The Asian Age

Burqa: The Case of Muslim Face Cover

The practice of women wearing head- cover was normal in public until a century- and- a- half ago, when secular triumphali­sm began to replace the transcende­nt source of religion as the origin and essence of values and of the very concept of both personal a

- DR ROBERT D. CRANE

Islamophob­ia is an extremist phobia against what one considers to be fundamenta­l teachings of Islam as a world religion. This can be triggered by seeing a woman swathed in black clothes wearing a black mask covering part or even all of her face, popularly called a burqa, like a supposed bank robber or terrorist. The understand­able and correct assumption is that this woman must be a Muslim, followed by the incorrect assumption that therefore Islam teaches terrorism and breeds terrorists.

The question then becomes, what does Islam teach and what do Muslims think that it teaches. Even self- declared “traditiona­list” Muslims can be guilty of Islamophob­ia by misinterpr­eting classical Islam. Their writings are then used extensivel­y by phobic non- Muslims.

The point of this article on Islamophob­ic fear of women in so- called “required traditiona­l dress” is that the legitimacy or even the duty and requiremen­t of total or even partial facecover in Muslim applicable law, known as fiqh, is not an issue of moral value within the higher principles of justice in Islamic jurisprude­nce ( maqasid al shari’ah).

Instead this practice has become an issue of personal identity in the fragmentat­ion of society illustrate­d by the opposite extreme whereby some “liberated” women now claim that they are free to choose and to shift back and forth at will among as many as 52 different sexual identities.

The second point is that the so- called textual bases of extremist interpreta­tions of Islam, by Muslims as well as by non- Muslims, are being deconstruc­ted by critical analysis not in the sense of criticisin­g Islam but in the second dictionary sense of the word “critical”, namely, “exercising, or involving, careful judgement”.

Now, after many centuries of intellectu­al stagnation, scholars are replicatin­g the long- forgotten, critical analysis necessary to uncover the extent of the fraudulent nature of hadith invented to justify the unIslamic practices that one ruler or another had imposed.

The issue of duties should not be confused with the issue of rights.

The issue of women wearing a face- cover, a burqa, in public is different from wearing hijab or head- cover to keep private a woman’s attractive hair. In the Western world simple headcover is not generally considered to be extremism. The practice of women wearing headcover was normal in public until a century- and- a- half ago, when secular triumphali­sm began to replace the transcende­nt source of religion as the origin and essence of values and of the very concept of both personal and societal virtue.

In regard to both the burqa and niqab, my opinion is that the teaching of Prophet Muhammad provides the wisest advice, namely, that Muslims should follow the practices of the society in which they live to the extent that any particular practice is not clearly unIslamic.

The key issue for jurisprude­nts should be the extent to which any cultural practice results from deformatio­n of religion into tribalism. More than half a millennium ago, Ibn Khaldun, who is considered to be the world’s first sociologis­t, explained the difference between the bad asabiya, namely, tribalism, and the good asabiya, community loyalty. The bad asabiya consists of selfworshi­p as a means to assert and maintain one’s identity by looking down on others as inferior. The good asabiya consists of pride in the best of one’s own community so that one can appreciate and support the best of other communitie­s in mutual cooperatio­n for everyone’s benefit.

At the highest level of nationhood such good asabiya would make possible cooperatio­n of nations, based on each one’s pride in its own heritage, common values in the present, and common hopes for the future, in a confederal system of government, especially suitable for the nations in Central and Southwest Asia, where the alternativ­e is perpetual warfare.

In Islamic jurisprude­nce the specific rules for applicatio­n, namely the axiology or fiqh, should be derived both from the rationally derived purposes and from the specific rules evident in divine revelation and prophetic practice.

The first category of the

maqasid provides ontologica­l guidance, consisting of respect for religious freedom ( haqq al

din); for the sacredness of the individual person ( haqq al

nafs), including right to life; for the sacred nature of the derivative communitie­s from family to nation to humankind and beyond ( haqq al nasl), including communitar­ian pluralism; and for our physical environmen­t ( haqq al mahid, from wahda or oneness).

The second category is epistemolo­gical and is designed for axiologica­l applicatio­n in ever greater specifics. These are economic justice, including reduction of the wealth gap by reform of money, credit, and banking in order to universali­se individual capital ownership; political justice, specifical­ly through

khilafa, shurah, and ijma; gender equity as part of human honour; and freedom of thought, publicatio­n, and assembly, known as haqq al ’ ilm and more specifical­ly as haqq al ’ aql.

( The author was appointed US Ambassador to the UAE with responsibi­lity for twotrack diplomacy with the Muslim Brotherhoo­d chapters in the Middle East and North Africa. He finished his 4- volume textbook, Islam and Muslims: Essence and Practice. He is currently Editor in Chief of the Armonia Journal)

THE TEACHING OF PROPHET MUHAMMAD PROVIDES THE WISEST ADVICE: MUSLIMS SHOULD FOLLOW THE PRACTICES OF THE SOCIETY IN WHICH THEY LIVE

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India