Название: Islam, the West and the Challenges of Modernity
Автор: Tariq Ramadan
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Культурология
isbn: 9780860374398
isbn:
4. What is the Sharī’a?
Nowadays reference to the Sharī’a, in the West, has the effect of a bugbear. To see it applied is to start the sordid, detailed account of amputated hands, floggings, and so on and so forth. It is further seen as men’s moralist repression through which they impose on women the “wearing of the chador” as well as considering them as legal minors. Fed by such imagery, references to the Sharī’a appear as obscurantist confinement, medieval stubbornness, and fanaticism. Wherever a discourse raises the notion of the Sharī’a, the actors seem to turn their backs on contemporary reality and reject progress and evolution by arming themselves against the perils of the future.
One should also add that some kings and presidents do nothing to facilitate the comprehension of this notion. Repression had not been the way of the Prophet (peace be upon him). That law has a role in the total scheme of reform is not disputed; what should be clearly understood is that moral and social transformation is a multi-dimensional process. The penal sphere is not the be-all and end-all of the Sharī’a. It does not consist of adding prohibition to prohibition, and of reprimanding transgressors in the most exemplary manner. The Sharī’a aims at the liberation of man and not merely of whittling down liberties. The Islamic model must not be confused with the destruction that has been perpetrated by certain dictators in the name of the Sharī’a.
It is appropriate, nonetheless, to take very seriously this interpellation of a central notion of Islamic thought; a notion which today suffers from an incredible misunderstanding, when it is not a question of reprehensible betrayal. To tackle the question of modernity presumes that we have a precise idea of what is entailed in the orientations of Islamic sources. These sources being the essence of what we call, in Islamic law, the Sharī’a.
We have identified above 17 the two fundamental sources of Islamic law, and what the role of ijtihād is in the formulation of a legislation which is in tune with its time. One must here insist that the Sharī’a cannot be reduced to the penal sphere and that, a fortiori, such reduction is of a nature that belies its very essence.
“Al-Sharī’a” is an Arabic term which literally means ‘the way’, and more precisely ‘the way which leads to a source’. We understand from this notion, in the domain of juridical reflection, all the prescriptions of worship and social injunctions which are derived from the Qur’ān and the Sunna. On the level of acts of worship, the said prescriptions are more often than not precise, and the rules of practice codified and fixed. The domain of “social affairs”, however, is more vast and we find in the two sources a certain number of principles and orientations which the jurists (fuqahā’) must respect when they formulate laws which are in tune with their time and place. It is indeed ijtihād, the third nominal source of Islamic law, which provides a link between the absoluteness of the points of reference and the relativity of history and location. Fed at the source and by the source, the jurist must think his time with a clear conscience of the course which separates him from the ideal of general and oriented prescriptions. He must take into consideration the specific social situation in order to think the stages of his reform. 18 His pragmatism must be permanent.
Thus, only that which is derived from the Qur’ān and the Sunna is absolute, and this, as we have noted before, covers the expression of general orientations. Beyond this, reflection is subject to the relativity of human thought and rationality. We can, at the same time, witness in two different locations two different legislations regarding the same question, but both legislations still remain “Islamic”. Similarly, we can, in the same place but at two successive epochs, introduce two different regulations, both determined by socio-historical evolution, while still remaining “Islamic” in both applications. Fiqh 19 is the way whereby jurists, in light of the Qur’ān and the Sunna, have thought out a legislation which is in tune with their times. Their efforts, respectable as they are, remain however only human attempts which cannot be convenient for all stages of history. In fact, each epoch must bring forth its own “comprehension” and make use of the intelligence of the scholars then extant.
Pointing out the confusion between the Sharī’a and fiqh and reminding that the Qur’ān and the Sunna convey expressions of absolute finalities, is not a question of sanctifying the decisions of such or such a jurist of such and such a time. For it is still not enough to respond to what the application of the Sharī’a can cover today. We have said above a few words about the necessity of Muslim jurists’ pragmatism, and it is necessary to be particularly precise on this subject. For the Muslim, pronouncing the attestation of faith (there is no deity except God and Muḥammad is His Messenger), praying five times a day, contributing zakāt, fasting during the month of Ramaḍān and making the pilgrimage, is already an application of the Sharī’a. 20 It is important to understand this notion from this angle, and one should realise that it is not playing with words or their meanings. The man of faith engages himself in fulfilling the orientation, practice, as well as the individual and collective legislation, whether public or private, from the moment he gives to his actions the sense of acknowledgement of the Creator. When he does so he is clearly on the way of the source.
This application, as much on the personal as on the social level, is the object of tension between the ideal design and the procedure of its daily actualisation. It is the share of each man, just as it is that of humanity in its entirety. Life is this course we take towards closeness of what is better, in the love of the best, while being conscious of insufficiency. Faith, then, must be the conscience of this humility. The Qur’ān, whose revelation was completed in 23 years, itself notes the essence of this tension in that it presents itself truly as a divine pedagogy. It has trained the men of the Arabian peninsula to rapprochement. It initiated them, from one revelation to another, and from one phase to another, in the best practice as much on the individual as on the collective level. Once engaged on this path, they never betrayed the meaning of the Sharī’a. Rather, they lived its accomplishment and perfection until the day when this plentitude was achieved:
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