| The Classical Islamic Sharia Law is NOT a Word of God! (Part 1: How the Qur’anic Message Has Been Subverted) | |
By Muhammad Yunus, NewAgeIslam.com 
-Epitome
 of Justice and Equity for a thousand years of Islamic civilization - 
now a threat to Islamic civilization and World peace, warranting an 
urgent paradigm shift in Islamic Juristic thoughts.  
By Muhammad Yunus (Joint Author), Essential Message of Islam, Amana Publications, USA, 2009 
The
 caption is shocking indeed! The qualifying statement may, however, turn
 the shock into posthumous glory, concern, and challenge. The essay 
attempts to bring across the dichotomy between the Classical Islamic Law
 and its divine Sharia (the Qur’an), and the incipient role of the 
former in feeding Islamophobia and Islamofascism – the twin menace that 
complement each other to  reduce Islam to a violent, intolerant cult and provoke a clash of  civilizations, threatening Islamic civilization and world peace.      
1. The Divine Sharia of Islam – the Qur’an.    
The
 Qur’an uses the words Shira (technically shir‘ah and Sharia (tech. 
Shariah) synonymously with the generic notion of a system or principles 
of law (5:48, 45:18). The Qur’an further declares that it is a book of 
wisdom (hikma, 10:1, 31:2, 43:4, 44:4) that is made clear and distinct 
(12:1, 15:1, 16:64, 26:2, 27:1, 36:69, 43:2, 44:2)  with
 all kinds of illustrations (17:89, 18:54, 30:58, 39:27) to guide 
humanity and bring it ‘out of darkness into light’ – an idiomatic 
expression that connotes social, moral and ethical reform; and “to lift 
from humanity the burdens and shackles that were upon them from before” 
(7:157). 
The
 Qur’anic paradigms are eternal, free from any addition or alteration 
since the revelation that was preserved orally as well as in various 
indigenous writing materials (suhuf, 80:11-16). It lays a great emphasis
 on the ‘constants’ of life – how a human being should behave regardless
 of time and era. Thus, it encompasses a broad spectrum of universal 
paradigms - justice, liberty, equity, good deeds, good neighborly and 
inter-faith relations, sharing of wealth with the poor, eradication of 
slavery, deliverance of women from various entrenched taboos, conjugal 
oppression and dehumanization; good business ethics, fair payment for 
goods and services, financial support to the needy, use of intellect, 
striving for excellence – to cite some major examples.  
2. The Classical Islamic Law - Contemporary Sharia Law of Islam.  
The
 Classical Islamic law is a cumulative juristic tradition that 
encompasses the legal responsa (fatawa) and opinions (rai) of all past 
jurists of Islam. Accordingly, it is shaped and informed by the customs,
 traditions, social and political conditions, juristic norms and the 
state of knowledge of the diverse historical points of Islamic 
civilization - dating from the founding Caliphate (632-661/10-40 AH) 
through the medieval ages to this day. Accordingly, it is a repository 
of, among countless other rulings, such notions as stoning to death for 
adultery, capital punishment for apostasy and blasphemy, punishment for 
homosexuality, slavery, discrimination and hatred against non-Muslims, 
demographic division of the world between the Muslims and non- Muslims, 
division of knowledge between Islamic and non-Islamic, temporary 
marriage, on the spot divorce, parental immunity against child abuse, 
gender disparity and so on, that are antithetic to the Qur’anic message.
 In historical perspective, these notions may not be out of line with 
those of the other civilizations, but dwelling into that will detract 
from the subject. The truth is, many of the fundamental notions and 
rulings of today’s overgrown Classical Sharia stand in sharp stark 
contrast to the realities of the modern era, as well as to the Qur’anic 
message. 
3. Historical roots and contributions of the Classical Islamic Sharia. 
Islam
 came at a time when the world was largely in a state of jahilliya – 
ignorance, injustice, oppression and exploitation. The notion of 
universal justice had yet to evolve. A suspect of a petty theft was 
bound hand and feet and thrown into a pond. If he sank, his guilt was 
established and punishment meted out. But if by any chance he floated, 
he was deemed to being possessed, and burnt on the stakes. The slaves 
were branded, chained, collared and dehumanized and remained slaves for 
their lives. If they married and raised children, the whole family 
became slaves. Women (wives) were sold as commodity - they could be 
killed by their husbands if caught in the bed with a stranger, or burnt 
alive with the corpses of their dead husbands as part of social norm. 
The pariah and the underdogs of the society – the blind, crippled, and 
mutilated, the lepers and the incurably diseased were regarded as the 
accursed creatures of God. Condemned, lampooned and ostracized, they 
were forsaken by their next of kin and forced to live in isolated 
colonies. The criminals, and the prisoners of war were slaughtered, 
pilloried and crucified; they had no legal hearing, nor any defense. The
 aristocracy watched with excitement the live show of humans being torn 
apart by wild beasts, or slaying rivals in vain bid for survival… The 
animal instinct of man reigned supreme. 
This
 is but a part of the melodrama that was played as daily norm in 
different parts of the world since the ancient times. The Qur’an came to
 rid the world of this beastly heritage. Accordingly, among other 
revolutionary reforms, it placed profound emphasis on justice (7:29, 
16:90,  4:58), declared justice 
as a harrama or binding obligation (6:152), asked humanity to give 
witnesses truthfully – even if it concerned themselves, their parents or
 relatives, the poor, or erstwhile enemies (4:135, 5:8), and to have 
trained professionals to guide the judges for justice to prevail (7:159,
 7:181). Consequently, since its inception, administration of justice 
became the taproot of governance in Islamic state. This is amply 
illustrated by the following proclamation of Caliph Umar (634-644) 
issued to his governors (rendered from Arabic/Urdu):  
“Administration
 of justice is an essential duty after the praise of God. Treat people 
equally, whether in your immediate presence, or in your court, so that 
the weak do not despair of justice, and the guilty may not be hopeful of
 your concession. One who makes a claim requires proving it. One who 
denies must take an oath. Compromise is permitted, provided it does not 
turn the halal (permissible) into haram (forbidden), and vice versa. If 
you have to give a decision tomorrow, reflect on it carefully today. If 
you have doubt on any matter not contained in the Qur'an or the 
Prophet’s Sunna (example), deeply ponder over it, and take account of 
similar instances and others’ opinions, and reflect over it 
logically...” [1]  
Thus,
 the administration of justice with due witnessing and engagement of 
trained people (fuqaha) occupied the central stage of civil 
administration in Islam. This led to a high pitch of intellectual 
activity in juristic fields – any detail of which will be too technical 
for this exercise; but suffice it to say, that the first three centuries
 of Islam saw a proliferation and flowering of learned fuqaha (jurists).
 The names prefixing the Classical law schools (Hanafite, Shafi’ite, 
Malakite, Hanbalite, Ja‘farite) are those of the most learned jurists of
 the era [2]. However, more than a thousand years down the history, 
today it does not represent the universal and non-partisan spirit, 
juristic rigor, vitality, discipline, depth, wisdom, rationality and 
Qur’an-compatibility of its early centuries. In fact in the hands of 
extremists, radicalized elements, Pakistanis and Talibans, is an 
overgrown, unmanageable juristic domain, that, as applied, represents a 
cancerous version of its early counterpart – and the cancer is only 
metastasizing as time goes by.    
4. How the Qur’anic message has been subverted to evolve rulings contradictory to its message? 
As
 Islam entered new cultures and civilizations, it encountered customs 
and juristic norms that contradicted the Qur’anic paradigms. To 
accommodate them into Islam, the doctors of law declared: “Any Qur’anic 
verse which contradicts the opinions of ‘our masters’ will be construed 
as having been abrogated, or the rule of preference will be applied 
thereto. It is better that the verse is interpreted in such a way that 
it conforms to their opinion.” [3]   
The
 doctors of law extrapolated this contra-Qur’anic ruling from a number 
of Qur’anic verses. Thus, the opening statement of the verse 3:110: “You
 are the best community brought forth for humanity.” Disregarding the 
historical context of the verse, they argued that as the leaders and 
guides of ‘the best of community’, they could never fall into error, 
even if their views conflicted with the Qur’an. The opening statement of
 the verse 2:143, “Thus We have made you a justly balanced community”, 
was cited to infer God’s special favor to Muslim community for all 
times. The statement, “You who believe, obey God and obey the Messenger 
and those among you in authority…” (4:159) was interpreted to imply the 
infallibility of the judgment of the one in authority on the premise 
that one whose obedience is commanded must be immune to error. 
Dialectical methods were then applied to establish the infallibility of 
the consensus (ijma) of the scholars – a core juristic doctrine. The 
theologians came up with supportive ahadith [4] and the doctors of law 
canonized the Hadith corpus as being indirect revelation that could 
legitimize their juristic notions and doctrines. Accordingly Hadith was 
canonized as the second source of law after the Qur’an – an ingenious 
juristic notion that became a fundamental doctrine of Islamic 
jurisprudence. This happened in the second and third centuries of Islam,
 when juristic and theological activities were at their peak. 
Armed
 with these juristic rulings and doctrines, the jurists were free to 
issue any legal ruling or fatwa, if barely a couple of them agreed on 
it, and legitimize it by supportive traditions (ahadith). The floodgate 
was opened and the Qur’anic message was subverted to meet the social, 
political and historical realities and the aspirations of the ruling 
elite and the vested interest of the era – a mammoth floodgate that 
continues to discharge an endless stream of fatwas to this very day.   
5. The fallouts of the Islamic Sharia Law at this historical juncture.  
There
 can be no doubt that, among other things, i) the Classical Islamic Law 
entertains notions that are antithetic to the Qur’anic message as well 
secular notions and universal values (2 above); ii) its application in 
some of the Islamic countries  – 
Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran for example has led to oppression of 
women, gross human rights violations, stagnation of developmental 
activities and authoritarianism, frustrating the democratic aspirations 
and civil rights of their people, casting a long shadow over their 
futures; iii) its gender bias handicaps the advancement and empowerment 
of women in most Muslim countries; iv) its discrimination against 
minorities and brutal apostasy and blasphemy laws are blatantly punitive
 to the minorities in Muslim majority Sharia-compliant countries; v) its
 barbaric criminal justice, excesses, hegemony and pan-Islamic 
aspirations are fuelling Islamophobia; vi) its precedents of wanton 
terrorism, such as those left by the Kharijites [5] and Qaramites [6] 
are feeding radicalization and Isalmofacism; vii) its disregard, if not 
abhorrence of popular sports, recreational and cultural activities, and 
exclusivist underpinnings are conducing to alienation of Muslims from 
the mainstream society in the Muslim-minority countries; viii) its 
division of knowledge between Islamic and non-Islamic – such as still in
 vogue in many madrasas is hampering the spread of universal education 
among the Muslims and narrowing their intellectual horizons; ix) its 
notion of wealth purification by giving only 2.5% of liquid assets 
(nowhere the Qur’an puts this, or any figure) regardless of the 
lawfulness of means is promoting corruption, widening income disparity, 
and increasing the poverty levels in Muslim countries; x) its singular 
emphasis on rituals and cold shoulder, if not a blind eye to the social,
 moral and ethical tenets and intellectually stimulating paradigms of 
the Qur’an is reducing Islam to virtually a cult incapable of making its
 mark on the modern civilization; xi) its religion-centric political 
orientation and division of the world between Muslim and non-Muslim 
blocks is obsolete today when non-Muslim powers like India, America and 
EU help the Muslims in their liberation wars (such as in the erstwhile 
East Pakistan, Afghanistan, Libya) and the NATO attacks Yugoslavia to 
save the Albanian Muslims from extinction - let alone the rising trend 
of secularism across the world; and xii) it can potentially promote 
sectarianism in Islam by accentuating the classical mathhab based 
division.  
In
 consideration of the above listed points (that can extended), it is 
high time that Muslim elite, educated class and intelligentsia take full
 cognizance of the dichotomy between the Classical Islamic Law (Islamic 
Sharia Law) and the divine Sharia of Islam – the Qur’an that does not 
entail any of the noted fallouts and incongruities. A denial or tacit 
oversight of this bitter truth will only exacerbate the problems they 
are facing in both Muslim majority and minority countries by the 
application or desired implementation of the Islamic Sharia Law or the 
machinations of its petro-dollar showering champions and propagators.  (To be concluded) 
6.Way Forward 
The
 jurists of Islam can draw modern law (Sharia) based on broader social, 
moral, ethical paradigms of the Qur’an and its emphasis on equity, 
justice, wealth distribution and other liberating paradigms [1 above], 
but without transgressing limits. They must consider the historical 
context of the Qur’an, as many of its allusions like hunting animals to 
catch birds (5:4), traveling to the Mecca for Hajj on lean mounts 
(22:27), employing cavalry in battle (8:60), flogging for zina 
(prostitution by married women) (24:2) and exemplary amputation 
punishments (5:33, 5:38) accorded with the paradigms of the seventh 
century Arabia. The Qur’an could in no way ask its audience to engage 
the practices of later historical eras – let alone the 21st century 
world. Therefore, a 21st century Sharia (system of law) of Islam must be
 commensurate to its realities. The Qur’an allows a flexibility or 
dynamism in the notion of Sharia by complementing it with the term, 
‘minhaj’, or ‘an open way’ (5:48) that allows the diverse communities at
 different historical locations to evolve their own Sharia “in 
accordance with the exigencies of the time and each community’s cultural
 development.” [7] 
7.The Western secular laws stand more Qur’an-compatible than the Classical Islamic Law (Islamic Sharia Law).  
Paradoxically,
 except for some non-negotiable areas (gay rights and marriage, 
extramarital sex, unqualified freedom of speech, ultra vires legislative
 power of the consensual majority as well as the Head of State for 
example), the Western secular notions are more attuned to the Qur’anic 
message, that is, more Qur’an-compatible than those espoused by the 
Classical Islamic law. This is no window dressing or turning coat to 
appease the West. 
More
 than a hundred years ago, the Egyptian scholar, Muhammad Abduh, wrote 
that the 19th century advancement of Europe commenced only after “Europe
 began to throw off their bondage and reform their condition, reordering
 the affairs of their life in a manner akin to the message of Islam, 
though oblivious of who their real guide and leader was. So were 
enunciated the fundamental principles of modern civilization….” [8]. 
Hasan
 al-Banna (1906-1949), the Egyptian scholar and Islamic activist who 
founded the Muslim Brotherhood extolled the merits the Western 
civilization as the epitome of the Qur’anic message [9]. Shaykh Rifa‘a 
Rafi‘ al-Tahtawi (1801-1873), a traditional Al-Azhar scholar and an 
admirer of Western scientific advancement said upon his return from 
France that he “found (in France) true Islam but no Muslims, while in 
Egypt, he found many Muslims but no true Islam—meaning that in his view,
 the civic virtues embraced by French society embodied a more true 
representation of Islam than the Muslim societies of his time.” [10]. 
Thus the Muslim countries who are aspiring to build people oriented 
democratic societies as in the West, may consider to take a Western 
model, but not like Turkey’s Kemal Ataturk (1881-1938) who had expunged 
the Islamic symbols (Arabic script, traditional dresses, hijab etc.) 
from the social and political fabric of the nation and replaced the 
Islamic Sharia Law of his country with Swiss and Italian based legal 
system. Today’s Muslim countries must not cut their intellectual 
moorings from Islam as it is inextricably ingrained in Muslim psyche.     
8. Are the Western laws forbidden to Muslims as they are man-made? 
The
 bold statement in the concluding part of the preceding Section 
seemingly carries a fundamental anomaly: Western secular laws are 
man-made and therefore cannot be privileged over the Classical Islamic 
laws that are derived from the Qur’an and thus represent God’s will. But
 this argument is fallacious. 
From
 the Qur’anic perspective, all humans stand on equal footing as God’s 
deputy on earth and recipients of some of God’s Spirit (15:29, 32:9, 
38:72), and therefore all noble woks of man have their origin in God’s 
Virtues, and human accomplishments in all fields including jurisprudence
 and governance of a state are nothing but the result of God’s Mercy and
 Grace upon humanity. Therefore, rejecting any so-called secular or 
modern institution, just because its architects are not Muslims will be 
as fallacious as rejecting all the good things of modern life that 
characterize the Western civilization just because their origin is 
non-Islamic. Thus, there could be no Qur’anic basis to forbid the 
so-called secular laws and institutions, except those of them that 
repudiate any of the explicit tenets of the Qur’an. 
In
 first century Islam, usul al fiqh (Principle of rational logic and 
reasoning) was the primary vehicle of jurisprudence after the Qur’an and
 was privileged over the Hadith [11]. This is an umbrella concept drawn 
from the Qur’anic vocabulary (root FQH, verse 6:65…) and embraces such 
notions as i) qiyas (parallelism), ii) ijma/ jama‘ah (consensus of the 
scholar/ community) iii) ‘urf (established custom and practice of the 
community), iii) islah (community good), iv) ijtihad (critical thinking 
or independent intellectual probe), and v) istihsan (one’s best 
judgment). Practically all these notions, drawn from the Qur’anic 
diction, are consistent with and even identical to those employed by the
 Western secular jurists and doctors of law in their jurisprudence, 
except for terminological differences. Hence, regardless of whether the 
Western doctors of law believe in the Qur’an or not, the laws they 
developed are rooted in the Qur’anic universal notions, except those 
that fall beyond its expressed prohibitions and permissible limits.   
Furthermore,
 the application of the Qur’anic principles can enhance the civil rights
 of the individual that can be subverted by consensus in modern 
democracy. As Muhammad Abduh records, Islamic law (drawn on the Qur’anic
 principles), gave full right to a poor non-Muslim woman to refuse to 
sell her small dwelling, at any price, to the local powerful amir 
(governor) who wanted it in order to enlarge a mosque, and to a Jew to 
have Caliph Ali summoned to the court and stand with him before the 
judge for a legal hearing, and get a fair judgment [12]. The reverse 
scenario – a poor Muslim woman in a non-Muslim majority country refusing
 to dispose off or part with her land to meet the need or the desire of 
the dominant community, or to bring a charge against the Head of the 
State is possible only in theory. 
Thus,
 while there is a great deal of synergy between the paradigms of the 
Qur’an and the articles of Western secular laws, there are some grey 
areas, while the Qur’anic principles do not privilege community 
consensus or state authority over civil rights. On the whole, there is 
no Qur’anic or ontological basis to forbid the Qur’an-compatible Western
 secular laws to the Muslims. The Muslim jurists should therefore have 
no hesitation to adopt the Western laws, but eschew those statutes of 
the Western laws that conflict with the message of the Qur’an. They must
 also be ready to adjust the personal laws within the broader paradigms 
of the Qur’an, like combining the Qur’anic decree on leaving a will 
(2:180) with its inheritance laws (to adjust the inheritance ratios 
among the children as merited) - rather than privileging the latter over
 the former, extending maintenance for the divorced woman until her 
remarriage or demise (2:241), entitling a believing non-Muslim widow to 
full Islamic inheritance rights (as she is entitled to full dowry, 5:5) 
giving equal rights to a woman as an individual (9:71), empowering her 
as a full witness for business contracts (2:282 - the business world is 
not fraught with hazardous and male occupied any more) – if not 
venerating her (4:1), for example . 
Conclusion. The
 object of this essay is not to undermine the entire domain of the 
Classical Islamic Law dating from its glorious formative period. Down 
the centuries, it enabled the Islamic civilization to offer enormously 
higher standards of justice, peace and security of life and property to 
the common people than the other major contemporaneous civilizations. It
 was also the bedrock of pluralism that enabled the minority to 
flourish, live in harmony with the Muslims - such as in Spain, Egypt, 
Syria, Iraq, India, and preserve its own heritage and language - Aramic 
is still spoken in Damascus, the seat of the Umayyads (661-750) – the 
first Islamic (dynastic) Caliphate. It was by far the best system of law
 for almost a thousand years of human history as testified by the 
highest echelon of Western scholarship [13]. However, with an endless 
series of paradigm shifts in human civilization from the medieval era to
 this day, many of the Classical Islamic Law’s rulings stand in conflict
 with the modern secular values, creating a civilizational divide. 
Besides, its application by the Islamists and extremist Muslim outfits 
such as in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Sudan is pushing those countries to 
anarchy and civil war. Most alarmingly, some of its preposterous rulings
 and notions that remain buried in its exhaustive discourses feed 
Islamophobia, Islamopathy, radicalization, Islamofascism, violent 
sectarianism and international terrorism, demonize Islam and its 
Prophet, and trivialize the entire global Muslim country in the eyes of 
the rest of the world. Thus, any perceptive mind would conclude that in 
the historical perspective, the domain of the Classical Islamic Law 
(Islamic Sharia Law) has run out its course. However, the Divine Sharia 
of Islam – the Qur’an is beyond history’s timeframe. Its compatibility 
with the Western secular values and pluralistic, humanistic, gender 
neutral, universal paradigms [1 above] crown it as the ideal alternative
 to the Classical Islamic Law. However, the Qur’an must be probed in a 
historic-critical, gender-neutral, intra-textual and universal manner 
while its best meaning must be sought (39:18, 39:55). [14]   
To
 sum up, in a grand irony of history, the Western Islamophobic 
protagonists are waging a Quixotic crusade against the Islamic Sharia 
Law – a proxy war against an invisible enemy on behalf of those facing 
the real enemy. It is time that the Muslim elite and leadership put 
their act together to achieve a gigantic paradigm leap - from the 
Classical Sharia Law of Islam to a Modern Islamic Law (Sharia), 
accommodating Western secular values - within the broader framework of 
the Qur’an. Their complacence and inaction may lend strong credence to 
Khaled Abou El Fadl’s agonizing concern: "Is it possible that the day 
will come when ours will be designated a "vanished civilization." [15] 
There
 is, however, no suggestion to consign the domain of the Classical 
Islamic law into the archives. Far from it! The rich heritage of the 
Classical Sharia Law of Islam must be studied as a technical subject - 
as being currently done in some of the major universities of the world, 
and its principles must be applied to broaden the scope of modern law 
for the greater good of humanity. 
Notes:  
7. Muhammad Assad, The Message of Islam, Chapter 5, Note 66. 
8. Extracted from John L.Esposito’s Islam in Transition, New York 1982,  p. 27. 
9. Cited by John Donohue and John Esposito, Islam in Transition, New York, 1982, p. 82. 
10. Harvard Online International Journal, Vol. 52, April 2011, Note 19. 
11. Yusuf Guraya, Origins of Islamic Jurisprudence, Delhi 1992, p. 29/30 
12. John L. Esposito, Islam in Transition, Oxford University Press, USA 1982, p. 26. 
13.
 The following comments by Count Leon Ostrorog made during his 
historical lectures in the University of London on the Angora Reform in 
1927, bring across the point made by this author : “The Eastern thinkers
 of the ninth century laid down on the basis of their theology, the 
principle of the Rights of Man, in those very terms, comprehending the 
rights of individual liberty, and of inviolability of person and 
property; described the superpower in Islam, or Califate, as based on a 
contract, implying conditions of capacity and performance, and subject 
to cancellation if the conditions under the contract were not fulfilled;
 elaborated a Law of War, of which the humane and chivalrous 
prescriptions would have put to blush certain belligerents in the Great 
War; expounded a doctrine of toleration of non-Muslim creeds so liberal 
that our West had to wait a thousand years before seeing equivalent 
principles adopted.”  - Extracted from Outlines of Mohammedan Law, Asaf A.A. Fyzee, 5th Edition, 2005, New Delhi, p. 53/54 
14. Essential Message of Islam, Amana Publications, USA, 2009, p.xxxix/xl 
15. The Search for Beauty in Islam: A Conference of the Books, Barnes and Noble, USA 2006, p.209. 
Notes:   
1.     1. Shibli Noumani, al-Faruq, 1898, Karachi reprint 1991, p. 191/192.] 
2.     Abu
 Hanifa (80 AH/699 CE -149 AH/766 CE), Malik ibn Anas (97-179 AH), 
Muhammad al-Shafi’i (150-205 AH), Ahmad ibn Hanbal (164-240 AH). The 
Shia Imam, Ja‘far al-Sadeq (83 –148 AH). 
3.     Ahmad Hussain, Doctrine of ijma in Islam, New Delhi, 1992, p.16]. 
4.     i)
 “My community will not agree on an error. When you see a disagreement, 
you should follow the overwhelming majority;” ii) Follow the community 
(jama‘ah) of the Muslims and their leaders;” iii) Whatever the Muslims 
consider good is good in the eyes of God, and whatever they consider 
evil is evil in His eyes.” 
5.     Kharijites
 were a brutally fanatic sect who readily killed their opponents and 
“caused rivers of blood to flow in the first three centuries of Islam.” 
Philip K. Hitti History of the Arabs,
 1937, 10th edition; London 1993, p. 247. Some of the sect members 
justified the killing of the children of polytheists, their own parents,
 and all the non-Muslims of the world. - Ghunit al-talebin, Urdu translation by Shahir Shams Barelwi, Arshad Brothers, New Delhi p.178-180. 
6.     The
 Qaramites. Founded by Hamdan Qarmat, a power hungry Iraqi peasant, 
around 860 (247 AH) (third century of Islam), the sect grew as a 
Bolshevik style revolutionary movement “that developed into a most 
malignant growth into the body of political Islam.” Qarmat’s successors 
“founded an independent state on the western shore of the Persian Gulf 
(286 AH), … from where they conducted a series of terrible raids on 
neighboring lands,.. laid waste most of lower al-Iraq, became the terror
 of the Caliphate … and kept Syria and al-Iraq drenched in blood.” 
---- 
Muhammad
 Yunus, a Chemical Engineering graduate from Indian Institute of 
Technology, and a retired corporate executive has been engaged in an 
in-depth study of the Qur’an since early 90’s, focusing on its core 
message. He has co-authored the referred exegetic work, which received 
the approval of al-Azhar al-Sharif, Cairo in 2002, and following 
restructuring and refinement was endorsed and authenticated by Dr. 
Khaled Abou El Fadl of UCLA, and published by Amana Publications, 
Maryland, USA, 2009.   
 | 
Saturday, March 23, 2013
Islamic Sharia Law is NOT a Word of God!
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Islam gives message of peace and mankind, as shown in Holly Quran and Hadees and gives complete right to women according sharia law of Islam. Islamic Sharia
ReplyDeleteSharia law is being defamed by two types of ignorant, one of them is like the writer and second of them is the link the one who is misusing Sharia law. Be curse of ALLah on these two types of people for the sake of betterment of community.
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