THE SECULAR
POSITION PAPER AGAINST FAITH-BASED COURTS
INTRODUCTION AND CASE STUDIES
In
In a Toronto-based case, the Sharia was used to force a 15-year-old girl to leave school and marry an older man. She then separated after being abused and impregnated at 16. While in Canadian secular court underage marriage and abuse would result in criminal charges and the involvement of Children’s Aid, the Sharia tribunal sees no crime, allowing public criminal law to be dealt with as private family law. Since children and women in these situations are young and uneducated, how will they know any differently? How have we as a society gotten to the point where we’re actually seriously considering allowing such outrageous incidents?
RAISING MULTICULTURALISM TO AN IDEOLOGY
Multiculturalism, while superficially admirable, has now been taken to a dangerous ideological extreme. “Multiculturalism is based on some fundamental misconceptions,” says former president of the Institute for the Secularization of Islamic Society Ibn Warraq. “There is the erroneous and sentimental belief that all cultures, deep down, have the same values; or if these values are different, that they are all worthy of respect. Multiculturalism, being the child of relativism, is incapable of criticizing cultures, or making cross-cultural judgments. Not all cultures have the same values and not all values are worthy of respect.”1
What must be cherished above religious freedom and group rights, are individual, universal human rights. “Rationality, in the sense of an appeal to a universal and impersonal standard of truth, is of supreme importance to the well-being of the human species,” said British philosopher Bertrand Russell.2 Cultural criticism is not to be equated with racism or fascism. Russell in “the Ancestry of Fascism” teaches the danger
Clearly, most people understand that multiculturalism can easily go too far. In the Wyoming murder of Matthew Shepard, the “gay panic” defense, whereby an individual goes temporarily insane when propositioned by a member of the same gender, based its effectiveness on social fear and disapproval of homosexuality, a position backed up by the Catholic Church. In other words, the defense was claiming immunity for murder based on southern
The executive summary of the Boyd Report states: “Religious arbitration can allow the people in dispute to select a shared set of values and rules that may be different than
If it’s true, as often claimed, that Muslim groups will not be allowed to violate the Canadian Charter of Human Rights, or that the Sharia is at its core in agreement with Canadian law, then what will be gained through Sharia courts? But, as is far more sensible, if Sharia laws at their core violate the spirit, values and ethics of the Charter, then their use is discriminatory against the individuals making up these groups and as such have no place in this country.
If the introductory examples were not enough to answer that question, consider the result of honouring religious freedom over individual rights in liberally progressive
DOES SHARIA HAVE A COMMON SET OF VALUES IN ITSELF?
The fact is Islamic Law is based on a fundamentally different system and mutually exclusive set of values compared to Canadian law. While the Canadian legal system is one that is evolving and dynamical, the Sharia follows Quranic verses like “beware of new things for every new thing is an innovation and every innovation is a mistake.” Since the Sharia is closed to interpretation laws must be followed to the letter rather than adapted to specific circumstances. “Considerations of good faith, fairness, justice, truth and so on play only a subordinate part in the system,” says Islamic Law expert Joseph Schacht.3 Instead, Sharia has no common values that it follows but rather is subservient to the letter of law laid down in seventh century Arabian desert culture and thanks to its injunction against innovation, critical enquiry and change, still reflects this now wholly alien context.
If the Sharia has one consistent value it is the emphasis placed on divinity, such that an authority representative of God decides arbitration. “For pious Muslims, legitimate authority comes from God alone, and the ruler derives his power from God and the holy law, and not from the people,” says Warraq.6 “According to Islam, personal freedom is available and permissible only in respect to matters which are not regulated by the injunctions and prohibitions laid down by the Quran and the Sunnah, for these are expressions of the inherent Divine Wisdom manifested through the Divine Will.” How different could this be from the western system, where the accused is judged in most matters of a crime against the state and is found guilty by a group of his or her peers? The emphasis on divinity is clear from the fact that the worst crime is not rape, murder or theft, but unbelief, punishable by death. The greatest crime is a crime against God!
THE PROBLEM OF CHOICE
The Boyd Report states: “The Review concluded that cultural groups should not be permitted to stop people from having access to laws and processes that are available to all.” Indeed, it is a requirement that all parties have the choice of switching to secular courts.
One must wonder though, how financially and socially disadvantaged and abused women will learn about their rights to refuse the arbitration or be in a position to refuse.
Maybe from the imams, who quote the Quran chapter 4 verse 34 “Men are the protectors and maintainers of women, because Allah has given one more strength than the other” to force their wives to submit to
And how exactly will an abused twelve year old understand the concept of rights to the point of actually going against his own parents and asking for the secular court? The state must be protecting these vulnerable elements that cannot protect themselves. They must do so all the more when these elements are reaching out to them.
The Boyd Report stated in its Recommendations, section 8, page 133 : “The Review did not find any evidence to suggest that women are being systematically discriminated against as a result of arbitration of family law issues. Therefore the Review supports the continued use of arbitration to resolve family law matters.”
Perhaps Boyd never heard from the Canadian Council of Muslim Women, who have spoken out on the imposition of Islamic law, making it clear Canadian Muslim women wish to live under Canadian secular law and the universal human rights enshrined by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. They speak of Muslim women being intimidated into using the Sharia court where inheritance laws and alimony, division of property and custody all favour men. In the latter case, for example, the age of the child is the only factor in deciding who gains custody. Keeping women subjugated and uneducated makes it even easier to impose a continued cycle of intimidation and communal pressure with the goal of making Sharia the natural, divine and unquestionable “choice.”.
THE WISE INDIVIDUAL LEARNS FROM OTHERS’ MISTAKES
With the above examples and arguments, and learning from the disastrous international experiments, it is no surprise the NDP has come out against arbitration in family law and that
It is indeed interesting that in the west the women’s “choice” frames the center of the debate, while in countries run by Sharia rules the concept of choice has no meaning. Internationally the Sharia experiment has been an abject failure. In Malaysia Sharia has been used since the mid 1990’s, making it a crime to dispute any fatwa (authoritative legal decision). “Very few Muslims have the courage to question, challenge, or even
Speaking on the
Since the adoption of Sharia in
If you are thinking that these atrocities apply to other countries but could never happen in
Many countries are learning their lesson. In
1 Warraq, Ibn. “Why I am not a Muslim.”
2 Russell, Bertrand. In Praise of Idleness.
3 Schacht, Joseph. Islamic Religious Law.” In The Legacy of Islam, Schacht and Bosworth, eds.
4 Taheri, Amir. Holy Terror.
5 Shacht, Joseph. An Introduction to Islamic Law.
6 Warraq, p. 186.
7 Interview: A review of the Muslim Personal/Family Law Campaign. (1995).
Coordinated by Rabia Mills. Downloaded 21 March 2004 from the Canadian
Society of Muslims web site: http://Muslim-canada.org/pfl.htm
8 Barbulesco, Luc, and Philippe Cardinal. L’Islam en questions.
9 Goodwin, Jan. Price of Honor.
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