The Education Policy
Article 170
It is imperative that Islamic ‘Aqidah is the basis for the education curriculum. The syllabi
and the ways of teaching are all drafted in a manner that does not deviate from
this basis.
It is said
linguistically: a man learns knowledge (‘ilm) – he arrives at the true
knowledge, and he learns something – he knows it. In the al-Muhit
dictionary it mentions “he learnt it is like he heard it as knowledge…and
knowledge is in the person, and the man is a scholar, and knowledgeable”. This
linguistic meaning is the basis of the meaning of the word knowledge and its
derivations, and so the linguistic meaning of the word and its derivations are
taken as long as there is no indication present which transfers it to the
terminological meaning. What is meant by “education curriculum” is the
linguistic meaning; in other words every knowledge. The education curriculum is
an expression meaning the basis upon which the information which is desired to
be learnt is built upon; from one angle this is the subjects which are
encompassed by this information and from another angle how this information is
going to be given. It therefore encompasses two issues: firstly, the topics for
study, and secondly, the ways of teaching. Since the Islamic ‘Aqidah is
the basis of the Muslim’s life, and the basis for the Islamic State, and for
the relationships between the Muslims, in other words the basis for the
society, then it is imperative that every piece of information that the Muslim
receives is based upon the Islamic ‘Aqidah. This is irrespective of
whether the information was connected to his life, or to his relationship with
others, or to the political situation in the State, or connected to any aspect
of this life, or what came before it or what comes after it. The Messenger
used to first call people to Islam, in other
words for them to embrace the Islamic ‘Aqidah. Once they embraced Islam,
he
started teaching them the rules
of Islam, and so the ‘Aqidah was the basis of the teachings of the
Messenger
to the Muslims. When the sun was eclipsed at
the time that his
son Ibrahim died, the people said that the sun
had eclipsed due to the death of Ibrahim, and so he
said to them “The Sun and the Moon are two
signs from the signs of Allah, they do not eclipse due to anyone’s death nor
due to anyone’s life” (agreed
upon). And so the Prophet
made the ‘Aqidah the basis for the
information he
gave regarding the solar and
lunar eclipses. It is reported by al-Bukhari from Abu Sa‘id al-Khudri who said “We
went out with the Messenger of Allah
in the
expedition of Bani Mustaliq and we took some prisoners from the Arabs and so we
wanted the women, and we were afraid about withdrawal (coitus interruptus), and
we wanted to engage in it, and so we asked the Messenger of Allah
and he
said “There is nothing upon you if you do it, since truly Allah has Written
what He Created until the Day of Judgement”, and in another narration they
asked the Prophet
about withdrawal and he
said “There is nothing upon you if you
do it, since Allah has Written whoever He Created until the day of Judgement”
and Muslim reported similar to this. So the Messenger
answered their question
regarding withdrawal from the angle of whether it prevents pregnancy, and made
belief in the Knowledge of Allah (swt) the basis of his
answer; in other words he
made the Islamic ‘Aqidah the basis of
his
answer. And there are several narrations which
indicate that making the Islamic ‘Aqidah the basis for the education
curriculum is an obligatory issue upon the State, and that it is not permitted
for it to stray from that at all. However, making the ‘Aqidah the basis
for the education curriculum does not mean that every piece of information emanated
from it, because that was not requested by the Shari’ah. This also
contradicts the reality, since not every piece of information emanates from the
Islamic ‘Aqidah, since the ‘Aqidah is specific to beliefs and
laws, and has no relationship to anything else. Rather, the meaning of making
it the basis for the education curriculum only means that all the information
connected to beliefs and laws must emanate from the Islamic ‘Aqidah,
since that is what the ‘Aqidah came with. As for with respect to any information
other than beliefs and laws, the meaning of making the Islamic ‘Aqidah
the basis for it is that these information and laws should be built upon the
Islamic ‘Aqidah; in other words the Islamic ‘Aqidah is used as
the criterion, so anything that contradicts it is rejected and not believed in,
and whatever does not contradict it is permitted to be accepted. So the ‘Aqidah
is the criterion for acceptance and beliefs.
As for the angle of
information and learning, there is nothing that prohibits it from being learnt,
since the evidences which encourage seeking knowledge are general; the Prophet
said “Seeking knowledge is obligatory”,
al-Zarkashi said in al-Tadhkirah “and al-Hafiz Jamal al-Dinn al-Mizzi
said: this is reported from many paths such that it reaches the level of a Hasan
narration”, and the word “knowledge” which is general covering all knowledge
that is beneficial. And Abu Dawud, Ahmad, Ibn Hibban, and al-Bayhaqi in al-Shu‘ab
all reported from Kathir b. Qays that he
said, “Whoever sets out on a path
seeking knowledge, Allah sets him on a path from the paths of Paradise”
and the word “knowledge” is general, covering all knowledge that is beneficial.
And in the noble
Quran there are ideas and beliefs which contradict Islam such as “and
nothing destroys us except time” (TMQ
45:24) and other such examples, which indicate the permissibility of
learning those ideas which contradict the Islamic ‘Aqidah. Accordingly,
to learn information without adopting it or believing in it is permissible and
there is nothing wrong with it, but what is prohibited is to adopt the ideas
that contradict the Islamic ‘Aqidah. For example, the idea of Darwin
says: people evolved from apes, whereas Allah (swt) said “Verily the
likeness of Isa before Allah is the likeness of Adam. He created him from dust,
then (He) said to him: “Be” – and he was” (TMQ 3:59), and the communist theory of material evolution
claims that material evolves eternally, and there is nothing else which
developed it, and so there is no God, whereas Allah (swt) says “O you who
believe, believe in Allah” (TMQ
4:136), in other words in His (swt) existence, and He
(swt) says “Allah Who created the heavens and the earth and all that is
between them” (TMQ 25:59).
The Book of Pre-Islamic (Jaahili) Literature mentions that the story of
Ibrahim was fabricated and that there is no substance in it but rather it was
invented by the narrators, even though the story of Ibrahim is mentioned in the
Quran and it tells it as a story that occurred in reality and so denying it is
a rejection of the Quran. Therefore, these types of information and anything
similar are not placed in the education curriculum if that would lead to them
being adopted and believed in, and so therefore for example they would not be a
part of primary education, since this would lead to it being adopted (by the
young children learning). In the same manner, if it is made part of the
curriculum, it is imperative that its incorrectness be explained and that its
ideas are dismantled such that no one would adopt them or believe in them.
In this manner, the
Islamic ‘Aqidah is made the basis for the education curriculum, so it is
made the criterion for adopting information from the angle of confirming it as
true and believing in it, and not simply from the angle that it is simply
information.
Article 171
The education policy is to form the Islamic
mentality and disposition. Therefore, all subjects in the curriculum must be
chosen on this basis.
Article 172
The goal of education is to produce the
Islamic personality and to increase peoples’ knowledge connected with life’s
affairs. Teaching methods are established to achieve this goal; any method that
leads to other than this goal is prevented.
The reality of
these two articles is that the meaning of the educational policy is the
principle, or principles, upon which information is given. As for the goal of
the education, this is the objective which the provision of that information is
aiming for. So the education policy is the basis which is built upon and the
goal of education is the intention which is intended by establishing it.
Therefore the
education policy is connected to the subjects taught, and the goal of the
education is connected to the methods of teaching. And the reality of man is
that he comprehends things and actions, and so makes a judgement about them,
and comprehends things and actions and so inclines towards them, and there is
nothing which is outside of these two issues. The reality of information is
that it is either information which develops the mentality in order to judge
upon actions and things, and information about those actual actions and things
in order to utilise them, and there is nothing which is outside of these two
issues. Islam made the Islamic ‘Aqidah the basis for the Muslim’s life,
and the basis for his thoughts, and in the same manner the basis for his
inclinations. The verses of the Quran, and the narrations of the Prophet
which provoke thought, such as
His (swt) words “and think deeply about the creations of the heavens and
the earth” (TMQ 3:191),
and the words of the Messenger
“Contemplation for an hour is better
than a year of worship” (reported
by al-Qurtubi in his Tafsir),
are only because they provoke him to believe in Allah (swt). The verses and
narrations which mention inclinations, such as His (swt) words “Say: if
your fathers” until His (swt) words “are more beloved to you than
Allah and His Messenger” (TMQ
9:24), and the Messenger’s
words “No one of you truly believes
until I am more beloved to him than his father and his son and all of the
people” (agreed upon
from the narration of Anas), are only mentioned as inclinations restricted by
the Islamic ‘Aqidah. Therefore it is imperative that the judgement of a
Muslim upon actions and things is built upon the basis of the Islamic ‘Aqidah,
and in the same manner it is imperative that his inclinations towards actions
and things are built upon the ‘Aqidah.
When it is the
information which forms his mentality, from the angle of the judgement upon
things, and forms his disposition from the angle of the inclinations towards
things, accordingly it is imperative that all of this information is built upon
the Islamic ‘Aqidah, irrespective of whether it is information to
develop the mentality, or information which is adopted in order to utilise
actions and things. In other words it is imperative that the information which
forms the mentality of the Muslim be built upon the Islamic ‘Aqidah, and
in the same manner it is imperative that the information which forms his
disposition is built upon the ‘Aqidah. And upon this basis, it is
imperative that the education policy forms the Islamic mentality and
disposition. The education policy has been deduced from the reality of
information from its aspect of being information, and from the collection of
verses connected to thought and inclinations, and linking
them to the reality of
information, and Article 171 was drafted upon this basis.
Article 172 has
been taken from the action of the Messenger
in his
teaching of the Muslims,
irrespective of whether that was in Makkah before the emigration, or in Madinah
afterwards, since he
intended from teaching them that each one of
them becomes an Islamic personality in his mentality and disposition - in other
words in their judgement upon actions and things and their inclinations towards
them. So on top of teaching them the rules which treated their life’s issues, he
used to teach them the noble values, such as
how to seek the Pleasure of Allah (swt), such as honour and such as how to
carry the responsibility of spreading the guidance to mankind, and guiding them
to Islam, with an influential method, and productive styles. Allah (swt) said “Invite
to the way of your Lord with wisdom and fair preaching, and argue with them in
a way that is better” (TMQ
16:125), and he
used to make them memorise the Quran, and
teach them the rules of Islam and enjoin them to follow the orders and avoid
the prohibitions, and alongside that he
would permit them to learn what they required
for their livelihood, from trade and agriculture and industry. And so these
actions of the Messenger
were what formed the Islamic personality, and
these are the evidences for this article.
Article 173
There must be weekly classes in Islamic
sciences and Arabic, with the same time and amount allocated as the classes for
the rest of the sciences.
The taught subjects
are of two types: scientific knowledge to develop the mind, in order that the
person can judge the words, actions and objects from the angle of their reality
and characteristics, and from the angle of their adaptation to human nature – such
as chemistry, physics, astronomy, mathematics and other experimental sciences.
This knowledge has no direct relationship with the building of the personality.
As for the Shari’ah knowledge of the words, actions and objects, in
order to explain the defining Shari’ah rule (taklifi), if it was
obligatory, recommended, permitted, disliked or prohibited, or to explain the Ahkam al-Wad’ such as whether it was a cause,
condition or prevention, or a concession (rukhsa) or an original rule (‘azimah),
or if it was valid (Sahih), void (batil) or defective (fasid),
and accordingly the Islamic mentality is built. If these Shari’ah rules
are accompanied by the goal of getting the Muslim to take an Islamic position
towards objects, actions and words in terms of their inclinations towards or
against them, and to take or leave them when fulfilling their bodily needs and
instincts, then the Islamic disposition is built. The Islamic personality is
built from the Islamic mentality and disposition, which makes the Islamic belief
(‘Aqidah) the basis for its thoughts and inclinations.
Islam asks the
Muslim to think about the creation of the universe, mankind and life, such as
His (swt) words “and they think deeply about the creation of the heavens
and the earth” (TMQ 3:191),
“Do they not look at the camels, how they are created?” (TMQ 88:17) and “Thus
Allah brings the dead to life and shows you His Ayat (proofs, evidences,
verses, lessons, signs, revelations, etc.) so that you may understand” (TMQ 2:73). In the same manner, Islam
also asks the Muslim to adhere to the Shari’ah rules in his laws,
actions and inclinations: He (swt) said “But no, by your Lord, they can
have no Faith, until they make you (O Muhammad) judge in all disputes between
them, and find in themselves no resistance against your decisions, and accept
(them) with full submission” (TMQ
4:65), and “And whatsoever the Messenger (Muhammad)
gives you, take it, and whatsoever he forbids you, abstain (from it)” (TMQ 59:7), and “O you who
believe! Take not for Awliya' (supporters and helpers) your fathers and your
brothers if they prefer disbelief to Belief” (TMQ 9:23), and “And say (O Muhammad) Do deeds! Allah will
see your deeds, and (so will) His Messenger and the believers. And you will be
brought back to the All-Knower of the unseen and the seen. Then He will inform
you of what you used to do” (TMQ
9:105).
Just as it is
requested from the school to be the first incubator to build the distinguished
Islamic personality, in the knowledge of the rules of the basis of jurisprudence
(Usul al-Fiqh), language and Tafsir, it is also requested to be
the first incubator to build the distinguished Islamic personality with the
scientific knowledge such as atomic science, astronomy and computing. The
Islamic Ummah which gave birth to
leaders in politics, governance and Jihad
such as Abu Bakr (ra), Khalid (ra) and Salah al-Deen, is the same Ummah which
gave birth to the scholars in jurisprudence and science such as al-Shafi’i,
al-Bukhari, al-Khawarizmi and Ibn al-Haytham. The goal of teaching all of this
knowledge in the school stage is to build the Islamic personality of the
student, and to prepare him to enter into the realm of practical life, or to
prepare him to continue higher studies in order to create distinguished
personalities which are necessary to raise the intellectual and scientific
level of the Ummah, and to prepare it to lead the world to take all the
people from the darkness of disbelief to the light of Islam, and from the
oppression of manmade law to the justice
of the Shari’ah law. And in the same manner to work to harness what is
in the heavens and the earth for the benefit and well being of mankind in that
which pleases Allah (swt), in accordance with His (swt) words “But seek,
with that (wealth) which Allah has bestowed on you, the home of the Hereafter,
and forget not your portion of lawful enjoyment in this world” (TMQ 28:77).
Based upon this,
there will be classes in scientific and Shari’ah knowledge, and it is
obligatory to balance the classes to meet the requirements of the two sections
in order for the Muslim to be capable to live on this earth which Allah (swt)
made him a successor upon, in a manner which Allah (swt) and His Messenger
love.
The scientific
knowledge that we are concerned with are those that do not have a direct
relationship with the viewpoint about life, and do not emanate from the Islamic
belief, but rather are built upon it, such as the necessary skills and
knowledge to prepare the student to enter the realm of practical life. The
first thing that the student is taught are those sciences that are necessary to
interact with the environment he lives in such as mathematics and the general
sciences about the tools and machinery used such as electronic and electrical
equipment, and domestic tools. And in the same manner the principles and rules
of traffic in the roads and streets, and the teaching of these subjects would
take into account the environment in
which the students live, such as if it was industrial, agricultural or
trade, and if it was mountainous, desert or a plain, and whether it was hot or
cold. The goal in teaching these subjects until the age of ten is to enable the
student to interact with the things around them, and to utilise them according
to their age and needs.
After the age of
ten, they start to be taught the branches of mathematics in stages, and
similarly the other sciences such as physics, chemistry and biology, and
beneficial sports such as swimming, jumping and shooting at targets. After
puberty they are taught military skills under the supervision of the army, and
then they can continue in the higher education institutions and universities to
learn beneficial knowledge from the sciences to the extent necessary.
Article 174
A distinction should be drawn between the
empirical sciences such as mathematics on the one hand and the cultural
sciences on the other. The empirical sciences and all that is related to them
are taught according to the need and are not restricted to any stage of
education. As for the cultural sciences, they are taught at the primary and
secondary levels according to a specific policy which does not contradict
Islamic thoughts and rules. In higher education, these cultural sciences are
studied like other sciences provided they do not lead to a departure from the
education policy and its goal.
Its evidence is the
generality of the evidences which permit learning knowledge, since they
encompass all knowledge, and so it is permitted for the Muslim to learn all
knowledge. However, learning some knowledge leads to deviation of the beliefs,
or weakness in the ‘Aqidah and so these types of knowledge are forbidden
from being taught as long as they result in that, and if they lost that effect
then it would be permitted to learn it, applying the principle “If one type
of a permitted thing leads to a harm, only that one is prohibited, and the
thing remains permitted”.
Accordingly, the
general evidences which permit learning and the Shari’ah principle are
the proof for this article.
Since learning what
causes a deviation and weakness in the beliefs easily influences children, it
is therefore prohibited to teach anything of these types of knowledge in the
primary and secondary stages of education. As for higher education, then
knowledge such as philosophy and anything similar are taught, in order to
refute them and show their falsehood, and nothing from these subjects is taught
without also teaching its refutation and invalidity alongside it. The noble
Quran mentions the ideas and beliefs of others, but they are mentioned in order
to explain their invalidity and to reject them. And in the same way, when the
educational programme is drafted, these types of subjects are drafted in higher
education in order to refute them and explain their falseness.
Article 175
The Islamic culture must be taught at all
levels of education. In higher education, departments should be assigned to the
various Islamic disciplines as will be done with medicine, engineering, physics
and anything similar.
The evidence for
the article is the action of the Messenger
, since he
used to teach the rules of Islam to men,
women, the elderly and the youth, which indicates that Islam teaches every
generation, and so it is learnt at all levels of education. Knowledge other
than the laws of Islam such as the sciences and industries is permitted,
however its reality is that they are studied after gaining basic knowledge that
is essential such as the principles that are required to enter some of the
sciences and industries such as medicine and engineering, and so they are
taught after this information has been acquired. Therefore their teaching is
done in higher education. Built upon the reality of the information and the
action of the Messenger
, this article was
drafted, and so this is what necessitated it.
Article 176
Arts and crafts may be related to science,
such as commerce, navigation and agriculture. In such cases, they are studied
without restriction or conditions. Sometimes,
however, arts and crafts are connected to culture and influenced by a
particular viewpoint of life, such as painting and sculpting. If this viewpoint
of life contradicts the Islamic viewpoint of life, these arts and crafts are
not taken.
The evidence is the
evidence for Article 162, which was the generality of the evidences which
permitted knowledge/science, and the principle that one type of a permitted
thing is prohibited if it leads to harm, because the arts and industries are information, and so they are
permitted since they are encompassed by the generality of the evidences
regarding knowledge. If they bring about harm due to their being influenced by
a particular viewpoint then they are prohibited. This is the case if there is
no text forbidding it. As for when there is a text which forbids it, such as
drawing something which has a soul (ruh), whether human, animal, bird or
otherwise, or sculpting something with a soul, then it is prohibited because it
is forbidden due to the narrations reported which decisively prohibit drawing
and sculpting.
Article 177
The State’s has one unique curriculum and no other curriculums are allowed to be taught.
Private schools are allowed as long as they adopt the State’s curriculum and
establish themselves on the State’s educational policy and accomplish the goal
of education set by the State, on condition they do not allow mixing between male and
female, whether student or teacher, and they are not specific to a sect, religion, school of
thought, race or colour.
To enforce a single
education curriculum upon the people is a permitted issue, since it is from the
permitted issues which have been left to the Imam to enforce upon the people with a particular style if chosen,
which is what ‘Uthman bin Affan (ra) did when he copied the Quran and sent it
to the different regions of the State. All types
of knowledge are permitted, and the
methods of teaching are all permitted, since they are all part of information.
However, organising
this information which is taught or upon which teaching is carried out in a
specific curriculum is a style to systemise the education, similar to the style
to organise the departments of the State. So the Imam can adopt a specific style and make the people abide by it,
since it is from the issues which are part of the governing of the affairs, and
therefore obedience to him in it would be obligatory.
The State can
prohibit any teaching which is carried out upon alternative curricula with the
evidence that it is from the issues that have been given to the Imam to deal with according to his
opinion and Ijtihad, and it is
permitted for him to select a particular style to undertake it. If he decided
upon one particular style, obedience to him would be obligatory, and it would
be forbidden to contradict him, since obedience to him is mentioned in the
Quran, “Obey Allah and the Messenger and those of you in authority” (TMQ 4:59), and mentioned in the
words of the Prophet
, “Whoever obeys the leader has obeyed me” (agreed upon from the narration
of Abu Hurayrah), and his
words “and listen and obey even if a
black slave with a head like a raisin was appointed over you” (reported by al-Bukhari from Anas).
This is only obedience to him in that which has been left for him to act in
according to his opinion and Ijtihad,
and obedience to him in this circumstance is obedience to the ones in
authority. As for the Shari’ah rules such as the recommended, permitted,
obligatory, and the forbidden, then obedience to him in these issues if he
ordered them would be obedience to Allah (swt) and not to him, due to the
evidence that if he ordered them to commit a sin he is not obeyed. It is
reported from Nafi’ from Abdullah that the Messenger
said “The Muslim must
listen and obey in that which he likes and dislikes except if he was ordered
with a sin. If he was ordered with a sin, then there is no listening or
obedience” (reported by al-Bukhari). And Ahmad reported with an
authentic chain from ‘Imran b. Husayn, “No obedience to something created
in disobedience to the Creator”. Therefore, his rights in governing the
affairs are in what has been left to his opinion and Ijtihad, and the obedience to his order by those who were ordered
by it is in these issues. So if he governed permitted issues upon a particular
basis, such as drafting a specific curriculum which was then ordered to be
implemented and for any difference to be prohibited, consequently obedience to
him would be obligatory.
This is with
respect to the fact that the State has one unique education curriculum.
As for the issue of
private schools, the Messenger
used to send teachers to people in order to
teach them Islam, and would permit the Muslims to teach other, which indicates
that every person can teach whoever he wishes, whether for a fee or for free,
and he is permitted to open a school. However, like the rest of the individual
subjects, he is compelled to follow the State curriculum, in other words the
curriculum that the Khalifah ordered, due to the evidence that was
aforementioned regarding obedience to whatever the Imam ordered.
If it is asked how
can the Dhimmi teach their children their religion if the private schools
have to be in agreement with the syllabus of the Islamic State – then the
answer is that they are not prohibited from teaching their religion and rituals
in their houses and places of religious worship, or in other words in places
other than the public life such as the schools since this proceeds upon the
governance that the State lays down. The Dhimmi used to learn their rituals in
their churches and their churches were present at the time of the Messenger
and the righteous khulafaa’. Al-Bukhari
reported from Abu Hurayrah who said “While we were in the mosque the
Messenger
came out to us and said: Go to the Jews, and so we went
with him until we came to the midras house, and the Prophet
stood and called them O Jews, Embrace Islam you will be
safe…” and the madras is
the place of their worship which they used to read the Torah and in which they
would also gather for prayers on their religious festivals. It is mentioned in
the al-Muhit dictionary “al-midras: the place which the Quran is read,
and from it is the madras of the Jews”, in other words where the Jews
would read their Torah. In Lisan al-‘Arab it mentions “fuhr of the Jews:
the place of their madras which they would gather in on their religious
festivals to pray there”. In other words, at the time of the Messenger
they were not prohibited from learning their
religion in their churches and synagogues. This continued throughout the time
of the righteous khulafaa’: it is reported by ‘Abd alRazzaq in his Musannaf
from ‘Ali b. Abi Talib (ra) “he saw a people with their clothes hanging low
and so he said: As though they were Jews leaving their fuhr. We asked ‘Abd
al-Razzaq what is their fuhr? He said their church”. In other
words, ‘Ali (ra) described those who prayed with their clothes hanging low as
being like Jews who left their synagogues after finishing their worship inside.
In other words – the Dhimmis used to practice their
religions and do their rituals of worship in their churches and synagogues, or
in the places connected to them, and they did not have specific schools
according to the known meaning.
As for the evidence
to prohibit mixing in private schools, in the same way that it is prohibited in
the schools of the State:
-
Al-Bukhari reported
from Abu Sa‘id al-Khudri who said:“ Some women requested the Prophet
to fix a day for them as the men were taking all his
time.
On that he
promised them one day for religious lessons and
commandments. Once during such a lesson the Prophet
said, A woman whose three children die will be shielded
by them from the Hell fire. On that a woman asked, If only two die? He replied,
Even two (will shield her from the Hell-fire).” In other words, the teaching
of the women was separated from that of the men, and it was not mixed. The
prayer was also done in separate rows, and when they left the mosque they would
not leave together thus mixing, rather the Messenger
and the companions who had prayed would wait
until the women left and then they would leave.
-
Al-Bukhari reported
from Umm Salamah: “Whenever the Messenger of Allah
finished his prayers with Taslim, the women would get up and
he would stay on for a while in his place before getting
up. Ibn Shihab said, I think (and Allah knows better), that the
purpose of his stay was that the women might leave before the men who had
finished their prayer”, and in another report “he used to give salam, and so the women
would leave and enter their houses before the Messenger of Allah would leave”
And therefore
teaching must not be mixed.
As for the issue of
the private schools not being specific to a sect, religion, school of thought,
race or colour – this is because schools established on this basis lead to
effects upon the unity of the State and focus upon points of difference,
especially since schools play an important role in building the mentality and
disposition of the students. At the end of the ‘Uthmani Khilafah such schools were a destructive element in the body of the
State. Therefore these schools are prohibited due to what damage they produce
and that they lead to the haram, in other words the evidence is the rule
of harm and the rule regarding the means to the prohibited being prohibited.
This is apart from
the call that is found in the Quran and the Sunnah to know other people
and to discard tribalism, and not to differentiate on the basis of race or
colour. Allah (swt) says “O mankind! We have created you from a male and
a female, and made you into nations and tribes, that you may know one another.
Verily, the most honourable of you with Allah is that (believer) who has taqwa.
Verily, Allah is All-Knowing, All-Aware” (TMQ 49:13). And the Messenger
said in a narration reported by
Muslim from Abu Hurayrah, “Whoever separates from the jama’h and leaves
obedience (to the leader of the Muslims) and dies then he dies the death of one
of jahiliyyah, and whoever fights under a flag of ignorance, getting angry for
the sake of tribalism or fighting for the sake of tribalism or calling to
tribalism, and then he dies then his death is that of jahilliyah”. And
it is reported by Ahmad with a chain from Abu Nadrah authenticated by al-Zayn: Someone
who heard the sermon of the Messenger of Allah
in the middle of the days of tashriq
told me that he
said: O people – your Lord is one, and
your father is one, there is no preference for an Arab over a non-Arab, nor a
non-Arab over an Arab, nor for the red over the black, nor the black over the
red, except in taqwa (piety). Have I not conveyed? They said: The Messenger of
Allah
has conveyed”
These are all the
evidences for the article.
Article 178
It is an obligation upon the State to teach
every individual those matters that are
necessary for the mainstream of life, male or female, in the primary and
secondary levels of education. This must be provided free of charge to
everyone, and the State should, to the best of
its ability, provide the opportunity for everyone to continue higher education
free of charge.
Its evidence is
that it is from the essential interests and utilities for people, since
teaching the individuals what they require in mainstream life is from the
essential interests, since it achieves benefit and repels harm. This is why it
is obligatory upon the State to provide for these interests according to what
mainstream life necessitates, and according to the number of youth present that
require to be taught those issues. Primary and secondary education of the
masses has become a necessity due to the nature of life between nations in this
era, and is no longer from the non-essential issues, so accordingly the primary
and secondary education for every individual of what is required to partake in
the mainstream of life is an obligation upon the State, while it remains one of
the essential interests. Therefore, it is obligatory upon the State to provide
sufficient primary and secondary schools for all the subjects of the State who
wish to study and provide them with what they require to partake in life’s
affairs free of charge. The Messenger
made the ransom of the
disbelieving prisoners that they should teach ten of the Muslim children, and
that was from the war booty which is part of what the Khalifah may spend
in the interests of the Muslims, and is evidence that the spending upon
education is without anything given in exchange.
Higher education is
also from the interests, so anything from it which is part of the necessities
such as medicine must be provided by the State, in the same manner as primary
and secondary education, since it achieves benefit and repels harm and is from
the issues that the Shari’ah obligated upon the State. As for anything
from the non-essential issues, such as literature, then the State should
provide for it if the finances were available.
The primary and
secondary teaching, along with whatever is essential for the Ummah in
terms of further education, is considered part of the obligatory interests upon
the expenditure of the Bayt al-Mal, without anything in return.
Article 179
The State ought to provide the means of
developing knowledge, such as libraries and laboratories, in addition to
schools and universities, to enable those who want to continue their research
in the various fields of knowledge, like jurisprudence, narrations and Tafsir,
and thought, medicine, engineering and chemistry, and such as inventions and
discoveries and so on. This is done to create an abundance of Mujtahidun,
outstanding scientists and inventors.
The evidence for
the article are the words of the Prophet (saw) “The Imam is a guardian and he is responsible for his subjects” (reported by al-Bukhari from Abdullah Bin
Umar), and the principle “Whatever is necessary to accomplish a duty is in
itself a duty”. Libraries, laboratories and the rest of the means of
developing knowledge are part of the affairs of the Ummah which the Imam must govern, and if he falls short
he is accounted over it. If the Ijtihad
in jurisprudence and the creation of inventions which are necessary for the
sake of military preparations, are not possible without these means of
developing knowledge, then to provide these means becomes an obligation upon
the Khalifah in accordance with the principle “whatever is necessary
to accomplish a duty is in itself a duty”. If they help to achieve these
goals, and simplify the issue of Ijtihad
and invention, then they are part of the governing of the affairs which achieve
benefits; in which case they would not be obligatory, and so if the State had
the finances it would establish them and otherwise not. Due to all of this, the
provision of libraries, laboratories and the remaining means to develop
knowledge fall under what the Imam
must provide, or in other words what falls upon the State to provide.
Article 180
The exploitation of writing books for educational purposes at whatever level is strictly
forbidden. Once a book has been printed and published,
nobody has the right to reserve the publishing and printing rights, including
the author. However, if they were ideas he had, which were not yet printed or
published, the owner has the right to be paid for transferring
these ideas to the public as he paid for teaching.
The evidence for it
is the permissibility of taking a fee for teaching and the permission of
knowledge for people. As for the permissibility of taking a fee for education,
it is confirmed from the words of the Messenger
“The
most right deserving thing you took a fee for is the Book of Allah” (reported by al-Bukhari from Ibn ‘Abbas),
and so by greater reasoning a fee can be taken for teaching anything else;
additionally it is confirmed from the fact that the Messenger
allowed the prisoners from the battle of Badr
to each teach ten Muslims as their ransom, which is making a payment for
education. Authoring is the writing of knowledge, or in other words the giving
of knowledge through writing and so it is like imparting it verbally. Knowledge
can be passed to people verbally or in a written form and in both circumstances
it is permitted to take a fee for it. However, if the teacher imparts something
verbally or through writing, the knowledge that the learner took becomes
possessed by him, and so he has the right to impart that knowledge to anyone
else whether verbally or through writing, and he has the right to take a fee
for it. The prisoners from Badr had no right over those who learnt reading and
writing from them other than their fee, and those who learnt from them could
teach others reading and writing for a fee without the permission of their
teachers, and without their teachers having any right.
Additionally,
knowledge, from the angle that it is permitted, and the meaning of its being
permitted is that it is permissible for anyone to take it, and permitted for
anyone who teaches it to take a fee, and not simply the teacher who taught it
originally. So from this it is seen that the knowledge is possessed by anyone
who knows it, and is not the sole possession of the one who taught it, and it
is the possession of the one who knows it as long as it remains with him, and
so he can take a fee for teaching it to someone else, or can teach it to others
for free. So if it emerges from him through his teaching of it to an individual
or a group, or talking about it in public, or conveying it to the people by any
means, it becomes permissible for all of the people in accordance with the
evidences which generally permit knowledge, and it becomes permissible for
whoever took that knowledge individually or part of a group, to give it to
whoever they wish irrespective of whether the one who taught them initially
gave them permission or not, and whether they were content for that to happen
or not.
This is evidence
that no one possesses the right to publish since it is knowledge, so as long as
it remains with him he has the right to charge a fee for it, and if he imparts
it to the people verbally or through writing, by any means at all, it becomes
permitted for all the people, and it becomes permitted for every one of them to
teach it to someone else and to charge a fee for teaching. So to make the
rights of publishing specific to the author is forbidding the permitted;
forbidding knowledge by prohibiting it being taken except with permission and
forbidding charging a fee for it by prohibiting it being taught for a fee
except with permission, and so accordingly it is not permissible for anyone to
possess publishing rights.
Foreign Policy
Article 181
Politics is taking care of the affairs of the
Ummah domestically and
internationally. It is performed by the State and the Ummah. The State takes on this task practically through government, and the Ummah
accounts the State upon it.
This article is the
definition of politics and this is a general definition held by everyone since
it characterises the reality of politics as what it actually is. So it is
similar to the definition of the mind, the definition of the truth, the
definition of authority and other definitions from the meanings which have a
single reality for all people which they do not differ over since it is a
perceptible reality, and so rather they only differ over its rules. In addition
to that, the linguistic meaning of politics (saasa, yasuso, siyasah) is governing of the affairs; it is mentioned in
the al-Muhit dictionary “I governed the citizens siyasatan – meaning I commanded them and I forbade them”, and this is the governing of
affairs through commandments and prohibitions. Additionally there are
narrations related regarding the actions of the ruler, accounting the ruler and
concern for the Muslim affairs, and the definition has been derived from all of
these; so the words of the Prophet
in
an agreed upon narration, the wording here from al-Bukhari from Ma’qal b.
Yasar: “There
is no worshipper that Allah puts in a position of responsibility, who does not
act sincerely towards it, except that he will not find the scent of Paradise”, and his
words, “There
is no governor who takes charge of governing the Muslims, and then dies, and he
had been cheating them, except that Allah prohibits him from Paradise”,
and his
words “There will be leaders
who you will know and reject, so whoever rejects them is innocent from them,
and whoever holds themselves (from following them) is safe, but the one who is
pleased with them and follows them (is blameworthy)” They said: Should we not
fight them? He
said “No, as long
as they pray”” (reported by Muslim from Umm Salamah),
and his
words, “Whoever
wakes up and his concern is other than Allah, then he is not from Allah, and
whoever is not concerned with the Muslims then he is not from them” reported by al-Hakim in al-Mustadrak from Ibn Mas’ud, and it is reported from Jarir b. ‘Abd Allah who
said “We gave the pledge of allegiance to the Messenger of Allah
upon establishing the prayer and giving Zakat, and giving
the advice to every Muslim” (agreed upon), and it is reported from Jarir b. ‘Abd
Allah who said “I went to the Prophet
and
gave him the pledge of allegiance upon Islam, and he made it a condition to
give the advice to every Muslim” (reported by al-Bukhari).
The definition of politics deduced from all of these narrations,
whether related to the ruler and his undertaking of ruling, or to the Ummah
and its accounting of the ruler, or to the relationship of the Muslims with
each other in being concerned over their issues and advising each other, is
that it is the governing of the affairs of the Ummah, and therefore the
definition of politics which this article mentioned is a Shari’ah
definition deduced from the Shari’ah evidences.
Article 182
It is absolutely forbidden for any
individual, party, group or association to have relations with a foreign state.
Relations with foreign countries are restricted to the State alone because the
State has the sole right of governing the affairs of the Ummah practically.
The Ummah can account the State regarding foreign relations.
Its evidence is the
words of the Prophet
“The Imam is a
guardian and he is responsible for his subjects” (reported by al-Bukhari from ‘Abd Allah b. Umar), and the Shari’ah
gave the practical undertaking of the governing of the affairs which would be
binding to the ruler alone, and so it is not permitted for the subjects to
carry out the actions of the ruler and it is not permitted for any of the
Muslims to carry out the actions of the ruler unless they were appointed to do
that according to the Shari’ah, either through a pledge of allegiance
from the people if he was the Khalifah, or by appointment from the Khalifah,
or from one of his assistants or governors whom had given the right to make
appointments. Anyone who had not been appointed through the pledge of
allegiance, and had not been appointed by the Khalifah, is not permitted
to undertake anything from the practical governing of the affairs of the Ummah,
domestically or internationally.
It is imperative here that this rule is clarified from the angle of the
evidence, and the reality upon which the evidence applies. As for the evidence,
the authority has been given by the Shari’ah to the ruler alone and
governing the people has been left to the ruler alone; the Messenger
said “Whoever
hates something about his leader should be patient over him, since there is no
person who removes himself even a hand span from the authority and dies except
that he dies the death of Jahiliyyah” (agreed upon from the
narration of Ibn ‘Abbas), and so it
made rebellion against him rebellion against the authority, and consequently in
that case he is the one who alone possesses the authority. The Messenger
said “The
tribes of Isra’il were ruled by the Prophets, every time a Prophet died he was
followed by another Prophet, and there will be no Prophets after me, and there
will be khulafaa’” (agreed upon from the narration of Abu Hurayrah), and its meaning is that the Muslims are
ruled by the Khulafaa’, and therefore the one who rules the Muslims has
been specified. The understanding from this is that other than the Amir
would not be an authority and that other than the Khulafaa’ do not rule.
This is evidence that the governing of the affairs is for the ruler alone and
not for anyone else. Additionally, the action of the Messenger
shows
that he
was the authority, and undertook
the ruling of the people with it by his
characteristic of being the Head
of State, and he
was the one who appointed
whoever would undertake the actions of authority or the actions of ruling the
subjects. So he
appointed the one who would take
his
place in Madinah whenever he
went out for any of the battles,
and he
appointed the governors, judges,
money collectors, and whoever undertook an interest such as distributing water,
estimating the amounts of fruit (for tax purposes), and so on. This is all
evidence that the authority and ruling the people is restricted to the ruler,
in other words to the Khalifah and whoever the Khalifah
appointed, to the Amir and whoever the Amir appointed. The
authority is the governing of the affairs of the people that is binding upon
them, and ruling the subjects is reported in the words of the Messenger
“were ruled by”,
which is the governing of the people that is binding upon them. Built upon this
is that governing the affairs of the people is a binding governance; in other
words the undertaking of the responsibility of the ruler is restricted to the
ruler, and so it is completely forbidden for anyone else to undertake it, since
the Shari’ah gave the authority and looking after people’s affairs to
the Khalifah and whoever he appoints. So if anyone other than the Imam
or those appointed by him carries out the actions of ruling and authority, and
takes upon themselves ruling the people, their action contradicts the Shari’ah
and is considered to be void, and every void action is forbidden (haram),
and so it is not permitted for anyone other that the Khalifah or who he
appointed, in other words other than the ruler, to undertake any action of
ruling and authority. Consequently, he does not undertake the governing of the
affairs of the people in a binding manner, in other words he does not rule the
people, since this is from the actions of the ruler and it is not permitted for
anyone other than the ruler to carry it out.
This is from the angle of the evidence; as for from the angle of the
reality, the undertaking of governing some of the affairs in a binding manner
by a group is from the understanding of the democratic rule. The democratic
rule is made up of institutions, the highest of which is the cabinet, in other
words the government, but there are others who carry out governing some of the
affairs in a binding manner, or in other words undertake ruling in some
particular area. For example, there are unions, so the lawyers’ union undertakes governing the
affairs of the lawyers in their professional capacity, and this is binding upon
them and so they have authority over them in specific issues; it grants them
the right to practise law and signs off on any punishments upon them, and sets
up a retirement fund for them, and other things that are from the actions of
ruling and authority which the State appointed to it in regards to the legal
profession, and its judgement is implemented just like the judgement of the
cabinet without any difference. This is the same with the doctors’ union and the rest of the unions. This is the reality
upon which the evidence applies with respect to within the State. Internationally, some
of the democratic countries permit the opposition party to communicate with
other states, and gives it the right to conduct negotiations with those states
while it is not ruling, and it has agreements with other states regarding
issues connected to the relationships between the two states that they will
implement once they get into power. This is the reality upon when the evidence
applies with respect to international affairs.
Therefore this reality which is that some institutions such as
syndicates undertake governing some of the affairs domestically in a binding
manner, and some institutions such as the political parties undertake some of
the affairs internationally in a manner which is binding, is not at all
permitted by Islam. This is because the authority and undertaking ruling of the
people has been given to the Khalifah or Amir alone, or to whom
the Amir or Khalifah appointed, and so it is not permitted for
anyone else to undertake a single issue from it since this would contradict the
Shari’ah.
Additionally, undertaking the governing of the affairs in a manner that
is binding is a governorship over the people, and governorship is a contract
that must be concluded between two sides, either between the Ummah and
the Khalifah, or between the Amir and the Ummah who
appointed him, or between the Khalifah or Amir and who they
appointed. Whoever undertakes the governing of the affairs without a contract
of governorship, then his action is invalid, and every invalid action is
forbidden (haram) without any difference. Therefore, undertaking the
governing of the affairs in a manner which is binding would be invalid, and
from this understanding it is forbidden for political parties and individuals
in the Ummah to have any relationship with any foreign state in which
that relationship would include what would be considered as undertaking the
governing of an issue from the issues of the Ummah in a binding manner,
and this is the evidence for this article.
Article 183
Ends do not justify means, because the method
is integral to the thought. Thus, the obligation and the permitted cannot be
attained by performing a forbidden action. Political means must not contradict
the political methods.
Allah (swt) set
rules in order to treat the problems of man, such as trade, renting,
partnerships and so on, and set other rules in order to implement these
treatments between the people, such as the discretionary (ta’zir) punishment for the one who cheats in trade and cutting the
hand of the thief as a prescribed punishment (hadd). And in the same manner, He (swt)
set rules to treat the problems that occur between the Islamic State and the
disbelieving states, such as the rules regarding the one who is covered by a
treaty and the one who takes amnesty, and the rules regarding the Dar al-Harb and the rules regarding
conveying the call to Islam to them in a way that attracts attention, and so
on. And He (swt) set other rules in order to implement these rules, such as the
protection of the blood and property of someone who has amnesty being
equivalent to the blood and property of the Muslim, and the prohibition of
fighting the disbeliever before they have been called to Islam in a manner
which attracts attention, and so on. Therefore, the method in Islam is the Shari’ah rules, and so victory is not
achieved through betrayal and conquest is not achieved through breaking a
treaty. So in the same way that the goal must be defined by the Shari’ah, what is used to reach that
goal must be from what the Shari’ah
permitted, since the goal and the means are both part of the actions of the
worshipper, and what makes the action permitted or forbidden is the Shari’ah evidence, and not the results
which are produced by it, nor the goal which is sought by it since Allah (swt)
says, “And so judge (you O Muhammad)
among them by what Allah has revealed” (TMQ 5:49), not by what results
the actions produce, or these actions are used to reach, and so the rule
regarding the means is the Shari’ah
evidence just like the rule regarding the goal. In other words, the fact that
the Shari’ah evidence is what
establishes the permissibility or impermissibility of the goal is evidence that
the goal does not justify the means, in other words does not make it permitted
if there is Shari’ah evidence which
has forbidden it. Accordingly the means are not permitted because its intended
goal was permitted, or obligatory, or recommended, or because its goal had
benefit or good or a victory; rather the means would be permitted if the Shari’ah permitted it and would be
forbidden if the Shari’ah forbade it.
In other words, it must be in accordance with the rules of the Shari’ah, because every action of the
Muslim must be directed by the Shari’ah,
and agree with the Shari’ah rule,
because the definition of the Shari’ah
rule is the address of the Legislator (swt) connected to the actions of the
worshippers, and so it is obligatory that all the actions of the Muslim are in
accordance with the Shari’ahh rule.
Based upon this,
the Muslims reject and disapprove of the principle that the ends justify the
means. It is correct that Islam has principles deduced from its evidences that
give the means used to reach the goal the rule of the goal, such as the
principle “the means to the forbidden are
forbidden”, and such as the principle “If one type of a permitted thing
leads to a harm, only that one is prohibited, and the thing remains permitted”, and the principle “Whatever is
necessary to accomplish a duty is in itself a duty”, however this is if the
means is permitted or obligatory. If on the other hand the means are forbidden,
then the goal does not make it permitted, whether it was obligatory or
permitted; rather the means would remain forbidden. From this understanding,
the goal does not justify the means, or in other words the obligatory or
permitted goal does not make the forbidden means permitted. The article was
drafted in accordance with this.
Article 184
Political manoeuvres are necessary in foreign
policy, and the effectiveness of these manoeuvres is dependent on concealing
(your) aims and disclosing (your) acts.
This article is
from the permitted issues left to the opinion and Ijtihad of the Imam, and
the political manoeuvres are the actions which are undertaken by the State
which are intended for goals other than the goals which are apparent from the
action undertaken. The Prophet
used to carry out these manoeuvres, such as
the expeditions which he carried out at the end of the first and beginning of
the second year Hijri, as the
apparent goal of these expeditions was that the Messenger
wanted to attack the Quraysh, but the reality
behind them was to intimidate the Quraysh and make the other Arab tribes take a
neutral position regarding the conflict between him
and the Quraysh. The evidence
for that is that these expeditions were small in number - sixty, or two
hundred, or three hundred - which is not large enough to fight the Quraysh, and
he
did not fight the Quraysh in any of them. All
that resulted from them was that he
concluded treaties with some of the Arab
tribes, such as his alliance with Damra and concluding friendly relations with
Bani Mudlij[YUN1] . Another example is his
trip to Makkah in the sixth Hijri year intending to perform the
pilgrimage, and his
announcing that while there was a state of war between him
and the Quraysh under whose authority the Ka’bah was at that time. The
intention of that journey was to arrive at an armistice treaty with the Quraysh
in order to deal with Khaybar, since it had reached him
that Khaybar and the Quraysh were negotiating
an agreement to attack Madinah. The evidence for this being a political
manoeuvre is that he
was pleased to return without having completed
the pilgrimage once he
had achieved the treaty, and he
then attacked and dealt with Khaybar two weeks
after his
return. All of these are political manoeuvres.
The power of these manoeuvres are the actions which are undertaken, such as
that the manoeuvre is announced and apparent, but the goals of it are hidden,
and so its effectiveness is dependent upon the prominence of the action and the
concealment of the goals.
Article 185
Some of the most important political means
are exposing the crimes of other states, demonstrating the danger of erroneous
politics, exposing harmful conspiracies and undermining misleading personalities.
This article is
part of the styles, and is part of the permitted issues, and the Messenger
used to expose the crimes of Bani Quraythah
when they broke the treaty on the day of al-ahzaab,
and when the Quraysh attacked him because ‘Abd Allah Bin Jahsh (ra) took two
men as prisoners and killed another during the sacred month and so they claimed
that Muhammad
and his
companions had made the sacred month permitted
(and so violated the custom), and spilt blood, seized wealth and captured men
during it. When the Quraysh attacked him with that, Allah (swt) revealed verses
which exposed their false politics trying to turn the Muslims away from their
religion. He (swt) said “They ask you concerning fighting in the Sacred
Months. Say, Fighting therein is a great (transgression) but a greater
(transgression) with Allah is to prevent mankind from following the Way of
Allah, to disbelieve in Him, to prevent access to al-Masjid al-Haram (at
Makkah), and to drive out its inhabitants, and Al-Fitnah is worse than
killing.” (TMQ 2:217).
And when the Jews
of Bani Quraythah conspired to kill the Messenger
by throwing a rock upon him
when he
was sitting next to a wall, the Messenger
exposed their conspiracy and their being
exiled was punishment for it. Ibn Ishaq said “The Prophet
went
out to Bani Nadir to ask them to help pay the blood money for the two dead men
of Bani ‘Amir who were killed by ‘Amru b. Umiyyah al-Damri. They had a promise
of safe passage from the Prophet
according
to Yazid b. Ruman. Bani Nadir and Bani ‘Amir had a treaty and were allies. When
Allah's Messenger
went
to Bani Nadir asking them for help to pay the blood money for the two men, they
said, ‘Yes, O Abu’l-Qasim! We will help you, since you asked us for help.’ Yet,
when they met each other in secret, they said, ‘You will not find a better
chance with this man than this,’ while the Messenger of Allah
was
sitting next to a wall of one of their houses. They said: ‘who will ascend this
wall and drop a stone on this man and rid us of his trouble’ ‘Amr b. Jahsh b.
Ka`b volunteered and ascended the wall of the house to drop a stone on the
Messenger
…The news of this plot was conveyed to the
Prophet
from
heaven, and he stood up and went back to Madinah. The Messenger of Allah
ordered
the preparation of war and marching forth to them…then he exiled them”.
And the Quran
attacked Abu Lahab by name, “Perish the two hands of Abu Lahab (an uncle
of the Prophet), and perish he” (TMQ
111:1) and others by their characteristics, all of which is considered undermining harmful
personalities.
These are the
evidences for this article.
Article 186
One of the most important political methods
is the manifestation of the greatness of the Islamic thoughts in governing the
affairs of individuals, nations and states.
This article is
part of what the Islamic State must undertake since it is obligatory and not
simply permissible. That is because it is the duty of the State to carry the
call to Islam in a manner which attracts attention, because Allah (swt) said “and the Messenger’s duty is only to convey
(the message) in a clear (mubeen) way” (TMQ 24:54), and the word mubeen is a description indicative of relation to the hukm (wasf mufhim), and consequently it is a
restriction for the conveyance. Conveying the call to Islam in a manner which
attracts attention cannot be achieved except through the manifestation of the
greatness of the Islamic thoughts. Amongst the great Islamic thoughts are the
way that the Islamic State deals with the Dhimmi,
the one given amnesty, and the one who has a covenant, and the fact that the
ruler is an implementer of the Shari’ah
and not a dictator over them, and the fact that the Ummah accounts the ruler with complete discipline. So in the same
manner that it is obligatory upon the Ummah
to account the ruler, it is obligatory to obey him even if oppressed, and it is
forbidden for it to obey him in a sin, and it has the full right to revolt
against him, and it is obligatory to revolt if he showed clear disbelief. And
the ruler and the ruled are equal in all affairs, and the Ummah can complain against him as they would against any other
individual regarding any right in front of any judge, and they can complain
about him to the judge of Madhalim if
he contradicts the Shari’ah while
ruling. And there are other Islamic thoughts of such nature, so accordingly it
is obligatory to manifest them and accentuate their greatness until the
greatness of Islam is displayed and until the call to Islam is conveyed in a
manner which attracts attention. The manifestation of these thoughts is not
from the political style rather they are from the political methods.
In addition to
that, the Shari’ah rule is that
practically fighting the disbelievers is not permitted until after the call to
Islam has been conveyed to them: al-Tabarani reported in al-Kabir from
Farwah b. Mosaik
[YUN2] who said “I said
O Messenger of Allah
; Shall I fight with those of my people who accepted Islam the others who refused it? He said Yes. After I turned
around he called me and said: Do not fight them until you have called them to
Islam”. And Al-Tirmidhi
reported something similar. And from Ibn ‘Abbas, “The Messenger of Allah
did
not fight a people until he called them” (reported by al-Darimi, Ahmad
and al-Hakim). This is evidence for the obligation of the call to Islam before
fighting. And for the call to Islam to be complete, it is imperative that the
conveyance of the call to Islam to them be done in a way that attracts
attention. From this, the issue of presenting the greatness of the Islamic
thoughts is an obligation, because the conveyance in a manner which attracts
attention is achieved through it. Therefore it is from the rules regarding the
method, and not from the styles.
Article 187
The political cause of the Ummah is
Islam, in the strength of the status of the
State, the best implementation of its rules and continuity in carrying its call
to mankind.
The meaning of the
words the political cause is the
matter that the State and the Ummah
face and is a duty upon them to undertake whatever it necessitates from the
governing of affairs. This issue could be general, and so it would be the
political cause, or it could be specific in which case it would be a political
cause, or it could be a part of a matter, and so in which case it would then be
an issue from the various issues of the cause. For example, the issue that faces the Islamic Ummah and obliges
her to undertake whatever it requires of the running of the affairs is the
re-establishment of the Khilafah, so this would be the political cause, and anything
else from the various causes such as the case of Palestine and the case of the
Caucasus countries are issues of this cause, and though they are issues which
the Islamic Ummah faces and they are
affairs that need to be taken care of, however they are part of the return of
the Khilafah. When the Islamic State
is established, its political cause would be to implement Islam domestically
and carry the call to Islam internationally, so if it becomes stabilised in a
place then its political cause would be the one mentioned in this article.
Subsequently if it implemented Islam correctly and its international profile
was strengthened, then its political cause would become carrying the call to
Islam to the world, until Allah (swt) made Islam dominant over all other ways of life.
Therefore, the
political cause is what the State and Ummah
face from the important political issues that the Shari’ah obligated upon them. So the
State is obligated to work to establish it in accordance with what the Shari’ah required of it to do, and this
does not require an evidence because it is part of the implementation of the
rules of the Shari’ah upon the issues
as they occur.
For this reason,
the political cause changes as the issues that occur change. The political
cause for the Messenger
while he was in Makkah in the stage of the
call was to make Islam manifest, which is why when Abu Talib said to him, “Your people have come to me and said such
and such, whatever they had said to him, so spare me and yourself, and do not
make me carry what I cannot bear”, the Messenger
thought that his uncle would forsake him and
give him up, and his support for him was weakened, so he said to him, “O Uncle, by Allah, if they place the sun in
my right hand and the moon in my left hand in return for giving up this matter,
I will never desist until either Allah makes it triumph or I perish defending
it" (Sirah of Ibn Hisham). These words indicate
that the political cause for the Messenger
at that time was making Islam manifest. When
he
was in Madinah, the State had been established
and a number of battles occurred between him
and the main enemy, the head of disbelief
which at that time was the Quraysh, the political cause of him
remained the manifestation of
Islam. This is why on his
way to pilgrimage before reaching Hudaybiyah,
after he heard that the Quraysh came to know that he was on the way and had
come out in order to fight him, a man from Bani Ka’ab said to him, “They heard about your journey, and so they
left wearing tiger skins, and they camped in Thi-Tuwa making oaths to Allah
that you would never enter”, and so the Messenger
said “Woe upon the Quraysh! War has destroyed
them. What would it matter to them if they left me to deal with the rest of the
Arabs” until his
words
“So
what do the Quraysh think? By Allah, I will continue to struggle for what Allah
sent me with until Allah makes it manifest or until this Salifah is separate” (reported by Ahmad from al-Maswar and Marwan). The Salifah is the surface of the neck, and the Messenger
used its separation as a
metaphor for death; in other words “until death”.
So the political cause in both situations was the same. However, in the
first situation he
made
clear his
insistence to continue conveying
the call to Islam until Allah (swt) made it manifest, and in the second
situation, in other words at the time the State was established, he
made clear his
insistence upon Jihad
until Allah (swt) made Islam manifest.
After the Prophet
arrived
at an armistice treaty with the Quraysh, which was the great opening, since it
was the preparation for the conquest of Makkah and made the Arabs come to the
Messenger of Allah
embracing the religion of Islam
in droves, at which point the political cause for the Messenger
was
not simply making Islam manifest but rather it became making it manifest and
dominant over all other ways of life through battles against the states
following other ways of life, such as the Romans and Persians. This is the
reason why the chapter of the opening (al-fath) was revealed to
him
, including the words of Allah (swt), “He it is who sent His Messenger with the
guidance and the religion of truth for it to be dominant over all other
religions.” (TMQ 48:28). So accordingly, if the Islamic State implemented Islam
well, and its international profile was strong, the political cause for it
would become making Islam dominant over all other religions and preparation for
defeating those who carry other ideologies and other religions.
This is what the article is based upon.
Article 188
The foreign policy revolves around carrying
the call to Islam; and
the relationship between the State and all of the other states is built upon this basis.
This article is
taken from the letters that the Messenger
wrote to the kings, and the
preparation of the army of Usamah to Balqa and al-Darum in
Palestine in order to fight the Romans, and his
insistence upon sending the Army despite his
illness which he
was to die from. This indicates that the call
to Islam is the basis for the relationship between the Islamic State and any
other state in the world, and this relationship necessitates the equipping of
armies, and the preparation for fighting, such that if the opportunity to fight
those who do not respond to the call to Islam after it has been conveyed to
them in a manner which attracts their attention, then the force required for Jihad is ready. Therefore, the call to
Islam is the basis for every relationship with any state, so it is the basis
for the foreign policy.
Article 189
The relationship of the State with other
states present in the world is built upon four considerations. These
are:
1.
The existing states
in the Islamic world are considered to be part of one land and therefore they
are not included within the sphere of foreign affairs. Relations with these
countries are not considered to be in the realm of foreign policy and it is
obligatory to work to unify all these countries into one state.
2.
States who have
economic, commercial, good neighbouring
or cultural treaties with our State are to be treated according to the terms of
the treaties. If a treaty states so, their subjects have the right to enter
the State with an identity card without the need for a passport provided our
subjects are treated in a like manner. The economic and commercial relations
with such states must be restricted to specific items and characteristics which
are deemed necessary and which at the same time do not lead to the
strengthening of these states.
3. States with whom we do not have treaties, and the actual
imperialist states, such as Britain, America and France, and those states that
have designs on the State, such as Russia, are legally considered to be
belligerent states. All precautions must be taken towards them and it would be
wrong to establish diplomatic relations with them. Their subjects may enter the
Islamic State, but only with a passport and a visa specific to every individual
and for every visit, unless they become practically belligerent.
4. States that are actually belligerent states, such as Israel for example, a state
of war must be taken as the basis for all dealings with them . They must be
dealt with as if a real war existed between us – irrespective of whether an
armistice exists between us or not - and all their subjects are prevented from
entering the State.
This article was
derived from the rules regarding Dar Al-Islam and Dar Al-Kufr,
and from the rules regarding the one with a covenant and the one who has
amnesty.
The first clause is
related to the Islamic lands which used to be ruled by Islam, such as India for
example, or where the majority are Muslims such as in Lebanon. All of the
Islamic lands since the destruction of the Khilafah in 1342 Hijri until it is re-established anew
with the Permission of Allah (swt), are Dar Al-Kufr, because some of
them are ruled by other than Islam and their external security is not the
security of Islam. Others are secured by Muslims but are ruled by other than
Islam. All of these are considered to be Dar Al-Kufr and since they used
to be Dar Al-Islam it is imperative to work to revert them back to being
Dar Al-Islam, but as long as they are ruled by other than Islam, or
their security is other than the security of Islam, then they remain as Dar
Al-Kufr, and so the rules of Dar Al-Kufr apply to them. It being Dar
Al-Kufr does not mean that all its inhabitants are disbelievers, and it
does not mean that in Dar Al-Islam that all its inhabitants are Muslims.
Rather, the meaning of Dar (abode)
here is a Shari’ah term “Shar’i reality”, in other
words it’s the Shari’ah which gives it this meaning, like the terms Salah
and Siyam and others from the Shari’ah terms.
Based upon it, the
term Dar Al-Islam is applied to a country where the majority of its
inhabitants are Christians for example, but it is part of the Islamic State.
This is because the laws applied are the laws of Islam and the security of the
land is by the Islamic security so long as it remains part of the Islamic
State.
And in the same
vein, with respect to the land where most of the people are Muslims but it is
part of a State that does not rule by Islam, and its security is not upheld by
the Muslim army but rather by the army of the disbelievers, the term Dar
Al-Kufr would be applied to it despite the fact that most of its
inhabitants were Muslim. So the meaning of the word Dar here is a Shari’ah
reality and no regard is given to the proportion of Muslims when the term
is used, rather the laws applied and the security of the people are considered.
In order words, the meaning of Dar is taken from the Shari’ah
texts which clarify this meaning, just like the meaning of the term Salah
is taken from the Shari’ah texts which explained it. And similarly all Shari’ah
terms take their meaning from the Shari’ah texts and not from the
linguistic meaning of the term.
The rules regarding
Dar Al-Kufr are completely different to the rules regarding Dar
Al-Islam, so there are rules specific to it.
If the Muslim who
lives in Dar Al-Kufr is unable to openly practise the rituals of his Deen
there, then he has to move to another Dar Al-Kufr in which he
would be able to do so due to His (swt) words:“Verily, as for those whom
the angels take (in death) while they are wronging themselves they (the angels)
said “In what (condition) were you” they reply “We were weak and oppressed on
the Earth” They say “Was not the earth of Allah spacious enough for you to
emigrate therein”. Such men will find their abode in Hell – what an evil
destination” (TMQ 4:97).
This is if there is
no Dar Al-Islam as is the case today.
However, if there
was a Dar Al-Islam, the rules related to emigration from Dar Al-Kufr to
Dar Al-Islam are accordingly:
1. Whoever is capable of
emigrating, and is unable to openly practise his Deen in his country nor carry out the Islamic rules required of him
– then the emigration to Dar Al-Islam is obligatory upon him. In this
circumstance it is not permitted for him to reside in Dar Al-Harb, in
other words Dar Al-Kufr. Rather the emigration to Dar Al-Islam is
obligatory. The evidence is the verse mentioned: :“Verily, as for those
whom the angels take (in death) while they are wronging themselves they (the
angels) said “In what (condition) were you” they reply “We were weak and
oppressed on the Earth” They say “Was not the earth of Allah spacious enough
for you to emigrate therein”. Such men will find their abode in Hell – what an
evil destination” (TMQ 4:97)
as it is also suitable for deduction here. Additionally, this is indicated by
what Al-Tirmidhi reported from Jarir that the Messenger of Allah
said, “I am free from a Muslim between
the polytheists. They said: Why O Messenger of Allah? He said: such that their
fires are not seen”, and in Abu Dawud “They said: Why O Messenger
of Allah. He
said:
such that their two fires are not seen” meaning that if both of them lit their fires you
could not distinguish between them, as an allegory to not live in their abode.
As for what
al-Bukhari reported “No emigration (Hijrah) after the conquest of Makkah”
and his
words “no Hijrah after al-fath”
and “Emigration is finished, but there is Jihad and intention”,
and what was reported that when Safwan b. Umayyah embraced Islam it was said
to him: no Deen for the one who
doesn’t emigrate, and so he came to Madinah and the Prophet
said to him, “What brought you here Abu
Wahb? So he said: It was said to me that there is no Deen for the one who does
not emigrate. He
said: Abu Wahb – return to Makkah and
stay in your places, emigration is finished and now there is Jihad and
intention, so if I sought you to come out for war, then come” (as reported by Ibn Asakir). All of
this negates emigration after the conquest of Makkah, but this negation has the
Shari’ah Illah (cause) derived from the narration itself, since his
words “after the conquest of Makkah” comes
in a form that includes the ‘Illah, which means that the conquest of
Makkah was the ‘Illah behind negating the need to emigrate. Since the ‘Illah
is present and absent with the ma’lul (caused), it is not specific
to the conquest of Makkah rather it applies to the conquest of any place, with
the evidence of another report “there is no Hijrah after al-fath
(conquest)”. This is supported by what al-Bukhari reported from Aaisha
(ra) when she was asked about emigration; she replied, “There is no
emigration today – the believer used to escape with his Deen to Allah and His
Messenger, as he was afraid of facing the trials. As for today, when Allah has
made Islam dominant, and the believer can worship his Lord wherever he wishes” which
indicates that the emigration for the Muslim before the conquest was in order
to escape with his Deen thus avoiding being afflicted,
and this was negated after the conquest of Makkah since he then became capable
of openly practising his Deen and
establishing the laws of Islam. So the conquest upon which this was based is
the ‘Illah for negating the need to emigrate, and not the conquest of
Makkah as a specific incident. Accordingly, what is meant is that there is no
emigration from a land once it has been conquered. And his
words to Safwan that emigration is finished meant
emigration from Makkah after it had been conquered, since emigration is to
leave the land of the disbelievers and from Dar Al-Kufr, so then if a
land is conquered and becomes Dar Al-Islam then it does not remain as a
land of disbelievers nor a Dar Al-Kufr, and so there is no Hijrah from
it, and accordingly every land which is conquered does not have a Hijrah from
it after its conquest (since it has become part of Dar Al-Islam). This
is supported by what Ahmad reported from Mu’awiyah who said: I heard the
Messenger of Allah
say “Hijrah doesn’t end while repentance
is accepted, and repentance is accepted until the sun rises from the West” and
Ahmad also reported from the Prophet
that he
said “Hijrah does not end while Jihad remains”
and in another narration “Hijrah does not end while the enemy is
fought”, which indicate that the emigration from Dar Al-Kufr to Dar
Al-Islam continues and does not end.
2. The one who is capable to
emigrate, but is able to openly practice his Deen in his country, and establish the Shari’ah laws
required of him. In this case the emigration is recommended and not
obligatory…the evidence being that the Messenger
used to encourage emigration
from Makkah before its conquest while it remained Dar Al-Kufr, and
explicit verses were revealed regarding it such as His (swt) words “Verily,
those who have believed, and those who have emigrated (for Allah’s Religion)
and have striven hard in the Way of Allah, all these hope for Allah’s Mercy.
And Allah is Oft-Forgiving, Most-Merciful” (TMQ 2:218) and His (swt) words “Those who believed and
emigrated and strove hard and fought in Allah’s Cause with their wealth and
their lives are far higher in degree with Allah. They are the successful” (TMQ 9:20), and this is all explicit
in requesting emigration. As for it not being obligatory, this is because the
Messenger
sanctioned Muslims who remained in Makkah. It is
reported that when Nu’aim al-Nahham wanted to emigrate, his tribe Banu Adi said
to him: stay with us and remain upon your Deen,
and we will prevent whoever wishes to harm you, and continue
to support us as you have supported us; he used to help the orphans and widows. And so he
delayed his emigration for a period and then emigrated later, and so the
Prophet
said to him “Your people
were better to you than mine to me, my people expelled me and wanted to kill
me, whereas yours took care of and protected you” (mentioned by Ibn Hajar in al-Isabah).
3. As for one who was not capable,
then Allah (swt) is forgiving, and he is
not requested to do so due to his inability to emigrate, either due to sickness or being forced to stay, or due
to weakness such as women, children and the like. The evidence is His (swt)
words, “Except the weak ones among men, women and children who cannot
devise a plan, nor are they able to direct their way.” (TMQ 4:98).
4. As for one who is able to
practise his Deen openly in his
country, and implement the rules of the Shari’ah requested from him, and
at the same time he possesses the capability to transform the Dar Al-Kufr he lives in into Dar Al-Islam – it is
prohibited in such a situation for him
to emigrate from Dar Al-Kufr to Dar Al-Islam, irrespective
of whether he possessed the capability himself or by organising himself with
the Muslims in his land, or through getting help from Muslims from outside of
his land, or through co-operation with the Islamic State, or through any of the
permitted means. It is obligatory upon him to work to change the Dar Al-Kufr
into a Dar Al-Islam, and in such a situation it is prohibited for
him to emigrate from there. The evidence for this is that the work to make his
land join to Dar Al-Islam is obligatory, and so if he does not support
it and he is capable to perform it and left behind the action of seeking it to
join the Dar Al-Islam and instead emigrates, then he has committed a sin
just like the neglect of any other obligation.
Based upon this, if
there was a Dar Al-Islam, taking up permanent residence in Dar
Al-Kufr is prohibited for the one who is obligated to emigrate. Above that,
taking a permanent residence in Dar Al-Kufr makes that Muslim from the
people of Dar Al-Kufr, and so the rules which apply to Dar Al-Kufr
apply to his relationship with the Islamic State and from the angle of his
relationships with other individuals, and so the hudud (prescribed
punishments) are not applicable to him, and Zakat is not collected from
him, and anyone from Dar Al-Islam cannot inherit from him, and it is not
obligatory to get maintenance from anyone in Dar Al-Islam from those
people who are obligated to pay for him if he had resided there, because the Shari’ah
is not applied upon the people of Dar Al-Kufr. Accordingly, they are not
obligated by what the Muslims are obligated by and nor do they have the rights
that the Muslims have, so they are not encompassed by the rules. The evidence
for that is that the Muslims request two issues from those in Dar Al-Kufr:
firstly, Islam; secondly, to come under the authority of Islam. It is related
on the authority of Sulayman b. Buraydah on that of his father who said “Whenever the Messenger of Allah
appointed anyone as Amir of an army or an expedition, he
would especially exhort him to fear Allah and to be good to the Muslims who
were with him. He
would say: “Conquer
in the Name of Allah and in the Way of Allah. Fight against those who
disbelieve in Allah. Conquer and do not embezzle the spoils; do not break your
pledge and do not mutilate the dead bodies. Do not kill the children and if you
encountered your enemies who are polytheists, invite them to three courses of
action. If they respond to any of these, then accept it from them and withhold
yourself from doing them any harm. Invite them to Islam; if they respond to you
accept it from them and desist from fighting them. Then invite them to migrate
from their abode to the abode of the Muhajirin and inform them that if they do
so, they shall have all the privileges and obligations of the Muhajirin. If
they refuse to migrate, tell them that they will have the status of Bedouin
Muslims, what applies to the Muslims applies to them, but they will not get any
share from the spoils of war or Fai’ except when they actually perform Jihad with
the Muslims” (reported by Muslim). So the Messenger
said “Then invite them
to migrate from their abode to the abode of the Muhajirin and inform them that
if they do so, they shall have all the privileges and obligations of the
Muhajirin” (reported by Muslim). This text makes emigration a precondition for
them to have the same privileges and obligations as us, in other words for them
to be encompassed by the rules. The understanding of his
words
“if
they do so, they shall have” is that if they do not do
that then they do not have the privileges of the Muhajirin,
nor do their obligations apply to them, since achieving the result is connected
to achievement of the condition, and so if the condition is not met the result
is not achieved. So if they do not migrate then they do not have the privileges
that the Muslims in Dar Al-Islam
have. The words of the Messenger
“they will have the status of Bedouin Muslims, what
applies to the Muslims applies to the them”
means from the angle that they will not be killed, nor will their wealth be
taken as war booty, and not from the angle of the rules applying to them, since
the subject of the rules was explicitly explained by the condition mentioned
just previously. The Messenger
explained the issue of
wealth further, and mentioned in the same narration “they will not get
any share from the spoils of war or Fai’”, and so the Messenger
considered that their refusal to
migrate nullified their right to the war booty and spoils of war, and any other
wealth is also encompassed through analogy with the war booty and spoils of
war. In other words, they have no rights with regard to anything connected to
wealth, and so the one who did not migrate to the abode of the Muhajirin is just like the non-Muslims with regards to these financial rights.
Therefore, he does not have the privileges of the Muslims and nor do the
obligations upon them apply to him, which means that the financial rules do not
apply to him since he did not migrate to the abode of the Muhajirin. This was an emphasis on financial rights, although all of the rules
do not apply to him due to the words of the Messenger
“if they do so, they shall have all the
privileges and obligations of the Muhajirin”. It
is the case that the abode of the Muhajirin
(which was Madinah at that time) alone was Dar Al-Islam,
and anything else was Dar Al-Harb, in
other words Dar Al-Kufr,
which is why when the Messenger
used to go out on expeditions
against every land other than the abode of the Muhajirin
considering it to be Dar al-Harb,
according to the evidence related from Anas who said “Whenever the
Messenger of Allah (saw) wanted to attack a people, he would wait until dawn,
if he heard the Adhan (call to prayer) he would refrain, and if he did not hear
it, he would pray and then attack” (reported
by al-Bukhari). And on the authority of Isam al-Muzani who said: “Whenever the Messenger of Allah (saw)
dispatched a task force or an expedition, he used to say to them: “If you see a
mosque, or if you hear a mu’adhin,
do not kill anyone” (reported
by the five except for Ibn Maja, and Al-Tirmidhi said it is Hasan gharib). These two narrations indicate that the Messenger
considered anything other than
the abode of the Muhajirin to
be Dar Al-Kufr and did not
differentiate between Muslims and non-Muslims other than that the Muslims are
not fought, not killed and their wealth is not taken as booty, whereas the
non-Muslims are fought, they can be killed and their wealth can be taken as
booty, while in everything else the rule is the same. So every land which is
not Dar Al-Islam is considered to be Dar Al-Harb, and takes the rules of Dar Al-Harb.
This all indicates that the rule is related to the abode, and so
whoever takes residency in Dar Al-Harb, in
other words Dar Al-Kufr,
while there was Dar Al-Islam,
then the rules of Dar Al-Harb apply
to him whether he was a Muslim or a disbeliever, and they are the same in that
respect, except that when the land is opened by force then the Muslim is not
killed nor is his wealth taken as booty. In the same manner, the rules
regarding Dar Al-Islam apply to the one who is
resident in Dar Al-Islam,
and the Muslims and the Dhimmi are equal in this respect. This means
that differences in rules result from differences in the abode. Accordingly,
whoever resides in Dar Al-Kufr
whether Muslim or non-Muslim is not encompassed by the laws of Islam at all,
due to the words of the Messenger
in the narration of
Sulayman b. Buraydah “if they do so, they shall have all the privileges and
obligations of the Muhajirin”, since its understanding
is that if they did not do that, in other words if they did not migrate to the
abode of the Muhajirin, then they would not have their privileges and nor would their
obligations apply to them; in other words they are not encompassed by the laws
of Islam which are applied in the Islamic State (Dar Al-Islam) since they
do not carry its citizenship, except for two rules which are: the inviolability
of their blood and what wealth they have at the time of the conquest of Dar Al-Kufr in which they lived, and this is due to words of the Messenger
from ‘Abd Allah Bin Umar who said: The
Messenger of Allah
said
“I have
been ordered to fight people until they profess that there is no god but Allah.
If they said it, their lives and their wealth would be inviolable to me, except
that which is by right and Allah will account them”
(agreed upon from the narration of Umar, Abu Hurayrah, Ibn Umar and others,
with the wording from Muslim). As for
the one who permanently resides in Dar Al-Islam,
whether they were Muslim or Dhimmi, they are covered by all the rules of
Islam which the State implements in Dar Al-Islam other
than what the Shari’ah exempts
the non-Muslims from such as their worship.
This consideration of the abode from the angle of it being Dar Al-Kufr or Dar Al-Islam is
what is referred to as citizenship. Whoever resides in Dar Al-Islam, whether Muslim or non-Muslim, carries the Islamic citizenship
(citizenship of Dar Al-Islam),
and so the rules of Islam are applied upon him by the State, and whoever
resides in Dar Al-Kufr, whether a Muslim or
disbeliever, carries the citizenship of Dar Al-Kufr,
and so the rules of Islam are not applied upon him by the State. Accordingly,
the consideration is given to the permanent residency and not to temporary
stay, and so if a Muslim resides in Dar Al-Islam and
goes to Dar Al-Kufr for the sake of
commerce, treatment, seeking knowledge, visiting relatives, to take a vacation,
or any other purpose, and resides there for months or years but he carries the
Islamic citizenship, in other words his permanent residency that he is going to
return to was in Dar Al-Islam,
then he is considered from the people of Dar Al-Islam,
even if he was living in Dar Al-Kufr.
And if a Muslim was a resident in Dar Al-Kufr,
and came to Dar Al-Islam for
commerce, treatment, to seek knowledge, visit their relatives, to take a
vacation, or any other purpose, and so stayed in Dar Al-Islam for
a day, month, year, or more, but he carries the citizenship of Kufr, in other words his permanent residency that he is going to return to
is in Dar Al-Kufr then he is considered to
be from the people of Dar Al-Kufr,
and so the rules of the one given amnesty apply to him, and so he cannot enter Dar Al-Islam except with security, in other words except with the permission of the
State. Therefore the subject is not temporary residency, however long that
residency may be, but rather the subject is permanent residency, or in other
words carrying the citizenship.
Based upon this, if the Islamic State was established then the Khilafah would be present, the lands that
it governs with the authority of the
Muslims, and the security of Islam, then they would become Dar Al-Islam, and anything else would have to be examined: if they were not ruled
by Islam or the security was the security of Kufr,
then it would be Dar Al-Kufr or
in other words Dar Al-Harb
even if all of the inhabitants were Muslims, and the rules of Dar Al-Harb would apply to it. However, if it was ruled by Islam, and the security
was the security of Islam, but it had not joined to the Khilafah, then it would be Dar Al-Islam and
the rules of Islam would apply to it, and the rule regarding it would be like
the rule of the rebels, their contracts would be considered valid and their
appointment as judges and governors would be valid, and the rule of their
judgements and governorships is considered valid, but they are fought in order
to make them give allegiance to the Khalifah due
to the narration “If the pledge of allegiance is given to two Imams then
kill the second of them” (reported
by Muslim from Abu Said); in other words fight against him. Based upon this, if
the Islamic State was established on any part of the Muslim lands such as Iraq,
Turkey and Syria for example, then the rule of the Muslim who resides in
England, America, Russia or anywhere else from the various abodes of Kufr and lands of the disbelievers would be the rule of the one who was in Dar Al-Harb, with no difference between the Muslim and disbeliever except for the
inviolability of their blood and wealth upon the conquest of that land. As for
the Muslims who are in the Muslim lands, then if they implemented Islam and did
not become part of the Khilafah, then their lands are Dar Al-Islam and they would take the rule of rebels (bugha). If they did not
implement Islam then they would be Dar
Al-Kufr. In the same way, every
land from the lands of Islam which remained not implementing Islam, or whose
external security was not the security of Islam, is considered to be Dar Al-Kufr, and the rule of Dar
Al-Harb is applied to it, even if
all the people there were Muslims. There is no difference whether it was
neighbouring the Islamic State, which is the lands which the Khalifah of the Muslims ruled or were not adjacent to it. So the Islamic State
will consider all the Islamic lands which were ruled by Islam, or which the
majority of people there are Muslims, as a single Islamic land which must join
the Islamic State, and be subservient to the Islamic flag, and for there to be
a pledge to the Khalifah upon its neck.
The phrase the security of Islam
means to be protected by the authority of Islam, and the phrase security of Kufr means to be protected by the authority of
disbelief; it is mentioned in the al-Muhit
dictionary “Safety and security like a companion against fear”, and Abu Dawud
related from Sa’ad who said “When it was the day of the conquest of Makkah, the
Messenger of Allah
gave security to the people, except for four men and two
women who he named”, and from Aubi b. Ka’ab, “when it was the
day of conquest a man who is not known said: (There will be) no Quraysh after
today, so the announcer of the Messenger of Allah
announced that the black and the white have
been given safety, except so and so and so and so, people who he named” (reported by Ahmad in al-Musnad
with a Hasan chain, and al-Hakim
reported something similar in al-Mustadrak as well as Ibn Hibban in his Sahih, both from Aubi b. Ka’ab). So this is the meaning of security. It
being added to Islam or Kufr, is simply to connect it to the authority
which is providing the security, because the security in the State is achieved
by the authority. Therefore, the security of Islam is the security by the
authority of the Muslims and the security of Kufr is the security by
the authority of Kufr.
Domestic security is to secure the blood, wealth and honour of every
one of the subjects by the security of the authority; whereas the external
security is that the State’s borders are protected by its authority from
invasion against it, and not by any other authority.
As for the second clause in the article, its evidence is that Islam
permitted entering into treaties with other nations; Allah (swt) said “Except those who
join a group, between you and whom there is a treaty (of peace)” (TMQ 4:90), and He (swt) said “and if he belonged to a people with whom
you have a treaty of mutual alliance, compensation (blood money) must be paid
to his family” (TMQ 4:92), and
He (swt) said “and if they seek
your help it is your duty to help them except against a people with whom you
have a treaty of mutual alliance” (TMQ 8:72). The Messenger
concluded a treaty with Yuhannatu Bin Ruba, the
companion of Ayla, and concluded a treaty with Bani Damrah. There were
conditions in these treaties which were applied, and it is a duty upon the
Muslims to be bound by these conditions due to the words of the Prophet
“The
Muslims are upon their conditions” (reported by Al-Tirmidhi who
said it was Hasan), as
long as this condition does not contradict Islam. If the condition did
contradict Islam it would be rejected due to the words of the Messenger
in the narration of
Al-Tirmidhi, “except for a condition which prohibits something permitted
or permits something prohibited” and his
words “Every condition
not in the Book of Allah is invalid” (agreed upon from Aaisha (ra)). Therefore the Muslims carry out
the implementation of these conditions according to what was mentioned in the
texts of the treaties as long as they do not contradict Islam. So the evidence
for this clause is the evidence that permits treaties and the evidence for the
obligation of fulfilling the conditions.
As for the second
half of this clause connected to the economic and commercial relations, this is
in consideration of what harm upon the Ummah could result from the
economic agreements, such as if the raw materials were exported out of the
country, or resulted in the closure of factories in the country, or anything
else similar, so therefore the agreements are restricted to whatever does not cause
harm and anything which causes harm is prohibited through the application of
the principle “If one type of a permitted thing leads to a harm, only that
one is prohibited, and the thing remains permitted”, and the same applies to the circumstances of the commercial
agreements.
These States are legally considered to be belligerent States, because
they are disbelievers who do not submit to Islamic authority, so they are
considered to be belligerents because the Messenger
said “I have been ordered to fight the people
until they witness that there is no God except for Allah, and that Muhammad is
His Messenger”, which is general. Their
being legally considered as belligerents, in other words with respect to
the laws, is due to the agreements between us and them.
As for the third clause, its evidence is the evidence for the rules of Dar Al-Harb in the absence of any treaty between us and them. The evidence to not
create any diplomatic relations with the countries which are mentioned in the
article is the fact that if their having embassies in a land which was under
the authority of Islam would lead to harm because the job of embassies of
countries like these is to try to increase the influence of their States in the
countries where they had their embassies, so consequently they are prohibited
in accordance with the practical application of the principle of prohibiting
something permitted if it leads to harm. However, their subjects are not
prevented from entering the country unless their entrance would lead to harm.
And a visiting envoy would not be prohibited
from entering the country unless the entrance of the specific person sent as an envoy, not their envoys generally, would lead to
harm.
These countries are legally considered as belligerent (rather than
actual belligerent) due to their falling under his
words, “I have been ordered to
fight the people until they witness that there is no God except for Allah, and
that Muhammad is His Messenger”, from the angle that they are
disbelievers. As for their being considered as belligerents from a legal rather
than actual perspective, this is because there is no fighting between us and
them, and there has been no announcement of an actual war between us from our
side or theirs. If some or part of these countries come to be in a situation of
actual war with us, in other words if they attacked the Muslim lands, then they
would be treated according to the fourth clause of this article which deals with
actual war, and for that reason America and Britain are considered as actual
belligerents after they began their war upon Iraq and Afghanistan, and any
other country which declared war on any of the Muslim lands would also be
considered the same, and the rules to do with actual war are applied as long as
the situation of war remains between us and them.
As for the fourth clause, its evidence is the evidence of Jihad
from the issue of fighting the disbelievers, and the evidences that make the
blood and property of the non-Muslims from amongst them permitted, and the
evidences of fighting in the battle; Allah (swt) said “fight those who
are close to you from the disbelievers” (TMQ 9:123),
and the Prophet
said “I have been
ordered to fight people until they profess that there is no god but Allah and
Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah” agreed upon with the
wording from Muslim, and he
made
an exception for the Muslims amongst them with his words
, “If they said it,
their lives and their wealth would be inviolable to me, except that which is by
right”. And Allah (swt) said, “And whoever turns his back from them that day, unless it
be a stratagem of war, or to retreat to a troop (of his own), he had indeed
drawn upon himself wrath from Allah” (TMQ 8:16),
and also due to the words of the Messenger
,
“Stay
away from the seven destructive things”, and he
enumerated
them until he
said “and to turn away
on the day of advance (into battle)” (agreed
upon from the narration of Abu Hurayrah).
And other rules of fighting and battles and the rest of the evidences
regarding Dar al-Harb and the battles.
It is not permitted to have a permanent peace treaty with these countries that were practically belligerent,
in other words a permanent cessation of fighting, or permanent truce, since
this prevents Jihad which continues until the day of Judgement, just as
a permanent truce prevents the spread of Islam until Allah (swt) makes it
dominant over all other Deens.
Allah (swt) says “And fight them until there is no more Fitnah (disbelief
and polytheism: i.e. worshipping others besides Allah) and the religion
(worship) will all be for Allah Alone” (TMQ 8:39),
and the Messenger
said
“Jihad
continues from when Allah sent me until the last of my Ummah fights the Dajjal”
(reported by Abu Dawud from Anas).
As for a temporary treaty with these countries, and a temporary
cessation of the war, it is looked at as follows:
a.
If the State which is in the actual war against us, has land which is
not Islamic land upon which its entity is formed, then it is permitted to have a
temporary truce with it, in other words to stop the war with it for a temporary
time, if the pause is in the interest of Islam and the Muslims, and according
to the conditions that the Shari’ah confirmed.
The evidence for this is the treaty of al-Hudaybiyah, which was between
the Islamic State which the Messenger
had established in
Madinah and the Qurayshi state which was established upon the land which Islam
had not yet conquered, in other words it was not established upon Islamic land.
b.
If the State which was at war with us, was established as an entity in
its entirety upon Islamic land, in other words the entity did not have any land
connected to it which had not been conquered by the Muslims, such as Israel –
the Jewish State which has stolen Palestine – then it is not permitted to have
a treaty with it, since the establishment of this State was invalid according
to the Shari’ah, and since a treaty with
it would mean to give up Islamic land to it, which is prohibited and a crime
against Islam. Rather, the situation of actual war has to remain with it,
irrespective if there was a truce which was contracted with it by illegitimate rulers
in the Muslim lands, or not.
And so accordingly any treaty with the Jewish State, even over a
handspan of the land, is prohibited by the Shari’ah
because it is usurping and occupying and
its whole entity is established on
Muslim land and it is a surrender of
Islamic land to it, and establishing its control over the Muslims there, which
is not permitted according to the Shari’ah.
Islam requires that all of the Muslims fight against it, and so their armies
must be sent to fight, and all those capable of fighting be gathered as
soldiers in the army, and for this to continue until the Jewish State is
finished and the Muslim lands are rescued from it. Allah(swt) says, “And never will
Allah grant to the disbelievers a way (to triumph) over the believers” (TMQ 4:141) and His (swt) words, “Then
whoever transgresses the prohibition against you, you transgress likewise
against him” (TMQ 2:194) and “and turn them out from where they have turned you out” (TMQ
2:191).
Article 190
All military treaties and pacts (with other States) are completely prohibited, along with anything of their
type, or connected to them such as political treaties and agreements covering
the leasing of military bases and airfields. It is permitted to conclude good neighbour relations, economic, commercial, financial, cultural and
armistice treaties.
The definition of “treaties” is that they are agreements
that States conclude between themselves with the goal of organising a specific
relationship and defining the rules and conditions which that relationship submits
to. The Islamic jurists used the term “al-muwada’at”, and the evidence
for the permissibility of concluding treaties between the Muslims and
disbelievers are the words of Allah (swt), “between you and whom there is a treaty (of peace)” (TMQ 4:90) and “and if he belonged to a people with whom you have a treaty of mutual
alliance” (TMQ 4:92), and “and if they seek your help it is your duty
to help them except against a people with whom you have a treaty of mutual
alliance” (TMQ 8:72), and the
word al-mithaq used in the verses means treaties. The
Messenger
concluded several treaties with
the disbelievers, however it is a precondition for the validity of the
contracting of the treaty that the subject that the contract was upon was
something that the Shari’ah had
permitted. There are various types of treaties, such as non-political and
political treaties.
Non-political treaties are the agreements which specify the manner of
the relationship between the two States with respect to a particular issue between
the two of them such as financial, economic, commercial, industrial and
cultural relationships, and anything else similar, and so these are considered
in the light of the Shari’ah
according to their subject, and the Shari’ah
rules connected to that subject are applicable. That is why economic treaties
are permitted, since the rules regarding renting and international commerce are
applicable, and commercial treaties are also permitted, since the rules
regarding selling and international commerce are applicable, and financial
treaties are permitted, since the rules of exchange apply, and cultural
treaties are permitted since the rules regarding education and teaching apply
from the angle of scientific material, and from the angle of definite and
speculative results which are produced by learning and teaching them.
There are three categories of political treaties:
Firstly, those that are permitted, which are those that do not affect
the nature of the State, and do not decrease its domestic and international
authority, and do not give the disbeliever any authority over it, such as peace
and armistice treaties - the Messenger
concluded an armistice
treaty with the Quraysh in the armistice treaty of Hudaybiyah.
Also permitted are treaties to not commit acts of aggression against
one another; the Messenger
concluded treaties to not
commit acts of aggression with Bani Damra and Bani Mudlij. In the same manner,
treaties upon friendly relations are permitted since the Messenger
concluded a treaty upon friendly
relations with the Jews and so on.
The second category of treaties are those which are necessary for the
State if it is in a position of difficulty and constraint, and these are
permitted, such as a treaty to take Jizya from a State while it remains
ruled by a Kufr system, or a treaty with
a State giving it money in exchange for its neutrality with us.
The third category are those treaties which are prohibited, such as
treaties of protection, or permanent neutrality and treaties which delineate
permanent borders, and those for leasing airfields and military bases and
anything else similar. These treaties are not permitted, because the subject of
the treaty is not permitted, since protection gives the disbeliever authority
over the Muslims, and makes the security of the Muslims the security of
disbelief (Kufr). Permanent neutrality
is not permitted, because it reduces the authority of the Muslims. Delineating
permanent borders is not permitted because it means not carrying the call to
Islam and the suspension of the rules of Jihad. Leasing airfields is not
permitted because it gives the disbelievers authority over Dar Al-Islam and the same applies to military bases.
As for military treaties, they are forbidden due to the words of the
Prophet
“Do not take light from the fire of the
disbelievers” (reported by Ahmad and Al-Nasa’i), and the
fire of a people is a metaphor for their structure in war. It is also forbidden
due to his
words “I do not rely
/seek help from a polytheist” (reported
by Muslim from Aaisha (ra)). And from Aaisha (ra) in Abu Dawud and Ibn Maja, “We do not seek help of a polytheist” and his
words, “We do not seek
help with the disbelievers against the polytheists” (reported by Ibn Abi Shayba from
Sa’id b. al-Mundhir).
With regard to what
is reported by Ahmad and Abu Dawud from Dhi Makhmar who said: I heard the
Messenger of Allah
say “You will make a safe treaty with the
Romans, and you and they will fight an enemy behind them” – his
words “and you and they
will fight an enemy behind them” is taken to mean individual Romans,
and not their State, and that is because he
said “You will make a
safe treaty with the Romans, and you will fight” and the treaty between
the Muslims and disbelievers is only when they accept the Jizya and to enter under the rule of the Muslims, since Islam
ordered the Muslims to give the disbelievers they fight the choice between
three: Islam, Jizya or war. If the
treaty occurred and they were disbelievers, this could not happen except in the
situation they were paying Jizya and
their falling under the Islamic flag. So therefore his
words “you
will make a treaty” is an indication that they were under the flag of
the Muslims, and so they would be individuals at that time, and this is
supported by what happened with the Romans. The Muslims fought and defeated
them, and occupied their lands, and the Romans fought with the Muslims as
individuals, but the Roman State did not fight alongside the Islamic State
against another enemy behind them. This confirms that what is meant by the
narration is individual Romans, and not as a State, and it is obligatory to
interpret it in this way in order to reconcile and use all of the evidences –
as is well known in Usul al-Fiqh, using the two evidences is better than voiding one of
them, and there is no recourse to weighing the evidences unless reconciling
them is not possible. Accordingly it is clear that there is no evidence which
permits seeking the help of the polytheists as a State; rather the evidences
are explicit against that without any restriction.
These are the evidences for this article.
Article 191
The State is forbidden to belong to any
organisation which is based on anything other than Islam or which applies
non-Islamic rules. This includes international organisations like the United
Nations, the International Court of Justice, the International Monetary Fund and
the World Bank, and regional organisations like the Arab League.
The subject which
the international and regional organisations are established upon has been
prohibited by the Shari’ah.
The United Nations
is established upon the basis of the Capitalist system, which is a system of Kufr,
above and beyond which it is a tool in the hands of the large nations,
particularly America, which exploits it for the sake of imposing its influence
over the smaller nations, which the current states in the Islamic World are a
part of.
The International
Court of Justice judges with a system of Kufr, and going to it for a
judgement is to take a judgement from other than what Allah (swt) has revealed.
The International
Monetary Fund is established upon giving loans of hard currency with interest,
and on a basis of exchange that is forbidden according to the Shari’ah,
and so it does not give hard currency in exchange for the local currency on the
spot, but rather it gives hard currency to the State which is in need of hard
currency, in exchange that after a period of time it repays it the equivalent
from its own currency with additional interest which is specified. This kind of
currency exchange is forbidden since it is a type of currency exchange that has
been prohibited, because currency exchange either has to be carried out on the
spot without any delay, since if there is a delay it is forbidden as the
narration has mentioned. And in the same manner it also includes interest which
is also forbidden.
The World Bank is
established upon utilising interest, like any other bank.
The Arab League is
established upon the basis of the Capitalist system, and it explicitly mentions
in its constitution that it is to protect the independence of the Arab states,
in other words the protection of the separation and division of the Islamic
lands, which is prohibited.
Similar to the Arab
League is the Organisation of Islamic Conference and its like.
For these reasons,
it is forbidden for the Islamic State to belong to any of these organisations.
This is the draft constitution, or the necessary evidences for it, and we have clarified the evidences for the rules
which are part of the articles of the constitution, and explained what was
necessary to be explained, and it is clear that this constitution is an Islamic
constitution, in other words it is composed of Shari’ah rules deduced
from Shari’ah evidences, in other words from the Book (Quran), the Sunnah, the Ijma’ of the
companions, and Qiyas. This is why it is a duty upon the Muslims to act
according to it.
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