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Sabria Jawhar

Sabria Jawhar

Posted: November 11, 2009 12:14 PM

Saudis Try to Put an End to Crazy Fatwas

What's Your Reaction:

Nearly a year after Saudi King Abdullah warned religious scholars that issuing careless fatwas gives extremists credibility as religious experts, the Ministry of Islamic Affairs, Call, Guidance and Endowment has finally said enough is enough.

Recently the Ministry issued a memo that fatwas were not to be issued to just anybody asking for one. The Ministry has ordered that Saudi imams refer people seeking fatwas to the Senior Board of Ulema. Apparently the Ulema got tired of having their own fatwas contradicted by some obscure rural cleric who thinks of himself as a religious scholar.

This new rule, although long overdue, thrills me to no end. If ever there was an aspect of Islam that has been so thoroughly abused by people who have no idea what they're doing it's the fatwa.

Fatwas, which are basically opinions or edicts, are supposed to be issued by Islamic scholars after careful and lengthy deliberation. The fatwa's source comes from the Qur'an and the sayings of the Prophet, peace be upon him. Once upon a time each and every word of a fatwa was agonized over and issued only when necessary.

Somewhere down the line more than a few imams from Seattle to Somalia fancied themselves fatwa experts and abused the privilege. As a result, trousers have been deemed sinful, Mickey Mouse was discovered to be Satan's foot soldier, and Saudi guys were given permission to take non-Muslim Western girls as wives for a couple of months to, well - just take a guess.

Although I am not one to concern myself with the internal politics of Saudi clerics, it's long troubled me that there often seems to be no rhyme nor reason as to what qualifies as a fatwa and who should be responsible for issuing one. At the very least it presents am image of disorganization among the Islamic religious community. At worst, it presents a picture of ignorance that leads to mockery of Islam.

At last January's International Conference on Fatwa and its Regulations, the King stated in a speech that, "Issuing ill-considered fatwas without following any criterion offers biased, ignorant, extremist or careless individuals the opportunity to pose as religious experts qualified to issue fatwas. On the other hand, they have been abusing Islam and distorting its noble values besides offering its enemies the justification for attacking the Holy Qur'an and spreading lies about the Holy Prophet (peace be upon him)."

The Senior Board of Ulema's recent decision brings back order and the original intent of the fatwa. Now, a panel of scholars will carefully deliberate the issue before them, determine whether it deserves consideration, and if so, correctly interpret the source of the decision before a fatwa is issued.

We've seen in the last decade or so, wildly different interpretations of the Qur'an and the words of the Prophet. Some non-Muslims, either through an anti-Muslim agenda or just plain ignorance, mangle the verses without proper scholarly research. Worse are the extremists, who interpret the Qur'an to suit their own agenda of murder and terror. Lost in these political sideshows -- and believe me it's political, not religious - is that even the most learned Muslim scholar still struggles to correctly interpret the Qur'an. Scholars who spend a lifetime of study still engage in debates over the interpretation of even a single word.

Issuing half-baked fatwas trivializes the true meaning its intent and renders it a joke. And the sheer number of fatwas issued over the past year reduces the significance of important ones, those that are really helpful guides to making us more pious and better Muslims.

It's ridiculous, I know, but for the sake of argument let's consider that Mickey Mouse is indeed the devil's toady and Minnie Mouse his handmaiden. Just how does this information help me live my life? Instead, it's a distraction, a bit of nonsense that would not have survived scrutiny of serious religious scholars. It's about time the real experts handled these things.

 
 
 
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12:12 PM on 11/16/2009
An interesting and hopeful article. I am in no way qualified to comment on Islamic Law in any incarnation, however, the value of anything decreases with an increase in supply. The same must be true of fatwas. A flurry of them necessarily degrades the attention given each and the quality of the whole. Unfortunately, as in all human endeavor, superior thought and consideration is a limited commodity. Within the context of Saudi society, which limits religion freedom entirely, this is at least a sign of some moderation in the only allowable religion.
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mommadona
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10:37 PM on 11/12/2009
This scares me to death, to think that this is just dawning on people - the need for clarification of just what Islam IS - AND christianity AND any other religion organized around a male-dominated power structure.

Denial is a deeeeep river.
12:14 PM on 11/16/2009
Sorry mommadona, but there has never been a successful atheist society. You may be the vanguard of the New Millennium, but frankly, I doubt it.
RTIII
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11:45 AM on 11/12/2009
So.. ...Is there going to be any effort to "mop up" the mess of all the previous, ill-considered fatwas? If not, they still have a huge problem on their hands.
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10:59 AM on 11/12/2009
Its a long time coming and should have been done sooner. Anyway, its about time someone took control! The problem with Islam as a whole is obvious, there is no central control - anyone and everyone who considers themselves muslim and can read the Koran (in Arabic) considers themselves a scholar. These so-called scholars speak mainly to other muslims who have no sense of comprehension or who simply can't read. Unfortunately they accept the assumed scholar's inpretation of the Koran and Hadith of the Prophet Mohammad (peace be upon him) and run with it to their detriment.

Now, if only the Saudis would control their lavish lifestyle (among other things), Muslims the world over can take them seriously.
11:26 PM on 11/11/2009
There's more stuff from "back home" (at least your home) in the Saudi press.

The King is moving slowly and surely to assert greater control.

At the beginning of the year (March? April?), the Supreme Religious Council was enlarged. For the first time ever representatives of all four mathhabs are members. And there was some reshuffling of the deck to bring in some new blood.

There is an ongoing program to reform the judicial system (to reform out some of the silly / dangerous practices) and increase the level of professionalism. And thus to ensure that rulings are more professional.

There's also a lot more visibility of women in the press - reporting on their activities. It's started out with the wives/daughters of the AlSaud.

But there have also been reports on the women in the Jeddah Chamber of Commerce and Industry. And interviews with women. Coverage of the trainee nurse complaints.

And some delightful to see articles - like the one in Saudi Gazette about Kuwaiti women winning the right to passports without male consent which ended with some Saudi (religious) sheikh saying there was nothing wrong with that. And even more heartening are the comments - often strongly pro-women's rights as in AlWatan and AlRiyadh over the Kuwaiti passports or the victory on hijab for the Kuwaiti women MPs.