describes how an Egyptian man turned apostate and the subsequent punishment prescribed for him by the Al Azhr Fatawa council Archived from the original on 17 November 2015 Retrieved 16 November 2015 Description Section Brown Daniel W 1996 Rethinking tradition in modern Islamic thought Cambridge University Press p 108 ISBN 0521570778 Retrieved 10 May 2018 Murphy Caryle 22 July 1993 Killing Apostates Condoned The Washington Post Retrieved 15 May 2018 a b Douglas Jehl 14 March 1996 Mohammed al Ghazali 78 An Egyptian Cleric and Scholar The New York Times Middle East Review of International Affairs MERIA Faraj Fawda or the cost of Freedom of Expression Archived 14 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Halverson Jeffry R 24 May 2018 Yusuf al Qaradawi Oxford Bibliographies Retrieved 6 December 2020 AFP news agency 11 May 2014 Qatar based cleric calls for Egypt vote boycott Yahoo News Archived from the original on 16 June 2014 No 9 Sheikh Dr Yusuf al Qaradawi Head of the International Union of Muslim Scholars The 500 most influential Muslims in the world 2009 Prof John Esposito and Prof Ibrahim Kalin Edmund A Walsh School of Foreign Service Georgetown University Product Description The Global Mufti The Phenomenon of Yusuf Al Qaradawi Paperback by Bettina Graf Author Editor Jakob Skovgaard Petersen Editor C Hurst amp Co Publishers Ltd 2009 ASIN 1850659397 Raymond William Baker Islam Without Fear Egypt and the New Islamists 2003 p 4 a b Shukla Ashutosh Muslim group welcomes ban on preacher Archived 13 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Daily News and Analysis 22 June 2010 Retrieved 16 April 2011 7 August 2011 Saudi Arabia gives top prize to cleric who blames George Bush for 9 11 Guardian Agence France Presse 1 March 2015 Retrieved 1 July 2015 a b Daniyal Shoaib 10 March 2015 Why a Saudi award for televangelist Zakir Naik is bad news for India s Muslims Archived from the original on 1 April 2015 Retrieved 3 December 2013 a b c Maldivian renounces Islam gets attacked by Zakir Naik audience Archived 27 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine May 2010 Retrieved 7 August 2011 Archived 7 August 2011 Minivan News Archived 8 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine s response to Mohamed Nazim Location Maafaanu stadium Male 10 30 pm Friday 28 May 2010 p 4 a b Huffington Post 7 July 2016 10 Times Zakir Naik Proved That He Promoted Anything But Peace Archived from the original on 20 July 2016 Retrieved 16 July 2016 Al Jazeera Studies Arab World Journalism in a Post Beheading Era by Thembisa Fakude Archived 23 March 2019 at the Wayback Machine 2013 Al Munajjid is considered one of the respected scholars of the Salafist movement Richard Gauvain Salafi Ritual Purity In the Presence of God p 355 ISBN 978 0710313560 Alexa Top Sites by Category Top www alexa com Gauvain Richard 2012 Salafi Ritual Purity In the Presence of God Routledge p 335 ISBN 978 0710313560 participants generally refer to the established Saudi scholars In this case the most common source of reference was Muhammad Salih al Munajid s well known website Islam Question and Answer which provides normative Saudi Arabian Salafi responses Deutsche Welle Women in Islam Behind the veil and in front of it retrieved September 2 2016 a b Grand Mufti Ali Gomaa Gomaa s Statement on Apostasy Archived 24 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine The Washington Post 25 July 2007 Whosoever will let him disbelieve Archived from the original on 8 September 2017 Retrieved 7 September 2017 the essential question before us is can a person who is Muslim choose a religion other than Islam The answer is yes they can because the Quran says Unto you your religion and unto me my religion Quran 109 6 and Whosoever will let him believe and whosoever will let him disbelieve Quran 18 29 and There is no compulsion in religion The right direction is distinct from error Quran 2 256 thus the matter is left until the Day of Judgement and it is not to be dealt with in the life of this world It is an issue of conscience and it is between the individual and Allah Apostasy in Islam PDF Archived from the original PDF on 8 September 2017 Retrieved 7 September 2017 Freedom of belief is protected and preserved in the Qur an Moreover given that this is the stance of the Qur an it is likewise the stance of the Sunnah The Qur an makes clear that the punishment for a change in belief is one that will take effect in the life to come while the Sunnah likewise makes clear that although a change in belief unaccompanied by anything else may have been interpreted to imply hostility against the Ummah and as a threat to its citizens and interests there is never theless no prescribed punishment for it in this earthly life a b c Jami Mahdi 2 February 2005 آيت الله منتظری هر تغيير مذهبی ارتداد نيست Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri Not Every Conversion is Apostasy BBC Persian in Persian Archived from the original on 28 May 2014 Retrieved 14 October 2009 REPORT Definition of Islamic Law and the Crime of Apostasy in Islam 19 May 2015 Archived from the original on 8 September 2017 Retrieved 7 September 2017 Ayatollah Seyyed Hossein Sadr a Shi a cleric based in Iraq has also stated that Verse 2 256 was revealed to the Prophet Mohammad regarding Muslims who had converted to Christianity and that the Prophet Mohammad advised against forcing them to return to Islam a b c d e f Kamali Mohammad Hashim 1998 Punishment in Islamic Law a Critique of The Hudud Bill of Kelantan Malaysia Arab Law Quarterly 13 3 203 234 doi 10 1163 026805598125826102 JSTOR 3382008 a b Parolin Gianluca P 2009 Citizenship in the Arab World Amsterdam University Press p 121 ISBN 978 9089640451 Retrieved 16 January 2021 Yusuf al Qaradawi Killing Of Apostates Is Essential For Islam To Survive in Arabic Archived from the original on 12 February 2018 Retrieved 8 January 2019 Kendal Elizabeth 2016 Hasten to Success After Saturday Comes Sunday Understanding the Christian Crisis in the Middle East Wipf and Stock p 36 ISBN 978 1498239868 Mohammad Iqbal Siddiqi The Penal Law of Islam International Islamic Publishers New Delhi 1991 p 96 quoted in O Sullivan Declan 2001 The Interpretation of Qur anic Text to Promote or Negate the Death Penalty for Apostates and Blasphemers Journal of Qur anic Studies 3 2 63 doi 10 3366 jqs 2001 3 2 63 JSTOR 25728038 Retrieved 21 January 2021 Ali Cheragh December 2014 The Modern Period Sources In Anderson Matthew Taliaferro Karen eds Islam and Religious Freedom A Sourcebook of Scriptural Theological and Legal Texts The Religious Freedom Project Berkley Center for Religion Peace amp World Affairs Georgetown University pp 69 70 Retrieved 2 February 2021 Kettani Ali 1986 Muslim Minorities in the World Today London pp 10 113 Brelvi Mahmud 1968 Islam on the March Karachi p ix cited in Cook David 2006 Apostasy from Islam A Historical Perspective PDF Journal of Arabic and Islamic Studies 31 249 Retrieved 6 January 2021 Syed Barakat Ahmad Conversion from Islam in C E Bosworth ed The Islamic World from Classical to Modern Times Essays in honor of Bernard Lewis Princeton 1989 pp 3 25 cited in Cook David 2006 Apostasy from Islam A Historical Perspective PDF Journal of Arabic and Islamic Studies 31 250 Retrieved 6 January 2021 Arguments for and against the death penalty Religious Tolerance Retrieved 10 February 2021 Abu Bakr Muhammad Ibn Abd Allah Ibn al Arabi Ahkam al Qura an Tahqiq Ali Muhammad al Badjawi 2nd imprint al Qahirah Isa al Babi al Halabi 1387 88 1967 68 4 volumes v 1 p 233 quoted in Peters Rudolph Vries Gert J J De 1976 Apostasy in Islam Die Welt des Islams 17 1 4 15 note 38 doi 10 2307 1570336 JSTOR 1570336 Peters Rudolph Vries Gert J J De 1976 Apostasy in Islam Die Welt des Islams 17 1 4 1 25 doi 10 2307 1570336 JSTOR 1570336 Finally the argument is put forward that killing an apostate must be considered as compulsion in religion which has been forbidden in K 2 256 though this verse was traditionally interpreted in a different way Footnote 38 According to some classical scholars this verse had been abrograted by later verses The current interpretation of this verse however was that it forbids compulsion to things that are wrong batil but not compulsion to accept the truth p 15 Muhammad Muhiy al Din al Masiri al Nuzum allati yaqum alayha kiyan al mudhtama al Islami Madjallat al Azhar 1374 pp 859 868 quoted in Peters Rudolph Vries Gert J J De 1976 Apostasy in Islam Die Welt des Islams 17 1 4 17 doi 10 2307 1570336 JSTOR 1570336 Muhammad al Ghazali Huquq al Insan bayn ta alim al ISlam wa i lan al Umam al Muttahidah al Qahirah al Maktabah al Tidjariyyah 1383 1963 272 p 102 quoted in Peters Rudolph Vries Gert J J De 1976 Apostasy in Islam Die Welt des Islams 17 1 4 17 doi 10 2307 1570336 JSTOR 1570336 Mirza Tahir Ahmad 2005 The Truth about the Alleged Punishment for Apostasy in Islam Islam International pp 139 142 ISBN 978 1853728501 Saeed Abdullah Hassan Saeed 2004 Freedom of religion apostasy and Islam Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 85 ISBN 978 0754630838 Saeed Abdullah 2005 Ridda and the case for decriminalization of apostasy In Oliver Leaman et al eds The Qur an An Encyclopedia 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Deserts of Ancient Arabia Macmillan p 237 ISBN 9780099523277 Robert Burns 2011 Christianity Islam and the West University Press ISBN 978 0761855590 pp 61 67 Campo Juan Eduardo 2009 Encyclopedia of Islam Infobase Publishing p 183 ISBN 978 0816054541 a b c d e f Laws Criminalizing Apostasy Archived 11 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine Library of Congress 2014 Which countries still outlaw apostasy and blasphemy Pew Research Center United States May 2014 Schirrmacher Christine 2020 Leaving Islam In Enstedt Daniel Larsson Goran Mantsinen Teemu T eds Handbook of Leaving Religion PDF Brill p 83 Retrieved 6 January 2021 a b Selim Deringi 2012 Conversion and Apostasy in the Late Ottoman Empire Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107004559 Chapter 1 and 2 Glasse Cyril 2001 The New Encyclopedia of Islam Walnut Creek California AltaMira p 54 ISBN 978 0759101890 OCLC 48553252 Peters J J De Vries Rudolph Gert 1976 1977 Apostasy in Islam Die Welt des Islams Brill Publishers 17 1 4 21 22 doi 10 2307 1570336 JSTOR 1570336 via JSTOR The first method is used by those who are of the opinion that freedom of religion as guaranteed by Islam is embodied in the right of unbelievers to practise their religion freely without being forced to give it up or change it excluding the freedom for Moslems to change their religion Muhammad Rashid Rida excludes freedom to apostatize expressis verbis with the argument that apostasy infringes on the freedom of others and on the respect due to the religion of the State Muhammad al Ghazali does the same using the reductio ad absurdum as an argument Must Islam allow rebellion against itself No religion of a similar nature will readily answer in the affirmative Abd al Muta ali al Sa idi and S A Rahman follow the other method of escaping from the contradiction They state unequivocally that capital punishment for the apostate is not compatible with freedom of religion and must therefore be abolished Morris Benny Ze evi Dror 4 November 2021 Then Came the Chance the Turks Have Been Waiting For To Get Rid of Christians Once and for All Haaretz Tel Aviv Archived from the original on 4 November 2021 Retrieved 5 November 2021 Angold Michael 2006 Eastern Christianity in Editor O Mahony Cambridge History of Christianity Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521811132 pp 510 517 Fifty Thousand Orphans Made So by the Turkish Massacres of Armenians Archived 9 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine New York Times 17 December 1895 William Cleveland 2000 A History of the Modern Middle East 2nd ed ISBN 0813334896 pp 108 127 Abd al Qadir Awdah al tashri al djina i al Islam muqaran bi al qanun al wadi Bayrut Dar al Kitab al Arabi n d 2 volumes v 1 pp 535 538 quoted in Peters Rudolph Vries Gert J J De 1976 Apostasy in Islam Die Welt des Islams 17 1 4 17 doi 10 2307 1570336 JSTOR 1570336 Miller Duane Alexander 2014 Living among the Breakage Contextual Theology Making and Ex Muslim Christians Edinburg UK PhD Thesis School of Divinity University of Edingburg p 59 Which countries still outlaw apostasy and blasphemy Archived 6 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine Pew Research Center United States May 2014 Nancy Gallagher 2005 Apostasy Encyclopedia of Women and Islamic Cultures Family Law and Politics Editors Suad Joseph and Afsana Naǧmabadi ISBN 978 9004128187 pp 7 9 Pakistan s secret atheists BBC News 12 July 2017 Paul Marshall and Nina Shea 2011 Silenced How Apostasy and Blasphemy codes are choking freedom worldwide Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199812288 The Application of the Apostasy Law in the World Today Barnabas Fund 3 July 2007 Archived from the original on 28 October 2010 Retrieved 15 October 2009 Kamguian Azam 21 June 2005 The Fate of Infidels and Apostates under Islam International Humanist and Ethical Union Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 15 October 2009 Hamid Mohsin 27 June 2010 Fear and silence Dawn Retrieved 10 December 2020 Anti al Qaeda base envisioned Exiled Egyptian cleric seeking to reclaim 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from the original on 28 November 2013 Retrieved 29 November 2013 Monteiro A 2014 Ethics of human rights Springer pp 414 416 ISBN 978 3319035666 Said Abdul Aziz 1979 Precept and Practice of Human Rights in Islam Universal Human Rights 1 1 63 79 doi 10 2307 761831 JSTOR 761831 Brems E 2001 Islamic Declarations of Human Rights Human rights universality and diversity Volume 66 of International studies in human rights Martinus Nijhoff Publishers pp 241 242 259 260 263 ISBN 978 9041116185 a b Cismas Ioana 2014 Religious actors and international law Oxford UK Oxford University Press pp 254 258 ISBN 978 0198712824 David Boersema Philosophy of Human Rights Theory and Practice Westview Press ISBN 978 0813344928 Denny F M 2005 Muslim ethical trajectories in the contemporary period in The Blackwell companion to religious ethics Editor William Schweiker ISBN 978 1405177580 Chapter 28 pp 268 269 272 77 Monshipouri 1998 Muslim World Half a Century after the Universal Declaration of Human Rights Progress and Obstacles The Netherlands Quarterly Hum Rts 16 3 pp 289 290 287 314 Cotran Eugene 2006 Yearbook of Islamic and Middle Eastern law Volume 10 Boston Brill Academic Publishers p 17 ISBN 978 9004144446 Faisal Devji 15 August 2017 Conversions From Islam in Europe and Beyond The New York Times Archived from the original on 16 August 2017 Retrieved 12 September 2017 Harris Sultan Know Why He Left Islam 3 June 2021 Further reading EditAhmad Mirza Tahir 1968 Murder in the Name of Allah Guildford Lutterworth Press ISBN 978 0718828059 OCLC 243438689 Cottee Simon 2015 The Apostates When Muslims Leave Islam Hurst p 288 ISBN 978 1849044691 Johnstone Patrick Miller Duane Alexander 2015 Believers in Christ from a Muslim Background A Global Census Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion 11 3 19 Peters Rudolph De Vries Gert J J 1976 Apostasy in Islam PDF Die Welt des Islams 17 1 4 1 25 doi 10 1163 157006076X00017 JSTOR 1570336 S2CID 162376591 Schirrmacher Christine 2020 Chapter 7 Leaving Islam In Enstedt Daniel Larsson Goran Mantsinen Teemu T eds Handbook of Leaving Religion Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion Vol 18 Leiden Brill Publishers pp 81 95 doi 10 1163 9789004331471 008 ISBN 978 9004330924 ISSN 1874 6691 Jabir Alalwani Taha 2011 Apostasy in Islam A Historical and Scriptural Analysis Translated by Nancy Roberts International Institute of Islamic Thought IIIT ISBN 978 1565643635 Subhani M E Asad 2005 Apostasy in Islam Global Media p 65 ISBN 978 8188869114 Saeed Abdullah Saeed Hassan 2004 Freedom of Religion Apostasy and Islam Burlington VT Ashgate Publishing Company pp 38 39 ISBN 978 0754630838 External links Edit Quotations related to Apostasy in Islam at Wikiquote Media related to Apostasy in Islam at Wikimedia Commons Apostasy Freedom and Da wah Full Disclosure in a Business Like Manner by Dr Mohammad Omar Farooq Al Munajjid Sheikh Muhammed Salih Why should a person who disbelieves after becoming Muslim be executed Retrieved 15 October 2009 Eltahawy Mona 20 October 1999 Lives torn apart in battle for the soul of the Arab world The Guardian London Retrieved 15 October 2009 Punishment for Apostasy Understanding Islam 6 December 1998 Archived from the original on 1 January 2009 Retrieved 15 October 2009 Apostasy Oxford Bibliographies Islamic Studies Andrew March 2010 Oxford University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Apostasy in Islam amp oldid 1159244234, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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