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Secularisation no answer
for Muslim world
By AMIR BUTLER*
Wednesday 16 January 2002 Two consistent themes in
much of the contemporary analysis of world affairs have been the impending
clash of civilisations and the need for the secularisation of the Muslim
world.
Secularism seeks to make the temporal rather than spiritual the basis for
all laws. It arose in response to a uniquely European Christian problem -
the excesses of the church, the antagonism between the church and science,
and the intra-Christian wars being fought at the time. The separation of
church and state was a logical solution.
In contrast, the periods of Muslim caliphate, particularly between 622 and
1492, were marked as periods of growth, intellectual advancement and social
justice. The rights of minorities were protected, human rights were
enshrined not just in law but in scripture, and a knowledge-centred society
was fostered that was the intellectual well from which all of Europe came to
drink.
Contrary to popular opinion, Islam, in its political manifestation, is
democratic - if democracy means that people choose their own leaders and
laws are passed through discussion and deliberation.
The Prophet Mohammed himself refrained from appointing a successor, instead
allowing people to choose the next ruler of the fledgling Islamic state.
Umar, the second Caliph (ruler), said that the ruler can be chosen only
through the consultative approval of the people.
However, Islamic democracy differs from secular democracy in that the right
of the people to legislate is limited by what they believe to be a higher
law, to which human law is subordinate. There is no axiom that states that a
democracy must be secular, in the same way that there is no axiom that
states that a secular system is intrinsically democratic.
The subordination of law-making to the Koran and Sunnah (traditions of the
Prophet Mohammed) made Muslim society immune to absolute tyranny and
dictatorship.
Such emphasis also prevented absolute tyranny by giving Islamic scholars
more legislative power than the ruler. It was their word that was final on
many matters. If the ruler made a decision that was contrary to that of the
ulema (people of knowledge), his decision was to be rejected.
There is a stark contrast between past glories and current reality.
Whereas once the Muslim world was ruled by a single caliphate, its
post-colonial manifestation is a collection of weak, mostly secular,
nation-states. Termed "bunker regimes" by Samuel Huntington, their guns face
their own people, ruthlessly repressing dissent and committing some of the
worst violations of human rights.
It is a sad irony that in many cases, Muslims have more freedom to practice
their religion in the secular democracies of the West than in the secular
dictatorships of the Middle East.
In Islam, there is no conflict between theology and science, between the
demands of the spiritual and the temporal. However, one can draw parallels
between Christian Europe before Enlightenment, and the intellectual
stagnation, reactionary impulses and conflict that characterises the Muslim
world today. Yet, what is required is not a wholesale adoption of secular
democracy, but a uniquely Islamic reformation.
Is it then unreasonable that Muslims, who have their own culture, values and
history, can be allowed to choose their own future? Those who advocate
Western secularism as a universal panacea, are akin to the child with the
hammer who thinks every problem is a nail.
Indeed, the call to secularise Islam as a means of averting a clash of
civilisations is really the first salvo in such a clash. Huntington wrote
that the problem for Islam is not the CIA nor the US Department of Defence.
It is the West, a different civilisation whose people are convinced of the
universality of their culture, and believe that their superior, if
declining, power imposes on them the obligation to extend that culture
throughout the world. These are the basic ingredients that fuel conflict
between Islam and the West.
What is needed today is a revival of the tremendous energy that propelled
Muslims forward in history; the energy that comes from a clear sense of
purpose and direction.
Muslim society must subject itself to critical self-evaluation, recognising
the principles that made it great in the past, as well as drawing on the
positive aspects of the West and other societies, adapting and improving
upon them.
From this may spring a profound sense of empowerment and a realisation that
Muslims can make their own future.
The call to modernise Islam thus becomes a call to Islamisizemodernity.
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*Amir Butler is executive director of the
Australian Muslim Public Affairs Committee (AMPAC).
e-mail: info@muslimaffairs.com.au
Source:
http://www.theage.com.au/news/state/2002/01/16/FFXN85RPGWC.html
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