The Thinker: When a Fatwa Is Not Necessarily a ‘Fatwa’

Image source: mzdown2earth.xanga.com
By Jennie S Bev
In five short years, Facebook’s members have reached 200 million worldwide. If it were a country, it would be ranked fifth in size after China, India, the United States and Indonesia. It is the fourth largest democracy by far.
No wonder it has been receiving the attention of Indonesian Muslim clerics as well. In late May, 700 religious students and clerics from East Java attended a public forum on young women’s Islamic boarding schools, and ultimately determined that overusing Facebook and other social networking sites was haram, or forbidden.
A few days later, Din Syamsuddin, the chairman of Muhammadiyah and the deputy chairman of the Indonesian Council of Ulema (MUI), clarified that social networking sites, just like mobile phones, e-mail and other common forms of technology, were neutral: they could be used for both good and bad purposes.
Still, the harm of almost being “ fatwa-ed ” was done. Muslims and non-Muslims alike always feel the pinch when a fatwa declares something or someone as haram .
Fatwas are notoriously life-altering, but what are they? A fatwa, or religious edict, is not a “fatwa” per se in Indonesia.
Indonesian Islam is Sunni, not Shiite, which means a fatwa has no legally binding implications whatsoever. They are, however, a strong moral force designed to influence public policies. In Indonesia, Muslim clerics have somewhat equal standing with other moderate and nonreligious intellectuals. They are trendsetters with something extra — a standpoint under “religious dogma.”
To religious people, anything dogmatic is believed to have a strong adherence pressure. All psychological, however, I must say. That is the strength of a fatwa.
In Shiite countries like Iran, a fatwa is legally binding, which explains why Salman Rushdie had to take to exile after a death fatwa was proclaimed by Ayatollah Khomeini in 1989. Even though Rushdie rushed to apologize a few days later, Khomeini insisted that his apology would not be accepted and that he should be killed even if he repented and recanted for his fictional work.
The disturbing thing with that fatwa is the thousands of religious followers who demanded both the banning and the murder of the author. This showed how powerful a fatwa is, especially when it is issued in a Shiite Shariah society.
Professor Abdullahi An-Na’im, an expert in Islamic law at Emory University in the United States, argued that the fatwa against Rushdie was in actuality a fallacy on three counts.
First, assuming Khomeini was the undisputed ruler of an Islamic state, or dar al-Islam , which in this case was Iran, his jurisdiction did not extend to a non-Islamic state or, dar al-harb . Rushdie was a British citizen, so Khomeini’s fatwa did not have any legal authority over him and his actions. Second, even if Khomeini was bestowed with universal authority over both Islamic and non-Islamic states, Rushdie would have the right to defend himself before punishment could be imposed. Third, the complete defense against any charge of heresy and apostasy is repentance.
In conclusion, whenever Muslim clerics issue a “haram fatwa,” we should not panic. We need to find out its credibility by delving into the substance, the jurisdiction and the context within which it was issued.
In Indonesia, a fatwa is simply a human expert opinion, with emphasis on “human.” It is a recommendation, a “consumer beware” sign, advice, suggestion. Therefore, whether something is sinful or not, we should leave it to God’s discretion in the afterlife.
Indonesia is a democratic secular country based on Pancasila and not on Shariah laws. And a fatwa is not a legal instrument. This fact alone is a strong legal basis to nullify Shariah-based or inspired bylaws in local municipalities.
Thus, if you are a Muslim in Indonesia, should you be following clerics’ fatwas? The answer is simple: use your best common sense, reasoning skills and discernment. A fatwa in Indonesia is merely an opinion, and humans, as we know, are prone to error.
Regardless of his high standing in society, a cleric is not a representative of God. He is merely a person who studies religion in-depth.
We should not meddle with God’s prerogatives. A fatwa, after all, might not be a “fatwa” per se.
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Jennie S. Bev is an Indonesia-born author and columnist based in Northern California. This article was published by The Jakarta Globe.
Thanks Jennie for the enlightenment article.
Though I am a clergyman through your writing I learn more about fatwa among the Muslims. Be more fruitful in writing inspiring and encouraging articles.
BJ
Jangan lupa bukunya kalau ke LA 8-))
Bob Jokiman
17 Jun 09 at 8:19 am
Thank you Pak Bob for your continued support.
Yes I’ll bring my book, only 2 more left. Need to print more.
Jennie
Jennie S. Bev
17 Jun 09 at 12:08 pm
I am muslim and there are lots of wrong beliefs and superstitions in Islam.
There is no fatwa, no veil for women, no religion compulsery in Islam.
Only God can judge about life and death.
The Quran is considered as the God’s word by all Muslims, but the very large majority of them don’t follow what it’s taught in it.
They prefer to follow the hadiths (that come more than 200 years after the Prophet’s dead), the clerics (there is no authority in Islam but God only).
So if they only accept the God’s Book there won’t be these troubles with the muslim’s world…
[Quran 6:114] Shall I seek other than GOD as a source of law, when He has revealed to you this book fully detailed? Those who received the scripture recognize that it has been revealed from your Lord, truthfully. You shall not harbor any doubt.
[Quran 6:115] The word of your Lord is complete, in truth and justice. Nothing shall abrogate His words. He is the Hearer, the Omniscient.
Did the Creator of all universe, the visible and the invisible, the Creator of our ability to think, the One who controls every thing, controls every dust’s location, did He forget something when He created Life with all creatures ?
He is beyond our understanding but nothing escapes from His attention, even our most secret thoughts.
Thanks,
Rachid
7 Jul 09 at 12:21 pm
Thank you Rachid for the clarifications. We are on the same page. Well said.
Jennie S. Bev
10 Jul 09 at 9:35 am