#07
- Human Rights In Islam Since God is the absolute
and sole master of men and the universe, He is the
Sovereign Lord, the Sustainer, and Nourisher, the
Merciful, whose mercy enshrines all beings; and since
He has given each man human dignity and honor, and
breathed into him of His own spirit, it follows that,
united in Him and through Him, and apart from their
other human attributes, men are substantially the
same and no tangible and actual distinction can be
made among them, on account of their accidental differences
such as nationality, color or race. Every human being
is thereby related to all others and all become one
community of brotherhood in their honorable and pleasant
servitude to the most compassionate Lord of the Universe.
In such a heavenly atmosphere the Islamic confession
of the oneness of God stands dominant and central,
and necessarily entails the concept of the oneness
of humanity and the brotherhood of mankind.
Although an Islamic state may be set up in any part
of the earth, Islam does not seek to restrict human
rights or privileges to the geographical limits of
its own state. Islam has laid down some universal
fundamental rights for humanity as a whole, which
are to be observed and respected under all circumstances
whether such a person is resident within the territory
of the Islamic state or outside it, whether he is
at peace with the state or at war. The Qur'an very
clearly states:
O believers, be you securers of justice,
witnesses for God. Let not detestation for a people
move you not to be equitable; be equitable –
that is nearer to the God-fearing. (5:8)
Human blood is sacred in any case and cannot be spilled
without justification. And if anyone violates this
sanctity of human blood by killing a soul without
justification, the Qur'an equates it to the killing
of entire mankind.
...Whoso slays a soul not to retaliate for
a soul slain, nor for corruption done in the land,
should be as if he had slain mankind altogether.
(5:32)
It is not permissible to oppress women, children,
old people, the sick or the wounded. Women's honor
and chastity are to be respected under all circumstances.
The hungry person 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 among its enemies.
When we speak of human rights in Islam we really
mean that these rights have been granted by God; they
have not been granted by any king or by any legislative
assembly. The rights granted by the kings or legislative
assemblies can also be withdrawn in the same manner
in which they are conferred. The same in the case
with the rights accepted and recognized by the dictators.
They can confer them when they please and withdraw
them when they wish; and they can openly violate them
when they like. But since in Islam human rights have
been conferred by God, no one on earth has the right
or authority to make any amendment or change in the
rights given by Him. No one has the right to abrogate
them or withdraw them. Nor are these basic human rights
which are conferred on paper for the sake of show
and exhibition and denied in actual life when the
show is over. Nor are they like philosophical concepts
which have no sanctions behind them.
The charter and the proclamations and the resolutions
of the United Nations cannot be compared with the
rights sanctioned by God, because the former is not
applicable on anybody while the latter is applicable
on every believer. They are a part of the Islamic
faith. Every Muslim, or administrators who claim to
be Muslim, will have to accept, recognize and enforce
them. If they fail to enforce them, and start denying
the rights that have been guaranteed by God, or make
amendments and changes in them, or practically violate
them while paying lip service to them, the verdict
of the Qur'an for such government is clear and unequivocal:
Those who do not judge by what God has sent
down are the disbelievers. (5:44)
Human Rights in an Islamic State
1. The Security of Life and Property
In the address which the Prophet delivered on the
occasion of the Farewell Hajj, he said: "Your
lives and properties are forbidden to one another
until you meet your Lord on the Day of Resurrection."
The Prophet has also said about the dhimmis
(non-Muslim citizens of the Muslim state):
"One who kills a man under covenant (i.e. dhimmi)
will not even smell the fragrance of Paradise."
2. The Protection of Honor
The Qur'an states:
You who believe,
i) do not let one make fun of another
ii) do not defame one another
iii) do not insult by using nicknames
iv) do not backbite or speak ill of one another
(49:11-12)
3. Sanctity and Security of Private Life
The Qur'an has laid down the injunctions:
i) Do not spy on one another. (49:12)
ii) Do not enter any houses unless you are
sure of the occupant's consent. (24:27)
4. The Security of Personal Freedom
Islam has laid down the principle that no citizen
can be imprisoned unless his guilt has been proven
in an open court. To arrest a man only on the basis
of suspicion and to throw him into a prison without
proper court proceedings and without providing him
a reasonable opportunity to produce his defense is
not permissible in Islam.
5. The Right to Protest Against Tyranny
Among the rights that Islam has conferred on human
beings is the right to protest against a government's
tyranny. Referring to this, the Qur'an says:
God does not love evil talk in public unless
it is by someone who has been injured thereby. (4:148)
In Islam, as has been argued earlier, all power and
authority belongs to God, and with man there is only
delegated power which becomes a trust; everyone who
becomes a recipient of such a power has to stand in
awful reverence before his people towards whom and
for whose sake he will be called upon to use these
powers. This was acknowledged by Abu Bakr, who said
in his very first address as Caliph: "Cooperate
with me when I am right, but correct me when I commit
error; obey me so long as I follow the commandments
of Allah and His Prophet; but turn away from me when
I deviate."
6. Freedom of Expression
Islam gives the right of freedom of thought and expression
to all citizens of the Islamic state on the condition
that it should be used for the propagation of virtue
and truth and not for spreading evil and wickedness.
The Islamic concept of freedom is much superior to
the concept prevalent in the West. Under no circumstances
would Islam allow evil and wickedness to be propagated.
It also does not give anybody the right to use abusive
or offensive language in the name of criticism. It
was the practice of the Muslims to enquire from the
Prophet whether a divine injunction had been revealed
to him on any given matter. If he said that he had
received no divine injunction, the Muslims freely
expressed their opinions on the matter.
7. Freedom of Association
Islam has also given people the right to freedom
of association and formation of parties or organizations.
This right is also subject to certain general rules.
8: Freedom of Conscience and Conviction
Islam has laid down the injunction:
There should be no coercion in the matter
of faith. (2:256)
On the contrary, totalitarian societies totally deprive
the individuals of their freedom. Indeed, this undue
exaltation of the state authority, curiously enough,
postulates a sort of servitude, of slavishness on
the part of man. At one time, slavery meant total
control over man – now that type of slavery
has been legally abolished, but in its place, totalitarian
societies impose a similar sort of control over individuals.
9. Protection of Religious Sentiments
Along with the freedom of conviction and freedom
of conscience, Islam has given the right to the individual
that his religious sentiments will be given due respect
and nothing will be said or done which may encroach
upon his right.
10. Protection from Arbitrary Imprisonment
Islam also recognizes the right of the individuals
not to be arrested or imprisoned for the offenses
of others. The Qur'an states clearly:
No bearer of burdens shall be made to bear
the burden of another. (35:18)
11. The Right to Basic Necessities of Life
Islam has recognized the right of the needy people
for help and assistance to be provided to them:
And in their wealth there is acknowledged
right for the needy and destitute. (51:19)
12. Equality Before the Law
Islam gives its citizens the right to absolute and
complete equality in the eyes of the law.
13. Accountability of Rulers to the Law
A woman belonging to a high and noble family was
arrested in connection with theft. The case was brought
to the Prophet, and it was recommended that she might
be spared the punishment of theft. The Prophet replied,
"The nations that lived before you were
destroyed by God because they punished the common
man for their offenses, and let their dignitaries
go unpunished for their crimes. I swear by Him Who
holds my life in His hand that even if Fatimah, daughter
of Muhammad, had committed this crime, I would have
amputated her hand."
14. The Right to Participate in the Affairs
of State
And their business is (conducted) through
consultation among themselves. (42:38)
The Shura or the legislative assembly has no other
meaning other than that: the executive head of the
government and the members of the assembly should
be elected by free and independent choice of the people.
Lastly, it is to be made clear that Islam tries to
achieve the above mentioned human rights and many
others not only by providing certain legal safeguards,
but mainly by inviting mankind to transcend the lower
level of animal life to be able to go beyond the mere
ties fostered by the kinship of blood, racial superiority,
linguistic arrogance, and economic privileges. It
invites mankind to move on to a plane of existence
where, by reason of his inner excellence, man can
realize the ideal of the Brotherhood of man. |