Throwing darts: Indonesian call for religious reform challenges Muslim autocracy
By James M.
Dorsey
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At first
glance, Islamic scholars discussing the religious legitimacy of the United
Nations and the nation-state sounds esoteric. It's not. On the contrary, it’s
potentially revolutionary.
Religious
scholars, led by Nahdlatul Ulama, the world’s largest and arguably most
moderate Muslim civil society movement in the world’s largest Muslim-majority
country and democracy, hope that the legitimization will counter notions of a
caliphate and a transnational Islamic state as an alternative world order as advocated
by militants such as Al Qaeda and the Islamic State.
If adopted,
legitimization of the United Nations would make the UN charter with its
references to “fundamental human rights…the dignity and worth of the human
person, (and)…the equal rights of men and women” legally binding for its Muslim
signatories, according to religious law.
That sentiment was, for example,
evident when an anchor on India’s controversial Hindu nationalist,
Hindi-language Z news recently asked whether “Muslims who sing the national anthem become kafirs." The anchor was using the
Arabic word for an infidel.
The effort
to reform Islamic jurisprudence so that it embraces the concept of the nation-state,
and the United Nations, is part of a sustained Nahdlatul Ulama effort to spark
reform of Islamic jurisprudence and inspire other faiths to take a critical
look at their potentially problematic tenants as a way of countering extremism
and religiously inspired violence.
That’s where
the revolutionary aspect kicks in.
Muslim leaders, parroted by their
Western counterparts, have for more than two decades since 9/11 insisted that
Islam and Islamic jurisprudence need no reform. Instead, they assert that
jihadis misrepresent and misconstrue the faith.
In doing so, autocrats drown out
criticism of their brutal, repressive rule that brooks no dissent and
potentially provokes violence.
Casting jihadists as deviants rather
than products of problematic tenants of jurisprudence that justify violence
stymies criticism of the justification of autocracy as a necessary means to
combat violence and promote moderate Islam.
Even so, that may not be a popularly
shared approach. In a poll, 56 per cent of Saudis surveyed said the government was not “paying attention to the opinions of ordinary
citizens like me.”
Timed to
coincide with the centennial of Nahdlatul Ulama according to the Muslim Hijri
calendar, the scholars will gather in February in the Indonesian city of
Surabaya under the auspices of the recently constituted Religion Forum 20, a
Group of 20 engagement tack, to discuss an “Islamic jurisprudence for a global
civilization.” The Group of 20 brings together the world’s largest economies.
Nahdlatul
Ulama’s concept note for the Surabaya conference argues that “views that
legitimize and encourage suspicion, segregation, discrimination, and even
hostility and conflict towards those who bear the legal status of “infidels…are
scattered throughout classical texts on Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh). These
views…are still considered…credible…and should…be practiced to the present day.
Muslim groups involved in conflict – including the use of violence and terror –
defend their position by citing references from these classical fiqh texts.”
The concept
note was bolstered by a Nahdlatul Ulama religious
finding in 2019 that eliminated the category of the kafir or in Islamic
law.
Potentially,
the concept note will put on the spot some of the invited speakers, such as
Muslim World League General Secretary Muhammad al-Issa, Forum for Promoting
Peace in Muslim Societies President Abdallah bin Bayyah, Tabah Foundation head
Habib al-Jufri, and Ahmad Al Tayyeb the Grand Iman of Al Azhar, the Muslim
world’s foremost seat of Islamic learning.
These men
represent autocratic regimes that insist that Islamic jurisprudence needs no
reform.
Mr.
Al-Issa’s League is Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s vehicle for
propagating a socially liberal, politically repressive interpretation of Islam
that demands absolute obedience to the ruler.
Messrs. Bin
Bayyah and Al-Jufri serve the same purpose for United Arab Emirates President
Mohammed bin Zayed. Mr. Al-Tayyeb’s Al Azhar is subservient to the government
of Egyptian President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi and supported by the two Gulf
monarchies.
Religious
legitimization of the United Nations and the concept of a nation-state could
have far-reaching consequences for the order of the Muslim world that partially
bases its religious justification on the employment by the Organisation for
Islamic Cooperation (OIC) of the language of Islamic jurisprudence to empower
states. The OIC groups the world’s 57
Muslim-majority countries.
By reforming
the jurisprudence, Nahdlatul Ulama would, in theory, introduce guardrails for
the incorporation by OIC members of Islamic law into domestic legal systems.
By and
large, Muslim-majority states have used the OIC framework to monopolise the
right to interpret Islamic law and bend it to their will, for example, in the
justification of abuse of human rights or, in the case of countries like Saudi
Arabia and the UAE, to demand absolute obedience of the ruler.
The OIC and
some of its members have also used the organisation’s religious framing and 1990 Cairo Declaration on Human
Rights in Islam to
lobby the United Nations to classify blasphemy as a violation of human rights
and a form of hate speech.
Liberal
critics charge that Nahdlatul Ulama’s silence about a recently
adopted new Indonesian criminal code has cast a shadow over its credibility.
The law
defines apostasy as leaving a religion or belief and criminalises anyone who
attempts to persuade a person to be a non-believer in a religion or belief. It
also bans extramarital sex and curbs freedom of expression by, for example,
outlawing insulting the president, but puts major limitations on who can file a
complaint.
Nahadlatul
Ulama’s acquiescence sparked questions on how it squares that with its
unconditional endorsement of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights – a
significant differentiator in its rivalry with state-sponsored autocratic
versions of moderate Islam.
Privately,
influential Nahdlatul Ulama sources defend the socially restrictive aspects of
the law but concede that freedom of expression concerns are legitimate. The
sources expect the law to be modified in challenges likely to be filed with the
Constitutional Court.
Even so,
scholars Sana Jaffrey and Eve Warburton warned that provisions of the law “threaten political dissent with prison sentences and have the
potential to muzzle public debate about the purview of the state in citizens’
private and political lives.”
The
criticism notwithstanding, Nahdlatul Ulama's effort to anchor the United
Nations and the concept of the nation-state in Islamic jurisprudence
constitutes the most serious current challenge to autocratic Muslim
justification of repressive rule. In doing so, it could prove to be
revolutionary.
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Dr. James
M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and scholar, an Adjunct Senior Fellow
at Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies, and the author of the syndicated column and blog, The Turbulent World of
Middle East Soccer.
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