http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/onfaith/guestvoices/2007/06/fatwas_and_modernity.html

Fatwas and Modernity
Sheikh Ali Gomaa





Almost two years ago the citizens of London were victims of a great atrocity. 
Those who perpetrated those crimes would like you to believe that they were 
inspired by the religion of Islam. Nothing could be further from the truth.

There is nothing in Islam that could ever justify these blatant acts of 
aggression. Islam calls on Muslims to be productive members of whatever society 
they find themselves in. Islam embodies a flexibility that allows Muslims to do 
so without any internal or external conflict. This is why we see a vast variety 
of cultural, artistic and civilisational phenomena all of which can be 
described as Islamic, ranging from the Taj Mahal in India to the winding 
streets of Fez to the poetry composed by English converts that represents not 
only the rigor of English verse, but also encompasses the beauty of Islamic 
piety.

This flexibility is not just present in the cultural output of Muslims; it is 
an integral part of the Islamic legal tradition as well. In fact, you could say 
it is one of the defining characteristics of Islamic law. Islamic law is both a 
methodology and the collection of positions adopted by Muslim jurists over the 
last 1,400 years. Those centuries were witness to no less than 90 schools of 
legal thought, and the 21st century finds us in the providential position to 
look back on this tradition in order to find that which will benefit us today. 
This is one of the first steps in the issuing of a fatwa (religious 
opinion/ruling).

Fatwas represent the bridge between the legal tradition and the contemporary 
world in which we live. They are the link between the past and the present, the 
absolute and the relative, the theoretical and the practical. For this reason 
it takes more than just knowledge of Islamic law to issue a fatwa. A Mufti who 
does not know the contemporary world in which he/she lives is like a person who 
has the ability to walk and might also have the ability to run. However, they 
move through a dark path without a light in their hand. It is possible that 
they will make it, but in most cases they will fall and perish. Muftis must 
also have an in-depth understanding of the problems that their communities are 
facing. When those who lack these qualifications issue fatwas the result is the 
extremism we see today, the kind witnessed on 7/7. We have to be clear about 
what is at stake here. When each and every person's unqualified opinion is 
considered a fatwa we lose a tool that is of the utmost importance for reigning 
in extremism and preserving the flexibility and balance of Islamic law.

This flexibility is present in the Islamic political sphere as well, but this 
is a point that is often missed. Many assume that an Islamic government must be 
a caliphate, and that the caliph must rule in a set and specific way. There is 
no basis for this vision within the Islamic tradition. The caliphate is one 
political solution that Muslims adopted during a certain historical period, but 
this does not mean that it is the only possible choice for Muslims when it 
comes to deciding how they should be governed.

The experience that Egypt went through can be taken as an example of this. The 
period of development begun by Muhammad Ali Pasha and continued by the Khedive 
Ismail was an attempt to build a modern state. This meant a reformulation of 
Islamic law. This process led Egypt to become a liberal state run by a system 
of democracy without any objections from Muslim scholars. Muslims are free to 
choose whichever system of government they deem most appropriate for them.

The principles of freedom and human dignity for which liberal democracy stands 
are themselves part of the foundation for the Islamic world view; it is the 
achievement of this freedom and dignity within a religious context that Islamic 
law strives for.

The world has witnessed tremendous change over the last two hundred years. This 
change came in the form of new technologies and political ideologies. There 
were also new developments in communications allowing us to be aware of what is 
happening in nearly every part of the world the instant that it occurs, whereas 
in the past it would take months if not years for even the most urgent news to 
spread. This wave of change has caused a complete alteration of nearly every 
aspect of our lives. It is this modern occurrence that presents the greatest 
difficulty to Muslim jurists and Muftis. In the past there was little 
alternation of the way things worked and progressed. Even when things changed 
it was slow and isolated to a handful of fields. The change of the past 200 
years, however, has made it necessary to re-examine how everything works. 
Meaning that the way in which Islamic law is applied must take into account 
this change.

The flexibility and adaptability of Islamic law is perhaps its greatest asset. 
To provide people with practical and relevant guidance while at the same time 
staying true to its foundational principles, Islam allows the wisdom and moral 
strength of revelation to be applied in modern times. It is through adopting 
this attitude towards the shari'a that an authentic, contemporary, "moderate" 
and tolerant Islam can provide solutions to the problems confronting the Muslim 
world and the West today. Muslims must hold fast to this tradition in order to 
stand in the face of those who would use our religion for their own agendas.

Sheikh Ali Gomaa is the Grand Mufti of the Arab Republic of Egypt - the second 
highest religious position in the country. He oversees the premier institution 
in the Muslim world for religious legal direction, Dar al-Ifta al-Misriyyah. 
This essay is distributed by Common Ground News Service.

Posted by Sheikh Ali Gomaa on June 8, 2007 9:54 AM 

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