The Asian Age

For Muslim women, SC verdict is a revolution

- Parsa Venkateshw­ar Rao Jr

In 1986, Shah Bano had lost out her case for maintenanc­e postdivorc­e when conservati­ve and reactionar­y leaders led by the All India Muslim Personal Law Board (AIMPLB) and others browbeat liberals in the Muslim community like Arif Mohammed Khan and forced the Rajiv Gandhi government to bring in legislatio­n to undo the Supreme Court verdict with regard to payment of maintenanc­e or alimony. Thirty years later, five younger Muslim women from middle and lower middle class background­s from small town India have managed to beat the greybeards of the country’s Muslim community.

It is a revolution from within the community and the majority of Muslim women and men in India today stand with Shayara Bano, 35, with Aafreen Rehman 26, Gulshan Parveen 31, and Ishrat Jahan, 31.

It is not possible for the powers-that-be in the community to hold their sway. Muslims have grown larger, they are more confident and they cannot be blackmaile­d into submission by showing the red rag of saffron majoritari­anism of the ruling BJP and its ideologica­l mentor, the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS). The BJP and RSS may pretend that they support the cause of Muslim women in a bid to outflank Muslims as a whole. But Muslims can differenti­ate between the need to set their own house in order as well as to fend off saffron tactics against Muslims to give up their distinct religious identity in the country.

There is no doubt that more than the legal nuances of the judgment could be debated, and even be challenged. But the main issue is the politics of perception. The Narendra Modi government is sure to proclaim it as a victory for its own politics by projecting the issue of the court holding triple talaq to be illegal as a clash between the Quran and the Constituti­on, as one between the Muslim faith and the secular order, and as a victory of the Constituti­on over the Quran, of secularism over faith. There is no need to push the question under the carpet. It needs to be faced squarely and fairly. It can be interprete­d as the victory of secularism over religiosit­y. But this is so only at a very superficia­l level.

In Islam, marriage is a contract and not a sacrament. Divorce is an accepted norm unlike among orthodox Hindus and Roman Catholics. And the issue here is not about divorce. It is about whether a particular form of divorce — triple talaq — is valid. Chief Justice J.S. Khehar and Justice Abdul Nazeer have rightly concluded that it goes against the tenets of the Quran, which means it is unIslamic, but they also conceded that the Hanafi school of Islam law allows for triple talaq, and that Sunni Muslims in India largely follow the Hanafi school. That is why they wanted the legislatur­e to bring in the necessary changes in the law. The majority judgment of Justices Joseph Kurian, U.U. Lalit and Rohinton F. Nariman looked upon triple talaq as arbitrary and which closes the door to reconcilia­tion, which the Quran requires. They have held Section 2 of the 1937 Shariat Act, which says that issues of inheritanc­e, marriage, trusts and waqfs will be decided on the basis of Muslim personal law, to be invalid, and said that no arbitrary law can be allowed to stand in the light of the Constituti­on.

There are enough loose ends in the three verdicts — the minority one by Chief Justice Khehar and Justice Nazeer, and the majority comprising Justice Joseph, who has written a separate verdict, and that of Justices Nariman and Lalit.

The concluding remarks of all three judgments carry a note of a tentativen­ess. Justice Kurien Joseph says: “I am also of the strong view that the constituti­onal democracy of India cannot conceive of a legislatio­n which is arbitrary.” It is the position adopted by Justices Nariman and Lalit as well.

There is enough fuzziness in the legal definition­s and justificat­ions for triple talaq. It has been agreed by all that triple talaq might be legal but it is sinful, even according to the Hanafi school, which allows for triple talaq. That is why Justice Kurian Jospeh has stated the problem succinctly: “What is bad in theology was once good in

Whatever the BJP may say, it would be a tragedy if the Congress, after its disastrous stand in the Shah Bano case 30 years ago, were to attack the court’s ruling, and strengthen Muslim reactionar­ies... law, but after Shariat has been declared as personal law, whether what is Quranicall­y wrong can be legally right is the issue to be considered in this case.” All the five judges have bravely grappled with this question. They have not been able to reconcile the two in a logical manner. But they have taken solace in the fact that triple talaq is found to be unacceptab­le in religious terms whatever might be the juridical position.

It is necessary to remember this distinctio­n in order to understand that the Supreme Court has not struck down triple talaq because religious law withers before secular law, but because there are too many contradict­ions and complicati­ons in the Hanafi jurisprude­nce and it cannot be reconciled with the Quran.

As a matter of fact, the Supreme Court has in effect said that the Quran is the true source of law and that the Hanafi law must bend its rules to follow the spirit of the Quran. And in secular terms as well, triple talaq was found wanting as it closed the door on reconcilia­tion and a rethink and therefore carried elements of arbitrarin­ess, which is unacceptab­le in secular law.

It would be wrong then for the opponents and critics of the BJP’s majoritari­an politics to oppose the Supreme Court’s verdict under the wrong impression that it questions and undermines the religious identity of Muslims. It would be a real tragedy for an ostensibly secular party like the Congress to criticise the Supreme Court’s verdict and strengthen the hands of reactionar­y elements among Muslims once again.

The author is a Delhibased commentato­r and analyst

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