The Political Framework Of Islam
The political system of Islam is based on the three principles of towhid(Oneness
of Allah), risala (Prophethood) and Khilifa(Caliphate).
Towhidmeans that one Allah alone is the Creator, Sustainer
and Master of the universe and of all that exists in it - organic or inorganic. He alone
has the right to command or forbid. Worship and obedience are due to Him alone. No aspect
of life in all its multifarious forms ¾ our own organs and faculties, the apparent
control which we have over physical objects or the objects themselves ¾
has been created or a acquired by us in our own right. They are the bountiful provisions
of Allah and have been bestowed on us by Him alone.
Hence, it is not for us to decide the aim and purpose of our
existence or to set the limits of our worldly authority; nor does anyone else have the
right to make these decisions for us. This right rests only with Allah. This principle of
the Oneness of Allah makes meaningless the concept of the legal and political sovereignty
of human beings. No individual, family, class or race can set themselves above Allah.
Allah alone is the Ruler and His commandments constitute the law of Islam.
Risala is the medium through which we receive the law of
Allah. We have received two things from this source: the Quran, the book in which
Allah has expounded His law, and the authoritative interpretation and exemplification of
that Book by the Prophet Muhammad (blessings of Allah and peace be upon him), through word
and deed, in his capacity as the representative of Allah. The Quran laid down the
broad principles on which human life should be based and the Prophet of Allah, in
accordance with these principles, established a model system of Islamic life. The
combination of these two elements is called the sharia (law).
Khilifa means "representation". Man, according to
Islam, is the representative of Allah on earth, His vice-gerent; that is to say, by virtue
of the powers delegated to him by Allah, and within the limits prescribed, he is required
to exercise Divine authority.
To illustrate what this means, let us take the case of an estate of
yours which someone else has been appointed to administer on your behalf. Four conditions
invariably obtain: First, the real ownership of the estate remains vested in you and not
in the administrator; secondly, he administers your property directly in accordance with
your instructions; thirdly, he exercises his authority within the limits prescribed by
you; and fourthly, in the administration of the trust he executes your will and fulfils
your intentions and not his own. Any representative who does not fulfil these four
conditions will be abusing his authority and breaking the covenant which was implied in
the concept of "representation".
This is exactly what Islam means when it affirms that man is the
representative (khalifa) of Allah on earth. Hence, these four conditions are also
involved in the concept of Khalifa. The state that is established in accordance
with this political theory will in fact be a caliphate under the sovereignty of Allah.
Democracy In Islam
The above explanation of the term Khilafa also makes it clear
that no individual or dynasty or class can be Khalifa: the authority of Khilafa
is bestowed on the whole of any community which is ready to fulfil the conditions of
representation after subscribing to the principles of towhid and Risala.
Such a society carries the responsibility of the Khilafa as a whole and each one of
its individuals shares in it.
This is the point where democracy begins in Islam. Every individual
in an Islamic society enjoys the rights and powers of the caliphate of Allah and in this
respect all individuals are equal. No-one may deprive anyone else of his rights and
powers. The agency for running the affairs of the state will be formed by agreement with
these individuals, and the authority of the state will only be an extension of the powers
of the individuals delegated to it. Their opinion will be decisive in the formation of the
government, which will be run with their advice and in accordance with their wishes.
Whoever gains their confidence will undertake the duties and
obligations of the caliphate on their behalf; and when he loses this confidence he will
have to step down. In this respect the political system of Islam is as perfect a dorm of
democracy as there can be.
What distinguishes Islamic democracy from Western democracy,
therefor, is that the latter is based on the concept of popular sovereignty, while the
former rests on the principle of popular Khilafa. In Western democracy, the people
are sovereign; in Islam sovereignty is vested in Allah and the people are His caliphs or
representatives. In the former the people make their own; in the latter they have to
follow and obey the laws (sharia) given by Allah through His Prophet. In one
the government undertakes to fulfil the will of the people; in the other the government
and the people have to fulfil the will of Allah.
The Purpose Of The Islamic State
We are now in a position to examine more closely the type of state
which is built on the foundations of tawhid, Risala and Khilafa.
The Holy Quran clearly states that the aim and purpose of this
state is the establishment, maintenance and development of those virtues which the Creator
wishes human life to be enriched by and the prevention and eradication of those evils in
human life which He finds abhorrent. The Islamic state is intended neither solely as an
instrument of political administration nor for the fulfillment of the collective will of
any particular set of people; rather, Islam places a high ideal before the state for the
achievement of which it must use all the means at its disposal.
This ideal is that the qualities of purity, beauty, goodness,
virtue, success and prosperity which Allah wants to flourish in the life of His people
should be engendered and developed and that all kinds of exploitation, injustice and
disorder which, in the sight of Allah, are ruinous for the world and detrimental to the
life of His creatures, should be suppressed and prevented. Islam gives us a clear outline
of its moral system by stating positively the desired virtues and the undesired evils.
Keeping this outline in view, the Islamic state can plan its welfare programme in every
age and in any environment.
The constant demand made by Islam is that the principles of morality
must be observed at all costs and in all walks of life. Hence, it lays down as an
unalterable policy that the state should base its policies on justice, truth and honesty.
It is not prepared, under any circumstances, to tolerate fraud, falsehood and injustice
for the sake of political, administrative or national expediency. Whether it be relations
between the rulers and the ruled within the state, or the relations of the state with
other states, precedence must always be given to truth, honesty and justice.
Islam imposes similar obligations on the state and the individual:
to fulfil all contracts and obligations; to have uniform standards in dealings; to
remember obligations along with rights and not to forget the rights of others when
expecting them to fulfil their obligations; to use power and authority for the
establishment of justice and not for the perpetration of injustice; to look upon duty as a
sacred obligation and to fulfil it scrupulously; and to regard power as a trust from Allah
to be used in the belief that one has to render an account of one's actions to Him in the
life Hereafter.
Fundamental Rights
Although an Islamic state may be set up anywhere on earth, Islam
does not seek to restrict human rights or privileges to the boundaries of such a state.
Islam has laid down universal fundamental rights for humanity which are to be observed and
respected in all circumstances. For example, human blood is sacred and may not be spilled
without strong justification; it is not permissible to oppress women, children, old
people, the sick or the wounded; women's honour and chastity must be respected; the hungry
must be fed, the naked clothed and the wounded or diseased treated medically irrespective
of whether they belong to the Islamic community or are from amongst its enemies. These,
and other provisions have been laid down by Islam as fundamental rights for every man by
virtue of his status as a human being.
Nor, in Islam, are the rights of citizenship confined to people born
in a particular state. A Muslim ipso facto becomes the citizen of an Islamic state
as soon as he sets foot on its territory with the intention of living there and thus
enjoys equal rights along with those who acquire its citizenship by birth. And every
Muslim is to be regarded as eligible for positions of the highest responsibility in an
Islamic state without distinction of race, colour or class.
Islam has also laid down certain rights for non-Muslims who may be
living within the boundaries of an Islamic state and these rights necessarily form part of
the Islamic constitution. In Islamic terminology, such non-Muslims are called dhimmis (the
covenanted), implying that the Islamic state has entered into a covenant with them and
guaranteed their protection. The life, property and honour of a dhimmis is to be
respected and protected in exactly the same way as that of a Muslim citizen. Nor is there
difference between a Muslim and a non-Muslim citizen in respect of civil or criminal law.
The Islamic state may not interfere with the personal rights of
non-Muslims, who have full freedom of conscience and belief and are at liberty to perform
their religious rites and ceremonies in their own way. Not only may they propagate their
religion, they are even entitled to criticize Islam within the limits laid down by law and
decency.
These rights are irrevocable. Non-Muslims cannot be deprived of them
unless they renounce the covenant which grants them citizenship. However much a non-Muslim
state may oppress its Muslim citizens it is not permissible for an Islamic state to
retaliate against its non-Muslim subjects; even if all the Muslims outside the boundaries
of an Islamic state are massacred, that state may not unjustly shed the blood of a single
non-Muslim citizen living within its boundaries.
Executive And Legislature
The responsibility for the administration of the government in an
Islamic state is entrusted to an amir (leader) who may be compared to the president
or the prime minister in a Western democratic state. All adult men and women who subscribe
to the fundamentals of the constitution are entitled to vote for the election of the amir.
The basic qualifications for an amir are that he should
command the confidence of the majority in respect of his knowledge and grasp of the spirit
of Islam, that he should possess the Islamic quality of fear of Allah and that he should
be endowed with qualities of statesmanship. In short, he should have both virtue and
ability.
A shoora(advisory council) is also elected by the people to
assist and guide the amir. It is incumbent on the amir to administer his
country with the advice of this shooraThe amir may retain office only so
long as he enjoys the confidence of the people and must relinquish it when he loses that
confidence. Every citizen has the right to criticize the amir and his government
and all reasonable means for the ventilation of public opinion must be available.
Legislation in an Islamic state is to be carried out within the
limits prescribed by the law of the sharia. The injunctions of Allah and His
Prophet are to be accepted and obeyed and no legislative body may alter or modify them or
make any law contrary to them. Those commandments which are liable to two or more
interpretations are referred to a sub-committee of the advisory council comprising men
learned in Islamic law. Great scope remains for legislation on questions not covered by
specific injunctions of the sharia and the advisory council or legislature is
free to legislate in regard to these matters.
In Islam the judiciary is not places under the control of the
executive. It derives its authority directly from the sharia and is
answerable to Allah. The judges are appointed by the government but once a judge occupies
the bench he has to administer justice impartially according to the law of Allah; the
organs and functionaries of the government are not outside his legal jurisdiction, so that
even the highest executive authority of the government is liable to be called upon to
appear in a court of law as a plaintiff or defendant. Rulers and ruled are subject to the
same law and there can be no discrimination on the basis of position, power or privilege,
Islam stands for equality and scrupulously adheres to this principle in social, economic
and political realms alike.
Human Rights,
The West And Islam
The Western Approach
People in the West have the habit of attributing every beneficial
development in the world to themselves. For example, it is vociferously claimed that the
world first derived the concept of basic human rights from the Magna Carta of
Britain - which was drawn up six hundred years after the advent of Islam. But the truth is
that until the seventeenth century of no-one dreamt of arguing that the Magna Carta
contained the principles of trial by jury, Habeas Corpus and control by Parliament
of the right of taxation. If the people who drafted the Magna Carta were living
today they would be greatly surprised to be told that their document enshrined these
ideals and principles.
To the best of my knowledge, the West had no concept of human and
civic rights before the seventeenth century; and it was not until the end of the
eighteenth century that the concept took on practical meaning in the constitutions of
America and France.
After this, although there appeared references to basic human rights
in the constitutions of many countries, more often than not these rights existed only on
paper. In the middle of the present century, the United Nations, which may now be more
aptly described as the Divided Nations, made a Declaration of Universal Human Rights, and
passed a resolution condemning genocide; regulations were framed to prevent it. But there
is not a single resolution or regulation of the United Nations which can be enforced if
the country concerned wants to prevent it. They are just expressions of pious hopes. They
have no sanctions behind them, no force, physical or moral, to enforce them. Despite all
the high-sounding resolutions of the United Nations, human rights continue to be violated
and trampled upon.
The Islamic Approach
When we speak of human rights in Islam we mean those rights granted
by Allah. Rights granted by kings or legislative assemblies can be withdrawn as easily as
they are conferred; but no individual and no institution has the authority to withdraw the
rights conferred by Allah.
The charter and the proclamations and the resolutions of the United
Nations cannot be compared with the rights sanctioned by Allah; the former are not
obligatory on anybody, while the latter are an integral part of the Islamic faith. All
Muslims and all administrators who claim to be Muslim have to accept, recognize and
enforce them. If they failed to enforce them or violate them while paying lip-service to
them, the verdict of the Holy Quran is unequivocal:
"Those who do not judge by what Allah has sent down are the
disbelievers (Kafirun)." (5:44)
The following verse also proclaims:
"They are the wrong-doers (zalimoon)". (5:45)
A third verse in the same chapter says:
"They are the perverse and law-breakers (fasiqoon)."
(5:47)
In other words, if temporal authorities regard their own words and
decisions as right and those given by Allah as wrong, they are disbelievers. If, on the
other hand, they regard Allah's commands as right but deliberately reject them in favour
of their owns decisions, then they are wrong-doers. Law-breakers are those who disregard
the bond of allegiance.