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Democracy is no cure-all, and can't be imposed by force
May 07, 2004 23:16:36
Ottawa Citizen May 7, 2004 Friday Final Edition
Democracy is no cure-all, and can't be imposed by force
by: Gamal Solaiman
In a recent column ("East is East," April 25), David Warren asked for a "well-informed imam" to buttress several points he has raised in his premise that democracy and Islam are at loggerheads. I shall try to do the best I can.
While I do not possess the broad and in-depth knowledge that Mr. Warren has attained and expresses well in his columns of late about Islam, I can only explain my narrow parochial view gained through researching my doctorate in Islamic jurisprudence at the University of Exeter in England.
The Islamic court system is what Mr. Warren thinks is a stumbling block to democracy in the Muslim World. Shariah has its roots in the Covenant Patriarch Abraham made with God. Even the word Canon is derived from the Arabic word for law, Qanun.
Shariah, the law, is inherent principles of Islam and should not be confused with Fiqh, the Islamic jurisprudence or the humane application of Shariah justice -- no eye for an eye in Islam. If a starving person steals to quell pangs of hunger, he or she cannot be punished under Fiqh.
If Shariah were that bad, why then in some Muslim countries do minority Christians opt for it as being fairer than a civil code available to them exclusively for relief and redress?
Contrarily, the premise that Muslims cannot accept non-Muslim civil authority is also erroneous. There are more than 60 million Muslims in China, and 150 million in India where some hold high positions in politics, government and the military, unlike in the democratic West.
In Egypt, 10 seats are reserved for the Christian minority regardless of their electoral successes, and they always hold two cabinet posts. Mr. Boutros Boutros-Ghali, the former United Nations secretary general, is a Christian and was Egypt's Foreign Minister. The president of Lebanon is a Christian. Much of the Palestinian leadership is Christian.
Pakistan has 10 seats out of 217 for its minorities. Iran has five seats out of 275 for Jews, Armenian Christians and Assyrian Christians. The Patriarch of the Orthodox Rite, the Pope of the Eastern Church, has for centuries resided in Istanbul (the Second Rome). Tariq Aziz, the former lieutenant of Saddam Hussein, is a Christian. What about the Western democratic deficit for Muslims?
The example of Turkey is well taken by Mr. Warren. Even though the country is proclaimed as a secular republic, Turks claim themselves to be 99 per cent Muslim and as democrats they do not consume pork, either.
It is social inertia that is not much understood in the West. The U.S. could not eliminate alcoholism through Prohibition in the 1930s. Similarly, Muslims will not abjure their religious principles regardless of the promise democracy may enticingly offer to erode their values. Turks never abandoned Islam: today they are being ruled by an Islamist party!
Although Christianity and Islam share a community of beliefs -- One God, Angels, Adam and Eve, the Garden of Eden, the Fall of Man, the Prophets, one life, life hereafter, Resurrection, the Day of Judgment, Heaven and Hell -- the rudimentary difference is that, while Jesus is central to Christianity, the word of the Quran is paramount to Muslims.
Furthermore, Islam does not deny the Virgin Birth, Jesus being the Messiah of God (Messih'Allah) or his Second Coming. However, Islam does not share the changing dynamism of Christianity (Santa Claus and his entourage would be considered Bida, or innovation, in Islam and forbidden, or Haram. So is Shirk, ascribing partnership to God; Muslims do not pray to Prophet Mohammad, but pray for his salvation.)
Granted that the West, which Mr. Warren believes has synonymy with Christianity, has unwittingly found itself at the end of the Cold War and the demise of Communism with Islam as a counterforce and adversary.
Let me step backwards into time to the Dark Ages when Tariq Ben Ziad landed at Jebel Tariq (now Gibraltar) in 711 AD and during the Muslim era until 1492 AD when democracy flourished in Spain such that the Jews had their Golden Age under the Islamic rule. Muslims introduced astronomy, physics, chemistry, mathematics, medicine and philosophy of Ibn Sina (Avicenna), Ibn Rushd (Averroes), Al-Khwarizmi (Algorithm) to Europe to generate such venerable scholars as St. Aquinas and Descartes.
Long before democratic institutions were in vogue in Europe, the Moghals in India had the Grand Trunk Road, gold coinage, a justice system and revenue collection to enable them to build such architectural wonders as the Taj Mahal and sundry mosques. This was prior to the British occupation and colonization of that subcontinent with a superimposition of a class system atop the caste one which was prevalent there.
The West's abrogation of Christian values such as the rescission of the Lord's Prayer in 1994 from the Canadian House of Commons, recited since 1877, did not give our Parliament any democratic surplus. In fact, Christianity has been replaced by utilitarianism's relativistic ethics, i.e. if God is needed, God exists; otherwise He is dismissed. Such an attitude does not exist in Islamic countries as His omnipresence is neither negotiable nor negated. God is an integral part of Islamic life, not something utilized and then shelved for later reference.
If democracy were such a cure-all, then the West would not have to use extreme force to destroy any country's insignia, infrastructure and institutions to deliver such a panacea. The recent deletion of "Allaho Akbar," "Deo Maximo" or "God is Great" from the flag of Iraq probably has the same significance as the Trinity -- "Father, Son and Holy Ghost" -- to Christians.
And the Real World that Mr. Warren mentions raises some interesting prospects: If 50-per-cent-plus-one of Canadians were against same-sex marriage, would that proposition become invalidated? If these are the remedies available through democracy, then I would rather take refuge under "Virtual Reality" so deeply entrenched in our society.
The democratic prescription may become a bitter pill to swallow. If it would kill rather than cure -- the operation was successful, but the patient died -- then perhaps democracy is not meant for the Muslims and they may have to live with this deficiency as they do without alcohol.
Remember what Sir Winston Churchill said in the Mother of Parliaments: "Indeed, it has been said that Democracy is the worst form of Government except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time."
But what about the other brand, Communism, under which democracy was sold for decades and still prevails in some parts of the world? Lest we forget the Democratic Republics of East Germany, North Korea, North Vietnam, etc. What an epitaph for democracy!
Gamal Solaiman is the Imam of the Ottawa Mosque.
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submitted by Emil Lazarian
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