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Dhimmi

Dhimmī (Arabic: ذمي ḏimmī, IPA: [ˈðimmiː], collectively أهل الذمة ʾahl aḏ-ḏimmah/dhimmah "the people of the covenant") or muʿāhid (معاهد) is a historical[1] term for non-Muslims living in an Islamic state with legal protection.[1][2]: 470  The word literally means "protected person",[3] referring to the state's obligation under sharia to protect the individual's life, property, as well as freedom of religion, in exchange for loyalty to the state and payment of the jizya tax, in contrast to the zakat, or obligatory alms, paid by the Muslim subjects.[4] Dhimmi were exempt from certain duties assigned specifically to Muslims if they paid the poll tax (jizya) but were otherwise equal under the laws of property, contract, and obligation.[5][6][7]

Historically, dhimmi status was originally applied to Jews, Christians, and Sabians, who are considered "People of the Book" in Islamic theology. Later, this status was also applied to Zoroastrians, Sikhs, Hindus, Jains, and Buddhists.[8][9][10]

Jews and Christians were required to pay the jizyah while others, depending on the different rulings of the four Madhhabs, might be required to accept Islam, pay the jizya, be exiled, or be killed.[11][12][13][14]

During the rule of al-Mutawakkil, the tenth Abbasid Caliph, numerous restrictions reinforced the second-class citizen status of dhimmīs and forced their communities into ghettos.[15] For instance, they were required to distinguish themselves from their Muslim neighbors by their dress.[16] They were not permitted to build new churches or synagogues or repair old churches according to the Pact of Umar. [17]

Under Sharia, the dhimmi communities were usually governed by their own laws in place of some of the laws applicable to the Muslim community. For example, the Jewish community of Medina was allowed to have its own Halakhic courts,[18] and the Ottoman millet system allowed its various dhimmi communities to rule themselves under separate legal courts. These courts did not cover cases that involved religious groups outside of their own communities, or capital offences. Dhimmi communities were also allowed to engage in certain practices that were usually forbidden for the Muslim community, such as the consumption of alcohol and pork.[19][20][21]

Some Muslims reject the dhimma system by arguing that it is a system which is inappropriate in the age of nation-states and democracies.[22] There is a range of opinions among 20th-century and contemporary Islamic theologians about whether the notion of dhimma is appropriate for modern times, and, if so, what form it should take in an Islamic state.

There are differences among the Islamic Madhhabs regarding which non-Muslims can pay jizya and have dhimmi status. The Hanafi and Maliki Madhabs generally allow non-Muslims to have dhimmi status. In contrast, the Shafi'i and Hanbali Madhabs only allow Christians, Jews and Zoroastrians to have dhimmi status, and they maintain that all other non-Muslims must either convert to Islam or be fought.[23]

The "Dhimma contract" edit

Based on Quranic verses and Islamic traditions, sharia law distinguishes between Muslims, followers of other Abrahamic religions, and Pagans or people belonging to other polytheistic religions. As monotheists, Jews and Christians have traditionally been considered "People of the Book", and afforded a special legal status known as dhimmi derived from a theoretical contract—"dhimma" or "residence in return for taxes". Islamic legal systems based on sharia law incorporated the religious laws and courts of Christians, Jews, and Hindus, as seen in the early caliphate, al-Andalus, Indian subcontinent, and the Ottoman Millet system.[24][25][page needed]

In Yemenite Jewish sources, a treaty was drafted between Muhammad and his Jewish subjects, known as kitāb ḏimmat al-nabi, written in the 17th year of the Hijra (638 CE), which gave express liberty to the Jews living in Arabia to observe the Sabbath and to grow-out their side-locks, but required them to pay the jizya (poll-tax) annually for their protection.[26] Muslim governments in the Indus basin readily extended the dhimmi status to the Hindus and Buddhists of India.[27] Eventually, the largest school of Islamic jurisprudence applied this term to all Non-Muslims living in Muslim lands outside the sacred area surrounding Mecca, Arabia.[28]

In medieval Islamic societies, the qadi (Islamic judge) usually could not interfere in the matters of non-Muslims unless the parties voluntarily chose to be judged according to Islamic law, thus the dhimmi communities living in Islamic states usually had their own laws independent from the sharia law, as with the Jews who would have their own rabbinical courts.[18] These courts did not cover cases that involved other religious groups, or capital offences or threats to public order. By the 18th century, however, dhimmi frequently attended the Ottoman Muslim courts, where cases were taken against them by Muslims, or they took cases against Muslims or other dhimmi. Oaths sworn by dhimmi in these courts were tailored to their beliefs.[29] Non-Muslims were allowed to engage in certain practices (such as the consumption of alcohol and pork) that were usually forbidden by Islamic law,[30] in point of fact, any Muslim who pours away their wine or forcibly appropriates it is liable to pay compensation.[31] Some Islamic theologians held that Zoroastrian "self-marriages", considered incestuous under sharia, should also be tolerated. Ibn Qayyim Al-Jawziyya (1292–1350) opined that most scholars of the Hanbali school held that non-Muslims were entitled to such practices, as long as they were not presented to sharia courts and the religious minorities in question held them to be permissible. This ruling was based on the precedent that there were no records of the Islamic prophet Muhammad forbidding such self-marriages among Zoroastrians, despite coming into contact with Zoroastrians and knowing about this practice.[32] Religious minorities were also free to do as they wished in their own homes, provided they did not publicly engage in illicit sexual activity in ways that could threaten public morals.[33]

There are parallels for this in Roman and Jewish law.[34] According to law professor H. Patrick Glenn of McGill University, "[t]oday it is said that the dhimmi are 'excluded from the specifically Muslim privileges, but on the other hand they are excluded from the specifically Muslim duties' while (and here there are clear parallels with western public and private law treatment of aliens—Fremdenrecht, la condition de estrangers), '[f]or the rest, the Muslim and the dhimmi are equal in practically the whole of the law of property and of contracts and obligations'."[35] Quoting the Qur'anic statement, "Let Christians judge according to what We have revealed in the Gospel",[36] Muhammad Hamidullah writes that Islam decentralized and "communalized" law and justice.[37] However, the classical dhimma contract is no longer enforced. Western influence over the Muslim world has been instrumental in eliminating the restrictions and protections of the dhimma contract.[38]

The Dhimma contract and Sharia law edit

The dhimma contract is an integral part of traditional Islamic law. From the 9th century AD, the power to interpret and refine law in traditional Islamic societies was in the hands of the scholars (ulama). This separation of powers served to limit the range of actions available to the ruler, who could not easily decree or reinterpret law independently and expect the continued support of the community.[39] Through succeeding centuries and empires, the balance between the ulema and the rulers shifted and reformed, but the balance of power was never decisively changed.[40] At the beginning of the 19th century, the Industrial Revolution and the French Revolution introduced an era of European world hegemony that included the domination of most of the Muslim lands.[41][42] At the end of the Second World War, the European powers found themselves too weakened to maintain their empires.[43] The wide variety in forms of government, systems of law, attitudes toward modernity and interpretations of sharia are a result of the ensuing drives for independence and modernity in the Muslim world.[44][45]

Muslim states, sects, schools of thought and individuals differ as to exactly what sharia law entails.[46] In addition, Muslim states today utilize a spectrum of legal systems. Most states have a mixed system that implements certain aspects of sharia while acknowledging the supremacy of a constitution. A few, such as Turkey, have declared themselves secular.[47] Local and customary laws may take precedence in certain matters, as well.[48] Islamic law is therefore polynormative,[49] and despite several cases of regression in recent years, the trend is towards liberalization.[50] Questions of human rights and the status of minorities cannot be generalized with regards to the Muslim world. They must instead be examined on a case-by-case basis, within specific political and cultural contexts, using perspectives drawn from the historical framework.[51]

The end of the Dhimma contract edit

The status of the dhimmi "was for long accepted with resignation by the Christians and with gratitude by the Jews" but the rising power of Christendom and the radical ideas of the French Revolution caused a wave of discontent among Christian dhimmis.[52] The continuing and growing pressure from the European powers combined with pressure from Muslim reformers gradually relaxed the inequalities between Muslims and non-Muslims.[53]

On 18 February 1856, the Ottoman Reform Edict of 1856 (Hatt-i Humayan) was issued, building upon the 1839 edict. It came about partly as a result of pressure from and the efforts of the ambassadors of France, Austria and the United Kingdom, whose respective countries were needed as allies in the Crimean War. It again proclaimed the principle of equality between Muslims and non-Muslims, and produced many specific reforms to this end. For example, the jizya tax was abolished and non-Muslims were allowed to join the army.[54][55]

Views of modern Islamic scholars on the status of non-Muslims in an Islamic society edit

  • The Iranian Shi'a Muslim Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini indicates in his book Islamic Government: Governance of the Jurist that non-Muslims should be required to pay the poll tax, in return for which they would profit from the protection and services of the state; they would, however, be excluded from all participation in the political process.[56][failed verification] Bernard Lewis remarks about Khomeini that one of his main grievances against the Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, was that his legislation allowed the theoretical possibility of non-Muslims exercising political or judicial authority over Muslims.[57]
  • The Egyptian theologian Yusuf al-Qaradawi, chairman of the International Union of Muslim Scholars,[58] has stated in his Al Jazeera program Sharia and Life, which has an estimated audience of 35 to 60 million viewers:[59] "When we say dhimmis (ahl al-dhimma) it means that [...] they are under the covenant of God and His Messenger and the Muslim community and their responsibility (ḍamān), and it is everyone's duty to protect them, and this is what is intended by the word. At present many of our brethren are offended by the word dhimmis, and I have stated in what I wrote in my books that I don't see anything to prevent contemporary Islamic ijtihad from discarding this word dhimmis and calling them non-Muslim citizens."[60]
  • Another Egyptian Islamist, Mohammad Salim al-Awa argued the concept of dhimmi must be re-interpreted in the context of Egyptian nationalism. Al-Awa and other Muslim scholars based this on the idea that while the previous dhimma condition result from the Islamic conquest, the modern Egyptian state results from a joint Muslim-Christian campaign to end the British occupation of Egypt. In modern-day Egypt, he argues, the constitution replaces the dhimma contract.[61]
  • Muhammad Husayn Tabataba'i, a 20th-century Shia scholar writes that dhimmis should be treated "in a good and decent manner". He addresses the argument that good treatment of dhimmis was abrogated by Quranic verse 9:29[62] by stating that, in the literal sense, this verse is not in conflict with good treatment of dhimmis.[63]
  • Javed Ahmad Ghamidi, a Pakistani theologian, writes in Mizan that certain directives of the Quran were specific only to Muhammad against peoples of his times, besides other directives, the campaign involved asking the polytheists of Arabia for submission to Islam as a condition for exoneration and the others for jizya and submission to the political authority of the Muslims for exemption from capital punishment and for military protection as the dhimmis of the Muslims. Therefore, after Muhammad and his companions, there is no concept in Islam obliging Muslims to wage war for propagation or implementation of Islam.[64][65]
  • The Iranian Shia jurist Grand Ayatollah Naser Makarem Shirazi states in Selection of the Tafsir Nemooneh that the main philosophy of jizya is that it is only a financial aid to those Muslims who are in the charge of safeguarding the security of the state and dhimmis' lives and properties on their behalf.[66]
  • Prominent Islamic thinkers like Fahmi Huwaidi and Tarek El-Bishry have based their justification for full citizenship of non-Muslims in an Islamic states on the precedent set by Muhammad in the Constitution of Medina. They argue that in this charter the People of Book, have the status of citizens (muwatinun) rather than dhimmis, sharing equal rights and duties with Muslims.[67]
  • Legal scholar L. Ali Khan also points to the Constitution of Medina as a way forward for Islamic states in his 2006 paper titled The Medina Constitution. He suggests this ancient document, which governed the status of religions and races in the first Islamic state, in which Jewish tribes are "placed on an equal footing with [...] Muslims" and granted "the freedom of religion," can serve as a basis for the protection of minority rights, equality, and religious freedom in the modern Islamic state.[68][69]
  • Tariq Ramadan, Professor of Islamic Studies at the University of Oxford, advocates the inclusion of academic disciplines and Islamic society, along with traditional Islamic scholars, in an effort to reform Islamic law and address modern conditions. He speaks of remaining faithful to the higher objectives of sharia law. He posits universal rights of dignity, welfare, freedom, equality and justice in a religiously and culturally pluralistic Islamic (or other) society, and proposes a dialogue regarding the modern term "citizenship," although it has no clear precedent in classical fiqh. He further includes the terms "non-citizen", "foreigner", "resident" and "immigrant" in this dialogue, and challenges not only Islam, but modern civilization as a whole, to come to terms with these concepts in a meaningful way with regards to problems of racism, discrimination and oppression.[70]

Dhimmi communities edit

Jews and Christians living under early Muslim rule were considered dhimmis, a status that was later also extended to other non-Muslims like Hindus and Buddhists. They were allowed to "freely practice their religion, and to enjoy a large measure of communal autonomy" and guaranteed their personal safety and security of property, in return for paying tribute and acknowledging Muslim rule.[71] Islamic law and custom prohibited the enslavement of free dhimmis within lands under Islamic rule.[72] Taxation from the perspective of dhimmis who came under the Muslim rule, was "a concrete continuation of the taxes paid to earlier regimes"[73] (but much lower under the Muslim rule[74][75]). They were also exempted from the zakat tax paid by Muslims. The dhimmi communities living in Islamic states had their own laws independent from the Sharia law, such as the Jews who had their own Halakhic courts.[76] The dhimmi communities had their own leaders, courts, personal and religious laws,[77][78] and "generally speaking, Muslim tolerance of unbelievers was far better than anything available in Christendom, until the rise of secularism in the 17th century".[79] "Muslims guaranteed freedom of worship and livelihood, provided that they remained loyal to the Muslim state and paid a poll tax".[80] "Muslim governments appointed Christian and Jewish professionals to their bureaucracies",[80] and thus, Christians and Jews "contributed to the making of the Islamic civilization".[80]

However, dhimmis faced social and symbolic restrictions,[81] and a pattern of stricter, then more lax, enforcement developed over time.[82] Marshall Hodgson, a historian of Islam, writes that during the era of the High Caliphate (7th–13th Centuries), zealous Shariah-minded Muslims gladly elaborated their code of symbolic restrictions on the dhimmis.[83]

From an Islamic legal perspective, the pledge of protection granted dhimmis the freedom to practice their religion and spared them forced conversions. The dhimmis also served a variety of useful purposes, mostly economic, which was another point of concern to jurists.[84][page needed] Religious minorities were free to do whatever they wished in their own homes, but could not "publicly engage in illicit sex in ways that threaten public morals".[85] In some cases, religious practices that Muslims found repugnant were allowed. One example was the Zoroastrian practice of incestuous "self-marriage" where a man could marry his mother, sister or daughter. According to the famous Islamic legal scholar Ibn Qayyim Al-Jawziyya (1292–1350), non-Muslims had the right to engage in such religious practices even if it offended Muslims, under the conditions that such cases not be presented to Islamic Sharia courts and that these religious minorities believed that the practice in question is permissible according to their religion. This ruling was based on the precedent that Muhammad did not forbid such self-marriages among Zoroastrians despite coming in contact with them and having knowledge of their practices.[86]

The Arabs generally established garrisons outside towns in the conquered territories, and had little interaction with the local dhimmi populations for purposes other than the collection of taxes. The conquered Christian, Jewish, Mazdean and Buddhist communities were otherwise left to lead their lives as before.[87]

Christians edit

According to historians Lewis and Stillman, local Christians in Syria, Iraq, and Egypt were non-Chalcedonians and many may have felt better off under early Muslim rule than under that of the Byzantine Orthodox of Constantinople.[88] In 1095, Pope Urban II urged western European Christians to come to the aid of the Christians of Palestine. The subsequent Crusades brought Roman Catholic Christians into contact with Orthodox Christians whose beliefs they discovered to differ from their own perhaps more than they had realized, and whose position under the rule of the Muslim Fatimid Caliphate was less uncomfortable than had been supposed. Consequently, the Eastern Christians provided perhaps less support to the Crusaders than had been expected.[89] When the Arab East came under Ottoman rule in the 16th century, Christian populations and fortunes rebounded significantly. The Ottomans had long experience dealing with Christian and Jewish minorities, and were more tolerant towards religious minorities than the former Muslim rulers, the Mamluks of Egypt.[90]

However, Christians living under Islamic rule have suffered certain legal disadvantages and at times persecution. In the Ottoman Empire, in accordance with the dhimmi system implemented in Muslim countries, they, like all other Christians and also Jews, were accorded certain freedoms. The dhimmi system in the Ottoman Empire was largely based upon the Pact of Umar. The client status established the rights of the non-Muslims to property, livelihood and freedom of worship but they were in essence treated as second-class citizens in the empire and referred to in Turkish as gavours, a pejorative word meaning "infidel" or "unbeliever". The clause of the Pact of Umar which prohibited non-Muslims from building new places of worship was historically imposed on some communities of the Ottoman Empire and ignored in other cases, at discretion of the local authorities. Although there were no laws mandating religious ghettos, this led to non-Muslim communities being clustered around existing houses of worship.[91][92]

In addition to other legal limitations, dhimmis, including the Christians among them, were not considered equals to Muslims and several prohibitions were placed on them. Their testimony against Muslims was inadmissible in courts of law wherein a Muslim could be punished; this meant that their testimony could only be considered in commercial cases. They were forbidden to carry weapons or ride atop horses and camels. Their houses could not overlook those of Muslims; and their religious practices were severely circumscribed (e.g., the ringing of church bells was strictly forbidden).[91][93]

Jews edit

Because the early Islamic conquests initially preserved much of the existing administrative machinery and culture, in many territories they amounted to little more than a change of rulers for the subject populations, which "brought peace to peoples demoralized and disaffected by the casualties and heavy taxation that resulted from the years of Byzantine-Persian warfare".[78]

María Rosa Menocal, argues that the Jewish dhimmis living under the caliphate, while allowed fewer rights than Muslims, were still better off than in the Christian parts of Europe. Jews from other parts of Europe made their way to al-Andalus, where in parallel to Christian sects regarded as heretical by Catholic Europe, they were not just tolerated, but where opportunities to practice faith and trade were open without restriction save for the prohibitions on proselytization.[94]

Bernard Lewis states:

Generally, the Jewish people were allowed to practice their religion and live according to the laws and scriptures of their community. Furthermore, the restrictions to which they were subject were social and symbolic rather than tangible and practical in character. That is to say, these regulations served to define the relationship between the two communities, and not to oppress the Jewish population.[95]

Professor of Jewish medieval history at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Hayim Hillel Ben-Sasson, notes:

The legal and security situation of the Jews in the Muslim world was generally better than in Christendom, because in the former, Jews were not the sole "infidels", because in comparison to the Christians, Jews were less dangerous and more loyal to the Muslim regime, and because the rapidity and the territorial scope of the Muslim conquests imposed upon them a reduction in persecution and a granting of better possibility for the survival of members of other faiths in their lands.[96]

According to the French historian Claude Cahen, Islam has "shown more toleration than Europe towards the Jews who remained in Muslim lands."[97]

Comparing the treatment of Jews in the medieval Islamic world and medieval Christian Europe, Mark R. Cohen notes that, in contrast to Jews in Christian Europe, the "Jews in Islam were well integrated into the economic life of the larger society",[98] and that they were allowed to practice their religion more freely than they could do in Christian Europe.[98]

According to the scholar Mordechai Zaken, tribal chieftains (also known as aghas) in tribal Muslim societies such as the Kurdish society in Kurdistan would tax their Jewish subjects. The Jews were in fact civilians protected by their chieftains in and around their communities; in return they paid part of their harvest as dues, and contributed their skills and services to their patron chieftain.[99]

Hindus and Buddhists edit

By the 10th century, the Turks of Central Asia had invaded the Indic plains, and spread Islam in Northwestern parts of India.[100] At the end of the 12th century, the Muslims advanced quickly into the Ganges Plain.[101] In one decade, a Muslim army led by Turkic slaves consolidated resistance around Lahore and brought northern India, as far as Bengal, under Muslim rule.[102] From these Turkic slaves would come sultans, including the founder of the sultanate of Delhi. By the 15th century, major parts of Northern India was ruled by Muslim rulers, mostly descended from invaders. In the 16th century, India came under the influence of the Mughals. Babur, the first ruler of the Mughal empire, established a foothold in the north which paved the way for further expansion by his successors.[103] Although the Mughal emperor Akbar has been described as a universalist, most Mughal emperors were oppressive of native Hindu, Buddhist and later Sikh populations.[104] Aurangzeb specifically was inclined towards a highly fundamentalist approach.[105]

Restrictions edit

There were a number of restrictions on dhimmis. In a modern sense the dhimmis would be described as second-class citizens.[15] According to historian Marshall Hodgson, from very early times Muslim rulers would very often humiliate and punish dhimmis (usually Christians or Jews that refused to convert to Islam). It was official policy that dhimmis should “feel inferior and to know ‘their place".[106]

Although dhimmis were allowed to perform their religious rituals, they were obliged to do so in a manner not conspicuous to Muslims. Loud prayers were forbidden, as were the ringing of church bells and the blowing of the shofar.[107] They were also not allowed to build or repair churches and synagogues without Muslim consent.[80] Moreover, dhimmis were not allowed to seek converts among Muslims.[108][page needed] In the Mamluk Egypt, where non-Mamluk Muslims were not allowed to ride horses and camels, dhimmis were prohibited even from riding donkeys inside cities.[109] Sometimes, Muslim rulers issued regulations requiring dhimmis to attach distinctive signs to their houses.[110]

Most of the restrictions were social and symbolic in nature,[81] and a pattern of stricter, then more lax, enforcement developed over time.[82] The major financial disabilities of the dhimmi were the jizya poll tax and the fact dhimmis and Muslims could not inherit from each other.[81] That would create an incentive to convert if someone from the family had already converted.[80] Ira M. Lapidus states that the "payment of the poll tax seems to have been regular, but other obligations were inconsistently enforced and did not prevent many non-Muslims from being important political, business, and scholarly figures. In the late ninth and early tenth centuries, Jewish bankers and financiers were important at the 'Abbasid court."[111] The jurists and scholars of Islamic sharia law called for humane treatment of the dhimmis.[112]

A Muslim man may marry a Jewish or Christian dhimmī woman, who may keep her own religion (though her children were automatically considered Muslims and had to be raised as such), but a Muslim woman cannot marry a dhimmī man unless he converts to Islam. Dhimmīs are prohibited from converting Muslims under severe penalties, while Muslims are encouraged to convert dhimmīs.[113][unreliable source?]

Jizya tax edit

Payment of the jizya obligated Muslim authorities to protect dhimmis in civil and military matters. Sura 9 (At-Tawba), verse 29 stipulates that jizya be exacted from non-Muslims as a condition required for jihad to cease. Islamic jurists required adult, free, healthy males among the dhimma community to pay the jizya, while exempting women, children, the elderly, slaves, those affected by mental or physical handicaps, and travelers who did not settle in Muslim lands.[114][115] According to Abu Yusuf dhimmi should be imprisoned until they pay the jizya in full.[116] Other jurists specified that dhimmis who don't pay jizya should have their heads shaved and made to wear a dress distinctive from those dhimmis who paid the jizya and Muslims.[117]

Lewis states there are varying opinions among scholars as to how much of a burden jizya was.[116] According to Norman Stillman: "jizya and kharaj were a "crushing burden for the non-Muslim peasantry who eked out a bare living in a subsistence economy."[118] Both agree that ultimately, the additional taxation on non-Muslims was a critical factor that drove many dhimmis to leave their religion and accept Islam.[119] However, in some regions the jizya on populations was significantly lower than the zakat, meaning dhimmi populations maintained an economic advantage.[120] According to Cohen, taxation, from the perspective of dhimmis who came under Muslim rule, was "a concrete continuation of the taxes paid to earlier regimes".[73][page needed] Lewis observes that the change from Byzantine to Arab rule was welcomed by many among the dhimmis who found the new yoke far lighter than the old, both in taxation and in other matters, and that some, even among the Christians of Syria and Egypt, preferred the rule of Islam to that of Byzantines.[75] Montgomery Watt states, "the Christians were probably better off as dhimmis under Muslim-Arab rulers than they had been under the Byzantine Greeks."[121] In some places, for example Egypt, the jizya was a tax incentive for Christians to convert to Islam.[80]

Some scholars have tried compute the relative taxation on Muslims vs non-Muslims in the early Abbasid period. According to one estimate, Muslims had an average tax rate of 17–20 dirhams per person, which rose to 30 dirhams per person when in kind levies are included.[122] Non-Muslims paid either 12, 24 or 48 dirhams per person, depending on their taxation category, though most probably paid 12.[122]

The importance of dhimmis as a source of revenue for the Rashidun Caliphate is illustrated in a letter ascribed to Umar I and cited by Abu Yusuf: "if we take dhimmis and share them out, what will be left for the Muslims who come after us? By God, Muslims would not find a man to talk to and profit from his labors."[123]

The early Islamic scholars took a relatively humane and practical attitude towards the collection of jizya, compared to the 11th century commentators writing when Islam was under threat both at home and abroad.[124]

The jurist Abu Yusuf, the chief judge of the caliph Harun al-Rashid, rules as follows regarding the manner of collecting the jizya[124]

No one of the people of the dhimma should be beaten in order to exact payment of the jizya, nor made to stand in the hot sun, nor should hateful things be inflicted upon their bodies, or anything of that sort. Rather they should be treated with leniency.

In the border provinces, dhimmis were sometimes recruited for military operations. In such cases, they were exempted from jizya for the year of service.[125]

Administration of law edit

Religious pluralism existed in medieval Islamic law and ethics. The religious laws and courts of other religions, including Christianity, Judaism and Hinduism, were usually accommodated within the Islamic legal framework, as exemplified in the Caliphate, Al-Andalus, Ottoman Empire and Indian subcontinent.[126][127] In medieval Islamic societies, the qadi (Islamic judge) usually could not interfere in the matters of non-Muslims unless the parties voluntarily chose to be judged according to Islamic law. The dhimmi communities living in Islamic states usually had their own laws independent from the Sharia law, such as the Jews who had their own Halakha courts.[128]

Dhimmis were allowed to operate their own courts following their own legal systems. However, dhimmis frequently attended the Muslim courts in order to record property and business transactions within their own communities. Cases were taken out against Muslims, against other dhimmis and even against members of the dhimmi's own family. Dhimmis often took cases relating to marriage, divorce or inheritance to the Muslim courts so these cases would be decided under sharia law. Oaths sworn by dhimmis in the Muslim courts were sometimes the same as the oaths taken by Muslims, sometimes tailored to the dhimmis' beliefs.[129]

Muslim men could generally marry dhimmi women who are considered People of the Book, however Islamic jurists rejected the possibility any non-Muslim man might marry a Muslim woman.[130] Bernard Lewis notes that "similar position existed under the laws of Byzantine Empire, according to which a Christian could marry a Jewish woman, but a Jew could not marry a Christian woman under pain of death".[77]

Relevant texts edit

Quranic verses as a basis for Islamic policies toward dhimmis edit

Lewis states

  • The phrase "Let there be no compulsion in religion: ...", from Surah Al-Baqara 2:256 has sometimes been interpreted in the Islamic legal and theological traditions to mean followers of other religions should not be forced to adopt Islam[131]
  • The phrase "Unto you your religion, and unto me my religion.", from Surah Al-Kafirun 109:6 has been used as a "proof-text for pluralism and coexistence".[131]
  • Surah Al-Baqara 2:62 has served to justify the tolerated position accorded to the followers of Christianity, Judaism, and Sabianism under Muslim rule.[131]

Hadith edit

A hadith by Muhammad, "Whoever killed a muʿāhid (a person who is granted the pledge of protection by the Muslims) shall not smell the fragrance of Paradise though its fragrance can be smelt at a distance of forty years (of traveling).",[132][133] is cited as a foundation for the right of non-Muslim citizens to live peacefully and undisturbed in an Islamic state.[134] Anwar Shah Kashmiri writes in his commentary on Sahih al-Bukhari Fayd al-Bari on this hadith: "You know the gravity of sin for killing a Muslim, for its odiousness has reached the point of disbelief, and it necessitates that [the killer abides in Hell] forever. As for killing a non-Muslim citizen [muʿāhid], it is similarly no small matter, for the one who does it will not smell the fragrance of Paradise."[134]

A similar hadith in regard to the status of the dhimmis: "Whoever wrongs one with whom a compact (treaty) has been made [i.e., a dhimmi] and lays on him a burden beyond his strength, I will be his accuser."[135][136]

Constitution of Medina edit

The Constitution of Medina, a formal agreement between Muhammad and all the significant tribes and families of Medina (including Muslims, Jews and pagans), declared that non-Muslims in the Ummah had the following rights:[137]

  1. The security (dhimma) of God is equal for all groups,[138]
  2. Non-Muslim members have equal political and cultural rights as Muslims. They will have autonomy and freedom of religion.[139]
  3. Non-Muslims will take up arms against the enemy of the Ummah and share the cost of war. There is to be no treachery between the two.[140]
  4. Non-Muslims will not be obliged to take part in religious wars of the Muslims.[141]

Khaybar agreement edit

A precedent for the dhimma contract was established with the agreement between Muhammad and the Jews after the Battle of Khaybar, an oasis near Medina. Khaybar was the first territory attacked and conquered by Muslims. When the Jews of Khaybar surrendered to Muhammad after a siege, Muhammad allowed them to remain in Khaybar in return for handing over to the Muslims one half their annual produce.[142]

Pact of Umar edit

The Pact of Umar, traditionally believed to be between caliph Umar and the conquered Jerusalem Christians in the seventh century, was another source of regulations pertaining to dhimmis. However, Western orientalists doubt the authenticity of the pact, arguing it is usually the victors and not the vanquished who impose rather than propose, the terms of peace, and that it is highly unlikely that the people who spoke no Arabic and knew nothing of Islam could draft such a document. Academic historians believe the Pact of Umar in the form it is known today was a product of later jurists who attributed it to Umar in order to lend greater authority to their own opinions. The similarities between the Pact of Umar and the Theodosian and Justinian Codes of the Eastern Roman Empire suggest that perhaps much of the Pact of Umar was borrowed from these earlier codes by later Islamic jurists. At least some of the clauses of the pact mirror the measures first introduced by the Umayyad caliph Umar II or by the early Abbasid caliphs.[143]

Cultural interactions and cultural differences edit

During the Middle Ages, local associations known as futuwwa clubs developed across the Islamic lands. There were usually several futuwwah in each town. These clubs catered to varying interests, primarily sports, and might involve distinctive manners of dress and custom. They were known for their hospitality, idealism and loyalty to the group. They often had a militaristic aspect, purportedly for the mutual protection of the membership. These clubs commonly crossed social strata, including among their membership local notables, dhimmi and slaves – to the exclusion of those associated with the local ruler, or amir.[144]

Muslims and Jews were sometimes partners in trade, with the Muslim taking days off on Fridays and Jews taking off on Saturdays.[145]

Andrew Wheatcroft describes how some social customs such as different conceptions of dirt and cleanliness made it difficult for the religious communities to live close to each other, either under Muslim or under Christian rule.[146]

In modern times edit

The dhimma and the jizya poll tax are no longer imposed in Muslim majority countries.[22][147] In the 21st century, jizya is widely regarded as being at odds with contemporary secular conceptions of citizens' civil rights and equality before the law, although there have been occasional reports of religious minorities in conflict zones and areas subject to political instability being forced to pay jizya.[148]

In 2009 it was claimed that a group of militants that referred to themselves as the Taliban imposed the jizya on Pakistan's minority Sikh community after occupying some of their homes and kidnapping a Sikh leader.[149]

As late as 2013, in Egypt jizya was reportedly being imposed by the Muslim Brotherhood on 15,000 Christian Copts of Dalga Village.[150][151]

In February 2014, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) announced that it intended to extract jizya from Christians in the city of Raqqa, Syria, which it controlled at the time. Christians who refused to accept the dhimma contract and pay the tax were to have to either convert to Islam, leave or be executed. Wealthy Christians would have to pay half an ounce of gold, the equivalent of $664 twice a year; middle-class Christians were to have to pay half that amount and poorer ones were to be charged one-fourth that amount.[152] In June, 2014 the Institute for the Study of War reported that ISIL claims to have collected jizya and fay.[153] On 18 July 2014 ISIL ordered the Christians in Mosul to accept the dhimma contract and pay the jizya or convert to Islam. If they refused to accept either of the options they would be killed.[154]

See also edit

  • Dhimmitude – Polemical characterization of the status of non-Muslims under Islamic rule
  • Gentile – Term referring to a non-Jew
  • Islam and other religions – Muslim attitudes towards other religions
  • Ger toshav – Non-Jew living in the Land of Israel who agrees to follow the Seven Laws of Noah
  • Jizyah – Islamic tax on non-Muslims
  • Musta'min – Islamic term for non-Muslims temporarily residing in Muslim-ruled lands
  • Persecution of Buddhists – Overview of hostility toward and/or discrimination against adherents of Buddhism
  • Persecution of Christians
  • Persecution of Hindus – Overview of hostility toward and/or discrimination against adherents of Hinduism
  • Persecution of Jews – Historical discrimination against Jewish groups
  • Persecution of Sikhs – Persecution based on religious belief
  • Zunnar – Type of identifying mark in historic Islamic societies

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Juan Eduardo Campo, ed. (2010). "dhimmi". Encyclopedia of Islam. Infobase Publishing. pp. 194–195. Dhimmis are non-Muslims who live within Islamdom and have a regulated and protected status. ... In the modern period, this term has generally has occasionally been resuscitated, but it is generally obsolete.
  2. ^ Mohammad Taqi al-Modarresi (2016). (PDF). Enlight Press. ISBN 978-0994240989. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 August 2019. Retrieved 22 December 2017.
  3. ^ "Definition of DHIMMI". www.merriam-webster.com.
  4. ^ Glenn, H. Patrick (2007). Legal Traditions of the World. Oxford University Press. pp. 218–219. A Dhimmi is a non-Muslim subject of a state governed in accordance to sharia law. The term connotes an obligation of the state to protect the individual, including the individual's life, property, and freedom of religion and worship, and required loyalty to the empire, and a poll tax known as the jizya, which complemented the Islamic tax paid by the Muslim subjects, called Zakat.
  5. ^ H. Patrick Glenn, Legal Traditions of the World. Oxford University Press, 2007, p. 219.
  6. ^ The French scholar Gustave Le Bon (the author of La civilisation des Arabes) writes "that despite the fact that the incidence of taxation fell more heavily on a Muslim than a non-Muslim, the non-Muslim was free to enjoy equally well with every Muslim all the privileges afforded to the citizens of the state. The only privilege that was reserved for the Muslims was the seat of the caliphate, and this, because of certain religious functions attached to it, which could not naturally be discharged by a non-Muslim." Mun'im Sirry (2014), Scriptural Polemics: The Qur'an and Other Religions, p. 179. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199359363.
  7. ^ Abou El Fadl, Khaled (2007). The Great Theft: Wrestling Islam from the Extremists. HarperOne. p. 204. ISBN 978-0061189036. According to the dhimma status system, non-Muslims must pay a poll tax in return for Muslim protection and the privilege of living in Muslim territory. Per this system, non-Muslims are exempt from military service, but they are excluded from occupying high positions that involve dealing with high state interests, like being the president or prime minister of the country. In Islamic history, non-Muslims did occupy high positions, especially in matters that related to fiscal policies or tax collection.
  8. ^ Annemarie Schimmel (2004). The Empire of the Great Mughals: History, Art and Culture. University of Chicago Press. p. 107. ISBN 978-1861891853. The conqueror Muhammad Ibn Al Qasem gave both Hindus and Buddhists the same status as the Christians, Jews and Sabaeans of the Middle East. They were all "dhimmi" ('protected people')
  9. ^ Michael Bonner (2008). Jihad in Islamic History: Doctrines and Practice. Princeton University Press. p. 89. ISBN 978-0691138381. JSTOR j.ctt7sg8f.
  10. ^ Wael B. Hallaq (2009). Sharī'a: Theory, Practice, Transformations. Cambridge University Press. p. 327. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511815300. ISBN 978-0511815300.
  11. ^ Michael Bonner (2008). Jihad in Islamic History. Princeton University Press. pp. 89–90. ISBN 978-1400827381. To begin with, there was no forced conversion, no choice between "Islam and the Sword". Islamic law, following a clear Quranic principle (2:256), prohibited any such things [...] although there have been instances of forced conversion in Islamic history, these have been exceptional.
  12. ^ Waines (2003) "An Introduction to Islam" Cambridge University Press. p. 53
  13. ^ Winter, T. J., & Williams, J. A. (2002). Understanding Islam and the Muslims: The Muslim Family Islam and World Peace. Louisville, Kentucky: Fons Vitae. p. 82. ISBN 978-1-887752-47-3. Quote: The laws of Muslim warfare forbid any forced conversions, and regard them as invalid if they occur.
  14. ^ Ira M. Lapidus. Islamic Societies to the Nineteenth Century: A Global History. p. 345.
  15. ^ a b Khadduri, Majid (2010). War and Peace in the Law of Islam. pp. 196–198. ISBN 978-1616190484.
  16. ^ The Torah itself set forth rules for dress that set Jews apart from the communities in which they lived.Eric Silverman, A Cultural History of Jewish Dress, A&C Black, 2013 ISBN 978-0-857-85209-0 pp. 47, xv, 24:'At 2 Maccabees 4:12 it is recorded that the Maccabees slaughtered Jewish youths guilty of Hellenizing in wearing caps typical of Greek youths. The first of the other Abrahamic religions to impose a distinctive mode of dress on Jews was Islam, beginning with decrees set forth by the Abbasid caliph Al-Mutawakkil obliging non-Muslims (dhimmis) to wear distinctive marks, – buttons on their caps, patches on their sleeves, and generally honey-coloured garbs, – on their clothing in order to mark them off from members of the Muslim communities.'; ‘a twelfth century synod decreed the first of many edicts which required Jews to don peculiar garb. These outfits marked Jews as Otherly-to be shunned, despised, …and sometimes murdered… . But Jews also dressed differently in premodern Europe because their rabbis understood any emulation of non-Jews as a violation of the divine law as revealed by God to Moses atop Mount Sinai. The Five Books of Moses, after all, together called the Torah, clearly specify that Jews must adhere to a particular dress code-modesty, for example, and fringes. The very structure of the cosmos demanded nothing less. Clothing, too, served as a "fence" that protected Jews from the profanities and pollutions of the non-Jewish societies in which they dwelled. From this angle, Jews dressed distinctively as God's elect.'
  17. ^ "Pact of Umar".
  18. ^ a b Cohen, Mark R. (1995). Under Crescent and Cross: The Jews in the Middle Ages. Princeton University Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-691-01082-3. Retrieved 10 April 2010.
  19. ^ Al-Misri, Reliance of the Traveler (edited and translated by Nuh Ha Mim Keller), p. 608. Amana Publications, 1994.
  20. ^ Al-Misri, Reliance of the Traveler (ed. and trans. Nuh Ha Mim Keller), pp. 977, 986. Amana Publications, 1994.
  21. ^ Ghazi, Kalin & Kamali 2013, pp. 240–241.
  22. ^ a b "[…] the overwhelming majority of moderate Muslims reject the dhimma system as ahistorical, in the sense that it is inappropriate for the age of nation-states and democracies." Abou El Fadl, Khaled (2007). The Great Theft: Wrestling Islam from the Extremists. HarperOne. p. 214. ISBN 978-0061189036.
  23. ^ Definition of jizyah, its rate and who has to pay it – Islam Guide
  24. ^ Weeramantry 1997, p. 138
  25. ^ Sachedina, Abdulaziz Abdulhussein (2001). The Islamic Roots of Democratic Pluralism. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-513991-4.
  26. ^ Shelomo Dov Goitein, The Yemenites – History, Communal Organization, Spiritual Life (Selected Studies), editor: Menahem Ben-Sasson, Jerusalem 1983, pp. 288–299. ISBN 965-235-011-7
  27. ^ Marshall Hodgson, The Venture of Islam Conscience and History in a World Civilization Vol 2. University of Chicago, 1958, p. 278.
  28. ^ al-Misri, Ahmad ibn Naqib (edited and translated from Arabic (with commentary) by Nuh Ha Mim Keller) (1994 revised ed.), p. 603.
  29. ^ al-Qattan, Najwa (1999). "Dhimmis in the Muslim Court: Legal Autonomy and Religious Discrimination". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 31 (3): 429–444. doi:10.1017/S0020743800055501. ISSN 0020-7438. S2CID 159763960.
  30. ^ Hamidullah, Muhammad (1970). Introduction to Islam. International Islamic Federation of Student Organizations. p. 180.
  31. ^ Abdel-Haleem 2012, p. 73.
  32. ^ Jackson, Sherman A. (2005). p. 144 (via Google Books). Retrieved 19 September 2011.
  33. ^ Jackson, Sherman A. (2005). p. 145 (via Google Books). Retrieved 19 September 2011.
  34. ^ Glenn, H. Patrick (2007). Legal Traditions of the World: Sustainable Diversity in Law (3rd edition). New York City; Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-920541-7. pp. 217–219.
  35. ^ Glenn, H. Patrick (2007). Legal Traditions of the World&: Sustainable Diversity in Law (3rd ed.). New York: Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-920541-7. p. 219.
  36. ^ Quran 5:47
  37. ^ Hamidullah, Muhammad (1986). "Relations of Muslims with non-Muslims". Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs. 7 (1): 9. doi:10.1080/13602008608715960. ISSN 0266-6952.
  38. ^ Lewis, Bernard (1984). The Jews of Islam. Princeton University Press. p. 184. ISBN 978-0-691-00807-3.
  39. ^ Basim Musallam, The Cambridge Illustrated History of the Islamic World, edited by Francis Robinson. Cambridge University Press, 1996, p. 176.
  40. ^ Hodgson, The Venture of Islam Vol 3, 1961, pp. 105–108.
  41. ^ Hodgson, The Venture of Islam Vol 3, 1961, pp. 176–177.
  42. ^ Sarah Ansari, The Cambridge Illustrated History of the Islamic World edited by Francis Robinson. Cambridge University Press, 1996, p. 90.
  43. ^ Hodgson, The Venture of Islam Vol 3, 1961, pp. 366–367.
  44. ^ Sarah Ansari, The Cambridge Illustrated History of the Islamic World edited by Francis Robinson. Cambridge University Press, 1996, pp. 103–111.
  45. ^ Marshall Hodgson, The Venture of Islam Conscience and History in a World Civilization Vol 3. The University of Chicago, 1961, pp. 384–386.
  46. ^ Otto, Jan Michiel. Sharia and National Law in Muslim Countries: Tensions and Opportunities for Dutch and EU Foreign Policy . Amsterdam University Press, 2008, p. 7.
  47. ^ Otto, Sharia and National Law in Muslim Countries, 2008, pp. 8–9.
  48. ^ Otto, Sharia and National Law in Muslim Countries, 2008, p. 29.
  49. ^ Otto, Sharia and National Law in Muslim Countries, 2008, p. 10.
  50. ^ Otto, Sharia and National Law in Muslim Countries, 2008, p. 18.[ISBN missing]
  51. ^ Otto, Sharia and National Law in Muslim Countries, 2008, pp. 37–39.
  52. ^ Lewis, Bernard (1984). The Jews of Islam. Princeton University Press. p. 62. ISBN 978-0-691-00807-3.
  53. ^ Lewis, Bernard (1984). The Jews of Islam. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-00807-3. summary of pp. 62–66. See p. 62 (2nd paragraph), p. 65 (3rd paragraph)
  54. ^ Lapidus (1988), p. 599
  55. ^ Lapidus (2002), p. 495
  56. ^ Hukuma Islamiyya, n.p. (Beirut), n.d., pp. 30ff.; Vilayat-i Faqih, n.p., n.d., pp. 35ff.; English version (from the Arabic), Islamic Government (U.S. Joint Publications Research Service 72663, 1979), pp. 22ff.; French version (from the Persian), Pour un gouvernement islamique (Paris, 1979), pp. 31ff. Another version in Hamid Algar, Islam and Revolution: Writings and Declarations of Imam Khomeini (Berkeley, 1981), pp. 45ff.
  57. ^ Bernard Lewis, The Jews of Islam notes on p. 3
  58. ^ AFP (news agency) (11 May 2014). "Qatar-based cleric calls for Egypt vote boycott". Yahoo News. from the original on 16 June 2014.
  59. ^ Gilbert Achcar (2013). The People Want: A Radical Exploration of the Arab Uprising. University of California Press. p. 112. ISBN 978-0520956544.
  60. ^ لما نقول أهل الذمة يعني أهل ذمة الله يعني هم في عهد الله وعهد رسوله وعهد جماعة المسلمين وضمانهم، الجميع عليه أن يحميهم، فهذا هو المقصود من الكلمة. الآن يتأذى منها الكثير من أخواننا كلمة أهل الذمة، وأنا ذكرت فيما كتبت في كتبي أنني أنا لا أرى أي مانع أمام الاجتهاد الإسلامي المعاصر أن يحذف كلمة أهل الذمة هذه ونسميهم المواطنون من غير المسلمين Transcript of the 5-6-2008 "Sharia and Life" episode, Aljazeera.net
  61. ^ Andrea Zaki Stephanous. Political Islam, Citizenship, and Minorities: The Future of Arab Christians. pp. 160–161. Both Muslims and al-dhimmiyun struggled for the liberation of this land for more than a century and, because of the blood that was shed by both, a new order was created...In the modern state, the constitution took the place of the al-dhimmi contract.
  62. ^ Quran 9:29—"Fight those who do not believe in Allah or in the Last Day and who do not consider unlawful what Allah and His Messenger have made unlawful and who do not adopt the religion of truth from those who were given the Scripture—fight until they give the jizyah willingly while they are humbled."
  63. ^ Muhammad Husayn Tabataba'i. "Surah Al-Baqarah, verses 83–88". almizan.org (in Arabic and English). Retrieved 1 January 2016. as-Sadiq (a.s) said: "Verily Allah sent Muhammad (s.a.w.) with five swords: So (there is) a sword against a dhimmi (free non-Muslim subject of an Islamic country). Allah said: and speak to men good (words); it was revealed about the dhimmis, then it was abrogated by another verse, Fight those who do not believe in Allah... (9:29) (al-'Ayyashi) The author says: In this tradition the Imam has taken the "speech" to mean behavior. We say: Do not speak to him but good; what we mean is: Do not deal with him but in a good and decent manner. This meaning will apply only if we take the word, "abrogated" in its terminological sense. But it may also be taken in its literal sense (as we shall explain under the verse: Whatever signs We abrogate or cause to be forgotten ...2:106); and in that case this verse will not be in conflict with that of the fighting. It should be pointed out that such uses of words in their literal meanings (as against their terminological ones) are not infrequent in the traditions of the Imams.
  64. ^ Javed Ahmed Ghamidi, Mizan, Chapter: The Islamic Law of Jihad, Dar ul-Ishraq, 2001. OCLC 52901690 [1]
  65. ^ "Misplaced Directives", Renaissance 13 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine, Al-Mawrid Institute, Vol. 12, No. 3, March 2002.. Archived from the original on 15 November 2006. Retrieved 5 October 2006.
  66. ^ Selection of Tafsir Nemooneh, Grand Ayatollah Makarim Shirazi, p. 10, vol. 2, on verse 9:29 18 November 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  67. ^ Muhammad Muslih; Michaelle Browers (2009). "Democracy". In John L. Esposito (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acref/9780195305135.001.0001. ISBN 978-0195305135.
  68. ^ Khan, Ali, Commentary on the Constitution of Medina in Understanding Islamic Law: From Classical to Contemporary, Edited by Aminah Beverly McCloud and Hisham Ramadan, Alta Mira Press, 2006, pp. 205–208.[ISBN missing]
  69. ^ Khan, Ali (17 November 2006). "The Medina Constitution". SSRN 945458.
  70. ^ Ramadan, Tariq, Radical Reform: Islamic Ethics and Liberation, Oxford University Press, 2009, pp. 268–271.[ISBN missing]
  71. ^ Lewis (1984), pp. 10, 20.
  72. ^ Lewis (2002), p. 92
  73. ^ a b Cl. Cahen in Encyclopedia of Islam, Jizya article
  74. ^ Lewis 1984 p. 18
  75. ^ a b Lewis (2002) p. 57
  76. ^ Mark R. Cohen (1995). Under Crescent and Cross: The Jews in the Middle Ages. Princeton University Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-691-01082-3. Retrieved 10 April 2010.
  77. ^ a b Lewis (1984), p. 27
  78. ^ a b Esposito 1998, p. 34. "They replaced the conquered countries, indigenous rulers and armies, but preserved much of their government, bureaucracy, and culture. For many in the conquered territories, it was no more than an exchange of masters, one that brought peace to peoples demoralized and disaffected by the casualties and heavy taxation that resulted from the years of Byzantine-Persian warfare. Local communities were free to continue to follow their own way of life in internal, domestic affairs. In many ways, local populations found Muslim rule more flexible and tolerant than that of Byzantium and Persia. Religious communities were free to practice their faith to worship and be governed by their religious leaders and laws in such areas as marriage, divorce, and inheritance. In exchange, they were required to pay tribute, a poll tax (jizya) that entitled them to Muslim protection from outside aggression and exempted them from military service. Thus, they were called the "protected ones" (dhimmi). In effect, this often meant lower taxes, greater local autonomy, rule by fellow Semites with closer linguistic and cultural ties than the hellenized, Greco-Roman élites of Byzantium, and greater religious freedom for Jews and indigenous Christians."
  79. ^ Bernard Lewis and Buntzie Ellis Churchill, Islam: The Religion and the People, Wharton School Publishing, 2008, p. 146.
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  83. ^ Marshall G.S. Hodgson (1977). The Venture of Islam: The classical age of Islam. University of Chicago Press. p. 448. ISBN 978-0226346830. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
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  86. ^ Jackson, p. 144
  87. ^ Hodgson, The Venture of Islam Vol 1, 1958, pp. 227–229.
  88. ^ Lewis (1984), pp. 17–18; Stillman (1979), p. 27.
  89. ^ Courbage and Fargues (1995), pp. 44–46.
  90. ^ Courbage and Fargues (1995), pp. 57–58.
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  94. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 November 2005.
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  96. ^ Ben-Sasson, Haim Hillel (1969). On Jewish History in the Middle Ages. Tel Aviv. p. 36.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) Quoted in Mark R. Cohen's Under Crescent and Cross: The Jews in the Middle Ages, Princeton University Press (1995), pp. xvii–xviii (Cohen's translation).
  97. ^ Cahen, Claude (1954). "Dhimma". In P. J. Bearman; Th. Bianquis; C.E. Bosworth; E. van Donzel; W. P. Heinrichs; B. Lewis; Ch. Pellat; J. Schacht; J. Burton-Page; C. Dumont; V.L. Ménage (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam. Leiden, Netherlands: Brill Academic Publishers. pp. 227–231. ISBN 978-90-04-07026-4.
  98. ^ a b Cohen, Mark (1995). Under Crescent and Cross: The Jews in the Middle Ages. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-01082-3.
  99. ^ Mordechai Zaken, Jewish Subjects and their tribal chieftains in Kurdistan: A Study in Survival, Brill: Leiden and Boston, 2007.
  100. ^ Hodgson, The Venture of Islam Vol 2, 1961, p. 275.
  101. ^ Hodgson, The Venture of Islam Vol 2, 1961, p. 276.
  102. ^ Hodgson, The Venture of Islam Vol 2, 1961, p. 278.
  103. ^ MHodgson, The Venture of Islam Vol 3, 1961, pp. 24–25.
  104. ^ Hodgson, The Venture of Islam Vol 3, 1961, pp. 65–67.
  105. ^ Hodgson, The Venture of Islam Vol 3, 1961, p. 60.
  106. ^ Hodgson, Marshall G. S. (15 May 2009). The Venture of Islam: Conscience and History in a World Civilization. 3 vols. University of Chicago Press. p. 1:268. ISBN 9780226346861.
  107. ^ Karsh 29.
  108. ^ Sidney H. Griffith (2010). The Church in the Shadow of the Mosque: Christians and Muslims in the World of Islam. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691146287.
  109. ^ Stillman (1979), p. 471
  110. ^ Al-Tabari, Ta'rikh al-Rusul wa 'l-Muluk, translated in Stillman (1979), p. 167.
  111. ^ Lapidus, Ira M. (2014). A History of Islamic societies. Cambridge University Press. pp. 155–156. ISBN 978-0521514309.
  112. ^ Lewis (1984), p. 16.
  113. ^ "Dhimmi". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 16 December 2021.
  114. ^ Mirza, Mahan; Gerhard Bowering; Patricia Crone; et al., eds. (2013). The Princeton encyclopedia of Islamic political thought. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. p. 283. ISBN 978-0691134840. Free adult males who were not afflicted by any physical or mental illness were required to pay the jizya. Women, children, handicapped, the mentally ill, the elderly, and slaves were exempt, as were all travelers and foreigners who did not settle in Muslim lands.
  115. ^ Alshech, Eli (2003). "Islamic Law, Practice, and Legal Doctrine: Exempting the Poor from the Jizya under the Ayyubids (1171–1250)". Islamic Law and Society. 10 (3): 348–375. doi:10.1163/156851903770227584. ...jurists divided the dhimma community into two major groups. The first group consists of all adult, free, sane males among the dhimma community, while the second includes all other dhimmas (i.e., women, slaves, minors, and the insane). Jurists generally agree that members of the second group are to be granted a "blanket" exemption from jizya payment.
  116. ^ a b Lewis (1984), pp. 14–15.
  117. ^ Ibrahim Oweiss (2003). The Book of Revenue: Kitab Al-Amwal. Garnet & Ithaca Press. p. xix. ISBN 978-1859641590.
  118. ^ Stillman (1979), p. 28
  119. ^ Lewis (1984), pp. 17–18; Stillman (1979), p. 18
  120. ^ Klorman (2007), p. 94
  121. ^ William Montgomery Watt, Islamic Political Thought: The Basic Concepts, p. 51. Quote: "The Christians were probably better off as dhimmis under Muslim-Arab rulers than they had been under the Byzantine Greeks."
  122. ^ a b Richard Bonney (2004). Jihad: From Qur'an to Bin Laden. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 84.
  123. ^ Lewis (1984), pp. 30–31.
  124. ^ a b Lewis (1984), p. 15.
  125. ^ "Djizya (i)", Encyclopaedia of Islam Online
  126. ^ Weeramantry, Judge Christopher G. (1997). Justice Without Frontiers: Furthering Human Rights. Brill Publishers. p. 138. ISBN 978-90-411-0241-6.
  127. ^ Sachedina, Abdulaziz Abdulhussein (2001). The Islamic Roots of Democratic Pluralism. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-513991-4.
  128. ^ Mark R. Cohen (1995). Under Crescent and Cross: The Jews in the Middle Ages. Princeton University Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-691-01082-3. Retrieved 10 April 2010.
  129. ^ al-Qattan (1999)
  130. ^ Al-Mawardi (2000), p. 161; Friedmann (2003), p. 161; Lewis (1984), p. 27.
  131. ^ a b c Lewis (1984) p. 13
  132. ^ Sahih al-Bukhari 6914
  133. ^ Ellethy, Yaser (2014). Islam, Context, Pluralism and Democracy: Classical and Modern Interpretations (Islamic Studies Series). Routledge. pp. 124–5. ISBN 978-1138800304.
  134. ^ a b Tahir-ul-Qadri, Muhammad (2011). Fatwa on Terrorism and Suicide Bombings. London: Minhaj-ul-Quran. pp. 98–99. ISBN 978-0-9551888-9-3.
  135. ^ Majid Khadduri: War and Peace in the Law of Islam, p. 175
  136. ^ al-Zuḥaylī, Wahbah (1998). ʾĀthar al-ḥarb fī l-fiqh al-Islāmī : dirāsah muqārinah. Damascus: Dār al-Fikr. p. 708. ISBN 978-1-57547-453-3. Quote: «» Translation:
  137. ^ Ahmed (1979), pp. 46–47.
  138. ^ Article 15, as quoted in Ahmed (1979), pp. 46–47.
  139. ^ Article 25, as quoted in Ahmed (1979), pp. 46–47.
  140. ^ Article 37, as quoted in Ahmed (1979), pp. 46–47.
  141. ^ Article 45, as quoted in Ahmed (1979), pp. 46–47.
  142. ^ Lewis (1984), pp. 10–11
  143. ^ Lewis (1984), pp. 24–25.
  144. ^ Marshall Hodgson, The Venture of Islam Conscience and History in a World Civilization Vol 2. The University of Chicago, 1961, pp. 126–127.
  145. ^ Marshall Hodgson, The Venture of Islam Conscience and History in a World Civilization Vol. 1. The University of Chicago, 1961, p. 302.
  146. ^ Wheatcroft (2003) p. 73.
  147. ^ Werner Ende; Udo Steinbach (2010). Islam in the World Today. Cornell University Press. p. 738. ISBN 978-0801445712.
  148. ^ Matthew Long (jizya entry author) (2012). The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought. Princeton University Press. pp. 283–284. ISBN 978-0691134840. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  149. ^ "The Tribune, Chandigarh, India – World". www.tribuneindia.com.
  150. ^ "Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood to Coptic Christians: Convert to Islam, or pay 'jizya' tax". The Washington Times.
  151. ^ "Two Christians Murdered in Egypt for Refusing to Pay Jizya to Muslims". www.aina.org.
  152. ^ Baker, Aryn. "Al-Qaeda Rebels in Syria Tell Christians to Pay Up or Die". Time.
  153. ^ Caris, Charlie. "The Islamic State Announces Caliphate". Institute for the Study of War. Retrieved 1 July 2014.
  154. ^ . BBC. 18 July 2014. Archived from the original on 24 July 2014. Retrieved 30 December 2014.

References edit

  • Ahmad, Barakat (1979). Muhammad and the Jews. Vikas Publishing House.
  • Al-Hibri, Azizah Y. (2003). "An Islamic Perspective on Domestic Violence". 27 Fordham International Law Journal 195.
  • Abdel-Haleem, Muhammad (2012). "The jizya Verse (Q. 9:29): Tax Enforcement on Non-Muslims in the First Muslim State". Journal of Qur'anic Studies. 14 (2): 72–89. doi:10.3366/jqs.2012.0056. ISSN 1465-3591.
  • Bravmann, Meïr M. (1966). "The ancient background of the Qur'ānic Concept Al-Ğizyatu 'an Yadin". Arabica. 13 (3): 307. doi:10.1163/157005866X00525.
  • Bosworth, C. E. (1982). The Concept of Dhimma in Early Islam In Benjamin Braude and B. Lewis, eds., Christians and Jews in the Ottoman Empire: The Functioning of a Plural Society 2 vols., New York: Holmes & Meier Publishing. ISBN 0-8419-0520-7
  • Cahen, Claude. "Djizya (i)". In P.J. Bearman; Th. Bianquis; C.E. Bosworth; E. van Donzel; W.P. Heinrichs (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam Online. Brill Academic Publishers. ISSN 1573-3912.
  • Klorman, Bat-Zion Eraqi (Fall 2007). "Muslim Society as an Alternative: Jews Converting to Islam". Jewish Social Studies. 14 (1).
  • Cohen, Mark (1995). Under Crescent and Cross: The Jews in the Middle Ages. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-01082-3.
  • Courbage, Youssef; Fargues, Philippe (1995). Christians and Jews under Islam. London: I.B. Tauris Publishers. ISBN 978-1-86064-285-2.
  • Friedmann, Yohanan (2003). Tolerance and Coercion in Islam: Interfaith Relations in the Muslim Tradition. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-82703-4.
  • Goddard, Hugh (2000). A History of Christian-Muslim Relations. Chicago: New Amsterdam Books. ISBN 978-1-56663-340-6.
  • Eraqi-Klorman, Bat-Zion; Reeva Spector Simon; Michael Menachem Laskier; et al., eds. (2003). The Jews of the Middle East and North Africa in Modern Times. Columbia, NY: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-10796-9.
  • Karsh, Ephraim (2006). Islamic Imperialism: A History. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-10603-9.
  • Lapidus, Ira M. (2002). A History of Islamic Societies (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-77933-3.
  • Lewis, Bernard (2002). The Arabs in History. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-280310-8.
  • Lewis, Bernard (1984). The Jews of Islam. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-00807-3.
  • Esposito, John L. (1998). Islam: The Straight Path. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-511233-7.
  • Littman, David (1979). "Jews Under Muslim Rule: The Case Of Persia". The Wiener Library Bulletin. XXXII (New series 49/50).
  • Al-Mawardi (2000). The Ordinances of Government (Al-Ahkam al-Sultaniyya w'al-Wilayat al-Diniyya). Lebanon: Garnet Publishing. ISBN 978-1-85964-140-8.
  • Parfitt, Tudor (2000). Israel and Ishmael : Studies in Muslim-Jewish Relations. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-312-22228-4.
  • Power, Samantha (2002). A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide. New York: Harper Perennial. ISBN 978-0-06-054164-4.
  • al-Qattan, Najwa (1999). "Dhimmis in the Muslim Court: Legal Autonomy and Religious Discrimination". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 31 (3): 429–444. doi:10.1017/S0020743800055501. ISSN 0020-7438. S2CID 159763960.
  • Ghazi Muhammad; Ibrahim, Kalin; Kamali, Mohammad Hashim (2013). (PDF). The Islamic Texts Society Cambridge. ISBN 978-1-903682-83-8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 July 2017. Retrieved 21 May 2016.
  • Stillman, Norman (1979). The Jews of Arab Lands: A History and Source Book. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of America. ISBN 978-1-82760-198-4.
  • Tritton, Arthur S. (1930). The Caliphs and their non-Muslim Subjects: a Critical Study of the Covenant of Umar. London: Humphrey Milford/Oxford University Press.
  • Viré, F. "Kird". In P.J. Bearman; Th. Bianquis; C.E. Bosworth; E. van Donzel; W.P. Heinrichs (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam Online. Brill Academic Publishers. ISSN 1573-3912.
  • Waines, David (2003). An Introduction to Islam. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-53906-7.
  • Wehr, Hans (1976). J. Milton Cowan (ed.). A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic. Ithaca, New York: Spoken Language Services, Inc. ISBN 978-0-87950-001-6.
  • Wheatcroft, Andrew (2003). Infidels: A History of the Conflict between Christendom and Islam. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-025738-0.

Further reading edit

  • Nabil Luka Babawi: Les droits et les devoirs des chrétiens dans l'état islamique et leurs conséquences sur la sécurité nationale, thèse de doctorat.[ISBN missing]
  • Binswanger, Karl (1977). Untersuchungen zum Status der Nichtmuslime im Osmanischen Reich des 16. Jahrhunderts (in German). München. ISBN 978-3-87828-108-5. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Choksy, Jamsheed (1997). Conflict and Cooperation: Zoroastrian Subalterns and Muslim Elites in Medieval Iranian Society. New York.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)[ISBN missing]
  • Mark. R. Cohen: Under Crescent and Cross: The Jews in the Middle Ages. Princeton University Press, 1994.[ISBN missing]
  • Fattal, Antoine (1958). Le statut légal des non-musulmans en pays d'Islam (in French). Beirut.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)[ISBN missing]
  • Maribel Fierro and John Tolan, eds, The legal status of ḏimmī-s in the Islamic West (second/eighth-ninth/fifteenth centuries) (Turnhoult, 2013).[ISBN missing]
  • Friedmann, Yohanan (1998). "Classification of Unbelievers in Sunnī Muslim Law and Tradition". Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam (22).
  • Goitein, S. D. (1967–71). The Mediterranean Society: The Jewish Communities of the Arab World as Portrayed in the Documents of the Cairo Geniza (4 vols.). Berkeley and Los Angeles. ISBN 978-0520018679.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Gilbert, Martin (2010). In Ishmael's house: a History of Jews in Muslim Lands. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300167153.
  • Nicola Melis, "Il concetto di ğihād", in P. Manduchi (a cura di), Dalla penna al mouse. Gli strumenti di diffusione del concetto di ğihād, Angeli, Milano 2006, pp. 23–54.[ISBN missing]
  • Nicola Melis, "Lo statuto giuridico degli ebrei dell'Impero Ottomano", in M. Contu – N. Melis – G. Pinna (a cura di), Ebraismo e rapporti con le culture del Mediterraneo nei secoli XVIII–XX, Giuntina, Firenze 2003.
  • Nicola Melis, Trattato sulla guerra. Il Kitāb al-ğihād di Molla Hüsrev, Aipsa, Cagliari 2002.[ISBN missing]
  • Mohammad Amin Al-Midani: "La question des minorités et le statut des non-musulmans en Islam." In: La religion est-elle un obstacle à l'application des droits de l'homme?. colloque tenu les 10–11 décembre 2004 à Lyon.
  • M. Levy-Rubin: "Shurut 'Umar and its alternatives: the legal debate on the status of the dhimmis." In: Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam. 30/2005
  • Pessah Shinar: "Some remarks regarding the colours of male Jewish dress in North Africa and their Arabic-Islamic context." In: Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam. 24/2000, pp. 380–395

External links edit

  • Islamic and Christian Spain in the early Middle Ages. Thomas F. Glick: Chapter 5: Ethnic relations
  • Islam and its tolerance level 8 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  • Surah Al Kafirun is 109 Surah and found in the 30th Parah of the Quran.
  • Islamic Teaching On Dhimmi Status Creates An Atmosphere Of Intolerance from the Religious Freedom Packet of the Order of Saint Andrew the Apostle
  • Bernard Lewis, Race and Slavery in the Middle East

dhimmi, dhimmī, arabic, ذمي, ḏimmī, ˈðimmiː, collectively, أهل, الذمة, ʾahl, aḏ, ḏimmah, dhimmah, people, covenant, muʿāhid, معاهد, historical, term, muslims, living, islamic, state, with, legal, protection, word, literally, means, protected, person, referring. Dhimmi Arabic ذمي ḏimmi IPA ˈdimmiː collectively أهل الذمة ʾahl aḏ ḏimmah dhimmah the people of the covenant or muʿahid معاهد is a historical 1 term for non Muslims living in an Islamic state with legal protection 1 2 470 The word literally means protected person 3 referring to the state s obligation under sharia to protect the individual s life property as well as freedom of religion in exchange for loyalty to the state and payment of the jizya tax in contrast to the zakat or obligatory alms paid by the Muslim subjects 4 Dhimmi were exempt from certain duties assigned specifically to Muslims if they paid the poll tax jizya but were otherwise equal under the laws of property contract and obligation 5 6 7 Historically dhimmi status was originally applied to Jews Christians and Sabians who are considered People of the Book in Islamic theology Later this status was also applied to Zoroastrians Sikhs Hindus Jains and Buddhists 8 9 10 Jews and Christians were required to pay the jizyah while others depending on the different rulings of the four Madhhabs might be required to accept Islam pay the jizya be exiled or be killed 11 12 13 14 During the rule of al Mutawakkil the tenth Abbasid Caliph numerous restrictions reinforced the second class citizen status of dhimmis and forced their communities into ghettos 15 For instance they were required to distinguish themselves from their Muslim neighbors by their dress 16 They were not permitted to build new churches or synagogues or repair old churches according to the Pact of Umar 17 Under Sharia the dhimmi communities were usually governed by their own laws in place of some of the laws applicable to the Muslim community For example the Jewish community of Medina was allowed to have its own Halakhic courts 18 and the Ottoman millet system allowed its various dhimmi communities to rule themselves under separate legal courts These courts did not cover cases that involved religious groups outside of their own communities or capital offences Dhimmi communities were also allowed to engage in certain practices that were usually forbidden for the Muslim community such as the consumption of alcohol and pork 19 20 21 Some Muslims reject the dhimma system by arguing that it is a system which is inappropriate in the age of nation states and democracies 22 There is a range of opinions among 20th century and contemporary Islamic theologians about whether the notion of dhimma is appropriate for modern times and if so what form it should take in an Islamic state There are differences among the Islamic Madhhabs regarding which non Muslims can pay jizya and have dhimmi status The Hanafi and Maliki Madhabs generally allow non Muslims to have dhimmi status In contrast the Shafi i and Hanbali Madhabs only allow Christians Jews and Zoroastrians to have dhimmi status and they maintain that all other non Muslims must either convert to Islam or be fought 23 Contents 1 The Dhimma contract 1 1 The Dhimma contract and Sharia law 1 2 The end of the Dhimma contract 1 3 Views of modern Islamic scholars on the status of non Muslims in an Islamic society 2 Dhimmi communities 2 1 Christians 2 2 Jews 2 3 Hindus and Buddhists 3 Restrictions 3 1 Jizya tax 3 2 Administration of law 4 Relevant texts 4 1 Quranic verses as a basis for Islamic policies toward dhimmis 4 2 Hadith 4 3 Constitution of Medina 4 4 Khaybar agreement 4 5 Pact of Umar 5 Cultural interactions and cultural differences 6 In modern times 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksThe Dhimma contract editBased on Quranic verses and Islamic traditions sharia law distinguishes between Muslims followers of other Abrahamic religions and Pagans or people belonging to other polytheistic religions As monotheists Jews and Christians have traditionally been considered People of the Book and afforded a special legal status known as dhimmi derived from a theoretical contract dhimma or residence in return for taxes Islamic legal systems based on sharia law incorporated the religious laws and courts of Christians Jews and Hindus as seen in the early caliphate al Andalus Indian subcontinent and the Ottoman Millet system 24 25 page needed In Yemenite Jewish sources a treaty was drafted between Muhammad and his Jewish subjects known as kitab ḏimmat al nabi written in the 17th year of the Hijra 638 CE which gave express liberty to the Jews living in Arabia to observe the Sabbath and to grow out their side locks but required them to pay the jizya poll tax annually for their protection 26 Muslim governments in the Indus basin readily extended the dhimmi status to the Hindus and Buddhists of India 27 Eventually the largest school of Islamic jurisprudence applied this term to all Non Muslims living in Muslim lands outside the sacred area surrounding Mecca Arabia 28 In medieval Islamic societies the qadi Islamic judge usually could not interfere in the matters of non Muslims unless the parties voluntarily chose to be judged according to Islamic law thus the dhimmi communities living in Islamic states usually had their own laws independent from the sharia law as with the Jews who would have their own rabbinical courts 18 These courts did not cover cases that involved other religious groups or capital offences or threats to public order By the 18th century however dhimmi frequently attended the Ottoman Muslim courts where cases were taken against them by Muslims or they took cases against Muslims or other dhimmi Oaths sworn by dhimmi in these courts were tailored to their beliefs 29 Non Muslims were allowed to engage in certain practices such as the consumption of alcohol and pork that were usually forbidden by Islamic law 30 in point of fact any Muslim who pours away their wine or forcibly appropriates it is liable to pay compensation 31 Some Islamic theologians held that Zoroastrian self marriages considered incestuous under sharia should also be tolerated Ibn Qayyim Al Jawziyya 1292 1350 opined that most scholars of the Hanbali school held that non Muslims were entitled to such practices as long as they were not presented to sharia courts and the religious minorities in question held them to be permissible This ruling was based on the precedent that there were no records of the Islamic prophet Muhammad forbidding such self marriages among Zoroastrians despite coming into contact with Zoroastrians and knowing about this practice 32 Religious minorities were also free to do as they wished in their own homes provided they did not publicly engage in illicit sexual activity in ways that could threaten public morals 33 There are parallels for this in Roman and Jewish law 34 According to law professor H Patrick Glenn of McGill University t oday it is said that the dhimmi are excluded from the specifically Muslim privileges but on the other hand they are excluded from the specifically Muslim duties while and here there are clear parallels with western public and private law treatment of aliens Fremdenrecht la condition de estrangers f or the rest the Muslim and the dhimmi are equal in practically the whole of the law of property and of contracts and obligations 35 Quoting the Qur anic statement Let Christians judge according to what We have revealed in the Gospel 36 Muhammad Hamidullah writes that Islam decentralized and communalized law and justice 37 However the classical dhimma contract is no longer enforced Western influence over the Muslim world has been instrumental in eliminating the restrictions and protections of the dhimma contract 38 The Dhimma contract and Sharia law edit Main article Sharia The dhimma contract is an integral part of traditional Islamic law From the 9th century AD the power to interpret and refine law in traditional Islamic societies was in the hands of the scholars ulama This separation of powers served to limit the range of actions available to the ruler who could not easily decree or reinterpret law independently and expect the continued support of the community 39 Through succeeding centuries and empires the balance between the ulema and the rulers shifted and reformed but the balance of power was never decisively changed 40 At the beginning of the 19th century the Industrial Revolution and the French Revolution introduced an era of European world hegemony that included the domination of most of the Muslim lands 41 42 At the end of the Second World War the European powers found themselves too weakened to maintain their empires 43 The wide variety in forms of government systems of law attitudes toward modernity and interpretations of sharia are a result of the ensuing drives for independence and modernity in the Muslim world 44 45 Muslim states sects schools of thought and individuals differ as to exactly what sharia law entails 46 In addition Muslim states today utilize a spectrum of legal systems Most states have a mixed system that implements certain aspects of sharia while acknowledging the supremacy of a constitution A few such as Turkey have declared themselves secular 47 Local and customary laws may take precedence in certain matters as well 48 Islamic law is therefore polynormative 49 and despite several cases of regression in recent years the trend is towards liberalization 50 Questions of human rights and the status of minorities cannot be generalized with regards to the Muslim world They must instead be examined on a case by case basis within specific political and cultural contexts using perspectives drawn from the historical framework 51 The end of the Dhimma contract edit The status of the dhimmi was for long accepted with resignation by the Christians and with gratitude by the Jews but the rising power of Christendom and the radical ideas of the French Revolution caused a wave of discontent among Christian dhimmis 52 The continuing and growing pressure from the European powers combined with pressure from Muslim reformers gradually relaxed the inequalities between Muslims and non Muslims 53 On 18 February 1856 the Ottoman Reform Edict of 1856 Hatt i Humayan was issued building upon the 1839 edict It came about partly as a result of pressure from and the efforts of the ambassadors of France Austria and the United Kingdom whose respective countries were needed as allies in the Crimean War It again proclaimed the principle of equality between Muslims and non Muslims and produced many specific reforms to this end For example the jizya tax was abolished and non Muslims were allowed to join the army 54 55 Views of modern Islamic scholars on the status of non Muslims in an Islamic society edit The Iranian Shi a Muslim Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini indicates in his book Islamic Government Governance of the Jurist that non Muslims should be required to pay the poll tax in return for which they would profit from the protection and services of the state they would however be excluded from all participation in the political process 56 failed verification Bernard Lewis remarks about Khomeini that one of his main grievances against the Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi was that his legislation allowed the theoretical possibility of non Muslims exercising political or judicial authority over Muslims 57 The Egyptian theologian Yusuf al Qaradawi chairman of the International Union of Muslim Scholars 58 has stated in his Al Jazeera program Sharia and Life which has an estimated audience of 35 to 60 million viewers 59 When we say dhimmis ahl al dhimma it means that they are under the covenant of God and His Messenger and the Muslim community and their responsibility ḍaman and it is everyone s duty to protect them and this is what is intended by the word At present many of our brethren are offended by the word dhimmis and I have stated in what I wrote in my books that I don t see anything to prevent contemporary Islamic ijtihad from discarding this word dhimmis and calling them non Muslim citizens 60 Another Egyptian Islamist Mohammad Salim al Awa argued the concept of dhimmi must be re interpreted in the context of Egyptian nationalism Al Awa and other Muslim scholars based this on the idea that while the previous dhimma condition result from the Islamic conquest the modern Egyptian state results from a joint Muslim Christian campaign to end the British occupation of Egypt In modern day Egypt he argues the constitution replaces the dhimma contract 61 Muhammad Husayn Tabataba i a 20th century Shia scholar writes that dhimmis should be treated in a good and decent manner He addresses the argument that good treatment of dhimmis was abrogated by Quranic verse 9 29 62 by stating that in the literal sense this verse is not in conflict with good treatment of dhimmis 63 Javed Ahmad Ghamidi a Pakistani theologian writes in Mizan that certain directives of the Quran were specific only to Muhammad against peoples of his times besides other directives the campaign involved asking the polytheists of Arabia for submission to Islam as a condition for exoneration and the others for jizya and submission to the political authority of the Muslims for exemption from capital punishment and for military protection as the dhimmis of the Muslims Therefore after Muhammad and his companions there is no concept in Islam obliging Muslims to wage war for propagation or implementation of Islam 64 65 The Iranian Shia jurist Grand Ayatollah Naser Makarem Shirazi states in Selection of the Tafsir Nemooneh that the main philosophy of jizya is that it is only a financial aid to those Muslims who are in the charge of safeguarding the security of the state and dhimmis lives and properties on their behalf 66 Prominent Islamic thinkers like Fahmi Huwaidi and Tarek El Bishry have based their justification for full citizenship of non Muslims in an Islamic states on the precedent set by Muhammad in the Constitution of Medina They argue that in this charter the People of Book have the status of citizens muwatinun rather than dhimmis sharing equal rights and duties with Muslims 67 Legal scholar L Ali Khan also points to the Constitution of Medina as a way forward for Islamic states in his 2006 paper titled The Medina Constitution He suggests this ancient document which governed the status of religions and races in the first Islamic state in which Jewish tribes are placed on an equal footing with Muslims and granted the freedom of religion can serve as a basis for the protection of minority rights equality and religious freedom in the modern Islamic state 68 69 Tariq Ramadan Professor of Islamic Studies at the University of Oxford advocates the inclusion of academic disciplines and Islamic society along with traditional Islamic scholars in an effort to reform Islamic law and address modern conditions He speaks of remaining faithful to the higher objectives of sharia law He posits universal rights of dignity welfare freedom equality and justice in a religiously and culturally pluralistic Islamic or other society and proposes a dialogue regarding the modern term citizenship although it has no clear precedent in classical fiqh He further includes the terms non citizen foreigner resident and immigrant in this dialogue and challenges not only Islam but modern civilization as a whole to come to terms with these concepts in a meaningful way with regards to problems of racism discrimination and oppression 70 Dhimmi communities editJews and Christians living under early Muslim rule were considered dhimmis a status that was later also extended to other non Muslims like Hindus and Buddhists They were allowed to freely practice their religion and to enjoy a large measure of communal autonomy and guaranteed their personal safety and security of property in return for paying tribute and acknowledging Muslim rule 71 Islamic law and custom prohibited the enslavement of free dhimmis within lands under Islamic rule 72 Taxation from the perspective of dhimmis who came under the Muslim rule was a concrete continuation of the taxes paid to earlier regimes 73 but much lower under the Muslim rule 74 75 They were also exempted from the zakat tax paid by Muslims The dhimmi communities living in Islamic states had their own laws independent from the Sharia law such as the Jews who had their own Halakhic courts 76 The dhimmi communities had their own leaders courts personal and religious laws 77 78 and generally speaking Muslim tolerance of unbelievers was far better than anything available in Christendom until the rise of secularism in the 17th century 79 Muslims guaranteed freedom of worship and livelihood provided that they remained loyal to the Muslim state and paid a poll tax 80 Muslim governments appointed Christian and Jewish professionals to their bureaucracies 80 and thus Christians and Jews contributed to the making of the Islamic civilization 80 However dhimmis faced social and symbolic restrictions 81 and a pattern of stricter then more lax enforcement developed over time 82 Marshall Hodgson a historian of Islam writes that during the era of the High Caliphate 7th 13th Centuries zealous Shariah minded Muslims gladly elaborated their code of symbolic restrictions on the dhimmis 83 From an Islamic legal perspective the pledge of protection granted dhimmis the freedom to practice their religion and spared them forced conversions The dhimmis also served a variety of useful purposes mostly economic which was another point of concern to jurists 84 page needed Religious minorities were free to do whatever they wished in their own homes but could not publicly engage in illicit sex in ways that threaten public morals 85 In some cases religious practices that Muslims found repugnant were allowed One example was the Zoroastrian practice of incestuous self marriage where a man could marry his mother sister or daughter According to the famous Islamic legal scholar Ibn Qayyim Al Jawziyya 1292 1350 non Muslims had the right to engage in such religious practices even if it offended Muslims under the conditions that such cases not be presented to Islamic Sharia courts and that these religious minorities believed that the practice in question is permissible according to their religion This ruling was based on the precedent that Muhammad did not forbid such self marriages among Zoroastrians despite coming in contact with them and having knowledge of their practices 86 The Arabs generally established garrisons outside towns in the conquered territories and had little interaction with the local dhimmi populations for purposes other than the collection of taxes The conquered Christian Jewish Mazdean and Buddhist communities were otherwise left to lead their lives as before 87 Christians edit According to historians Lewis and Stillman local Christians in Syria Iraq and Egypt were non Chalcedonians and many may have felt better off under early Muslim rule than under that of the Byzantine Orthodox of Constantinople 88 In 1095 Pope Urban II urged western European Christians to come to the aid of the Christians of Palestine The subsequent Crusades brought Roman Catholic Christians into contact with Orthodox Christians whose beliefs they discovered to differ from their own perhaps more than they had realized and whose position under the rule of the Muslim Fatimid Caliphate was less uncomfortable than had been supposed Consequently the Eastern Christians provided perhaps less support to the Crusaders than had been expected 89 When the Arab East came under Ottoman rule in the 16th century Christian populations and fortunes rebounded significantly The Ottomans had long experience dealing with Christian and Jewish minorities and were more tolerant towards religious minorities than the former Muslim rulers the Mamluks of Egypt 90 However Christians living under Islamic rule have suffered certain legal disadvantages and at times persecution In the Ottoman Empire in accordance with the dhimmi system implemented in Muslim countries they like all other Christians and also Jews were accorded certain freedoms The dhimmi system in the Ottoman Empire was largely based upon the Pact of Umar The client status established the rights of the non Muslims to property livelihood and freedom of worship but they were in essence treated as second class citizens in the empire and referred to in Turkish as gavours a pejorative word meaning infidel or unbeliever The clause of the Pact of Umar which prohibited non Muslims from building new places of worship was historically imposed on some communities of the Ottoman Empire and ignored in other cases at discretion of the local authorities Although there were no laws mandating religious ghettos this led to non Muslim communities being clustered around existing houses of worship 91 92 In addition to other legal limitations dhimmis including the Christians among them were not considered equals to Muslims and several prohibitions were placed on them Their testimony against Muslims was inadmissible in courts of law wherein a Muslim could be punished this meant that their testimony could only be considered in commercial cases They were forbidden to carry weapons or ride atop horses and camels Their houses could not overlook those of Muslims and their religious practices were severely circumscribed e g the ringing of church bells was strictly forbidden 91 93 Jews edit Because the early Islamic conquests initially preserved much of the existing administrative machinery and culture in many territories they amounted to little more than a change of rulers for the subject populations which brought peace to peoples demoralized and disaffected by the casualties and heavy taxation that resulted from the years of Byzantine Persian warfare 78 Maria Rosa Menocal argues that the Jewish dhimmis living under the caliphate while allowed fewer rights than Muslims were still better off than in the Christian parts of Europe Jews from other parts of Europe made their way to al Andalus where in parallel to Christian sects regarded as heretical by Catholic Europe they were not just tolerated but where opportunities to practice faith and trade were open without restriction save for the prohibitions on proselytization 94 Bernard Lewis states Generally the Jewish people were allowed to practice their religion and live according to the laws and scriptures of their community Furthermore the restrictions to which they were subject were social and symbolic rather than tangible and practical in character That is to say these regulations served to define the relationship between the two communities and not to oppress the Jewish population 95 Professor of Jewish medieval history at Hebrew University of Jerusalem Hayim Hillel Ben Sasson notes The legal and security situation of the Jews in the Muslim world was generally better than in Christendom because in the former Jews were not the sole infidels because in comparison to the Christians Jews were less dangerous and more loyal to the Muslim regime and because the rapidity and the territorial scope of the Muslim conquests imposed upon them a reduction in persecution and a granting of better possibility for the survival of members of other faiths in their lands 96 According to the French historian Claude Cahen Islam has shown more toleration than Europe towards the Jews who remained in Muslim lands 97 Comparing the treatment of Jews in the medieval Islamic world and medieval Christian Europe Mark R Cohen notes that in contrast to Jews in Christian Europe the Jews in Islam were well integrated into the economic life of the larger society 98 and that they were allowed to practice their religion more freely than they could do in Christian Europe 98 According to the scholar Mordechai Zaken tribal chieftains also known as aghas in tribal Muslim societies such as the Kurdish society in Kurdistan would tax their Jewish subjects The Jews were in fact civilians protected by their chieftains in and around their communities in return they paid part of their harvest as dues and contributed their skills and services to their patron chieftain 99 Hindus and Buddhists edit By the 10th century the Turks of Central Asia had invaded the Indic plains and spread Islam in Northwestern parts of India 100 At the end of the 12th century the Muslims advanced quickly into the Ganges Plain 101 In one decade a Muslim army led by Turkic slaves consolidated resistance around Lahore and brought northern India as far as Bengal under Muslim rule 102 From these Turkic slaves would come sultans including the founder of the sultanate of Delhi By the 15th century major parts of Northern India was ruled by Muslim rulers mostly descended from invaders In the 16th century India came under the influence of the Mughals Babur the first ruler of the Mughal empire established a foothold in the north which paved the way for further expansion by his successors 103 Although the Mughal emperor Akbar has been described as a universalist most Mughal emperors were oppressive of native Hindu Buddhist and later Sikh populations 104 Aurangzeb specifically was inclined towards a highly fundamentalist approach 105 Restrictions editThere were a number of restrictions on dhimmis In a modern sense the dhimmis would be described as second class citizens 15 According to historian Marshall Hodgson from very early times Muslim rulers would very often humiliate and punish dhimmis usually Christians or Jews that refused to convert to Islam It was official policy that dhimmis should feel inferior and to know their place 106 Although dhimmis were allowed to perform their religious rituals they were obliged to do so in a manner not conspicuous to Muslims Loud prayers were forbidden as were the ringing of church bells and the blowing of the shofar 107 They were also not allowed to build or repair churches and synagogues without Muslim consent 80 Moreover dhimmis were not allowed to seek converts among Muslims 108 page needed In the Mamluk Egypt where non Mamluk Muslims were not allowed to ride horses and camels dhimmis were prohibited even from riding donkeys inside cities 109 Sometimes Muslim rulers issued regulations requiring dhimmis to attach distinctive signs to their houses 110 Most of the restrictions were social and symbolic in nature 81 and a pattern of stricter then more lax enforcement developed over time 82 The major financial disabilities of the dhimmi were the jizya poll tax and the fact dhimmis and Muslims could not inherit from each other 81 That would create an incentive to convert if someone from the family had already converted 80 Ira M Lapidus states that the payment of the poll tax seems to have been regular but other obligations were inconsistently enforced and did not prevent many non Muslims from being important political business and scholarly figures In the late ninth and early tenth centuries Jewish bankers and financiers were important at the Abbasid court 111 The jurists and scholars of Islamic sharia law called for humane treatment of the dhimmis 112 A Muslim man may marry a Jewish or Christian dhimmi woman who may keep her own religion though her children were automatically considered Muslims and had to be raised as such but a Muslim woman cannot marry a dhimmi man unless he converts to Islam Dhimmis are prohibited from converting Muslims under severe penalties while Muslims are encouraged to convert dhimmis 113 unreliable source Jizya tax edit Main article Jizya Payment of the jizya obligated Muslim authorities to protect dhimmis in civil and military matters Sura 9 At Tawba verse 29 stipulates that jizya be exacted from non Muslims as a condition required for jihad to cease Islamic jurists required adult free healthy males among the dhimma community to pay the jizya while exempting women children the elderly slaves those affected by mental or physical handicaps and travelers who did not settle in Muslim lands 114 115 According to Abu Yusuf dhimmi should be imprisoned until they pay the jizya in full 116 Other jurists specified that dhimmis who don t pay jizya should have their heads shaved and made to wear a dress distinctive from those dhimmis who paid the jizya and Muslims 117 Lewis states there are varying opinions among scholars as to how much of a burden jizya was 116 According to Norman Stillman jizya and kharaj were a crushing burden for the non Muslim peasantry who eked out a bare living in a subsistence economy 118 Both agree that ultimately the additional taxation on non Muslims was a critical factor that drove many dhimmis to leave their religion and accept Islam 119 However in some regions the jizya on populations was significantly lower than the zakat meaning dhimmi populations maintained an economic advantage 120 According to Cohen taxation from the perspective of dhimmis who came under Muslim rule was a concrete continuation of the taxes paid to earlier regimes 73 page needed Lewis observes that the change from Byzantine to Arab rule was welcomed by many among the dhimmis who found the new yoke far lighter than the old both in taxation and in other matters and that some even among the Christians of Syria and Egypt preferred the rule of Islam to that of Byzantines 75 Montgomery Watt states the Christians were probably better off as dhimmis under Muslim Arab rulers than they had been under the Byzantine Greeks 121 In some places for example Egypt the jizya was a tax incentive for Christians to convert to Islam 80 Some scholars have tried compute the relative taxation on Muslims vs non Muslims in the early Abbasid period According to one estimate Muslims had an average tax rate of 17 20 dirhams per person which rose to 30 dirhams per person when in kind levies are included 122 Non Muslims paid either 12 24 or 48 dirhams per person depending on their taxation category though most probably paid 12 122 The importance of dhimmis as a source of revenue for the Rashidun Caliphate is illustrated in a letter ascribed to Umar I and cited by Abu Yusuf if we take dhimmis and share them out what will be left for the Muslims who come after us By God Muslims would not find a man to talk to and profit from his labors 123 The early Islamic scholars took a relatively humane and practical attitude towards the collection of jizya compared to the 11th century commentators writing when Islam was under threat both at home and abroad 124 The jurist Abu Yusuf the chief judge of the caliph Harun al Rashid rules as follows regarding the manner of collecting the jizya 124 No one of the people of the dhimma should be beaten in order to exact payment of the jizya nor made to stand in the hot sun nor should hateful things be inflicted upon their bodies or anything of that sort Rather they should be treated with leniency In the border provinces dhimmis were sometimes recruited for military operations In such cases they were exempted from jizya for the year of service 125 Administration of law edit Religious pluralism existed in medieval Islamic law and ethics The religious laws and courts of other religions including Christianity Judaism and Hinduism were usually accommodated within the Islamic legal framework as exemplified in the Caliphate Al Andalus Ottoman Empire and Indian subcontinent 126 127 In medieval Islamic societies the qadi Islamic judge usually could not interfere in the matters of non Muslims unless the parties voluntarily chose to be judged according to Islamic law The dhimmi communities living in Islamic states usually had their own laws independent from the Sharia law such as the Jews who had their own Halakha courts 128 Dhimmis were allowed to operate their own courts following their own legal systems However dhimmis frequently attended the Muslim courts in order to record property and business transactions within their own communities Cases were taken out against Muslims against other dhimmis and even against members of the dhimmi s own family Dhimmis often took cases relating to marriage divorce or inheritance to the Muslim courts so these cases would be decided under sharia law Oaths sworn by dhimmis in the Muslim courts were sometimes the same as the oaths taken by Muslims sometimes tailored to the dhimmis beliefs 129 Muslim men could generally marry dhimmi women who are considered People of the Book however Islamic jurists rejected the possibility any non Muslim man might marry a Muslim woman 130 Bernard Lewis notes that similar position existed under the laws of Byzantine Empire according to which a Christian could marry a Jewish woman but a Jew could not marry a Christian woman under pain of death 77 Relevant texts editQuranic verses as a basis for Islamic policies toward dhimmis edit Lewis states The phrase Let there be no compulsion in religion from Surah Al Baqara 2 256 has sometimes been interpreted in the Islamic legal and theological traditions to mean followers of other religions should not be forced to adopt Islam 131 The phrase Unto you your religion and unto me my religion from Surah Al Kafirun 109 6 has been used as a proof text for pluralism and coexistence 131 Surah Al Baqara 2 62 has served to justify the tolerated position accorded to the followers of Christianity Judaism and Sabianism under Muslim rule 131 Hadith edit A hadith by Muhammad Whoever killed a muʿahid a person who is granted the pledge of protection by the Muslims shall not smell the fragrance of Paradise though its fragrance can be smelt at a distance of forty years of traveling 132 133 is cited as a foundation for the right of non Muslim citizens to live peacefully and undisturbed in an Islamic state 134 Anwar Shah Kashmiri writes in his commentary on Sahih al Bukhari Fayd al Bari on this hadith You know the gravity of sin for killing a Muslim for its odiousness has reached the point of disbelief and it necessitates that the killer abides in Hell forever As for killing a non Muslim citizen muʿahid it is similarly no small matter for the one who does it will not smell the fragrance of Paradise 134 A similar hadith in regard to the status of the dhimmis Whoever wrongs one with whom a compact treaty has been made i e a dhimmi and lays on him a burden beyond his strength I will be his accuser 135 136 Constitution of Medina edit The Constitution of Medina a formal agreement between Muhammad and all the significant tribes and families of Medina including Muslims Jews and pagans declared that non Muslims in the Ummah had the following rights 137 The security dhimma of God is equal for all groups 138 Non Muslim members have equal political and cultural rights as Muslims They will have autonomy and freedom of religion 139 Non Muslims will take up arms against the enemy of the Ummah and share the cost of war There is to be no treachery between the two 140 Non Muslims will not be obliged to take part in religious wars of the Muslims 141 Khaybar agreement edit A precedent for the dhimma contract was established with the agreement between Muhammad and the Jews after the Battle of Khaybar an oasis near Medina Khaybar was the first territory attacked and conquered by Muslims When the Jews of Khaybar surrendered to Muhammad after a siege Muhammad allowed them to remain in Khaybar in return for handing over to the Muslims one half their annual produce 142 Pact of Umar edit Main article Pact of Umar The Pact of Umar traditionally believed to be between caliph Umar and the conquered Jerusalem Christians in the seventh century was another source of regulations pertaining to dhimmis However Western orientalists doubt the authenticity of the pact arguing it is usually the victors and not the vanquished who impose rather than propose the terms of peace and that it is highly unlikely that the people who spoke no Arabic and knew nothing of Islam could draft such a document Academic historians believe the Pact of Umar in the form it is known today was a product of later jurists who attributed it to Umar in order to lend greater authority to their own opinions The similarities between the Pact of Umar and the Theodosian and Justinian Codes of the Eastern Roman Empire suggest that perhaps much of the Pact of Umar was borrowed from these earlier codes by later Islamic jurists At least some of the clauses of the pact mirror the measures first introduced by the Umayyad caliph Umar II or by the early Abbasid caliphs 143 Cultural interactions and cultural differences editDuring the Middle Ages local associations known as futuwwa clubs developed across the Islamic lands There were usually several futuwwah in each town These clubs catered to varying interests primarily sports and might involve distinctive manners of dress and custom They were known for their hospitality idealism and loyalty to the group They often had a militaristic aspect purportedly for the mutual protection of the membership These clubs commonly crossed social strata including among their membership local notables dhimmi and slaves to the exclusion of those associated with the local ruler or amir 144 Muslims and Jews were sometimes partners in trade with the Muslim taking days off on Fridays and Jews taking off on Saturdays 145 Andrew Wheatcroft describes how some social customs such as different conceptions of dirt and cleanliness made it difficult for the religious communities to live close to each other either under Muslim or under Christian rule 146 In modern times editThe dhimma and the jizya poll tax are no longer imposed in Muslim majority countries 22 147 In the 21st century jizya is widely regarded as being at odds with contemporary secular conceptions of citizens civil rights and equality before the law although there have been occasional reports of religious minorities in conflict zones and areas subject to political instability being forced to pay jizya 148 In 2009 it was claimed that a group of militants that referred to themselves as the Taliban imposed the jizya on Pakistan s minority Sikh community after occupying some of their homes and kidnapping a Sikh leader 149 As late as 2013 in Egypt jizya was reportedly being imposed by the Muslim Brotherhood on 15 000 Christian Copts of Dalga Village 150 151 In February 2014 the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant ISIL announced that it intended to extract jizya from Christians in the city of Raqqa Syria which it controlled at the time Christians who refused to accept the dhimma contract and pay the tax were to have to either convert to Islam leave or be executed Wealthy Christians would have to pay half an ounce of gold the equivalent of 664 twice a year middle class Christians were to have to pay half that amount and poorer ones were to be charged one fourth that amount 152 In June 2014 the Institute for the Study of War reported that ISIL claims to have collected jizya and fay 153 On 18 July 2014 ISIL ordered the Christians in Mosul to accept the dhimma contract and pay the jizya or convert to Islam If they refused to accept either of the options they would be killed 154 See also edit nbsp Islam portalDhimmitude Polemical characterization of the status of non Muslims under Islamic rule Gentile Term referring to a non Jew Islam and other religions Muslim attitudes towards other religions Ger toshav Non Jew living in the Land of Israel who agrees to follow the Seven Laws of Noah Jizyah Islamic tax on non MuslimsPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Musta min Islamic term for non Muslims temporarily residing in Muslim ruled lands Persecution of Buddhists Overview of hostility toward and or discrimination against adherents of Buddhism Persecution of Christians Persecution of Hindus Overview of hostility toward and or discrimination against adherents of Hinduism Persecution of Jews Historical discrimination against Jewish groups Persecution of Sikhs Persecution based on religious beliefPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Zunnar Type of identifying mark in historic Islamic societiesNotes edit a b Juan Eduardo Campo ed 2010 dhimmi Encyclopedia of Islam Infobase Publishing pp 194 195 Dhimmis are non Muslims who live within Islamdom and have a regulated and protected status In the modern period this term has generally has occasionally been resuscitated but it is generally obsolete Mohammad Taqi al Modarresi 2016 The Laws of Islam PDF Enlight Press ISBN 978 0994240989 Archived from the original PDF on 2 August 2019 Retrieved 22 December 2017 Definition of DHIMMI www merriam webster com Glenn H Patrick 2007 Legal Traditions of the World Oxford University Press pp 218 219 A Dhimmi is a non Muslim subject of a state governed in accordance to sharia law The term connotes an obligation of the state to protect the individual including the individual s life property and freedom of religion and worship and required loyalty to the empire and a poll tax known as the jizya which complemented the Islamic tax paid by the Muslim subjects called Zakat H Patrick Glenn Legal Traditions of the World Oxford University Press 2007 p 219 The French scholar Gustave Le Bon the author of La civilisation des Arabes writes that despite the fact that the incidence of taxation fell more heavily on a Muslim than a non Muslim the non Muslim was free to enjoy equally well with every Muslim all the privileges afforded to the citizens of the state The only privilege that was reserved for the Muslims was the seat of the caliphate and this because of certain religious functions attached to it which could not naturally be discharged by a non Muslim Mun im Sirry 2014 Scriptural Polemics The Qur an and Other Religions p 179 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199359363 Abou El Fadl Khaled 2007 The Great Theft Wrestling Islam from the Extremists HarperOne p 204 ISBN 978 0061189036 According to the dhimma status system non Muslims must pay a poll tax in return for Muslim protection and the privilege of living in Muslim territory Per this system non Muslims are exempt from military service but they are excluded from occupying high positions that involve dealing with high state interests like being the president or prime minister of the country In Islamic history non Muslims did occupy high positions especially in matters that related to fiscal policies or tax collection Annemarie Schimmel 2004 The Empire of the Great Mughals History Art and Culture University of Chicago Press p 107 ISBN 978 1861891853 The conqueror Muhammad Ibn Al Qasem gave both Hindus and Buddhists the same status as the Christians Jews and Sabaeans of the Middle East They were all dhimmi protected people Michael Bonner 2008 Jihad in Islamic History Doctrines and Practice Princeton University Press p 89 ISBN 978 0691138381 JSTOR j ctt7sg8f Wael B Hallaq 2009 Shari a Theory Practice Transformations Cambridge University Press p 327 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511815300 ISBN 978 0511815300 Michael Bonner 2008 Jihad in Islamic History Princeton University Press pp 89 90 ISBN 978 1400827381 To begin with there was no forced conversion no choice between Islam and the Sword Islamic law following a clear Quranic principle 2 256 prohibited any such things although there have been instances of forced conversion in Islamic history these have been exceptional Waines 2003 An Introduction to Islam Cambridge University Press p 53 Winter T J amp Williams J A 2002 Understanding Islam and the Muslims The Muslim Family Islam and World Peace Louisville Kentucky Fons Vitae p 82 ISBN 978 1 887752 47 3 Quote The laws of Muslim warfare forbid any forced conversions and regard them as invalid if they occur Ira M Lapidus Islamic Societies to the Nineteenth Century A Global History p 345 a b Khadduri Majid 2010 War and Peace in the Law of Islam pp 196 198 ISBN 978 1616190484 The Torah itself set forth rules for dress that set Jews apart from the communities in which they lived Eric Silverman A Cultural History of Jewish Dress A amp C Black 2013 ISBN 978 0 857 85209 0 pp 47 xv 24 At 2 Maccabees 4 12 it is recorded that the Maccabees slaughtered Jewish youths guilty of Hellenizing in wearing caps typical of Greek youths The first of the other Abrahamic religions to impose a distinctive mode of dress on Jews was Islam beginning with decrees set forth by the Abbasid caliph Al Mutawakkil obliging non Muslims dhimmis to wear distinctive marks buttons on their caps patches on their sleeves and generally honey coloured garbs on their clothing in order to mark them off from members of the Muslim communities a twelfth century synod decreed the first of many edicts which required Jews to don peculiar garb These outfits marked Jews as Otherly to be shunned despised and sometimes murdered But Jews also dressed differently in premodern Europe because their rabbis understood any emulation of non Jews as a violation of the divine law as revealed by God to Moses atop Mount Sinai The Five Books of Moses after all together called the Torah clearly specify that Jews must adhere to a particular dress code modesty for example and fringes The very structure of the cosmos demanded nothing less Clothing too served as a fence that protected Jews from the profanities and pollutions of the non Jewish societies in which they dwelled From this angle Jews dressed distinctively as God s elect Pact of Umar a b Cohen Mark R 1995 Under Crescent and Cross The Jews in the Middle Ages Princeton University Press p 74 ISBN 978 0 691 01082 3 Retrieved 10 April 2010 Al Misri Reliance of the Traveler edited and translated by Nuh Ha Mim Keller p 608 Amana Publications 1994 Al Misri Reliance of the Traveler ed and trans Nuh Ha Mim Keller pp 977 986 Amana Publications 1994 Ghazi Kalin amp Kamali 2013 pp 240 241 a b the overwhelming majority of moderate Muslims reject the dhimma system as ahistorical in the sense that it is inappropriate for the age of nation states and democracies Abou El Fadl Khaled 2007 The Great Theft Wrestling Islam from the Extremists HarperOne p 214 ISBN 978 0061189036 Definition of jizyah its rate and who has to pay it Islam Guide Weeramantry 1997 p 138 Sachedina Abdulaziz Abdulhussein 2001 The Islamic Roots of Democratic Pluralism Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 513991 4 Shelomo Dov Goitein The Yemenites History Communal Organization Spiritual Life Selected Studies editor Menahem Ben Sasson Jerusalem 1983 pp 288 299 ISBN 965 235 011 7 Marshall Hodgson The Venture of Islam Conscience and History in a World Civilization Vol 2 University of Chicago 1958 p 278 al Misri Ahmad ibn Naqib edited and translated from Arabic with commentary by Nuh Ha Mim Keller 1994 revised ed p 603 al Qattan Najwa 1999 Dhimmis in the Muslim Court Legal Autonomy and Religious Discrimination International Journal of Middle East Studies 31 3 429 444 doi 10 1017 S0020743800055501 ISSN 0020 7438 S2CID 159763960 Hamidullah Muhammad 1970 Introduction to Islam International Islamic Federation of Student Organizations p 180 Abdel Haleem 2012 p 73 Jackson Sherman A 2005 p 144 via Google Books Retrieved 19 September 2011 Jackson Sherman A 2005 p 145 via Google Books Retrieved 19 September 2011 Glenn H Patrick 2007 Legal Traditions of the World Sustainable Diversity in Law 3rd edition New York City Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 920541 7 pp 217 219 Glenn H Patrick 2007 Legal Traditions of the World amp Sustainable Diversity in Law 3rd ed New York Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 920541 7 p 219 Quran 5 47 Hamidullah Muhammad 1986 Relations of Muslims with non Muslims Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs 7 1 9 doi 10 1080 13602008608715960 ISSN 0266 6952 Lewis Bernard 1984 The Jews of Islam Princeton University Press p 184 ISBN 978 0 691 00807 3 Basim Musallam The Cambridge Illustrated History of the Islamic World edited by Francis Robinson Cambridge University Press 1996 p 176 Hodgson The Venture of Islam Vol 3 1961 pp 105 108 Hodgson The Venture of Islam Vol 3 1961 pp 176 177 Sarah Ansari The Cambridge Illustrated History of the Islamic World edited by Francis Robinson Cambridge University Press 1996 p 90 Hodgson The Venture of Islam Vol 3 1961 pp 366 367 Sarah Ansari The Cambridge Illustrated History of the Islamic World edited by Francis Robinson Cambridge University Press 1996 pp 103 111 Marshall Hodgson The Venture of Islam Conscience and History in a World Civilization Vol 3 The University of Chicago 1961 pp 384 386 Otto Jan Michiel Sharia and National Law in Muslim Countries Tensions and Opportunities for Dutch and EU Foreign Policy Amsterdam University Press 2008 p 7 Otto Sharia and National Law in Muslim Countries 2008 pp 8 9 Otto Sharia and National Law in Muslim Countries 2008 p 29 Otto Sharia and National Law in Muslim Countries 2008 p 10 Otto Sharia and National Law in Muslim Countries 2008 p 18 ISBN missing Otto Sharia and National Law in Muslim Countries 2008 pp 37 39 Lewis Bernard 1984 The Jews of Islam Princeton University Press p 62 ISBN 978 0 691 00807 3 Lewis Bernard 1984 The Jews of Islam Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00807 3 summary of pp 62 66 See p 62 2nd paragraph p 65 3rd paragraph Lapidus 1988 p 599 Lapidus 2002 p 495 Hukuma Islamiyya n p Beirut n d pp 30ff Vilayat i Faqih n p n d pp 35ff English version from the Arabic Islamic Government U S Joint Publications Research Service 72663 1979 pp 22ff French version from the Persian Pour un gouvernement islamique Paris 1979 pp 31ff Another version in Hamid Algar Islam and Revolution Writings and Declarations of Imam Khomeini Berkeley 1981 pp 45ff Bernard Lewis The Jews of Islam notes on p 3 AFP news agency 11 May 2014 Qatar based cleric calls for Egypt vote boycott Yahoo News Archived from the original on 16 June 2014 Gilbert Achcar 2013 The People Want A Radical Exploration of the Arab Uprising University of California Press p 112 ISBN 978 0520956544 لما نقول أهل الذمة يعني أهل ذمة الله يعني هم في عهد الله وعهد رسوله وعهد جماعة المسلمين وضمانهم الجميع عليه أن يحميهم فهذا هو المقصود من الكلمة الآن يتأذى منها الكثير من أخواننا كلمة أهل الذمة وأنا ذكرت فيما كتبت في كتبي أنني أنا لا أرى أي مانع أمام الاجتهاد الإسلامي المعاصر أن يحذف كلمة أهل الذمة هذه ونسميهم المواطنون من غير المسلمين Transcript of the 5 6 2008 Sharia and Life episode Aljazeera net Andrea Zaki Stephanous Political Islam Citizenship and Minorities The Future of Arab Christians pp 160 161 Both Muslims and al dhimmiyun struggled for the liberation of this land for more than a century and because of the blood that was shed by both a new order was created In the modern state the constitution took the place of the al dhimmi contract Quran 9 29 Fight those who do not believe in Allah or in the Last Day and who do not consider unlawful what Allah and His Messenger have made unlawful and who do not adopt the religion of truth from those who were given the Scripture fight until they give the jizyah willingly while they are humbled Muhammad Husayn Tabataba i Surah Al Baqarah verses 83 88 almizan org in Arabic and English Retrieved 1 January 2016 as Sadiq a s said Verily Allah sent Muhammad s a w with five swords So there is a sword against a dhimmi free non Muslim subject of an Islamic country Allah said and speak to men good words it was revealed about the dhimmis then it was abrogated by another verse Fight those who do not believe in Allah 9 29 al Ayyashi The author says In this tradition the Imam has taken the speech to mean behavior We say Do not speak to him but good what we mean is Do not deal with him but in a good and decent manner This meaning will apply only if we take the word abrogated in its terminological sense But it may also be taken in its literal sense as we shall explain under the verse Whatever signs We abrogate or cause to be forgotten 2 106 and in that case this verse will not be in conflict with that of the fighting It should be pointed out that such uses of words in their literal meanings as against their terminological ones are not infrequent in the traditions of the Imams Javed Ahmed Ghamidi Mizan Chapter The Islamic Law of Jihad Dar ul Ishraq 2001 OCLC 52901690 1 Misplaced Directives Renaissance Archived 13 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine Al Mawrid Institute Vol 12 No 3 March 2002 March Content2002 Archived from the original on 15 November 2006 Retrieved 5 October 2006 Selection of Tafsir Nemooneh Grand Ayatollah Makarim Shirazi p 10 vol 2 on verse 9 29 Archived 18 November 2006 at the Wayback Machine Muhammad Muslih Michaelle Browers 2009 Democracy In John L Esposito ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780195305135 001 0001 ISBN 978 0195305135 Khan Ali Commentary on the Constitution of Medina in Understanding Islamic Law From Classical to Contemporary Edited by Aminah Beverly McCloud and Hisham Ramadan Alta Mira Press 2006 pp 205 208 ISBN missing Khan Ali 17 November 2006 The Medina Constitution SSRN 945458 Ramadan Tariq Radical Reform Islamic Ethics and Liberation Oxford University Press 2009 pp 268 271 ISBN missing Lewis 1984 pp 10 20 Lewis 2002 p 92 a b Cl Cahen in Encyclopedia of Islam Jizya article Lewis 1984 p 18 a b Lewis 2002 p 57 Mark R Cohen 1995 Under Crescent and Cross The Jews in the Middle Ages Princeton University Press p 74 ISBN 978 0 691 01082 3 Retrieved 10 April 2010 a b Lewis 1984 p 27 a b Esposito 1998 p 34 They replaced the conquered countries indigenous rulers and armies but preserved much of their government bureaucracy and culture For many in the conquered territories it was no more than an exchange of masters one that brought peace to peoples demoralized and disaffected by the casualties and heavy taxation that resulted from the years of Byzantine Persian warfare Local communities were free to continue to follow their own way of life in internal domestic affairs In many ways local populations found Muslim rule more flexible and tolerant than that of Byzantium and Persia Religious communities were free to practice their faith to worship and be governed by their religious leaders and laws in such areas as marriage divorce and inheritance In exchange they were required to pay tribute a poll tax jizya that entitled them to Muslim protection from outside aggression and exempted them from military service Thus they were called the protected ones dhimmi In effect this often meant lower taxes greater local autonomy rule by fellow Semites with closer linguistic and cultural ties than the hellenized Greco Roman elites of Byzantium and greater religious freedom for Jews and indigenous Christians Bernard Lewis and Buntzie Ellis Churchill Islam The Religion and the People Wharton School Publishing 2008 p 146 a b c d e f Heather J Sharkey 2012 Introducing World Christianity Wiley Blackwell p 10 ISBN 978 1 4443 4454 7 a b c Lewis 1984 p 26 a b Lewis 1984 pp 49 51 Marshall G S Hodgson 1977 The Venture of Islam The classical age of Islam University of Chicago Press p 448 ISBN 978 0226346830 Retrieved 7 July 2012 Lewis 1984 Sherman A Jackson 2005 Islam and the Blackamerican Looking Toward the Third Resurrection Oxford University Press p 145 ISBN 978 0 19 518081 7 Retrieved 10 April 2010 Jackson p 144 Hodgson The Venture of Islam Vol 1 1958 pp 227 229 Lewis 1984 pp 17 18 Stillman 1979 p 27 Courbage and Fargues 1995 pp 44 46 Courbage and Fargues 1995 pp 57 58 a b A goston Ga bor Alan Masters Bruce 2010 Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire Infobase Publishing pp 185 186 ISBN 978 1 4381 1025 7 Retrieved 15 April 2016 Balakian Peter 2003 The Burning Tigris The Armenian Genocide and America s Response New York HarperCollins pp 25 445 ISBN 978 0 06 019840 4 Akcam Taner 2006 A Shameful Act The Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish Responsibility New York Metropolitan Books ISBN 978 0 8050 7932 6 The Ornament of the World by Maria Rosa Menocal Archived from the original on 9 November 2005 Lewis Bernard W 1984 The Jews of Islam Ben Sasson Haim Hillel 1969 On Jewish History in the Middle Ages Tel Aviv p 36 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Quoted in Mark R Cohen s Under Crescent and Cross The Jews in the Middle Ages Princeton University Press 1995 pp xvii xviii Cohen s translation Cahen Claude 1954 Dhimma In P J Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs B Lewis Ch Pellat J Schacht J Burton Page C Dumont V L Menage eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Leiden Netherlands Brill Academic Publishers pp 227 231 ISBN 978 90 04 07026 4 a b Cohen Mark 1995 Under Crescent and Cross The Jews in the Middle Ages Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 01082 3 Mordechai Zaken Jewish Subjects and their tribal chieftains in Kurdistan A Study in Survival Brill Leiden and Boston 2007 Hodgson The Venture of Islam Vol 2 1961 p 275 Hodgson The Venture of Islam Vol 2 1961 p 276 Hodgson The Venture of Islam Vol 2 1961 p 278 MHodgson The Venture of Islam Vol 3 1961 pp 24 25 Hodgson The Venture of Islam Vol 3 1961 pp 65 67 Hodgson The Venture of Islam Vol 3 1961 p 60 Hodgson Marshall G S 15 May 2009 The Venture of Islam Conscience and History in a World Civilization 3 vols University of Chicago Press p 1 268 ISBN 9780226346861 Karsh 29 Sidney H Griffith 2010 The Church in the Shadow of the Mosque Christians and Muslims in the World of Islam Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691146287 Stillman 1979 p 471 Al Tabari Ta rikh al Rusul wa l Muluk translated in Stillman 1979 p 167 Lapidus Ira M 2014 A History of Islamic societies Cambridge University Press pp 155 156 ISBN 978 0521514309 Lewis 1984 p 16 Dhimmi Encyclopedia com Retrieved 16 December 2021 Mirza Mahan Gerhard Bowering Patricia Crone et al eds 2013 The Princeton encyclopedia of Islamic political thought Princeton N J Princeton University Press p 283 ISBN 978 0691134840 Free adult males who were not afflicted by any physical or mental illness were required to pay the jizya Women children handicapped the mentally ill the elderly and slaves were exempt as were all travelers and foreigners who did not settle in Muslim lands Alshech Eli 2003 Islamic Law Practice and Legal Doctrine Exempting the Poor from the Jizya under the Ayyubids 1171 1250 Islamic Law and Society 10 3 348 375 doi 10 1163 156851903770227584 jurists divided the dhimma community into two major groups The first group consists of all adult free sane males among the dhimma community while the second includes all other dhimmas i e women slaves minors and the insane Jurists generally agree that members of the second group are to be granted a blanket exemption from jizya payment a b Lewis 1984 pp 14 15 Ibrahim Oweiss 2003 The Book of Revenue Kitab Al Amwal Garnet amp Ithaca Press p xix ISBN 978 1859641590 Stillman 1979 p 28 Lewis 1984 pp 17 18 Stillman 1979 p 18 Klorman 2007 p 94 William Montgomery Watt Islamic Political Thought The Basic Concepts p 51 Quote The Christians were probably better off as dhimmis under Muslim Arab rulers than they had been under the Byzantine Greeks a b Richard Bonney 2004 Jihad From Qur an to Bin Laden Palgrave Macmillan p 84 Lewis 1984 pp 30 31 a b Lewis 1984 p 15 Djizya i Encyclopaedia of Islam Online Weeramantry Judge Christopher G 1997 Justice Without Frontiers Furthering Human Rights Brill Publishers p 138 ISBN 978 90 411 0241 6 Sachedina Abdulaziz Abdulhussein 2001 The Islamic Roots of Democratic Pluralism Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 513991 4 Mark R Cohen 1995 Under Crescent and Cross The Jews in the Middle Ages Princeton University Press p 74 ISBN 978 0 691 01082 3 Retrieved 10 April 2010 al Qattan 1999 Al Mawardi 2000 p 161 Friedmann 2003 p 161 Lewis 1984 p 27 a b c Lewis 1984 p 13 Sahih al Bukhari 6914 Ellethy Yaser 2014 Islam Context Pluralism and Democracy Classical and Modern Interpretations Islamic Studies Series Routledge pp 124 5 ISBN 978 1138800304 a b Tahir ul Qadri Muhammad 2011 Fatwa on Terrorism and Suicide Bombings London Minhaj ul Quran pp 98 99 ISBN 978 0 9551888 9 3 Majid Khadduri War and Peace in the Law of Islam p 175 al Zuḥayli Wahbah 1998 ʾAthar al ḥarb fi l fiqh al Islami dirasah muqarinah Damascus Dar al Fikr p 708 ISBN 978 1 57547 453 3 Quote Translation Ahmed 1979 pp 46 47 Article 15 as quoted in Ahmed 1979 pp 46 47 Article 25 as quoted in Ahmed 1979 pp 46 47 Article 37 as quoted in Ahmed 1979 pp 46 47 Article 45 as quoted in Ahmed 1979 pp 46 47 Lewis 1984 pp 10 11 Lewis 1984 pp 24 25 Marshall Hodgson The Venture of Islam Conscience and History in a World Civilization Vol 2 The University of Chicago 1961 pp 126 127 Marshall Hodgson The Venture of Islam Conscience and History in a World Civilization Vol 1 The University of Chicago 1961 p 302 Wheatcroft 2003 p 73 Werner Ende Udo Steinbach 2010 Islam in the World Today Cornell University Press p 738 ISBN 978 0801445712 Matthew Long jizya entry author 2012 The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought Princeton University Press pp 283 284 ISBN 978 0691134840 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help The Tribune Chandigarh India World www tribuneindia com Egypt s Muslim Brotherhood to Coptic Christians Convert to Islam or pay jizya tax The Washington Times Two Christians Murdered in Egypt for Refusing to Pay Jizya to Muslims www aina org Baker Aryn Al Qaeda Rebels in Syria Tell Christians to Pay Up or Die Time Caris Charlie The Islamic State Announces Caliphate Institute for the Study of War Retrieved 1 July 2014 Iraqi Christians flee after Isis issue Mosul ultimatum BBC 18 July 2014 Archived from the original on 24 July 2014 Retrieved 30 December 2014 References editAhmad Barakat 1979 Muhammad and the Jews Vikas Publishing House Al Hibri Azizah Y 2003 An Islamic Perspective on Domestic Violence 27 Fordham International Law Journal 195 Abdel Haleem Muhammad 2012 The jizya Verse Q 9 29 Tax Enforcement on Non Muslims in the First Muslim State Journal of Qur anic Studies 14 2 72 89 doi 10 3366 jqs 2012 0056 ISSN 1465 3591 Bravmann Meir M 1966 The ancient background of the Qur anic Concept Al Gizyatu an Yadin Arabica 13 3 307 doi 10 1163 157005866X00525 Bosworth C E 1982 The Concept of Dhimma in Early Islam In Benjamin Braude and B Lewis eds Christians and Jews in the Ottoman Empire The Functioning of a Plural Society 2 vols New York Holmes amp Meier Publishing ISBN 0 8419 0520 7 Cahen Claude Djizya i In P J Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Online Brill Academic Publishers ISSN 1573 3912 Klorman Bat Zion Eraqi Fall 2007 Muslim Society as an Alternative Jews Converting to Islam Jewish Social Studies 14 1 Cohen Mark 1995 Under Crescent and Cross The Jews in the Middle Ages Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 01082 3 Courbage Youssef Fargues Philippe 1995 Christians and Jews under Islam London I B Tauris Publishers ISBN 978 1 86064 285 2 Friedmann Yohanan 2003 Tolerance and Coercion in Islam Interfaith Relations in the Muslim Tradition Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82703 4 Goddard Hugh 2000 A History of Christian Muslim Relations Chicago New Amsterdam Books ISBN 978 1 56663 340 6 Eraqi Klorman Bat Zion Reeva Spector Simon Michael Menachem Laskier et al eds 2003 The Jews of the Middle East and North Africa in Modern Times Columbia NY Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 10796 9 Karsh Ephraim 2006 Islamic Imperialism A History Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10603 9 Lapidus Ira M 2002 A History of Islamic Societies 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 77933 3 Lewis Bernard 2002 The Arabs in History Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280310 8 Lewis Bernard 1984 The Jews of Islam Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00807 3 Esposito John L 1998 Islam The Straight Path Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 511233 7 Littman David 1979 Jews Under Muslim Rule The Case Of Persia The Wiener Library Bulletin XXXII New series 49 50 Al Mawardi 2000 The Ordinances of Government Al Ahkam al Sultaniyya w al Wilayat al Diniyya Lebanon Garnet Publishing ISBN 978 1 85964 140 8 Parfitt Tudor 2000 Israel and Ishmael Studies in Muslim Jewish Relations Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 312 22228 4 Power Samantha 2002 A Problem from Hell America and the Age of Genocide New York Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0 06 054164 4 al Qattan Najwa 1999 Dhimmis in the Muslim Court Legal Autonomy and Religious Discrimination International Journal of Middle East Studies 31 3 429 444 doi 10 1017 S0020743800055501 ISSN 0020 7438 S2CID 159763960 Ghazi Muhammad Ibrahim Kalin Kamali Mohammad Hashim 2013 War and Peace in Islam The Uses and Abuses of Jihad PDF The Islamic Texts Society Cambridge ISBN 978 1 903682 83 8 Archived from the original PDF on 9 July 2017 Retrieved 21 May 2016 Stillman Norman 1979 The Jews of Arab Lands A History and Source Book Philadelphia Jewish Publication Society of America ISBN 978 1 82760 198 4 Tritton Arthur S 1930 The Caliphs and their non Muslim Subjects a Critical Study of the Covenant of Umar London Humphrey Milford Oxford University Press Vire F Kird In P J Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Online Brill Academic Publishers ISSN 1573 3912 Waines David 2003 An Introduction to Islam Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 53906 7 Wehr Hans 1976 J Milton Cowan ed A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic Ithaca New York Spoken Language Services Inc ISBN 978 0 87950 001 6 Wheatcroft Andrew 2003 Infidels A History of the Conflict between Christendom and Islam Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 025738 0 Further reading editNabil Luka Babawi Les droits et les devoirs des chretiens dans l etat islamique et leurs consequences sur la securite nationale these de doctorat ISBN missing Binswanger Karl 1977 Untersuchungen zum Status der Nichtmuslime im Osmanischen Reich des 16 Jahrhunderts in German Munchen ISBN 978 3 87828 108 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help CS1 maint location missing publisher link Choksy Jamsheed 1997 Conflict and Cooperation Zoroastrian Subalterns and Muslim Elites in Medieval Iranian Society New York a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link ISBN missing Mark R Cohen Under Crescent and Cross The Jews in the Middle Ages Princeton University Press 1994 ISBN missing Fattal Antoine 1958 Le statut legal des non musulmans en pays d Islam in French Beirut a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link ISBN missing Maribel Fierro and John Tolan eds The legal status of ḏimmi s in the Islamic West second eighth ninth fifteenth centuries Turnhoult 2013 ISBN missing Friedmann Yohanan 1998 Classification of Unbelievers in Sunni Muslim Law and Tradition Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 22 Goitein S D 1967 71 The Mediterranean Society The Jewish Communities of the Arab World as Portrayed in the Documents of the Cairo Geniza 4 vols Berkeley and Los Angeles ISBN 978 0520018679 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Gilbert Martin 2010 In Ishmael s house a History of Jews in Muslim Lands New Haven Conn Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300167153 Nicola Melis Il concetto di gihad in P Manduchi a cura di Dalla penna al mouse Gli strumenti di diffusione del concetto di gihad Angeli Milano 2006 pp 23 54 ISBN missing Nicola Melis Lo statuto giuridico degli ebrei dell Impero Ottomano in M Contu N Melis G Pinna a cura di Ebraismo e rapporti con le culture del Mediterraneo nei secoli XVIII XX Giuntina Firenze 2003 Nicola Melis Trattato sulla guerra Il Kitab al gihad di Molla Husrev Aipsa Cagliari 2002 ISBN missing Mohammad Amin Al Midani La question des minorites et le statut des non musulmans en Islam In La religion est elle un obstacle a l application des droits de l homme colloque tenu les 10 11 decembre 2004 a Lyon M Levy Rubin Shurut Umar and its alternatives the legal debate on the status of the dhimmis In Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 30 2005 Pessah Shinar Some remarks regarding the colours of male Jewish dress in North Africa and their Arabic Islamic context In Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 24 2000 pp 380 395External links editIslamic and Christian Spain in the early Middle Ages Thomas F Glick Chapter 5 Ethnic relations Islam and its tolerance level Archived 8 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine Surah Al Kafirun is 109 Surah and found in the 30th Parah of the Quran Islamic Teaching On Dhimmi Status Creates An Atmosphere Of Intolerance from the Religious Freedom Packet of the Order of Saint Andrew the Apostle Bernard Lewis Race and Slavery in the Middle East Jihad the Arab Conquests and the Position of Non Muslim Subjects Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dhimmi amp oldid 1198228969, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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