Why an Islamic Government in Egypt Might Not Be So Terrible - New America Media
The current unrest in Egypt is once again raising the  specter of a potential “Islamic republic” as the fortunes of the nearly  century-old Muslim Brotherhood and its role in a possible post-Mubarak  state there are weighed in the minds of Egyptians and non-Egyptians  alike. This prospect is met with a great deal of consternation and  hand-wringing in the United States and Europe. However, the idea of an  Islamic republic in the minds of Western observers is far worse than the  reality.
The symbolic value of “Islamic governance” is of  critical importance for Muslims, since as a matter of faith, Islam is  supposed to be the governing principle for all of human life. However,  theologically speaking, even if a nation labels itself as an Islamic  republic, all government structures would not necessarily be determined  by Islamic Shari'a (sacred law). Moreover, even those aspects of  governance that appear to be directly determined by Shari'a principles  are subject to interpretation by religious officials, many of whom  disagree on their application.
Beyond this, Islamic government  incorporates a broad set of ethical principles that few in the West  would disagree with, namely that public resources should be used for the  good of all, that honesty should be a hallmark of public life, and that  the poor, sick and disadvantaged should be provided for.
Most  Americans look at the term “Islamic republic” and immediately think of  Iran, with clerical rule, mandatory head covering for women, and  prohibitions on various forms of public and private behavior. However,  the Iranian government is in some ways an anomaly in the Muslim world  because it is very specifically based on a bedrock principle of the  Velayat-e Faqih, or “rule of the chief jurisprudent,” which mandates a  hierarchy of clerical decision-making with the chief cleric being the  last word on all decisions. The Iranian state structure is a miracle of  complexity with interlocking leadership positions, staggered election  terms, and baroque combinations of direct and indirect election of  leadership posts.
In other countries where Shari’a principles are  included in the law, this doctrine is anathema, though clerical  authority is nonetheless imperative. Thus, it is highly unlikely that  any emerging Islamic state would mandate total clerical jurisprudence as  in Iran.
Of course, Islam does have a specific set of laws that  pious Muslims want to see an Islamic state preserve and protect. These  include family law (including custody of children), inheritance law,  laws against charging interest, laws governing certain aspects of  personal behavior (such as personal dress), and specific punishments for  certain crimes. These are frequently the battleground areas for those  who want to protect the Islamic nature of the state, and those who want  to approximate the secular laws of Europe and North America.
However,  most people who object to Shari'a law have no idea how it is applied in  the Islamic world. The laws are modified differently from country to  country depending on who is making the religious determination and how  strongly they are imbedded in the constitution and other legal documents  of the state. For example, in some Muslim countries, the law that  allows a man to have four wives is modified by the equally important  religious demand that he prove that he will be able to treat all of his  wives equally. In some Muslim countries, devices such as requiring  written permission from the earlier wives before a second, third or  fourth marriage can take place keep this practice in check, while still  preserving the Islamic law.
Naturally, many in the United States  and Israel are afraid that an Islamic government in Egypt would spell  renewed hostilities with Israel. This depends entirely on the ability of  moderate Muslims, of which there are millions in Egypt, to exert  political control over the small minority of rabid extremists in the  state. It is thus a political, not a religious question. The benefits of  peace with Israel have been very great, and a sensible Muslim citizenry  realizes that this is not something to renege on lightly.
It is  also important to understand that under religious law, an Islamic  government must be in place in order to protect religious minorities.  Jews and Christians are all "people of the book," whose religious  practices must be respected under Islamic law. This protection has been  logically extended to Zoroastrians, Hindus, Buddhists, Jains, Sikhs, and  Taoists in South and East Asia in de facto observance. For example, in  Iran, Jews, Christians and Zoroastrians are allowed to manufacture, sell  and consume alcoholic beverages, even though alcohol is prohibited for  Muslims.
It is somewhat odd that Western commentators find it  difficult to accept the desire to preserve a small number of  characteristic religious structures in the laws of the state, when many  of their countries already do so. Israeli law accommodates Orthodox  Jewish religious practice. European nations until recently had  prohibitions against divorce and abortion to uphold Catholic Canon Law.  The opposition to same-sex marriage on religious grounds is a reality in  American politics today, having resulted in legal prohibition in the  laws of the majority of states. In fact, many religious-minded people in  the United States would find such laws welcome, and regularly lobby for  them.
There should be no interference to impose some imagined  set of secular Western values on Egypt, given the serious problems that  legislators would have to face. The United States in particular would do  well not to obsess over the potential Islamic nature of the Egyptian  state.
William O. Beeman is professor and chair of the  department of anthropology at the University of Minnesota. He has lived  and worked in the Middle East for more than 30 years. His most recent  book is “The ‘Great Satan’ vs. the ‘Mad Mullahs’: How the United States  and Iran Demonize Each Other” (Chicago).
Tuesday, February 01, 2011
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2 comments:
Among the best articles I have ever before read through with this issue. Thanks!
An Islamic government in Egypt would set womens rights back many years, as it has in Iran.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pFqWlCV_4kE&feature=player_embedded
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