Question: In your editorial
‘Terrorism, Murder and Manslaughter All in the Name of Allah’ (published
March-April, 1997), you have tried to prove that there is no concept of
Jihad -- militant struggle
to be more precise -- in Islam without the authority of the State. In this
regard, I have three questions:
i) Abu
Basir,
a convert to Islam in the Prophet’s time (sws), formed a base near
Duh’l-Marwah and launched guerrilla warfare from there, ultimately
forcing the Quraysh to make peace with him. Wouldn’t you agree that
his stance proves your point invalid?
ii) Isn’t your idea a negation of
the Jihad in Kashmir?
Answer: Abu
Basir was
bound by the Pact of Hudaybiyyah to
remain in Makkah, but he defected to the Muslims in Madinah.
The Prophet (sws), in accordance with the terms of the pact, returned him
to the Quraysh by handing him over to two representatives from their
side. Abu Basir killed one of them on the way back; the other ran away and came to
the Prophet (sws). Abu Basir also returned to the Prophet (sws) and told him that by handing
Abu
Basir over
to the Quraysh the Prophet (sws) had fulfilled his promise and that
thenceforth Abu Basir was himself responsible for all his actions. Thereafter,
Abu
Basir left Madinah and went to ‘is near Dhul’l
Marwah. Soon a number of other defectors joined him and began ambushing
the trade caravans of the Quraysh. Finally, the Quraysh relaxed
the conditions of the pact for him, and he, along with his companions,
settled down in Madinah.
If the moral of Abu
Basir’s story
is that ambushes -- or guerrilla warfare as you prefer to call the skirmishes
in question -- without the authority of the State are justified in Islam,
then it also follows from Abu Basir’s episode that a Muslim may break a promise that the Prophet (sws) makes
on behalf of all the Muslims and that a Muslim may also kill a mu‘ahid (a non-Muslim with whom a treaty -- especially of peace -- has been
made by the Islamic State).
One can only extol the brilliance
of those who find, in what Abu
Basir did,
justification for Qital without
the authority of the State. It is amazing that they simply choose to ignore
the fact that Abu Basir,
after killing one man, told the Prophet (sws) that Abu
Basir was
then responsible for his own actions and that the Prophet (sws) had fulfilled
his promise by handing Abu Basir over to the Quraysh. The only thing that went in favour of
Abu
Basir was
that he got lucky enough to get a relaxation from the Quraysh, who
had become tired of his ambushes.
It is obvious from Abu
Basir’s statement
to the Prophet (sws) that the Prophet (sws) would not have demanded Qisas from the Quraysh if they had later killed
Abu
Basir for
killing a man and violating the terms of the treaty.
The chance that God afforded to Abu
Basir in
the form of pardon by the Quraysh might be indicative of His mercy
for a convert to Islam, but it does not in any way negate a principle emanating
from the Qur’an and the Sunnah
for Qital.
ii) ‘No Qital without the authority of the State’ is not ‘my idea’. It is a deduction
from the Qur’an for which deduction
detailed arguments were given in the editorial. Calling this deduction
‘your idea’ does not prove it wrong. You can call it anything that
pleases you: your idea, your imagination, your trickery, but only sound
counter arguments from the Qur’an and the Sunnah can negate what is presented on these bases.
Regarding the struggle in Kashmir,
I should like to ask you if you regard all what Muslims do as truly Islamic.
Isn’t it possible -- as has been the case many a time in our history --
that a Muslim or a group of Muslims -- despite our emotional attachment
to that person or group -- may be doing something against the Qur’an without realising it? What are the criteria? That is the question.
Are the criteria the Qur’an and
the Sunnah or actions and emotions of the Muslims? If actions and
emotions are the criteria, ‘Umar (raa) should not have submitted
to Abu Bakr’s argument (raa)
when he recited the Qur’an on
the death of our Prophet (sws).
In Kashmir, different factions fighting
Indian hegemony have different objectives and strategies. Which objectives
and strategies are right and which are wrong? Is Kashmir another Afghanistan
in the making (where Muslims fought and killed Muslims)? These questions
should be of interest to every patriotic Pakistani Muslim. However, the
question here is not Kashmir. It is the Qur’an and the Sunnah. What are the arguments from within the Qur’an
and on the basis of the Sunnah which negate the principle of
No Qital without the Authority
of the State?
I do not deny the plight of the Kashmiri
Muslims or the atrocities of the Indians. Indeed, if it were my choice
alone, I should like to bomb all the Indians out of Kashmir -- may be even
out of India. But again the question is: How do the Qur’an and the Sunnah want me to go about it?
If you look at the editorial from
this angle, you’ll find that it does not negate Jihad in Kashmir. It merely spells out the right way to do it.
My article does not stop Pakistan
or any other Muslim State -- from Morocco to Indonesia -- to wage an armed
Jihad against India. Indeed,
that, according to the article, would absolutely be in accordance with
the dictates of Islam provided that the Jihad is morally and tactically justified. If, in that Jihad,
my country or ‘the United Muslim States’ asked for my services as
an individual, I should regard it as a matter of my faith to render them.
In the existing circumstances, however, we must ask ourselves whether
or not we are deceiving our conscience with insignificant measures as slogans,
seminars and rallies to cover up for the lack of courage and of tactical
ability at the level of our State -- and even at the level of the Ummah
-- to wage an all out Jihad for our Kashmiri brethren.
iii) Regarding Hadrat Husayn’s
stand against Yazid, again the
first question is related to the criteria?
It is evident from the Qur’an that the Qur’an
and the
Sunnah are the actual sources of Divine guidance, not history. Not
only has the veracity of various historical records been a subject of continual
debate, the contexts in which events have been reported are also not always
clear. Why then should one rely on a human source of knowledge for deriving
religious principles when two indubitable sources of Divine guidance --
the Qur’an and the Sunnah
-- are available?
As Muslims, we can assume that Hadrat
Husayn did what he thought was correct. But what exactly was it that
he did? What actually happened? Much has been written on these issues and
much needs to be written. Research on this aspect of our history, it seems,
will continue. We, however, have to decide about religion on the basis
of the Qur’an and the Sunnah.
As far as history is concerned, who
knows further research might reveal that Hadrat Husayn decided to
go to Kufa just to form an
independent State for fulfilling a condition for Khuruj and that on finding out that the people of Kufa
had backed out from supporting him, he offered to pledge allegiance to
Yazid (one of the three
propositions he made) not as a compromise but as an acceptance of the Qur’anic
principle of government by the majority-vote of the Muslims (see the
Qur’an 42:38).
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