Benernya udah terlambat..

Udah ketahuan bahwa Islam itu cuman jelmaan salah satu sekte Nasrani, jadi ya 
nggk bisa di reformasi.

Bisanya cuman ditinggalin, kayak kapal Titanic yang sedangkaram.

PS.

Saya teringat istilah ini:

"The so-called Islamic reformers remind me of the salon orchestra, which -
in a heroic display of giving the passengers the illusion of normalcy -
continued to play on the deck of the Titanic until it went down. Likewise, the
reformers are playing an alluring melody, but know full well that no one is
listening anyway."

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/message/288058

--
   

Pursuing an Islamic metamorphosis

The Muslim world faces a decline similar to that of medieval Europe; a 
potential rebirth requires a new consensus.
Mohamed El-Moctar El-Shinqiti Last Modified: 17 Oct 2010 14:11 GMT

Reformists should focus on the rule of law, rather than the legal tradition 
from which law is drawn [EPA]

In his book, The Autumn of the Middle Ages, Dutch historian Johan Huizinga 
describes the decline of the medieval world as a process of "dying and 
rigidifying of a previously valid store of thought".

The main thesis of Huizinga's book is that, by the fourteenth and fifteenth 
centuries, the cultural forms and norms on which medieval Europe was based 
became overused and exhausted. When any ideal becomes exhausted, it fails to be 
a source of inspiration; rather it becomes an artificial burden.

>From Huizinga's perspective, the European world of the late middle ages was a 
>world of artificial vanity and self-deception, a ruin of a world that had died 
>a long time before.

I think that the abstract aspect of Huizinga's thesis on cultural forms is 
enlightening, and can be extended to explain transitional moments in other 
cultures, including contemporary Islamic culture. The cultural legacy modern 
Muslims inherited from their ancestors is exhausted, and - with lack of 
self-criticism - much of this legacy is becoming a burden rather than a source 
of inspiration.

The Islamic world is going through a deep metamorphosis. The lessons of history 
from the American and French revolutions show that these kinds of transitive 
moments are sometimes bloody and painful. At this moment, Muslims need new 
ideas and ideals that transcend their divisions and heel their wounds.

One of these deep wounds is the conflict between secularists and Islamists, and 
that is what we will explore here. 

State and religion

At the heart of the crisis of Muslim societies today is the lack of consensus 
about the social contract on which society should be based, especially in terms 
of an agreed understanding for the relation between religion and state.

Secularism can be seen from an institutional, legal or ideological angle. In 
the western experience, it is also important to distinguish between the 
Anglo-Saxon 'soft' secularism which basically means positive neutrality of the 
state towards religion, and the French 'hard' laïcité that goes beyond 
neutrality to  negative intervention against religion.

Institutional separation between religious and political organisations is not 
difficult to accept in the Islamic world. It is indeed in compatibility with 
the Islamic historical experience, where religion was never institutionalised 
as a political competitor with the state, the way it was in medieval 
Christianity.

But ideological secularism the French way, and legal secularism that excludes 
Islam as a source of legislation, will never take root in Islamic culture.

Historical potential

Muslims cannot, however, continue ignoring new developments in the morality of 
all humanity regarding the religion-state relations. First, the foundation of 
the modern state is geographical, not faith-based.

Second, the equality of all citizens in political rights is, theoretically at 
least, unquestionable in any respected modern state. Third, every nation needs 
to consider the laws and legislation of other nations.

Fortunately for modern Muslims who are deeply rooted in their cultural 
heritage, there are potentials in their inherited culture that might help. 
First, Muslim societies have always been open to religious diversity.

The unbroken existence of Christian minorities in the Middle East from the 
birth of Islam until today is a good illustration of this potential. Second, 
Islamic law is very flexible and open to perpetual interpretation and 
adaptation, and it is easy to incorporate most modern laws within the Islamic 
legal vision. 

Three players

A closer look at the conflict over religion and state in the Islamic world 
reveals the existence of three players who have a stake in the outcome of this 
conflict. These players are the Muslim majorities, the non-Muslim minorities, 
and the non-practising Muslims. Each one of these players has its own set of 
concerns.

The Muslim majorities see Islam as an essential part of inspiration in public 
life, and they don't want their value system to be compromised. They are also 
afraid of foreign manipulation of the minority's case.

Some people among these majorities believe that the issue of secularism is 
irrelevant. We have no church, they argue, and secularism, by definition, is 
"the separation between the state and the church".

Some would even go as far as saying that Islam is a secular religion, and we 
are already secular, because we have no clergy who have a claim on being God's 
legate on earth.

The non-Muslim minorities don't want to be treated as second class citizens, 
and they don't want their religious freedom restricted. They are not willing to 
accept less than equal rights and responsibilities in their land of birth.

As for non-practising Muslims, Islam is acceptable as an individualistic 
observance, but not a social or political system. They believe the state should 
avoid legislation of morality, especially religious morality.

Towards a compromise

The three players in this Islamic metamorphosis need to come to a historical 
compromise that will save much time and energy, and help produce a swift 
transition of the Muslim societies to democracy and modernity. 

Non-Muslim minorities and non-practising Muslims need to accept the fact that 
Islamic law is too rich and too important to be discarded. The historical 
analogy with Western experience is misleading, since there was never a 
universally subscribed to "Christian law" that governed societies and states. 
Unlike the Islamic law that has been the law of many Muslim states and empires 
throughout the last 1400 years, the medieval Canon law was to govern the 
Church, not the state or the society at large. 

Muslim majorities need to accept that faith is no longer the basis for a social 
contract; geography is the new basis.

They must also guarantee the political and legal equality of their non-Muslim 
and non-religious citizens. Any legalisation of discrimination against 
non-Muslim citizens in terms of constitutional and political rights is absurd. 
Unfortunately that is what we still have today in many Arab countries—including 
the very secular ones, where constitutions deprive non-Muslim citizens from 
running in presidential elections (good for them anyway, since the elections 
are never fair or transparent).

Institutional secularism that prevents rulers from misusing religion, and 
guarantees freedom of conscience for all, should be accepted by all. 
Ideological secularism that chases religion away from public life should be 
rejected by all, because it is pure coercion.

Legal secularism that ignores the centrality of Islamic laws is meaningless. 
However, a great reinterpretation and adaptation of Islamic laws is necessary 
to help this compromise take place. These laws are flexible, and there has 
never been a monopoly in interpreting them.

Rule of law

Those who complain about Islamic laws need to shift their discourse to a more 
positive and practical formula: what should matter for them should be equality 
before the law, more than the source of the law.

As I told my friends at a Texas church a few years ago, I don't care if US law 
is drawn from a biblical source or a Roman source; what I care about is that 
the law does not discriminate against me as a Muslim.

The three players in the debate over religion and politics in the Islamic world 
need to be focusing on the rule of law instead of fighting over what kind of 
law should rule. 

The Islamic world has suffered a lot from the lack of consensus on the social 
contract within Muslim societies.

It is time to explore new roads towards this necessary consensus. Both 
Islamists and secularists share the responsibility to achieve common ground 
through mutual respect and compromise.

A creative synthesis that is seen by Islamists as 'Islamic', and by secularists 
as 'secular', is very possible. After all Islam never accepted splitting the 
human personality into spiritual and material parts, and the Islamic ideal was 
never the self-absorbed asceticism, but the practical ethicality.

Mohamed El-Moctar El-Shinqiti is an author in political history and history of 
religion. He is a research coordinator at the Qatar Foundation in Doha, Qatar.  

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily 
reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy. 
Source:
Al Jazeera
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