Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Modifying My Belief
Egypt Independent
has published a testimony of former Muslim Brotherhood member and
writer Osama Dorra of how he has resolved to desert Islam as religion
from his life:
I
decided to deactivate my practice of Islam as a religion because the
“cognitive dissonance” between some of its details and what I think is
rational, just and logical has reached a limit that is beyond my
comprehension.
I
have resolved to reduce the status of Islam to a “cultural reference”
that sets the tone for my morals, until I find another reference, or
adopt it again as a religion.
The
Arab Spring has shaken our confidence in what we were like before
revolutions. It has become clear that the assumptions upon which we
built our lives were not all sound, the institutions that led us were
not all efficient or honest, and the people we thought highly of were
not all worthy of that praise.
Hence,
the current generation carries the burden of re-inspecting everything
that has now come under doubt until God shows us the truth.
In
the context of the current volatile situation, I was tormented by three
incidents in particular that involved doctrinal controversy.
First,
the violent protests against the film that insulted Prophet Mohamed.
These protests highlighted that the penalty for insulting the Prophet in
Sharia is execution.
This
penalty seemed to me incompatible with the “tolerance,” “compassion”
and “freedom” we attribute to Islam. In fact, it made Western legal
codes, which allow for “freedom of expression,” seem more sensible,
tolerant and fair.
Then
I heard the Friday prayer preacher telling the story of a blind man who
had a female slave who nursed him. The man married the woman and they
had two children. But, one day, he stabbed her in the stomach when he
heard her saying something about the Prophet of which he disapproved,
though she was pregnant with their third child.
And
when he admitted to the Prophet why he killed her, the Prophet said:
“Be witnesses that killing this woman has become lawful.”
This story is taken from Ibn Dawoud’s teachings and was told by Ibn Abbas.
According
to the standards of the Hadith tellers, it is believed to be correct,
despite the fact that it is weird, savage and contradictory to what we
think of Islam. I do not think the Prophet of Mercy would have approved
of such a thing.
Second,
in a TV interview, the host, Wael al-Ibrashy, asked Yasser Borhamy, the
deputy leader of the Salafi Dawah movement in Alexandria, about his
opinion of the marriage of a girl. Borhamy’s answer was that he cannot
forbid what God and his Messenger have allowed, and that underage
marriage is permissible if the girl tolerates it.
He
cited a section of the fourth verse of Surat al-Talaq (Divorce), saying
“those who have not menstruated” must wait three months before they
marry again, meaning that like adults a girl must also wait three months
before marrying again.
I
was dismayed that the Quran should have a text like this. And, if the
preachers insist that the Quran is not a historically conditioned text
that can be a source of inspiration and a base for measurement (qiyas),
without being literally applied, I cannot help but wonder if God had
really permitted sexual abuse of children in his last message to humans.
Third,
the Mauritanian Initiative for the Resurgence of Abolitionism’s burning
of the books of the Maliki doctrine whose violation is seen as a
“violation of the values and identity of society.”
These
books distinguish between a free person and a slave regarding the right
to life, and exempt a master from penalty if he kills his slave. And,
if a master kills another master’s slave, he is only obliged to pay the
value of that slave.
This
is what the writers of these books understood from verse 178 of Surat
al-Baqarah that says: “Prescribed for you is legal retribution for those
murdered — the free for the free, the slave for the slave.”
It
became clear from the debate accompanying this incident that, unless it
is interpreted in a humanistic manner, the founding text of religion
cannot be referred to in a battle against slavery.
Furthermore,
those who restrict themselves to the literal meaning of the text
promise themselves that if jihad returns, the possession of women as war
hostages and the slave trade will also return. This is happening while
contemporary humans have surpassed all that is honorable and merciful.
But
the matter goes beyond these three issues to larger issues. There is
nothing that compels my generation to have confidence in the choices of
society or accept its truisms.
The
people of our country have fallen into humiliating failure and poverty.
They reminisce that if they return to their past, they will retrieve
glory. But the fact is that others on this planet have advanced
themselves with the repositories of wisdom and with God’s unequivocal
blessings.
Add
to this those who have appointed themselves as the “guardians of
belief.” These people think they are carrying out a sacred mission, are
more capable of leading the country and are closer to God. But, the fact
is, they lie, break promises, spread rumors to satisfy their interests,
cast doubts on the chastity of those who have opinions different from
theirs, and defer social justice if it contradicts their aim of
hegemony.
Is this religion? Well then, my religion is different from yours.
When
people face new facts that contradict their old beliefs, they pass
through pain that could damage their souls. Under such circumstances,
they sometimes revoke their beliefs, deny the new facts or interpret
these facts in a way that allows for their coexistence with the old
ones.
But
I have chosen that most straightforward and unhurried reaction to this
crisis: I chose to freeze my old beliefs without dropping them. I chose
to deliberate the old and the new without arriving at an absolute
conviction. I am reconsidering all religions and philosophies. So help
me God.
Many
young people have opted before for a choice similar to mine, some
mixing it with unrestrained behavior in oppostion to a society they feel
besieges them. But the majority of those who have opted for my choice
keep silent, fearing the “delegates of God” who abound in our country.
Here
is the message that my generation sends to those who control this
country: Purify religion from all the jurisprudential horror and elevate
it above political misuse, or else we will reject you and your beliefs
altogether.
Osama Dorra is a writer and columnist, and a former Muslim Brotherhood member. This article is an edited version of his blog entry, written in Arabic.
Translated by Ibrahim Hab el-Roman
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