Death for “Apostates” and “Sodomists”
Andrew
G. Bostom
2006/03/23
This past week has
provided two glaring examples of the pitfalls of allowing that “no
law can be contrary to the beliefs and provisions of the sacred religion
of Islam”, as per the new constitutions of the vox populi
elected governments in Afghanistan and Iraq. With major input from the
U.S. State Department, both constitutions installed Islam as the official
state religion and made ancient Islamic religious law, Shari’a, a
primary guiding source for these legal systems. As former federal
prosecutor Andrew McCarthy noted,
the constitutions,
…also contained
some human rights provisions, which is what…enthusiasts said we should
be focusing on rather than all that nettlesome religio-cultural
stuff…The State Department maintained that it [the Afghanistan
constitution] also contained strong human rights provisions and was thus
becoming a framework for the emergence of a peaceful and vibrant
democracy
Thus with grim
predictability, an Afghan Muslim convert from Islam to Christianity, Abdul
Rahman, was arrested, charged with “apostasizing” from Islam,
and according to the March 19, 2006 statement of the presiding judge,
Ansarullah Mawlavezada, faces
the death penalty. Apostasizing from Islam to any other religion is
punishable by death under the Shari’a. And as Ibn Warraq described in
his unique study
of Muslim apostates, the Shari’a mandates often fill in the
“lacunae” of Islamic constitutions regarding punishment for apostasy
from Islam. Mr. Mawlavezada explained that, although,
We are not
against any particular religion in the world..in Afghanistan, this sort
of thing is against the law…[apostasy from Islam] is an attack on
Islam. ... The prosecutor is asking for the death penalty.
In an effort, one
assumes, to convey his “Islamic reasonableness,” the Afghan
prosecutor, Abdul Wasi, further noted
…that he had
offered to drop the charges if Rahman changed his religion back to
Islam, but the defendant refused.
According to a
March 16, 2006 report
from a London-based gay rights group, Grand Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani, the
supreme religious authority for Shi’ite Muslims in Iraq and an icon for
Shi’a worldwide, has apparently decreed that gays and lesbians should be
put to death “in the worst manner possible.” Confirmation of this
claim is provided at Sistani’s own official
website, specifically this
page, item 5, from a question and answer section, which translates:
Q: What is the
judgment on sodomy and lesbianism?
A: Forbidden.
Those involved in the act should be punished. In fact, sodomites should
be killed in the worst manner possible.*
Al-Sistani has been
lionized as a moderate healing force in Iraq, worthy of consideration for
a Nobel Peace Prize (such informal “nominations” coming from across
the political spectrum, i.e., both the New York Times’ Tom
Friedman, and National Review’s Richard
Lowry). His frank “ruling” which sanctions the brutal murder of
homosexuals, in conjunction with the good Ayatollah’s earlier
pronouncements on the debasing uncleanliness of non-Muslims (i.e., his
adherence to the orthodox Shi’ite doctrine of najis) might
dampen his Nobel prospects—although one can’t be too sure in our
moribund contemporary world.
Analyses of the
debacles over the drafting of the Iraq Constitution and the delayed
seating of Iraq’s elected Parliamentary government, ignore the fact that
Iraqis have in fact tread this path before—with distressing results,
culminating in massacres
of the Assyrian Christians, and later the hideous Baghdad
pogrom of its Jewish population in 1941. British Arabist S. A.
Morrison wrote a revealing “hopeful” analysis in1935 which, even after
the Assyrian massacres of 1933-34, smacks of delusional apologetics,
particularly viewed in light of Iraq’s subsequent history, through 2006.
Morrison’s essay was written following great expense of British blood
and treasure, and more than a decade of military occupation. His
conclusions (S.A. Morrison, “Religious Liberty in Iraq”, Moslem
World, 1935, p. 128) regarding the British involvement in the
“creation” of Iraq, sound depressingly familiar in light of the
present U.S. predicament:
Iraq is moving
steadily forward towards the modern conception of the State, with a
single judicial and legislative system, unaffected by considerations of
religion or nationality. The Millet system (i.e., the system of Ottoman
dhimmitude), still survives but its scope is definitely
limited. Even the Assyrian tragedy (a brutal series of murderous pogroms
during which Iraqi Kurdish and Arab Muslims killed thousands of Assyrian
Christians) of 1933 does not shake our faith in the essential progress
that has been made. The Government is endeavoring to carry out
faithfully the undertakings it has given, even when these run directly
counter to the long cherished provisions of the Shari’a Law. But it is
not easy; it cannot be easy in the very nature of the case, for the
common people quickly to adjust their minds to the new legal situation,
and to eradicate from their outlook the results covering many centuries
of a system which implies the superiority of Islam over the non-Moslem
minority groups. The legal guarantees of liberty and equality represent
the goal towards which country is moving, rather than the expression of
the present thoughts and wishes of the population. The movement,
however, is in the right direction, and it may yet prove possible for
Islam to disentangle religious faith from political status and
privilege.
Clearly
more than 70 years later, the Iraqi people still cannot seem
...to
eradicate from their outlook the results covering many centuries of a
system which implies the superiority of Islam over the non-Moslem
minority groups…,
while
Iraqi Islam remains unable to “...disentangle religious faith from
political status and privilege.”
These disturbing
current events—a prosecution for “apostasy” in Afghanistan, with a
potential death sentence imposed, and the sanctioning of the brutal murder
of homosexuals by Iraq’s most influential “moderate” cleric—are
entirely consistent with the Shari’a. They underscore how Islamic
societies must embrace the pluralistic spirit of the Western Enlightenment
if they are to be meaningfully reformed. Muslim scholar Bassam Tibi’s
observations are particularly apposite, and reveal what our objectives for
Afghanistan and Iraq should be:
In the context of
religious tolerance-and I write this as a Muslim- there can be no
place…for Shari’a …Shari’a is diametrically opposed to secular
constitutions formulated by the people… I hold out for the superiority
of common sense over religious faith (i.e., absolute religious
precepts); individual human rights (i.e., not collective human rights);
secular democracy based on the separation of religion from politics; a
universally accepted pluralism; and a mutually accepted secular
tolerance. The acceptance of these values is the foundation of a civil
society.
*I have had this
translation of the original Arabic vetted and confirmed independently by
three scholars of written Arabic.
Andrew G. Bostom, MD, MS is
the author of The
Legacy of Jihad.
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