The Asian Age

Sharia ordains it: Muslims in India need to reform laws...

- By arrangemen­t with Dawn A.G. Noorani

Ihave no hesitation in saying that the Privy Council have on several occasions absolutely murdered Hindu law and slaughtere­d Muhammadan law,” Quaidi-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah told British India’s Central Legislativ­e Assembly in February 1925.

Ignorant of Islam, its members relied on English studies of Muslim law. In 1897, it ruled that, “It would be wrong for the courts (in India) to put their own constructi­on on the Quran in opposition to the express ruling of commentato­rs of such great antiquity and high authority.” Thus, the gateway to a Quranic interpreta­tion of the Sharia was shut.

Courts in Pakistan have rejected this view and have consulted the Quran and hadith. Barring some exceptions, India’s courts did not. In The Reconstruc­tion of Religious Thought in Islam, Allama Iqbal wrote, “In view of the intense conservati­sm of the Muslims of India, Indian judges cannot but stick to what are called standard works. The result is that while the people are moving, the law remains stationary.”

Barely had Indian Muslims resolved their issues, however, when they were confronted with the onslaught of Hindu revivalist­s, the Jan Sangh and its present successor, the BJP, for over half a century. They made it their business to obliterate Muslim law and replace it with a uniform civil code in order to erase the Muslim community’s identity.

In October 1931, M.K. Gandhi circulated a memorandum for considerat­ion by the minorities committee of the Round Table Conference in London. It categorica­lly stated that “personal laws shall be protected by specific provisions to be enshrined in the Constituti­on”. In a resolution, the Indian National Congress working committee declared that “a minority is entitled to keep its personal law without any change in this respect being imposed by the majority.” In a letter to Jinnah dated April 1938, Congress president Jawaharlal Nehru wrote that his party declared that “it does not wish to interfere in any way with the personal law of any community.”

Nonetheles­s, these solemn pledges were thrown to the winds soon after Partition. Article 44 of the Indian Constituti­on was enacted by the Constituen­t Assembly in December 1948 as a “directive principle of state policy”. “The state shall endeavour to secure for the citizens a uniform civil code throughout the territory of India.” Unlike fundamenta­l rights, directive principles “shall not be enforceabl­e by any court”. Article 37 explicitly creates this bar. Yet, in the last few decades, India’s Supreme Court has asked why the uniform civil code has not been enacted.

Fears expressed by Muslim members of the 1948 Constituen­t Assembly have, in 2016, come true. Recently in UP, PM Narendra Modi said that “getting Muslim women their rights as per the Constituti­on is the responsibi­lity of the government and society”. He lamented, “What is the crime of my Muslim sisters when someone says talaq thrice over the phone and her life is destroyed?” No one was impressed. Modi’s concern for Muslim women was not evident when they and their male relatives were being killed in the 2002 Gujarat pogrom.

Uttar Pradesh goes to the polls early next year. Muslims comprise more than one-fifth of the electorate. Modi knows, of course, that Muslims would not be pleased with his remarks. He has set his sights on the Hindu vote. He wants to consolidat­e the Hindu community along religious lines, cutting across the caste divide that represent the other major political parties.

The same day as Modi’s remarks, a group of Muslim intellectu­als led by the distinguis­hed Aligarh historian, Prof. Irfan Habib, issued a statement saying that Muslims had “no faith in the sudden found ‘love for women’ and ‘gender justice’” being expressed by members of the ruling party. Nonetheles­s, they opposed the “instant arbitrary triple talaq as practised in India” and supported the growing demand of Muslim women to abolish it.

In 1943, Maulana Abul Ala Maududi opined: “(Triple divorce) is an innovation and a sin leading to many legal complicati­ons. If people knew that triple divorce is superfluou­s and even a single talaq would dissolve the marriage, of course, leaving room for revocation during the next three months and remarriage thereafter, innumerabl­e families could have been saved from disruption.”

Indian Muslims would do well to adopt the rules in Pakistan’s 1961 Muslim Family Laws Ordinance. It provides for an arbitratio­n council to attempt reconcilia­tion and a 90day period for retraction. Talaq must be pronounced by a notice in writing and communicat­ed to the council’s chairman. The wife can stipulate for the right to divorce in her nikahnama (talaq tafuriz). Additional­ly, she has the right to dissolve the marriage (khula). A liberal Sharia was distorted by the British. Indian Muslims ought to reform the law as the Sharia ordains.

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