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Sharia

Sharia (/ʃəˈrə/; Arabic: شَريعَة, romanizedsharīʿa [ʃaˈriːʕa]) is a body of religious law that forms a part of the Islamic tradition.[1][2][3] It is derived from the religious precepts of Islam and is based on scriptures of Islam, particularly the Quran and the Hadith.[1] In Arabic, the term sharīʿah refers to God's immutable divine law and is contrasted with fiqh, which refers to its human scholarly interpretations.[4][5][6] Over time, legal schools have emerged, reflecting the preferences of particular societies and governments, as well as islamic scholars or imams through their work on the theoretical (usul) and practical application (füru'/Fatwa) of laws and regulations. However, sharia has never been the sole valid legal system in Islam, and has always been used alongside urf (customary law) from the beginning.[7][8] Although sharia is presented as a form of government[9] in addition to its other aspects, especially by the contemporary Islamist understanding, some researchers see the early history of Islam, which was also modelled and exalted by most Muslims; not a period when the understanding of sharia was dominant, but a kind of "secular Arabic expansion".[10][11]

An unhappy wife complains to the kadi about her husband's impotence (18th century Ottoman miniature)

Traditional theory of Islamic jurisprudence recognizes four sources of Sharia: the Quran, sunnah (authentic hadith), ijma (juridical consensus) and qiyas (analogical reasoning).[note 1][14] Five Sunni Madhhab (legal school of Sunni Islam), Hanafi, Maliki, Shafiʽi, Hanbali and Zahiri, developed Sunni methodologies for deriving Sharia rulings from scriptural sources using a process known as ijtihad.[4][5] Traditional jurisprudence (fiqh) distinguishes two principal branches of law, ʿibādāt (rituals) and muʿāmalāt (social relations), which together comprise a wide range of topics.[4][6] Its rulings are concerned with ethical standards as much as with legal norms,[15][16] assigning actions to one of five categories: mandatory, recommended, neutral, abhorred, and prohibited.[4][5][6] Fiqh was elaborated over the centuries by legal opinions (fatwas) issued by qualified jurists (muftis) and historically applied in Sharia courts by ruler-appointed judges,[4][6] complemented by various economic, criminal and administrative laws issued by Muslim rulers.[17]

In the 21st century, the role of Sharia has become an increasingly contested topic around the world.[5] The manner of its application in modern times has been a subject of dispute between Muslim fundamentalists and modernists.[2][18] There are progressives who argue that Sharia is compatible with democracy, human rights, minority rights, freedom of thought, women's rights and banking.[19][20][21] According to human rights groups, some of the classical sharia practices involve serious violations of basic human rights, gender equality and freedom of expression, and the practices of countries governed by sharia are criticized. Against this, "the concept of human rights" can be categorically excluded by the governments of countries such as Iran and Saudi Arabia on the grounds that it belongs to secular and western values,[22] and the Cairo conference on the subject by the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation declares that human rights can only be respected if they are compatible with Islam.[23] The European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg (ECtHR) ruled in several cases that Sharia is "incompatible with the fundamental principles of democracy".[24][25] In Muslim countries in the modern era traditional laws have been widely used with European models.[5][26] Judicial procedures and legal education have likewise been brought in line with European practice.[5] While the constitutions of most Muslim-majority states contain references to Sharia its rules are largely retained only in family law.[5] The Islamic revival of the late 20th century brought calls by Islamic movements for full implementation of Sharia, including hudud corporal punishments, such as stoning.[5][27]

Etymology and usage edit

Contemporary usage edit

The word sharīʿah is used by Arabic-speaking peoples of the Middle East to designate a prophetic religion in its totality.[28] For example, sharīʿat Mūsā means law or religion of Moses and sharīʿatu-nā can mean "our religion" in reference to any monotheistic faith.[28] Within Islamic discourse, šarīʿah refers to religious regulations governing the lives of Muslims.[28] For many Muslims, the word means simply "justice," and they will consider any law that promotes justice and social welfare to conform to Sharia.[5]

Jan Michiel Otto distinguishes four senses conveyed by the term sharia in religious, legal and political discourse:[29]

  • Divine, abstract sharia: God's plan for mankind and the norms of behavior which should guide the Islamic community. Muslims of different perspectives agree in their respect for the abstract notion of sharia, but they differ in how they understand the practical implications of the term.
  • Classical sharia: the body of rules and principles elaborated by Islamic jurists during the first centuries of Islam.
  • Historical sharia(s): the body of rules and interpretations developed throughout Islamic history, ranging from personal beliefs to state legislation and varying across an ideological spectrum. Classical sharia has often served as a point of reference for these variants, but they have also reflected the influences of their time and place.
  • Contemporary sharia(s): the full spectrum of rules and interpretations that are developed and practiced at present.

A related term al-qānūn al-islāmī (القانون الإسلامي, Islamic law), which was borrowed from European usage in the late 19th century, is used in the Muslim world to refer to a legal system in the context of a modern state.[30]

Etymology edit

The primary range of meanings of the Arabic word šarīʿah, derived from the root š-r-ʕ, is related to religion and religious law.[28] The lexicographical tradition records two major areas of use where the word šarīʿah can appear without religious connotation.[31] In texts evoking a pastoral or nomadic environment, the word, and its derivatives refer to watering animals at a permanent water-hole or to the seashore, with special reference to animals who come there.[31] Another area of use relates to notions of stretched or lengthy.[31] This range of meanings is cognate with the Hebrew saraʿ[clarification needed] and is likely to be the origin of the meaning "way" or "path".[31] Both these areas have been claimed to have given rise to aspects of the religious meaning.[31]

Some scholars describe the word šarīʿah as an archaic Arabic word denoting "pathway to be followed" (analogous to the Hebrew term Halakhah ["The Way to Go"]),[32] or "path to the water hole"[33][34] and argue that its adoption as a metaphor for a divinely ordained way of life arises from the importance of water in an arid desert environment.[34]

Use in religious texts edit

In the Quran, šarīʿah and its cognate širʿah occur once each, with the meaning "way" or "path".[28] The word šarīʿah was widely used by Arabic-speaking Jews during the Middle Ages, being the most common translation for the word torah in the 10th-century Arabic translation of the Torah by Saʿadya Gaon.[28] A similar use of the term can be found in Christian writers.[28] The Arabic expression Sharīʿat Allāh (شريعة الله "God's Law") is a common translation for תורת אלוהים ('God's Law' in Hebrew) and νόμος τοῦ θεοῦ ('God's Law' in Greek in the New Testament [Rom. 7: 22]).[35] In Muslim literature, šarīʿah designates the laws or message of a prophet or God, in contrast to fiqh, which refers to a scholar's interpretation thereof.[36]

In older English-language law-related works in the late 19th/early 20th centuries, the word used for Sharia was sheri.[37] It, along with the French variant chéri, was used during the time of the Ottoman Empire, and is from the Turkish şer’(i).[38]

Historical origins edit

A similar legal concept Eye for an eye first recorded in the Code of Hammurabi. Qisas was a practice used as a resolution tool in inter-tribal conflicts in pre-Islamic Arab society. The basis of this resolution was that a member from the tribe to which the murderer belonged was handed over to the victim's family for execution, equivalent to the social status of the murdered person.[39] The "condition of social equivalence" meant the execution of a member of the murderer's tribe who was equivalent to the murdered, in that the murdered person was male or female, slave or free, elite or commonone. For example, only one slave could be killed for a slave, and a woman for a woman. In other cases, compensatory payment (Diyya) could be paid to the family of the murdered person. On top of this pre-Islamic understanding added a debate about whether a Muslim can be executed for a non-Muslim during the Islamic period.

The main verse for implementation in Islam is Al Baqara, 178 verse: "Believers! Retaliation is ordained for you regarding the people who were killed. Free versus free, captive versus captive, woman versus woman. Whoever is forgiven by the brother of the slain for a price, let him abide by the custom and pay the price well."

According to the traditionalist (Atharī) Muslim view, the major precepts of Sharia were passed down directly from the Islamic prophet Muhammad without "historical development"[40] and the emergence of Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh) also goes back to the lifetime of Muhammad.[5][6] In this view, his companions and followers took what he did and approved of as a model (sunnah) and transmitted this information to the succeeding generations in the form of hadith.[5][6] These reports led first to informal discussion and then systematic legal thought, articulated with greatest success in the eighth and ninth centuries by the master jurists Abu Hanifah, Malik ibn Anas, Al-Shafi‘i, and Ahmad ibn Hanbal, who are viewed as the founders of the Hanafi, Maliki, Shafiʿi, and Hanbali legal schools (madhhabs) of Sunni jurisprudence.[6]

Modern historians have presented alternative theories of the formation of fiqh.[5][6] At first Western scholars accepted the general outlines of the traditionalist account.[41] In the late 19th century, an influential revisionist hypothesis was advanced by Ignac Goldziher and elaborated by Joseph Schacht in the mid-20th century.[6] Schacht and other scholars[42] argued that having conquered much more populous agricultural and urban societies with already existing laws and legal needs, the initial Muslim efforts to formulate legal norms[note 2] regarded the Quran[note 3] and Muhammad's hadiths as just one source of law,[note 4] with jurist personal opinions, the legal practice of conquered peoples, and the decrees and decisions of the caliphs also being valid sources.[47]

 
Imam Shafi'i tomb in Cairo

According to this theory, most canonical hadiths did not originate with Muhammad but were actually created at a later date, despite the efforts of hadith scholars to weed out fabrications.[note 5] After it became accepted that legal norms must be formally grounded in scriptural sources, proponents of rules of jurisprudence supported by the hadith would extend the chains of transmission of the hadith back to Muhammad's companions.[6] In his view, the real architect of Islamic jurisprudence was Al-Shafi‘i (d. 820 CE/204 AH), who formulated this idea (that legal norms must be formally grounded in scriptural sources) and other elements of classical legal theory in his work al-risala,[6][41] but who was preceded by a body of Islamic law not based on primacy of Muhammad's hadiths.

While the origin of hadith remains a subject of scholarly controversy, this theory (of Goldziher and Schacht) has given rise to objections, and modern historians generally adopt more cautious, intermediate positions,[41] and it is generally accepted that early Islamic jurisprudence developed out of a combination of administrative and popular practices shaped by the religious and ethical precepts of Islam.[49][5][50] It continued some aspects of pre-Islamic laws and customs of the lands that fell under Muslim rule in the aftermath of the early conquests and modified other aspects, aiming to meet the practical need of establishing Islamic norms of behavior and adjudicating disputes arising in the early Muslim communities.[51] Juristic thought gradually developed in study circles, where independent scholars met to learn from a local master and discuss religious topics.[51][52] At first, these circles were fluid in their membership, but with time distinct regional legal schools crystallized around shared sets of methodological principles.[5][52] As the boundaries of the schools became clearly delineated, the authority of their doctrinal tenets came to be vested in a master jurist from earlier times, who was henceforth identified as the school's founder.[5][52] In the course of the first three centuries of Islam, all legal schools came to accept the broad outlines of classical legal theory, according to which Islamic law had to be firmly rooted in the Quran and hadith.[5][53]

Traditional jurisprudence (fiqh) edit

Fiqh is traditionally divided into the fields of uṣūl al-fiqh (lit. the roots of fiqh), which studies the theoretical principles of jurisprudence, and furūʿ al-fiqh (lit. the branches of fiqh), which is devoted to elaboration of rulings on the basis of these principles.[6][13]

Principles of jurisprudence (uṣūl al-fiqh) edit

Classical jurists held that human reason is a gift from God which should be exercised to its fullest capacity.[54] However, they believed that use of reason alone is insufficient to distinguish right from wrong, and that rational argumentation must draw its content from the body of transcendental knowledge revealed in the Quran and through the sunnah of Muhammad.[12][54]

Traditional theory of Islamic jurisprudence elaborates how scriptures should be interpreted from the standpoint of linguistics and rhetoric.[6] It also comprises methods for establishing authenticity of hadith and for determining when the legal force of a scriptural passage is abrogated by a passage revealed at a later date.[6] In addition to the Quran and sunnah, the classical theory of Sunni fiqh recognizes two other sources of law: juristic consensus (ijmaʿ) and analogical reasoning (qiyas).[49] It therefore studies the application and limits of analogy, as well as the value and limits of consensus, along with other methodological principles, some of which are accepted by only certain legal schools.[6] This interpretive apparatus is brought together under the rubric of ijtihad, which refers to a jurist's exertion in an attempt to arrive at a ruling on a particular question.[6] The theory of Twelver Shia jurisprudence parallels that of Sunni schools with some differences, such as recognition of reason (ʿaql) as a source of law in place of qiyas and extension of the notion of sunnah to include traditions of the imams.[12][55]

Sources of Sharia edit

Islamic scholar Sayyid Rashid Rida (1865 - 1935 C.E) lists the four basic sources of Islamic law, agreed upon by all Sunni Muslims:

"the [well-known] sources of legislation in Islam are four: the Qur'an, the Sunnah, the consensus of the ummah and ijtihad undertaken by competent jurists"[56]

Some researchers suggests that primary sources may have evolved similarly to fiqh, contrary to traditional knowledge; Gerd R. Puin, Lawrence Conrad, Patricia Crone, and Joseph Schacht reached these conclusions by examining sirah books,[57] hadith terminology,[58] and the chains of narration of hadith,[59] respectively.

  • Quran: In Islam, the Quran is considered to be the most sacred source of law.[60] Classical jurists held its textual integrity to be beyond doubt on account of it having been handed down by many people in each generation, which is known as "recurrence" or "concurrent transmission" (tawātur).[49][60] [61] Only several hundred verses of the Quran have direct legal relevance, and they are concentrated in a few specific areas such as inheritance, though other passages have been used as a source for general principles whose legal ramifications were elaborated by other means.[5][60]
  • Sunnah / Hadith: The body of hadith provides more detailed and practical legal guidance, but it was recognized early on that not all of them were authentic.[5][60] Early Islamic scholars developed a methodology for evaluating their authenticity by assessing trustworthiness of the individuals listed in their transmission chains.[60] These criteria narrowed down the vast corpus of prophetic traditions to several thousand "sound" hadiths, which were collected in several canonical compilations.[60] The hadiths which enjoyed concurrent transmission were deemed unquestionably authentic; however, the vast majority of hadiths were handed down by only one or a few transmitters and were therefore seen to yield only probable knowledge.[60][49] The uncertainty was further compounded by ambiguity of the language contained in some hadiths and Quranic passages.[60] Disagreements on the relative merits and interpretation of the textual sources allowed legal scholars considerable leeway in formulating alternative rulings.[5]
  • Ijma: It is the consensus that could in principle elevate a ruling based on probable evidence to absolute certainty.[62][5] This classical doctrine drew its authority from a series of hadiths stating that the Islamic community could never agree on an error.[62] This form of consensus was technically defined as agreement of all competent jurists in any particular generation, acting as representatives of the community.[62][5][63] However, the practical difficulty of obtaining and ascertaining such an agreement meant that it had little impact on legal development.[62][5] A more pragmatic form of consensus, which could be determined by consulting works of prominent jurists, was used to confirm a ruling so that it could not be reopened for further discussion.[5] The cases for which there was a consensus account form less than 1 percent of the body of classical jurisprudence.[62]
  • Qiyas: It is the Analogical reasoning that is used to derive a ruling for a situation not addressed in the scripture by analogy with a scripturally based rule.[49] In a classic example, the Quranic prohibition of drinking wine is extended to all intoxicating substances, on the basis of the "cause" (ʿilla) shared by these situations, which in this case is identified to be intoxication.[49] Since the cause of a rule may not be apparent, its selection commonly occasioned controversy and extensive debate.[64] Majority of Sunni Muslims view Qiyas as a central Pillar of Ijtihad.[65] On the other hand; Zahirites, Ahmad ibn Hanbal, Al-Bukhari, early Hanbalites, etc rejected Qiyas amongst the Sunnis.[66][67][68] Twelver Shia jurisprudence also does not recognize the use of qiyas, but relies on reason (ʿ'Aql) in its place.[12][13]

Ijtihad edit

The classical process of ijtihad combined these generally recognized principles with other methods, which were not adopted by all legal schools, such as istihsan (juristic preference), istislah (consideration of public interest) and istishab (presumption of continuity).[49] A jurist who is qualified to practice ijtihad is known as a mujtahid. [69][50] The use of independent reasoning to arrive at a ruling is contrasted with taqlid (imitation), which refers to following the rulings of a mujtahid.[50] By the beginning of the 10th century, development of Sunni jurisprudence prompted leading jurists to state that the main legal questions had been addressed and the scope of ijtihad was gradually restricted.[50][70] From the 18th century on, leading Muslim reformers began calling for abandonment of taqlid and renewed emphasis on ijtihad, which they saw as a return to the vitality of early Islamic jurisprudence.[70]

Decision types (aḥkām) edit

Fiqh is concerned with ethical standards as much as with legal norms, seeking to establish not only what is and is not legal, but also what is morally right and wrong.[15][16] Sharia rulings fall into one of five categories known as "the five decisions" (al-aḥkām al-khamsa): mandatory (farḍ or wājib), recommended (mandūb or mustaḥabb), neutral (mubāḥ), reprehensible (makrūh), and forbidden (ḥarām).[5][13]

It is a sin or a crime to perform a forbidden action or not to perform a mandatory action.[5] Reprehensible acts should be avoided, but they are not considered to be sinful or punishable in court.[5][71] Avoiding reprehensible acts and performing recommended acts is held to be subject of reward in the afterlife, while neutral actions entail no judgment from God.[5][71] Jurists disagree on whether the term ḥalāl covers the first three or the first four categories.[5] The legal and moral verdict depends on whether the action is committed out of necessity (ḍarūra) and on the underlying intention (niyya), as expressed in the legal maxim "acts are [evaluated according] to intention."[5]

As can be seen in many examples, classification is relative. For example, believing in the existence and miracles of Awliya is presented as a "condition" for orthodox Islam by many prominent Sunni creed writers such as Al-Tahawi and Nasafi[72][73] and is accepted in traditional Sunnis and Shi'ism. However, this understanding, along with expressions of respect and visits to the graves of saints, are seen as unacceptable heresy by puritanical and revivalist Islamic movements such as Salafism, Wahhabism and Islamic Modernism.[74]

Aims of Sharia and public interest edit

Maqāṣid (aims or purposes) of Sharia and maṣlaḥa (welfare or public interest) are two related classical doctrines which have come to play an increasingly prominent role in modern times.[75][76][77] They were first clearly articulated by al-Ghazali (d. 1111), who argued that maslaha was God's general purpose in revealing the divine law, and that its specific aim was preservation of five essentials of human well-being: religion, life, intellect, offspring, and property.[78] Although most classical-era jurists recognized maslaha and maqasid as important legal principles, they held different views regarding the role they should play in Islamic law.[75][77] Some jurists viewed them as auxiliary rationales constrained by scriptural sources and analogical reasoning.[75][79] Others regarded them as an independent source of law, whose general principles could override specific inferences based on the letter of scripture.[75][80] While the latter view was held by a minority of classical jurists, in modern times it came to be championed in different forms by prominent scholars who sought to adapt Islamic law to changing social conditions by drawing on the intellectual heritage of traditional jurisprudence.[75][49][76] These scholars expanded the inventory of maqasid to include such aims of Sharia as reform and women's rights (Rashid Rida); justice and freedom (Mohammed al-Ghazali); and human dignity and rights (Yusuf al-Qaradawi).[75]

Branches of law (furūʿ al-fiqh) edit

The domain of furūʿ al-fiqh (lit. branches of fiqh) is traditionally divided into ʿibādāt (rituals or acts of worship) and muʿāmalāt (social relations).[6][50] Many jurists further divided the body of substantive jurisprudence into "the four quarters", called rituals, sales, marriage and injuries.[81] Each of these terms figuratively stood for a variety of subjects.[81] For example, the quarter of sales would encompass partnerships, guaranty, gifts, and bequests, among other topics.[81] Juristic works were arranged as a sequence of such smaller topics, each called a "book" (kitab).[6][81] The special significance of ritual was marked by always placing its discussion at the start of the work.[6][81]

Some historians distinguish a field of Islamic criminal law, which combines several traditional categories.[5][82][13] Several crimes with scripturally prescribed punishments are known as hudud.[5] Jurists developed various restrictions which in many cases made them virtually impossible to apply.[5] Other crimes involving intentional bodily harm are judged according to a version of lex talionis that prescribes a punishment analogous to the crime (qisas), but the victims or their heirs may accept a monetary compensation (diya) or pardon the perpetrator instead; only diya is imposed for non-intentional harm.[5][82] Other criminal cases belong to the category of taʿzīr, where the goal of punishment is correction or rehabilitation of the culprit and its form is largely left to the judge's discretion.[5][82] In practice, since early on in Islamic history, criminal cases were usually handled by ruler-administered courts or local police using procedures which were only loosely related to Sharia.[6][82]

The two major genres of furūʿ literature are the mukhtasar (concise summary of law) and the mabsut (extensive commentary).[6] Mukhtasars were short specialized treatises or general overviews that could be used in a classroom or consulted by judges.[6][5][83] A mabsut, which usually provided a commentary on a mukhtasar and could stretch to dozens of large volumes, recorded alternative rulings with their justifications, often accompanied by a proliferation of cases and conceptual distinctions.[6][83] The terminology of juristic literature was conservative and tended to preserve notions which had lost their practical relevance.[6] At the same time, the cycle of abridgement and commentary allowed jurists of each generation to articulate a modified body of law to meet changing social conditions.[83] Other juristic genres include the qawāʿid (succinct formulas meant to aid the student remember general principles) and collections of fatwas by a particular scholar.[5]

Classical jurisprudence has been described as "one of the major intellectual achievements of Islam"[84] and its importance in Islam has been compared to that of theology in Christianity.[note 6]

Schools of law edit

 
Juristic exchange between Abu Dawood and Ibn Hanbal. One of the oldest literary manuscripts of the Islamic world, dated October 879 A.D.

The main Sunni schools of law (madhhabs) are the Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi'i and Hanbali madhhabs.[50] They emerged in the ninth and tenth centuries and by the twelfth century almost all jurists aligned themselves with a particular madhhab.[87] These four schools recognize each other's validity and they have interacted in legal debate over the centuries.[87][50] Rulings of these schools are followed across the Muslim world without exclusive regional restrictions, but they each came to dominate in different parts of the world.[87][50] For example, the Maliki school is predominant in North and West Africa; the Hanafi school in South and Central Asia; the Shafi'i school in Lower Egypt, East Africa, and Southeast Asia; and the Hanbali school in North and Central Arabia.[87][50][5] The first centuries of Islam also witnessed a number of short-lived Sunni madhhabs.[6] The Zahiri school, which is commonly identified as extinct, continues to exert influence over legal thought.[6][50][87] The development of Shia legal schools occurred along the lines of theological differences and resulted in formation of the Twelver, Zaidi and Ismaili madhhabs, whose differences from Sunni legal schools are roughly of the same order as the differences among Sunni schools.[6][5] The Ibadi legal school, distinct from Sunni and Shia madhhabs, is predominant in Oman.[50]

The transformations of Islamic legal institutions in the modern era have had profound implications for the madhhab system.[87] Legal practice in most of the Muslim world has come to be controlled by government policy and state law, so that the influence of the madhhabs beyond personal ritual practice depends on the status accorded to them within the national legal system.[87] State law codification commonly utilized the methods of takhayyur (selection of rulings without restriction to a particular madhhab) and talfiq (combining parts of different rulings on the same question).[87] Legal professionals trained in modern law schools have largely replaced traditional ulema as interpreters of the resulting laws.[87] Global Islamic movements have at times drawn on different madhhabs and at other times placed greater focus on the scriptural sources rather than classical jurisprudence.[87] The Hanbali school, with its particularly strict adherence to the Quran and hadith, has inspired conservative currents of direct scriptural interpretation by the Salafi and Wahhabi movements.[87] Other currents, such as networks of Indonesian ulema and Islamic scholars residing in Muslim-minority countries, have advanced liberal interpretations of Islamic law without focusing on traditions of a particular madhhab.[87]

Pre-modern Islamic legal system edit

Jurists edit

Sharia was traditionally interpreted by muftis. During the first few centuries of Islam, muftis were private legal specialists who normally also held other jobs. They issued fatwas (legal opinions), generally free of charge, in response to questions from laypersons or requests for consultation coming from judges, which would be stated in general terms. Fatwas were regularly upheld in courts, and when they were not, it was usually because the fatwa was contradicted by a more authoritative legal opinion.[88] The stature of jurists was determined by their scholarly reputation.[89][90] The majority of classical legal works, written by author-jurists, were based in large part on fatwas of distinguished muftis.[89] These fatwas functioned as a form of legal precedent, unlike court verdicts, which were valid only for the given case.[91] Although independent muftis never disappeared, from the 12th century onward Muslim rulers began to appoint salaried muftis to answer questions from the public.[92] Over the centuries, Sunni muftis were gradually incorporated into state bureaucracies, while Shia jurists in Iran progressively asserted an autonomous authority starting from the early modern era.[93]

 
Ulugh Beg Madrasa, Samarkand (est. 1422)

Islamic law was initially taught in study circles that gathered in mosques and private homes. The teacher, assisted by advanced students, provided commentary on concise treatises of law and examined the students' understanding of the text. This tradition continued to be practiced in madrasas, which spread during the 10th and 11th centuries.[94][95] Madrasas were institutions of higher learning devoted principally to study of law, but also offering other subjects such as theology, medicine, and mathematics. The madrasa complex usually consisted of a mosque, boarding house, and a library. It was maintained by a waqf (charitable endowment), which paid salaries of professors, stipends of students, and defrayed the costs of construction and maintenance. At the end of a course, the professor granted a license (ijaza) certifying a student's competence in its subject matter.[95] Students specializing in law would complete a curriculum consisting of preparatory studies, the doctrines of a particular madhhab, and training in legal disputation, and finally write a dissertation, which earned them a license to teach and issue fatwas.[92][94]

Courts edit

 
The poet Saadi and a dervish go to settle their quarrel before a judge (16th century Persian miniature)

A judge (qadi) was in charge of the qadi's court (mahkama), also called the Sharia court. Qadis were trained in Islamic law, though not necessarily to a level required to issue fatwas.[5][96] Court personnel also included a number of assistants performing various roles.[97] Judges were theoretically independent in their decisions, though they were appointed by the ruler and often experienced pressure from members of the ruling elite where their interests were at play.[92] The role of qadis was to evaluate the evidence, establish the facts of the case, and issue a verdict based on the applicable rulings of Islamic jurisprudence.[5] The qadi was supposed to solicit a fatwa from a mufti if it was unclear how the law should be applied to the case.[5][98] Since Islamic legal theory does not recognize the distinction between private and public law, court procedures were identical for civil and criminal cases, and required a private plaintiff to produce evidence against the defendant. The main type of evidence was oral witness testimony. The standards of evidence for criminal cases were so strict that a conviction was often difficult to obtain even for apparently clear-cut cases.[5] Most historians believe that because of these stringent procedural norms, qadi's courts at an early date lost their jurisdiction over criminal cases, which were instead handled in other types of courts.[99]

If an accusation did not result in a verdict in a qadi's court, the plaintiff could often pursue it in another type of court called the mazalim court, administered by the ruler's council.[5] The rationale for mazalim (lit. wrongs, grievances) courts was to address the wrongs that Sharia courts were unable to address, including complaints against government officials. Islamic jurists were commonly in attendance and a judge often presided over the court as a deputy of the ruler.[5][92] Mazalim verdicts were supposed to conform to the spirit of Sharia, but they were not bound by the letter of the law or the procedural restrictions of qadi's courts.[5][98]

The police (shurta), which took initiative in preventing and investigating crime, operated its own courts.[92] Like the mazalim courts, police courts were not bound by the rules of Sharia and had the powers to inflict discretionary punishments.[99] Another office for maintaining public order was the muhtasib (market inspector), who was charged with preventing fraud in economic transactions and infractions against public morality.[92] The muhtasib took an active role in pursuing these types of offenses and meted out punishments based on local custom.[99]

Socio-political context edit

The social fabric of pre-modern Islamic societies was largely defined by close-knit communities organized around kinship groups and local neighborhoods. Conflicts between individuals had the potential to escalate into a conflict between their supporting groups and disrupt the life of the entire community. Court litigation was seen as a last resort for cases where informal mediation had failed. This attitude was reflected in the legal maxim "amicable settlement is the best verdict" (al-sulh sayyid al-ahkam). In court disputes, qadis were generally less concerned with legal theory than with achieving an outcome that enabled the disputants to resume their previous social relationships. This could be accomplished by avoiding a total loss for the losing side or simply giving them a chance to articulate their position in public and obtain a measure of psychological vindication.[100][101] Islamic law required judges to be familiar with local customs, and they exercised a number of other public functions in the community, including mediation and arbitration, supervision of public works, auditing waqf finances, and looking after the interests of orphans.[96][99]

 
Manuscript copy of al-Fatawa al-'Alamgiriyyah

Unlike pre-modern cultures where the ruling dynasty promulgated the law, Islamic law was formulated by religious scholars without involvement of the rulers. The law derived its authority not from political control, but rather from the collective doctrinal positions of the legal schools (madhhabs) in their capacity as interpreters of the scriptures. The ulema (religious scholars) were involved in management of communal affairs and acted as representatives of the Muslim population vis-à-vis the ruling dynasties, who before the modern era had limited capacity for direct governance.[102] Military elites relied on the ulema for religious legitimation, with financial support for religious institutions being one of the principal means through which these elites established their legitimacy.[103][102] In turn, the ulema depended on the support of the ruling elites for the continuing operation of religious institutions. Although the relationship between secular rulers and religious scholars underwent a number of shifts and transformations in different times and places, this mutual dependence characterized Islamic history until the start of the modern era.[104][102] Additionally, since Sharia contained few provisions in several areas of public law, Muslim rulers were able to legislate various collections of economic, criminal and administrative laws outside the jurisdiction of Islamic jurists, the most famous of which is the qanun promulgated by Ottoman sultans beginning from the 15th century.[17] The Mughal emperor Aurangzeb (r. 1658–1707) issued a hybrid body of law known as Fatawa-e-Alamgiri, based on Hanafi fatwas as well as decisions of Islamic courts, and made it applicable to all religious communities on the Indian subcontinent. This early attempt to turn Islamic law into semi-codified state legislation sparked rebellions against Mughal rule.[105]

Women, non-Muslims, slaves edit

In both the rules of civil disputes and application of penal law, classical Sharia distinguishes between men and women, between Muslims and non-Muslims, and between free persons and slaves.[5]

 
Zanzibar Child slave sentenced to transport logs by Arab master in Sultanate, 1890s

Traditional Islamic law assumes a patriarchal society with a man at the head of the household.[106] Different legal schools formulated a variety of legal norms which could be manipulated to the advantage of men or women,[107] but women were generally at a disadvantage with respect to the rules of inheritance, blood money (diya), and witness testimony, where in some cases a woman's value is effectively treated as half of that of a man.[106] Various financial obligations imposed on the husband acted as a deterrent against unilateral divorce and commonly gave the wife financial leverage in divorce proceedings.[107] Women were active in Sharia courts as both plaintiffs and defendants in a wide variety of cases, though some opted to be represented by a male relative.[108][5]

Sharia was intended to regulate affairs of the Muslim community.[5] Non-Muslims residing under Islamic rule had the legal status of dhimmi, which entailed a number of protections, restrictions, freedoms and legal inequalities, including payment of the jizya tax.[109] Dhimmi communities had legal autonomy to adjudicate their internal affairs. Cases involving litigants from two different religious groups fell under jurisdiction of Sharia courts,[5] where (unlike in secular courts)[110] testimony of non-Muslim witnesses against a Muslim was inadmissible in criminal cases[111] or at all.[112] This legal framework was implemented with varying degree of rigor. In some periods or towns, all inhabitants apparently used the same court without regard for their religious affiliation.[5] The Mughal emperor Aurangzeb imposed Islamic law on all his subjects, including provisions traditionally applicable only to Muslims, while some of his predecessors and successors are said to have abolished jizya.[105][113] According to Ottoman records, non-Muslim women took their cases to a Sharia court when they expected a more favorable outcome on marital, divorce and property questions than in Christian and Jewish courts.[114] Over time, non Muslims in the Ottoman Empire could be more or less likely to use Islamic courts. For example, in 1729 at the Islamic court in Galata only two percent of cases involved non-Muslims whereas in 1789 non-Muslims were a part of thirty percent of cases.[115] Ottoman court records also reflect the use of Islamic courts by formerly non-Muslim women.[116] As it was illegal for non-Muslims to own Muslims and for non-Muslim men to marry Muslim women in the Ottoman empire, conversion to Islam would have been an option for non-Muslim women to free themselves of a spouse or master they did not want to subject to.[116] However, this would likely lead to them being shunned by their former community.[116]

Classical fiqh acknowledges and regulates slavery as a legitimate institution.[106] It granted slaves certain rights and protections, improving their status relative to Greek and Roman law, and restricted the scenarios under which people could be enslaved.[117][118] However, slaves could not inherit or enter into a contract, and were subject to their master's will in a number of ways.[117][118] The labor and property of slaves were owned by the master, who was also entitled to sexual submission of his unmarried slaves.[118][119]

Formal legal disabilities for some groups coexisted with a legal culture that viewed Sharia as a reflection of universal principles of justice, which involved protection of the weak against injustices committed by the strong. This conception was reinforced by the historical practice of Sharia courts, where peasants "almost always" won cases against oppressive landowners, and non-Muslims often prevailed in disputes against Muslims, including such powerful figures as the governor of their province.[120][121] In family matters the Sharia court was seen as a place where the rights of women could be asserted against their husband's transgressions.[5]

Modern legal reforms edit

Under colonial rule edit

Starting from the 17th century, European powers began to extend political influence over lands ruled by Muslim dynasties, and by the end of the 19th century, much of the Muslim world came under colonial domination. The first areas of Islamic law to be impacted were usually commercial and criminal laws, which impeded colonial administration and were soon replaced by European regulations.[122] Islamic commercial laws were also replaced by European (mostly French) laws in Muslim states which retained formal independence, because these states increasingly came to rely on Western capital and could not afford to lose the business of foreign merchants who refused to submit to Islamic regulations.[5]

 
Warren Hastings initiated far-reaching legal reforms in British India

The first significant changes to the legal system of British India were initiated in the late 18th century by the governor of Bengal Warren Hastings. Hastings' plan of legal reform envisioned a multi-tiered court system for the Muslim population, with a middle tier of British judges advised by local Islamic jurists, and a lower tier of courts operated by qadis. Hastings also commissioned a translation of the classic manual of Hanafi fiqh, Al-Hidayah, from Arabic into Persian and then English, later complemented by other texts.[123][124] These translations enabled British judges to pass verdicts in the name of Islamic law based on a combination of Sharia rules and common law doctrines, and eliminated the need to rely on consultation by local ulema, whom they mistrusted. In the traditional Islamic context, a concise text like Al-Hidayah would be used as a basis for classroom commentary by a professor, and the doctrines thus learned would be mediated in court by judicial discretion, consideration of local customs and availability of different legal opinions that could fit the facts of the case. The British use of Al-Hidayah, which amounted to an inadvertent codification of Sharia, and its interpretation by judges trained in Western legal traditions anticipated later legal reforms in the Muslim world.[123][125]

British administrators felt that Sharia rules too often allowed criminals to escape punishment, as exemplified by Hastings' complaint that Islamic law was "founded on the most lenient principles and on an abhorrence of bloodshed".[123] In the course of the 19th century, criminal laws and other aspects of the Islamic legal system in India were supplanted by British law, with the exception of Sharia rules retained in family laws and some property transactions.[123][124] Among other changes, these reforms brought about abolition of slavery, prohibition of child marriage, and a much more frequent use of capital punishment.[126][124] The resulting legal system, known as Anglo-Muhammadan law, was treated by the British as a model for legal reforms in their other colonies. Like the British in India, colonial administrations typically sought to obtain precise and authoritative information about indigenous laws, which prompted them to prefer classical Islamic legal texts over local judicial practice. This, together with their conception of Islamic law as a collection of inflexible rules, led to an emphasis on traditionalist forms of Sharia that were not rigorously applied in the pre-colonial period and served as a formative influence on the modern identity politics of the Muslim world.[124]

Ottoman Empire edit

 
An Ottoman courtroom (1879 A.D. drawing)

During the colonial era, Muslim rulers concluded that they could not resist European pressure unless they modernized their armies and built centrally administered states along the lines of Western models. In the Ottoman Empire, the first such changes in the legal sphere involved placing the formerly independent waqfs under state control. This reform, passed in 1826, enriched the public treasury at the expense of the waqfs, thereby depleting the financial support for traditional Islamic legal education. Over the second half of the 19th century, a new hierarchical system of secular courts was established to supplement and eventually replace most religious courts. Students hoping to pursue legal careers in the new court system increasingly preferred attending secular schools over the traditional path of legal education with its dimming financial prospects.[127] The Tanzimat reforms of the 19th century saw reorganization of both Islamic civil law and sultanic criminal law after the model of the Napoleonic Code.[50] In the 1870s, a codification of civil law and procedure (excepting marriage and divorce), called the Mecelle, was produced for use in both Sharia and secular courts. It adopted the Turkish language for the benefit of the new legal class who no longer possessed competence in the Arabic idiom of traditional jurisprudence. The code was based on Hanafi law, and its authors selected minority opinions over authoritative ones when they were felt to better "suit the present conditions". The Mecelle was promulgated as a qanun (sultanic code), which represented an unprecedented assertion of the state's authority over Islamic civil law, traditionally the preserve of the ulema.[127] The 1917 Ottoman Law of Family Rights adopted an innovative approach of drawing rules from minority and majority opinions of all Sunni madhhabs with a modernizing intent.[27] The Republic of Turkey, which emerged after the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire, abolished its Sharia courts and replaced Ottoman civil laws with the Swiss Civil Code,[50] but Ottoman civil laws remained in force for several decades in Jordan, Lebanon, Palestine, Syria, and Iraq.[27][50]

Nation states edit

 
Mahkamah Syariyah (Sharia court) in Aceh, Indonesia

Westernization of legal institutions and expansion of state control in all areas of law, which began during the colonial era, continued in nation-states of the Muslim world.[128] Sharia courts at first continued to exist alongside state courts as in earlier times, but the doctrine that sultanic courts should implement the ideals of Sharia was gradually replaced by legal norms imported from Europe. Court procedures were also brought in line with European practice. Though the Islamic terms qadi and mahkama (qadi's/Sharia court) were preserved, they generally came to mean judge and court in the Western sense. While in the traditional Sharia court all parties represented themselves, in modern courts they are represented by professional lawyers educated in Western-style law schools, and the verdicts are subject to review in an appeals court. In the 20th century, most countries abolished a parallel system of Sharia courts and brought all cases under a national civil court system.[5]

In most Muslim-majority countries, traditional rules of classical fiqh have been largely preserved only in family law. In some countries religious minorities such as Christians or Shia Muslims have been subject to separate systems of family laws.[5] Many Muslims today believe that contemporary Sharia-based laws are an authentic representation of the pre-modern legal tradition. In reality, they generally represent the result of extensive legal reforms made in the modern era.[128] As traditional Islamic jurists lost their role as authoritative interpreters of the laws applied in courts, these laws were codified by legislators and administered by state systems which employed a number of devices to effect changes,[5] including:

  • Selection of alternative opinions from traditional legal literature (takhayyur), potentially among multiple madhhabs or denominations, and combining parts of different rulings (talfiq).[128][129]
  • Appeal to the classical doctrines of necessity (darura), public interest (maslaha), and the objectives (maqasid) of Sharia, which played a limited role in classical fiqh, but were now given wider utilitarian applications.[128][129][125]
  • Changes in administrative law that grant the courts discretionary powers to restrict certain practices which are not forbidden by substantive law (e.g., polygamy), in some cases imposing penal sanctions as additional deterrence.[128][129]
  • Modernist interpretation of Islamic scriptures without adherence to the rules or methodologies of traditional jurisprudence, known as neo-ijtihad.[128][129]
 
Muhammad Abduh exercised a powerful influence on liberal reformist thought

The most powerful influence on liberal reformist thought came from the work of the Egyptian Islamic scholar Muhammad ʿAbduh (1849–1905). Abduh viewed only Sharia rules pertaining to religious rituals as inflexible, and argued that the other Islamic laws should be adapted based on changing circumstances in consideration of social well-being. Following precedents of earlier Islamic thinkers, he advocated restoring Islam to its original purity by returning to the Quran and the sunna instead of following the medieval schools of jurisprudence.[27] He championed a creative approach to ijtihad that involved direct interpretation of scriptures as well as the methods of takhayyur and talfiq.[6][27]

One of the most influential figures in modern legal reforms was the Egyptian legal scholar Abd El-Razzak El-Sanhuri (1895–1971), who possessed expertise in both Islamic and Western law. Sanhuri argued that reviving Islamic legal heritage in a way that served the needs of contemporary society required its analysis in light of the modern science of comparative law. He drafted the civil codes of Egypt (1949) and Iraq (1951) based on a variety of sources, including classical fiqh, European laws, existing Arab and Turkish codes, and the history of local court decisions.[27][105] Sanhuri's Egyptian code incorporated few classical Sharia rules, but he drew on traditional jurisprudence more frequently for the Iraqi code.[105] Sanhuri's codes were subsequently adopted in some form by most Arab countries.[27]

Aside from the radical reforms of Islamic family law carried out in Tunisia (1956) and Iran (1967), governments often preferred to make changes that made a clear break from traditional Sharia rules by imposing administrative hurdles rather than changing the rules themselves, in order to minimize objections from religious conservatives. Various procedural changes have been made in a number of countries to restrict polygamy, give women greater rights in divorce, and eliminate child marriage. Inheritance has been the legal domain least susceptible to reform, as legislators have been generally reluctant to tamper with the highly technical system of Quranic shares.[27][105] Some reforms have faced strong conservative opposition. For example, the 1979 reform of Egyptian family law, promulgated by Anwar Sadat through presidential decree, provoked an outcry and was annulled in 1985 by the supreme court on procedural grounds, to be later replaced by a compromise version.[27] The 2003 reform of Moroccan family law, which sought to reconcile universal human rights norms and the country's Islamic heritage, was drafted by a commission that included parliamentarians, religious scholars and feminist activists, and the result has been praised by international rights groups as an example of progressive legislation achieved within an Islamic framework.[130][27]

Islamization edit

The Islamic revival of the late 20th century brought the topic of Sharia to international attention in the form of numerous political campaigns in the Muslim world calling for full implementation of Sharia.[5][131] A number of factors have contributed to the rise of these movements, classified under the rubric of Islamism or political Islam, including the failure of authoritarian secular regimes to meet the expectations of their citizens, and a desire of Muslim populations to return to more culturally authentic forms of socio-political organization in the face of a perceived cultural invasion from the West.[131][132] Islamist leaders such as Ayatollah Khomeini drew on leftist anticolonialist rhetoric by framing their call for Sharia as a resistance struggle. They accused secular leaders of corruption and predatory behavior, and claimed that a return to Sharia would replace despotic rulers with pious leaders striving for social and economic justice. In the Arab world these positions are often encapsulated in the slogan "Islam is the solution" (al-Islam huwa al-hall).[131]

Full implementation of Sharia theoretically refers to expanding its scope to all fields of law and all areas of public life.[5] In practice, Islamization campaigns have focused on a few highly visible issues associated with the conservative Muslim identity, particularly women's hijab and the hudud criminal punishments (whipping, stoning and amputation) prescribed for certain crimes.[131] For many Islamists, hudud punishments are at the core of the divine Sharia because they are specified by the letter of scripture rather than by human interpreters. Modern Islamists have often rejected, at least in theory, the stringent procedural constraints developed by classical jurists to restrict their application.[5] To the broader Muslim public, the calls for Sharia often represent, even more than any specific demands, a vague vision of their current economic and political situation being replaced by a "just utopia".[132]

A number of legal reforms have been made under the influence of these movements, starting from the 1970s when Egypt and Syria amended their constitutions to specify Sharia as the basis of legislation.[131] The Iranian Revolution of 1979 represented a watershed for Islamization advocates, demonstrating that it was possible to replace a secular regime with a theocracy.[131] Several countries, including Iran, Pakistan, Sudan, and some Nigerian states have incorporated hudud rules into their criminal justice systems, which, however, retained fundamental influences of earlier Westernizing reforms.[5][27] In practice, these changes were largely symbolic, and aside from some cases brought to trial to demonstrate that the new rules were being enforced, hudud punishments tended to fall into disuse, sometimes to be revived depending on the local political climate.[5][133] The supreme courts of Sudan and Iran have rarely approved verdicts of stoning or amputation, and the supreme courts of Pakistan and Nigeria have never done so.[133] Nonetheless, Islamization campaigns have also had repercussions in several other areas of law, leading to curtailment of rights of women and religious minorities, and in the case of Sudan contributing to the breakout of a civil war.[27]

Advocates of Islamization have often been more concerned with ideology than traditional jurisprudence and there is no agreement among them as to what form a modern Sharia-based "Islamic state" should take. This is particularly the case for the theorists of Islamic economics and Islamic finance, who have advocated both free-market and socialist economic models.[27] The notion of "Sharia-compliant" finance has become an active area of doctrinal innovation and its development has had a major impact on business operations around the world.[131]

Contemporary applications edit

 
Use of sharia by country:
  Sharia plays no role in the judicial system.
  Sharia influences personal status (family) laws.
  Sharia influences personal status and criminal laws.
  Regional variations in the application of sharia.

Muslim-majority countries edit

The legal systems of most Muslim-majority countries can be classified as either secular or mixed. Sharia plays no role in secular legal systems. In mixed legal systems, Sharia rules are allowed to influence some national laws, which are codified and may be based on European or Indian models, and the central legislative role is played by politicians and modern jurists rather than the ulema (traditional Islamic scholars).

Saudi Arabia and some other Persian Gulf states possess what may be called classical Sharia systems, where national law is largely uncodified and formally equated with Sharia, with ulema playing a decisive role in its interpretation. Iran has adopted some features of classical Sharia systems, while also maintaining characteristics of mixed systems, like codified laws and a parliament.[134]

Constitutional law edit

Constitutions of many Muslim-majority countries refer to Sharia as a source or the main source of law, though these references are not in themselves indicative of how much the legal system is influenced by Sharia, and whether the influence has a traditionalist or modernist character.[5][6] The same constitutions usually also refer to universal principles such as democracy and human rights, leaving it up to legislators and the judiciary to work out how these norms are to be reconciled in practice.[135] Conversely, some countries (e.g., Algeria), whose constitution does not mention Sharia, possess Sharia-based family laws.[6] Nisrine Abiad identifies Bahrain, Iran, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia as states with "strong constitutional consequences of Sharia "on the organization and functioning of power".[136]

Family law edit

Except for secular systems, Muslim-majority countries possess Sharia-based laws dealing with family matters (marriage, inheritance, etc.). These laws generally reflect influence of various modern-era reforms and tend to be characterized by ambiguity, with traditional and modernist interpretations often manifesting themselves in the same country, both in legislation and court decisions.[26] In some countries (e.g., parts of Nigeria), people can choose whether to pursue a case in a Sharia or secular court.[26][137]

Criminal law edit

Countries in the Muslim world generally have criminal codes influenced by civil law or common law, and in some cases a combination of Western legal traditions. Saudi Arabia has never adopted a criminal code and Saudi judges still follow traditional Hanbali jurisprudence. In the course of Islamization campaigns, several countries (Libya, Pakistan, Iran, Sudan, Mauritania, and Yemen) inserted Islamic criminal laws into their penal codes, which were otherwise based on Western models. In some countries only hudud penalties were added, while others also enacted provisions for qisas (law of retaliation) and diya (monetary compensation). Iran subsequently issued a new "Islamic Penal Code". The criminal codes of Afghanistan and United Arab Emirates contain a general provision that certain crimes are to be punished according to Islamic law, without specifying the penalties. Some Nigerian states have also enacted Islamic criminal laws. Laws in the Indonesian province of Aceh provide for application of discretionary (ta'zir) punishments for violation of Islamic norms, but explicitly exclude hudud and qisas.[138] Brunei has been implementing a "Sharia Penal Code", which includes provisions for stoning and amputation, in stages since 2014.[139][140] The countries where hudud penalties are legal do not use stoning and amputation routinely, and generally apply other punishments instead.[5][133][141]

Property law edit

Sharia recognizes the concept of haqq.[142] Haqq refers to personal rights of the individual and the right to generate and accumulate wealth. The various ways in which property can be acquired under Sharia are purchase, inheritance, bequest, physical or mental effort, diya and donations.[143] Certain concepts relating to property under Sharia are Mulk, Waqf, Mawat and Motasarruf.[143]

Muslim-minority countries edit

Sharia also plays a role beyond religious rituals and personal ethics in some countries with Muslim minorities. For example, in Israel Sharia-based family laws are administered for the Muslim population by the Ministry of Justice through the Sharia Courts.[144] In India, the Muslim Personal Law (Shariat) Application Act provides for the use of Islamic law for Muslims in several areas, mainly related to family law.[145] In England, the Muslim Arbitration Tribunal makes use of Sharia family law to settle disputes, though this limited adoption of Sharia is controversial.[146][147][148]

Court procedures edit

 
Shariah court in Malacca, Malaysia.

Sharia courts traditionally do not rely on lawyers; plaintiffs and defendants represent themselves. In Saudi Arabia and Qatar, which have preserved traditional procedure in Sharia courts, trials are conducted solely by the judge, and there is no jury system. There is no pre-trial discovery process, and no cross-examination of witnesses. Unlike common law, judges' verdicts do not set binding precedents[149] under the principle of stare decisis,[150] and unlike civil law, Sharia is left to the interpretation in each case and has no formally codified universal statutes.[151]

The rules of evidence in Sharia courts traditionally prioritize oral testimony, and witnesses must be Muslim.[152][153][154][155][156] In criminal cases, women witnesses are unacceptable in stricter, traditional interpretations of Sharia, such as those found in Hanbali jurisprudence, which forms the basis of law in Saudi Arabia.[152]

Criminal cases edit

A confession, an oath, or the oral testimony of Muslim witnesses are the main evidence admissible in traditional sharia courts for hudud crimes, i.e., the religious crimes of adultery, fornication, rape, accusing someone of illicit sex but failing to prove it, apostasy, drinking intoxicants and theft.[157][158][159][160]

According to classical jurisprudence, testimony must be from at least two free Muslim male witnesses, or one Muslim male and two Muslim females, who are not related parties and who are of sound mind and reliable character. Testimony to establish the crime of adultery, fornication or rape must be from four Muslim male witnesses, with some fiqhs allowing substitution of up to three male with six female witnesses; however, at least one must be a Muslim male.[161]

Forensic evidence (i.e., fingerprints, ballistics, blood samples, DNA etc.) and other circumstantial evidence may likewise rejected in hudud cases in favor of eyewitnesses in some modern interpretations. In the case of regulations that were part of local Malaysian legislation that did not go into effect, this could cause severe difficulties for women plaintiffs in rape cases.[162][163] In Pakistan, DNA evidence is rejected in paternity cases on the basis of legislation that favors the presumption of children's legitimacy, while in sexual assault cases DNA evidence is regarded as equivalent to expert opinion and evaluated on a case-by-case basis.[164]

Civil cases edit

Quran 2:282 recommends written financial contracts with reliable witnesses, although there is dispute about equality of female testimony.[156]

Marriage is solemnized as a written financial contract, in the presence of two Muslim male witnesses, and it includes a brideprice (Mahr) payable from a Muslim man to a Muslim woman. The brideprice is considered by a Sharia court as a form of debt. Written contracts were traditionally considered paramount in Sharia courts in the matters of dispute that are debt-related, which includes marriage contracts.[165] Written contracts in debt-related cases, when notarized by a judge, is deemed more reliable.[166]

In commercial and civil contracts, such as those relating to exchange of merchandise, agreement to supply or purchase goods or property, and others, oral contracts and the testimony of Muslim witnesses historically triumphed over written contracts. Islamic jurists traditionally held that written commercial contracts may be forged.[166][167] Timur Kuran states that the treatment of written evidence in religious courts in Islamic regions created an incentive for opaque transactions, and the avoidance of written contracts in economic relations. This led to a continuation of a "largely oral contracting culture" in Muslim-majority nations and communities.[167][168]

In lieu of written evidence, oaths are traditionally accorded much greater weight; rather than being used simply to guarantee the truth of ensuing testimony, they are themselves used as evidence. Plaintiffs lacking other evidence to support their claims may demand that defendants take an oath swearing their innocence, refusal thereof can result in a verdict for the plaintiff.[169] Taking an oath for Muslims can be a grave act; one study of courts in Morocco found that lying litigants would often "maintain their testimony right up to the moment of oath-taking and then to stop, refuse the oath, and surrender the case."[170] Accordingly, defendants are not routinely required to swear before testifying, which would risk casually profaning the Quran should the defendant commit perjury.[170]

Diya edit

In classical jurisprudence monetary compensation for bodily harm (diya or blood money) is assessed differently for different classes of victims. For example, for Muslim women the amount was half that assessed for a Muslim man.[171][172] Diya for the death of a free Muslim man is twice as high as for Jewish and Christian victims according to the Maliki and Hanbali madhhabs and three times as high according to Shafi'i rules.[173] Several legal schools assessed diya for Magians (majus) at one-fifteenth the value of a free Muslim male.[173]

Modern countries which incorporate classical diya rules into their legal system treat them in different ways. The Pakistan Penal Code modernized the Hanafi doctrine by eliminating distinctions between Muslims and non-Muslims.[174] In Iran, diya for non-Muslim victims professing one of the faiths protected under the constitution (Jews, Christians, and Zoroastrians) was made equal to diya for Muslims in 2004,[175] though according to a 2006 US State Department report, the penal code still discriminates against other religious minorities and women.[176] According to Human Rights Watch and the US State Department, in Saudi Arabia Jewish or Christian male plaintiffs are entitled to half the amount a Muslim male would receive, while for all other non-Muslim males the proportion is one-sixteenth.[177][178][179]

Role of fatwas edit

 
Turkish mufti (17th-century Spanish drawing)

The spread of codified state laws and Western-style legal education in the modern Muslim world has displaced traditional muftis from their historical role of clarifying and elaborating the laws applied in courts.[180][181] Instead, fatwas have increasingly served to advise the general public on other aspects of Sharia, particularly questions regarding religious rituals and everyday life.[180][182] Modern fatwas deal with topics as diverse as insurance, sex-change operations, moon exploration and beer drinking.[182] Most Muslim-majority states have established national organizations devoted to issuing fatwas, and these organizations to a considerable extent replaced independent muftis as religious guides for the general population.[183] State-employed muftis generally promote a vision of Islam that is compatible with state law of their country.[93]

Modern public and political fatwas have addressed and sometimes sparked controversies in the Muslim world and beyond.[93] Ayatollah Khomeini's proclamation condemning Salman Rushdie to death for his novel The Satanic Verses is credited with bringing the notion of fatwa to world's attention,[93][182] although some scholars have argued that it did not qualify as one.[note 7] Together with later militant fatwas, it has contributed to the popular misconception of the fatwa as a religious death warrant.[185]

Modern fatwas have been marked by an increased reliance on the process of ijtihad, i.e. deriving legal rulings based on an independent analysis rather than conformity with the opinions of earlier legal authorities (taqlid),[185] and some of them are issued by individuals who do not possess the qualifications traditionally required of a mufti.[93] The most notorious examples are the fatwas of militant extremists.[185] When Osama bin Laden and his associates issued a fatwa in 1998 proclaiming "jihad against Jews and Crusaders", many Islamic jurists, in addition to denouncing its content, stressed that bin Laden was not qualified to either issue a fatwa or proclaim a jihad.[93] New forms of ijtihad have also given rise to fatwas that support such notions as gender equality and banking interest, which are at variance with classical jurisprudence.[185]

In the internet age, a large number of websites provide fatwas in response to queries from around the world, in addition to radio shows and satellite television programs offering call-in fatwas.[93] Erroneous and sometimes bizarre fatwas issued by unqualified or eccentric individuals in recent times have sometimes given rise to complaints about a "chaos" in the modern practice of issuing fatwas.[182] There exists no international Islamic authority to settle differences in interpretation of Islamic law. An International Islamic Fiqh Academy was created by the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, but its legal opinions are not binding.[181] The vast amount of fatwas produced in the modern world attests to the importance of Islamic authenticity to many Muslims. However, there is little research available to indicate to what extent Muslims acknowledge the authority of different muftis or heed their rulings in real life.[185]

Role of hisba edit

The classical doctrine of hisba, associated with the Quranic injunction of enjoining good and forbidding wrong, refers to the duty of Muslims to promote moral rectitude and intervene when another Muslim is acting wrongly.[186][187] Historically, its legal implementation was entrusted to a public official called muhtasib (market inspector), who was charged with preventing fraud, disturbance of public order and infractions against public morality. This office disappeared in the modern era everywhere in the Muslim world, but it was revived in Arabia by the first Saudi state, and later instituted as a government committee responsible for supervising markets and public order. It has been aided by volunteers enforcing attendance of daily prayers, gender segregation in public places, and a conservative notion of hijab.[186] Committee officers were authorized to detain violators before a 2016 reform.[188] With the rising international influence of Wahhabism, the conception of hisba as an individual obligation to police religious observance has become more widespread, which led to the appearance of activists around the world who urge fellow Muslims to observe Islamic rituals, dress code, and other aspects of Sharia.[186]

 
Taliban religious police beating a woman in Kabul on 26 August 2001, as reported by RAWA.[189][190] for opening her burqa (Face).

In Iran, hisba was enshrined in the constitution after the 1979 Revolution as a "universal and reciprocal duty", incumbent upon both the government and the people. Its implementation has been carried out by official committees as well as volunteer forces (basij).[186][191] Elsewhere, policing of various interpretations of Sharia-based public morality has been carried out by the Kano State Hisbah Corps in the Nigerian state of Kano,[192] by Wilayatul Hisbah in the Aceh province of Indonesia,[193] by the Committee for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice in the Gaza Strip, and by the Taliban during their 1996–2001 and 2021– rule of Afghanistan.[186] Religious police organizations tend to have support from conservative currents of public opinion, but their activities are often disliked by other segments of the population, especially liberals, urban women, and younger people.[194]

In Egypt, a law based on the doctrine of hisba had for a time allowed a Muslim to sue another Muslim over beliefs that may harm society, though because of abuses it has been amended so that only the state prosecutor may bring suit based on private requests.[195] Before the amendment was passed, a hisba suit brought by a group of Islamists against the liberal theologian Nasr Abu Zayd on charges of apostasy led to the annulment of his marriage.[196][197] The law was also invoked in an unsuccessful blasphemy suit against the feminist author Nawal El Saadawi.[195] Hisba has also been invoked in several Muslim-majority countries as rationale for blocking pornographic content on the internet and for other forms of faith-based censorship.[198]

Support and opposition edit

Support edit

A 2013 survey based on interviews of 38,000 Muslims, randomly selected from urban and rural parts in 39 countries using area probability designs, by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life found that a majority—in some cases "overwhelming" majority—of Muslims in a number of countries support making "Sharia" or "Islamic law" the law of the land, including Afghanistan (99%), Iraq (91%), Niger (86%), Malaysia (86%), Pakistan (84%), Morocco (83%), Bangladesh (82%), Egypt (74%), Indonesia (72%), Jordan (71%), Uganda (66%), Ethiopia (65%), Mali (63%), Ghana (58%), and Tunisia (56%).[199] In Muslim regions of Southern-Eastern Europe and Central Asia, the support is less than 50%: Russia (42%), Kyrgyzstan (35%), Tajikistan (27%), Kosovo (20%), Albania (12%), Turkey (12%), Kazakhstan (10%), Azerbaijan (8%). Regional averages of support were 84% in South Asia, 77% in Southeast Asia, 74% in the Middle-East/North Africa, 64%, in Sub-Saharan Africa, 18% in Southern-Eastern Europe, and 12% in Central Asia .[199]

However, while most of those who support implementation of Sharia favor using it in family and property disputes, fewer supported application of severe punishments such as whippings and cutting off hands, and interpretations of some aspects differed widely.[199] According to the Pew poll, among Muslims who support making Sharia the law of the land, most do not believe that it should be applied to non-Muslims. In the Muslim-majority countries surveyed this proportion varied between 74% (of 74% in Egypt) and 19% (of 10% in Kazakhstan), as percentage of those who favored making Sharia the law of the land.[200]

In all of the countries surveyed, respondents were more likely to define Sharia as "the revealed word of God" rather than as "a body of law developed by men based on the word of God".[201] In analyzing the poll, Amaney Jamal has argued that there is no single, shared understanding of the notions "Sharia" and "Islamic law" among the respondents. In particular, in countries where Muslim citizens have little experience with rigid application of Sharia-based state laws, these notions tend to be more associated with Islamic ideals like equality and social justice than with prohibitions.[202] Other polls have indicated that for Egyptians, the word "Sharia" is associated with notions of political, social and gender justice.[203]

In 2008, Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, has suggested that Islamic and Orthodox Jewish courts should be integrated into the British legal system alongside ecclesiastical courts to handle marriage and divorce, subject to agreement of all parties and strict requirements for protection of equal rights for women.[204] His reference to the sharia sparked a controversy.[204] Later that year, Nicholas Phillips, then Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, stated that there was "no reason why sharia principles [...] should not be the basis for mediation or other forms of alternative dispute resolution."[205] A 2008 YouGov poll in the United Kingdom found 40% of Muslim students interviewed supported the introduction of sharia into British law for Muslims.[206] Michael Broyde, professor of law at Emory University specializing in alternative dispute resolution and Jewish law,[207] has argued that sharia courts can be integrated into the American religious arbitration system, provided that they adopt appropriate institutional requirements as American rabbinical courts have done.[208]

Opposition edit

 
Protest against Sharia in the United Kingdom (2014)

In the Western world, Sharia has been called a source of "hysteria",[209] "more controversial than ever", the one aspect of Islam that inspires "particular dread".[210] On the Internet, "dozens of self-styled counter-jihadis" emerged to campaign against Sharia law, describing it in strict interpretations resembling those of Salafi Muslims.[210] Also, fear of Sharia law and of the ideology of extremism among Muslims as well as certain congregations donating money to terrorist organizations within the Muslim community reportedly spread to mainstream conservative Republicans in the United States.[211] Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich won ovations calling for a federal ban on Sharia law.[211] The issue of "liberty versus Sharia" was called a "momentous civilisational debate" by right-wing pundit Diana West.[212] In 2008 in Britain, the future Prime Minister (David Cameron) declared his opposition to "any expansion of Sharia law in the UK."[213] In Germany, in 2014, the Interior Minister (Thomas de Maizière) told a newspaper (Bild), "Sharia law is not tolerated on German soil."[214]

Some countries and jurisdictions have explicit bans on sharia law. In Canada, for example, sharia law has been explicitly banned in Quebec by a 2005 unanimous vote of the National Assembly,[215] while the province of Ontario allows family law disputes to be arbitrated only under Ontario law.[216] In the U.S., opponents of Sharia have sought to ban it from being considered in courts, where it has been routinely used alongside traditional Jewish and Catholic laws to decide legal, business, and family disputes subject to contracts drafted with reference to such laws, as long as they do not violate secular law or the U.S. constitution.[217] After failing to gather support for a federal law making observing Sharia a felony punishable by up to 20 years in prison, anti-Sharia activists have focused on state legislatures.[217] By 2014, bills aimed against use of Sharia have been introduced in 34 states and passed in 11.[217] A notable example of this would be 2010 Oklahoma State Question 755, which sought to permanently ban the use of Sharia law in courts. While approved by voters, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals placed an injunction on the law. Citing the unconstitutionality of the law's impartial focus on a specific religion, the law was struck down and never took effect.[218] These bills have generally referred to banning foreign or religious law in order to thwart legal challenges.[217]

According to Jan Michiel Otto, Professor of Law and Governance in Developing Countries at Leiden University, "[a]nthropological research shows that people in local communities often do not distinguish clearly whether and to what extent their norms and practices are based on local tradition, tribal custom, or religion. Those who adhere to a confrontational view of Sharia tend to ascribe many undesirable practices to Sharia and religion overlooking custom and culture, even if high-ranking religious authorities have stated the opposite."[219]

Contemporary debates and controversies edit

Compatibility with democracy edit

It has been argued that the extent to which Sharia is compatible with democracy depends on how it is culturally interpreted,[220] with a cultural position that Sharia represents the human attempt to interpret God's message associated with a greater preference for democracy than an Islamist interpretation that Sharia law is the literal word of God.[220]

General Muslim views edit

Scholars John L. Esposito and DeLong-Bas distinguish four attitudes toward Sharia and democracy prominent among contemporary Muslims:[221]

  • Advocacy of democratic ideas, often accompanied by a belief that they are compatible with Islam, which can play a public role within a democratic system, as exemplified by many protestors who took part in the Arab Spring uprisings;
  • Support for democratic procedures such as elections, combined with religious or moral objections toward some aspects of Western democracy seen as incompatible with sharia, as exemplified by Islamic scholars like Yusuf al-Qaradawi;
  • Rejection of democracy as a Western import and advocacy of traditional Islamic institutions, such as shura (consultation) and ijma (consensus), as exemplified by supporters of absolute monarchy and radical Islamist movements;
  • Belief that democracy requires restricting religion to private life, held by a minority in the Muslim world.

According to Polls conducted by Gallup and PEW in Muslim-majority countries; most Muslims see no contradiction between democratic values and religious principles, desiring neither a theocracy, nor a secular democracy, but rather a political model where democratic institutions and values can coexist with the values and principles of Sharia.[222][223][224]

Islamic political theories edit

Muslih and Browers identify three major perspectives on democracy among prominent Muslims thinkers who have sought to develop modern, distinctly Islamic theories of socio-political organization conforming to Islamic values and law:[225]

  • The rejectionist Islamic view, elaborated by Sayyid Qutb and Abul A'la Maududi, condemns imitation of foreign ideas, drawing a distinction between Western democracy and the Islamic doctrine of shura (consultation between ruler and ruled). This perspective, which stresses comprehensive implementation of Sharia, was widespread in the 1970s and 1980s among various movements seeking to establish an Islamic state, but its popularity has diminished in recent years.
  • The moderate Islamic view stresses the concepts of maslaha (public interest), ʿadl (justice), and shura. Islamic leaders are considered to uphold justice if they promote public interest, as defined through shura. In this view, shura provides the basis for representative government institutions that are similar to Western democracy, but reflect Islamic rather than Western liberal values. Hasan al-Turabi, Rashid al-Ghannushi, and Yusuf al-Qaradawi have advocated different forms of this view.
  • The liberal Islamic view is influenced by Muhammad Abduh's emphasis on the role of reason in understanding religion. It stresses democratic principles based on pluralism and freedom of thought. Authors like Fahmi Huwaidi and Tariq al-Bishri have constructed Islamic justifications for full citizenship of non-Muslims in an Islamic state by drawing on early Islamic texts. Others, like Mohammed Arkoun and Nasr Hamid Abu Zayd, have justified pluralism and freedom through non-literalist approaches to textual interpretation. Abdolkarim Soroush has argued for a "religious democracy" based on religious thought that is democratic, tolerant, and just. Islamic liberals argue for the necessity of constant reexamination of religious understanding, which can only be done in a democratic context.

European Court of Human Rights edit

In 1998 the Constitutional Court of Turkey banned and dissolved Turkey's Refah Party over its announced intention to introduce Sharia-based laws, ruling that it would change Turkey's secular order and undermine democracy.[226] On appeal by Refah the European Court of Human Rights determined that "sharia is incompatible with the fundamental principles of democracy".[227][228][229] Refah's Sharia-based notion of a "plurality of legal systems, grounded on religion" was ruled to contravene the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms. It was determined that it would "do away with the State's role as the guarantor of individual rights and freedoms" and "infringe the principle of non-discrimination between individuals as regards their enjoyment of public freedoms, which is one of the fundamental principles of democracy".[230] In an analysis, Maurits S. Berger found the ruling to be "nebulous" and surprising from a legal point of view, since the Court neglected to define what it meant by "Sharia" and would not, for example, be expected to regard Sharia rules for Islamic rituals as contravening European human rights values.[231] Kevin Boyle also criticized the decision for not distinguishing between extremist and mainstream interpretations of Islam and implying that peaceful advocacy of Islamic doctrines ("an attitude which fails to respect [the principle of secularism]") is not protected by the European Convention provisions for freedom of religion.[232]

Compatibility with human rights edit

Governments of several predominantly Muslim countries have criticized the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) for its perceived failure to take into account the cultural and religious context of non-Western countries. Iran declared in the UN assembly that UDHR was "a secular understanding of the Judeo-Christian tradition", which could not be implemented by Muslims without trespassing the Islamic law.[233] Islamic scholars and Islamist political parties consider 'universal human rights' arguments as imposition of a non-Muslim culture on Muslim people, a disrespect of customary cultural practices and of Islam.[234][235] In 1990, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, a group representing all Muslim-majority nations, met in Cairo to respond to the UDHR, then adopted the Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam.[236][237]

Ann Elizabeth Mayer points to notable absences from the Cairo Declaration: provisions for democratic principles, protection for religious freedom, freedom of association and freedom of the press, as well as equality in rights and equal protection under the law. Article 24 of the Cairo declaration states that "all the rights and freedoms stipulated in this Declaration are subject to the Islamic shari'a".[238]

In 2009, the journal Free Inquiry summarized the criticism of the Cairo Declaration in an editorial: "We are deeply concerned with the changes to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights by a coalition of Islamic states within the United Nations that wishes to prohibit any criticism of religion and would thus protect Islam's limited view of human rights. In view of the conditions inside the Islamic Republic of Iran, Egypt, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, the Sudan, Syria, Bangladesh, Iraq, and Afghanistan, we should expect that at the top of their human rights agenda would be to rectify the legal inequality of women, the suppression of political dissent, the curtailment of free expression, the persecution of ethnic minorities and religious dissenters—in short, protecting their citizens from egregious human rights violations. Instead, they are worrying about protecting Islam."[239]

H. Patrick Glenn states that Sharia is structured around the concept of mutual obligations of a collective, and it considers individual human rights as potentially disruptive and unnecessary to its revealed code of mutual obligations. In giving priority to this religious collective rather than individual liberty, the Islamic law justifies the formal inequality of individuals (women, non-Islamic people).[240] Bassam Tibi states that Sharia framework and human rights are incompatible.[241] Abdel al-Hakeem Carney, in contrast, states that Sharia is misunderstood from a failure to distinguish Sharia from siyasah (politics).[242]

Blasphemy edit

 
Blasphemy laws worldwide:
  Subnational restrictions
  Fines and restrictions
  Prison sentences
  Death sentences

In classical fiqh, blasphemy refers to any form of cursing, questioning or annoying God, Muhammad or anything considered sacred in Islam,[243][244][245][246] including denying one of the Islamic prophets or scriptures, insulting an angel or refusing to accept a religious commandment.[247] Jurists of different schools prescribed different punishment for blasphemy against Islam, by Muslims and non-Muslims, ranging from imprisonment or fines to the death penalty.[243][248][249][250] In some cases, sharia allows non-Muslims to escape death by converting and becoming a devout follower of Islam.[251] In the modern Muslim world, the laws pertaining to blasphemy vary by country, and some countries prescribe punishments consisting of fines, imprisonment, flogging, hanging, or beheading.[252]

Blasphemy laws were rarely enforced in pre-modern Islamic societies, but in the modern era some states and radical groups have used charges of blasphemy in an effort to burnish their religious credentials and gain popular support at the expense of liberal Muslim intellectuals and religious minorities.[253]

Blasphemy, as interpreted under Sharia, is controversial.[254] Representatives of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation have petitioned the United Nations to condemn "defamation of religions" because "Unrestricted and disrespectful freedom of opinion creates hatred and is contrary to the spirit of peaceful dialogue".[255] The Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam subjects free speech to unspecified Sharia restrictions: Article 22(a) of the Declaration states that "Everyone shall have the right to express his opinion freely in such manner as would not be contrary to the principles of the Shariah."[256] Others, in contrast, consider blasphemy laws to violate freedom of speech,[257] stating that freedom of expression is essential to empowering both Muslims and non-Muslims, and point to the abuse of blasphemy laws in prosecuting members of religious minorities, political opponents, and settling personal scores.[258][259][260] In Pakistan, blasphemy laws have been used to convict more than a thousand people, about half of them Ahmadis and Christians.[261][260] While none have been legally executed,[261] two Pakistani politicians, Shahbaz Bhatti and Salmaan Taseer, have been assassinated over their criticism of the blasphemy laws. The Pakistani blasphemy laws are based upon colonial-era legislation which made it a "crime to disturb a religious assembly, trespass on burial grounds, insult religious beliefs or intentionally destroy or defile a place or an object of worship", with these laws being modified between 1980 and 1986 by the military government of General Zia-ul Haq to make them more severe. A number of clauses were added by the government in order to "Islamicise" the laws and deny the Muslim character of the Ahmadi minority.[260]

Apostasy edit

 
Countries that criminalize apostasy from Islam as of 2020. Some Muslim-majority countries impose the death penalty or a prison sentence for apostasy from Islam, or ban non-Muslims from proselytizing .[262]
 
Execution of a Moroccan woman (Sol Hachuel) on the grounds of leaving Islam (apostasy) painting by Alfred Dehodencq

According to the classical doctrine, apostasy from Islam is a crime as well as a sin, punishable with the death penalty,[263][264] typically after a waiting period to allow the apostate time to repent and to return to Islam.[263][265][266][267] Wael Hallaq writes that "[in] a culture whose lynchpin is religion, religious principles and religious morality, apostasy is in some way equivalent to high treason in the modern nation-state".[268] Early Islamic jurists set the standard for apostasy from Islam so high that practically no apostasy verdict could be passed before the 11th century,[269] but later jurists lowered the bar for applying the death penalty, allowing judges to interpret the apostasy law in different ways,[269] which they did sometimes leniently and sometimes strictly.[270] In the late 19th century, the use of criminal penalties for apostasy fell into disuse, although civil penalties were still applied.[263]

According to Abdul Rashied Omar, the majority of modern Islamic jurists continue to regard apostasy as a crime deserving the death penalty.[265] This view is dominant in conservative societies like Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. A number of liberal and progressive Islamic scholars have argued that apostasy should not be viewed as a crime.[271][272][263][273] Others argue that the death penalty is an inappropriate punishment,[274][275] inconsistent with the Qur'anic verses such as "no compulsion in religion";[271] and/or that it was a man-made rule enacted in the early Islamic community to prevent and punish the equivalent of desertion or treason,[276] and should be enforced only if apostasy becomes a mechanism of public disobedience and disorder (fitna).[277] According to Khaled Abou El Fadl, moderate Muslims do not believe that apostasy requires punishment.[278] The death penalty[279][280] or other punishment for apostasy in Islam is a violation of universal human rights, and an issue of freedom of faith and conscience.[274][281]

Twenty-three Muslim-majority countries, as of 2013, penalized apostasy from Islam through their criminal laws.[282] As of 2014, apostasy from Islam was a capital offense in Afghanistan, Brunei, Mauritania, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, the United Arab Emirates, and Yemen.[283][284] In other countries, Sharia courts could use family laws to void the Muslim apostate's marriage and to deny child-custody rights as well as inheritance rights.[285] In the years 1985–2006, four individuals were legally executed for apostasy from Islam: "one in Sudan in 1985; two in Iran, in 1989 and 1998; and one in Saudi Arabia in 1992."[271] While modern states have rarely prosecuted apostasy, the issue has a "deep cultural resonance" in some Muslim societies and Islamists have tended to exploit it for political gain.[271] In a 2008–2012 Pew Research Center poll, public support for capital punishment for apostasy among Muslims ranged from 78% in Afghanistan to less than 1% in Kazakhstan, reaching over 50% in 6 of the 20 countries surveyed.

LGBT rights edit

 
Same-sex intercourse illegal:
  Death penalty on books but not applied
  Up to life in prison
  Imprisonment
  Prison on books but not enforced

Homosexual intercourse is illegal in classical Sharia, with different penalties, including capital punishment, stipulated depending on the situation and legal school. In pre-modern Islam, the penalties prescribed for homosexual acts were "to a large extent theoretical" according to the Encyclopaedia of Islam, owing in part to stringent procedural requirements for their harsher (hudud) forms and in part to prevailing social tolerance toward same-sex relationships.[286] Historical instances of prosecution for homosexual acts are rare, and those which followed Sharia rules are even rarer.[287] Public attitudes toward homosexuality in the Muslim world turned more negative starting from the 19th century through the gradual spread of Islamic fundamentalist movements such as Salafism and Wahhabism,[288][289][290] and under the influence of sexual notions prevalent in Europe at that time.[291][292] A number of Muslim-majority countries have retained criminal penalties for homosexual acts enacted under colonial rule.[293][294] In recent decades, prejudice against LGBT individuals in the Muslim world has been exacerbated by increasingly conservative attitudes and the rise of Islamist movements, resulting in Sharia-based penalties enacted in several countries.[294] The death penalty for homosexual acts is currently a legal punishment in Brunei, Iran, Mauritania, some northern states in Nigeria, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, parts of Somalia, and Yemen, all of which have Sharia-based criminal laws. It is unclear whether the laws of Afghanistan and United Arab Emirates provide for the death penalty for gay sex, as they have never been carried out.[295][296] Criminalization of consensual homosexual acts and especially making them liable to capital punishment has been condemned by international rights groups. According to polls, the level of social acceptance for homosexuality ranges from 52% among Muslims in the U.S. to less than 10% in a number of Muslim-majority nations.

Women edit

Personal status and child marriage edit

Shari'a is the basis for personal status laws in most Islamic-majority nations. These personal status laws determine rights of women in matters of marriage, divorce and child custody. A 2011 UNICEF report concludes that Sharia law provisions are discriminatory against women from a human rights perspective. In many countries, in legal proceedings relating to Sharia-based personal status law, in certain cases a woman's testimony is worth half of a man's before a court.[155]

The 1917 codification of Islamic family law in the Ottoman empire distinguished between the age of competence for marriage, which was set at 18 for boys and 17 for girls, and the minimum age for marriage, which followed the traditional Hanafi limits of 12 for boys and 9 for girls. Marriage below the age of competence was permissible only if proof of sexual maturity was accepted in court, while marriage under the minimum age was forbidden. During the 20th century, most countries in the Middle East followed the Ottoman precedent in defining the age of competence, while raising the minimum age to 15 or 16 for boys and 13–16 for girls. Marriage below the age of competence is subject to approval by a judge and the legal guardian of the adolescent. Egypt diverged from this pattern by setting the age limits of 18 for boys and 16 for girls, without a distinction between competence for marriage and minimum age.[297]

Property rights edit

Islamic law granted Muslim women certain legal rights, such as property rights which women in the West did not possess until "comparatively recent times".[298][299][300] Starting with the 20th century, Western legal systems evolved to expand women's rights, but women's rights in the Muslim world have to varying degree remained tied to the Quran, hadiths and their traditional interpretations by Islamic jurists.[301][302] Sharia grants women the right to inherit property from other family members, and these rights are detailed in the Quran.[303] A woman's inheritance can be unequal is she inherits from her father as a daughter's inheritance is usually half of that of her brother's.[Quran 4:11][304]

Domestic violence edit

Jonathan A.C. Brown says:

The vast majority of the ulama across the Sunni schools of law inherited the Prophet's unease over domestic violence and placed further restrictions on the evident meaning of the 'Wife Beating Verse'. A leading Meccan scholar from the second generation of Muslims, Ata' bin Abi Rabah, counseled a husband not to beat his wife even if she ignored him but rather to express his anger in some other way. Darimi, a teacher of both Tirmidhi and Muslim bin Hajjaj as well as a leading early scholar in Iran, collected all the Hadiths showing Muhammad's disapproval of beating in a chapter entitled 'The Prohibition on Striking Women'. A thirteenth-century scholar from Granada, Ibn Faras, notes that one camp of ulama had staked out a stance forbidding striking a wife altogether, declaring it contrary to the Prophet's example and denying the authenticity of any Hadiths that seemed to permit beating. Even Ibn Hajar, the pillar of late medieval Sunni Hadith scholarship, concludes that, contrary to what seems to be an explicit command in the Qur'an, the Hadiths of the Prophet leave no doubt that striking one's wife to discipline her actually falls under the Shariah ruling of 'strongly disliked' or 'disliked verging on prohibited'.[305]

The Surah 4:34, in the Quran, has been debated for domestic violence and also has been the subject to varied interpretations.[306][307] According to some interpretations, Sharia condones certain forms of domestic violence against women, when a husband suspects nushuz (disobedience, disloyalty, rebellion, ill conduct) in his wife only after admonishing and staying away from the bed does not work.[308] These interpretations have been criticized as inconsistent with women's rights in domestic abuse cases.[309][310][311][312] Musawah, CEDAW, KAFA and other organizations have proposed ways to modify Sharia-inspired laws to improve women's rights in Muslim-majority nations, including women's rights in domestic abuse cases.[313][314][315][316]

Others believe that wife-beating is not consistent with a more modernist perspective of the Quran.[317] Many Imams and scholars who learned Shariah in traditional Islamic seminaries object to the misuse of this verse to justify domestic violence. Muslims for White Ribbon Campaign was launched in 2010 with Imams and Muslim leaders committing to join with others to work to end violence against women.[318] Khutbah campaigns were held in many parts of the world to speak out against domestic violence and encourage Muslim congregants to eradicate domestic abuse.[319][320][321]

Rape edit

Rape is considered a serious crime in the Sharia law since the Islamic prophet Muhammad ordered rapists to be punished by stoning.[322] while in countries like, Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates, rape victims who press charges can risk being prosecuted for extramarital sex (zina) if the rape can not be proven.[155][323][324]

Slavery edit

 
13th century slave market, Yemen. Slaves and concubines are considered as possessions in Sharia; they can be bought, sold, rented, gifted, shared, and inherited when owners die.

Sharia recognizes the basic inequality between master and slave, between free women and slave women, between believers and non-believers, as well as their unequal rights.[325][326] Sharia authorized the institution of slavery, using the words abd (slave) and the phrase ma malakat aymanukum ("that which your right hand owns") to refer to women slaves, seized as captives of war.[325][327] Under Islamic law, Muslim men could have sexual relations with female captives and slaves.[328][301] Slave women under sharia did not have a right to own property or to move freely.[329][330] Sharia, in Islam's history, provided a religious foundation for enslaving non-Muslim women (and men), but allowed for the manumission of slaves. However, manumission required that the non-Muslim slave first convert to Islam.[331][332] A slave woman who bore a child to her Muslim master (umm al-walad) could not be sold, becoming legally free upon her master's death, and the child was considered free and a legitimate heir of the father.[333][334]

Terrorism edit

 
Al-Qaeda ideologues have used their interpretation of sharia to justify terrorist attacks

Some extremists have used their interpretation of Islamic scriptures and Sharia, in particular the doctrine of jihad, to justify acts of war and terror against Muslim as well as non-Muslim individuals and governments.[335][336][337] The expert on terrorism Rachel Ehrenfeld wrote that the "Sharia's finance (Islamic banking) is a new weapon in the arsenal of what might be termed fifth-generation warfare (5GW)".[338] However, sharia-complaint financing actually requires a person to stay away from weapons manufacturing.[339][340][341]

In classical fiqh, the term jihad refers to armed struggle against oppressors.[342][343] Classical jurists developed an elaborate set of rules pertaining to jihad, including prohibitions on harming those who are not engaged in combat.[344][345] According to Bernard Lewis, "[a]t no time did the classical jurists offer any approval or legitimacy to what we nowadays call terrorism"[346] and the terrorist practice of suicide bombing "has no justification in terms of Islamic theology, law or tradition".[347] In the modern era the notion of jihad has lost its jurisprudential relevance and instead gave rise to an ideological and political discourse.[348] While modernist Islamic scholars have emphasized defensive and non-military aspects of jihad, some radicals have advanced aggressive interpretations that go beyond the classical theory.[348] For al-Qaeda ideologues, in jihad all means are legitimate, including targeting Muslim non-combatants and the mass killing of non-Muslim civilians.[335]

Some modern ulema, such as Yusuf al-Qaradawi and Sulaiman Al-Alwan, have supported attacks against Israeli army reservists and hence should be considered as soldiers, while Hamid bin Abdallah al-Ali declared that suicide attacks in Chechnya were justified as a "sacrifice".[335][349] Many prominent Islamic scholars, including al-Qaradawi himself, have issued condemnations of terrorism in general terms.[350] For example, Abdul-Aziz ibn Abdullah Al ash-Sheikh, the Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia has stated that "terrorizing innocent people [...] constitute[s] a form of injustice that cannot be tolerated by Islam", while Muhammad Sayyid Tantawy, Grand Imam of al-Azhar and former Grand Mufti of Egypt has stated that "attacking innocent people is not courageous; it is stupid and will be punished on the Day of Judgment".[335][351]

Comparison with other legal systems edit

Jewish law edit

Islamic legal tradition has a number of parallels with Judaism. In both religions, revealed law holds a central place, in contrast to Christianity which does not possess a body of revealed law, and where theology rather than law is considered to be the principal field of religious study. [3][352] Both Islamic and Jewish law (Halakha) are derived from formal textual revelations (Quran and Pentateuch) as well as less formal, orally transmitted prophetic traditions (hadith and mishna). According to some scholars, the words sharia and halakha both mean literally "the path to follow". The fiqh literature parallels rabbinical law developed in the Talmud, with fatwas being analogous to rabbinic responsa.[353][183]

However, the emphasis on qiyas in classical Sunni legal theory is both more explicitly permissive than Talmudic law with respect to authorizing individual reason as a source of law, and more implicitly restrictive, in excluding other, unauthorized forms of reasoning.[353]

Western legal systems edit

Early Islamic law developed a number of legal concepts that anticipated similar such concepts that later appeared in English common law.[354][355] Similarities exist between the royal English contract protected by the action of debt and the Islamic Aqd, between the English assize of novel disseisin and the Islamic Istihqaq, and between the English jury and the Islamic Lafif in classical Maliki jurisprudence.[354][356] The law schools known as Inns of Court also parallel Madrasahs.[354] The methodology of legal precedent and reasoning by analogy (Qiyas) are also similar in both the Islamic and common law systems,[357] as are the English trust and agency institutions to the Islamic Waqf and Hawala institutions, respectively.[358][359][355]

Elements of Islamic law also have other parallels in Western legal systems. For example, the influence of Islam on the development of an international law of the sea can be discerned alongside that of the Roman influence.[360]

George Makdisi has argued that the madrasa system of attestation paralleled the legal scholastic system in the West, which gave rise to the modern university system. The triple status of faqih ("master of law"), mufti ("professor of legal opinions") and mudarris ("teacher"), conferred by the classical Islamic legal degree, had its equivalents in the medieval Latin terms magister, professor and doctor, respectively, although they all came to be used synonymously in both East and West.[361] Makdisi suggested that the medieval European doctorate, licentia docendi was modeled on the Islamic degree ijazat al-tadris wa-l-ifta’, of which it is a word-for-word translation, with the term ifta’ (issuing of fatwas) omitted.[361][362] He also argued that these systems shared fundamental freedoms: the freedom of a professor to profess his personal opinion and the freedom of a student to pass judgement on what he is learning.[361]

There are differences between Islamic and Western legal systems. For example, Sharia classically recognizes only natural persons, and never developed the concept of a legal person, or corporation, i.e., a legal entity that limits the liabilities of its managers, shareholders, and employees; exists beyond the lifetimes of its founders; and that can own assets, sign contracts, and appear in court through representatives.[363] Interest prohibitions imposed secondary costs by discouraging record keeping and delaying the introduction of modern accounting.[364] Such factors, according to Timur Kuran, have played a significant role in retarding economic development in the Middle East.[365] However, the rise of monopoly wealth and corporations have proven to also be detrimental to the economic equality of a society. Ziauddin Sardar also suggests that the promotion of equitable wealth distribution and suppression of monopoly capital are a part of Islam's message that emphasises genuine equity and justice.[366]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Twelver Shia jurisprudence does not recognize the use of qiyas, but relies on reason (ʿaql) in their place. [12] [13]
  2. ^ "...the essential features of old Muhammadan jurisprudence, such as the idea of the 'living tradition' of the ancient schools of law [local practices of early Muslim communities]; a body of common doctrine expressing the earliest effort to systematize; legal maxims which often reflect a slightly later stage, and an important nucleus of legal traditions... it is safe to say that [this] Muhammadan legal science started in the later part of the Umaiyad period, taking the legal practice of the time as its raw material and endorsing, modifying, or rejecting it"[43]
  3. ^ Islamic "law did not derive directly from the Koran but developed... out of popular and administrative practices under the Umayyads, and this practice often diverged from the intentions and even the explicit wording of the Koran... Norms derived from the Koran were introduced into Muhammadan law almost invariably at a secondary stage"[44]
  4. ^ "In the time of Shafi’i, traditions from the Prophet were already recognized as one of the material bases of Muhammadan law. Their position in the ancient schools of law was, as we have seen, much less certain."[45] Another example is that an early major works of fiqh—Muwatta Imam Malik (edited by Shaibani)—contains 429 ahadith by Muhammad but 750 by the Companions, Successors and others,[46] in contrast to later works by al-Bukhari, Muslim, etc. that contain only ahadith by Muhammad.
  5. ^ "...a great many traditions in the classical and other collections were put into circulation only after Shafi'i's time; the first considerable body of legal traditions from the Prophet originated towards the middle of the second century..."[48]
  6. ^ "What theology is for the Christian, law is for the Muslim."[85] referenced in [86]
  7. ^ Khomeini himself did not call this proclamation a fatwa, and in Islamic legal theory only a court can decide whether an accused is guilty. However, after the proclamation was presented as a fatwa in Western press, this characterization was widely accepted by both its critics and its supporters.[180][184]

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sharia, islamic, redirects, here, other, uses, islamic, disambiguation, confused, with, saria, shara, shariyah, shahriyar, arabic, ريع, romanized, sharīʿa, ʃaˈriːʕa, body, religious, that, forms, part, islamic, tradition, derived, from, religious, precepts, is. Islamic law redirects here For other uses see Islamic law disambiguation Not to be confused with Saria Shara Shariyah or Shahriyar Sharia ʃ e ˈ r iː e Arabic ش ريع ة romanized shariʿa ʃaˈriːʕa is a body of religious law that forms a part of the Islamic tradition 1 2 3 It is derived from the religious precepts of Islam and is based on scriptures of Islam particularly the Quran and the Hadith 1 In Arabic the term shariʿah refers to God s immutable divine law and is contrasted with fiqh which refers to its human scholarly interpretations 4 5 6 Over time legal schools have emerged reflecting the preferences of particular societies and governments as well as islamic scholars or imams through their work on the theoretical usul and practical application furu Fatwa of laws and regulations However sharia has never been the sole valid legal system in Islam and has always been used alongside urf customary law from the beginning 7 8 Although sharia is presented as a form of government 9 in addition to its other aspects especially by the contemporary Islamist understanding some researchers see the early history of Islam which was also modelled and exalted by most Muslims not a period when the understanding of sharia was dominant but a kind of secular Arabic expansion 10 11 An unhappy wife complains to the kadi about her husband s impotence 18th century Ottoman miniature Traditional theory of Islamic jurisprudence recognizes four sources of Sharia the Quran sunnah authentic hadith ijma juridical consensus and qiyas analogical reasoning note 1 14 Five Sunni Madhhab legal school of Sunni Islam Hanafi Maliki Shafiʽi Hanbali and Zahiri developed Sunni methodologies for deriving Sharia rulings from scriptural sources using a process known as ijtihad 4 5 Traditional jurisprudence fiqh distinguishes two principal branches of law ʿibadat rituals and muʿamalat social relations which together comprise a wide range of topics 4 6 Its rulings are concerned with ethical standards as much as with legal norms 15 16 assigning actions to one of five categories mandatory recommended neutral abhorred and prohibited 4 5 6 Fiqh was elaborated over the centuries by legal opinions fatwas issued by qualified jurists muftis and historically applied in Sharia courts by ruler appointed judges 4 6 complemented by various economic criminal and administrative laws issued by Muslim rulers 17 In the 21st century the role of Sharia has become an increasingly contested topic around the world 5 The manner of its application in modern times has been a subject of dispute between Muslim fundamentalists and modernists 2 18 There are progressives who argue that Sharia is compatible with democracy human rights minority rights freedom of thought women s rights and banking 19 20 21 According to human rights groups some of the classical sharia practices involve serious violations of basic human rights gender equality and freedom of expression and the practices of countries governed by sharia are criticized Against this the concept of human rights can be categorically excluded by the governments of countries such as Iran and Saudi Arabia on the grounds that it belongs to secular and western values 22 and the Cairo conference on the subject by the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation declares that human rights can only be respected if they are compatible with Islam 23 The European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg ECtHR ruled in several cases that Sharia is incompatible with the fundamental principles of democracy 24 25 In Muslim countries in the modern era traditional laws have been widely used with European models 5 26 Judicial procedures and legal education have likewise been brought in line with European practice 5 While the constitutions of most Muslim majority states contain references to Sharia its rules are largely retained only in family law 5 The Islamic revival of the late 20th century brought calls by Islamic movements for full implementation of Sharia including hudud corporal punishments such as stoning 5 27 Contents 1 Etymology and usage 1 1 Contemporary usage 1 2 Etymology 1 3 Use in religious texts 2 Historical origins 3 Traditional jurisprudence fiqh 3 1 Principles of jurisprudence uṣul al fiqh 3 1 1 Sources of Sharia 3 1 2 Ijtihad 3 1 3 Decision types aḥkam 3 2 Aims of Sharia and public interest 3 3 Branches of law furuʿ al fiqh 3 4 Schools of law 4 Pre modern Islamic legal system 4 1 Jurists 4 2 Courts 4 3 Socio political context 4 4 Women non Muslims slaves 5 Modern legal reforms 5 1 Under colonial rule 5 2 Ottoman Empire 5 3 Nation states 5 4 Islamization 6 Contemporary applications 6 1 Muslim majority countries 6 1 1 Constitutional law 6 1 2 Family law 6 1 3 Criminal law 6 1 4 Property law 6 2 Muslim minority countries 6 3 Court procedures 6 3 1 Criminal cases 6 3 2 Civil cases 6 3 3 Diya 6 4 Role of fatwas 6 5 Role of hisba 7 Support and opposition 7 1 Support 7 2 Opposition 8 Contemporary debates and controversies 8 1 Compatibility with democracy 8 1 1 General Muslim views 8 1 2 Islamic political theories 8 1 3 European Court of Human Rights 8 2 Compatibility with human rights 8 2 1 Blasphemy 8 2 2 Apostasy 8 2 3 LGBT rights 8 2 4 Women 8 2 4 1 Personal status and child marriage 8 2 4 2 Property rights 8 2 4 3 Domestic violence 8 2 4 4 Rape 8 2 5 Slavery 8 2 6 Terrorism 9 Comparison with other legal systems 9 1 Jewish law 9 2 Western legal systems 10 See also 11 Notes 12 Citations 13 Sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksEtymology and usage editContemporary usage edit The word shariʿah is used by Arabic speaking peoples of the Middle East to designate a prophetic religion in its totality 28 For example shariʿat Musa means law or religion of Moses and shariʿatu na can mean our religion in reference to any monotheistic faith 28 Within Islamic discourse sariʿah refers to religious regulations governing the lives of Muslims 28 For many Muslims the word means simply justice and they will consider any law that promotes justice and social welfare to conform to Sharia 5 Jan Michiel Otto distinguishes four senses conveyed by the term sharia in religious legal and political discourse 29 Divine abstract sharia God s plan for mankind and the norms of behavior which should guide the Islamic community Muslims of different perspectives agree in their respect for the abstract notion of sharia but they differ in how they understand the practical implications of the term Classical sharia the body of rules and principles elaborated by Islamic jurists during the first centuries of Islam Historical sharia s the body of rules and interpretations developed throughout Islamic history ranging from personal beliefs to state legislation and varying across an ideological spectrum Classical sharia has often served as a point of reference for these variants but they have also reflected the influences of their time and place Contemporary sharia s the full spectrum of rules and interpretations that are developed and practiced at present A related term al qanun al islami القانون الإسلامي Islamic law which was borrowed from European usage in the late 19th century is used in the Muslim world to refer to a legal system in the context of a modern state 30 Etymology edit The primary range of meanings of the Arabic word sariʿah derived from the root s r ʕ is related to religion and religious law 28 The lexicographical tradition records two major areas of use where the word sariʿah can appear without religious connotation 31 In texts evoking a pastoral or nomadic environment the word and its derivatives refer to watering animals at a permanent water hole or to the seashore with special reference to animals who come there 31 Another area of use relates to notions of stretched or lengthy 31 This range of meanings is cognate with the Hebrew saraʿ clarification needed and is likely to be the origin of the meaning way or path 31 Both these areas have been claimed to have given rise to aspects of the religious meaning 31 Some scholars describe the word sariʿah as an archaic Arabic word denoting pathway to be followed analogous to the Hebrew term Halakhah The Way to Go 32 or path to the water hole 33 34 and argue that its adoption as a metaphor for a divinely ordained way of life arises from the importance of water in an arid desert environment 34 Use in religious texts edit In the Quran sariʿah and its cognate sirʿah occur once each with the meaning way or path 28 The word sariʿah was widely used by Arabic speaking Jews during the Middle Ages being the most common translation for the word torah in the 10th century Arabic translation of the Torah by Saʿadya Gaon 28 A similar use of the term can be found in Christian writers 28 The Arabic expression Shariʿat Allah شريعة الله God s Law is a common translation for תורת אלוהים God s Law in Hebrew and nomos toῦ 8eoῦ God s Law in Greek in the New Testament Rom 7 22 35 In Muslim literature sariʿah designates the laws or message of a prophet or God in contrast to fiqh which refers to a scholar s interpretation thereof 36 In older English language law related works in the late 19th early 20th centuries the word used for Sharia was sheri 37 It along with the French variant cheri was used during the time of the Ottoman Empire and is from the Turkish ser i 38 Historical origins editA similar legal concept Eye for an eye first recorded in the Code of Hammurabi Qisas was a practice used as a resolution tool in inter tribal conflicts in pre Islamic Arab society The basis of this resolution was that a member from the tribe to which the murderer belonged was handed over to the victim s family for execution equivalent to the social status of the murdered person 39 The condition of social equivalence meant the execution of a member of the murderer s tribe who was equivalent to the murdered in that the murdered person was male or female slave or free elite or commonone For example only one slave could be killed for a slave and a woman for a woman In other cases compensatory payment Diyya could be paid to the family of the murdered person On top of this pre Islamic understanding added a debate about whether a Muslim can be executed for a non Muslim during the Islamic period The main verse for implementation in Islam is Al Baqara 178 verse Believers Retaliation is ordained for you regarding the people who were killed Free versus free captive versus captive woman versus woman Whoever is forgiven by the brother of the slain for a price let him abide by the custom and pay the price well According to the traditionalist Athari Muslim view the major precepts of Sharia were passed down directly from the Islamic prophet Muhammad without historical development 40 and the emergence of Islamic jurisprudence fiqh also goes back to the lifetime of Muhammad 5 6 In this view his companions and followers took what he did and approved of as a model sunnah and transmitted this information to the succeeding generations in the form of hadith 5 6 These reports led first to informal discussion and then systematic legal thought articulated with greatest success in the eighth and ninth centuries by the master jurists Abu Hanifah Malik ibn Anas Al Shafi i and Ahmad ibn Hanbal who are viewed as the founders of the Hanafi Maliki Shafiʿi and Hanbali legal schools madhhabs of Sunni jurisprudence 6 Modern historians have presented alternative theories of the formation of fiqh 5 6 At first Western scholars accepted the general outlines of the traditionalist account 41 In the late 19th century an influential revisionist hypothesis was advanced by Ignac Goldziher and elaborated by Joseph Schacht in the mid 20th century 6 Schacht and other scholars 42 argued that having conquered much more populous agricultural and urban societies with already existing laws and legal needs the initial Muslim efforts to formulate legal norms note 2 regarded the Quran note 3 and Muhammad s hadiths as just one source of law note 4 with jurist personal opinions the legal practice of conquered peoples and the decrees and decisions of the caliphs also being valid sources 47 nbsp Imam Shafi i tomb in CairoAccording to this theory most canonical hadiths did not originate with Muhammad but were actually created at a later date despite the efforts of hadith scholars to weed out fabrications note 5 After it became accepted that legal norms must be formally grounded in scriptural sources proponents of rules of jurisprudence supported by the hadith would extend the chains of transmission of the hadith back to Muhammad s companions 6 In his view the real architect of Islamic jurisprudence was Al Shafi i d 820 CE 204 AH who formulated this idea that legal norms must be formally grounded in scriptural sources and other elements of classical legal theory in his work al risala 6 41 but who was preceded by a body of Islamic law not based on primacy of Muhammad s hadiths While the origin of hadith remains a subject of scholarly controversy this theory of Goldziher and Schacht has given rise to objections and modern historians generally adopt more cautious intermediate positions 41 and it is generally accepted that early Islamic jurisprudence developed out of a combination of administrative and popular practices shaped by the religious and ethical precepts of Islam 49 5 50 It continued some aspects of pre Islamic laws and customs of the lands that fell under Muslim rule in the aftermath of the early conquests and modified other aspects aiming to meet the practical need of establishing Islamic norms of behavior and adjudicating disputes arising in the early Muslim communities 51 Juristic thought gradually developed in study circles where independent scholars met to learn from a local master and discuss religious topics 51 52 At first these circles were fluid in their membership but with time distinct regional legal schools crystallized around shared sets of methodological principles 5 52 As the boundaries of the schools became clearly delineated the authority of their doctrinal tenets came to be vested in a master jurist from earlier times who was henceforth identified as the school s founder 5 52 In the course of the first three centuries of Islam all legal schools came to accept the broad outlines of classical legal theory according to which Islamic law had to be firmly rooted in the Quran and hadith 5 53 Traditional jurisprudence fiqh editMain article Fiqh Fiqh is traditionally divided into the fields of uṣul al fiqh lit the roots of fiqh which studies the theoretical principles of jurisprudence and furuʿ al fiqh lit the branches of fiqh which is devoted to elaboration of rulings on the basis of these principles 6 13 Principles of jurisprudence uṣul al fiqh edit Main article Principles of Islamic jurisprudence Classical jurists held that human reason is a gift from God which should be exercised to its fullest capacity 54 However they believed that use of reason alone is insufficient to distinguish right from wrong and that rational argumentation must draw its content from the body of transcendental knowledge revealed in the Quran and through the sunnah of Muhammad 12 54 Traditional theory of Islamic jurisprudence elaborates how scriptures should be interpreted from the standpoint of linguistics and rhetoric 6 It also comprises methods for establishing authenticity of hadith and for determining when the legal force of a scriptural passage is abrogated by a passage revealed at a later date 6 In addition to the Quran and sunnah the classical theory of Sunni fiqh recognizes two other sources of law juristic consensus ijmaʿ and analogical reasoning qiyas 49 It therefore studies the application and limits of analogy as well as the value and limits of consensus along with other methodological principles some of which are accepted by only certain legal schools 6 This interpretive apparatus is brought together under the rubric of ijtihad which refers to a jurist s exertion in an attempt to arrive at a ruling on a particular question 6 The theory of Twelver Shia jurisprudence parallels that of Sunni schools with some differences such as recognition of reason ʿaql as a source of law in place of qiyas and extension of the notion of sunnah to include traditions of the imams 12 55 Sources of Sharia edit Main article Sources of ShariaIslamic scholar Sayyid Rashid Rida 1865 1935 C E lists the four basic sources of Islamic law agreed upon by all Sunni Muslims the well known sources of legislation in Islam are four the Qur an the Sunnah the consensus of the ummah and ijtihad undertaken by competent jurists 56 Some researchers suggests that primary sources may have evolved similarly to fiqh contrary to traditional knowledge Gerd R Puin Lawrence Conrad Patricia Crone and Joseph Schacht reached these conclusions by examining sirah books 57 hadith terminology 58 and the chains of narration of hadith 59 respectively Quran In Islam the Quran is considered to be the most sacred source of law 60 Classical jurists held its textual integrity to be beyond doubt on account of it having been handed down by many people in each generation which is known as recurrence or concurrent transmission tawatur 49 60 61 Only several hundred verses of the Quran have direct legal relevance and they are concentrated in a few specific areas such as inheritance though other passages have been used as a source for general principles whose legal ramifications were elaborated by other means 5 60 Sunnah Hadith The body of hadith provides more detailed and practical legal guidance but it was recognized early on that not all of them were authentic 5 60 Early Islamic scholars developed a methodology for evaluating their authenticity by assessing trustworthiness of the individuals listed in their transmission chains 60 These criteria narrowed down the vast corpus of prophetic traditions to several thousand sound hadiths which were collected in several canonical compilations 60 The hadiths which enjoyed concurrent transmission were deemed unquestionably authentic however the vast majority of hadiths were handed down by only one or a few transmitters and were therefore seen to yield only probable knowledge 60 49 The uncertainty was further compounded by ambiguity of the language contained in some hadiths and Quranic passages 60 Disagreements on the relative merits and interpretation of the textual sources allowed legal scholars considerable leeway in formulating alternative rulings 5 Ijma It is the consensus that could in principle elevate a ruling based on probable evidence to absolute certainty 62 5 This classical doctrine drew its authority from a series of hadiths stating that the Islamic community could never agree on an error 62 This form of consensus was technically defined as agreement of all competent jurists in any particular generation acting as representatives of the community 62 5 63 However the practical difficulty of obtaining and ascertaining such an agreement meant that it had little impact on legal development 62 5 A more pragmatic form of consensus which could be determined by consulting works of prominent jurists was used to confirm a ruling so that it could not be reopened for further discussion 5 The cases for which there was a consensus account form less than 1 percent of the body of classical jurisprudence 62 Qiyas It is the Analogical reasoning that is used to derive a ruling for a situation not addressed in the scripture by analogy with a scripturally based rule 49 In a classic example the Quranic prohibition of drinking wine is extended to all intoxicating substances on the basis of the cause ʿilla shared by these situations which in this case is identified to be intoxication 49 Since the cause of a rule may not be apparent its selection commonly occasioned controversy and extensive debate 64 Majority of Sunni Muslims view Qiyas as a central Pillar of Ijtihad 65 On the other hand Zahirites Ahmad ibn Hanbal Al Bukhari early Hanbalites etc rejected Qiyas amongst the Sunnis 66 67 68 Twelver Shia jurisprudence also does not recognize the use of qiyas but relies on reason ʿ Aql in its place 12 13 Ijtihad edit Main article Ijtihad The classical process of ijtihad combined these generally recognized principles with other methods which were not adopted by all legal schools such as istihsan juristic preference istislah consideration of public interest and istishab presumption of continuity 49 A jurist who is qualified to practice ijtihad is known as a mujtahid 69 50 The use of independent reasoning to arrive at a ruling is contrasted with taqlid imitation which refers to following the rulings of a mujtahid 50 By the beginning of the 10th century development of Sunni jurisprudence prompted leading jurists to state that the main legal questions had been addressed and the scope of ijtihad was gradually restricted 50 70 From the 18th century on leading Muslim reformers began calling for abandonment of taqlid and renewed emphasis on ijtihad which they saw as a return to the vitality of early Islamic jurisprudence 70 Decision types aḥkam edit Main article Ahkam Fiqh is concerned with ethical standards as much as with legal norms seeking to establish not only what is and is not legal but also what is morally right and wrong 15 16 Sharia rulings fall into one of five categories known as the five decisions al aḥkam al khamsa mandatory farḍ or wajib recommended mandub or mustaḥabb neutral mubaḥ reprehensible makruh and forbidden ḥaram 5 13 It is a sin or a crime to perform a forbidden action or not to perform a mandatory action 5 Reprehensible acts should be avoided but they are not considered to be sinful or punishable in court 5 71 Avoiding reprehensible acts and performing recommended acts is held to be subject of reward in the afterlife while neutral actions entail no judgment from God 5 71 Jurists disagree on whether the term ḥalal covers the first three or the first four categories 5 The legal and moral verdict depends on whether the action is committed out of necessity ḍarura and on the underlying intention niyya as expressed in the legal maxim acts are evaluated according to intention 5 As can be seen in many examples classification is relative For example believing in the existence and miracles of Awliya is presented as a condition for orthodox Islam by many prominent Sunni creed writers such as Al Tahawi and Nasafi 72 73 and is accepted in traditional Sunnis and Shi ism However this understanding along with expressions of respect and visits to the graves of saints are seen as unacceptable heresy by puritanical and revivalist Islamic movements such as Salafism Wahhabism and Islamic Modernism 74 Aims of Sharia and public interest edit Main articles Maqasid and Maslaha Maqaṣid aims or purposes of Sharia and maṣlaḥa welfare or public interest are two related classical doctrines which have come to play an increasingly prominent role in modern times 75 76 77 They were first clearly articulated by al Ghazali d 1111 who argued that maslaha was God s general purpose in revealing the divine law and that its specific aim was preservation of five essentials of human well being religion life intellect offspring and property 78 Although most classical era jurists recognized maslaha and maqasid as important legal principles they held different views regarding the role they should play in Islamic law 75 77 Some jurists viewed them as auxiliary rationales constrained by scriptural sources and analogical reasoning 75 79 Others regarded them as an independent source of law whose general principles could override specific inferences based on the letter of scripture 75 80 While the latter view was held by a minority of classical jurists in modern times it came to be championed in different forms by prominent scholars who sought to adapt Islamic law to changing social conditions by drawing on the intellectual heritage of traditional jurisprudence 75 49 76 These scholars expanded the inventory of maqasid to include such aims of Sharia as reform and women s rights Rashid Rida justice and freedom Mohammed al Ghazali and human dignity and rights Yusuf al Qaradawi 75 Branches of law furuʿ al fiqh edit Further information Topics in Sharia law The domain of furuʿ al fiqh lit branches of fiqh is traditionally divided into ʿibadat rituals or acts of worship and muʿamalat social relations 6 50 Many jurists further divided the body of substantive jurisprudence into the four quarters called rituals sales marriage and injuries 81 Each of these terms figuratively stood for a variety of subjects 81 For example the quarter of sales would encompass partnerships guaranty gifts and bequests among other topics 81 Juristic works were arranged as a sequence of such smaller topics each called a book kitab 6 81 The special significance of ritual was marked by always placing its discussion at the start of the work 6 81 Some historians distinguish a field of Islamic criminal law which combines several traditional categories 5 82 13 Several crimes with scripturally prescribed punishments are known as hudud 5 Jurists developed various restrictions which in many cases made them virtually impossible to apply 5 Other crimes involving intentional bodily harm are judged according to a version of lex talionis that prescribes a punishment analogous to the crime qisas but the victims or their heirs may accept a monetary compensation diya or pardon the perpetrator instead only diya is imposed for non intentional harm 5 82 Other criminal cases belong to the category of taʿzir where the goal of punishment is correction or rehabilitation of the culprit and its form is largely left to the judge s discretion 5 82 In practice since early on in Islamic history criminal cases were usually handled by ruler administered courts or local police using procedures which were only loosely related to Sharia 6 82 The two major genres of furuʿ literature are the mukhtasar concise summary of law and the mabsut extensive commentary 6 Mukhtasars were short specialized treatises or general overviews that could be used in a classroom or consulted by judges 6 5 83 A mabsut which usually provided a commentary on a mukhtasar and could stretch to dozens of large volumes recorded alternative rulings with their justifications often accompanied by a proliferation of cases and conceptual distinctions 6 83 The terminology of juristic literature was conservative and tended to preserve notions which had lost their practical relevance 6 At the same time the cycle of abridgement and commentary allowed jurists of each generation to articulate a modified body of law to meet changing social conditions 83 Other juristic genres include the qawaʿid succinct formulas meant to aid the student remember general principles and collections of fatwas by a particular scholar 5 Classical jurisprudence has been described as one of the major intellectual achievements of Islam 84 and its importance in Islam has been compared to that of theology in Christianity note 6 Schools of law edit Main article Madhhab nbsp Juristic exchange between Abu Dawood and Ibn Hanbal One of the oldest literary manuscripts of the Islamic world dated October 879 A D The main Sunni schools of law madhhabs are the Hanafi Maliki Shafi i and Hanbali madhhabs 50 They emerged in the ninth and tenth centuries and by the twelfth century almost all jurists aligned themselves with a particular madhhab 87 These four schools recognize each other s validity and they have interacted in legal debate over the centuries 87 50 Rulings of these schools are followed across the Muslim world without exclusive regional restrictions but they each came to dominate in different parts of the world 87 50 For example the Maliki school is predominant in North and West Africa the Hanafi school in South and Central Asia the Shafi i school in Lower Egypt East Africa and Southeast Asia and the Hanbali school in North and Central Arabia 87 50 5 The first centuries of Islam also witnessed a number of short lived Sunni madhhabs 6 The Zahiri school which is commonly identified as extinct continues to exert influence over legal thought 6 50 87 The development of Shia legal schools occurred along the lines of theological differences and resulted in formation of the Twelver Zaidi and Ismaili madhhabs whose differences from Sunni legal schools are roughly of the same order as the differences among Sunni schools 6 5 The Ibadi legal school distinct from Sunni and Shia madhhabs is predominant in Oman 50 The transformations of Islamic legal institutions in the modern era have had profound implications for the madhhab system 87 Legal practice in most of the Muslim world has come to be controlled by government policy and state law so that the influence of the madhhabs beyond personal ritual practice depends on the status accorded to them within the national legal system 87 State law codification commonly utilized the methods of takhayyur selection of rulings without restriction to a particular madhhab and talfiq combining parts of different rulings on the same question 87 Legal professionals trained in modern law schools have largely replaced traditional ulema as interpreters of the resulting laws 87 Global Islamic movements have at times drawn on different madhhabs and at other times placed greater focus on the scriptural sources rather than classical jurisprudence 87 The Hanbali school with its particularly strict adherence to the Quran and hadith has inspired conservative currents of direct scriptural interpretation by the Salafi and Wahhabi movements 87 Other currents such as networks of Indonesian ulema and Islamic scholars residing in Muslim minority countries have advanced liberal interpretations of Islamic law without focusing on traditions of a particular madhhab 87 Pre modern Islamic legal system editJurists edit Main articles Mufti and Madrasa Sharia was traditionally interpreted by muftis During the first few centuries of Islam muftis were private legal specialists who normally also held other jobs They issued fatwas legal opinions generally free of charge in response to questions from laypersons or requests for consultation coming from judges which would be stated in general terms Fatwas were regularly upheld in courts and when they were not it was usually because the fatwa was contradicted by a more authoritative legal opinion 88 The stature of jurists was determined by their scholarly reputation 89 90 The majority of classical legal works written by author jurists were based in large part on fatwas of distinguished muftis 89 These fatwas functioned as a form of legal precedent unlike court verdicts which were valid only for the given case 91 Although independent muftis never disappeared from the 12th century onward Muslim rulers began to appoint salaried muftis to answer questions from the public 92 Over the centuries Sunni muftis were gradually incorporated into state bureaucracies while Shia jurists in Iran progressively asserted an autonomous authority starting from the early modern era 93 nbsp Ulugh Beg Madrasa Samarkand est 1422 Islamic law was initially taught in study circles that gathered in mosques and private homes The teacher assisted by advanced students provided commentary on concise treatises of law and examined the students understanding of the text This tradition continued to be practiced in madrasas which spread during the 10th and 11th centuries 94 95 Madrasas were institutions of higher learning devoted principally to study of law but also offering other subjects such as theology medicine and mathematics The madrasa complex usually consisted of a mosque boarding house and a library It was maintained by a waqf charitable endowment which paid salaries of professors stipends of students and defrayed the costs of construction and maintenance At the end of a course the professor granted a license ijaza certifying a student s competence in its subject matter 95 Students specializing in law would complete a curriculum consisting of preparatory studies the doctrines of a particular madhhab and training in legal disputation and finally write a dissertation which earned them a license to teach and issue fatwas 92 94 Courts edit Main articles Judge Islamic law Mazalim Shurta and Muhtasib nbsp The poet Saadi and a dervish go to settle their quarrel before a judge 16th century Persian miniature A judge qadi was in charge of the qadi s court mahkama also called the Sharia court Qadis were trained in Islamic law though not necessarily to a level required to issue fatwas 5 96 Court personnel also included a number of assistants performing various roles 97 Judges were theoretically independent in their decisions though they were appointed by the ruler and often experienced pressure from members of the ruling elite where their interests were at play 92 The role of qadis was to evaluate the evidence establish the facts of the case and issue a verdict based on the applicable rulings of Islamic jurisprudence 5 The qadi was supposed to solicit a fatwa from a mufti if it was unclear how the law should be applied to the case 5 98 Since Islamic legal theory does not recognize the distinction between private and public law court procedures were identical for civil and criminal cases and required a private plaintiff to produce evidence against the defendant The main type of evidence was oral witness testimony The standards of evidence for criminal cases were so strict that a conviction was often difficult to obtain even for apparently clear cut cases 5 Most historians believe that because of these stringent procedural norms qadi s courts at an early date lost their jurisdiction over criminal cases which were instead handled in other types of courts 99 If an accusation did not result in a verdict in a qadi s court the plaintiff could often pursue it in another type of court called the mazalim court administered by the ruler s council 5 The rationale for mazalim lit wrongs grievances courts was to address the wrongs that Sharia courts were unable to address including complaints against government officials Islamic jurists were commonly in attendance and a judge often presided over the court as a deputy of the ruler 5 92 Mazalim verdicts were supposed to conform to the spirit of Sharia but they were not bound by the letter of the law or the procedural restrictions of qadi s courts 5 98 The police shurta which took initiative in preventing and investigating crime operated its own courts 92 Like the mazalim courts police courts were not bound by the rules of Sharia and had the powers to inflict discretionary punishments 99 Another office for maintaining public order was the muhtasib market inspector who was charged with preventing fraud in economic transactions and infractions against public morality 92 The muhtasib took an active role in pursuing these types of offenses and meted out punishments based on local custom 99 Socio political context edit The social fabric of pre modern Islamic societies was largely defined by close knit communities organized around kinship groups and local neighborhoods Conflicts between individuals had the potential to escalate into a conflict between their supporting groups and disrupt the life of the entire community Court litigation was seen as a last resort for cases where informal mediation had failed This attitude was reflected in the legal maxim amicable settlement is the best verdict al sulh sayyid al ahkam In court disputes qadis were generally less concerned with legal theory than with achieving an outcome that enabled the disputants to resume their previous social relationships This could be accomplished by avoiding a total loss for the losing side or simply giving them a chance to articulate their position in public and obtain a measure of psychological vindication 100 101 Islamic law required judges to be familiar with local customs and they exercised a number of other public functions in the community including mediation and arbitration supervision of public works auditing waqf finances and looking after the interests of orphans 96 99 nbsp Manuscript copy of al Fatawa al AlamgiriyyahUnlike pre modern cultures where the ruling dynasty promulgated the law Islamic law was formulated by religious scholars without involvement of the rulers The law derived its authority not from political control but rather from the collective doctrinal positions of the legal schools madhhabs in their capacity as interpreters of the scriptures The ulema religious scholars were involved in management of communal affairs and acted as representatives of the Muslim population vis a vis the ruling dynasties who before the modern era had limited capacity for direct governance 102 Military elites relied on the ulema for religious legitimation with financial support for religious institutions being one of the principal means through which these elites established their legitimacy 103 102 In turn the ulema depended on the support of the ruling elites for the continuing operation of religious institutions Although the relationship between secular rulers and religious scholars underwent a number of shifts and transformations in different times and places this mutual dependence characterized Islamic history until the start of the modern era 104 102 Additionally since Sharia contained few provisions in several areas of public law Muslim rulers were able to legislate various collections of economic criminal and administrative laws outside the jurisdiction of Islamic jurists the most famous of which is the qanun promulgated by Ottoman sultans beginning from the 15th century 17 The Mughal emperor Aurangzeb r 1658 1707 issued a hybrid body of law known as Fatawa e Alamgiri based on Hanafi fatwas as well as decisions of Islamic courts and made it applicable to all religious communities on the Indian subcontinent This early attempt to turn Islamic law into semi codified state legislation sparked rebellions against Mughal rule 105 Women non Muslims slaves edit Main articles Women in Islam Dhimmi Islamic views on slavery and History of slavery in the Muslim world In both the rules of civil disputes and application of penal law classical Sharia distinguishes between men and women between Muslims and non Muslims and between free persons and slaves 5 nbsp Zanzibar Child slave sentenced to transport logs by Arab master in Sultanate 1890sTraditional Islamic law assumes a patriarchal society with a man at the head of the household 106 Different legal schools formulated a variety of legal norms which could be manipulated to the advantage of men or women 107 but women were generally at a disadvantage with respect to the rules of inheritance blood money diya and witness testimony where in some cases a woman s value is effectively treated as half of that of a man 106 Various financial obligations imposed on the husband acted as a deterrent against unilateral divorce and commonly gave the wife financial leverage in divorce proceedings 107 Women were active in Sharia courts as both plaintiffs and defendants in a wide variety of cases though some opted to be represented by a male relative 108 5 Sharia was intended to regulate affairs of the Muslim community 5 Non Muslims residing under Islamic rule had the legal status of dhimmi which entailed a number of protections restrictions freedoms and legal inequalities including payment of the jizya tax 109 Dhimmi communities had legal autonomy to adjudicate their internal affairs Cases involving litigants from two different religious groups fell under jurisdiction of Sharia courts 5 where unlike in secular courts 110 testimony of non Muslim witnesses against a Muslim was inadmissible in criminal cases 111 or at all 112 This legal framework was implemented with varying degree of rigor In some periods or towns all inhabitants apparently used the same court without regard for their religious affiliation 5 The Mughal emperor Aurangzeb imposed Islamic law on all his subjects including provisions traditionally applicable only to Muslims while some of his predecessors and successors are said to have abolished jizya 105 113 According to Ottoman records non Muslim women took their cases to a Sharia court when they expected a more favorable outcome on marital divorce and property questions than in Christian and Jewish courts 114 Over time non Muslims in the Ottoman Empire could be more or less likely to use Islamic courts For example in 1729 at the Islamic court in Galata only two percent of cases involved non Muslims whereas in 1789 non Muslims were a part of thirty percent of cases 115 Ottoman court records also reflect the use of Islamic courts by formerly non Muslim women 116 As it was illegal for non Muslims to own Muslims and for non Muslim men to marry Muslim women in the Ottoman empire conversion to Islam would have been an option for non Muslim women to free themselves of a spouse or master they did not want to subject to 116 However this would likely lead to them being shunned by their former community 116 Classical fiqh acknowledges and regulates slavery as a legitimate institution 106 It granted slaves certain rights and protections improving their status relative to Greek and Roman law and restricted the scenarios under which people could be enslaved 117 118 However slaves could not inherit or enter into a contract and were subject to their master s will in a number of ways 117 118 The labor and property of slaves were owned by the master who was also entitled to sexual submission of his unmarried slaves 118 119 Formal legal disabilities for some groups coexisted with a legal culture that viewed Sharia as a reflection of universal principles of justice which involved protection of the weak against injustices committed by the strong This conception was reinforced by the historical practice of Sharia courts where peasants almost always won cases against oppressive landowners and non Muslims often prevailed in disputes against Muslims including such powerful figures as the governor of their province 120 121 In family matters the Sharia court was seen as a place where the rights of women could be asserted against their husband s transgressions 5 Modern legal reforms editUnder colonial rule edit Starting from the 17th century European powers began to extend political influence over lands ruled by Muslim dynasties and by the end of the 19th century much of the Muslim world came under colonial domination The first areas of Islamic law to be impacted were usually commercial and criminal laws which impeded colonial administration and were soon replaced by European regulations 122 Islamic commercial laws were also replaced by European mostly French laws in Muslim states which retained formal independence because these states increasingly came to rely on Western capital and could not afford to lose the business of foreign merchants who refused to submit to Islamic regulations 5 nbsp Warren Hastings initiated far reaching legal reforms in British IndiaThe first significant changes to the legal system of British India were initiated in the late 18th century by the governor of Bengal Warren Hastings Hastings plan of legal reform envisioned a multi tiered court system for the Muslim population with a middle tier of British judges advised by local Islamic jurists and a lower tier of courts operated by qadis Hastings also commissioned a translation of the classic manual of Hanafi fiqh Al Hidayah from Arabic into Persian and then English later complemented by other texts 123 124 These translations enabled British judges to pass verdicts in the name of Islamic law based on a combination of Sharia rules and common law doctrines and eliminated the need to rely on consultation by local ulema whom they mistrusted In the traditional Islamic context a concise text like Al Hidayah would be used as a basis for classroom commentary by a professor and the doctrines thus learned would be mediated in court by judicial discretion consideration of local customs and availability of different legal opinions that could fit the facts of the case The British use of Al Hidayah which amounted to an inadvertent codification of Sharia and its interpretation by judges trained in Western legal traditions anticipated later legal reforms in the Muslim world 123 125 British administrators felt that Sharia rules too often allowed criminals to escape punishment as exemplified by Hastings complaint that Islamic law was founded on the most lenient principles and on an abhorrence of bloodshed 123 In the course of the 19th century criminal laws and other aspects of the Islamic legal system in India were supplanted by British law with the exception of Sharia rules retained in family laws and some property transactions 123 124 Among other changes these reforms brought about abolition of slavery prohibition of child marriage and a much more frequent use of capital punishment 126 124 The resulting legal system known as Anglo Muhammadan law was treated by the British as a model for legal reforms in their other colonies Like the British in India colonial administrations typically sought to obtain precise and authoritative information about indigenous laws which prompted them to prefer classical Islamic legal texts over local judicial practice This together with their conception of Islamic law as a collection of inflexible rules led to an emphasis on traditionalist forms of Sharia that were not rigorously applied in the pre colonial period and served as a formative influence on the modern identity politics of the Muslim world 124 Ottoman Empire edit nbsp An Ottoman courtroom 1879 A D drawing During the colonial era Muslim rulers concluded that they could not resist European pressure unless they modernized their armies and built centrally administered states along the lines of Western models In the Ottoman Empire the first such changes in the legal sphere involved placing the formerly independent waqfs under state control This reform passed in 1826 enriched the public treasury at the expense of the waqfs thereby depleting the financial support for traditional Islamic legal education Over the second half of the 19th century a new hierarchical system of secular courts was established to supplement and eventually replace most religious courts Students hoping to pursue legal careers in the new court system increasingly preferred attending secular schools over the traditional path of legal education with its dimming financial prospects 127 The Tanzimat reforms of the 19th century saw reorganization of both Islamic civil law and sultanic criminal law after the model of the Napoleonic Code 50 In the 1870s a codification of civil law and procedure excepting marriage and divorce called the Mecelle was produced for use in both Sharia and secular courts It adopted the Turkish language for the benefit of the new legal class who no longer possessed competence in the Arabic idiom of traditional jurisprudence The code was based on Hanafi law and its authors selected minority opinions over authoritative ones when they were felt to better suit the present conditions The Mecelle was promulgated as a qanun sultanic code which represented an unprecedented assertion of the state s authority over Islamic civil law traditionally the preserve of the ulema 127 The 1917 Ottoman Law of Family Rights adopted an innovative approach of drawing rules from minority and majority opinions of all Sunni madhhabs with a modernizing intent 27 The Republic of Turkey which emerged after the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire abolished its Sharia courts and replaced Ottoman civil laws with the Swiss Civil Code 50 but Ottoman civil laws remained in force for several decades in Jordan Lebanon Palestine Syria and Iraq 27 50 Nation states edit nbsp Mahkamah Syariyah Sharia court in Aceh IndonesiaWesternization of legal institutions and expansion of state control in all areas of law which began during the colonial era continued in nation states of the Muslim world 128 Sharia courts at first continued to exist alongside state courts as in earlier times but the doctrine that sultanic courts should implement the ideals of Sharia was gradually replaced by legal norms imported from Europe Court procedures were also brought in line with European practice Though the Islamic terms qadi and mahkama qadi s Sharia court were preserved they generally came to mean judge and court in the Western sense While in the traditional Sharia court all parties represented themselves in modern courts they are represented by professional lawyers educated in Western style law schools and the verdicts are subject to review in an appeals court In the 20th century most countries abolished a parallel system of Sharia courts and brought all cases under a national civil court system 5 In most Muslim majority countries traditional rules of classical fiqh have been largely preserved only in family law In some countries religious minorities such as Christians or Shia Muslims have been subject to separate systems of family laws 5 Many Muslims today believe that contemporary Sharia based laws are an authentic representation of the pre modern legal tradition In reality they generally represent the result of extensive legal reforms made in the modern era 128 As traditional Islamic jurists lost their role as authoritative interpreters of the laws applied in courts these laws were codified by legislators and administered by state systems which employed a number of devices to effect changes 5 including Selection of alternative opinions from traditional legal literature takhayyur potentially among multiple madhhabs or denominations and combining parts of different rulings talfiq 128 129 Appeal to the classical doctrines of necessity darura public interest maslaha and the objectives maqasid of Sharia which played a limited role in classical fiqh but were now given wider utilitarian applications 128 129 125 Changes in administrative law that grant the courts discretionary powers to restrict certain practices which are not forbidden by substantive law e g polygamy in some cases imposing penal sanctions as additional deterrence 128 129 Modernist interpretation of Islamic scriptures without adherence to the rules or methodologies of traditional jurisprudence known as neo ijtihad 128 129 nbsp Muhammad Abduh exercised a powerful influence on liberal reformist thoughtThe most powerful influence on liberal reformist thought came from the work of the Egyptian Islamic scholar Muhammad ʿAbduh 1849 1905 Abduh viewed only Sharia rules pertaining to religious rituals as inflexible and argued that the other Islamic laws should be adapted based on changing circumstances in consideration of social well being Following precedents of earlier Islamic thinkers he advocated restoring Islam to its original purity by returning to the Quran and the sunna instead of following the medieval schools of jurisprudence 27 He championed a creative approach to ijtihad that involved direct interpretation of scriptures as well as the methods of takhayyur and talfiq 6 27 One of the most influential figures in modern legal reforms was the Egyptian legal scholar Abd El Razzak El Sanhuri 1895 1971 who possessed expertise in both Islamic and Western law Sanhuri argued that reviving Islamic legal heritage in a way that served the needs of contemporary society required its analysis in light of the modern science of comparative law He drafted the civil codes of Egypt 1949 and Iraq 1951 based on a variety of sources including classical fiqh European laws existing Arab and Turkish codes and the history of local court decisions 27 105 Sanhuri s Egyptian code incorporated few classical Sharia rules but he drew on traditional jurisprudence more frequently for the Iraqi code 105 Sanhuri s codes were subsequently adopted in some form by most Arab countries 27 Aside from the radical reforms of Islamic family law carried out in Tunisia 1956 and Iran 1967 governments often preferred to make changes that made a clear break from traditional Sharia rules by imposing administrative hurdles rather than changing the rules themselves in order to minimize objections from religious conservatives Various procedural changes have been made in a number of countries to restrict polygamy give women greater rights in divorce and eliminate child marriage Inheritance has been the legal domain least susceptible to reform as legislators have been generally reluctant to tamper with the highly technical system of Quranic shares 27 105 Some reforms have faced strong conservative opposition For example the 1979 reform of Egyptian family law promulgated by Anwar Sadat through presidential decree provoked an outcry and was annulled in 1985 by the supreme court on procedural grounds to be later replaced by a compromise version 27 The 2003 reform of Moroccan family law which sought to reconcile universal human rights norms and the country s Islamic heritage was drafted by a commission that included parliamentarians religious scholars and feminist activists and the result has been praised by international rights groups as an example of progressive legislation achieved within an Islamic framework 130 27 Islamization edit Main article Islamization The Islamic revival of the late 20th century brought the topic of Sharia to international attention in the form of numerous political campaigns in the Muslim world calling for full implementation of Sharia 5 131 A number of factors have contributed to the rise of these movements classified under the rubric of Islamism or political Islam including the failure of authoritarian secular regimes to meet the expectations of their citizens and a desire of Muslim populations to return to more culturally authentic forms of socio political organization in the face of a perceived cultural invasion from the West 131 132 Islamist leaders such as Ayatollah Khomeini drew on leftist anticolonialist rhetoric by framing their call for Sharia as a resistance struggle They accused secular leaders of corruption and predatory behavior and claimed that a return to Sharia would replace despotic rulers with pious leaders striving for social and economic justice In the Arab world these positions are often encapsulated in the slogan Islam is the solution al Islam huwa al hall 131 Full implementation of Sharia theoretically refers to expanding its scope to all fields of law and all areas of public life 5 In practice Islamization campaigns have focused on a few highly visible issues associated with the conservative Muslim identity particularly women s hijab and the hudud criminal punishments whipping stoning and amputation prescribed for certain crimes 131 For many Islamists hudud punishments are at the core of the divine Sharia because they are specified by the letter of scripture rather than by human interpreters Modern Islamists have often rejected at least in theory the stringent procedural constraints developed by classical jurists to restrict their application 5 To the broader Muslim public the calls for Sharia often represent even more than any specific demands a vague vision of their current economic and political situation being replaced by a just utopia 132 A number of legal reforms have been made under the influence of these movements starting from the 1970s when Egypt and Syria amended their constitutions to specify Sharia as the basis of legislation 131 The Iranian Revolution of 1979 represented a watershed for Islamization advocates demonstrating that it was possible to replace a secular regime with a theocracy 131 Several countries including Iran Pakistan Sudan and some Nigerian states have incorporated hudud rules into their criminal justice systems which however retained fundamental influences of earlier Westernizing reforms 5 27 In practice these changes were largely symbolic and aside from some cases brought to trial to demonstrate that the new rules were being enforced hudud punishments tended to fall into disuse sometimes to be revived depending on the local political climate 5 133 The supreme courts of Sudan and Iran have rarely approved verdicts of stoning or amputation and the supreme courts of Pakistan and Nigeria have never done so 133 Nonetheless Islamization campaigns have also had repercussions in several other areas of law leading to curtailment of rights of women and religious minorities and in the case of Sudan contributing to the breakout of a civil war 27 Advocates of Islamization have often been more concerned with ideology than traditional jurisprudence and there is no agreement among them as to what form a modern Sharia based Islamic state should take This is particularly the case for the theorists of Islamic economics and Islamic finance who have advocated both free market and socialist economic models 27 The notion of Sharia compliant finance has become an active area of doctrinal innovation and its development has had a major impact on business operations around the world 131 Contemporary applications editMain article Application of Sharia by country nbsp Use of sharia by country Sharia plays no role in the judicial system Sharia influences personal status family laws Sharia influences personal status and criminal laws Regional variations in the application of sharia Muslim majority countries edit The legal systems of most Muslim majority countries can be classified as either secular or mixed Sharia plays no role in secular legal systems In mixed legal systems Sharia rules are allowed to influence some national laws which are codified and may be based on European or Indian models and the central legislative role is played by politicians and modern jurists rather than the ulema traditional Islamic scholars Saudi Arabia and some other Persian Gulf states possess what may be called classical Sharia systems where national law is largely uncodified and formally equated with Sharia with ulema playing a decisive role in its interpretation Iran has adopted some features of classical Sharia systems while also maintaining characteristics of mixed systems like codified laws and a parliament 134 Constitutional law edit Constitutions of many Muslim majority countries refer to Sharia as a source or the main source of law though these references are not in themselves indicative of how much the legal system is influenced by Sharia and whether the influence has a traditionalist or modernist character 5 6 The same constitutions usually also refer to universal principles such as democracy and human rights leaving it up to legislators and the judiciary to work out how these norms are to be reconciled in practice 135 Conversely some countries e g Algeria whose constitution does not mention Sharia possess Sharia based family laws 6 Nisrine Abiad identifies Bahrain Iran Pakistan and Saudi Arabia as states with strong constitutional consequences of Sharia on the organization and functioning of power 136 Family law edit Except for secular systems Muslim majority countries possess Sharia based laws dealing with family matters marriage inheritance etc These laws generally reflect influence of various modern era reforms and tend to be characterized by ambiguity with traditional and modernist interpretations often manifesting themselves in the same country both in legislation and court decisions 26 In some countries e g parts of Nigeria people can choose whether to pursue a case in a Sharia or secular court 26 137 Criminal law edit Countries in the Muslim world generally have criminal codes influenced by civil law or common law and in some cases a combination of Western legal traditions Saudi Arabia has never adopted a criminal code and Saudi judges still follow traditional Hanbali jurisprudence In the course of Islamization campaigns several countries Libya Pakistan Iran Sudan Mauritania and Yemen inserted Islamic criminal laws into their penal codes which were otherwise based on Western models In some countries only hudud penalties were added while others also enacted provisions for qisas law of retaliation and diya monetary compensation Iran subsequently issued a new Islamic Penal Code The criminal codes of Afghanistan and United Arab Emirates contain a general provision that certain crimes are to be punished according to Islamic law without specifying the penalties Some Nigerian states have also enacted Islamic criminal laws Laws in the Indonesian province of Aceh provide for application of discretionary ta zir punishments for violation of Islamic norms but explicitly exclude hudud and qisas 138 Brunei has been implementing a Sharia Penal Code which includes provisions for stoning and amputation in stages since 2014 139 140 The countries where hudud penalties are legal do not use stoning and amputation routinely and generally apply other punishments instead 5 133 141 Property law edit Sharia recognizes the concept of haqq 142 Haqq refers to personal rights of the individual and the right to generate and accumulate wealth The various ways in which property can be acquired under Sharia are purchase inheritance bequest physical or mental effort diya and donations 143 Certain concepts relating to property under Sharia are Mulk Waqf Mawat and Motasarruf 143 Muslim minority countries edit Sharia also plays a role beyond religious rituals and personal ethics in some countries with Muslim minorities For example in Israel Sharia based family laws are administered for the Muslim population by the Ministry of Justice through the Sharia Courts 144 In India the Muslim Personal Law Shariat Application Act provides for the use of Islamic law for Muslims in several areas mainly related to family law 145 In England the Muslim Arbitration Tribunal makes use of Sharia family law to settle disputes though this limited adoption of Sharia is controversial 146 147 148 Court procedures edit This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Shariah court in Malacca Malaysia Sharia courts traditionally do not rely on lawyers plaintiffs and defendants represent themselves In Saudi Arabia and Qatar which have preserved traditional procedure in Sharia courts trials are conducted solely by the judge and there is no jury system There is no pre trial discovery process and no cross examination of witnesses Unlike common law judges verdicts do not set binding precedents 149 under the principle of stare decisis 150 and unlike civil law Sharia is left to the interpretation in each case and has no formally codified universal statutes 151 The rules of evidence in Sharia courts traditionally prioritize oral testimony and witnesses must be Muslim 152 153 154 155 156 In criminal cases women witnesses are unacceptable in stricter traditional interpretations of Sharia such as those found in Hanbali jurisprudence which forms the basis of law in Saudi Arabia 152 Criminal cases edit A confession an oath or the oral testimony of Muslim witnesses are the main evidence admissible in traditional sharia courts for hudud crimes i e the religious crimes of adultery fornication rape accusing someone of illicit sex but failing to prove it apostasy drinking intoxicants and theft 157 158 159 160 According to classical jurisprudence testimony must be from at least two free Muslim male witnesses or one Muslim male and two Muslim females who are not related parties and who are of sound mind and reliable character Testimony to establish the crime of adultery fornication or rape must be from four Muslim male witnesses with some fiqhs allowing substitution of up to three male with six female witnesses however at least one must be a Muslim male 161 Forensic evidence i e fingerprints ballistics blood samples DNA etc and other circumstantial evidence may likewise rejected in hudud cases in favor of eyewitnesses in some modern interpretations In the case of regulations that were part of local Malaysian legislation that did not go into effect this could cause severe difficulties for women plaintiffs in rape cases 162 163 In Pakistan DNA evidence is rejected in paternity cases on the basis of legislation that favors the presumption of children s legitimacy while in sexual assault cases DNA evidence is regarded as equivalent to expert opinion and evaluated on a case by case basis 164 Civil cases edit Quran 2 282 recommends written financial contracts with reliable witnesses although there is dispute about equality of female testimony 156 Marriage is solemnized as a written financial contract in the presence of two Muslim male witnesses and it includes a brideprice Mahr payable from a Muslim man to a Muslim woman The brideprice is considered by a Sharia court as a form of debt Written contracts were traditionally considered paramount in Sharia courts in the matters of dispute that are debt related which includes marriage contracts 165 Written contracts in debt related cases when notarized by a judge is deemed more reliable 166 In commercial and civil contracts such as those relating to exchange of merchandise agreement to supply or purchase goods or property and others oral contracts and the testimony of Muslim witnesses historically triumphed over written contracts Islamic jurists traditionally held that written commercial contracts may be forged 166 167 Timur Kuran states that the treatment of written evidence in religious courts in Islamic regions created an incentive for opaque transactions and the avoidance of written contracts in economic relations This led to a continuation of a largely oral contracting culture in Muslim majority nations and communities 167 168 In lieu of written evidence oaths are traditionally accorded much greater weight rather than being used simply to guarantee the truth of ensuing testimony they are themselves used as evidence Plaintiffs lacking other evidence to support their claims may demand that defendants take an oath swearing their innocence refusal thereof can result in a verdict for the plaintiff 169 Taking an oath for Muslims can be a grave act one study of courts in Morocco found that lying litigants would often maintain their testimony right up to the moment of oath taking and then to stop refuse the oath and surrender the case 170 Accordingly defendants are not routinely required to swear before testifying which would risk casually profaning the Quran should the defendant commit perjury 170 Diya edit Main article Diya Islam In classical jurisprudence monetary compensation for bodily harm diya or blood money is assessed differently for different classes of victims For example for Muslim women the amount was half that assessed for a Muslim man 171 172 Diya for the death of a free Muslim man is twice as high as for Jewish and Christian victims according to the Maliki and Hanbali madhhabs and three times as high according to Shafi i rules 173 Several legal schools assessed diya for Magians majus at one fifteenth the value of a free Muslim male 173 Modern countries which incorporate classical diya rules into their legal system treat them in different ways The Pakistan Penal Code modernized the Hanafi doctrine by eliminating distinctions between Muslims and non Muslims 174 In Iran diya for non Muslim victims professing one of the faiths protected under the constitution Jews Christians and Zoroastrians was made equal to diya for Muslims in 2004 175 though according to a 2006 US State Department report the penal code still discriminates against other religious minorities and women 176 According to Human Rights Watch and the US State Department in Saudi Arabia Jewish or Christian male plaintiffs are entitled to half the amount a Muslim male would receive while for all other non Muslim males the proportion is one sixteenth 177 178 179 Role of fatwas edit Main article Fatwa nbsp Turkish mufti 17th century Spanish drawing The spread of codified state laws and Western style legal education in the modern Muslim world has displaced traditional muftis from their historical role of clarifying and elaborating the laws applied in courts 180 181 Instead fatwas have increasingly served to advise the general public on other aspects of Sharia particularly questions regarding religious rituals and everyday life 180 182 Modern fatwas deal with topics as diverse as insurance sex change operations moon exploration and beer drinking 182 Most Muslim majority states have established national organizations devoted to issuing fatwas and these organizations to a considerable extent replaced independent muftis as religious guides for the general population 183 State employed muftis generally promote a vision of Islam that is compatible with state law of their country 93 Modern public and political fatwas have addressed and sometimes sparked controversies in the Muslim world and beyond 93 Ayatollah Khomeini s proclamation condemning Salman Rushdie to death for his novel The Satanic Verses is credited with bringing the notion of fatwa to world s attention 93 182 although some scholars have argued that it did not qualify as one note 7 Together with later militant fatwas it has contributed to the popular misconception of the fatwa as a religious death warrant 185 Modern fatwas have been marked by an increased reliance on the process of ijtihad i e deriving legal rulings based on an independent analysis rather than conformity with the opinions of earlier legal authorities taqlid 185 and some of them are issued by individuals who do not possess the qualifications traditionally required of a mufti 93 The most notorious examples are the fatwas of militant extremists 185 When Osama bin Laden and his associates issued a fatwa in 1998 proclaiming jihad against Jews and Crusaders many Islamic jurists in addition to denouncing its content stressed that bin Laden was not qualified to either issue a fatwa or proclaim a jihad 93 New forms of ijtihad have also given rise to fatwas that support such notions as gender equality and banking interest which are at variance with classical jurisprudence 185 In the internet age a large number of websites provide fatwas in response to queries from around the world in addition to radio shows and satellite television programs offering call in fatwas 93 Erroneous and sometimes bizarre fatwas issued by unqualified or eccentric individuals in recent times have sometimes given rise to complaints about a chaos in the modern practice of issuing fatwas 182 There exists no international Islamic authority to settle differences in interpretation of Islamic law An International Islamic Fiqh Academy was created by the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation but its legal opinions are not binding 181 The vast amount of fatwas produced in the modern world attests to the importance of Islamic authenticity to many Muslims However there is little research available to indicate to what extent Muslims acknowledge the authority of different muftis or heed their rulings in real life 185 Role of hisba edit Main article Hisbah Further information Islamic religious police The classical doctrine of hisba associated with the Quranic injunction of enjoining good and forbidding wrong refers to the duty of Muslims to promote moral rectitude and intervene when another Muslim is acting wrongly 186 187 Historically its legal implementation was entrusted to a public official called muhtasib market inspector who was charged with preventing fraud disturbance of public order and infractions against public morality This office disappeared in the modern era everywhere in the Muslim world but it was revived in Arabia by the first Saudi state and later instituted as a government committee responsible for supervising markets and public order It has been aided by volunteers enforcing attendance of daily prayers gender segregation in public places and a conservative notion of hijab 186 Committee officers were authorized to detain violators before a 2016 reform 188 With the rising international influence of Wahhabism the conception of hisba as an individual obligation to police religious observance has become more widespread which led to the appearance of activists around the world who urge fellow Muslims to observe Islamic rituals dress code and other aspects of Sharia 186 nbsp Taliban religious police beating a woman in Kabul on 26 August 2001 as reported by RAWA 189 190 for opening her burqa Face In Iran hisba was enshrined in the constitution after the 1979 Revolution as a universal and reciprocal duty incumbent upon both the government and the people Its implementation has been carried out by official committees as well as volunteer forces basij 186 191 Elsewhere policing of various interpretations of Sharia based public morality has been carried out by the Kano State Hisbah Corps in the Nigerian state of Kano 192 by Wilayatul Hisbah in the Aceh province of Indonesia 193 by the Committee for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice in the Gaza Strip and by the Taliban during their 1996 2001 and 2021 rule of Afghanistan 186 Religious police organizations tend to have support from conservative currents of public opinion but their activities are often disliked by other segments of the population especially liberals urban women and younger people 194 In Egypt a law based on the doctrine of hisba had for a time allowed a Muslim to sue another Muslim over beliefs that may harm society though because of abuses it has been amended so that only the state prosecutor may bring suit based on private requests 195 Before the amendment was passed a hisba suit brought by a group of Islamists against the liberal theologian Nasr Abu Zayd on charges of apostasy led to the annulment of his marriage 196 197 The law was also invoked in an unsuccessful blasphemy suit against the feminist author Nawal El Saadawi 195 Hisba has also been invoked in several Muslim majority countries as rationale for blocking pornographic content on the internet and for other forms of faith based censorship 198 Support and opposition editSupport edit A 2013 survey based on interviews of 38 000 Muslims randomly selected from urban and rural parts in 39 countries using area probability designs by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life found that a majority in some cases overwhelming majority of Muslims in a number of countries support making Sharia or Islamic law the law of the land including Afghanistan 99 Iraq 91 Niger 86 Malaysia 86 Pakistan 84 Morocco 83 Bangladesh 82 Egypt 74 Indonesia 72 Jordan 71 Uganda 66 Ethiopia 65 Mali 63 Ghana 58 and Tunisia 56 199 In Muslim regions of Southern Eastern Europe and Central Asia the support is less than 50 Russia 42 Kyrgyzstan 35 Tajikistan 27 Kosovo 20 Albania 12 Turkey 12 Kazakhstan 10 Azerbaijan 8 Regional averages of support were 84 in South Asia 77 in Southeast Asia 74 in the Middle East North Africa 64 in Sub Saharan Africa 18 in Southern Eastern Europe and 12 in Central Asia 199 However while most of those who support implementation of Sharia favor using it in family and property disputes fewer supported application of severe punishments such as whippings and cutting off hands and interpretations of some aspects differed widely 199 According to the Pew poll among Muslims who support making Sharia the law of the land most do not believe that it should be applied to non Muslims In the Muslim majority countries surveyed this proportion varied between 74 of 74 in Egypt and 19 of 10 in Kazakhstan as percentage of those who favored making Sharia the law of the land 200 In all of the countries surveyed respondents were more likely to define Sharia as the revealed word of God rather than as a body of law developed by men based on the word of God 201 In analyzing the poll Amaney Jamal has argued that there is no single shared understanding of the notions Sharia and Islamic law among the respondents In particular in countries where Muslim citizens have little experience with rigid application of Sharia based state laws these notions tend to be more associated with Islamic ideals like equality and social justice than with prohibitions 202 Other polls have indicated that for Egyptians the word Sharia is associated with notions of political social and gender justice 203 In 2008 Rowan Williams the Archbishop of Canterbury has suggested that Islamic and Orthodox Jewish courts should be integrated into the British legal system alongside ecclesiastical courts to handle marriage and divorce subject to agreement of all parties and strict requirements for protection of equal rights for women 204 His reference to the sharia sparked a controversy 204 Later that year Nicholas Phillips then Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales stated that there was no reason why sharia principles should not be the basis for mediation or other forms of alternative dispute resolution 205 A 2008 YouGov poll in the United Kingdom found 40 of Muslim students interviewed supported the introduction of sharia into British law for Muslims 206 Michael Broyde professor of law at Emory University specializing in alternative dispute resolution and Jewish law 207 has argued that sharia courts can be integrated into the American religious arbitration system provided that they adopt appropriate institutional requirements as American rabbinical courts have done 208 Opposition edit Further information Ban on sharia law nbsp Protest against Sharia in the United Kingdom 2014 In the Western world Sharia has been called a source of hysteria 209 more controversial than ever the one aspect of Islam that inspires particular dread 210 On the Internet dozens of self styled counter jihadis emerged to campaign against Sharia law describing it in strict interpretations resembling those of Salafi Muslims 210 Also fear of Sharia law and of the ideology of extremism among Muslims as well as certain congregations donating money to terrorist organizations within the Muslim community reportedly spread to mainstream conservative Republicans in the United States 211 Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich won ovations calling for a federal ban on Sharia law 211 The issue of liberty versus Sharia was called a momentous civilisational debate by right wing pundit Diana West 212 In 2008 in Britain the future Prime Minister David Cameron declared his opposition to any expansion of Sharia law in the UK 213 In Germany in 2014 the Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere told a newspaper Bild Sharia law is not tolerated on German soil 214 Some countries and jurisdictions have explicit bans on sharia law In Canada for example sharia law has been explicitly banned in Quebec by a 2005 unanimous vote of the National Assembly 215 while the province of Ontario allows family law disputes to be arbitrated only under Ontario law 216 In the U S opponents of Sharia have sought to ban it from being considered in courts where it has been routinely used alongside traditional Jewish and Catholic laws to decide legal business and family disputes subject to contracts drafted with reference to such laws as long as they do not violate secular law or the U S constitution 217 After failing to gather support for a federal law making observing Sharia a felony punishable by up to 20 years in prison anti Sharia activists have focused on state legislatures 217 By 2014 bills aimed against use of Sharia have been introduced in 34 states and passed in 11 217 A notable example of this would be 2010 Oklahoma State Question 755 which sought to permanently ban the use of Sharia law in courts While approved by voters the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals placed an injunction on the law Citing the unconstitutionality of the law s impartial focus on a specific religion the law was struck down and never took effect 218 These bills have generally referred to banning foreign or religious law in order to thwart legal challenges 217 According to Jan Michiel Otto Professor of Law and Governance in Developing Countries at Leiden University a nthropological research shows that people in local communities often do not distinguish clearly whether and to what extent their norms and practices are based on local tradition tribal custom or religion Those who adhere to a confrontational view of Sharia tend to ascribe many undesirable practices to Sharia and religion overlooking custom and culture even if high ranking religious authorities have stated the opposite 219 Contemporary debates and controversies editCompatibility with democracy edit Further information Islamic ethics Islam and democracy Shura and Ijma It has been argued that the extent to which Sharia is compatible with democracy depends on how it is culturally interpreted 220 with a cultural position that Sharia represents the human attempt to interpret God s message associated with a greater preference for democracy than an Islamist interpretation that Sharia law is the literal word of God 220 General Muslim views edit Scholars John L Esposito and DeLong Bas distinguish four attitudes toward Sharia and democracy prominent among contemporary Muslims 221 Advocacy of democratic ideas often accompanied by a belief that they are compatible with Islam which can play a public role within a democratic system as exemplified by many protestors who took part in the Arab Spring uprisings Support for democratic procedures such as elections combined with religious or moral objections toward some aspects of Western democracy seen as incompatible with sharia as exemplified by Islamic scholars like Yusuf al Qaradawi Rejection of democracy as a Western import and advocacy of traditional Islamic institutions such as shura consultation and ijma consensus as exemplified by supporters of absolute monarchy and radical Islamist movements Belief that democracy requires restricting religion to private life held by a minority in the Muslim world According to Polls conducted by Gallup and PEW in Muslim majority countries most Muslims see no contradiction between democratic values and religious principles desiring neither a theocracy nor a secular democracy but rather a political model where democratic institutions and values can coexist with the values and principles of Sharia 222 223 224 Islamic political theories edit Muslih and Browers identify three major perspectives on democracy among prominent Muslims thinkers who have sought to develop modern distinctly Islamic theories of socio political organization conforming to Islamic values and law 225 The rejectionist Islamic view elaborated by Sayyid Qutb and Abul A la Maududi condemns imitation of foreign ideas drawing a distinction between Western democracy and the Islamic doctrine of shura consultation between ruler and ruled This perspective which stresses comprehensive implementation of Sharia was widespread in the 1970s and 1980s among various movements seeking to establish an Islamic state but its popularity has diminished in recent years The moderate Islamic view stresses the concepts of maslaha public interest ʿadl justice and shura Islamic leaders are considered to uphold justice if they promote public interest as defined through shura In this view shura provides the basis for representative government institutions that are similar to Western democracy but reflect Islamic rather than Western liberal values Hasan al Turabi Rashid al Ghannushi and Yusuf al Qaradawi have advocated different forms of this view The liberal Islamic view is influenced by Muhammad Abduh s emphasis on the role of reason in understanding religion It stresses democratic principles based on pluralism and freedom of thought Authors like Fahmi Huwaidi and Tariq al Bishri have constructed Islamic justifications for full citizenship of non Muslims in an Islamic state by drawing on early Islamic texts Others like Mohammed Arkoun and Nasr Hamid Abu Zayd have justified pluralism and freedom through non literalist approaches to textual interpretation Abdolkarim Soroush has argued for a religious democracy based on religious thought that is democratic tolerant and just Islamic liberals argue for the necessity of constant reexamination of religious understanding which can only be done in a democratic context European Court of Human Rights edit In 1998 the Constitutional Court of Turkey banned and dissolved Turkey s Refah Party over its announced intention to introduce Sharia based laws ruling that it would change Turkey s secular order and undermine democracy 226 On appeal by Refah the European Court of Human Rights determined that sharia is incompatible with the fundamental principles of democracy 227 228 229 Refah s Sharia based notion of a plurality of legal systems grounded on religion was ruled to contravene the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms It was determined that it would do away with the State s role as the guarantor of individual rights and freedoms and infringe the principle of non discrimination between individuals as regards their enjoyment of public freedoms which is one of the fundamental principles of democracy 230 In an analysis Maurits S Berger found the ruling to be nebulous and surprising from a legal point of view since the Court neglected to define what it meant by Sharia and would not for example be expected to regard Sharia rules for Islamic rituals as contravening European human rights values 231 Kevin Boyle also criticized the decision for not distinguishing between extremist and mainstream interpretations of Islam and implying that peaceful advocacy of Islamic doctrines an attitude which fails to respect the principle of secularism is not protected by the European Convention provisions for freedom of religion 232 Compatibility with human rights edit Governments of several predominantly Muslim countries have criticized the Universal Declaration of Human Rights UDHR for its perceived failure to take into account the cultural and religious context of non Western countries Iran declared in the UN assembly that UDHR was a secular understanding of the Judeo Christian tradition which could not be implemented by Muslims without trespassing the Islamic law 233 Islamic scholars and Islamist political parties consider universal human rights arguments as imposition of a non Muslim culture on Muslim people a disrespect of customary cultural practices and of Islam 234 235 In 1990 the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation a group representing all Muslim majority nations met in Cairo to respond to the UDHR then adopted the Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam 236 237 Ann Elizabeth Mayer points to notable absences from the Cairo Declaration provisions for democratic principles protection for religious freedom freedom of association and freedom of the press as well as equality in rights and equal protection under the law Article 24 of the Cairo declaration states that all the rights and freedoms stipulated in this Declaration are subject to the Islamic shari a 238 In 2009 the journal Free Inquiry summarized the criticism of the Cairo Declaration in an editorial We are deeply concerned with the changes to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights by a coalition of Islamic states within the United Nations that wishes to prohibit any criticism of religion and would thus protect Islam s limited view of human rights In view of the conditions inside the Islamic Republic of Iran Egypt Pakistan Saudi Arabia the Sudan Syria Bangladesh Iraq and Afghanistan we should expect that at the top of their human rights agenda would be to rectify the legal inequality of women the suppression of political dissent the curtailment of free expression the persecution of ethnic minorities and religious dissenters in short protecting their citizens from egregious human rights violations Instead they are worrying about protecting Islam 239 H Patrick Glenn states that Sharia is structured around the concept of mutual obligations of a collective and it considers individual human rights as potentially disruptive and unnecessary to its revealed code of mutual obligations In giving priority to this religious collective rather than individual liberty the Islamic law justifies the formal inequality of individuals women non Islamic people 240 Bassam Tibi states that Sharia framework and human rights are incompatible 241 Abdel al Hakeem Carney in contrast states that Sharia is misunderstood from a failure to distinguish Sharia from siyasah politics 242 Blasphemy edit Main article Islam and blasphemy nbsp Blasphemy laws worldwide Subnational restrictions Fines and restrictions Prison sentences Death sentencesIn classical fiqh blasphemy refers to any form of cursing questioning or annoying God Muhammad or anything considered sacred in Islam 243 244 245 246 including denying one of the Islamic prophets or scriptures insulting an angel or refusing to accept a religious commandment 247 Jurists of different schools prescribed different punishment for blasphemy against Islam by Muslims and non Muslims ranging from imprisonment or fines to the death penalty 243 248 249 250 In some cases sharia allows non Muslims to escape death by converting and becoming a devout follower of Islam 251 In the modern Muslim world the laws pertaining to blasphemy vary by country and some countries prescribe punishments consisting of fines imprisonment flogging hanging or beheading 252 Blasphemy laws were rarely enforced in pre modern Islamic societies but in the modern era some states and radical groups have used charges of blasphemy in an effort to burnish their religious credentials and gain popular support at the expense of liberal Muslim intellectuals and religious minorities 253 Blasphemy as interpreted under Sharia is controversial 254 Representatives of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation have petitioned the United Nations to condemn defamation of religions because Unrestricted and disrespectful freedom of opinion creates hatred and is contrary to the spirit of peaceful dialogue 255 The Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam subjects free speech to unspecified Sharia restrictions Article 22 a of the Declaration states that Everyone shall have the right to express his opinion freely in such manner as would not be contrary to the principles of the Shariah 256 Others in contrast consider blasphemy laws to violate freedom of speech 257 stating that freedom of expression is essential to empowering both Muslims and non Muslims and point to the abuse of blasphemy laws in prosecuting members of religious minorities political opponents and settling personal scores 258 259 260 In Pakistan blasphemy laws have been used to convict more than a thousand people about half of them Ahmadis and Christians 261 260 While none have been legally executed 261 two Pakistani politicians Shahbaz Bhatti and Salmaan Taseer have been assassinated over their criticism of the blasphemy laws The Pakistani blasphemy laws are based upon colonial era legislation which made it a crime to disturb a religious assembly trespass on burial grounds insult religious beliefs or intentionally destroy or defile a place or an object of worship with these laws being modified between 1980 and 1986 by the military government of General Zia ul Haq to make them more severe A number of clauses were added by the government in order to Islamicise the laws and deny the Muslim character of the Ahmadi minority 260 Apostasy edit Main article Apostasy in Islam nbsp Countries that criminalize apostasy from Islam as of 2020 Some Muslim majority countries impose the death penalty or a prison sentence for apostasy from Islam or ban non Muslims from proselytizing 262 nbsp Execution of a Moroccan woman Sol Hachuel on the grounds of leaving Islam apostasy painting by Alfred DehodencqAccording to the classical doctrine apostasy from Islam is a crime as well as a sin punishable with the death penalty 263 264 typically after a waiting period to allow the apostate time to repent and to return to Islam 263 265 266 267 Wael Hallaq writes that in a culture whose lynchpin is religion religious principles and religious morality apostasy is in some way equivalent to high treason in the modern nation state 268 Early Islamic jurists set the standard for apostasy from Islam so high that practically no apostasy verdict could be passed before the 11th century 269 but later jurists lowered the bar for applying the death penalty allowing judges to interpret the apostasy law in different ways 269 which they did sometimes leniently and sometimes strictly 270 In the late 19th century the use of criminal penalties for apostasy fell into disuse although civil penalties were still applied 263 According to Abdul Rashied Omar the majority of modern Islamic jurists continue to regard apostasy as a crime deserving the death penalty 265 This view is dominant in conservative societies like Saudi Arabia and Pakistan A number of liberal and progressive Islamic scholars have argued that apostasy should not be viewed as a crime 271 272 263 273 Others argue that the death penalty is an inappropriate punishment 274 275 inconsistent with the Qur anic verses such as no compulsion in religion 271 and or that it was a man made rule enacted in the early Islamic community to prevent and punish the equivalent of desertion or treason 276 and should be enforced only if apostasy becomes a mechanism of public disobedience and disorder fitna 277 According to Khaled Abou El Fadl moderate Muslims do not believe that apostasy requires punishment 278 The death penalty 279 280 or other punishment for apostasy in Islam is a violation of universal human rights and an issue of freedom of faith and conscience 274 281 Twenty three Muslim majority countries as of 2013 update penalized apostasy from Islam through their criminal laws 282 As of 2014 update apostasy from Islam was a capital offense in Afghanistan Brunei Mauritania Qatar Saudi Arabia Sudan the United Arab Emirates and Yemen 283 284 In other countries Sharia courts could use family laws to void the Muslim apostate s marriage and to deny child custody rights as well as inheritance rights 285 In the years 1985 2006 four individuals were legally executed for apostasy from Islam one in Sudan in 1985 two in Iran in 1989 and 1998 and one in Saudi Arabia in 1992 271 While modern states have rarely prosecuted apostasy the issue has a deep cultural resonance in some Muslim societies and Islamists have tended to exploit it for political gain 271 In a 2008 2012 Pew Research Center poll public support for capital punishment for apostasy among Muslims ranged from 78 in Afghanistan to less than 1 in Kazakhstan reaching over 50 in 6 of the 20 countries surveyed LGBT rights edit Main article LGBT in Islam nbsp Same sex intercourse illegal Death penalty Death penalty on books but not applied Up to life in prison Imprisonment Prison on books but not enforcedHomosexual intercourse is illegal in classical Sharia with different penalties including capital punishment stipulated depending on the situation and legal school In pre modern Islam the penalties prescribed for homosexual acts were to a large extent theoretical according to the Encyclopaedia of Islam owing in part to stringent procedural requirements for their harsher hudud forms and in part to prevailing social tolerance toward same sex relationships 286 Historical instances of prosecution for homosexual acts are rare and those which followed Sharia rules are even rarer 287 Public attitudes toward homosexuality in the Muslim world turned more negative starting from the 19th century through the gradual spread of Islamic fundamentalist movements such as Salafism and Wahhabism 288 289 290 and under the influence of sexual notions prevalent in Europe at that time 291 292 A number of Muslim majority countries have retained criminal penalties for homosexual acts enacted under colonial rule 293 294 In recent decades prejudice against LGBT individuals in the Muslim world has been exacerbated by increasingly conservative attitudes and the rise of Islamist movements resulting in Sharia based penalties enacted in several countries 294 The death penalty for homosexual acts is currently a legal punishment in Brunei Iran Mauritania some northern states in Nigeria Pakistan Qatar Saudi Arabia parts of Somalia and Yemen all of which have Sharia based criminal laws It is unclear whether the laws of Afghanistan and United Arab Emirates provide for the death penalty for gay sex as they have never been carried out 295 296 Criminalization of consensual homosexual acts and especially making them liable to capital punishment has been condemned by international rights groups According to polls the level of social acceptance for homosexuality ranges from 52 among Muslims in the U S to less than 10 in a number of Muslim majority nations Women edit Main articles Women in Islam and Islam and domestic violence Personal status and child marriage edit Shari a is the basis for personal status laws in most Islamic majority nations These personal status laws determine rights of women in matters of marriage divorce and child custody A 2011 UNICEF report concludes that Sharia law provisions are discriminatory against women from a human rights perspective In many countries in legal proceedings relating to Sharia based personal status law in certain cases a woman s testimony is worth half of a man s before a court 155 The 1917 codification of Islamic family law in the Ottoman empire distinguished between the age of competence for marriage which was set at 18 for boys and 17 for girls and the minimum age for marriage which followed the traditional Hanafi limits of 12 for boys and 9 for girls Marriage below the age of competence was permissible only if proof of sexual maturity was accepted in court while marriage under the minimum age was forbidden During the 20th century most countries in the Middle East followed the Ottoman precedent in defining the age of competence while raising the minimum age to 15 or 16 for boys and 13 16 for girls Marriage below the age of competence is subject to approval by a judge and the legal guardian of the adolescent Egypt diverged from this pattern by setting the age limits of 18 for boys and 16 for girls without a distinction between competence for marriage and minimum age 297 Property rights edit Islamic law granted Muslim women certain legal rights such as property rights which women in the West did not possess until comparatively recent times 298 299 300 Starting with the 20th century Western legal systems evolved to expand women s rights but women s rights in the Muslim world have to varying degree remained tied to the Quran hadiths and their traditional interpretations by Islamic jurists 301 302 Sharia grants women the right to inherit property from other family members and these rights are detailed in the Quran 303 A woman s inheritance can be unequal is she inherits from her father as a daughter s inheritance is usually half of that of her brother s Quran 4 11 304 Domestic violence edit Jonathan A C Brown says The vast majority of the ulama across the Sunni schools of law inherited the Prophet s unease over domestic violence and placed further restrictions on the evident meaning of the Wife Beating Verse A leading Meccan scholar from the second generation of Muslims Ata bin Abi Rabah counseled a husband not to beat his wife even if she ignored him but rather to express his anger in some other way Darimi a teacher of both Tirmidhi and Muslim bin Hajjaj as well as a leading early scholar in Iran collected all the Hadiths showing Muhammad s disapproval of beating in a chapter entitled The Prohibition on Striking Women A thirteenth century scholar from Granada Ibn Faras notes that one camp of ulama had staked out a stance forbidding striking a wife altogether declaring it contrary to the Prophet s example and denying the authenticity of any Hadiths that seemed to permit beating Even Ibn Hajar the pillar of late medieval Sunni Hadith scholarship concludes that contrary to what seems to be an explicit command in the Qur an the Hadiths of the Prophet leave no doubt that striking one s wife to discipline her actually falls under the Shariah ruling of strongly disliked or disliked verging on prohibited 305 The Surah 4 34 in the Quran has been debated for domestic violence and also has been the subject to varied interpretations 306 307 According to some interpretations Sharia condones certain forms of domestic violence against women when a husband suspects nushuz disobedience disloyalty rebellion ill conduct in his wife only after admonishing and staying away from the bed does not work 308 These interpretations have been criticized as inconsistent with women s rights in domestic abuse cases 309 310 311 312 Musawah CEDAW KAFA and other organizations have proposed ways to modify Sharia inspired laws to improve women s rights in Muslim majority nations including women s rights in domestic abuse cases 313 314 315 316 Others believe that wife beating is not consistent with a more modernist perspective of the Quran 317 Many Imams and scholars who learned Shariah in traditional Islamic seminaries object to the misuse of this verse to justify domestic violence Muslims for White Ribbon Campaign was launched in 2010 with Imams and Muslim leaders committing to join with others to work to end violence against women 318 Khutbah campaigns were held in many parts of the world to speak out against domestic violence and encourage Muslim congregants to eradicate domestic abuse 319 320 321 Rape edit Rape is considered a serious crime in the Sharia law since the Islamic prophet Muhammad ordered rapists to be punished by stoning 322 while in countries like Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates rape victims who press charges can risk being prosecuted for extramarital sex zina if the rape can not be proven 155 323 324 Slavery edit See also Islamic views on slavery and Islamic views on concubinage nbsp 13th century slave market Yemen Slaves and concubines are considered as possessions in Sharia they can be bought sold rented gifted shared and inherited when owners die Sharia recognizes the basic inequality between master and slave between free women and slave women between believers and non believers as well as their unequal rights 325 326 Sharia authorized the institution of slavery using the words abd slave and the phrase ma malakat aymanukum that which your right hand owns to refer to women slaves seized as captives of war 325 327 Under Islamic law Muslim men could have sexual relations with female captives and slaves 328 301 Slave women under sharia did not have a right to own property or to move freely 329 330 Sharia in Islam s history provided a religious foundation for enslaving non Muslim women and men but allowed for the manumission of slaves However manumission required that the non Muslim slave first convert to Islam 331 332 A slave woman who bore a child to her Muslim master umm al walad could not be sold becoming legally free upon her master s death and the child was considered free and a legitimate heir of the father 333 334 Terrorism edit Further information Islamic terrorism Islamic extremism Jihad Jihadism and Salafi jihadism nbsp Al Qaeda ideologues have used their interpretation of sharia to justify terrorist attacksSome extremists have used their interpretation of Islamic scriptures and Sharia in particular the doctrine of jihad to justify acts of war and terror against Muslim as well as non Muslim individuals and governments 335 336 337 The expert on terrorism Rachel Ehrenfeld wrote that the Sharia s finance Islamic banking is a new weapon in the arsenal of what might be termed fifth generation warfare 5GW 338 However sharia complaint financing actually requires a person to stay away from weapons manufacturing 339 340 341 In classical fiqh the term jihad refers to armed struggle against oppressors 342 343 Classical jurists developed an elaborate set of rules pertaining to jihad including prohibitions on harming those who are not engaged in combat 344 345 According to Bernard Lewis a t no time did the classical jurists offer any approval or legitimacy to what we nowadays call terrorism 346 and the terrorist practice of suicide bombing has no justification in terms of Islamic theology law or tradition 347 In the modern era the notion of jihad has lost its jurisprudential relevance and instead gave rise to an ideological and political discourse 348 While modernist Islamic scholars have emphasized defensive and non military aspects of jihad some radicals have advanced aggressive interpretations that go beyond the classical theory 348 For al Qaeda ideologues in jihad all means are legitimate including targeting Muslim non combatants and the mass killing of non Muslim civilians 335 Some modern ulema such as Yusuf al Qaradawi and Sulaiman Al Alwan have supported attacks against Israeli army reservists and hence should be considered as soldiers while Hamid bin Abdallah al Ali declared that suicide attacks in Chechnya were justified as a sacrifice 335 349 Many prominent Islamic scholars including al Qaradawi himself have issued condemnations of terrorism in general terms 350 For example Abdul Aziz ibn Abdullah Al ash Sheikh the Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia has stated that terrorizing innocent people constitute s a form of injustice that cannot be tolerated by Islam while Muhammad Sayyid Tantawy Grand Imam of al Azhar and former Grand Mufti of Egypt has stated that attacking innocent people is not courageous it is stupid and will be punished on the Day of Judgment 335 351 Comparison with other legal systems editJewish law edit Main article Halakha See also Seven Laws of Noah Islamic legal tradition has a number of parallels with Judaism In both religions revealed law holds a central place in contrast to Christianity which does not possess a body of revealed law and where theology rather than law is considered to be the principal field of religious study 3 352 Both Islamic and Jewish law Halakha are derived from formal textual revelations Quran and Pentateuch as well as less formal orally transmitted prophetic traditions hadith and mishna According to some scholars the words sharia and halakha both mean literally the path to follow The fiqh literature parallels rabbinical law developed in the Talmud with fatwas being analogous to rabbinic responsa 353 183 However the emphasis on qiyas in classical Sunni legal theory is both more explicitly permissive than Talmudic law with respect to authorizing individual reason as a source of law and more implicitly restrictive in excluding other unauthorized forms of reasoning 353 Western legal systems edit Early Islamic law developed a number of legal concepts that anticipated similar such concepts that later appeared in English common law 354 355 Similarities exist between the royal English contract protected by the action of debt and the Islamic Aqd between the English assize of novel disseisin and the Islamic Istihqaq and between the English jury and the Islamic Lafif in classical Maliki jurisprudence 354 356 The law schools known as Inns of Court also parallel Madrasahs 354 The methodology of legal precedent and reasoning by analogy Qiyas are also similar in both the Islamic and common law systems 357 as are the English trust and agency institutions to the Islamic Waqf and Hawala institutions respectively 358 359 355 Elements of Islamic law also have other parallels in Western legal systems For example the influence of Islam on the development of an international law of the sea can be discerned alongside that of the Roman influence 360 George Makdisi has argued that the madrasa system of attestation paralleled the legal scholastic system in the West which gave rise to the modern university system The triple status of faqih master of law mufti professor of legal opinions and mudarris teacher conferred by the classical Islamic legal degree had its equivalents in the medieval Latin terms magister professor and doctor respectively although they all came to be used synonymously in both East and West 361 Makdisi suggested that the medieval European doctorate licentia docendi was modeled on the Islamic degree ijazat al tadris wa l ifta of which it is a word for word translation with the term ifta issuing of fatwas omitted 361 362 He also argued that these systems shared fundamental freedoms the freedom of a professor to profess his personal opinion and the freedom of a student to pass judgement on what he is learning 361 There are differences between Islamic and Western legal systems For example Sharia classically recognizes only natural persons and never developed the concept of a legal person or corporation i e a legal entity that limits the liabilities of its managers shareholders and employees exists beyond the lifetimes of its founders and that can own assets sign contracts and appear in court through representatives 363 Interest prohibitions imposed secondary costs by discouraging record keeping and delaying the introduction of modern accounting 364 Such factors according to Timur Kuran have played a significant role in retarding economic development in the Middle East 365 However the rise of monopoly wealth and corporations have proven to also be detrimental to the economic equality of a society Ziauddin Sardar also suggests that the promotion of equitable wealth distribution and suppression of monopoly capital are a part of Islam s message that emphasises genuine equity and justice 366 See also editDin Glossary of Islam Guardianship of the Islamic Jurists Imam Nawawi s Forty Hadith a brief collection of forty hadith by the founder of the Shafiʿi school each used to illustrate a fundamental of shariah Islamic advice literature Islamic republic Islamic Sharia Council a court in the United Kingdom with no legal authority Ma ruf Principle of legality in French criminal law Sources of Islamic law Halakha TheonomyNotes edit Twelver Shia jurisprudence does not recognize the use of qiyas but relies on reason ʿaql in their place 12 13 the essential features of old Muhammadan jurisprudence such as the idea of the living tradition of the ancient schools of law local practices of early Muslim communities a body of common doctrine expressing the earliest effort to systematize legal maxims which often reflect a slightly later stage and an important nucleus of legal traditions it is safe to say that this Muhammadan legal science started in the later part of the Umaiyad period taking the legal practice of the time as its raw material and endorsing modifying or rejecting it 43 Islamic law did not derive directly from the Koran but developed out of popular and administrative practices under the Umayyads and this practice often diverged from the intentions and even the explicit wording of the Koran Norms derived from the Koran were introduced into Muhammadan law almost invariably at a secondary stage 44 In the time of Shafi i traditions from the Prophet were already recognized as one of the material bases of Muhammadan law Their position in the ancient schools of law was as we have seen much less certain 45 Another example is that an early major works of fiqh Muwatta Imam Malik edited by Shaibani contains 429 ahadith by Muhammad but 750 by the Companions Successors and others 46 in contrast to later works by al Bukhari Muslim etc that contain only ahadith by Muhammad a great many traditions in the classical and other collections were put into circulation only after Shafi i s time the first considerable body of legal traditions from the Prophet originated towards the middle of the second century 48 What theology is for the Christian law is for the Muslim 85 referenced in 86 Khomeini himself did not call this proclamation a fatwa and in Islamic legal theory only a court can decide whether an accused is guilty However after the proclamation was presented as a fatwa in Western press this characterization was widely accepted by both its critics and its supporters 180 184 Citations edit a b Bassiouni M Cherif 2014 2013 The Sharia Sunni Islamic Law Fiqh and Legal Methods Ilm Uṣul al Fiqh In Bassiouni M Cherif ed The Shari a and Islamic Criminal Justice in Time of War and Peace Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 18 87 doi 10 1017 CBO9781139629249 003 ISBN 9781139629249 LCCN 2013019592 Archived from the original on 17 October 2021 Retrieved 17 October 2021 a b British amp World English sharia Oxford Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 4 December 2015 a b Dahlen 2003 chpt 2a a b c d e John L Esposito ed 2014 Islamic Law The Oxford Dictionary of Islam Oxford Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 31 March 2019 Retrieved 29 January 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj Vikor 2014 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad Calder 2009 Customary law has also been an important part of Islamic law from the beginning It was used to resolve disputes that were not covered by sharia and it also helped to adapt sharia to the needs of different societies and cultures Islamic Law An Introduction by John Esposito 2019 Esposito John Islamic Law An Introduction Oxford University Press 2019 Page 31 Another key principle that the early Islamic jurists developed was the concept of urf or customary law Urf is the customary practices of a particular community The early jurists recognized that urf could be used to supplement or complement Islamic law For example if there was no clear ruling on a particular issue in the Quran or hadith the jurists could look to urf for guidance The Oxford Handbook of Islamic Law Emon Anver M and Rumee Ahmed editors The Oxford Handbook of Islamic Law Oxford University Press 2018 p 25 https www deoband org 2010 06 politics the system of rule in islam Robert G Hoyland In God s Path The Arab Conquests and the Creation of an Islamic Empire 2015 Patricia Crone Martin Hinds God s Caliph Religious Authority in the First Centuries of Islam 1986 a b c d Dahlen 2003 chpt 4c a b c d e Schneider 2014 John L Esposito Natana J DeLong Bas 2001 Women in Muslim family law Archived 19 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine p 2 Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0815629085 Quote by the ninth century the classical theory of law fixed the sources of Islamic law at four the Quran the 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Israel Ministry of Justice Archived from the original on 25 March 2019 Retrieved 19 March 2019 India Law emory edu Archived from the original on 16 January 2013 Retrieved 18 February 2013 Taher Abul 14 September 2008 Revealed UK s first official sharia courts The Sunday Times Inside Britain s Sharia courts Archived 18 May 2018 at the Wayback Machine Jane Corbin The Telegraph 7 April 2013 Bowen John R 2010 How could English courts recognize Shariah University of St Thomas Law Journal 7 3 411 35 Archived from the original on 21 August 2016 Retrieved 19 July 2016 Qatar The Duality of the Legal System Archived from the original on 8 July 2010 Retrieved 28 April 2010 Saudi Arabia Basic Industries Corp v Mobil Yanbu Petrochemical Co Supreme Court of Delaware January 14 2005 p 52 The Saudi law system differs in critically important respects from the system of legal thought employed by the common law countries including the United States Perhaps most significant is that Islamic law does not 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