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Fatwas shouldn’t be law PDF Print
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Thursday, 27 November 2008 10:19

By Sisters in Islam (The Nut Graph)

SISTERS in Islam calls on the government to review the fatwa as an instrument of mandatory and binding rule-making in Malaysia. Our call is made on the grounds that fatwas having the automatic force of law:

  • has no basis in Islamic legal theory and practice;
  • conflict with the Federal Constitution; and
  • result in confusion, selective prosecution and victimisation in their enforcement.

Firstly, fatwas are theological and legal reasonings given by the mufti or the ulama to enlighten and educate the public so Muslims can arrange their affairs in accordance with Islamic teachings. What is a voluntary and optional concept throughout the history of Islam and in the current practice of other Muslim countries has been turned into an instrument of law and coercion in Malaysia.
 
Gavel
(© James Morrison / sxc.hu)

This is unprecedented in Islamic jurisprudence and violates a fundamental principle in Islam: that change must occur gradually through education and not through force.

The Grand Imam of Al-Azhar in Cairo, Muhammad Sayyid Tantawi, and Saudi Arabia's Vice-Minister of Justice, Sheikh Abdul Mohsen Al-Obaikan, have gone on record to say that fatwas are not binding.

Secondly, fatwas having the automatic force of law disregards constitutional limitations on legislation on Islamic matters and violates fundamental liberties guaranteed under the Constitution. Fatwas issued by the mufti and approved by the state Fatwa Committee and the Sultan, only need to be gazetted to become law. They are not tabled for debate in the legislative body.
 
In addition, the Syariah Criminal Offences laws state that any violation of a fatwa is a criminal offence. Any effort to dispute or to give an opinion contrary to the fatwa is also a criminal offence. In his paper Jurisdiction of State Authorities to Punish Offences Against the Precepts of Islam: A Constitutional Perspective, Malaysian constitutional law expert Prof Shad Faruqi argues that the power of the states to create and punish offences against the precepts of Islam should be confined to the areas explicitly mentioned in Schedule 9, List II, Item 1, under the Federal Constitution. He also argues that Schedule 9 must conform to the fundamental rights guaranteed under the Federal Constitution.
 
Thirdly, fatwas which regulate a citizen's life to the smallest detail is so wide in its impact that it becomes unenforceable. Such laws could only lead to select prosecution and victimisation, as they cannot be enforced fully and equally.

Islamic jurisprudence expert Prof Muhammad Hashim Kamali argues that when statutory law rules on matters that essentially belong to the realm of morality, and may be deemed to belong to the sphere of personal choice and liberty, the expected result of such lawmaking would be confusion and difficulty over enforcements. This is likely to erode the credibility and survival of both the laws and the lawmaking process, as can be seen with the controversies that erupt over the enforcement of these laws in Malaysia.
 
Historically unprecedented

The ongoing debate and controversy surrounding the recent fatwas on tomboys and yoga have brought to fore opinions and trends that are unprecedented in the history of Muslim societies and jurisprudence, and alarming in multi-faith and democratic Malaysia.
 
Under the Syariah Criminal Offences laws, one cannot defy, disobey or dispute a fatwa. Does this mean that questioning the view of Jakim director-general Datuk Wan Mohamad Sheikh Abd Aziz (New Straits Times, 24 Nov 2008) — that an appeal against the yoga fatwa is akin to appealing "to God to change the rules according to our whims and desires" — is considered insulting Islam and the religious authorities and hence, a criminal offence?
 
Would it be an offence to disagree with Kelantan Menteri Besar Datuk Nik Aziz Nik Mat when he said questioning fatwas is the same as questioning God (Bernama Online, 17 Nov 2008)?

 

If the Minister in the Prime Minister's Department Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi has forbidden people from questioning the tomboy fatwa (Bernama Online, 10 Nov 2008), will Malaysians be criminalised if they still say that a fatwa is unconstitutional?
 
Can Malaysian citizens — Muslims and those of other faiths — register their concern about the impact of fatwas on their lives without it being labelled as affecting national security and triggering retaliation among Muslims, as stated by the Inspector-General of Police Tan Sri Musa Hassan (New Straits Times, 13 Nov 2008)?

Can laws allowing for detention without trial be used on those who raise questions about fatwas, as called for by Malay-Muslim NGO Pewaris (Utusan Malaysia, 24 Nov 2008)?

Given these concerns, Sisters in Islam urges the Government and religious authorities to consider all differing views and be guided by the principles of justice, equality and public interest when putting into practice precepts of Islam. In coming up with fatwas, the National Fatwa Council must take into consideration the country's multi-cultural, multi-racial and multi-religious identity, and the needs of Malaysian Muslims in contemporary situations.
 
If the purpose of fatwas is to provide opinions and reasonings to guide Muslims in their affairs in accordance with Islamic teachings, then fatwas made in the name of Islam cannot result in confusion and injustice and bring the Islamic authorities, the fatwa-making process and Islam itself into disrepute. In a country that is multi-ethnic and modern like Malaysia, it is imperative that the government examines these urgent concerns and take due consideration in making and gazetting fatwas in the name of Islam.

Masjaliza Hamzah
Programme Manager (Research and Publications)
Sisters in Islam

Comments (13)Add Comment
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written by indianputra, November 27, 2008 10:22:24
SISTERS IN ISLAM is the only Malay/Muslim organization that talks sense in Malaysia. May be these SISTERS should adopt BROTHERS and teach them Islam
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written by temenggong, November 27, 2008 10:36:49
Anything not approved by parliament cannot have the force of law.

Parliament cannot legislate away its legislation making capacity
to an individual or council. Parliament can merely confer powers to individuals and councils to 'regulate' laws. Such laws will be null and void. Regulate is not 'to legislate'. Get a legal opinion of this.
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written by Birdbrain, November 27, 2008 10:46:07
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xKwQKqQ8MMY

Out of the ruins
Out from the wreckage
Can't make the same mistake this time
We are the children
The last generation
We are the ones they left behind
And i wonder when we are ever gonna change it
Living under the fear till nothing else remains

We don't need another hero
We don't need to know the way home
All we want is life beyond the thunderdome
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written by ahmadneil, November 27, 2008 10:46:12
Don't leave Islam to those malays and are too stupid to understand what this beautiful religion is.
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written by My2Sens, November 27, 2008 10:56:59
Bravo, I like reading your press statement / releases. I may not always agree but they have consistenly been the most sane around.

Very relevant points raised.

I now wait for the goverment to answer all the 5 questions. I hope the they will be equally well thought out answers just as the questions have been.

Keep up the good work Sisters In Islam! smilies/smiley.gif
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written by Xerxes, November 27, 2008 12:02:52
And we had a former CJ proposing that we merge Shariah and Common Law? man, how are we going to reconcile fatwas such as these? If there is only one law and it icludes Islamic law, then the non muslims also will not be able to practise yoga.

I have no wish to comment or judge whether the fatwa is right or wrong but I am confused. The Govt raises its revenues from taxes and such taxes include gaming taxes from business such as 4 digit and Sports toto, which are gambling and prohibited in Islam and haram. So by right the tax are also haram but the tax are used to pay the salaries of Muslims in Govt service including those in JAKIM. So is the Govt also going to close down 4 digit and Sports Toto to prevent corrupting Muslims from the haram taxes?

These concerns must be made clear because non muslims do not want to start a business, worked hard to build it up and then be told later it has to be banned because the tax on their business is haram even though the business is not patronised by Muslims. Very susah lah!!
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written by A MI, November 27, 2008 14:09:19
The Prophet (blessings and peace be upon him) said, " A believer does not taunt, curse, abuse or talk indecently.”
Al-Tirmidhi Hadith 1740 Narrated by Abdullah ibn Mas'ud (r.a.)


Therefore a it is urgent that NFC issue a Fatwa on the use of abusive language in Parliament. Just days ago a BN MP had used swear words on another MP in parliament!
By the way, going by the behaviour of that BN MP he is not a believer according to his Hadith smilies/grin.gif

According to a socilinguistics researcher, the way people use language influences their beliefs and values, their emotions and their actions. She then asserts that when language is corrupted it can lead to corrupted thinking and distorted politics.

Food for thought
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written by A MI, November 27, 2008 15:21:50
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written by chipon, November 27, 2008 14:15:51
alaaaa...tak perlu dengar laa sisters in islam nih. konon islam tapi rambut pun tak tutup. memalukan islam dan org islam betul diorang ni.


chipon jangan marah ye tapi tolong tunjukkan ayat-ayat Al Quran yang mewajibkan hijab.
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written by A MI, November 27, 2008 16:40:09
Chipon do read Hijab not Mandated

http://www.irfi.org/articles/a...hijab.htm if your English comprehension is good
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written by Sabahfan, November 27, 2008 23:40:18
Kesian lah sisters in islam members..

These women knows that under the rules made by their own menfolks, the moslem woman is just a second class citizen, the property and chattels of their husbands and menfolks....What utter disgrace, like going back to the dark ages...

Very sure that if these members are living in the western world, they would have already dropped their veils and join other cultures...

But under malaysian islamic laws, they remain second class..!!

U see, in Malaysia, their husband only have to say..."talak 3" and they can divorce their wives without giving any reasons...

while a wife even if beaten and abused daily by husband, she will never be able to divorce and run away from their husband....

and lots of other unfair laws to them..

why else would these women formed their sisters in islam body if they arent fed up with these uncivilised laws???
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