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Duties of the Muhtasib

Posted by huntingnasrallah on December 17, 2008

12-17-08

by:  Gary H. Johnson, Jr.

A review of

Public Duties in Islam: The Institution of the Hisba

$15.95, 159 pp.

Ibn Taymiya, Author
Muhtar Holland, Translator
Khurshid Ahmad, Editor

 

 

For the Last 700 years, Ibn Taymiya has served as one of the chief sources of inspiration for revivalist, fundamentalist, jihadist, and supremacist Islamic Movements. A stand-out intellectual figure in the History of Islam, known for his towering scholarship, Ibn Taymiya is generally accepted as an “authentic spokesman” for the Faith. Universally referred to as the Shaykh of Islam, the appeal of Ibn Taymiya’s thought spans across all schools of the Religion. Considering (1) the challenging economic ramifications of a resurgant Islam, (2) the relatively recent cultivation and entrenchment of Shariah Compliant Finance in the modern Market, and (3) the ever-widening spectrum of socially active as well as violent Islamic Supremacist movements the world over, Public Duties in Islam: The Institution of the Hisba by al-Shaykh al-Imam Ibn Taymiya is a necessary eye-opener for any Westerner seriously attempting to come to grips with the ethics and context of modern Muslim Thought.

Since Muhtar Holland’s English translation of Ibn Taymiya’s treatise was first published by The Islamic Foundation in 1985, it is unlikely that the Western intellectual community has yet examined the relevance of this seminal discourse by the Shaykh of Islam. In time, the book will be hailed a Rosetta Stone.

In terms of (1) evaluating the collective duties of mankind, (2) determining the nature of human rights, (3) measuring the Rights of Allah, (4) decoding the ethical imperatives of Jihad, and (5) delineating virtue and vice through the Muslim frame of conscious belief, Ibn Taymiya’s Public Duties in Islam: The Institution of the Hisba has no rival. In the War of Ideas, the significance of the text cannot be overstated. Indeed, no comprehensive analysis of Shariah Law, the Mercantile Age, Islamic Imperialism, Islamic Finance, Contemporary Jihadism or Islamic Supremacism is possible without a public intellectual struggle over the Principles of Hisba and the Duties of the Muhtasib.

Al-Hisba is a cardinal institution of Islam. It is derived from the Koranic command of Allah “to enjoin good and forbid evil”. To clarify, the word “enjoin” means “to command or demand from a position of Authority”.

The intricacies of Ibn Taymiya’s thought on the nature of authority and obedience through the applications of the institution of Al-Hisba are staggering in terms of the morality, clarity, and aims of contemporary Islamic Supremacist movements.  To attempt a summary or analysis of the wide range of Al-Hisba functions is far beyond the reach or scope of a simple book review.

Therefore, I shall quote but one passage in full and will, in closing, offer a charity.

Duties of the Muhtasib

As for the Muhtasib, he is charged with ordaining that which is fitting and proscribing the improper in those spheres not reserved to the governors, the judges, the administrative officers, etc.

The duties of the Muhtasib include: ordering the common people to perform the five prayers at the proper times and punishing with flogging or imprisonment those who do not pray; supervising the prayer-leaders and those who give the call to prayer, seeing to it that the former do not neglect the duties of their office and that the latter keep within the legally prescribed form. Should he be unable to enforce his orders he may call upon the military, the magistrate or anyone commanding obedience to help him.

The Prophet Muhammad is considered the first Muhtasib. One can only ask: In the absence of a caliph, what position holds stewardship over the Umma if not the Muhtasib?

Al-Hisba is the missing link in the struggle to attain human rights in the face of Shariah Law. The problem is simple: at the Hisba root, Allah’s Rights hold Supremacy over Man’s Rights. Its chief characteristic, as an institution, is in its creation of a regulating body for the total socio-economic enforcement of Allah’s ordained prescriptions and proscriptions. The Taliban are “Students” of this Methodology in policing morality. The Saud Wahhab state has a “Virtue and Vice” squad. In view of Ibn Taymiyya’s Institution of the Hisba, a “more clairvoyant generation” would recognize the danger of the Harmonization Boards of Shariah Compliant Finance in light of the implications carried by the Office of the Muhtasib. 

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The Voice of Hezbollah

Posted by huntingnasrallah on December 13, 2008

A Book Review

by: Gary H Johnson Jr.

 

9/8/07

The Voice of Hezbollah:  The Statements of Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah

Nicholas Noe, Editor.

$19.95, 410 pp.

For those who still have unanswered questions regarding the volatile situation between Israel and Hezbollah, that erupted into a 34-Day War in the summer of discontent – 2006…the recent Verso release by Nicholas Noe, Voice of Hezbollah: The Statements of Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, is a long awaited ray of light.

At last, a book of substance on Hezbollah has arrived.

Nicholas Noe of Beirut, Lebanon, founder of Mideastwire.com and former News Editor on the Lebanon Daily Star/Herald Tribune, has provided the English speaking West with a compilation of Key Statements that Hezbollah’s spokesman and Secretary General, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, has put forth into the public record over the last twenty years of his rise to International acclaim and infamy.

These statements, while couched in Politics, provide the Ethics of a man for all to see. And the Ethics of this man, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, has guided the history of Hezbollah onto the rails of a jihadi juggernaut of a movement.

Noe’s work reveals Nasrallah’s calculated and charismatic stand for National Resistance as a path to Victory.

While reading Nasrallah’s words, Lebanon – the nation – comes to life; the distance between Western Democracy and Lebanon’s Pluralism is evident; and, suddenly, the reader finds himself asking whether it is the Nation of Lebanon, the Nation of Islam, or Nasrallah, as a uniting force unto himself, that provides the Context for the ever evolving Israeli-Hezbollah conflict.

Laid out in 32 chapters, Nicholas Noe provides the West with the key names, dates, issues, guides and stresses of Nasrallah’s career. A must read for all historians; Nasrallah’s statements translated by Ellen Khouri, in combination with the masterfully crafted intros and guiding footnotes of Nicholas Noe, generate a natural framework to build an understanding of the last thirty years in the Palestinian Diaspora.

In full, Voice of Hezbollah provides a timely challenge to the long-standing Media concept of soundbite news, and demands of 24-hour News Networks the whole story.

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The Al Qaeda Reader

Posted by huntingnasrallah on December 13, 2008

November 03, 2007

By Gary H. Johnson, Jr.

A review of
Raymond Ibrahim, Editor/translator.
$15.95, 282 pp.
Recently, Raymond Ibrahim edited and translated into English a decade’s worth of public releases by al Qaeda’s leadership.  Published by Broadway Books, with partial proceeds donated to the Committee to Protect Journalists, Ibrahim’s The Al Qaeda Reader is not only a timely fountainhead for the United States citizenry’s understanding of our Jihadi enemies, it is also a necessary release for all Muslims living under secular governments to grapple with in the coming years. 

 

The text focuses on the prepared statements of both Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri, the leading authority figures of the Al Qaeda forces, which coordinated and carried out the devastating attacks of 9/11/2001.   Since Muhammad’s definition of war is “deceit”, and al Qaeda has declared war against America, we can only assume that these al Qaeda releases hold a two-fold purpose:  to provide sound, doctrinal justification for terrorism; and to gather popular support for their cause. 

Raymond Ibrahim tackles these angles admirably well by splitting the releases into the broader sections:  Theology and Propaganda.  This revealing text brings forth the Doctrines of Loyalty and Enmity, Jahaliyya, Taqiyya, in jihadi context for the Western witness.  It also sheds light on the source blood of the modern Islamist mentality in terms of ibn Taymiyya as well as the pivotal battle of Taif eight years after Muhammad’s celebrated Hegira to Medina. 

 

Part 1, Theology, begins with a thesis entitled, “Moderate Islam is a Prostration to the West”.   What is obvious from this essay is that Osama bin Laden feels betrayed by the Muslim Intellectuals (particularly of Saudi Arabia) who would seek to stamp out extremism by helping President Bush in his “Crusade” against Islam.  Bush’s actual statement was made on September 16th, 2001: “This Crusade, this war on terror, is going to take a while.”  Regardless of President Bush’s intent, the slip was made, and Osama bin Laden berates these “Moderate Muslims” for not including into their dialogue, with the Western Crusaders, three central elements of the Islamic Faith:  the doctrine of Loyalty and Enmity; the necessity of jihad; and the bounds of Sharia. 

 

Osama bin Laden chides the moderates for seeking the UN’s concept of equality, freedom, and justice, which differ from the Islamic Notions, of the same, in the sunna tradition.  This train of thought rolls like a juggernaut into its culmination on page 43 when Osama places down the cornerstone of Al Qaeda, the Koranic ayat (sign/verse) 60:4, in which Allah via his Messenger, Muhammad, summarizes the Muslim-Infidel relation as plainly exampled by Abraham, when he states
“We disown you and that which you worship besides Allah.  We renounce you. Enmity and hate shall forever reign between us–till you believe in Allah alone.”
Bin Laden lays the brick with ease, stating,
“Battle, animosity, and hatred – directed from the Muslim to the infidel – is the foundation of our religion.  And we consider this a justice and kindness to them.”  [emphasis added]
Osama is vexed by the pesky Moderates, since they don’t uphold Islam while dealing with the West.  After all, he notes that,
“Muslims are obligated to raid the lands of the infidels, occupy them, and exchange their systems of governance for an Islamic system, barring any practice that contradicts the sharia…” 
It is as if bin Laden is saying, if only these moderates had simply invited the West to submit to Islam; but, instead, by cooperating with the West, they have become apostates, denying the ultimate truth of Islam its rightful place above the Infidel, who has only three options when confronted with the Islamic faith: conversion to Islam, paying the Jizya tax, or death.

 

Part 1 continues with a Treatise by Ayman al-Zawahiri entitled “Loyalty and Enmity”, in which he expounds upon Osama bin Laden’s efforts.  The controversial topic of Taqiyya is broached in which it is permissible for Muslims to associate with infidels to dissemble rather than befriend.  Taqiyya basically states that if forced to deal with infidels, lie and smile, remain secure in faith, knowing you are not helping the enemy.  Loyalty comes first, for all Muslims must heed ibn Taymiyya when he states,
“…he is obligated to befriend a believer – even if he is oppressive and violent toward you, while he must be hostile to the infidel – even if he is liberal and kind to you.”  
Al-Zawahiri confirms that all Muslims are ordered to wage jihad against infidels, apostates, and hypocrites by the consensus of the ulema (jurists of accepted hadith). 

 

It is in this vein that ibn Taymiyyah’s power is demonstrated in the line of Islamic jurists, for repulsing an invading force is second only to faith in Allah as a duty to Islam.  Ibn Kathir then shows his value by verifying that unquestioning obedience to the will of the ulema is the right path of submission to Allah, while doubt and refusal to adhere is caused by fear. 

 

But by far the most striking feature of this lengthy treatise comes when he notes those leaders that Al Qaeda has targeted, “that clique of rulers who, while domineering over the lands of Islam, oppose sharia.”  Al-Zawahiri proceeds to enumerate the Arabian Peninsula, Gulf Emirates, Egypt, and Jordan as the secular clique of governments that aid the Crusader armies against the Mujahidin.  

 

He goes on to state that anyone who joins the UN is not a true Muslim, calling them Henchmen of the Crusaders.  He takes aim at the cowards who oppose sharia out of fear that the Crusaders will hurt them.  And al-Zawahiri then pounds on the Northern Alliance Muslims who are aiding the American cause in Afghanistan.  This juristic wrangling is the establishment of a purge to come.  One can only wonder what type of purge is in store for these apostates should Al Qaeda win or become desperate.  And if you doubt the purge to come, consider that the Tawhid (Oneness) of God, demands Submission to Allah and Fear of Allah, alone; yet, in this treatise’s conclusion, al-Zawahiri states,
“We warn our umma against falling to defeatism and ignoring the dangers that oppressively lie atop our chests.  Behold! the Crusader-Jewish military machine…  It gears its aggression against us through a network of submissive rulers.” 
What happens to apostates again?

 

Part 1 culminates with two shorter treatises by Ayman al-Zawahiri, the first of which is entitled “Sharia and Democracy” and is simply an extract from his 1991 release, Bitter Harvest: The Muslim Brotherhood in Sixty Years.  The importance of this section is in the simplicity with which democracy is labeled as the defining difference between Muslims and infidels, namely, Muslims submit to God, while infidels submit to men.  Al-Zawahiri takes the consensus view of seven different jurists of the ulema, the source of Sharia Law, to explain why democratic government, created by the whims of men and nations is “a motley set of contrived rules”. 

 

Not only that, democracy is a primitive form of religion in comparison to faithful submission to Allah’s Sharia.  As proof for this rationale, Zawahiri examines Seven Islamic Jurist opinions, including those of the sheik of Islam, Ibn Taymiyya, and the father of radical Islam, Sayyid Qutb, all of which consider the rules of men to be a jahiliyya initiative, which is an attempt to bring mankind back to the time of man’s law, before the Divine Koran was delivered, before the time of Muhammad, when true Sovereignty was ordained to Allah, by Allah himself. 

 

This section is a revealing legalist perspective on why democracy is idolatry, the earmark of infidelity, and punishable by death.  But, the most startling outburst in this treatise comes as a response to the “equality” to be had under democratic institutions, raging that there isn’t anything more blasphemous than a society that does not limit apostasy (with death), abolishes jihad against infidelity, abolishes the protection tax and second-class dhimmi status of infidels, and (to top it off) abolishes man’s dominion over women.  But in order to understand the impact of these ruminations on the Islamic community, one must trace back to Sayyid Qutb, who provides the just definition of democracy as a religion.  Without this linchpin, the argument just sounds like raving lunacy and an attack on reason. 

 

The Second of the minor treatises, “Jihad, Martyrdom, and the Killing of Innocents” is actually al-Zawahiri’s master stroke of blending ulema doctrines in order to justify his chief weapon of deception in his war on America:  the suicide bomber.  For thirty odd pages, he examines suicide and “proves” that the intent of the suicide determines whether it is a sin or an act of martyrdom.  But by far the most striking element in this treatise is the examination of accidental killing of innocents or fellow Muslims, which culminates in Ibn Tamiyya’s statement,
“Based on the consensus of the ulema, those Muslims who are accidentally killed are martyrs; and the obligatory jihad should never be abandoned because it creates martyrs.” 
This is the logic that America needs to understand.  America must come to grips with the fact that the jihad is obligatory to the Islamic faithful.  Thus, with a sweep of historic citations, Ayman al-Zawahiri, utilizes the sheik of Islam, Ibn Taymiyyah, whom all Muslims adhere or respect, to define defensive jihad as second only to faith in Islam, and at the same time justifies suicide bombing in the measure of antiquity… via ijma, or parallels, to Muhammad’s battle of Ta’if.

 

Part 2, Propaganda, is a hodgepodge of shorter releases, aimed at specific groups, and documented in order to seek popular support for methods and aims as well as provide the righteous sword of reciprocity for all to see.   Strangely, in “Why are We Fighting You”, Osama bin Laden begins listing reasons for Al Qaeda’s war with the West, and ironically claims that the clique of secular Islamic governments give true Muslims “…a taste of humiliation, placing us in a large prison of fear and submission.” 

 

In “Your Fate is in Your Hands Alone,” Osama bin Laden tells the touching story of tragedy in the 1982 occupation of Lebanon by Israel, with American support, which filled his heart with nebulous ideas concerning occupation and repelling the oppressor regimes of Islam, and lo! a freedom fighter was born.   But it is not until bin Laden offers a truce to America that we see plain the intentions of al Qaeda for the long run, when he states,
“You have occupied our lands, transgressed against our manhood and dignity, spilled our blood, plundered our wealth, destroyed our homes, dislocated us, and played with our security — and we will give you the same treatment.“ 
Words like these seem to give weight to President Bush’s notion that if we tuck tail and run in Iraq (a process called redeployment in some circles), the terrorists will follow us home, especially when you take into account a previous promise of bin Laden:
“…this has not been because of a failure to break through your security measures.  The operations are under preparation and you will see them in your own homes once they are readied.” 
Bin Laden hints at possible future targets in his “To the Muslims of Iraq”, when he defines the countries most in need of liberation:  Jordan, Morocco, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Yemen.   But as far as recent news is concerned, the five releases under the theme heading, “The Youth of Islam” basically state that men over 25 are busy building families, and those under 15 are still dependent on parents, while those Muslims between 15 and 25 are strongly urged to join ranks with Al Qaeda.  This call virtually  demands that “profiling” be implemented in all transit areas on men between 15 and 25, especially since the 2007 July Pew Report of Islam in America notes that “26 percent of Muslims [in America] age 18 to 29 believe that suicide bombing can be justified” (Newsweek Special Report, July 30, p. 31).  To attempt to view the issue in any other way is suicide by denial. 

 

The purpose of revolutionary propaganda is to gather popular support, to justify the righteousness of the cause, to generate outrage and fervor in its proponents, and to demonstrate why victory is inevitable for the righteous few.  Part 2 of Ibrahim’s text, Propaganda, demonstrates these purposes well; however, it is the Soviet paradigm of victory which is the least convincing.  The key element in this battle according to both Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri is Patience.  The element is woven through every treatise and release. It is the belief that like Soviet Russia while fighting with Afghanistan, America will, through its “War on Terror” grow politically fractured, will eventually go bankrupt and will split apart, by the grace of Allah.  

 

It would be hubris to say that America can’t go the way of the dodo. Yet, while the opinions in this country are divided almost 50-50 on every issue, it is this freedom to have a polarity of opinion that differentiates America from both the communism of Stalin and Khrushchev and the rigid, puritanical Islam of al Qaeda.  And, in the end, the resilience of capitalism’s inequalities compared with the desperate equality of communism promises only the inevitability of exhaustion for al Qaeda, hence its call for Muslim youth to dedicate their lives to Jihad.

 

In full, Raymond Ibrahim’s text The Al Qaeda Reader provides the world of English-speakers many lessons that we may choose to learn or dismiss.  Chief among these lessons is that in Islam there is no separation between Mosque and State.  For years, since the fall of the Twin Towers, moderate Muslims have claimed their religion had been hijacked by fundamentalists, literalists, radicals, and extremists; and, now the West has been apprised of the twisted view of two of these hijackers. 

 

Is this message of hate the literalist perspective of Islam laid bare for the world to see?  And if it is, what does it teach the World of English-speakers about the Koran’s content, intent, and merit?  The fact is, all Muslims believe the Koran to be the literal, uncorrupted word of Allah, written in the celestial language of Arabic.  Moving past the arrogance necessary to declare to the world that any language is that of God, what does this text teach us about the original words of the Islamic God?  Has the God of Islam, Allah, demanded His followers to wage jihad on all infidels in a quest to force the entire planet to convert, pay alms, or die?  And if the Koran is the literal, uncorrupted, Word and Warning of Allah; then, why would we, infidels, ever consider “Peaceful” a religion which promises our demise as sovereign states in one form or another, following obligatory genocidal purges, inquisitions, enslavements, indoctrination, trials of apostasy, and the death of the very idea of American Freedom, and the death of every value held as heroic in the West?  For the West’s concepts of equality, justice and freedom do not hold parallel with the Koran’s or Sharia’s view of the same. 

 

In full, Raymond Ibrahim’s release The Al Qaeda Reader is a necessary addition to the scholarship of jihad.  The text begs the question: does the doctrine proclaimed by al Qaeda’s leadership, now widely known among the world’s Muslims,  guarantee a state of perpetual war against the whole of humanity?  And if so, what is the process of eradication of these elements from the Ulema consensus in order to defuse this ticking bomb of world-wide genocide?

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