By BBC Trending
What's popular and why
A growing social media conversation in Arabic is calling for the implementation of Sharia, or Islamic law, to be abandoned.
Discussing religious law is a sensitive topic in many Muslim countries. But on Twitter, a hashtag which translates as "
why we reject implementing Sharia"
has been used 5,000 times in 24 hours. The conversation is mainly
taking place in Saudi Arabia and Egypt. The debate is about whether
religious law is suitable for the needs of Arab countries and modern
legal systems.
Dr Alyaa Gad, an Egyptian doctor living in Switzerland,
started the hashtag. "I have nothing against religion," she tells BBC
Trending, but says she is against "using it as a political system".
Islamists often call for legal systems to be reformed to be consistent
with Sharia principles, and some want harsh interpretations of criminal
punishments to be implemented. Dr Gad says she is worried about young
people adopting the extremes of this kind of thinking. "You see it
everywhere now, Islamic State is spreading mentally as well as
physically" she told BBC Trending.
One of Dr Gad's tweets compared what action is taken against
those who commit crimes under strict interpretations of Sharia to those
who do so in Western societies.
The Tweet says: "A thief under Sharia
rule has his hand cut off and becomes a burden on society - and a
Norwegian criminal is rehabilitated to become a good citizen"
Many others joined in the conversation, using the hashtag,
listing reasons why Arabs and Muslims should abandon Sharia. "Because
there's not a single positive example of it bringing justice and
equality," one man tweeted. "Because IS and Somalia and Afghanistan
implement it, and we've seen the results," commented another. A few
Saudis who joined the online conversation shared their experience of
coming from a country that adheres to Islamic law. "In Saudi Arabia we
tried implementing Sharia, and know first-hand the bitterness of being
ruled by a religious power," a Saudi man living in California tweeted.
And a Saudi woman commented: "By adhering to Sharia we are adhering to
inhumane laws. Saudi Arabia is saturated with the blood of those
executed by Sharia".
The caption for this cartoon reads:
"Marrying four [women] and underage girls and slaves is moral. But a
consensual relationship between two unmarried people is immoral and
against Islam".
However a large proportion of those tweeting were less
critical. They argued that the problem was not religious law per se, but
a flawed understanding and interpretation of it. An Egyptian living in
Bahrain tweeted: "There has never been anything wrong with Sharia, but
it's how we implement it". Another Egyptian commented: "There is no
singular understanding of Sharia. The Muslim Brotherhood have one
understanding, the Salafists have another and so do IS, Boko Haram and
al-Qaeda".
Others found the hashtag to be offensive to Muslims. Dr Gad,
who started it, was called a "non-believer". Another commented: "You
don't want Sharia because you want homosexuality, alcohol and adultery."
Dr Gad, who has a popular
YouTube channel
that discusses sexuality and health issues, says she is used to this
kind of reaction to the topics she initiates. She says one of the
reasons she started the hashtag is because she values her right to speak
out - a right she says her friends back in Egypt don't have in the same
way. "If I were living in Egypt I would not be half as courageous as I
am now," she says.
Reporting by Mai Noman
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