Sharia: It's About Religious Freedom              

                     
Toronto Star 
Dec. 22, 2004

"There is room in Canada for religious arbitration and secular law"

Before I could read the final report by Marion Boyd released yesterday, Dispute Resolution in Family Law: Protecting Choice, Promoting Inclusion, I received a voice mail from a TV reporter saying, " I'd like your comments against Sharia law and how it discriminates against Muslim women's rights." I called back and said, "It's rather presumptuous of you to assume that I'm against Sharia; if you call me back, I can tell you the positive aspects of Shania."

I wasn't surprised that she didn't phone back.

Within 24 hours of the report being released, I've heard a slew of uninformed and biased ideas ranging from calling anyone in favour of religious arbitration a fundamentalist, to labeling Marion Boyd a white racist. The groups opposing the establishment of a Muslim tribunal have effectively fanned the flames of Islamophobia.

Since the hot debate on the establishment of a Muslim Arbitration Tribunal started almost a year ago, I've been concerned about where this is taking us.

Everywhere I've been invited to speak on Islam, concern has been expressed about Canada supporting a Taliban-like regime. The fact of the matter is that Ismaili Muslims have been successfully using arbitration and mediation for some time, just like our counterparts in the Jewish and Catholic communities.

The public doesn't focus on the fact that this is not about Shania but about religious freedom.

Unfortunately, the word Shania has been grossly misused. Dr. Lynda Clarke, professor of Religion at Concordia University, explains, "Islamic law as an ideal pattern of life desired by God is known as Shania, i.e. `the way.' All Muslims aspire toward Shania; but it can never fully be known by the limited human intellect.

"Islamic law as understood and applied is therefore called fiqh. Fiqh means understanding. This understanding is acknowledged to be human, fallible, diverse, and to an extent (it's disputed) flexible and changeable," Clarke continues.

"Consequently, there is a wide range of understanding of law in the Muslim tradition, and different applications of law in the Muslim world."

To me, Shania is also the core value system for Muslims; it's a code of moral and ethical values that we implement in our daily lives in many different ways. In terms of birth, death and marriage, even secular Muslims often fall back on Shania.

Regarding women's rights, a study of Islamic law shows Shania gave Muslim women rights, based on knowledge of the society they lived in. One thousand four hundred years ago, Shania gave women rights to inheritance, voting, and decisions in marriage and divorce.

Judith Tucker's book, In The House Of The Law highlights how Shania courts were favourable to women during the Ottoman rule.

I understand and appreciate the fears of women who have been subjected to male patriarchal injustice in countries that use Shania as a crutch to legitimize their oppression of women. This is why it's imperative to separate culture and politics from the faith, and take a balanced approach without resorting to polemics.

As a person keenly involved in the development of Canadian Muslims and being on record as having spoken out against gender apartheid, I'm not blindly supporting the Muslim tribunal.

As Clarke argues, "For any group to claim that their fiqh (understanding) amounts fully and unmistakably to Shania is, in my view, contrary to the workings and spirit of the Islamic legal tradition."

Therefore, I believe it's imperative for the tribunal to reflect the diversity and flexibility of Islamic law. To achieve this, much work has to be done to create awareness and educate the Muslim community.

One relevant issue raised by the opponents of the tribunal is that uneducated immigrant Muslim women may not know their rights under Islam, and might be coerced into decisions that go against them. However, these women probably don't know what their rights are under Canadian law — a challenge faced by most immigrant communities.

Herein lies a unique opportunity to educate, inform and bring about that change. We can enlist help from enlightened Muslims as well as the Canadian government so that values and respect of both systems are put in place. This will help ensure we don't fall into the same pattern as Saudi Arabia, Pakistan or Iran.

Let's not allow Shania and Islam to be presented as murky and invite prejudice that lurks below the surface of Canadian society. There is room in Canada for religious arbitration and secular law without encroaching on each other.

Most of all, let's remember it's a personal choice

 

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