07/01/2005

Sharia is neither Islamic, nor Canadian 
Taj Hashmi from Toronto 

Of late the proposed introduction of a Sharia Arbitration Board in
Ontario has created much controversy, among both Muslim and
non-Muslim Canadians. Former attorney-general Marion Boyd’s 150-page
report favouring the introduction of Sharia, or “Muslim principles”
(in her language), in the proposed Arbitration Board has become the
proverbial last straw.

 While the proponents justify the Sharia Board in the name of equal
opportunity for the Muslim community, the opponents regard such a
move as being contrary to Canadian constitution and anticipate gross
violations of Muslim women’s right to custody, inheritance and
post-divorce alimony.

 To the uninformed, Marion Boyd sounds quite “reasonable” in the way
she has argued her case. In her view the “Muslim principles” should
be considered an acceptable method of religious arbitration as long
as they do not violate Canadian law –– very similar to how Catholics,
Jews and Ismailis have made use of a 1991 Act.

Surprisingly, she tells us: “We’re being very clear, this is not
Sharia law.”

What is even more surprising is that Syed Mumtaz Ali, the main
advocate of Sharia arbitrations in Ontario, is “delighted” with the
Boyd Report given that many of the 46 recommendations of the Report
came from him. Ali glorifies the proposed Board as “a model for the
world to see how Sharia law can be used in a Western society.” The
ambivalence in Boyd’s and Ali’s statements on the true colour of the
Report smacks of duplicity. It seems, Boyd is playing a hide and seek
game with us, trying to introduce Sharia with a different name.

Although we cannot agree with the sensational view that some
“fundamentalist” groups want the Sharia Board as a stepping-stone to
eventually create an independent legal system for Canadian Muslims,
we can agree that Canada’s adopting Sharia law may legitimise the
excesses of Sharia committed elsewhere in the Muslim World.

Problematically, both the adherents and opponents of Sharia believe
that the code was derived from the Quran and is as old as Islam
itself. Ordinary Muslims also consider Sharia to be divine law.
Contrary to these assumptions, Sharia is hardly Quranic in origin as
the Quran contains 80-odd verses, which are prescriptive or
regulative. The main sources of Sharia are thousands of spurious
Hadiths or “sayings” of Prophet Muhammad, collected haphazardly more
than 200 years after his death. Muslim jurists’ legal opinions
collected during the 8th and 12th centuries based on their
understanding of the Quran, traditions of the Prophet, local customs
and above all, common sense, are collectively known as the Sharia.

Once we consider the following facts, we come closer to resolving the
Sharia debate:

1) Sharia is authoritative, not infallible;

2) The Sunni Sharia code went through major transformation and
changes, but only up to the 16th century;

3) Shiite Sharia is still subject to changes and modifications; and

4) The moral principles of the Quran outweigh its legal principles
(for example, while slavery, concubinage and polygamy are tolerated
in Islam for a specific historical era, the Quran does not promote or
encourage these practices).

It is quite puzzling that secular Canada should toy with the idea of
incorporating Sharia into its legal system while several Muslim
countries are gradually replacing the Sharia with secular codes and
some have already done away with it. Canada should be even more
cautious about implementing Sharia, as there are very few Islamic
scholars in the country, qualified enough to interpret the Quran and
the teachings of Islam.

It is interesting that Dr Mohamed Elmasry (a mathematics professor at
Waterloo University, not an Islamic scholar), controversial for his
comments on Jews and his classification of anti-Sharia Muslims as
“not religious”, also thinks that there could be as few as “only one
Muslim scholar in Canada” capable of interpreting the Sharia.
Paradoxically, he is an ardent advocate of a Sharia Arbitration Board
in Ontario.

Again, as it appears in Chapter 4 (Sura Nissa) of the Quran, only
immediate family members of Muslim couples may arbitrate in matters
relating to divorce and custody, there is no room for outsiders to
arbitrate.

And again, whose Sharia are we talking about? There are at least four
Sunni and scores of Shiite sects, each with its own Sharia code.
While the Wahhabi and other Muslim sects sanction female genital
mutilation in the name of Islam and Sharia, the official Iranian
Shiism endorses temporary marriage (Muta or Segha) between a man and
a woman for a day, week, month or year.

Some Muslims, on the basis of wrong interpretations of the Quran,
justify polygamy and even consider wife beating permissible in Islam.
Are Canadians willing to allow the implementation of these varying
versions of Sharia in this country?

I think we should think carefully before taking such a rash move.
Once we allow a Sharia Board to meddle with the conjugal problems of
Muslim couples, the Ontario government would simply fail to protect
half-educated, uninformed and dependent Muslim women from being
abused in the name of Islam. All concerned should learn that what the
Quran has given to women, Sharia has taken away from them. Examples
abound. While men and women are equally held responsible for adultery
in the Quran, which prescribes 80 lashes for the offenders each, the
Sharia is particularly harsh on the adulteress, prescribing the death
penalty for both the offenders.

Since Sharia is not infallible and is subject to change and
modifications, there is no need to rush for its implementation
anywhere, let alone Ontario, until the emergence of a Muslim Martin
Luther. Unless Islam goes through its Reformation and the Muslim
World undergoes a total transformation to adapt to modern, liberal
democratic, secular and urban cultures of enlightenment and
tolerance, no one should advocate the cause of Sharia in Canada.

Marion Boyd and like-minded non-Muslim well wishers of the Canadian
Muslim community should learn more about Sharia, Islam and Muslims.
The advocates of a Sharia Board should realise that Ontario Muslims
do not have to have a religious arbitration board only because the
Catholics, Jews and Ismailis have their own boards.

The Ontario government should not try to do “justice” to the Muslim
community through comparison with the Catholics or other communities,
as apples cannot be compared with oranges.

The Canadian government should not pay heed to the romantic and
utopian views of the Muslim Diaspora, which is unaware of the
anti-Islamic nature of the Sharia. Some members of the Diaspora, we
have reasons to believe, want to come to the limelight as leaders of
the Muslim community through the Sharia Board as advisers,
arbitrators and “experts” of Sharia law. However, the Government
alone cannot stop the formation of the Sharia Board; civil society in
general and liberal Muslims in particular should come forward to stop
this vice, which is neither Islamic nor Canadian in character and
spirit.

Dr. Taj Hashmi is a professor at the York Centre for Asian Research,
York University, Toronto and a member of the Muslim Canadian
Congress.

http://www.weeklyholiday.net/com.html

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