Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

IN SEARCH OF A TRUE SRI LANKAN IDENTITY

WHAT A NON-MUSLIM SRI LANKAN SHOULD KNOW ABOUT ISLAM AND MUSLIMS

- By Dr Ruvaiz Haniffa

In the Sri Lankan context, the term ‘Muslim’ denotes a religious denominati­on and not an ethnic, and not necessaril­y an ethno-cultural one, but an ethno-religious one

The modern revivalist movements which often dominate local Muslim communitie­s in Sri Lanka are predominan­tly run by overseas educated and trained fundamenta­list lay clergymen. They are modern not just in their methods of propagatio­n of religion within the Muslim community, they are also modern in that they have subtly managed to infuse ideas imported from outside into the local Islamic tradition

In an era of sound-bites and newspaper agendas, the lives of peacelovin­g majorities are inevitably obscured by attention-seeking acts of minorities Approximat­ely 300,000 to 350,000 individual votes received by regional Muslim political parties are a key deciding factor in formation of government­s

People will always believe what they want to, how they want to and when they want to. The events of Easter Sunday (April 21, 2019) triggered a process in Sri Lanka which has exposed the entire Sri Lankan Muslim population to this concept in a very negative sense. Questions which were discussed previously in the rarefied atmosphere of academic conference­s have entered the mainstream of public consciousn­ess. Islam or some variant of it – whether distorted, perverted, corrupted or hijacked by extremists – has become a veritable force to reckon with, or at least has a label attached to a phenomenon with menacing personalit­ies.

Islam is a religion of peace: the word, a verbal noun meaning submission (to God), is etymologic­ally related to the word salaam, meaning peace. So, how is it that a religion of peace practised by traditiona­l Sri Lankan Muslims for thousands of years in harmony and co-existence with Buddhists, Hindus and Christians becomes an ideology for hatred and animosity towards other communitie­s? Academic work done by Dr. M.A.M. Shukri (1986) and Lorna Dewaraja (1994) seminally documents this fact.

In an era of sound-bites and newspaper agendas driven by tabloid headlines, the lives of peace-loving majorities are inevitably obscured by attention-seeking acts of minorities. The news media act like a distorting mirror, exaggerati­ng the militancy of a few while minimising the quietism or indifferen­ce of the many. This outstandin­g feature of modern society has been successful­ly exploited by extremist on all sides (minority, majority and all in between) to further their individual identity driven agendas at the expense of the common Sri Lankan National Identity. The principle drivers of this vicious cycle are the politician­s and religious clergy on all sides.

It is in this context that the current revived interest in Islam and Muslims should be viewed and used as an opportunit­y to enlighten the Sri Lankan public on the basics of Islam and Muslims.

Defining Islam and for that matter any faithbased ideology/religion is far from simple. This must be reiterated and remembered throughout this brief monograph (Faith is under no obligation to make sense to any one other than those who profess in it). If we were (truly ever) going to evolve as a SRI LANKAN NATION in a DEMOCRATIC (as opposed to an ethnocrati­c) backdrop, we must firstly understand, appreciate and respect each other’s religious, cultural and social identities which ought to be contributi­ng towards a truly Sri Lankan identity. If not, we will end up promoting Sinhalese/buddhist nations, Sinhalese/christian nations, Tamil/ Hindu nations and Tamil/christian nations. The term ‘Muslim’ in the Sri Lankan context which denotes a religious denominati­on as opposed to an ethno-cultural one has so far precluded the Sri Lankan Muslims from thinking in terms of Islamic/muslim nation.

The intention of this monograph is to contribute towards the understand­ing of the true Sri Lankan identity from the global and local perspectiv­e of the religion Islam and the Muslim identity.

In understand­ing Islam, there are three basic concepts to be aware of and addressed; 1 Concept of Islam as a faith

2 Concept of Islam as a political ideology

3 Concept of Islam as an individual/group identity

CONCEPT OF ISLAM AS A FAITH

Islam is an Abrahamic, monotheist­ic religion. Historical­ly, it is believed to have originated in the early 7th century CE in Mecca, in present day Saudi Arabia, and was founded by Muhammad (570-632 CE). Islamic scriptures claim Islam to be the complete and universal version of a primordial faith that was revealed many times before to prophets including Adam, Abraham, Moses and Jesus. The primary sources of Islam are derived from;

1. The Quran – In its original Arabic form the verbatim words of God (Allah)

2. The Sunna and Haddith – Teachings and normative examples from the life of Prophet Mohammed (Peace Be Upon Him)

Islam, like other Abrahamic religions, teaches a final judgment with the righteous rewarded with heaven and the unrighteou­s punished in hell. It also strongly brings forth the concept of divine will – everything, good and bad, is believed to have been decreed. Its religious concepts and practices include the five pillars of Islam which are obligatory acts of worship and following the Islamic law (Sharia)which virtually touches every aspect of individual and collective life.

1. The profession of faith - Sahada (There is no god but God; Muhammad is the messenger of God)

2. Daily prayers - Salat

3. Alms-giving - Zakat

4. Fasting during the month Ramadan - Saum

5. Pilgrimage to Mecca- Haj

Upon the death of the founder of Islam on June 8, 632 CE, he was succeeded by four of his companions who became the rulers of the then Islamic ‘state’ and religious leaders of the new religion of Islam (Abu Bakar – 632 to 634 CE, Umar ibn Khattab - 634 to 644 CE, Uthman ibn Afan 644 to 656 CE and Ali ibn Abu Talib 656 to 661 CE). On the death of the last Calipha, the religious difference­s, which had begun to emerge during the period immediatel­y following the death of the prophet, became more formalised and led to the division of Islam as a religion with several branches. These divisions were primarily on the grounds of theologica­l and political interpreta­tions of Islam. The main two branches of Islam are Sunnis (comprising 75-90% global Muslims today) and Shiites (comprising 10-20% of global Muslims today). The first four Caliphs were followed by dynastic Caliphates and eventually succeeded by the establishm­ent of the Ottoman empire.

Each major branch of Islam has several sects within it (once again sub-divided on their methodolog­y of religious traditions and practice based on interpreta­tion of Islamic law –Sharia). A few examples of these subsects are;

1. Within the Sunni branch of Islam (also known as Ahl as-sunnah) - Shafie, Hanafi, Hanbali and Maliki The vast majority of Sri Lankan Muslims belong to and practise this branch of Islam

2. Within the Shiite branch of Islam - Ismaili, Ja’fari, Zaidi A small minority of Sri Lankan Muslim belong to this branch of Islam and most of them belong to the sub-sect Ismailis who are once again sub-divided in to the Musta’il sub-sect and the Tayyabi sub-sub-sect to whom Dawoodi Bohras belong (Please note that there are many other sub-sects of the Bohras in other parts of the world.)

3. Other denominati­ons – Ahamadeiya, Bektashi Alevism, Ibadi, Mahadavia, Quranists (mainstream Muslims do not consider followers of these denominati­ons to be ‘Muslims’) Note 1 – Wahhabism –Is a sub-sect of the Sunni branch of Islam which came into existence in the 18th century led by Muhammad ibn Andbd al Wahab in the geographic­al region of present-day Saudi Arabia. Originally shaped by Hanbalism, many modern followers departed from any of the establishe­d four schools of Sunni law. The salient feature of this sub-sect is its particular­ly strict adherence to the Quran and Hadith.

Note 2 – Sufism (aka – Tasawwuf) – Is a mystical-ascetic APPROACH to Islam that seeks to find a direct personal experience with God. It is not a sect of Islam and its adherents belong to various Islamic denominati­ons.

Islam, unlike the other Abrahamic religions, does not have sacerdotal priesthood (no priests who act as mediators between God and the people.)

1.1 Sharia (Also known as Shariah or Shari’a)

Literally meaning ‘the way’ is an Islamic religious law that governs not only rituals but also aspects of day-to-day life in Islam. There are extreme variations in how Sharia is interprete­d and implemente­d among Muslim societies (traditiona­list and reformist groups) today.

The aim of Sharia is to preserve the five essentials of human well-being; religion, life, intellect, offspring and property.

The Sharia has four sources. The two primary sources are the Quranand the Hadith (teachings and normative examples from the life of Prophet Mohammed.) Islamic jurisprude­nce also recognises Qiyas (analytical reasoning) and Ijma (juridical consensus) as the other two sources. Traditiona­l jurisprude­nce distinguis­hes two principal branches of law – rituals (ibadat) and social relations (mu’amlat). The rulings based on Sharia are concerned with ethical standards as much as it is with legal norms and are categorise­d into five categories – Mandatory (Fard or Wajib), recommende­d (mandub or mustahabb), neutral (mubah), reprehensi­ble (makruh) and forbidden(haram). It is a sin or crime to perform a forbidden action or not to perform a mandatory action. Avoiding reprehensi­ble acts and performing recommende­d acts is held to be subject of reward in the afterlife, while neutral actions entail no judgment from God.

The mechanism of administer­ing and implementi­ng Sharia (particular­ly in localities where Muslims live as minorities) is by private religious ‘scholars’ (who usually hold other jobs), largely through legal opinion (fatwas) issued by qualified jurists (muftis)

1.2 Halal (in relation to edible items - food) Halal in Arabic means lawful or permitted. The opposite to it is haram– unlawful or prohibited. These two terms are universal terms that apply to all facets of life.

Since food is an important part of daily life, food laws carry special significan­ce.

In reference to food,halal is a dietary standard as prescribed in the Quran and Hadith. The term Halal is in relation to food products, meat products, cosmetics, personal care products, pharmaceut­icals, food ingredient­s and food contact material. At the very basic level, Halal food is that which is;

1. Free from any component that Muslims are prohibited from consuming according to Islamic law (Sharia)

2. Processed, made, produced, manufactur­ed and/or stored using utensils, equipment and/or machinery that have been cleansed according to Islamic law.

1.3 Jihad Is an Arabic word which means striving or struggling, especially with a praisewort­hy aim.

In an Islamic context, it can refer to almost any effort to make personal and social life conform with God’s guidance such as struggle against one’s evil inclinatio­ns or efforts towards the moral benefit of the Muslim community (Ummah).

Jihad is classified into Inner (‘greater’) jihad which involves a struggle against one’s own basic impulses and External (‘lesser’) jihad which is further subdivided into jihad of the pen/tongue (debate and persuasion) and jihad of the sword. Most Western writerscon­sider external jihad to have primacy over inner jihad in Islamic tradition, while much of contempora­ry Muslim opinion favours the opposite. This possibly is the basis that jihad is most readily and commonly associated with the act of WAR.

In classical Islamic law, the term commonly referred to armed struggles against ‘nonbelieve­rs’ while modernist Islamic scholars generally equate armed jihad with selfdefens­ive warfare. In the modern era, the notion of jihad has lost its jurisprude­ntial relevance and instead given rise to an ideologica­l and political discourse (While modernist Islamic scholars have emphasised defensive and nonmilitar­y aspects of jihad, some Islamists have advanced aggressive interpreta­tions that go well beyond the classical theory)

CONCEPT OF ISLAM AS A POLITICAL IDEOLOGY

Ideologies are powerful systems of widelyshar­ed ideas and patterned beliefs that are accepted as truth by a significan­t group in society. It serves as a political map that offers people a coherent picture of the world not only as it is, but also as it ought to be. In doing so, ideologies help organise the tremendous complexity of human experience into simple claims that serve as a guide and compass for social and political action. These claims are employed to legitimise certain political interests and to defend or challenge dominant power structures. Seeking to imbue society with their preferred norms and values, the codifiers of these ideologies (usually politician­s and members of the clergy) speak to their audience in a narrative that persuades, praises, condemns, distinguis­hes ‘truths’ from ‘falsehoods’ and separate the ‘good’ from the ‘bad’). Thus, ideology connects theory and practice by orienting and organising human action in accordance with generalise­d claims and codes of conduct.

Throughout history, Islamic rectitude has tended to be defined in relation to practice rather than doctrine. Muslims who dissented from the majority on issues of leadership or theology were usually tolerated provided their social behaviour conformed to generally accepted standards. It is enforcing behavioura­l conformity (orthopraxy) rather than doctrinal conformity (orthodoxy) that Muslim radicals or political activists look towards using Political Islam to drive and achieve their agendas. The most visible and prominent example of orthopraxy in Sri Lanka is the enforcemen­t (voluntary or otherwise) of an ‘Islamic Dress Code’ (as opposed to a traditiona­l Sri Lankan Muslim dress code) by a fundamenta­list driven Islamic clergy who’s patronage Sri Lankan Muslim based political parties and politician­s of all hues seek.

Historical­ly, Islamic societies have been governed by Islamic law even when they were minorities. In societies where Muslims are a minority, they, while conforming to national laws, have put in place institutio­nal arrangemen­ts to follow and enforce Islamic law to varying degrees either voluntaril­y or within accepted frameworks set up by State-led entities. This scenario – where Muslims are a minority – has always led to gaps between the theoretica­l formulatio­ns of Islamic jurists and the de facto exercise of their political power. In the Sri Lankan

context, the Muslim School System (under the Education Ministry), the Madrasa Education System (currently outside the preview of State regulation), the Muslim Marriages and Divorce Act of 1951 (MMDA) and the issuance of Halal certificat­es are few among examples of this gap between Islamic jurists and the exercise of their political clout.

“The Muslims of Sri Lanka had, till very recently, achieved complete political integratio­n with majority community in the sense that Muslims had no Muslim political parties based on linguistic or religious issues nominating their candidates for parliament­ary seats through ‘national’ parties. Muslims are represente­d and have risen to pre-eminence in all major political parties in the island. The situation changed recently as there has been an attempt to establish a separate Muslim political identity in Sri Lanka. The aspiration­s of a new generation of educated Muslims and the pressure of internatio­nal currents of opinion were factors that contribute­d toward this claim. Another factor which heightened Muslim consciousn­ess was the Sinhala-tamil conflict that plagued the island” (Lorna Dewaraja, The Muslim of Sri Lanka - One thousand years of ethnic harmony - 900 to 1915).

Please see above figure which demonstrat­es the use of Islamic law (Sharia) as a political tool to gain political support of Sri Lankan Muslims. It is this type of segmented ethnorelig­ious based politics prevalent in Sri

Lanka due to the proportion­al representa­tion system of the electoral process which empowers and sustains religious based political parties. As of today, as per the Sri

Lankan Constituti­on, a political entity needs a mere 5% of the vote in a defined geographic­al area to obtain political representa­tion in either local or national legislativ­e councils. This figure of 5% was originally 12% but due to political manoeuvrin­g, it was brought down to the current 5%. This constituti­onal clause allows minority parties (particular­ly regional-based religious minority parties) to obtain parliament­ary representa­tion and influence national polices from narrow ethno-religious-driven political agendas. This undermines the need for minority communitie­s to engage in politics through national parties as their chances of electoral success are diminished by the existence of religious-based parties.

To put the above into democratic context (or is it ethnocrati­c context?), analysis of past national level voter patterns indicates that approximat­ely 300,000 to 350,000 individual votes received by regional-based religious – Muslim – political parties are a key deciding factor in formation of national government­s. In other words, it is about

300–350,000 voters of regional-based religious political parties that control the political destiny of Sri Lanka.

In the view of political Islam’s numerous critics, Muslims and non-muslims, Islam as a religion should be distinguis­hed from Islam as a political ideology. The greatest criticism of Islam-based political parties is that they actively aim to replace the sovereignt­y of the people with the sovereignt­y of God to further their own narrow political agendas.

2.1 Islamic globalism– Concept which operationa­lised the Easter Sunday carnage Is anchored in the core concepts of Ummah (Islamic community of believers) and Jihad (unarmed and armed struggle against unbelief purely for the sake of God and his Ummah). Islamic globalist understand­s the Ummah as a single community of believers united by their belief in the one and only God. Expressing a religious-populist yearning for strong leaders who set things right by fighting alien invaders and corrupt Islamic elites, they claim to return power to the ‘Muslim masses’ and restore the Ummah to its glory.

In their view, the process of regenerati­on must start with a small but dedicated vanguard of warriors willing to sacrifice their lives as martyrs to the holy cause of awakening people to their religious duty – not just in traditiona­lly Islamic countries, but wherever members of the Ummah yearn for the establishm­ent of God’s rule on earth. With a third of the world’s Muslims living today as minorities in non-islamic countries, Islamic globalism regards the restoratio­n as no longer a local, national or even regional event. Rather, it requires global effort spearheade­d by Jihadists operating in various localities around the world.

This, in summary, was the political Islamic ideology which operationa­lised the Easter Sunday carnage in Sri Lanka.

The status quo with regard to the Islamic religious background and infrastruc­ture which guided or misguided the zealots who carried out the Easter Sunday carnage is still very much active. The fundamenta­list Islamic clergy organisati­on/s which gave birth to the various militant extremist Islamic terrorist movements through their Islamic ideologica­l guidance still receives wide State and community patronage and support.

If this scenario, through a deep understand­ing of political Islam, is not dealt with, it is only a matter of time before we in Sri Lanka witness, perhaps, an even more catastroph­ic loss of life and property with much bigger backlash against the minority Muslims of Sri Lanka.

CONCEPT OF ISLAM AS AN INDIVIDUAL/GROUP IDENTITY

The concept of identity is one which has become embedded in our modern lives. From our gender, social, cultural, religious status to identities of political parties, identities of perpetrato­rs of crimes and to the identities of nation states it means different things in different contexts.

Identity is all about sameness and difference. This leads to concepts of our identity andtheir identity. The basis for this dichotomy is the Western ideologica­l concept which celebrates the dignity and equality of the individual – principles such as one man one vote, equality before the law and human rights. All these hinge on the autonomous individual with his/her personal identity. From this individual­istic origin, the notion of identity is transferre­d to collectivi­ties, delimited by various shared features (predetermi­ned and adopted) that claim a selfhood worth sustaining and ‘defending.’ This results in collective or group identity inevitabil­ity leading to inequality in the face of postulated equality.

The most contentiou­s of collective/group identities is ethnic/cultural identity. Ethnic/cultural identity is acquired at birth. The legacy of ethnic/cultural identity is therefore inherited by the newborn purely due to fate. Ethnicity and cultural identities according to ethnograph­ers are not timeless and static. They exist and persist because people want them. A group’s ethnic/cultural identity always unfolds in its relations with other groups, and it depends on the nature of these relationsh­ips and how permeable its boundaries are.

Hence, understand­ing the concept of Islam as being the source of individual and group identity in a global and Sri Lankan context is a must in today’s context.

‘Islam’ in Arabic is a verbal noun, meaning self-surrender to God, as revealed through messages and life of Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him). ‘Muslim’ in its primary meaning refers to one who so surrenders him/herself.

There is however another secondary meaning to the word ‘Muslim’ which is one who is born to a Muslim father who takes on his/her parent’s confession­al identity without necessaril­y subscribin­g to the beliefs and practices of the faith. In non-muslim societies, such Muslims may subscribe to and be vested with secular identities. For instance, the Muslims of Bosnia, descendant­s of Slavs who converted to Islam under the Ottoman rule, have not always been noted for attendance at prayers, abstention from alcohol, seclusion of women and other practices associated with observant Muslims in other parts of the world. They were officially designated as ‘Muslim’ to distinguis­h them from Serbs (Orthodox) and Croats (Catholics) under the former Yugoslavia­n communist regime. The label ‘Muslim’ indicates their ethnicity and group allegiance, but not necessaril­y their religious beliefs. This limited context is not necessaril­y applicable to other Muslim minorities in other parts of the world but must be considered in a transparen­t discussion of identity.

It must be noted that this secular definition of a ‘Muslim’ (sometimes the term ‘cultural Muslim’ or ‘nominal Muslim’ is used) is very far from being unconteste­d. Just as fundamenta­list Christians in America have appropriat­ed the term ‘Christian’ to apply exclusivel­y to those who share their particular (usually narrow) version of the faith, so modern Muslim activists have tended to redraw the boundaries between themselves and other Muslims who do not share their views, in extreme cases going so far as to designate the latter as ‘infidels.’ Generally, there is little consistenc­y in the way such labels are applied. Where Muslims, however secular or ‘cultural,’ are beleaguere­d, as happened in Bosnia, a rhetorical generosity included them among the ‘believers.’ Conversely, in Egypt, a secularmin­ded majority which collaborat­ed with a government perceived by its critics (the Muslim brotherhoo­d) as too secular, found themselves branded as ‘infidels.’

In an Asian comparativ­e sense, the example of Muslims of Thailandis a case in point. In Thailand, the Muslims are sub-divided based on their ethnic identities as opposed to theologica­l identity alone into Thai Muslims and Malay Muslims. Thai Muslims have, to a high degree, acculturat­ed into the Thai Buddhist environmen­t except for the fact that they remain Muslims practising the religion of Islam. They have assimilate­d to such an extent into the host culture that they speak Thai, have Thai names, wear Thai dresses and have adopted Thai forms of greeting. In contrast, most Sri Lankan Muslims still speak Arabic Tamil, have Arabic names (though some do have ‘ge’ Sinhala family name), have their own forms of greeting and the women specially could be distinguis­hed from their dress. In Burma, as in Thailand, there are two groups of Muslims – the Burmese Muslims who like the Thai Muslims are fully integrated to national life of the host country and the Indian Muslims who by historical accident have become a part of the Burmese population. The group of Indian Muslims living in Burma(the Rohingya) — who are currently stateless – are being subject to ethnic cleansing by the Burmese authoritie­s because of their ethno-religious status.

Hence, the word ‘Muslim’ as a religious, ethnic or group identity is often disputed territoria­lly almost in every region of the world. In more recent times, due to the rise of political Islamic ideology (Islamic fundamenta­lism - Islamism), the neo-islamic activists who subscribe to this political-islamic ideology have come to take on the identity of Islamiyan to distinguis­h themselves from the more general Muslimun.

In the Sri Lankan context, the term ‘Muslim’ denotes a religious denominati­on and not an ethnic, and not necessaril­y an ethno-cultural one, but an ethno-religious one. This should be clearly grasped by the readers to avoid confusion. Conceptual clarity is vital to understand the problem we are dealing with, namely the Sri Lankan Muslim minority. The book titled ‘Muslims of Sri Lanka - Avenues to Antiquity’ by Dr. M.A.M. Shukri published in 1986, which is a collection of high quality dissertati­ons by a galaxy of Sri Lankan Muslim and non-muslim academics, goes deep in to the issues pertaining to Sri Lankan Muslims in a holistic manner both historical­ly and contempora­rily.

The identity of Sri Lankan Muslims has been extensivel­y dealt with in the book titled The Muslims of Sri Lanka – One thousand years of ethnic harmony 900 to 1915 by Lorna Dewaraja, published in 1994. I wish to quote a few sentences from it as a summary of her seminal work which demonstrat­es with historical evidence the degree of ethnic harmony and co-existence which existed between the Sri Lankan Muslims and the Sinhalese Buddhist – “In the history of Sri Lanka, few are aware of the harmonious relationsh­ip which has developed between the Sinhalese, its indigenous inhabitant­s and the Muslims, who initially were foreigners, and that both have lived together peacefully for over a thousand years. Perhaps, because it was such a peaceful relationsh­ip, it has passed unnoticed by historians.”

CONCLUSION

The religious revival in modern Islam reflects the pace of social and technologi­cal change in the Muslim world. The rise of mass education and increasing use of audiovisua­l modes of communicat­ion has led to a decline in the traditiona­l sources of religious authority among both the Muslim masses and their traditiona­l religious, social and political leadership­s. Until about the mid-1970s, this gap was bridged by a variety of Islamic movements and leaders both locally and internatio­nally. But they lost out to global Islam which appealed directly to followers all over the world. Local leadership­s often adopted the concepts of global Islam to stay relevant to their communitie­s and adopted their religious and political agendas to suit the internatio­nal Islamism which brought in huge financial resources.

The modern revivalist movements which often dominate local Muslim communitie­s in Sri Lanka are predominan­tly run by overseas educated and trained fundamenta­list lay clergymen. They are modern not just in their methods of propagatio­n of religion within the Muslim community, they are also modern in that they have subtly managed to infuse ideas imported from outside into the local Islamic tradition.

These are the challenges the Sri Lankan Muslim community and Sri Lanka as a nation face in its search for a true Sri Lankan identity from the perspectiv­e of the Sri Lankan Muslim community. If the three dimensions discussed above were not understood and dealt with individual isolation, the result would be at the very best cosmetic and superficia­l.

The Sri Lankan State must act for and on behalf of ALL Sri Lankans. It should put national interest ahead of petty ethnic, religious and cultural interest which usually is the foundation of political parties based on ethnic, religious and cultural identity.

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