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Islamisation of Pakistan’s legal system

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Islamisation of Pakistan’s legal system


Justice A R Cornelius, being a liberal catholic Christian, is an unlikely champion of the Islamisation of the legal system in Pakistan. Yet facts show that it was he who first expounded the idea that in order for rule of law to take root in Pakistan, judges should freely deploy Islam to justify their legal decisions. Ironically, he did so speaking to officers at the General Headquarters (GHQ) on July 11, 1962 where he argued that the state could only find political legitimacy if it honoured the wishes of the people and unveiled a just Islamic order. To understand thecontext of Cornelius’ comments, I recommend that the readers refer to Clark Lombardi’s fascinating study ‘Can Islamising a legal system ever help promote liberal democracy? A view from Pakistan’, which is available online.Of course, Cornelius envisaged Pakistani liberals as leaders of this Islamisation, which would be a sort of a renaissance of Islam and would unleash liberal rule of law in the country. Advising the military rulers of the country, Justice Cornelius said, “It is in this sense that the demand often heard in Pakistan for restoration of traditional Islamic institutions should be understood. It is the natural cry of a strong organism to be connected once again with its original and proper roots. The matter lies in the field of political therapeutics.” In doing so, Cornelius was overturning the axiomatic wisdom of Justice Munir and Justice Kayani, who had held that the question of an Islamic state would only lead to dissention given the variety of the often contradictory claims of various sects in Islam. Withthe Christian Chief Justice (CJ) of Pakistan now giving a nod to the Islamisation of the legal system, it was only a matter of time before a theory of Islamic review would take root in Pakistan. At least the military drew its own lessons from Cornelius’exposition, especially in how it used that logic to the hilt under General Ziaul Haq. One wonders if General Zia himself was in attendance at Cornelius’ lecture.Cornelius was speaking at a time when the world was yet to experience the spread of fundamentalism and revivalist thought in the Muslim world. I doubt he would hold the views he expressed at the GHQ in 1962 if he were alive today. For one thing, time has proved that liberals have failed to establish any kind of legitimacy vis-à-vis Islam. This was obviously natural given that the common man is not likely to reject the interpretations of established religious clergy in favour of modernist interpretations of Islam expounded by liberal Muslims or legal scholars attempting to reconcile Islam with modernity. The problem is that whenever the issue is going to come down to an interpretation of Islamic law, invariably liberal and progressive interpretations, no matter how persuasively argued, will lose out to traditionalist and orthodox views thatare championed by a reactionary clergy. Priests with a divine mission, which Jinnah warned us against, will always trump any liberal attempts at reform. It is therefore a losing proposition for liberals to engage theclergy on that level, especially given that there are no liberal scholars of Islam grounded in Islamic history and jurisprudence, at least in Pakistan, who can challenge the established sectarian narratives of Barelvis and Deobandis. There are noRaza Aslans or Mustafa Akyols in Pakistan and even if there were, given the post-General Zia scenario, they would be driven out of the country. The treatment meted out to Fazlur Rahman Malik by Pakistan’s aggressive Islamists, at a time when Pakistan was a relatively liberal country, is a case in point. The more recent case of Javed Ahmad Ghamdi,by no means a liberal Islamic scholarbut merely a reasonable one, is another.A case in point is the Federal Shariat Court (FSC), which has recently beenthe subject of a lively debate between some of Pakistan’s brightest legal minds. The FSC was General Zia’s greatest trick. It was the foremost tool by which he intended to legitimise his illegitimatemilitary dictatorship. The idea of a court of Islamic review empowered to give binding legal opinions on religious matters was itself a revolutionary one within Islam. Neverin the 1,400 years of the history of Islam was there ever an institution that was vested with such jurisdiction. The closest the Muslim world ever came to this was under Caliph Mamun’s reign in the ninth century with his attempt to create a Church of Islam inspired by the rationalist doctrine of Mutazila. It ended in terrific failure. The very existence of the FSC therefore is a censure on the democratic will of thepeople of Pakistan, but it is said to be a popular censure. The people of Pakistan, we are told, want to have a shariat court. It is, to quote Cornelius, a matter of “political therapeutics”. These political therapeutics, in my opinion, have destroyed the dream that was Pakistan. Where do we draw the line?Perhaps the first thing that liberals and reformists in Pakistan need to do is to stop trying to find a silver lining when talking of out of place institutions like the FSC. Instead, we need to dig out and revive those arguments that liberal judges had made prior to Cornelius’ ill-fated advice. Pakistan is home to many different kinds of Islamic sects, not to mention adherents of other religions. The different kind of Islamic sects cannot really agree on what it means to be a Muslim. Meanwhile, Pakistan is a modern state that has to exist in the modern world. When you talk of sharia, whose version are you going to implement? Will this argument not destroy the very fabric of the state? Has our experience over the last 40 years not shown us that this is an endless and fruitless debate that only weakens the state? As a Pakistani who wants this state to prosper and not just carry on in confusion, I reject the imposition of the FSC, designed to prop up GeneralZia’s military dictatorship, as having any legitimacy in deciding what is Islamic and what is not Islamic.

Islamisation of Pakistan’s legal system
 
Last edited:
Islamisation of Pakistan’s legal system


Justice A R Cornelius, being a liberal catholic Christian, is an unlikely champion of the Islamisation of the legal system in Pakistan. Yet facts show that it was he who first expounded the idea that in order for rule of law to take root in Pakistan, judges should freely deploy Islam to justify their legal decisions. Ironically, he did so speaking to officers at the General Headquarters (GHQ) on July 11, 1962 where he argued that the state could only find political legitimacy if it honoured the wishes of the people and unveiled a just Islamic order. To understand thecontext of Cornelius’ comments, I recommend that the readers refer to Clark Lombardi’s fascinating study ‘Can Islamising a legal system ever help promote liberal democracy? A view from Pakistan’, which is available online.Of course, Cornelius envisaged Pakistani liberals as leaders of this Islamisation, which would be a sort of a renaissance of Islam and would unleash liberal rule of law in the country. Advising the military rulers of the country, Justice Cornelius said, “It is in this sense that the demand often heard in Pakistan for restoration of traditional Islamic institutions should be understood. It is the natural cry of a strong organism to be connected once again with its original and proper roots. The matter lies in the field of political therapeutics.” In doing so, Cornelius was overturning the axiomatic wisdom of Justice Munir and Justice Kayani, who had held that the question of an Islamic state would only lead to dissention given the variety of the often contradictory claims of various sects in Islam. Withthe Christian Chief Justice (CJ) of Pakistan now giving a nod to the Islamisation of the legal system, it was only a matter of time before a theory of Islamic review would take root in Pakistan. At least the military drew its own lessons from Cornelius’exposition, especially in how it used that logic to the hilt under General Ziaul Haq. One wonders if General Zia himself was in attendance at Cornelius’ lecture.Cornelius was speaking at a time when the world was yet to experience the spread of fundamentalism and revivalist thought in the Muslim world. I doubt he would hold the views he expressed at the GHQ in 1962 if he were alive today. For one thing, time has proved that liberals have failed to establish any kind of legitimacy vis-à-vis Islam. This was obviously natural given that the common man is not likely to reject the interpretations of established religious clergy in favour of modernist interpretations of Islam expounded by liberal Muslims or legal scholars attempting to reconcile Islam with modernity. The problem is that whenever the issue is going to come down to an interpretation of Islamic law, invariably liberal and progressive interpretations, no matter how persuasively argued, will lose out to traditionalist and orthodox views thatare championed by a reactionary clergy. Priests with a divine mission, which Jinnah warned us against, will always trump any liberal attempts at reform. It is therefore a losing proposition for liberals to engage theclergy on that level, especially given that there are no liberal scholars of Islam grounded in Islamic history and jurisprudence, at least in Pakistan, who can challenge the established sectarian narratives of Barelvis and Deobandis. There are noRaza Aslans or Mustafa Akyols in Pakistan and even if there were, given the post-General Zia scenario, they would be driven out of the country. The treatment meted out to Fazlur Rahman Malik by Pakistan’s aggressive Islamists, at a time when Pakistan was a relatively liberal country, is a case in point. The more recent case of Javed Ahmad Ghamdi,by no means a liberal Islamic scholarbut merely a reasonable one, is another.A case in point is the Federal Shariat Court (FSC), which has recently beenthe subject of a lively debate between some of Pakistan’s brightest legal minds. The FSC was General Zia’s greatest trick. It was the foremost tool by which he intended to legitimise his illegitimatemilitary dictatorship. The idea of a court of Islamic review empowered to give binding legal opinions on religious matters was itself a revolutionary one within Islam. Neverin the 1,400 years of the history of Islam was there ever an institution that was vested with such jurisdiction. The closest the Muslim world ever came to this was under Caliph Mamun’s reign in the ninth century with his attempt to create a Church of Islam inspired by the rationalist doctrine of Mutazila. It ended in terrific failure. The very existence of the FSC therefore is a censure on the democratic will of thepeople of Pakistan, but it is said to be a popular censure. The people of Pakistan, we are told, want to have a shariat court. It is, to quote Cornelius, a matter of “political therapeutics”. These political therapeutics, in my opinion, have destroyed the dream that was Pakistan. Where do we draw the line?Perhaps the first thing that liberals and reformists in Pakistan need to do is to stop trying to find a silver lining when talking of out of place institutions like the FSC. Instead, we need to dig out and revive those arguments that liberal judges had made prior to Cornelius’ ill-fated advice. Pakistan is home to many different kinds of Islamic sects, not to mention adherents of other religions. The different kind of Islamic sects cannot really agree on what it means to be a Muslim. Meanwhile, Pakistan is a modern state that has to exist in the modern world. When you talk of sharia, whose version are you going to implement? Will this argument not destroy the very fabric of the state? Has our experience over the last 40 years not shown us that this is an endless and fruitless debate that only weakens the state? As a Pakistani who wants this state to prosper and not just carry on in confusion, I reject the imposition of the FSC, designed to prop up GeneralZia’s military dictatorship, as having any legitimacy in deciding what is Islamic and what is not Islamic.

Islamisation of Pakistan’s legal system

Author needs to recheck Pakistan fulls name that is Islamic Republic of Pakistan although most things in constitution are either not Islamic and things which are they are not being implemented
 
Author needs to recheck Pakistan fulls name that is Islamic Republic of Pakistan although most things in constitution are either not Islamic and things which are they are not being implemented
What are the un Islamic things in our constitution?Last i remembered we cannot pass a law or ruling
contradictory to Islamic teachings

But there remain folks who keep calling our system nizam e murtads and all supporters as murtads

Mixed government is the form of government in Pakistan. It's not completely shariah state and not even completely democracy. The name 'Islamic republic' is just in words, honestly speaking.
We need a better republic
 
What are the un Islamic things in our constitution?Last i remembered we cannot pass a law or ruling
contradictory to Islamic teachings

But there remain folks who keep calling our system nizam e murtads and all supporters as murtads
Yes still most laws are not according to Islam
 
What are the un Islamic things in our constitution?Last i remembered we cannot pass a law or ruling
contradictory to Islamic teachings

But there remain folks who keep calling our system nizam e murtads and all supporters as murtads


We need a better republic

Nahi we need the implementation, no matter which form of government it is. WE NEED IMPLEMENTATION.

Democracy isn't working out, we are not fully under shariah, we curse dictatorship, ain't got chance for communists, no tolerance for totalitarian. What we need then basically? The laws/rules, and/or form of governments need to be implemented.
 
Like what inheritance,marriage,murder,rape,treason,zakat which laws are un Islamic?

Ab main bolon gi to sare attack Karen ge or aap to Shayd sub Se Agay. :p

Media ko deakh lo Kis angle Se lagta h Islamic republic of Pakistan h yeh?????

Specifically entertainment media.
 
Nahi we need the implementation, no matter which form of government it is. WE NEED IMPLEMENTATION.

Democracy isn't working out, we are not fully under shariah, we curse dictatorship, ain't got chance for communists, no tolerance for totalitarian. What we need then basically? The laws/rules, and/or form of governments need to be implemented.
Democracy aye kahaan hay mulk mein yahaan Butt raj laga hua hay :D
No offence to PDF butts :D
@Pakistani Exile @Armstrong
 
IQBAL AND THE RECONSTRUCTION OF ISLAMIC LAW
KHURSHID AHMAD

Dr. Muhammad Iqbal, on one occasion, said:

“Today, Islam’s greatest need is the reconstruction of the Islamic law and its re-codification in such a way that it may provide the Islamic answer to the hundreds of thousands of new questions that have been posed by the modern economic, political, social, national and international developments.”

In a letter to Maulana Sayyid Sulayman Nadvi, he wrote:

“It is my firm conviction that he who critically reviews modern jurisprudence from the Qur’anic viewpoint, reconstructs it, and establishes the truth and eternality of Qur’anic laws, would be the real leader and pioneer of Islamic renaissance and the greatest benefactor of humanity at large. This is the time for action; for in my humble opinion, Islam today is on trial and never in the long range of Islamic history was it faced with such a challenge as the one that besets it today.”

Iqbal, it seems, was extremely preoccupied with the idea of the reconstruction of Islamic law. He was looking with sober anxiety at the currents and cross-currents of thought in the Muslim world.

He was worried at the spectacle of the growing alien influences in the world of Islam and wanted to awaken the intelligentsia to the dangers of indiscriminate assimilation.

Law is the sheet-anchor of a culture. It deals with life in all its multifarious aspects. Every science is its domain, every field is its jurisdiction. It guides and controls human life in every walk of activity. As such its importance is paramount. Iqbal realised this cardinal importance of law and looked with grief at the gradual disintegration of the law and custom that had held together the Muslim society.

Although the contact of Islam and the Modern Western Civilization began in the seventeenth century yet it entered a crucial stage only in the nineteenth and the twentieth centuries. In these later periods the political supremacy of the Muslims was on the wane. The Muslim world was succumbing, at a heavy pace, to the encroachments of Western imperialism. Under the sheltering care of imperialism, Western education and Western technology were creeping into the world of Islam. New ideas began to fill the air, new techniques began to hold the sway. These forces disturbed the old order to its roots. The Muslim world was thrown into convulsion.

Read the complete article:

IQBAL AND THE RECONSTRUCTION OF ISLAMIC LAW
 
Ab main bolon gi to sare attack Karen ge or aap to Shayd sub Se Agay. :p

Media ko deakh lo Kis angle Se lagta h Islamic republic of Pakistan h yeh?????

Specifically entertainment media.
mam ap humy choreen ap woheen USA main apny liya aik sharia room bana leen humy maafi deen
 
religion mixed with LAW create anarchy

State and churches' separation would work for developed countries and sensible nations. MashAllah if Pakistan's government is messed up, so do we people are.
 
There is nothing un-Islamic or something against Islam in our constitution.

The problem is in PPC draft, which was created by East India Company to keep the land under their rule, it should be updated on modern lines.
 

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