Fury Over Fatwa on Imrana |
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Deobandi Mufti's Opinion
Challenged |
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The rape of a Muslim woman, Imrana, by her father-in-law some
weeks ago has now snowballed into a major controversy following a controversial fatwa issued by a mufti of the Deoband madrasa announcing that the marriage between Imrana and her husband now stands dissolved. Further complicating the controversy, the Hindutva lobby is using the fatwa as an excuse to step up its campaign for the abolition of Muslim personal law, presenting itself as saviour of Muslim women, its complicity in the mass rape and murder of Muslim women notwithstanding. And making matters even more messy, sections of the 'mainstream' media, ever on the prowl for stories of 'oppressed' Muslim women as a stick to beat Muslims with, have sought to sensationalise the issue all out of proportion, presenting the fatwa as further 'evidence' of the unrepentant 'obscurantism' of the
mullahs, as if Hindu priests were any better when it comes to the violation of
women's rights. For all the heat that it has generated, the Imrana case has, in
a sense, proved to be a blessing in disguise, for it has generated
considerable soul-searching within the Muslim community about the institution
and authority of the ' ulama or Muslim clerics, who see themselves as
authoritative spokesmen of the faith. It has also led to heated discussion as
to precisely what the shariah or Islamic law is or lays down and as to
whether or not traditional Islamic jurisprudence or fiqh can or cannot be modified or
reformed . Increasingly, as these discussions suggest, alternate voices seek
to speak for Islam, challenging the authority that the 'ulama of the madrasas
claim for themselves. The responses to the Imrana controversy are also bringing
out into the open the considerable diversity of views among the ' ulama of
different schools of thought on matters of Islamic jurisprudence, as some
non-Deobandi 'ulama have joined the fray in critiquing the Deobandi fatwa.
These voices indicate the fluidity and contested nature of precisely what the
shariah is seen as constituting, and at the same time point to the
possibility of developing new, more gender-just perspectives on jurisprudence
from within a broadly defined 'Islamic' paradigm. The 'ulama, predictably, are divided on the fatwa, this
reflecting the ambiguous nature of the shariah and the different sectarian
understandings of it that, on several points, are mutually contradictory.
Most Hanafi 'ulama, both Deobandis and Barelvis, who represent the majority
of the Indian Muslims, appear to concur with the fatwa, as the fatwa is said
to be in accordance with the Hanafi interpretation of the shariah as laid
down in the classical Hanafi fiqh texts. For their part, the Ahl-i Hadith,
the Indian counterpartof the Saudi 'Wahhabis', have consciously distanced
themselves from the fatwa. Unlike the Hanafis, they are not bound by the
corpus of traditional fiqh, following the guidance only of the Qur'an and
the Hadith, statements attributed to the Prophet Muhammad. In a recent
statement, a leading Ahl-i Hadith scholar, Abdul Wahhab Khilji, has declared
that neither of these primary sources of Islam law calls for dissolution of
marriage on account of rape by a woman's father-in-law, unlike what the
Deobandis claim. Hence, he argues, the fatwa is not 'Islamically' valid. A
similar statement critiquing the fatwa has been issued by the
newly-constituted All-India Shia Muslim Personal Law Board. Incidentally, one
of the reasons for the setting up of this Board was that several Shia ' ulama
felt that the All-India Muslim Personal Law Board was heavily
over-represented by the Deobandis and hence unwilling to listen to alternate
perspectives from the other Islamic schools of thought. Likewise, another
recently-established Muslim organisation, the All-India Muslim Women's
Personal Law Board, has condemned the fatwa as unjust, claiming that it
had'misinterpreted' the tenets of Islam. No doubt this organisation of
spirited Muslim women will see Deoband's latest fatwa as added justification
for the setting up of a separate Muslim Women's Personal Law Board and as
further proof of the fact that Muslim women need to interpret Islam for
themselves, rather than rely on conservative patriarchs to explain their
faith to them. It is not likely, however, that the 'ulama of Deoband will be
moved by the arguments of these critics. The Deobandis, by and large, see the
Ahl-i Hadith and the Shias as heretics and not 'true' Muslims at all, and
hence lacking the authority to speak for or about Islam. And as for the women
behind the All-India Muslim Women's Personal Law Board, they are probably
seen by many Deobandis as 'ignorant' 'upstarts', at best, or as 'agents',
unwitting or otherwise, of the 'enemies' of Islam, at worst. Not all Deobandi 'ulama would necessarily concur with the fatwa,
however. I am given to understand by a friend of mine, who describes himself
as a 'dissident Deobandi', that a small, yet significant, number of younger
Deobandi scholars, particularly those who have also studied at universities,
are resentful of the fatwa. My friend, who pleads to remain anonymous for
fear of being attacked by his fellow Deobandi ' ulama, says that the fatwa
goes against the basic Islamic tenet of 'adl or justice. 'Why should a woman
be punished for a crime committed by someone else? This is totally against
what the Qur'an teaches', he explains. He tells me that the fatwa is simply
the personal opinion of a particular mufti and that it is not binding or the
ultimate word on the subject, unlike what the media presents it as or as the
authorities at Deoband might like Muslims to believe. He argues that although
the fatwa is in accordance with the traditional Hanafi view, which the
Deobandis staunchly defend, there is actually no compelling religious
argument for Muslims to blindly follow Hanafi jurisprudential precedent. The
Shafi, Hanbali and Maliki schools of Islamic law, regarded by Sunni Muslims
as equally 'orthodox' as the Hanafi school, do not lay down dissolution of
marriage if a woman is raped by her father-in-law, he tells me. Hence, he
says, there is no reason why Hanafi Muslims cannot 'benefit from' these other
schools of Sunni jurisprudence on this or any other matter. Yet, he
complains, it is unlikely that the majority of his fellow Deobandi ' ulama
would agree to this proposal. 'They insist on blindly following Hanafi fiqh,
although they also claim that the other three schools are also valid', he
says, adding that their 'lack of familiarity with the real-world problems of
Muslims' makes for their dogged resistance to any reform in traditional
Hanafi jurisprudence. He insists, however, that such reforms are urgent.
'Islam and the Islamic shariah cannot be reduced to Hanafi jurisprudence and
the Deoband school', he stresses. manifest' the fact that the traditional madrasas and mullahs
have 'lost their utility' and that 'the more free hand they are given in
tampering with the shariah, the more disastrous they will prove for the
social and religious fabric of the community'. 'Now is the time', he
concludes in what will obviously been seen by the traditional ' ulama as a
major assault, 'when a sustained movement must be launched to keep the
illiterate Muslim masses away from the nefarious ideology of these madarsas
and maulvis if Islam is to survive as a modern religion in the twenty-first
century'. Another bitter critic of the fatwa is Juzar Bandukwala,
professor at the M.S. University, Vadodara. He argues that while Islam
obviously condemns consensual sexual relations between a father-in-law and
his daughter-in-law, for which it lays down strict punishment for both
parties, the Imrana case is clearly different since it involves rape. Hence,
rather than being punished, as the fatwa in effect advises, Imrana 'demands
compassion and kindness' in accordance with the teachings of the Qur'an,
particularly because she is the mother of five young children and comes from
a poor family. 'I am surprised', he says, that 'the Deoband ulama failed to
apply these Qur'anic commands', and laments that they have 'erred badly'. At
the same time as he critiques the fatwa, Bandukwala expresses the fear that
the Imrana case might be used by Hindutva forces to promote its anti-Muslim
agenda by 'stereotyping Muslims' and by 'shedding crocodile tears for the
plight of Muslim women'. While
welcoming the concern for Imrana expressed by human rights and women
activists, he warns of the risk of playing into the hands of the Hindutva
lobby. 'We may be on the verge of another Shah Bano disaster', he cautions,
'and the last thing the country needs at this stage is another issue to widen
the gulf between Hindus and Muslims'. Yet another vocal critic of the fatwa is the Washington
D.C.-based Kaleem Kawaja, president of the Association of Indian Muslims of
America. He believes that the case should have been handled by the state
courts, in accordance with secular laws, instead of having been taken to the
mullahs for their decision. He berates some Deobandi ' ulama and certain
members of the All-India Muslim Personal Law Board for 'compounding the
problem' by 'making highly irrational statements regarding the marital status
of Imrana', thereby subjecting the victim to 'further misery'. Rather than
seeing the problem as rooted essentially in patriarchal fiqh formulations, he
claims that the fatwa is based on 'obscurantist tribal customs'. In any case,
he stresses the need for both the Deoband madrasa and the All-India Muslim Personal Law Board to 'make structural changes in their set-up'
in order to 'stop such obscurantism and injustice to women in the name of Islam'.
He suggests that at least a third of the 40-member Working Committee of the
Board should consist of women, in place of the sole woman that it has today,
and argues that there are indeed several learned Muslim women who are
qualified to fill such a role.
opines that the fatwa indicates that the Indian ' ulama 'are way behind their counterparts in other countries', and urges then to
interpret shariah laws, through a process of ijtihad, in a more gender-equitable
manner. In case the 'ulama refuse to consider any such reforms, he suggests,
Muslims must struggle for the right for individuals to 'opt for a uniform
code' in order to ensure gender justice. Several Muslim critics of the fatwa appear to be incensed with
what they see as its 'un-Islamic' conflation of patriarchy and shariah. They
have also berated some senior leaders of the All-India Muslim Personal Law
Board for apparently approving of the fatwa, arguing that this indicates that
the Board is unwilling to give women their due. Thus, a certain Zafar Iqbal, a frequent contributor to several
Muslim internet discussion groups, accuses the author of the fatwa and members
of the Board that have approved of it of double standards for men and women.
'If the rapist is being dealt with under civil law', he asks, why should the
victim be 'subjugated to Islamic law?' 'If is difficult to justify why
Islamic laws of punishment should apply to female victims, not to male
perpetrators', he asserts. Echoing the same view, Arshad Alam, an Indian
Islamic scholar based in Germany, argues that the fatwa clearly indicates
that traditional understandings of Islamic jurisprudence 'do not give
adequate protection to women', and hence are in need of reform. He stresses what
he sees as the deep-rooted patriarchy underlying the Deobandi version of
Islam, arguing that this is clearly evident from the fact that while the
author of the fatwa 'categorically wants the separation of the women in
question from her husband, he suggests that the rapist father in law should
be tried under the Indian penal code'. In other words, 'while women are to be covered under Personal Law, the
men are free to enjoy the reformed secular law'. Supporting Alam's argument, another Muslim writer, Parveen Khan,
writes that the fatwa 'exposes the fact that Muslim women cannot expect
justice from patriarchal mullahs', and predicts that the chain of shariah
courts all over the country that both the all-India Muslim Personal Law Board
and the largely Deobandi Jami'at ul-'Ulama-i Hind have recently started
demanding 'will lead to a hundred thousand Imranas, Gudiyas and Shah Banos,
on an unimaginable scale'. At the same
time, she warns that the Imrana case should not be sensationalised out of
proportion in order to portray Islam as 'irredeemably misogynist'. She rightly critiques a marked
tendency in the 'mainstream' media to highlight instances of 'oppressed'
Muslim women, while downplaying or even ignoring similar or even worse cases of
oppression of Hindu women, including of such heinous crimes as sati and
girl-child sacrifice that are not practised among any non-Hindu communities,
including the Muslims. For their part, and not surprisingly, various 'secular'
political parties, with their eyes on Muslim votes, have refused to condemn
the fatwa, except for the CPI(M), which has called for a review of gender unjust
laws. Since the conservative mullahs exercise a powerful political influence
among significant sections of Muslim voters, these parties are consistently
wary of antagonising them. Instead, they go out of their way to court them in
order to stress their 'secular' credentials. This symbiotic relationship
brings the politicians Muslim votes while it at the same time reinforces the
mullahs' claims to being the authoritative spokesmen of the Muslim community.
The fear of antagonising the mullahs, even if at the cost of legitimising the
oppression of women, thus explains 'secular' hero Mulayam Singh Yadav's claim
that the fatwa must have been the effort of considerable 'thought', because,
so he alleges, the mullahs 'are all very learned and they understand the
community and its sentiments'. The
Congress has adopted a similar stance, and its leader in Uttar Pradesh Salman
Khurshid has announced that the issue is an 'individual one' which should be
dealt in accordance with the shariah. The Congress' position is, of course,
entirely predictable, given the historically close ties between the party and
the Deobandi mullahs, reinforced lately by the participation of its President
in the recently-held meeting of the Deobandi Jamiat ul-'Ulama-i Hind. Between obdurate mullahs, anti-Muslim Hindutva ideologues, unscrupulous politicians, newspapers hungry for sensational stories and unrepentant patriarchs the fate of Imrana and countless other women like her precariously hangs in the balance. Yet, as the spirited critique of the fatwa mounted by sections of the ' ulama as well as Muslim intellectuals indicates, a new Muslim leadership is today in the making, one that is sensitive to the real-world concerns of hitherto silent voices like Imrana and her brothers and sisters who now refuse to remain mute. (Cobrapost News Features) |
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