By Pervez Hoodbhoy
21 Nov 2020
UNMARRIED
men and women may live together, alcohol restrictions are gone, and honour
killings will be judged a crime just as any other. This official decree took
effect last week in the United Arab Emirates, a country whose social-political
matters are declaredly driven by Sharia law. These new rules apply equally to
expatriates (88 per cent) and UAE citizens (12pc), the latter being mostly
Sunni Muslims.
Morality
has apparently been ripped to shreds. In a frankly patriarchal desert culture
where local women wear the niqab, what was unthinkable has happened. Still, no
internal protest has been reported and neighbouring countries don’t care. Other
GCC countries — and even normally hostile Turkey — have not commented. Saudi
Arabia, once a bastion of Sunni conservatism, is following a similar path.
Theocratic Iran semi-officially admits its alcohol problem and seems resigned.
Billboards in Tehran warn against drinking and driving.
No Arab
Spring movement is driving this cultural liberalisation nor is popular
democracy on the cards. Unless something happens, dynastic rulers and clerics
will continue to rule. Various new top-down changes simply aim at making Arab
countries more Western tourist and business friendly. The recent opening up to
Israel undoubtedly plays some part.
But the new
legislative changes freeing cultural behaviour are likely to impact society far
more than political changes. They bring with them many key questions: what is
sinful and improper and what does Islam forbid or permit? Which values are
truly permanent and absolute and which must inevitably change with time?
Notions of
right and wrong are being turned upside down everywhere. There is, for example,
complete acceptance now of television across the Muslim world. Even in Pakistan
— among the most conservative Islamic countries — families spend evenings glued
to the drawing room TV set. Men with beards and women from Al Huda casually
snap selfies and WhatsApp them around. Yet older citizens cannot forget
admonitions that Islam prohibits photography and the strident denunciations of
TV as a ‘shaitani ala’ (devil’s tool).
Aniconism,
or a prohibition of depicting images of all living beings, was considered
immutable and absolute by almost all early Islamic religious authorities.
Scholars and clerics took as axiomatic that the creation and depiction of
living forms is God’s prerogative, not to be trespassed upon by artists and
painters. So, although Muslims can rightfully boast of magnificent Islamic
architecture such as Taj Mahal and Dome of the Rock, Islamic art was narrowly
restricted to decorative figural designs.
Aniconism
was taken so seriously that — although he later relented — a thoroughly liberal
and scientific-minded man like Sir Syed Ahmad Khan refused to be photographed.
The Afghan Taliban founder, Mullah Omar, never relented and so no known photo
of him exists. The 2005 earthquake in Pakistan’s northern areas was widely
attributed to watching television and, two days later, local clerics organised
a mass smashing of TV sets in the town of Kaghan.
The march
of technology, however, made clerics realise they were missing a huge opportunity.
Thus began the age of religious TV channels. Although limited initially to
audio recitations and images of floating clouds and heavens, talking heads
followed. Thereafter televised sermons and religious gatherings became popular
and today’s clerical screen personalities have millions of devotees. Asked
about earlier restrictions, one such megastar replied in a complicated way that
Islam prohibits drawings and photos but not videos.
Such
adaptive changes are not unique to Islam or Pakistan. Fundamental
transformations of thought and action have happened everywhere. Take slavery.
From the 15th century onwards, European colonialists stole manpower for
developing Europe by depopulating Africa. But slavery began phasing out after
the European Enlightenment. The British Empire formally outlawed it in 1833.
For the United States to follow suit took a civil war and an additional 32
years.
Banning
slavery from Muslim countries took much longer. Since the Quran discourages but
does not forbid slavery, for nearly 13 centuries the possession of slaves was
not condemned as sinful or illegal by any religious authority.
In 1909,
anti-slavery Young Turks, inspired by the Westernised Kemal Ataturk, forced
Sultan Abdul Hamid II to free his personal slaves. Ataturk dismissed the last
Ottoman caliph in 1924 and so ended slavery. Turkey formally ratified the 1926
League of Nations convention abolishing slavery in 1933. Though Western driven,
it was surely a good thing.
Whether
good or bad, the changes in the UAE’s laws are also Western driven. How the
country’s authorities will explain them to the world and their people remains
to be seen. Quite possibly no explanation will be forthcoming since UAE is a
sovereign country where ruling dynasties exercise total control. Its people
don’t have a voice.
On the
other hand, UAE could try to get endorsements for the new dispensation from
pliant muftis and shaikh-ul-Islam. This won’t be the first time. Muslim rulers
are thoroughly familiar with using friendly clerics for blessing bank interest
disguised to avoid its condemnation as riba. UAE has supported various militant
Salafist groups overseas and is said to have considerable control over the
authorities of Egypt’s Jamia al-Azhar. This wide outreach could be useful for
suppressing possible criticism.
UAE’s
rulers could also try a more straightforward explanation. The West thrives and
prospers in spite of its evolving values — what was immoral yesterday is now
simply the new normal. Until the 1960s, cohabitation was fiercely frowned upon
in much of Europe and the US. But religious opposition has since softened and,
in fact, most religions are following the trend.
UAE’s
rulers might try arguing that Islam, suitably interpreted, can do so as well.
As with child marriage, widow remarriage and polygamy, cohabitation will
doubtless lead to furious disputes. But, like it or not, the arrow of time is
unidirectional and irreversible.
Pakistan
could learn much from recent cultural developments and liberalisation of social
values in the rest of the Muslim world — a world which it had once aspired to
lead. But now in a state of confusion, and dragged willy-nilly by global forces
towards an uncertain future, it prefers to keep its eyes fixed firmly upon the
past while praying for old times to return.
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Pervez Hoodbhoy
is an Islamabad-based physicist and writer.
Original Headline: Shockwaves out of UAE
Source: The Dawn, Pakistan
URL: https://newageislam.com/the-war-within-islam/pakistan-seeks-lead-muslim-world/d/123580
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