| 
 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
   | 
  Islamic Government" - An 
Oxymoron  By T.O. Shanavas
 
 In many Muslim majority nations, monarchies, brutal military, dictators or 
religious extremists force free people to confess and practice a 
government-approved version of faith that they call Islam. These self-righteous 
terrorists and tyrants want to subdue Muslims and non-Muslims alike. These 
enemies of freedom use their handpicked Imams to issue fatwas to validate their 
tyranny. Unfortunately, most of these Imams' values, and fatwas that have never 
been subjected to the scrutiny of a free press, are accepted as truly Islamic 
values in many Muslim societies. Under many such regimes, women cannot drive, 
own a business, or even acquire the most rudimentary education. In countries 
such as Saudi Arabia, religious police whip and herd the common people like 
camels into mosques during prayer time. When women become victims of torture and 
honor killing in the name of Islam, these Imams, kings and generals ignore or 
declare these atrocities to be isolated incidents. They claim that Islam and 
Muslims are protected under their "just" rule.
 
 Muslims are quick to condemn non-Muslim societies for their human right 
violations. However, they are often silent when it comes to the abuse of 
innocent women and other members of Muslim society. In such a sad state of 
Muslim society, many Muslims blindly dream of a utopian "Islamic government", in 
much the same way as Christians anticipate the "Kingdom of God." Unfortunately, 
this idea of "Islamic government" is a myth created by the power-hungry to 
subdue Muslims and non-Muslims alike to benefit exclusively those who rule. The 
Qur'an unambiguously exposes the tyrants' forgery of Islam.
 
 The Qur'an states: "Say (Muhammad, it is) truth from the Lord of you all. 
Whosoever will, let him believe and whosoever will, let him disbelieve" (Qur'an 
18: 29) "And so, [O Prophet,] exhort them; thy task is only to exhort: thou 
cannot compel them to believe."(Qur'an: 21-22). "O Prophet.!…Thy duty is not 
more than to deliver the message; and the reckoning is Ours." (Qur'an 13:40).
 
 These verses teach that an atmosphere of safety and liberty is an absolute 
necessity to the development of faith in the heart. These verses demand that 
Muslims guarantee freedom and safety for all. Moreover, the "reckoning" belongs 
to God only. Therefore, if a governments or an Imams' Fatwas demand public 
obedience and submission, such an enforced, outward appearance of obedience is 
not faith. Tyrants have no means to know what is in the heart of the individual 
thus subdued. When a government enforces religion, the control is over the body 
not over the soul. The Qur'an rejects such tyranny over the body: "It is not 
your meat or blood that reach Allah: It is the fealty of your heart that reaches 
Him" (Qur'an 22:37). Similarly, the Qur’an condemns and rejects the prayers of 
those Muslims who pray but refrain from the moral duties: “Have you seen him who 
denies the Day of Judgment? It is he who pushes the orphan away; and does not 
induce others to feed the needy; Woe to those who pray; but who are oblivious of 
their duties; who dissimilate and withhold things of common use from others.” 
(The Qur’an 107:1-7).
 
 The Qur'an states: "We sent down the Torah which contains guidance and 
light…Later, in the train of Prophets We send Jesus, son of Mary, confirming the 
Torah which has been sent down before him, and gave him the Gospel containing 
guidance and light. …Unto to you [O Muhammad] this writ (Koran) and a way and a 
pattern of life, confirming what were revealed before…Unto everyone of you have 
We appointed a different law and way of life. And if God had so willed He could 
surely have you all made one single community professing one faith. But He 
wished to try you and test you. So try to excel in good deeds" (Qur'an: 
5:44-48).
 
 Therefore, the very existence of different kinds of faith and religion 
contesting one another in acts of good work is the will of God. Hence, freedom 
without the enforcement of conformity in religious matters is Islamic. The 
so-called Islamic governments of the self-righteous violate Qur'anic principles 
and tyrannize people of all faith including Muslims.
 
 Allah told the Prophet (s): "…Fear not people, but fear Me (God)…" (Qur'an 
5:44). Therefore, the Prophet (s) declared that human beings are free and 
individually accountable to God only. He preached freedom of faith. He struggled 
to establish a free society. Prophet Muhammad (s) functioned democratically at 
the request of the citizens of Medina. The Prophet (s) never forced a decision 
upon his community even when he believed that the majority decision on a 
particular secular matter was a mistake, as happened in the case of the disaster 
at the battle of Uhud. He and a minority of the citizens of Medina argued for 
the fortification of the city of Medina and planned to fight the Meccan army 
from within. Yet, he agreed to go along with the wishes of the majority of his 
followers to fight the Meccan army in open field instead of fighting from 
fortified Medina, even though he truly believed that the strategy of the 
majority was wrong. He upheld the democratic principles even when there was 
maximum danger to the community. This incident is an example illustrating that 
Islam demands Democracy, and not tyranny by Imams, Kings, self-appointed 
presidents, and military generals. Following the footsteps of Prophet (s), all 
Muslims must ardently and peacefully struggle to establish a free society. 
Everyone is equal and free. If any one wants to be a believer, let him/her be. 
If anyone wants to be an apostate let him/her be safe to live the life of an 
apostate.
 
 Government is a tool to maintain communal policy. Within the framework of a 
democratic government, the policy of a community is generated by communal 
consensus. The concept of communal consensus, though valuable in establishing 
communal parameters, becomes irrelevant in the assessment of an individual's 
soul on " The Day of Judgment." What is critical in the Islamic context is 
faith. Faith is an exclusively personal and private experience. We embrace faith 
individually just as we confront our death individually. An Iranian Muslim 
philosopher, Souroush, correctly said that we have communal actions but not 
communal faith. We can express faith in public but the core of the faith is 
mysteriously private. The preeminence of Islamic faith is for the Hereafter 
where people are to be judged individually: "Everyone of them will come before 
Him all alone on the Day of Resurrection. Surely, Ar-Rahman will show love for 
those who believe and do right." [Qur'an 19:95-96]. In Islam, there is no 
concept of Original Sin to blight the goodness inherent in mankind; therefore, 
the prime criterion on the Day of Judgment is the cumulative action of the 
individual. The officials of a government can have faith and religious values, 
yet Allah (sw) judges the individual not for what the community has sanctioned 
as ethical, but for what the individual has chosen as honorable action. One 
individual cannot bear the sole responsibility for a communal decision. So on 
the Day of Judgment, a communal policy does not outweigh one's actions 
determined in the course of free will.
 
 The function of government is enforcement. Therefore, the concept of so-called 
Islamic government is an oxymoron because the Qur'an is against any form of 
compulsion or enforcement of a particular religion. The Qur'an proclaims: "No 
compulsion is there in religion, for rectitude is henceforth distinct from 
perversity…" [Qur'an 2:256]., however, the closed minds of many contemporary 
Muslims at large cannot gasp this straightforward and simple message.
 
 A community can have Islamic values. The community values do not come from the 
simple pronouncement of fatwas by Imams, but after comprehensive free discussion 
of all fatwas and opinions in a free press, without coercion and intimidation. 
Such open discussion and decision-making by the community are important Islamic 
tenets because Allah asked the Prophet (s) "…And seek their [i.e., people's] 
counsel in all matters of public concern…" [Qur'an 3:159].
 
 Mistakes are possible when humans make decisions. However, the Compassionate God 
states: "There is no sin upon you for what mistakes you commit unintentionally, 
but there is sin in what your hearts have intended." [Qur'an 33:5] Unintentional 
mistakes happen less frequently when the mind is exposed to free press, public 
dialogue, and reason. Prophet taught: "Allah has not created any thing better 
than reason." Any Muslim who opposes a free press, public debate, and reasoning 
commits a sin knowingly because he/she refuses to listen to the merit or demerit 
of an opposing point of view.
 
 The Quraish of Mecca rejected the Prophet (s) because they refused to listen to 
reason. Muslims must reject this paradigm that pervades within Muslim 
communities. We must free ourselves from the concept of enforced forms of 
outward Islam that demand conformity and submission by force. We must reject 
totalitarianism and monarchies that want to rule our bodies. We must let liberal 
democracy with the safeguard of a free press rule our "meat and blood" and let 
faith rule our heart and let our hearts and minds fly freely until truth based 
in reason pervades the earth so that there may be liberty and justice for all.
 
 Unlike the enforced, distorted Islam of tyrants and terrorists, faith chosen 
freely without coercion and without forced conformity is the genuine faith. In a 
world where faith freely chosen fills the heart, the true religious spirit may 
come alive vibrantly to establish the ideal society where all people may partake 
of that precious freedom called choice. Early Muslim history corroborates this 
fact. Muslims helped Jews to create their Golden Age and helped liberate 
Christians from the tyranny of the Roman church. Muslim philosophy and science 
promoted the Enlightenment and Renaissance of Europe. Muslims also developed 
experimental science. In those days, Muslims educated anyone who came our way 
without force-feeding our faith. Now we have governments that have taken control 
of our body claiming to send our "meat and blood" to God while Muslims have to 
beg from non-Muslim societies for their daily bread to keep their body alive. 
Islam will remain a dream and a theory with no practical value until faith rules 
the hearts and liberal democracy with an accountable free press rules human 
"blood and meat."
 
 I agree with Rose Wilder Lane, the daughter of Laura Ingall (of "Little House on 
the Prairie" fame) and author of The Discovery of Freedom. She said that in 
principle the American struggle against authority is only a different version of 
the struggle against authority of the Prophet. The democratic paradigm draws 
inspiration from the Qur'anic axiom that human beings are free under God. The 
American constitution reflects this as it states: "Congress shall make no law 
respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise 
thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or the press." In America, hearts 
can choose their faith at the individual level. In this great nation, everyone 
is free to believe or disbelieve in the Day of Judgment when free human spirits 
face God for their individual acts and faith, not for governmental or communal 
sins.
 
 American Muslims must struggle along with the rest of Americans against any 
threat from external or internal forces that endanger our re-discovered freedom. 
We must struggle for a better America without abridging freedom. America may not 
be the perfect utopia of Christians or Muslims, or of anybody else, but it is 
the most resilient nation in the contemporary world. Muslim Americans joining 
hands with the rest of Americans, without impinging on the freedom of others, 
must strive to make America a greater nation that it is now. The free Muslims of 
America know that America and American freedom must be protected and preserved 
at any cost if Muslims want to practice Islam as each Muslim understands it, not 
as authoritarians such as monarchs or religious bigots choose to enforce it. 
Finally, I thank Allah (sw) for creating America where my faith rules my heart 
and liberal democracy rules my "meat and blood" without enforcement to conform 
my Islamic practices to anyone else's Islam or vice versa.
 
 May God Bless America and help us make it better and freer nation.
 |