Dynamics of Change in Islamic Law (I): Normative Pluralism

by Aasem Bakhshi

In my view, the most important crisis that Muslim society miserably failed to handle during Islam’s sojourn into modernity is diversity. By diversity, I mean religious heterogeneity in any form, may it be the pronouncement of legal injunctions, opinions regarding societal norms or something as personal as individual religious practices.

Therefore, whether it is the abundance of contradictory fatwas on issues as diverse as women leading prayers to Muslims attending Christmas celebrations to Islamic prohibition of images to what constitutes death, Pakistani brothers arguing about the bare heels of a Chinese sister during Hajj or my grandma’s queasiness while watching me pray in a manner other than our family’s religious school, there is an invisible urge to see a kind of religious monism; a CONSENSUS based on an almost Utopian unity of intelligibility, opinion and action.

I would go as far as contending that pluralism, when it manifests itself in any of the above forms does not resonate well with the conventionally perceived absolute nature of religious discourse. And this perception, while breeding religious exclusivism and thus extremism, also undermines the true rationalistic nature of Islamic legal tradition.

One of the foremost reasons for this intellectual aversion to disagreement is the nature of Muslim law itself. While majority of traditional Muslim jurists – and I prefer to restrict my comment to Sub Continent as I am aware of someMax Weber exceptions outside – seem perfectly at ease with it, western legal sociologists have always struggled with the antinomies of permission and prohibition that exist for a single issue. Max Weber, for instance, while attributing these “variety of norms” to the irrationality of the law, stated:

The priestly approach to the law aims at a material, rather than formal rationalization of the law. The legal teaching in such schools, which generally rests on either a sacred book or a sacred law fixed by a stable oral or literal tradition, possesses a rational character in a very special sense. Its rational character consists in its predilection for construction of purely theoretical casuistry oriented less to the practical needs of the groups concerned than to the needs of the uninhibited intellectualism of the scholars – its casuistry, inasmuch as it serves at all practical rather than intellectual needs, is formalistic in the special sense that it must maintain, through re-interpretation, the practical applicability of the traditional, unchangeable norms to changing needs. But it is not formalistic in the sense that it would create a rational system of law.

Needless to say that these comments by Weber in Economy and Society generally pertain to any religious law and do not specifically consider the dynamics of Muslim positive law. However, while Weber scarcely commented on Islam (except of course his formulation of Kadijustiz), above analysis while comprehensively illuminating the problem of “variety of norms” as construed by the post-Cartesian mind also highlights the kind of confusion that still prevails regarding contextual literacies of the pre-modern Islamic legal tradition.

While some attribute this characteristic of variety of verdicts in Islamic law to quasi-irrational nature of Islamic law, others argue that normative pluralism has a perfectly established pedigree in Islamic law and that new norms are perpetually created and recreated through a perfectly reasonable process that is an intrinsic part of the law itself.

The key question thus, in my view, can be formulated in this way: When a jurisconsult – a mufti, mujtahid or a faqih more specifically – adjudicate according to new circumstances thereby adding to the already existing variety of norms, is it a symptom of irrationality of law, per se or the change thus driven can be attributed to some rational interpretive method called Ijtihad.

to be continued…

6 Comments

Filed under Islam, Islamism, Law, Philosophy, Society

6 responses to “Dynamics of Change in Islamic Law (I): Normative Pluralism

  1. PTH

    Aasem
    Extremely thought provoking..looking forward to the second part.. I hope that we can make this as a basis for a major debate on the issues that you have raised..

    cheers, Raza Rumi

  2. Thanks for your post – you have addressed a very important issue. However you should also try to see this attempt to ‘see a kind of religious monism’ in its historical context – part of the attempt to bureaucratize and rationalize a wide variety norms in to one acceptable set is about trying to build an Islamic ‘identity’ in the modern sense. I am not sure if this has always been the case.

    Reading about Ibn Batuta’s travels in the Islamic world of the middle ages, one is struck by the sheer variety of norms of dress, behaviour, interaction between sexes and ritual in different parts of the Islamic world. Nowadays many would view this diversity through the lens of an idealized ‘correct’ form of rituals and norms, with the different societies being placed on a scale of being more or less religious. But this strikes me as a very modern conceit.

    If there is such a thing as an ‘Islamic civilization’, then it must embrace its own diversity. It was the pluralism of Islam in the classical age – which causes so much confusion and division amongst those seeking a ‘pure’ Islamic law – which is its most striking feature, as well as, perhaps, the foundation of its greatest achievements.

  3. Pingback: Dynamics of Change in Islamic Law (III): Grundnorm, a cosmological myth « Pak Tea House

  4. مولیٰ بس

    Our moulvis are giving bad name to islam and we muslims are tools in there hands. Look at this video

  5. Salam
    Meray tamam musalman bhaiyon yeh woh log haiin jinko apni wazaratein chamkani hain inka koi deen imaan nahi hai aur jaisa k hamein pata hai k musalman tehattar firqon me bat jayengay aur us k baad phir ek hojayengay aur kuffar ko tabah o barbad kr dengay. Pr yeh molvi hamesha se humsubko laratay rahay hain k hum musalman kabhi agay nahi barhein. Allah to Us shakhs ki b namaz qabool krta hai k agar uska tareeqay me thori si bhool chok hojaye ya koi ghalti haojaye woh dillon k haal khoob janta hai. Aur tamam molvi hazraat ko maloom hai k unka hashar kya hogay qayamat k rooz , yahan woh jitna chahein musalmanon me phoot dalein mager fitnay paida krne walon me se yeh molvi hazraat b shamil hain kabhi chand ka masla to kabhi mohorram, Kabhi rozay kam to kabhi eid ghalat din…….
    Hum sub musalman batay hoe hain…. Yeh gham-e-fiqriya hai humsub k liye, k agar abhi b ek nahi hoe to phir kabhi nai hosaktay hum ek. Jagoooo Meray Musalman Bhaiyon aur firqqon me jo batay hoe hain ek hojao mutahid hojao.
    Apna nahi to kamazkam dosron ka socho jinko tum maar daltay ho ek khudkash dhamakay me aur tum log jannat nahi balke jahanam ki dehakti hoi aag mein jalaye jaogay aur tmhara thikana wohi hoga aur khana peena khoon aur peep hogi….
    Zaraaa Sochooo hum aaj kahan kharay hain….

  6. Milind Kher

    The system of having a marjae taqleed is an excellent one. His entire following wherever they may be in the world is accountable only to him.

    This eliminates all petty maulanas and tinpot mullahs. Other sects could also think of adopting a similar model.

    Above all, there should be no discrimination against any sect.

    In fact, there should be no criterion for any discrimination at all. All children of Adam should be equal.