http://www.tariqramadan.com/spip.php?article264

An International call for Moratorium on corporal punishment, stoning
and the death penalty in the Islamic World

Tuesday 5 April 2005, by Tariq Ramadan

Tariq Ramadan

Muslim majority societies and Muslims around the world are constantly
confronted with the fundamental question of how to implement the
penalties prescribed in the Islamic penal code.

Evoking the notion of sharî’a, or more precisely hudûd[1], the terms
of the debate are defined by central questions emerging from thought
provoking discussions taking place between ulamâ’ (scholars) and/or
Muslim masses: How to be faithful to the message of Islam in the
contemporary era? How can a society truly define itself as “Islamic”
beyond what is required in the daily practices of individual private
life? But a critical and fruitful debate has not yet materialized.


Several currents of thought exist in the Islamic world today and
disagreements are numerous, deep and recurring. Among these, a small
minority demands the immediate and strict application of hudûd,
assessing this as an essential prerequisite to truly defining a
“Muslim majority society” as “Islamic”. Others, while accepting the
fact that the hudûd are indeed found in the textual references (the
Qur’an and the Sunna[2]), consider the application of hudûd to be
conditional upon the state of the society which must be just and, for
some, has to be “ideal” before these injunctions could be applied.
Thus, the priority is the promotion of social justice, fighting
against poverty and illiteracy etc. Finally, there are others, also a
minority, who consider the texts relating to hudûd as obsolete and
argue that these references have no place in contemporary Muslim
societies.


One can see the opinions on this subject are so divergent and
entrenched that it becomes difficult to discern what the respective
arguments are. At the very moment we are writing these lines- while
serious debate is virtually non-existent, while positions remain vague
and even nebulous, and consensus among Muslims is lacking- women and
men are being subjected to the application of these penalties.


For Muslims, Islam is a message of equality and justice. It is our
faithfulness to the message of Islam that leads us to recognize that
it impossible to remain silent in the face of unjust applications of
our religious references. The debate must liberate itself and refuse
to be satisfied by general, timid and convoluted responses. These
silences and intellectual contortions are unworthy of the clarity and
just message of Islam.


In the name of the scriptural sources, the Islamic teachings, and the
contemporary Muslim conscience, statements must be made and decisions
need to be taken.


What does the majority of the ulamâ’ say?

All the ulamâ’ (scholars) of the Muslim world, of yesterday and of
today and in all the currents of thought, recognize the existence of
scriptural sources that refer to corporal punishment (Qur’an and
Sunna), stoning of adulterous men and women (Sunna) and the penal code
(Qur’an and Sunna). The divergences between the ulamâ’ and the various
trends of thought (literalist, reformist, rationalist, etc.) are
primarily rooted in the interpretation of a certain number of these
texts, the conditions of application of the Islamic penal code, as
well as its degree of relevance to the contemporary era (nature of the
committed infractions, testimonials, social and political contexts,
etc.).


The majority of the ulamâ’, historically and today, are of the opinion
that these penalties are on the whole Islamic but that the conditions
under which they should be implemented are nearly impossible to
reestablish. These penalties, therefore, are “almost never
applicable”. The hudûd would, therefore, serve as a “deterrent,” the
objective of which would be to stir the conscience of the believer to
the gravity of an action warranting such a punishment.


Anyone who reads the books of the ulamâ’, listens to their lectures
and sermons, travels inside the Islamic world or interacts with the
Muslim communities of the West will inevitably and invariably hear the
following pronouncement from religious authorities: “almost never
applicable”. Such pronouncements give the majority of ulamâ and Muslim
masses a way out of dealing with the fundamental issues and questions
without risking appearing to be have betrayed the Islamic scriptural
sources. The alternative posture is to avoid the issue of hudûd
altogether and/or to remain silent.


 What is happening on the ground?


One would have hoped that this pronouncement, “almost never,” would be
understood as a assurance that women and men would be protected from
repressive and unjust treatment; one would have wished that the
stipulated conditions would be seen, by legislators and government who
claim Islam, as an imperative to promote equality before the law and
justice among humans. Nothing could be further from the reality.


Behind an Islamic discourse that minimizes the reality and rounds off
the angles, and within the shadows of this “almost never”, lurks a
somber reality where women and men are punished, beaten, stoned and
executed in the name of hudûd while Muslim conscience the world over
remains untouched.


It is as if one does not know, as though a minor violation is being
done to the Islamic teachings. A still more grave injustice is that
these penalties are applied almost exclusively to women and the poor,
the doubly victimized, never to the wealthy, the powerful, or the
oppressors. Furthermore, hundreds of prisoners have no access to
anything that could even remotely be called defense counsel. Death
sentences are decided and carried out against women, men and even
minors (political prisoners, traffickers, delinquents, etc.) without
ever given a chance to obtain legal counsel. In resigning ourselves to
having a superficial relationship to the scriptural sources, we betray
the message of justice of Islam.


The international community has an equally major and obvious
responsibility to be involved in addressing the question of hudûd in
the Muslim world. Thus far, the denunciations have been selective and
calculated for the protection of geostrategic and economic interests.
A poor country, in Africa or
Asia, trying to apply the hudûd or the sharî’a will face the
mobilization of international campaigns as we have seen recently. This
is not the case with rich countries, the petromonarchies and those
considered “allies”. Towards the latter, denunciations are made
reluctantly, or not at all, despite ongoing and acknowledged
applications of these penalties typically carried out against the
poorest or weakest segments of society. The intensity of the
denouncements is inversely proportional to the interests at stake. A
further injustice!.


The passion of the people, the fear of the ulamâ’


For those who travel within the Islamic world and interact with
Muslims, an analysis imposes itself: everywhere, populations are
demonstrating an increasing devotion to Islam and its teachings. This
reality, although interesting in itself, could be troubling, and even
dangerous when the nature of this devotion is so fervent, where there
is no real knowledge or comprehension of the texts, where there is so
little if any critical distance vis-à-vis the different scholarly
interpretations, the necessary contextualization, the nature of the
required conditions or, indeed the protection of the rights of the
individual and the promotion of justice.


On the question of hudûd, one sometimes sees popular support hoping or
exacting a literal and immediate application because the latter would
guarantee henceforth the “Islamic” character of a society. In fact, it
is not rare to hear Muslim women and men (educated or not, and more
often of modest means) calling for a formal and strict application of
the penal code (in their mind, the sharî’a) of which they themselves
will often be the first victims. When one studies this phenomenon, two
types of reasoning generally motivate these claims:


1.       The literal and immediate application of the hudûd legally
and socially provides a visible reference to Islam. The legislation,
by its harshness, gives the feeling of fidelity to the Qur’anic
injunctions that demands rigorous respect of the text. At the popular
level, one can infer in the African, Arabic, Asian as well as Western
countries, that the very nature of this harshness and intransigence of
the application, gives an Islamic dimension to the popular psyche.


2.       The opposition and condemnations by the West supplies,
paradoxically, the popular feeling of fidelity to the Islamic
teachings; a reasoning that is antithetical, simple and simplistic.
The intense opposition of the West is sufficient proof of the
authentic Islamic character of the literal application of hudûd. Some
will persuade themselves by asserting that the West has long since
lost its moral references and became so permissive that the harshness
of the Islamic penal code which punishes behaviors judged immoral, is
by antithesis, the true and only alternative “to Western decadence”.
These formalistic and binary reasoning are fundamentally dangerous for
they claim and grant an Islamic quality to a legislation, not in what
it promotes, protects and applies justice to, but more so because it
sanctions harsh and visible punishment to certain behaviors and in
stark contrast and opposition to the Western laws, which are perceived
as morally permissive and without a reference to religion[3]. One sees
today that communities or Muslim people satisfy themselves with this
type of legitimacy to back a government or a party that calls for an
application of the sharî’a narrowly understood as a literal and
immediate application of corporal punishment, stoning and the death
penalty.



When this type of popular passion takes hold, it is the first sign of
a will to respond to various forms of frustration and humiliation by
asserting an identity that perceives itself as Islamic (and
anti-Western). Such an identity is not based on the comprehension of
the objectives of the Islamic teachings (al maqâsid) or the different
interpretations and conditions relating to the application of the
hudûd.


Faced with this passion, many ulamâ’ remain prudent for the fear of
losing their credibility with the masses. One can observe a
psychological pressure exercised by this popular sentiment towards the
judicial process of the ulamâ’, which normally should be independent
so as to educate the population and propose alternatives. Today, an
inverse phenomenon is revealing itself. The majority of the ulamâ’ are
afraid to confront these popular and simplistic claims which lack
knowledge, are passionate and binary, for fear of losing their status
and being defined as having compromised too much, not been strict
enough, too westernized or not Islamic enough.


The ulamâ’, who should be the guarantors of a deep reading of the
texts, the guardians of fidelity to the objectives of justice and
equality and of the critical analysis of conditions and social
contexts, find themselves having to accept either a formalistic
application (an immediate non-contextualized application), or a binary
reasoning (less West is more Islam), or hide behind “almost never
applicable” pronouncements which protects them but which does not
provide real solutions to the daily injustices experienced by women
and the poor.



An impossible status quo: our responsibility


The Islamic world is experiencing a very deep crisis the causes of
which are multiple and sometimes contradictory. The political system
of the Arab world is becoming more and more entrenched, references to
Islam frequently instrumentalized, and public opinion is often muzzled
or blindly passionate (to such a point as to accept, indeed even to
call for, the most repressive interpretations and least just
application of the “Islamic sharî’a” and hudûd).


In terms of the more circumscribed religious question, we can observe
a crisis of authority accompanied by an absence of internal debate
among the ulamâ’ in the diverse schools of thought and within Muslim
societies. It becomes apparent that a variety of opinions, accepted in
Islam, are whirling today within a chaotic framework leading to the
coexistence of disparate and contradictory Islamic legal opinions each
claiming to have more “Islamic character” than the other.


Faced with this legal chaos, the ordinary Muslim public is more
appeased by “an appearance of fidelity”, then it is persuaded by
opinions based on real knowledge and understanding of the governing
Islamic principles and rules (ahkâm).


Let us look at the reality, as it exists. There is a today a quadruple
crisis of closed and repressive political systems, religious
authorities upholding contradictory juristic positions and
unknowledgeable populations swept up in remaining faithful to the
teachings of Islam through religious fervor than through true
reflection. The crisis cannot legitimize our silence. We are
accomplices and guilty when women and men are punished, stoned or
executed in the name of a formal application of the scriptural
sources.


It leaves the responsibility to the Muslims of the entire world. It is
for them to rise to the challenge of remaining faithful to the message
of Islam in the contemporary era; it is for them to denounce the
failures and the betrayals being carried out by whatever authorities
or any Muslim individual. A prophetic tradition reports: “Support your
brother, whether he be unjust or victim of an injustice.” One of the
Companions asked: “Messenger of God, I understand how to support
someone that is a victim of injustice, but how can I support him who
is unjust?” The Prophet (peace be upon him) responded: “Prevent him
from being unjust, that is you support to him.”[4]It thus becomes the
responsibility of each ‘âlim (scholar), of each conscience, every
woman and man, wherever they may be to speak up. Western Muslims
either hide behind the argument that they are exempt from the
application of the sharî’a or hudûd since they are “in a minority
position”[5]. Their avoidance of the questions leaves a heavy and
troubling silence. Or they express condemnation from afar without
attempting to change the situation and influence the mentalities.
These Muslim women and men who live in spaces of political freedom,
who have access to education and knowledge, shoulder – in the very
name of the Islamic teachings – have a major responsibility to attempt
to reform the situation, open a relevant debate, condemn and put a end
to injustices perpetrated in their name. .


A call, some questions:


Taking into account all these considerations, we launch today a call
for an immediate international moratorium on corporal punishment,
stoning and the death penalty in all Muslim majority countries.
Considering that the opinions of most scholars, regarding the
comprehension of the texts and the application of hudûd, are neither
explicit nor unanimous (indeed there is not even a clear majority),
and bearing in mind that political systems and the state of the
majority Muslim societies do not guarantee a just and equal treatment
of individuals before the law, it is our moral obligation and
religious responsibility to demand for the immediate suspension of the
application of the hudûd which is inaccurately accepted as an
application of “Islamic sharî’a”.


This call doubles itself with a series of basic questions addressed to
the body of Islamic religious authorities of the world, whatever their
tradition (sunnî or shî’î), their school of thought (hanâfî, mâlikî,
ja’farî, etc.) or their tendencies (literalist, salafî, reformist,
etc.) :


1.                   What are the texts (and what is their respective
degrees of recognized authenticity), that make reference to corporal
punishment, stoning and to the death penalty in the corpus of the
Islamic scriptural sources circumscribed to what the specialists call
the hudûd? Where are the margins of possible interpretations and on
which points are there clear divergences (al ikhtilâf) in the history
of the Islamic law and in the contemporary era?


2.                   What are the conditions (shurût) stipulated for
each of the penalties by the sources themselves, the consensus of the
scholars (al ijmâ’) or by individual scholars through Islamic law
history and jurisprudence (fiqh)? Where are the divergences on the
stipulations and what “extenuating circumstances” were sometimes
elaborated by religious authorities throughout history or within the
different schools of thought?

 3.                   The socio-political context (al wâqi’) was
always considered by the ulamâ’ as one of the conditions needed for
the application of hudûd. The importance of this question is such that
it demands special treatment (and participation within the debate from
intellectuals, notably those who are specialized in the social
sciences). In which context today is it possible to apply hudûd? What
would be the required conditions in terms of political systems and the
application of the general legislation: freedom of expression,
equality before the law, public education, eradication of poverty and
social exclusion? Which are, in this domain, the areas of divergence
between the legal schools and the ulamâ’ and on what are these
disagreements based?


Studying these questions are meant to clarify the terms of the debate
with regards to the interpretative latitudes offered by the texts,
while simultaneously taking into account the determining state of
contemporary societies and their evolution. This intra-community
reflection requires from the start a double understanding of the texts
and contexts, in keeping solemnly with the objectives of the Islamic
message. On the whole, this must allow us to respond to the questions
of what is applicable (and according to which methods) and what is no
longer applicable (considering the required conditions are impossible
to reestablish as well as the fact that societal evolution is clearly
moving away from the required ideal).


This undertaking requires, from within, rigour, time and establishing
spaces of dialogue and debate, nationally and internationally, between
the ulamâ’, Muslim intellectuals and inside the Muslim communities
since this matter is not only about a relationship to the texts, but
equally, to the context. In the interval, there can be no
justification for applying penalties that sanction legal
approximations and injustices such as is the case today[6]. A
moratorium would impose and allow a basic debate to unfold in
serenity, without using it as an excuse to manipulate Islam. All
injustices made legal in the name of Islam must stop immediately.

Between the letter and objectives: fidelity

 Some will understand this call as an instigation to disrespect the
scriptural sources of Islam, thinking that to ask for a moratorium
goes against the explicit texts of the Qu`ran and Sunna. Precisely the
opposite is true: all the legal texts demand to be read in light of
the objective intended to justify them (Al-maqâsid). Foremost among
these objectives, we find stipulated that the protection of the
integrity of the person (an- nafs) and the promotion of justice
(al-’adl) are primordial. Therefore, a literal and non-contextualized
application of hudûd, with no regard for strict and numerous
stipulated conditions, and one which would present itself as being
faithful to the teachings of Islam, is in fact a betrayal if according
to the context, for it produces an injustice.


The caliph ‘Umar ibn al-Khattab established a moratorium towards
thieves when he suspended the application of the punishment during a
famine. Despite the Qur’anic text beingvery explicit on this, the
state of the society meant it would have been an unjust literal
application: they would have castigated poor people whose potential
theft would have been for the sole purpose of surviving in a state of
absolute poverty. Therefore, in the name of absolute justice demanded
by the global message of Islam, ‘Umar ibn al-Khattab decided to
suspend the application of a text: keeping with the literalist
interpretation would have meant disloyalty and betrayal of the
superior value of Islam that is justice. It is in the name of Islam
and in the understanding of texts that he suspended the application of
one of these injunctions. The moratorium finds here a precedent of the
utmost importance.


Reflection and necessary reform within Muslim majority societies will
not occur but from within. It is for Muslims to take up their
responsibilities and set in motion a debate that opensan
intra-community dialogue, while refusing the continued
legalizedinjusticesin the name of Islam, i.e. in their name. An
endogenous dynamic is imperative


This does not mean that the questions put forward by non-Muslim
intellectuals or citizens should be dismissed. On the contrary, all
parties must learn to decentre themselves and move towards listening
to the other, to the other’s points of reference, logic and their
aspiration. For Muslims, all queries, from their co-religionists or
women and men who do share their religious conviction, are welcome. It
is for us to make use of these questions as a spark of dynamism to our
thoughts. This is how we can remain faithful to the justice demanded
by Islam while taking into account also the demands of the
contemporary era.


Conclusion

  This call for an immediate moratorium on corporal punishment,
stoning and the death penalty is demanding on many fronts. We are
defining it as a call to consciousness of each individual so that
she/he realizes that Islam is being used to degrade and subjugate
women and men in certain Muslim majority societies in the midst of
collusive silence and chaotic judicial opinions on the ground.


 This realization implies:



 - A mobilization of ordinary Muslims throughout the world to call on
their governments to place an immediate moratorium on the application
of hudûd and for the opening of a vast intra-community debate
(critical, reasonable and reasoned) between the ulamâ, the
intellectuals, the leaders and the general population.



 - Taking the ulamâ to account so that they at last dare to report the
injustices and instrumentalization of Islam in the field of hudûd and,
in the name of fidelity to the Islamic texts, to put out a call for an
immediate moratorium emulating the example of ‘Umar ibn al-Khattab.



 -  Promoting education of Muslim populations so that they go beyond
the mirage of the formalism and appearances. The application of the
repressive interpretations, measures and punishment does not make a
society more faithful to the Islamic teachings. It is more the
capacity to promote social justice and the protection the integrity of
every individual, woman or man, rich or poor, that determines a truly
authentic fidelity. The priority, according to the norms of Islam, is
given to the protection of rights not to administering punishments
which are meant to be implemented under strict and conditioned
exceptions.



 -  This movement for reform from within, by the Muslims and in the
name of the message and reference texts of Islam, should never neglect
listening to the surrounding world as well as to the inquiries that
Islam raises in non-Muslim minds. Not to concede to responses from
“the other”, from “the West”, but, in order to remain, in its mirror,
more constructively faithful to oneself.


We urge all of those that take heed to this call to join us and make
their voices heard for the immediate suspension of the application of
hudûd in the Muslim world so that a real debate establishes itself on
the question. We say that in the name of Islam, of its texts and of
the message of justice, we can no longer accept that women and men
undergo punishment and death while we remain utterly silent, as
accomplices, through a process which is ultimately cowardly.   It is
urgent that Muslim throughout the world refuse the formalist
legitimization of the teachings of their religion and reconcile
themselves with the deep message that invites towards spirituality,
demands education, justice and the respect of pluralism. Societies
will never reform themselves by repressive measures and punishment but
more so by the engagement of each to establish civil society and the
respect of popular will as well as a just legislation guaranteeing the
equality of women and men, poor and rich before the law. It is urgent
to set in motion a democratization movement that moves populations
from the obsession of what the law is sanctioning to the claim of what
it should protect: their conscience, their integrity, their liberty
and their rights.




[1] A concept which literally means “limits”. In the specialized
language of Muslim jurists, (fuqahâ’), this term is inclusive of the
punishment which is revealed in the application of the Islamic Penal
code. Sharî’a, literally ‘the way to the source” and a path to
faithfulness, is a corpus of Islamic jurisprudence the in-depth
definition of which is beyond the scope of this paper. Sharî’a has
sadly been reduced to legalistic formulae of a penal code in the minds
of many, Muslims and non-Muslim alike

 [2] Prophetic tradition: texts which report what the Prophet of Islam
(peace be upon him) did, said or approved of during his lifetime.

 [3] In Muslim countries, laws that we see as being “ borrowed from
the west “ are often interpreted as tools by dictatorial governments
to mislead and legitimize their autocratic character, and more
importantly, to promote a westernized culture and morals.

 [4] Hadîth reported by al-Bukhârî and Muslim.

[5] The argument is weak and dangerous as it tacitly accepts the
application of hudûd within today’s societal context as “ Islamic “

[6] If ever in doubt, all circumstances require the benefit of the
doubt towards the accused according to a legal universal principle
(acknowledged from the start by the tradition of Islamic
jurisprudence)


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