http://www.aawsat.com/english/news.asp?section=2&id=19881


15/02/2010 
Fatwas of Fear

By Diana Mukkaled




They raise feelings of sadness, as well as ridicule and derision. 

 

I am talking about a number of fatwas and religious opinions and 
interpretations that are occasionally issued to us from here and there. Those 
who issue these either voice their [religious] opinions on what is forbidden 
and acceptable from the pulpit or via their websites, in response to people 
asking questions about what to eat and wear, how to live, and how to utilize 
the forms of communication and information in this modern world. 

The former head of the Al-Azhar University Fatwa Commission called for the 
prohibition of the Facebook social networking website, saying that whoever uses 
this website is committing a sin. Of course al-Azhar quickly distanced itself 
from this fatwa, saying that since it was issued by the former head of the 
Fatwa Commission, rather than its current head, it does not represent the 
official position of Al-Azhar University. 

However doesn't the recent state of confusion surrounding this fatwa, resemble 
the confusion that took place following the issuance of fatwas and religious 
opinions on similar issues, which resulted in the Sheikhs who issued the 
original fatwas to quickly retracting them? 

Don't the majority of such fatwas merely reflect the personal opinions of the 
Sheikh who issues them and his limited knowledge with regards to globalization 
and modern technology, which thereby causes embarrassment to the authority that 
the sheikh belongs to? 

The fatwa prohibiting Facebook takes us back to a long series of confusing 
fatwas issued on modern means of communications, and particularly the internet, 
and such fatwas are not usually related to the modern values of our time. 
Without a doubt, the rate at which knowledge and the methods of communication 
are advancing is far beyond our understanding, especially as this advancement 
opens up new and revolutionary horizons to new knowledge and the future; 
however these horizons also contain within them the seeds of risk and harm. 
This is something that applies to all modes of living and progress. The 
internet seems to be a tool for dialogue and sharing knowledge, but it is also 
[potentially] a tool for exploitation. At this point, we must not forget that 
the world is still in the initial stages of this [digital] revolution. 

The internet has unique features with regards to communication, and it 
continues to seriously challenge researchers and thinkers, and these same 
challenges are also being faced by traditional religious institutions. 

Social networking sites and blogs have helped to break down barriers and 
produce innovations, and it has even helped to document the political and 
social history that is taking place today in a way that has never been done 
before. Isn't this what happened with regards to the Iranian protestors 
utilizing the Twitter website, and prior to this the manner in which Egyptian 
and Iraqi bloggers utilized the internet? This is something that is happening 
every day with hundreds of bloggers, writing down their thoughts on social 
networking sites. 

This is a fear that causes the traditional social classes to attempt to contain 
and curb such advances, and most dangerously of all, attempt to repress them. 

Most of these fatwas and religious advisory opinions represent a defensive 
reaction from a handful of frightened individuals who are alarmed by what they 
see as an attack on their legacy. It is hard to reconcile the modern world with 
fatwas that prohibit Facebook. The job of the preacher has changed, and before 
issuing any fatwas, he must first make an effort to understand modern 
technology, and stop dealing with this as if it is a source of great evil.


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