Fatwa on those who kill Civilians
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Topic: Fatwa on those who kill Civilians
Posted By: rami
Subject: Fatwa on those who kill Civilians
Date Posted: 14 September 2005 at 10:11pm
Bi imsillahir rahmanir raheem
assalamu alaikum
You can read the following in PDF format
http://mac.abc.se/home/onesr/d/dcmm_e.pdf - here or from the
site it http://www.livingislam.org/k/dcmm_e.html - self . PDF
would be the easiest to read it is well worth the effort even though
it is long.
Defending the Civilians:
Mudafi' al-Mazlum
Introduction by Gibril F Haddad
In the Name of God, the All-Beneficent, the Most Merciful.
Gentle reader, Peace upon those who follow right guidance!
I am honored to present the following fatwa or "response by a qualified
Muslim Scholar" against the killing of civilians by the Oxford-based
Malaysian jurist of the Shafi`i School and my inestimable teacher,
Shaykh Muhammad Afifi al-Akiti, titled "Defending the Transgressed by
Censuring the Reckless against the Killing of Civilians."
The Shaykh authored it in a few days, after I asked him to offer some
guidance on the issue of targeting civilians and civilian centers by
suicide bombing in response to a pseudo-fatwa by a deviant UK-based
group which advocates such crimes.
Upon reading Shaykh Afifi's fatwa do not be surprised to find that you
have probably never before seen such clarity of thought and expression
together with breadth of knowledge of Islamic Law applied (by a non-
native speaker) to define key Islamic concepts pertaining to the
conduct of war and its jurisprudence, its arena and boundaries, suicide
bombing, the reckless targeting of civilians, and more.
May it bode the best start to true education on the impeccable position
of Islam squarely against terrorism in anticipation of the day all its
culprits are brought to justice.
Dear Muslim reader, as-Salamu `alaykum wa-rahmatullah:
Read this luminous Fatwa by Shaykh Muhammad Afifi al-Akiti carefully
and learn it. Distribute it, publicize it, and teach it. Perhaps we
will be counted among those who do something to redress wrong, not only
with our hearts as we always do, but also with our tongues, in the
fashion of the inspired teachers and preachers of truth.
I have tried to strike the keynote of this Fatwa in a few lines of free
verse, mostly to express my thanks to our Teacher but also to seize the
opportunity of such a long-expected response to remind myself of the
reasons why I embraced Islam in the first place.
A TAQRIZ � HUMBLE COMMENDATION:
Praise to God Whose Law shines brighter than the sun!
Blessings and peace on him who leads to the abode of peace!
Truth restores honor to the Religion of goodness.
Patient endurance lifts the oppressed to the heights
While gnarling mayhem separates like with like:
The innocent victims on the one hand and, on the other,
Silver-tongued devils and wolves who try to pass for just!
My God, I thank You for a Teacher You inspired
With words of light to face down Dajjal's advocates.
Allah bless you, Ustadh Afifi, for _Defending the Transgressed
By Censuring the Reckless Against the Killing of Civilians_!
Let the powers that be and every actor-speaker high and low
Heed this unique Fatwa of knowledge and responsibility.
Let every lover of truth proclaim, with pride once more,
What the war-mongers try to bury under lies and bombs:
Islam is peace and truth, the Rule of Law, justice and right!
Murderous suicide is never martyrdom but rather perversion,
Just as no flag on earth can ever justify oppression.
And may God save us from all criminals, East and West!
By permission of Shaykh Afifi I have done some very light editing having
to do mostly with style, spelling, or punctuation such as standardizing
spacing between paragraphs, providing in-text translations of a couple
of Arabic supplications, adding quotation marks to mark out textual
citations, and so forth.
I also provided the following alphabetical glossary of arabic terms not
already glossed by the Shaykh directly in the text:
GLOSSARY
ahl = [1] people; [2] qualified adherents or practicioners
`aql = intellect, reason
`amal = deed
asl = see usul
bab = chapter
Banu Adam = human beings
dabit = see dawabit
darura = necessity
dawabit = pl. of dabit = standard or pricipal rule
Doctor Angelicus = Angel-like scholar or Scholar of the angels, a title
given to Thomas Aquinas, the great theologian of the Western Church.
da`i = summoner
dunya = this world
fa'ida = benefit
Faqih = see Fiqh
fard `ayn = personal categorical obligation
far`i = adj. from far`, see furu`
Fiqh = Islamic jurisprudence, the expertise of the Faqih
fitna = strife, temptation, seduction, delusion, chaos, trial and
tribulation
fitra = sane mind and soul, primordial disposition
Fuqaha' = pl. of Faqih (q.v.)
furu` = pl. of far`, [1] branches (of the Law), secondary legal texts;
[2] corollaries
hadith = saying of the Prophet Muhammad, upon him blessings and peace
halal = lawful, permitted
haram = categorically prohibited, unlawful
hukm shar`i = legal status
Iblis = Satan
Ihsan = Excellence, the pinnacle of religious practice
Ijma` = Consensus
insaf = fairness
Jama`a = congregation (of the Muslims)
Jamal al-Shuhada' = Beauty of Martyrs, the title of the murdered vizier
Nizam al-Mulk
Jihad = military or moral struggle by the Mujahid
khilaf = (juridical) disagreement
khilafiyya = fem. adjective from khilaf
= having to do with (juridical) disagreement
madhhab = school of law
makruh = detestable, abhorrent, abominable, disliked, legally offensive
maqasid = pl. of maqsad, objective
maqsad = see maqasid
masa'il = pl. of mas'ala = question
mas'ala = see masa'il
maslaha = welfare
mubah = indifferently permissible
mufassir = exegete
mufti = one who formulates fatwas or formal legal responses
mujahid = one who does jihad (q.v.)
mukallaf = legally-responsible Muslim
musharaka = mutual or reciprocal matter
nafs = ego, self
nasiha = faithful, sincere advice
qadaya = pl. of qadiyya = issue
qadi = judge in an Islamic court of law
qatil nafsahu = self-killer, suicide
qawl = saying, position
qital = warfare, battle
sabab al-wujud = raison d'etre
sabr = patient endurance and fortitude
shahid, pl. suhada' = self-sacrificing believer who dies for the sake of
God alone, "martyr"
shar`i = adj. legitimate in the eyes of the Shari`a (Islamic Law), lawful
siyar = military expeditions
sunna = way, path
tafakkur = reflexion
tafsil = detailed discussion
tahluka = self-destruction
thaghrir bi l-nafs = risking one's life
tawakkul = God-reliance
thawabit = pl. of thabit = axiom
Umma = Community (of the Prophet Muhammad MHMD )
usul = pl. of asl = foundational principle. Adj. usuli
wahm = imaginative faculty
wasa'il = pl. of wasila, means
wasila = see wasa'il
May Allah Subhan wa-Ta`ala save Shaykh Muhammad Afifi here and
hereafter, may He reward him and his teachers for this blessed work and
grant us its much-needed benefits, not least of which the redress of our
actions and beliefs for safety here and hereafter.
Blessings and peace on the Prophet, his Family, and all his Companions,
wal-Hamdu lillahi Rabb al-`Alamin.
G.F. Haddad
Day of Jumu`a after `Asr
1 Rajab al-Haram 1426
5 August 2005
Brunei Darussalam
------------- Rasul Allah (sallah llahu alaihi wa sallam) said: "Whoever knows himself, knows his Lord" and whoever knows his Lord has been given His gnosis and nearness.
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Replies:
Posted By: rami
Date Posted: 14 September 2005 at 10:13pm
Bi ismillahir rahmanir raheem
SHAYKH AFIFI'S TEXT
Defending the Transgressed by Censuring the Reckless against the Killing of Civilians
If you have time to address this delicate issue for the benefit of this
mercied Umma which is reeling in fitna day in and day out, perhaps a
few blessed words might use a refutation of the following text as a
springboard?
I would like you to read the following article which highlights some of
the problems we are facing, and why it is quite possible that young
muslims turn to extremism. the article was issued by al-muhajiroun not
long ago, headed by Omar Bakri Mohammed, and whatever our reservations
about the man, it is the content I am more concerned about, and it is
possibly these types of writings which need to be confronted head-on:
AQD UL AMAAN: THE COVENANT OF SECURITY
The Muslims living in the west are living under a covenant of security,
it is not allowed for them to fight anyone with whom they have a
covenant of security, abiding by the covenant of security is an
important obligation upon all Muslims. However for those Muslims living
abroad, they are not under any covenant with the kuffar in the west, so
it is acceptable for them to attack the non-muslims in the west whether
in retaliation for constant bombing and murder taking place all over
the Muslim world at the hands of the non-muslims, or if it an offensive
attack in order to release the Muslims from the captivity of the
kuffar. For them, attacks such as the September 11th Hijackings is a
viable option in Jihad, even though for the Muslims living in America
who are under covenant, it is not allowed to do operations similar to
those done by the magnificent 19 on the 9/11. This article speaks about
the covenant and what the scholars have said regarding Al Aqd Al Amaan
- the covenant of security. [...]
bismillahi r-rahman al-rahim
al-hamdulillah alladhi yahuddu l-harba wa-la yuhibbu l-mu'tadina wa
s-salatu wa-s-salamu 'ala qa'idi l-ummah alladhi huwa asbaru 'ala adha
l-a'da'i bi-futuwwatin kamilatin wa-muru'atin shamilatin wa-'ala alihi
wa-ashabihi wa-jayshihi ajma'in!
{Praise be to God Who sets the boundaries of war and does not love
transgressors! Blessings and peace on the Umma's leader, the most
enduring of men in the face of the harm of enemies with perfect
chivalry and complete manliness, and upon all his Family, Companions,
and Army!}
This is a collection of masa'il, entitled: Mudafi' al-Mazlum bi-Radd
al-Muhamil 'ala Qital Man La Yuqatil [Defending the Transgressed by
Censuring the Reckless against the Killing of Civilians]; written in
response to the fitna reeling this mercied Umma, day in and day out,
which is partly caused by those who, wilfully or not, misunderstand the
legal discussions of the chapter on warfare outside their proper
contexts [of which the technical Fiqh terminology varies with bab:
Siyar, Jihad, or Qital], which have been used by them to justify their
wrong actions. May Allah open our eyes to the true meaning [haqiqa] of
sabr and to the fact that only through it can we successfully endure
the struggles we face in this dunya, especially during our darkest
hours; for indeed, He is with those who patiently endure tribulations!
There is no khilaf that all of the Shafi'i fuqaha' of today and other
Sunni specialists in the Law from the Far East to the Middle East
reject outright [mardud] the above opinion and consider it not only an
anomaly [shadh] and very weak [wahin] but also completely wrong [batil]
and a misguided innovation [bid'a dalala]: an 'amal that cannot at all
be adopted by any mukallaf. It is regrettable too that the above was
written in a legal style at which any doctor of the Law should be
horrified and appalled (since it is an immature yet persuasive attempt
to mask a misguided personal opinion with authority from Fiqh, and an
effort to hijack our Fiqh by invoking one of its many qadaya of this
bab while recklessly neglecting others). It should serve to remind the
students of Fiqh of the importance of forming in one's mind and being
aware throughout, of the thawabit and the dawabit when reading a furu'
text, in order to ensure that those principal rules have not been
breached in any given legal case.
The above opinion is problematic in three legal particulars: (1) the
target [maqtul]: without doubt, civilians; (2) the authority for
carrying out the killing [amir al-qital]: as no Muslim authority has
declared war, or if there has been such a declaration there is at the
time a ceasefire [hudna]; and (3) the way in which the killing is
carried out [maqtul bih]: since it is either Haram and is also cursed
as it is suicide [qatil nafsah], or at the very least doubtful
[shubuhat] in a way such that it must be avoided by those who are
religiously scrupulous [wara']. Any sane Muslim who would believe
otherwise and think the above to be not a crime [jinaya] would be both
reckless [muhmil] and deluded [maghrur]. Instead, whether he realizes
it or not, by doing so he would be hijacking rules from our Sacred Law
which are meant for the conventional (or authorized) army of a Muslim
state and addressed to those with authority over it (such as the
executive leader(s), the military commanders and so forth), but not to
individuals who are not connected to the military or those without the
political authority of the state [dawla].
The result in fiqh [Islamic jurisprudence] is: if a Muslim carries out
such an attack voluntarily, he becomes a murderer and not a martyr or a
hero, and he will be punished with that in the Next World.
I. The Target: Maqtul
The proposition: "so it is acceptable for
them to attack the non-muslims in the west", where "non-Muslims" can be
taken to mean, and indeed does mean in the document, non-combatants,
civilians, or in the terminology of Fiqh: those who are not engaged in
direct combat [man la yuqatilu].
This opinion violates a well known principal rule [Dabit] from our Law:
"la yajUzu qatlu nisA'ihim wa-la SibyAnihim idhA lam yuqAtilU" [it is
not permissible to kill their [i.e., the opponents'] women and children
if they are not in (direct) combat], which is based on the Prophetic
prohibition on soldiers from killing women and children, from the well
known Hadith of Ibn 'Umar (may Allah be pleased with them both!)
related by Imams Malik, al-Shafi'i, Ahmad, al-Bukhari, Muslim, Ibn
Majah, Abu Dawud, al-Tirmidhi, al-Bayhaqi and al-Baghawi (may Allah be
well pleased with them all!) and other Hadiths.
Imam al-Subki (may Allah be pleased with him!) made it unequivocally
clear what scholars have understood from this prohibition in which the
standard rule of engagement taken from it is that: "[a Muslim soldier]
may not kill a woman nor a child soldier unless they are in combat
directly, and they can only be killed in self-defence" [al-Nawawi,
Majmu', 21:57].
It goes without saying that men and innocent bystanders who are not
direct combatants are also included in this prohibition. The nature of
this prohibition is so specific and well defined that there can be no
legal justification, nor can there be a legitimate Shar'i excuse, for
circumventing this convention of war by targeting non-combatants or
civilians whatsoever, and that the Hukm Shar'i of killing them is not
only Haram but also a Major Sin [kabira] and contravenes one of the
principal commandments of our way of life.
II. The Authority: Amir al-Qital
The proposition: "so it is acceptable for
them to attack the non-muslims in the west whether in retaliation for
constant bombing and murder taking place all over the Muslim world at
the hands of the non-muslims," where it implies that a state of war
exist with this particular non-Muslim state on account of its being
witnessed as the aggressor.
This opinion violates the most basic rules of engagement from our Law:
"amru l-jihAdi mawkulun ila l-imAmi wa-ijtihAdihi wa-yalzamu
r-ra'iyyata TA'atuhu fImA yarAhu min dhalika" [The question of
declaring war [or not] is entrusted to the executive authority and to
its decision: compliance with that decision is the subject's duty with
respect to what the authority has deemed appropriate in that matter]
and "wa-li-imamin aw amirin khiyarun bayna l-kaffi wa l-qitAli" [The
executive or its subordinate authority has the option of whether to
declare war or not].
Decisions of this kind for each Muslim state, such as those questions
dealing with ceasefire ['aqd al-hudna], peace settlement ['aqd al-aman]
and the judgment on prisoners of war [al-ikhtar fi asir] can only be
dealt with by the executive or political authority [imam] or by a
subordinate authority appointed by the former authority [amir mansubin
min jihati l-imam]. This is something Muslims take for granted from the
authority of our naql [scriptures] such that none will reject it except
those who betray their 'aql [intellect]. The most basic legal reason
['illa asliyya] is that this is a matter involving the public interest
in which only the authority has jurisdiction in considering it [li-anna
hadhA l-amra mina l-masAliHi l-'Ammati allati yakhtassu l-imAmi
bi-n-naZari fI-hA].
All of this is based on the well known legal principle:
taSarrufu l-imAmi 'ala r-ra'iyyati manUTun bi l-maSlaHati [the
decisions of the authority on behalf of the subjects are dependent upon
the public good].
And:
fa-yaf'alu l-imAmu wujUban al-aHaZZa li-l-muslimIna li-ijtihAdihi [So
the authority must act for the greatest advantage of (the rest of) the
Muslims in making his judgement].
Nasiha: Uppermost in the
minds of our authority during their deliberation over whether to wage
war or not should be the awareness that war is only a means and not the
end. Hence, if there are other ways of achieving the aim, and the
highest aim is the right to practice our religion openly (as is indeed
the case in modern day Spain, for example, unlike in medieval
Reconquista Spain), then it is better [awla] not to go to war. This has
been expressed in a few words by Imam al-Zarkashi (may Allah be pleased
with him!) as:
wujUbuhu wujUbu l-wasA'ili lA l-maqASidi
[Its necessity is the necessity of means, not ends]
The upshot is, whether one likes it or not, that the decision and the
discretion and the right to declare war or jihad for Muslims lies
solely with the various authorities today represented by the respective
Muslim states - and not with any individual, even if he is a scholar or
a soldier � and not just anyone is a soldier or a scholar � in the same
way that only an authority (such as the Qadi in a court of law:
mahkamah) is the only one with the right to excommunicate or declare
someone an apostate [murtad]. Otherwise, the killing would be
extra-judicial and unauthorized.
Even during the period of the Ottoman caliphate, for example, another
Muslim authority elsewhere such as in the Indian subcontinent could
have been engaged in a war when at the same time the Khalifa's army was
at peace with the same enemy. This is how it has been throughout our
long history and this is how it will always be and this is what the
reality is on the ground.
III. The Method: Maqtul bih
The proposition: "attacks such as the
September 11th Hijackings is a viable option in Jihad," where such
attacks employ a tactic � analogous to the Japanese "Kamikaze" missions
during the Second World War � that have been described variously as
self-sacrificing/martyrdom/suicide missions.
There is no question among scholars and there is no khilaf on this
question by any Qadi, Mufti or Faqih, that this proposition and those
who accept it are without doubt breaching the scholarly consensus
[mukhalifun li-l-ijma'] of the Muslims since it resulted in the killing
of non-combatants, and moreover, the proposition is an attempt to
legitimize the killing of indisputable non-combatants.
As for the Kamikaze method and tactic in which it was carried out,
there is a difference of opinion among some jurists as to whether it
constitutes suicide, which is not only Haram but also cursed, or
whether it does not. In this, there are further details. (Note that in
all of the following cases, the target is assumed to be already
legitimate � i.e., a valid military target � and that the action is
carried out during a valid war when there is no ceasefire [fi hal
al-harb wa-la l-hudna fihi], just as with the actual circumstance of
the Japanese Kamikaze attacks.)
Tafsil I: If the attack
involves a bomb* placed on the body or placed so close to the bomber
that when the bomber detonates it the bomber is certain [yaqin] to die,
then the More Correct Position [Qawl Asahh] according to us is that it
does constitute suicide. This is because the bomber, being also the
Maqtul [the one killed], is unquestionably the same Qatil [the
immediate/active agent that kills] = Qatil Nafsahu.
Furu' If the attack involves
a bomb (such as the lobbing of a grenade and the like) but when it is
detonated, the attacker thinks that it is uncertain [zann] whether he
may die in the process or survive the attack, then the Correct Position
[Qawl Sahih] is that this does not constitute suicide, and were he to
die in this selfless act, he becomes what we call a martyr or hero
[shahid]. This is because the attacker, were he to die, is not the
active, willing agent of his own death, since the Qatil is probably
someone else.
An example [sura] of this is: when in its right place and circumstance,
such as in the midst of an ongoing fierce battle against an opponent's
military unit, whether ordered by his commanding officer or whether
owing to his own initiative, the soldier makes a lone charge and as a
result of that initiative manages to turn the tide of the day's battle
but dies in the process (and not intentionally at his own hand): that
soldier died as a hero (and this circumstance is precisely the context
of becoming a shahid � in Islamic terminology � as he died selflessly).
If he survives, he wins a Medal of Honour and becomes an honoured war
hero and is remembered as a famous patriot (in our terminology,
becoming a true mujahid).
This is precisely the context of the mas'ala concerning the "lone
charger" [al-hajim al-wahid] and the meaning of putting one's life in
danger [al-taghrir bi-l-nafs] found in all of the Fiqh chapters
concerning warfare. The Umma's Doctor Angelicus, Imam al-Ghazali (may
Allah be pleased with him!) provides the best impartial summation:
"If it is said: What is the meaning of the words of the Most High:
"wa-lA tulqU bi-aydIkum ila t-tahlukati"
[and do not throw into destruction by your own hands!]
(al-Baqara, 2:195) ?
"We say: There is no difference [of opinion
amongst scholars] that regarding the lone Muslim [soldier] who charges
into the battle-lines of the [opposing] non-Muslim [army that is
presently in a state of war with his army and is facing them in a
battle] and fights [them] even if he knows that he will almost
certainly be killed � a case misconstruable to be against the
requirements of the Verse, that it is not so. Indeed, Ibn 'Abbas (may
Allah be well pleased with both of them!) says: [the meaning of]
"destruction" is not that [incident]. Instead, [its meaning] is to
neglect providing [adequate] supplies [nafaqa: for the military
campaign; and in the modern context, the state should provide for the
arms and equipment, for example, for which all of this is done] in
obedience to God [as in the first part of the Verse which says:
"wa-anfiqU fI sabIli LlAhi" [And spend for the sake of God] (al-Baqara,
2:195)]. That is, those who fail to do that will destroy themselves.
[In another Sahabi authority:] al-Bara' Ibn 'Azib [al-Ansari (may Allah
be well pleased with them both!)] says: [the meaning of] "destruction"
is [a Muslim] committing a sin and then saying: 'my repentance will not
be accepted'. [A Tabi'i authority] Abu 'Ubayda says: it [the meaning of
"destruction"] is to commit a sin and then not perform a good deed
after it before he perishes. [Ponder over this!]
"In the same way that it is permissible [for the Muslim soldier in the
incident above] to fight the non-Muslim [army] until he is killed [in
the process], that [extent and consequence] is also permissible for him
[i.e., the enforcer of the Law, since the 'a'id (antecedent) here goes
back to the original pronoun [damir al-asl] for this bab: the muhtasib
or enforcer, such as the police] in [matters of] law enforcement
[hisba].
"However, [note the following qualification (qayd):] were he to know
[zanni] that his charge will not cause harm to the non-Muslim [army],
such as the blind or the weak throwing himself into the [hostile]
battle-lines, then it is prohibited [Haram] and [this latter incident]
is included under the general meaning ['umum] of "destruction" from the
Verse [for in this case, he will be literally throwing himself into
destruction].
"It would only be permissible for him to advance [and suffer the
consequences] if he knows that he will be able to fight [effectively]
until he is killed, or knows that he will be able to demoralize the
hearts and minds of the non-Muslim [army]: by their witnessing his
courage and by their conviction that the rest of the Muslim [army] are
[also] selfless [qilla al-mubala] in their loyalty to sacrifice for the
sake of God. By this, their will to fight [shawka] will become
demoralized [and so this may cause panic and rout them and thereby be
the cause of their battle-lines to collapse]."
[al-Ghazali, Ihya', 2:354].
It is clear that this selfless deed which any modern soldier, Muslim or
non-Muslim, might perform in battle today is not suicide. It may
hyperbolically be described as a 'suicidal' attack, but to endanger
one's life is one thing and to commit suicide during the attack is
obviously another. And as the passage shows, it is possible to have
both situations: an attack that is taghrir bi-l-nafs, which is not
prohibited; and an attack that is of the tahluka-type, which is
prohibited.
Tafsil II: If the attack
involves ramming a vehicle into a military target and the attacker is
certain to die, precisely like the historical Japanese Kamikaze
missions, then our jurists have disagreed whether it does or does not
constitute suicide.
Qawl A: Those who consider it
a suicide argue that there is the possibility [zanni] that the Maqtul
is the same as the Qatil (as in Tafsil I above) and would therefore not
allow for any other qualification whatsoever since suicide is a cursed
sin.
Qawl B: Whereas those who
consider otherwise, even with the possibility that the Maqtul is the
same Qatil, will allow some other qualification such as the possibility
that by carrying it out the battle of the day could be won. There are
further details in this alternative position, such as that the
commanding officer does not have the right to command anyone under him
to perform this dangerous mission so that were it to be sanctioned, it
could only be when it is not under anyone else's orders other than the
lone initiative of the concerned soldier (such as in defiance of the
standing orders of his commanding officer).
The first of the two positions is the Preferred Position [Muttajih]
among our jurists, as the second is the rarer because of the vagueness
of a precedent, and its legal details are fraught with further
difficulties and ambiguities, and its opposing position [muqabil]
carries such a weighty consequence (namely, that of suicide, for which
there is Ijma' that the one who commits suicide will be damned to
committing it eternally forever).
In addition to this juristic preference, the first position is also
preferable and better since it is the original or starting state [Asl],
and by invoking the well known and accepted legal principle: al-khurUju
mina l-khilAfi mustaHabbun [to avoid the controversy is preferable].
Finally, the first position is religiously safer, since owing to the
ambiguity itself of the legal status of the person performing the act �
whether it will result in the Maqtul being also the Qatil � and since
there is doubt and uncertainty over the possibility of it either being
or not being the case, then this position falls under the type of
doubtful matters [shubuhat] of the kind [naw'] that should be avoided
by those who are religiously scrupulous [wara']. And here, the wisdom
of our wise Prophet MHMD may Allah's blessings and peace be upon him!
is illuminated from the Hadith of al-Nu'man raDiy-Allahu-anhu.gif may
Allah be well pleased with him!):
"fa-mani ttaqA sh-shubuhAti istabra'a li-dInihi wa 'irDihi"
[He who saves himself from doubtful matters will save his religion and
his honour] (Related by Ahmad, al-Bukhari, Muslim, al-Tirmidhi,
Ibn Majah, al-Tabarani, and al-Bayhaqi with variants.)
wallahu a'lam bi-s-sawab!
Fa'ida The original ruling
[al-Asl] for using a bomb (the medieval precedents: Greek fire [qital
bi l-nar or ramy al-naft] and catapults [manjaniq]) as a weapon is that
it is Makruh [offensive] because it kills indiscriminately [ya'ummu man
yuqatilu wa-man la yuqatilu], as opposed to using rifles (medieval
example: a single bow and arrow). If the indiscriminate weapon is used
in a place where there are civilians, it becomes Haram except when used
as a last resort [min darura] (and of course, by those military
personnel authorised to do so).
From the consideration of the foregoing three legal particulars, it is
evident that the opinion expressed regarding the 'amal in the above
article is untenable by the standards of our Sacred Law.
As to those who may still be persuaded by it and suppose that the 'amal
is something that can be excused on the pretext that there is scholarly
khilaf on the details of Tafsil II from the third particular (and that
therefore, the 'amal itself could at the end of the day be accommodated
by invoking the guiding principle that one should be flexible with
regards to legal controversies [masa'il khilafiyya] and to agree to
disagree); know then there is no khilaf among scholars that that
rationale does not stand, since it is well known that:
lA yunkaru l-mukhtalafu fIhi wa-innamA yunkaru l-mujma'u 'alayhi
[The controversial cannot be denied; only {breach of} the unanimous can be denied]
Since at the very least, it is agreed upon by all that killing
non-combatants is prohibited, there is no question whatsoever that the
'amal overall is outlawed.
Masa'il Mufassala
If it is said: "I have heard that Islam says the killing of civilians is allowed if they are non-Muslims."
We say: On a joking note (but ponder over
this so your hearts may be opened!): the authority is not with what
Islam says but with what Allah (Exalted is He) and His Messenger MHMD
may His blessings and peace be upon him! - have said!
But seriously: the answer is absolutely NO,
for even a novice student of Fiqh would be able to see that the first
Dabit above concerns already a non-Muslim opponent in the case of a
state of war having been validly declared by a Muslim authority against
a particular non-Muslim enemy even when that civilian is a subject or
in the care [dhimma] of the hostile non-Muslim state [Dar al-Harb]. If
this is the extent of the limitation to be observed with regards to
non-Muslim civilians associated with a declared enemy force, what
higher standards will it be in cases if it is not a valid war or when
the status of war becomes ambiguous? Keep in mind that there are more
than 100 Verses in the Qur'an commanding us at all times to be patient
in the face of humiliation and to turn away from violence [al-i'rad
'ani l-mushrikin wa l-sabr 'ala adha l-a'da'], while there is only one
famous Verse in which war (which does not last forever) becomes an
option (in our modern context: for a particular Muslim authority and
not an individual), when a particular non-Muslim force has drawn first
blood.
If it is said: "What about the verse of the Qur'an which
says 'kill the unbelievers wherever you find them' and the Sahih Hadith
which says 'I have been ordered to fight against the people until they
testify ... '?"
We say: It is well known among scholars that
the following verse, "fa-qtulU l-mushrikIna Haythu wajad-tumUhum" [kill
the idolaters wherever you find them] (al-Tawba, 9:5) is in reference
to a historical episode: those among the Meccan Confederates who
breached the Treaty of Hudaybiyya [Sulh al-Hudaybiyya] which led to the
Conquest of Mecca, and that therefore, no legal rulings, or in other
words, no practical or particular implications can be derived from this
Verse on its own. The Divine Irony and indeed Providence from the last
part of the Verse, "wherever you find them" � which many of our
Mufassirs understood in reference to place (i.e., attack them whether
inside the Sacred Precinct or not) � is that the victory against the
Meccans happened without a single battle taking place, whether inside
the Sacred Precinct or otherwise, rather, there was a general amnesty
[wa-mannun 'alayhi bi-takhliyati sabilihi or naha 'an safki d-dima']
for the Jahili Arabs there. Had the Verse not been subject to a
historical context, then you should know that it is of the general type
['amm] and that it will therefore be subject to specification [takhsis]
by some other indication [dalil]. Its effect in lay terms, were it not
related to the Jahili Arabs, is that it can only refer to a case during
a valid war when there is no ceasefire.
Among the well known exegeses of "al-mushrikin" from this verse are:
"al-nakithina khassatan" [specifically, those who have breached (the
Treaty)] [al-Nawawi al-Jawi, Tafsir, 1:331]; "alladhina yuharibunakum"
[those who have declared war against you] [Qadi Ibn 'Arabi, Ahkam
al-Qur'an, 2:889]; and "khassan fi mushkriki l-'arabi duna ghayrihim"
[specifically, the Jahili Arabs and not anyone else] [al-Jassas, Ahkam
al-Qur'an, 3:81].
As for the meaning of "people" [al-nas] in the above well related
Hadith, it is confirmed by Ijma', that it refers to the same
"mushrikin" as in the Verse of Sura al-Tawba above and therefore what
is meant there is only the Jahili Arabs [muskhriku l-'arab] during the
closing days of the Final Messenger and the early years of the
Righteous Caliphs and not even to any other non-Muslims.
In sum, we are not in a perpetual state of war with non-Muslims. On the
contrary, the original legal status [al-Asl] is a state of peace, and
making a decision to change this status belongs only to a Muslim
authority who will in the Next World answer for their ijtihad and
decision, and this decision is not divinely charged to any individuals
� not even soldiers or scholars (and to believe otherwise would go
against the well known rule in our Law that a Muslim authority could
seek help from a non-Muslim with certain conditions, including for
example that the non-Muslim allies are of goodwill towards the Muslims
[la-yast'Inu bi-mushkrikin illA bi-shurUTin ka-an takUna niyyatuhu
Hasanatan li-l-muslimIna]).
If it is said: "I have heard a scholar say
that 'Israeli women are not like women in our society because they are
militarised'. By implication, this means that they fall into the
category of women who fight and that this makes them legitimate targets
but only in the case of Palestine."
We say: No properly schooled jurists from
any of the four schools would say this as a legal judgement if they
faithfully followed the juridical processes of the orthodox schools in
this bab, for if it is true that the scholar made such a statement and
meant it in the way you've implied it, then not only does this violate
the well known principal rule above {Section I: "It is not permissible
to kill their women and children if they are not in (direct) combat"}
but the supposed remarks also show a lack of sophistication in the
legal particulars. If this is the case, then it has to be said here
that this is not among the masa'il khilafiyya that one can afford to
agree to disagree, since it is outright wrong by the principles and the
rules from our Usul and Furu'.
Let us restate the Dabit again, as our jurists have succinctly
summarised its rule of engagement: a soldier can only attack a female
or (if applicable) child soldier (or a male civilian) in self-defence
and only when she *herself* (and not someone else from her army) is
engaged in direct combat (as for male soldiers, it goes without saying
that they are considered combatants as soon as they arrive on the
battlefield even if they are not in direct combat � provided of course
that the remaining conventions of war have been observed throughout and
that all this is during a valid war when there is no ceasefire).
Not only is this strict rule of engagement already made clear in our
secondary legal texts, but this is also obvious from the linguistic
analysis of the primary proof-texts used to derive this principal rule.
Hence, the form of the verb used in the scriptures, yuqAtilu, is of the
musharaka-type so that the verb denotes a direct or a personal or a
reciprocal relationship between two agents: the minimum for which is
when one of them makes an effort or attempt to act upon the other. The
immediate legal implication here is that one of the two can only even
be considered a legitimate target when there is a reciprocal/direct
relationship.
In reality, this is not what happens on the ground (since the bombing
missions are offensive in nature � as they are not after all targeting,
for example, a force that IS *attacking* an immediate Muslim force but
rather the attack is directed at an overtly non-military target, so the
person carrying it out can only be described as attacking it � and the
target is someone unknown until only seconds before the mission reaches
its termination).
In short, even if these women are soldiers, they can only be attacked
when they are in *direct combat* and not otherwise. In any case, there
are other overriding particulars to be considered and various
conditions to be observed throughout, namely, that it must be during a
valid state of war when there is no ceasefire.
If it is said: "When a bomber blows up
himself he is not directing the attack towards civilians. On the
contrary, the attack is designed to target off-duty soldiers (which I
was told did not mean reservists, since most Israelis are technically
reservists). The innocent civilians are unfortunate collateral damage
in the targeting of soldiers."
We say: There are two details here.
Tafsil A: Off-duty soldiers are treated as civilians.
Our jurists agree that during a valid war when there is no ceasefire,
and when an attack is not aimed at a valid military target, a hostile
soldier (whether male or female, whether conscripted or not) who is not
on operational duty or not wearing a military uniform and when there is
nothing in the soldier's outward appearance to suggest that the soldier
is in combat is considered a non-combatant [man la yuqatilu] (and the
soldier in this case must therefore be treated as a normal civilian).
A valid military target is limited to either a battlefield [mahall
al-ma'raka or sahat al-qital] or a military base [mu'askar; medieval
examples: citadel or forts; modern examples: barracks, military depots,
etc.] but certainly NEVER at anything else such as restaurants, hotels,
around a traffic light, a public bus or at any other public place,
since firstly, these are not places and bases from which an attack
would normally originate [mahall al-ra'y]; secondly, because there is
certain knowledge [yaqin] that there is intermingling [ikhtilat] with
non-combatants; and thirdly, the non-combatants have not been given the
option to leave the place.
As for when the soldiers are on the battlefield, the normal rules of engagement apply.
As for when the soldiers are in a barracks or the like, there is
further discussion on whether the soldiers become a legitimate target,
and the Qawl Asahh [the more correct position] according to our jurists
is that they do, albeit to attack them there is Makruh.
Tafsil B: Non-combatants cannot be considered collateral damage
Non-combatants cannot at all be considered collateral damage except at
a valid military target for which they may be so deemed, depending on
certain extenuating circumstances.
There is no khilaf that non-combatants or civilians cannot at all be
considered collateral damage at a non-military target in a war zone,
and that their deaths are not excusable by our Law, and that the one
who ends up killing one of them will be sinful as in the case of
murder, even though the soldier who is found guilty of it would be
excused from the ordinary capital punishment [hadd], unless the killing
was found to be premeditated and deliberate [aw ata bi-ma'siyyatin
tujibu l-hadda]. If not, the murderer's punishment in this case would
instead be subject to the authority's discretion [ta'zir] and he would
in any case be liable to pay the relevant compensation [diya].
As for a valid military target in a war zone, the Shafi'i school have
historically considered the possibility of collateral damage, unlike
the position held by others that it is unqualifiedly outlawed. The
following are the conditions stipulated for allowing for this
controversial exception (in addition to meeting the most important
condition of them all: that this takes place during a valid war when
there is no ceasefire):
(1) The target is a valid military target. (2) The attack is as a last
resort [min darura] (such as when the civilians have been warned to
leave the place and after a period of siege has elapsed). [wujUb
al-indhAri qabla l-bad'i bi-l-qatli li-annahu lA yajUzu an yaqtula illA
man yuqAtilu] (3) There are no Muslim civilians or prisoners. (4) The
decision to attack the target is based on a considered judgement of the
executive or military leader that by doing so, there is a good chance
that the battle would be won.
(Furthermore, this position is subject to khilaf among our jurists with
regard to whether the military target can be a Jewish/Christian [Ahl
l-Kitab] one, since the sole primary text that is invoked to allow this
exception concerns an incident restricted to the same "mushrikin" as
the Verse of Sura al-Tawba above.)
To intentionally neglect any of these strict conditions is analogous to
not fulfilling the conditions [shurut] for a prayer with the outcome
that the Salat would become invalidated [batil] and useless [fasad].
This is why the means of an act ['amal] must be correct and validated
according to the rule of Law in order for its outcome to be sound and
accepted, as expressed succinctly in the following wisdom of Imam Ibn
'Ata'illah:
man ashraqat bidayatuhu ashraqat nihayatuhu
[He who makes good his beginning will make good his ending].
In our Law, the ends can never justify the means except when the means
are in themselves permissible, or Mubah (and not Haram) as is made
clear in the following famous legal principle:
wasIlatu T-TA'ati TA'atun wa-wasIlatu l-ma'Siyati ma'Siyatun
[the means to a reward is itself a reward and the means to a sin is itself a sin].
Hence, even a simple act such as opening a window, which on its own is
only Mubah or Halal, religiously entailing no reward nor being a sin,
when a son opens it with the intention for his mother's comfort on a
hot summer's day before she asks for it to be opened, the originally
non-consequent act itself becomes Mandub [recommended] and the son is
rewarded in his 'amal account for the Next World and acquires the
pleasure of Allah.
wallahu a'lam wa-ahkam bi-s-sawab!
{God knows and judges best what is right!}
If it is said: "In a classic manual of
Islamic Sacred Law I read that "it is offensive to conduct a military
expedition [ghazw] against hostile non-Muslims without the caliph's
permission (though if there is no caliph, no permission is required)."
Doesn't this entail that though it is Makruh for anyone else to call
for or initiate such a jihad, it is permissible?"
We say: lA ghazwata illA fi l-jihAdi
[there can be no battle except during a war]!
Secondary legal texts, just as with primary proof-texts (a single Verse
of the Qur'an from among the relatively few Ayat al-Ahkam or a Hadith
from among the limited number of Ahadith al-Ahkam), must be read and
understood in context. The conclusion drawn that it is offensive or
permissible for anyone other than those in authority to declare or
initiate a war is evidently wrong, since it violates the principal rule
of engagement discussed above.
The context is that of endangering one's life [taghrir bi-nafs] when
there is already a valid war with no ceasefire as seen in the above
example from the Ihya' passage, but certainly not in executive matters
of the kind of proclaiming a war and the like. This is also obvious
from the terminology used: a ghazw [a military act, assault, foray or
raid; the minimum limit in a modern example: an attack by a squad or a
platoon [katiba]* can take place only when there is a state of jihad
[war] not otherwise.
Fa'ida Imam Ibn Hajar (may
Allah be pleased with him!) lists the organizational structure of an
army as follows: a ba'th [unit] and when together, a katiba [platoon],
which is a part of a sariyya [company; made up of 50-100 soldiers],
which is in turn a part of a minsar [regiment; up to 800 soldiers],
which is a part of a jaysh [division; up to 4000 soldiers], which is a
part of a jahfal [army corps; exceeding 4000 soldiers], which makes up
the jaysh 'azim [army]. [Ibn Hajar, Tuhfa, 12:4]
In our School, it is offensive but not completely prohibited for a
soldier to defy or in other words to take the initiative against the
wishes of his direct authority, whether his unit is strong or
otherwise. In the modern context, this may include cases when
soldier(s) disagree with a particular decision or strategy adopted by
their superior officers, whether during a battle or otherwise.
The accompanying commentary to the text you quoted will help clarify this for you:
"[Original Text:] It is offensive to conduct an assault [whether the
unit is strong (man'a) or otherwise; and some have defined a strong
force as 10 men] without the permission of the authority ([Commentary]:
or his subordinate, because the assault depends on the needs [of the
battle and the like] and the authority is more aware about them. It is
not prohibited [to go without his permission] {if} there is no grave
endangering of one's life even when that is permissible in war.)" [Ibn
Barakat, Fayd, 2:309]
If it is said: "What is the meaning of the
rule in fiqh that I always hear, that Jihad is a Fard Kifaya [communal
obligation] and when the Dar al-Islam is invaded or occupied it is a
Fard 'Ayn [personal obligation]? How do we apply this in the context of
a modern Muslim state such as Egypt?"
We say: It is Fard Kifaya for the eligible
Muslim subjects of the state (as for non-Muslim subjects, they
evidently are not religiously obligated but can still serve) in the
sense that recruitment to the military is only voluntary when the state
is at war with a non-Muslim state. It becomes a Fard 'Ayn for any
able-bodied Muslim when there is a conscription or a state-wide draft
to the military if the state is invaded by a hostile non-Muslim force,
but only until the hostile force is repelled or the Muslim authority
calls for a ceasefire. As for those not in the military, they have the
option to defend themselves if attacked even if they have to resort to
throwing stones and using sticks [bi ayyi shay'in aTAqUhu wa-law
bi-HijAratin aw 'aSA].
Furu' When it is not possible
to prepare for war [and rally the army for war (ijtima' li-harb), and a
surprise attack by a hostile force completely defeats the army of the
state and the entire state becomes occupied] and someone [at home, for
example] is faced with the choice of whether to surrender or to fight
[such as when the hostile force comes knocking at the door], then he
may fight, or he may surrender, provided that he knows [with certainty]
that if he resisted [arrest] he would be killed and that [his] wife
would be safe from being raped [fahisha] if she were taken. If not
[that is to say, even if he surrenders he knows he will be killed and
his wife raped when taken], then [as a last resort] fighting [jihad]
becomes personally obligatory for him. [al-Bakri, I'ana, 4:197].
Reflect upon this legal ruling of our Religion and the emphasis placed
upon preserving human life and upon the wisdom of resorting to violence
only when it is absolutely necessary and in its proper place, and
witness the conjunction between the maqasid and the wasa'il and the
meaning of the conditions when fighting actually becomes a Fard 'Ayn
for an individual!
If it is said today: "In the {Shafi`i}
Madhhab, what are the different classifications of land in the world?
For example, Dar al-Islam, Dar al-Kufr and so forth, and what have the
classical ulema said their attributes are?"
We say: As it is also from empirical fact
[tajriba], Muslim scholars have classified the territories in this
world into: Dar al-Islam [its synonyms: Bilad al-Islam or Dawla
al-Islam; a Muslim state or territory or land or country, etc.] and Dar
al-Kufr [a Non-Muslim state or territory].
The definition of a Muslim state is: "Any
place at which a resident Muslim is capable of defending himself
against hostile forces [harbiyyun] for a period of time is a Muslim
state where his judgements can be applied at that time and those times
following it." [Ba'alawi, Bughya, 254]. A non-Muslim who resides in a
Muslim state is in our terminology: kafir dhimmi or al-kafir
bi-dhimmati l-muslim [a non-Muslim in the care of a Muslim state].
By definition, a country is a Muslim state as long as Muslims continue
to live there and enjoy the political and executive authority. (Think
about this, for the Muslim lands are many, varied, wide and extensive;
and how poor and of limited insight are those who have tried to limit
the definition of what a Muslim state must be, and whether realizing it
or not thus tries to shrink the Muslim world!)
As for a non-Muslim state, it is the absence of a Muslim state.
As for the Dar al-Harb [sometimes called, Ard al-'Adw], it is a
non-Muslim state which is in a state of war with a Muslim state.
Therefore, a hostile non-Muslim soldier from there is known in our
books as: kafir harbi.
Furu' Even if such a person enters or
resides in a Muslim country that is in a state of war with his home
country, provided of course he does so with the permission of the
Muslim authority (such as entering with a valid visa and the like), the
sanctity of a kafir harbi's life is protected by Law just like the rest
of the Muslim and non-Muslim subjects of the state. [al-Kurdi, Fatwa,
211-2]. In this case, his legal status becomes a kafir harbi
bi-dhimmati l-imam [a hostile non-Muslim under the protection of the
Muslim authority], in which, for all intent and purposes, he becomes
exactly like the non-Muslim subject of the state. In this way, the
apparent difference between a dhimmi and a harbi non-Muslim becomes
only an academic exercise and a distinction in name only.
The implications of this rule for the pious, godfearing and law-abiding
Muslims are not only that to attack non-Muslims becomes something
illegal and an act of disobedience [ma'siya], but also that the steps
taken by the Muslim authority and enforcers, such as in Malaysia or
Indonesia today, to protect their places, including churches or
temples, from the threat of killings and bombings, is included under
the bab of amr bi-ma'ruf wa nahi 'ani l-munkar [the duty to intervene
when another is acting wrongly; in the modern context: enforcing the
Law], even if the Muslim enforcers [muhtasib] die in the course of
protecting non-Muslims.
If it is said: "What land classification are
we in the European Union, and what is the hukm of those who are here?
Should they theoretically leave?"
We say: It is clear that the countries in
the Union are non-Muslim states, except for Turkey or Bosnia, for
example, if they are a part of the Union. The status of the Muslims who
reside and are born in non-Muslim states is the reverse of the above
non-Muslim status in a Muslim state: al-muslim bi-dhimmati l-kafir [a
Muslim in the care of a non-Muslim state] and from our own Muslim and
religious perspective, whether we like it or not, there are
similarities to the status of a guest which should not be forgotten.
There is precedent for this status in our Law. The answer to your
question is that they should as a practical matter remain in these
countries, and if applicable, learn to cure the schizophrenic cultural
condition in which they may find themselves � whether of torn identity
in their souls or of dissociation from the general society. If they
cannot do so, but find instead that their surroundings are incompatible
with the life they feel they must lead, then it is recommended for them
to leave and reside in a Muslim state. This status is made clear in the
fatwa of Imam al-Kurdi (may Allah be pleased with him!):
"He (may Allah's (Exalted is He!) mercy be upon him) was asked:
"In a territory ruled by non-Muslims, they have left the Muslims [in
peace] other than that they pay tax [mal] every year just like the
jizya-tax in reverse, for when the Muslims pay them, their protection
is ensured and the non-Muslims do not oppose them [i.e., do not
interfere with them]. Thereupon, Islam becomes practiced openly and our
Law is established [meaning that they have the freedom to practice
their religious duty in the open and in effect become practicing
Muslims in that non-Muslim society]. If they do not pay them, they
could massacre them by killing or pillage. Is it permissible to pay
them the tax [and thereby become residents there]? If you say it is
permissible, what is the ruling about the non-Muslims mentioned above
when they are at war [with a Muslim state]: would it or would it not be
permissible to oppose them and if possible, take their money? Please
give us your opinion!
"The answer: Insofar as it is possible for Muslims to
practice their religion openly with what they can have power over, and
they are not afraid of any threat [fitna] to their religion if they pay
tax to the non-Muslims, it is permissible for them to reside there. It
is also permissible to pay them the tax as a requirement of it; rather,
it is obligatory [Wajib] to pay them the tax for fear of their causing
harm to the Muslims. The ruling about the non-Muslims at war as
mentioned above, because they protect the Muslims [in their territory],
is that it would not be permissible for the Muslims to murder them or
to steal from them."
[al-Kurdi, Fatawa, 208]
The Dabit for this mas'ala is: wa-in qadara
'ala iZhAri d-dIni wa-lam yakhfi l-fitnata fi d-dIni wa-nafsihi
wa-mAlihi lam tajib 'alayhi al-hijratu [if someone is able to practice
his religion openly and is not afraid of trouble to his religion, life
and property, then emigration is not obligatory for him].
Furu' Our Shafi'i jurists
have discussed details concerning the case of Muslims residing in a
non-Muslim state, and they have divided the legal rulings about their
emigration from it to a Muslim state into four sorts (assuming that an
individual is capable and has the means to emigrate):
1. Prohibited to leave: when they are able to defend the territory from
a hostile non-Muslim force and withdraw from it and they do not need to
ask for help from a Muslim state, since their place is a Muslim state:
if they emigrated it would become a non-Muslim state.
2. Offensive: when it is possible for them to practice their religion openly and they wish to do so openly.
3. Recommended: when that is possible but they do not wish to do so openly.
4. Obligatory: when in the only remaining option, that {to practice their religion openly} is not possible.
If it is said: "Would you say that in the
modern age with all the considerations surrounding sovereignty and
inter-connectedness, these classical labels do not apply any longer, or
do we have sufficient resources in the school to continue using these
same labels?"
We say: As Imam al-Ghazali would say: "once
the real meaning is understood, there is no need to quibble over
names". Labels can never be relied upon; it is the meaning behind them
that must be properly understood. Once they are unpacked, they
immediately become relevant for all times; just as with the following
loaded terms: Jihad, Mujahid and Shahid. The result for Muslims who
fail to notice the relevance and fail to connect the dots of our own
inherited medieval terms with the modern world may be that they will
live in a schizophrenic cultural reality and will be unable to
associate themselves with the surrounding society and will not be at
peace [sukun] with the rest of creation.
Just as the sabab al-wujud of this article is a Muslim's
misunderstanding of his own medieval terminology from a long and rich
legacy, the fitna in the world today has been the result of those who
misunderstand our Laws.
Pay heed to the words of Mawlana Rumi (may Allah sanctify his secrets!):
Go beyond names and look at the qualities,
so that they may show you the way to the essence.
The disagreement of people takes place because of names.
Peace occurs when they go to the real meaning.
Every war and every conflict between human beings
has happened because of some disagreement about names.
It's such an unnecessary foolishness, because just beyond the arguing
there's a long table of companionship, set and waiting for us to sit down.
End of the Masa'il section
------------- Rasul Allah (sallah llahu alaihi wa sallam) said: "Whoever knows himself, knows his Lord" and whoever knows his Lord has been given His gnosis and nearness.
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Posted By: rami
Date Posted: 14 September 2005 at 10:14pm
Bi ismillahir rahmanir raheem
It is truly sad that despite our sophisticated and elaborate set of
rules of engagement and in spite of the strict codes of warfare and the
chivalrous disciplines which our soldiers are expected to observe, all
having been thoroughly worked out and codified by the orthodox jurists
of the Umma from among the generations of the Salaf, there are today in
our midst those who are not ashamed to depart from these sacred
conventions in favour of opinions espoused by persons who are not even
trained in the Sacred Law at all let alone enough to be a Qadi or a
Faqih � the rightful heir and source from which they should receive
practical guidance in the first place. Instead they rely on engineers
or scientists and on those who are not among its ahl yet speak in the
name of our Law. With these "reformist" preachers and da'i comes a
departure from the traditional ideas about the rules of
Siyar/Jihad/Qital, i.e., warfare. Do they not realise that by doing so
and by following them they will be ignoring the limitations and
restrictions cherished and protected by our pious forefathers and that
they will be turning their backs on the Jama'a and Ijma' and that they
will be engaging in an act for which there is no accepted legal
precedent among the orthodoxy in our entire history? Have they
forgotten that part of the original maqsad of warfare/jihad was to
limit warfare itself and that warfare for Muslims is not total war, so
that women, children and innocent bystanders are not to be killed and
property not to be needlessly destroyed?
To put it plainly, there is simply no legal precedent in the history of
Sunni Islam for the tactic of attacking civilians and overtly
non-military targets. Yet the awful reality today is that a minority of
Sunni Muslims, whether in Iraq or Beslan or elsewhere, have perpetuated
such acts in the name of Jihad and on behalf of the Umma. Perhaps the
first such mission to break this long and admirable precedent was the
Hamas bombing on a public bus in Jerusalem in 1994 � not that long ago.
(Ponder about this fact!) Immediately after the incident, the almost
unanimous response of the orthodox Shafi'i jurists from the Far East
and the Hadramawt was not only to make clear that the minimum legal
position from our Sacred Law is untenable, but also to warn the Umma
that by going down that path we would be compromising the optimum way
of Ihsan and that we would thereby be running a real risk of losing the
moral and religious high ground. Those who still defend this tactic,
invoking blindly a nebulous usuli principle that it is justifiable out
of darura while ignoring the far'i strictures, must look long and hard
at what they are doing and ask the question: was it absolutely
necessary, and if so, why was this not done before 1994, and especially
during the earlier wars, most of all during the disasters of 1948 and
1967?
How could such a tactic be condoned by one of our rightly guided
caliphs and a heroic fighter such as 'Ali (may Allah ennoble his
face!), who when in the Battle of the Trench his notorious non-Muslim
opponent, who was seconds away from being killed by him, spat on his
noble face, immediately left him alone. When asked later his reasons
for withdrawing when Allah clearly gave him power over him, answered:
"I was fighting for the sake of God, and when he spat in my face I
feared that if I killed him it would have been out of revenge and
spite!" Far from being an act of cowardice, this characterizes Muslim
chivalry: fighting, yet not out of anger.
In actual fact, the only precedent for this tactic from Muslim history
is the cowardly terrorism carried out by the "Assassins" of the Nizari
Isma'ilis. Their most famous victim was the suicide mission in
assassinating the wise minister and the Defender of the Faith who could
have been alive to deal with the Fitna of the Crusades: Nizam al-Mulk,
the Jamal al-Shuhada' (may Allah encompass him with His mercy!) on
Thursday, the 10th of the holy month of Ramadan 485/14 October 1092.
Ironically, in the case of Palestine, the precedent was set not by
Muslims but by early Zionist terrorist gangs such as the Irgun, who,
for example, infamously bombed the King David Hotel in Jerusalem on the
22nd of July 1946. So ask yourself as an upright and godfearing
believer whose every organ will be interrogated: do you really want to
follow the footsteps and the models of those Zionists and the heterodox
Isma'ilis, instead of the path taken by our Beloved MHMD may Allah's
blessings and peace be upon him!, who for almost half of the
{twenty-three} years of his mission endured Meccan persecution,
humiliation and insults? Is anger your only strength? If so, remember
the Prophetic advice that it is from the Devil. And is darura your only
excuse for following them instead into their condemned lizard-holes? Do
you think that any of our famous Mujahid from history, such as 'Ali,
Salah al-Din, and Muhammad al-Fatih (may Allah be well pleased with
them all!) will ever condone the article you quoted and these acts
today in Baghdad, Jerusalem, Cairo, Bali, Casablanca, Beslan, London
and New York, some of them committed on days when it is traditionally
forbidden by our Law to fight: Dhu l-Qa'da and al-Hijja, Muharram and
Rajab? Every person of fitra will see that this is nothing other than a
sunna of perversion. This is what happens to the Banu Adam when the
wahm is abandoned by 'aql, when one of the maqasid justifies any
wasila, when the realities of furu' are indiscriminately overruled by
generalities of usul, and most tragically, as illustrated from the
eternal blunder of Iblis, when Divine tawakkul is replaced by basic
nafs.
Yes, we are one Umma such that when one part of the macro-body is
attacked somewhere, another part inevitably feels the pain. Yet at the
same time, our own history has shown that we have also been a wise and
sensible, instead of a reactive and impulsive, Umma. That is the secret
of our success, and that is where our strengths will always lie as has
been promised by Divine Writ: in sabr and in tawakkul. It is already
common knowledge that when Jerusalem fell to the Crusading forces on 15
July 1099 and was occupied by them, and despite its civilians having
been raped, killed, tortured and plundered and the Umma at the time
humiliated and insulted � acts far worse than what can be imagined in
today's occupation � that it took more than 100 years of patience and
legitimate struggle under the Eye of the Almighty before He allowed
Salah al-Din to liberate Jerusalem. We should have been taught from
childhood by our fathers and mothers about the need to prioritize and
about how to reconcile the spheres of our global concerns with those of
our local responsibilities � as we will definitely not escape the
questioning in the grave about the latter � so that by this insight we
may hope that our response will not be disproportionate nor
inappropriate. This is the true meaning [haqiqa] of the true advice
[nasiha] of our Beloved Prophet MHMD may Allah's blessings and peace be
upon him!: to leave what does not concern one [tark ma la ya'nih],
where one's time and energy could be better spent in improving the lot
of the Muslims today or benefiting others in this world.
Yes, we will naturally feel the pain when any of our brothers and
sisters die unjustly anywhere when their deaths have been caused
directly by non-Muslims, but it MUST be the more painful for us when
they die in Iraq, for example, when they are caused directly by the
self-destroying/martyrdom/suicide missions carried out by one of our
own. On tafakkur, the second pain should make us realize and feel
ins.�f that missions of this sort when the means and the legal
particulars are all wrong � by scripture and reason � are not only a
scourge for our non-Muslim neighbours but a plague and great fitna for
this mercied Umma, so that out of mas.lah.a and the general good, it
must be stopped.
To this end, we could sum up a point of law tersely in the following
maxim: two wrongs do not make the second right [lA yaj'alu Z-ZulmAni
th-thAniya Haqqan]. If the first pain becomes one of the mitigating
factors and ends up being used as a justification by our misguided
young to retaliate in a manner which our Sacred Law definitely and
without doubt outlaws (which makes your original article the more
appalling, as its author will have passed the special age of 40), then
the latter pain should by its graver significance generate a greater
and more meaningful response. With this intention, we may hope that we
shall regain our former high ground and reputation and rediscover our
honour and chivalrous qualities and be no less brave.
I end with the first ever Verse revealed in the Qur'an, which bestowed
the military option only upon those in a position of authority:
wa-qAtilU fI sabIli LlAhi l-ladhIna yuqAtilUnakum
wa-lA ta'tadU inna LlAha lA yuHibbu l-mu'tadIna
[And fight for the sake of God those who fight you:
but do not commit excesses,
for God does not love those who exceed (i.e., the Law)]
(al-Baqara, 2:190).
Even then, peace is preferred over war:
wa-in janaHU li-s-salmi fa-jnaH la-hA wa-tawakkal 'ala LlAhi
[Now if they incline toward peace, then incline to it,
and place your trust in God]
(al-Anfal, 8:61).
Even if you think that the authority in question has decided wrongly
and you disagree with their decision not to war with the non-Muslim
state upon which you wish war to be declared, then take heed of the
following Divine command:
yA ayyhuhA l-ladhIna AmanU aTI'u l-LAha
wa-aTI'u r-rasUla wa-uli l-amri minkum
[O believers, obey Allah, and obey the messenger,
and those with authority among you!]
(al-Nisa', 4:58).
If you still insist that your authority should declare war with the
non-Muslim state upon which you wish war to be declared, then the most
you could do in this capacity is to lobby your authority for it.
However, if your anger is so unrestrained that its fire brings out the
worse in you to the point that your disagreement with your Muslim
authority leads you to declare war on those you want your authority to
declare war on, and you end up resorting to violence, then know with
certainty that you have violated our own religious Laws. For then you
will have taken the Shari'a into your own hands. If indeed you reach
the point of committing a violent act, then know that by our own Law
you would have been automatically classified as a rebel [ahl al-baghy]
whom the authority has the right to punish: even if the authority is
perceived to be or is indeed corrupt [fasiq]. (The definition of rebels
is: "Muslims who have disagreed [not by heart or by tongue but by hand]
with the authority even if it is unjust [ja'ir] and they are correct
['adilun]" [al-Nawawi, Majmu', 20:337].)
That is why, my brethren, when the military option is not a legal one
for the individuals concerned, you must not lose hope in Allah; and let
us be reminded of the words of our Beloved MHMD may Allah's blessings
and peace be upon him!:
afDalu l-jihAdi kalimatu Haqqin 'inda sulTAnin jA'irin
[The best Jihad is a true (i.e., brave) word in the face of a
tyrannical ruler]. (From a Hadith of Abu Sa'id al-Khudri
raDiy-Allahu-anhu.gif may Allah be well pleased with him!) among
others, which is related by Ibn al-Ja'd, Ahmad, Ibn Humayd, Ibn Majah,
Abu Dawud, al-Tirmidhi, al-Nasa'i, Abu Ya'la, Abu Bakr al-Ruyani,
al-Tabarani, al-Hakim, and al-Bayhaqi, with variants.)
For it is possible still, and especially, today to fight injustice or
zulm and taghut in this dunya through your tongue and your words and
through the pen and the courts, which still amounts in the Prophetic
idiom to Jihad, even if not through war. As in the reminder [tadhkira]
of the great scholar, Imam al-Zarkashi: war is only a means to an end
and as long as some other way is open to us, that should be the course
trod upon by Muslims.
Masha-Allah, how true indeed are the Blessed words, so that the latter
Mujahid or activist will be no less brave or lacking in any courage
with his or her campaign for a just cause in an oppressive country or
one needing reforms than the former Mujahid or patriot who fought
bravely for his country in a just war.
fa-t-taqillaha wa-raji' mufatashata nafsika wa-islaha fasadiha wa-huwa
hasbuna wa-ni'ma l-wakil wa-la hawla wa-la quwwata illa billahi
l-'aliyyi l-'azim! wa-salawatuhu 'ala sayyidina Muhammadin wa-alihi
wasallim waradiyallahu tabaraka wa-ta'ala 'an sadatina ashabi
rasulillahi ajma'in wa-'anna ma'ahum wa-fihim wa-yaj'aluna min hizbihim
bi-rahmatikaya arhama r-rahimin! Amin!
May this be of benefit.
With heartfelt wishes for salam & tayyiba from Oxford to Brunei,
M. Afifi al-Akiti 16 Jumada II 1426 23 VII 2005
Select Bibliography:
Ba'alawi, Abd al-Rahman. Bughyat al-Mustarshidin fi Talkhis Fatawa ba'd al-Muta'akhkhirin. Bulaq, 1309 H.
al-Bakri. Hashiyat I'anat al-Talibin. 4 vols. Bulaq, 1300 H.
al-Ghazali. Ihya' 'Ulum al-Din. Edited by Badawi Ahmad Tabanah. 4 vols.
Cairo: Dar Ihya' al-Kutub al-'Arabiyya, 1957.
Ibn 'Arabi, Qadi. Ahkam al-Qur'an. Edited by 'Ali Muhammad al-Bajawi. 4 vols. Cairo: Dar Ihya' al-Kutub al-'Arabiyya, 1957-8.
Ibn Barakat. Fayd al-Ilah al-Malik fi Hall Alfaz 'Umdat al-Salik
wa-'Uddat al-Nasik. Edited by Mustafa Muhammad 'Imara. 2 vols.
Singapore: al-Haramayn, 1371 H.
Ibn Hajar al-Haytami. Tuhfa al-Muhtaj bi-Sharh al-Minhaj al-Nawawi in
Hawashi al-Shirwani wa-Ibn Qasim 'ala Tuhfa al-Muhtaj. Edited by
Muhammad 'Abd al-'Aziz al-Khalidi. 13 vols. Beirut: Dar al-Kutub
al-'Ilmiyya, 1996.
al-Jassas, Ahkam al-Qur'an. 3 vols. Istanbul: Dar al-Khilafa al-'Aliya, 1335-1338.
al-Kurdi. Fatawa al-Kurdi al-Madani. In Qurrat al-'Ayn bi-Fatawa
'Ulama' al-Haramayn. Edited by Muhammad 'Ali b. Hussayn al-Maliki.
Bogor: Maktaba 'Arafat, n.d.
al-Nawawi. al-Majmu' Sharh al-Muhadhdhab. Edited by Mahmud Matraji. 22 vols. Beirut: Dar al-Fikr, 1996.
al-Nawawi al-Jawi. Marah Labid Tafsir al-Nawawi: al-Tafsir al-Munir
li-Ma'alim al-Tanzil al-Mufassir 'an Wujuh Mahasin al-Ta'wil al-Musamma
Marah Labid li-Kashf Ma'na Qur'an Majid. 2 vols. Bulaq, 1305 H.
�
2005-08-05
------------- Rasul Allah (sallah llahu alaihi wa sallam) said: "Whoever knows himself, knows his Lord" and whoever knows his Lord has been given His gnosis and nearness.
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Posted By: rami
Date Posted: 14 September 2005 at 10:20pm
Bi ismillahir rahmanir raheem
If you would like to start a discussion on this issue and you are not
able to post in the section please do so in the general or interfaith
section.
------------- Rasul Allah (sallah llahu alaihi wa sallam) said: "Whoever knows himself, knows his Lord" and whoever knows his Lord has been given His gnosis and nearness.
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Posted By: DavidC
Date Posted: 15 September 2005 at 1:35am
Brilliant, but does the Shaykh have a plan of action?
Are the misdirected "mujahadeen" even going to read this fatwa?
It would seen OBL et. al. are to be considered hypocrites and innovators, but
the Shaykh's fatwa stops short of compelling any implementation of sharia.
Children like to roll up papers and play at swordfighting, buy Al-Qaeda has
a real scimitar! And it is pointed at the heart of Islam!
Even a masterfull fatwa seems an insufficient defense.
------------- Christian; Wesleyan M.Div.
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Posted By: rami
Date Posted: 15 September 2005 at 2:21am
Bi ismillahir rahmanir raheem
This fatwa is a formal legal ruling which is binding on those who
follow the shafii madhhab, but as the fatwah also indicats the other
four schools of thought in islam Hanafi, Maliki, Hanbali have a similar
view.
It serves as a guidance for those who havent fallen into the trap and
wrong ideology of these people and gives the average muslim a weapon
with which to defend themself against there alegation and ideas but
more importantly it tells muslims in what light there actions should be
viewd.
This war is a war of ideas first then action not the other way around
becouse it is there ideology which drives them to there acts.
One thing i hope comes out of the above fatwa apart from its main aims
and puropses is that people are enlightened about the depth of analysis
that a proper muslim scholar goes through before coming to a decision
about a matter and why it is esential to follow established and
traditional understanding of islam. Many people think the matter is as
simple as looking at a few verses and hadith but that is only becouse
they havnt been exposed to real scholarship.
------------- Rasul Allah (sallah llahu alaihi wa sallam) said: "Whoever knows himself, knows his Lord" and whoever knows his Lord has been given His gnosis and nearness.
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Posted By: DavidC
Date Posted: 15 September 2005 at 5:24am
But how do Muslims find out about this and other fatwas?
How does the authority of this fatwa compare to Khomeni's fatwa
demanding the death of Salman Rushdie?
------------- Christian; Wesleyan M.Div.
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Posted By: rami
Date Posted: 15 September 2005 at 6:18am
Bi ismillahir rahmanir raheem
You need to have an understanding of the schools of thought in Islam.
Sunni Islam has 4 acceptable schools of thought, meaning a muslim can
follow any of these and he will be considered to be following right
guidance. This authority and guidance comes from certain commands in
the Quran and Prophetic tradions of the prophet, such as the command by
Rasul allah (sallah llahu alaihi wa sallam) to stick to the main body
of the Ummah as it will never go astray. Main body here meaning major
group of scholars, now looking back on Islamic History the main body of
Scholars as well as muslim have always adhered to the Four schools of
thought.
There are other evidences and the issue is not just based on what i said but i am trying to give a general answer.
Khoimani is a Shia muslim his auhtority in Sunni Islam does not
exist, his Fatwa is null and void. A muslim can not order the
execution of another person for the reasons they have given and on top
of that in a place and country where they have no authority to do
anything. Basicly it doesnt hold water in Sunni Islam.
The last Muslim authority to exist was the Ottoman Khalifah in 1920,
but the colonial powers took care of it so the kind of authority you
are asking about to implament publicise this does not exist.
Today each muslim has to learn and understand and implament Islam for
them self based on these schools of thought this is the state we are in
there is no global muslim authority to take care of the affairs of the
ummah.
We dont have an organisation like the catholic church if that is what
you are asking, the closest thing are these Madhhabs and the system in
place to ensure that each scholar is qualafied to give a ruling
according to each school.
------------- Rasul Allah (sallah llahu alaihi wa sallam) said: "Whoever knows himself, knows his Lord" and whoever knows his Lord has been given His gnosis and nearness.
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Posted By: DavidC
Date Posted: 15 September 2005 at 9:16am
Thank you, Rami. I was not aware of the Sunni Madhabs.
Good post and explanation.
I hope the tape released yesterday by Zarqawi declaring total war on Shiite
Islam will make some of the self-proclaimed mujahadeen reconsider their
spiritual position. My understanding is that in Islam it is forgiveable to be in
error, but if one is shown the truth and then rejects it one must repent or
suffer eternal consequences.
------------- Christian; Wesleyan M.Div.
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Posted By: rami
Date Posted: 15 September 2005 at 11:22am
Bi ismillahir rahmanir raheem
These people are so unbelievable that you would think they are being paid to say such things.
If a person is ignorant of say the prohabition of drinking alcohol and
he does then allah will not hold him accountable until he learns it,
but having said that a person has the responsability to learn the
fundamentals of islam called "fard al ain" ie obligatory islamic
knowledge. So his not knowing can not be an excuse for the rest of his
life.
Otherwise yes if they are informed of the truth and reject it they are
accountable for there actions. There are clear prohabitions in islam
about killing civilians and killing muslims, as stated in the fatwa
above they are stated specificly by our prophet. These people also have
an obligation to ask the scholars for the right course of acction but
it seems they have taken matters into there own hands.
You might be interested in http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/newmadhh.htm - this article about the four schools of thought, it explains them and there history.
------------- Rasul Allah (sallah llahu alaihi wa sallam) said: "Whoever knows himself, knows his Lord" and whoever knows his Lord has been given His gnosis and nearness.
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Posted By: rami
Date Posted: 17 September 2005 at 11:58pm
Bi ismillahir rahmanir raheem
Some types of knowlege in Islam only become obligatory and hence you
are held accountable for not knowing are the Islamic knowdge on things
you are involved in.
An example would be the knowledge about Marriage in Islam, prior to
getting married you are not obliged to know it but once you prepare to
get married it then becomes Obligatory upon the person to learn the
rules and adab of marriage. Its similar for being involved in business
and any other thing a person may involve himself in.
Needless to say it is the same with Fighting Jihad.
------------- Rasul Allah (sallah llahu alaihi wa sallam) said: "Whoever knows himself, knows his Lord" and whoever knows his Lord has been given His gnosis and nearness.
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Posted By: bakkah1
Date Posted: 02 October 2005 at 8:55pm
What do you do when your enemy kills women and children? As the US has done in the past, present and will do in the future. They have wiped out entire cities of people, and now preach that they target only civilians. Until the next time they have justification to break their own rules.
�O Prophet (Muhammad)! Strive hard against the disbelievers and the hypocrites, and be harsh against them, their abode is Hell, � and worst indeed is that destination�
[al-Tawbah 9:73]
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Posted By: AhmadJoyia
Date Posted: 03 October 2005 at 12:48pm
My brother bakkah1 are you serious in your question?
First of all define your enemy?
Secondly even if it is true as you have defined, are you suggesting to do the same as the "bad" guys do? Then what is the difference? ?Clearly, this is not suggested by the verse you have quoted.
Thirdly, who has to define as when an individual has to take the law in his own hand? Reading Quranic verses out of their right context won't help this way.
Please read the whole surah "Att-Toba" with complete context under which this verse must be understood and not in isolation. Thanks
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Posted By: rami
Date Posted: 04 October 2005 at 12:46am
Bi ismillahir rahmanir raheem
We dont behave as they
do, The Quran and sunnah forbids killing women and children. Allah has
set limits and this is one of them.
This what we shouldnt do quote verses of the quran against other
versus of the quran and sunnah, as if Allah and his mesenger
contradicted them selfs.
if i bring you another verse saying allah hates those who trangress all
limits and bounds will you think there is a contradiction?
The Quran explains the Quran, strive hard against them but follow the
limits allah has set, Not killing women and children is one of these
limits.
------------- Rasul Allah (sallah llahu alaihi wa sallam) said: "Whoever knows himself, knows his Lord" and whoever knows his Lord has been given His gnosis and nearness.
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Posted By: bakkah1
Date Posted: 29 October 2005 at 4:54am
I know and I agree, I just dont like the hyprocrisy of the west, when they throw atomic bombs on people and have ten of thousands more nuclear warheads waiting to be used, and deny those to Muslim nations, and speak of themselves as so highly that they only target combatants.
There is an underlying question of using any type of bomb. That is a catapulted bomb does not know where it may land and who it may kill. It may and does kill women and children. So is that allowed Islamically or not?? Of course the enemy uses it, and justifies that they only target combatants, so is that the permission slip to use. When you know the results do not match the intention. You can only know who you are killing when in hand to hand combat with swords . So it that the only weapon Muslims may use when its enemy has F-160 fighter jets and stealth weapons. Of couse there is no declared war, but what to do when one is?
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Posted By: rami
Date Posted: 29 October 2005 at 9:00pm
Bi ismilahir rahmanir raheem
It is haram in Islam to kill using fire, as allah clearly states in the Quran that he is the only one who can punish with fire.
What kind of fighting do you imagine taking place where civilians live?
if the civilian ventures onto the battle field that is a different
issue but your talking about taking the war to civilian areas which is
not permisable unless you can ensure there safety.
these people who blow them selves up delibratly target civilians.
------------- Rasul Allah (sallah llahu alaihi wa sallam) said: "Whoever knows himself, knows his Lord" and whoever knows his Lord has been given His gnosis and nearness.
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Posted By: bakkah1
Date Posted: 30 October 2005 at 7:32am
Assalamo Alaikum
Of course the punishment of fire is reserved for Allah Tallah.
My question is one not of theory, but of practical tactics. How should a Muslim country fight a war and with what type of weapons are they allowed to use Islamically? Swords and rifles, of course, what about bombs/missles thrown from airplanes or what about tanks that throw their bombs great distances? Nuclear bomb? Land mines?
Civilians dont venture onto the battlefield, the battlefield is where they live, the aspects of war have changed from 1400 years ago, it is entire cities, beachfronts and the other strategic points.
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Posted By: rami
Date Posted: 02 November 2005 at 4:47am
Bi ismillahir rahmanir raheem
Assalamo Alaikum
Do we make Halal what Allah has made haram for practical reasons?
since when have muslims used modern weapons in civilian areas we have
been the one to be invaded, would you advocate killing muslims?
i suggest you look at modern Jihad fighters and the tactics they use, no jet fighters tanks or shelling of civilian areas.
There is no excuse period, if you feel the need to kill civilians on an
excuse of practicality than you have not done jihad properly starting
with jihad an nafs and culminating in the jihad with the body and soul.
Ali (hs) would not kill his enimie imdietly even after he spat in his face so not to kill him out of anger as this was haram.
------------- Rasul Allah (sallah llahu alaihi wa sallam) said: "Whoever knows himself, knows his Lord" and whoever knows his Lord has been given His gnosis and nearness.
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Posted By: bakkah1
Date Posted: 03 November 2005 at 12:35pm
My direct question was whether using bombs was right or not, How did you get the idea that I was advocating killing civilians? The modern jihad fighters I know about are commiting suicide because they are facing military frustration and the fact that there is no organized khilafah where people are uniting under to fight.
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Posted By: Shamil
Date Posted: 06 November 2005 at 9:52pm
A very useful site on the fiqh of the four Sunni maddhabs is:
http://www.geocities.com/mutmainaa/law/law_resources.html#maliki - http://www.geocities.com/mutmainaa/law/law_resources.html#ma liki
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Posted By: Shamil
Date Posted: 06 November 2005 at 10:03pm
AhmadJoyia wrote:
Please read the whole surah "Att-Toba" with complete context under which this verse must be understood and not in isolation. Thanks
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All Muslims should read Tafsir Ibn-Kathir concerning At-Tauba, as it has been cited out of context both by uneducated Muslims to justify patently unIslamic practices and by non-Muslims determined to disparage Islam.
http://tafsir.com/default.asp?sid=9&tid=20702 - http://tafsir.com/default.asp?sid=9&tid=20702
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