(A) Non-Muslims' Rights:
As the Qur'an has taken special care of non-Muslims in the matter of their
legal rights, it accords them full freedom in the matters of faith, economic
activity, property, social security, and the preservation of their culture and
traditions. 1. Muslims are commanded to observe the conditions of their pacts
and treaties made with non-Muslims and never to violate them (al-Ma'idah. 1;
al-Nahl: 91; al-'Ahzab. 15; al-Tawbah: 4 and 7; Banu Isra'il. 34; al-Baqarah:
177; al-Ra'd: 20; al-Mu minun: 8 and 9; al-Ma`arij: 32). A general principle is
laid down that keeping of promises and fulfilling pacts is a sign of a Muslim.
This rule includes pacts with non-Muslims also. Ali (a.s) included non-Muslims
also among the common citizens paying taxes or tribute (jizyah). Regarding
pacts with an enemy, he advises Malik al-'Ashtar:
"If your enemy invites you for a treaty that will be acceptable to the
Lord, then never refuse to accept such an offer. Be very careful, never break
your promises with your enemy, never forsake the protection or support that you
have offered to him, never go back on your words and never violate the terms of
treaty~ You must risk even your life to fulfill the promises given and the
terms settled. Because of all the obligations laid by the Mighty Lord upon man
there is none so important as the keeping of one's promises . . .. Even the
heathens take care to keep promises made among themselves.... Deception and
fraud against your enemy is deception against God. Let there he no ambiguity in
them (pacts); do not try to take advantage of any ambiguous word or phrase in
an agreement . . . Beware of the sin of shedding blood without religious
justification and sanction, because there is nothing quicker to bring the wrath
of the Lord ......" (40)
In the same letter, he writes: "Remember Mailik that among your subjects
there are two kinds of people: they are either your brethren in the faith or
likes of you in nature and creation. They may have failings and faults and
commit slips. They may act wrongfully either willfully or by neglect. So extend
to them your forgiveness in the same way as you would like God to extend His
forgiveness to you ...." (41)
The rights of non-Muslims living in a Muslim State are covered by the above
instructions; their lives are to be protected and their bloodshed is
prohibited. Verse 58 of al-'Anfal and verses 90-94 of al-Nisa' encourage
Muslims to accept any offer of peace by non-Muslims with the Divine promise
that if they intend to deceive, God will protect Muslims.
2. Muslims have to take care of the dhimmis, i.e. non-Muslims under the
protection of a Muslim State according to a dhimmah pact. A dhimmi is free to
abide by the dhimmah pact or to leave the Muslim State. There is no compulsion.
Al-'Allamah al-Hilli holds that this pact is not binding on a non-Muslim for
ever. (42) This is a bilateral pact. The Jews, Christians and Zoroastrians are
covered by this pact, but the Sunnis include all other non-Muslims also under
the pact of dhimmah. The pact made with the Christians of San'a' by the Prophet
(s.a.w) and written by Ali (a.s), declared that all the Christians living in
the east and the west, whether Arab or non-Arab, are covered by it; anybody who
attacks them will he regarded as attacking Muslims, and if a Muslim violates
it, whether he is an official or a commoner, he will he unfaithful to Islam.
According to it, Muslims were held responsible for securing the security of the
Christians and were hound to defend them with their own lives. Dhimmis would
not he liable to pay any other tax except the tribute they had willingly agreed
to pay; their priests and churches would he safe; the priests would be exempted
from paying jizyah; the rich among them and the traders would not be asked to
pay any additional tax; none among them would be forced to fight in battle;
they would be treated in the best manner; and anything that would cause them
harm would be prevented. (43) Similar treaties with the people of Ila ('Aqabah)
and Najran were also concluded. (44)
3. The dhimmis have to pay jizyah only, and are bound to abide by the Islamic
laws pertaining to judicial matters and penal issues, which are applicable to
all citizens equally. (45) It means that the non-Muslims enjoy equality in
legal affairs with Muslims. It was because of this right to equality that a
Christian could rebut the Caliph in the court of justice, that too on false
grounds, as described above.
Jizyah is a financial commitment on the part of the dhimmis in accordance with
the Qur'anic injunction (al-Tawbah: 29). According to al-Shaykh al-Tusi, the
amount of jizyah is not fixed; it may be fixed by Muslim rulers taking into
consideration the yield of the lands of the dhimmis, or determined with regard
to each individual's capacity. Amir al-Mu'minin (a.s) levied a tax of 48
dirhams on rich ones, 24 on middle class people, and 12 on the poor. (46)
Tribute is a term used for both jizyah and kharaj, which have been confused
with each other. Jizyah is per head capitation tax, while kharaj is a
collective land tax. If the one is levied, the other one is not collected. It
was the second Caliph only who levied both the taxes simultaneously, which
misled some Muslim fuqaha' and Orientalists into believing that both were
collected from non-Muslims. (47) In case a dhimmi embraced Islam, he was
exempted from jizyah.Amir al-Mu'minin (a.s), in his letter to Malik al-'Ashtar,
directs him to be considerate in respect of the circumstances of the farmers in
collecting land revenue, always keeping in view the welfare of the tax-payers.
In his view more importance should be attached to the fertility of land than
the collection of taxes, because the actual taxable capacity of people rests
upon the condition of the land. He warns that a ruler who does not pay
attention to the prosperity of his subjects and the fertility of land but
concentrates only on the extraction of revenue lays waste the land, ruins the
State, and brings destruction to the creatures of God, and his rule cannot last
long. In case of natural calamities and vagaries of rain, drought and
destruction of crops, the tax is to be reduced or, if conditions necessitate,
totally exempted for the season. He also recommends providing all facilities to
the farmers, for the best investment for a ruler is to help his subjects in
times of difficulty. It may be noted that it were mainly non-Muslims who were
engaged in cultivation of land in those days, for Muslims were mostly employed
in the army and the defense of the State. The lenience in collecting taxes is a
means of winning the dhimmis' confidence and love, which in case of a crisis
would prove to be an asset and source of strength for the ruler. Ali (a.s)
wanted Muslim rulers to behave differently from the kind of rulers described by
the Qur'an as those who bring devastation to the land and misery to the people
(al-Naml: 34). The poverty of the people, in his view, is the actual cause of a
country's devastation and ruin. Extraordinary conditions apart, in normal
conditions too, certain categories of non-Muslim subjects were exempted from
jizyah or kharãj, such as minors, the poor, old, disabled and insane
persons. (48) Women are never required to pay jizyah. The married among them
are entitled to all the rights of citizenship on the basis of their husbands'
payment of the tax, while maidens are exempted due to their parents' and
guardians' citizenship rights. Every treaty that levies jizyah on women is null
and void from the Islamic viewpoint. (49) Besides natural or other calamities,
in some other circumstances also non-Muslims are exempted from the payment of
jizyah. These are: whenever Muslims feel they are unable to fulfill their
obligations towards the dhimmis; whenever Muslims consider the exemption to be
instrumental in creating and fostering better relations between the Muslim and
non-Muslim communities; whenever Muslims are in need of seeking their active
participation in war; and whenever any of them embraces Islam. (50) In most of
the countries under Muslim rule jizyah was not collected at all; for instance,
in India the majority of rulers, with a few exceptions, did not levy jizyah on
non-Muslims. Awrangzeb Alamgir, the Moghal emperor, levied it in his reign, but
it proved to be against the interests of the Muslim empire and
counter-productive.
The dhimmis and other non-Muslims loyal to the Muslim State enjoy freedom of
faith and worship. Their places of worship are protected. (51) They have
usually received liberal grants from Muslim rulers. Though they have equal
legal rights, they are free to refer their disputes to their own religious
authorities. (52) They are accorded all the rights granted to Muslim citizens,
that is, the right to education and dissemination of knowledge, freedom of
thought, the right to property, the right to engage in business, agriculture,
industry, and any honourable activity. They are treated equally in social
matters and are respected. (53) Al-Sharif al-Radi composed elegies paying
tribute to his friend and teacher, al-Sabi', an eminent Christian poet and
scholar. Non-Muslims have been serving Muslim courts as ministers,
administrators, accountants, secretaries, and ambassadors. They also excelled
during Muslim regimes as scientists, physicians, teachers, men of letters,
artists, businessmen, industrialists, bankers and soon. Even the secular
democracies of today are unable to ensure all these rights and freedoms to
their minorities. Since the Muslim States could ensure these rights to their
non-Muslim subjects, we seldom find in their history incidents of communal
clashes and riots. The Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran states in
article 23 of Chapter III: "The investigation of individuals' beliefs is
forbidden, and no one may be molested or taken to task for holding a certain
belief". (54)
(B) The Rights of Slaves:
All medieval societies allowed slavery to continue in the interest of the
ruling classes, but Islam discouraged it. As the historical conditions did not
permit its outright abolishment at that time, Islam granted slaves human rights
which had been denied to them from time immemorial. The Qur`an encouraged
Muslims to emancipate slaves in such verses as: al-Baqarah: 177; al-Ma'idah:
89; al-Nisa': 93; al-Mujadilah: 3. The Prophet (s.a.w) also entreated all the
Muslims to let slaves free, and himself did it. He appointed slaves to
important positions and treated them equally. Though the institution of slavery
continued in the Muslim world, but due to enjoying benefits of good education
and respectable status many slaves rose to high posts and sometimes ruled over
their past masters. The Turk slaves of the Banu Abbas could dictate their terms
to the caliphs also. The founders of Ghaznawi and Ghawri empires were slaves.
Similarly the Khawãrazmi rulers were descendants of slaves. In India,
the first Muslim empire was built up by a slave of Shihab al-Din Ghawri, Qutb
al-Din Aybak, who in his turn was succeeded by his slave, Iltitmush, and
subsequently his slave Balhan was made the emperor when Iltitmush's family came
to an end. In South India (Deccan), the first independent dynasty was founded
by a slave of Muhammad Tughlaq, Ala' al-Din Hasan Gangu Bahmani. Slaves were
often married their master's daughters. No other religion or law has treated
slaves so respectfully. Practically, slavery was almost abolished in the Muslim
world when the newly civilized West was making the Africans slaves and
deporting them to America, where the Black Americans are still fighting for equal
rights and human treatment. South Africa is another example of the treatment of
the Blacks, who despite being the legitimate masters of the country and forming
the majority are being treated and persecuted in a manner worse than slaves.
All such atrocities against free human beings are committed by the authors of
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Islam bestowed freedom on slaves of
the world fourteen centuries ago. Slaves were the greatest beneficiaries of the
Islamic declaration of human rights. It is because of Islamic equality that
peoples who were discriminated against on racial or other grounds came to the
fold of Islam.
(C) Women's Rights:
If one compares the status of women in the pre-Islamic societies of Greece,
Rome, Persia, Syria, India, and Arabia, one will acknowledge that Islam raised
their position to a level that they could claim equal rights with men in all
spheres of life. Christianity regarded woman as the source and cause of Adam's
sin and his Consequent fall, and Arab paganism buried daughters alive
considering them to be the cause of shame. Islam not only advocated equality of
the sexes, but also the Prophet (s.a.w) set an example of how to respect women
by paying great respect to Khadijah (a.s) and Fatimah (a.s) in particular and
women folk in general. Polygamy and the Hijab are the butts of the West's and
the so-called enlightened East's criticism of Islam's treatment of women. The
former, on the one hand, was necessitated by social conditions, and, on the
other, by the physiological make-up of the two sexes. Promiscuity and free love
in modern Societies point to this natural need. The Islamic Hijab does not
imprison woman, but rather emancipates her in many ways. Confining woman to the
four walls of the house and keeping her deprived of the fruits of education was
never approved by Islam. Jawahirlal Nehru, in The Discovery of India, rightly
points out that this type of female confinement is a result of women were
deprived of their freedom under non-Islamic influences. The West, which poses
as the champion of women's equal rights, has granted them the rights to
property, separation and vote only recently. Syed Amir Ali, an eminent Indian
jurist, wrote in The Spirit of Islam in the first decades of this century:
"Until very recently, even in England, a married woman possessed no rights
independently of her husband . . .. But the Teacher, who in an age when no
country, no system, no community gave any right to woman, maiden or married,
mother or wife, who, in a country where the birth of a daughter was considered
a calamity, secured to the female sex rights which are only unwillingly and
under pressure being conceded to them by the civilized nations of the twentieth
century, deserves the gratitude of humanity". (55)
If the Muslim woman seeks to imitate the social role of her European sister, it
will be nothing but a misconceived emancipation which shall land her in the
evil mire of the capitalist system, which has reduced woman to a commodity and
a sex-object for exhibition in the windows of supermarkets and reception rooms
of high offices. On the contrary, Islam gave her the rights and freedoms which
no system could grant her.
In Islam all the rights granted to men, with few exceptions, are also given to
women. One exception is with respect to jihãd, but women are expected to
help men behind the war front by taking care of the wounded and doing similar
important jobs. In the matter of marriage, women have the right to express
their consent to marry a person and they are free to dissent. In divorce the
right is given to man, but under certain provisions woman can initiate the
legal proceeding to secure divorce. Woman's rights in Islam can be summarized
as follows: Women are treated at an equal footing with men in all affairs:
religious, educational, legal, moral and economic.
(a) In religious matters, obligations and rewards of women are the same as
those of men (al-Nisa': 1; al-'A'raf: 189;al- Ahzah: 35). (b) In ethical
matters, also, equality of the two sexes is maintained (al-Nisa': 124; al-Nahl:
97). (c) Regarding education, the Qur'an implicitly gives the same rights to
women as are granted to men. Similarly, the Hadith of the Prophet (s.a.w)
making acquisition of knowledge obligatory upon all Muslims does not mention
any sex; in fact, the Prophet commanded that even the slave girls be educated.
As women are responsible for taking care of infants, they are supposed to have
some knowledge of medicine and also of the art of helping in childbirth. The
Prophet (s.a.w) asked a lady to instruct his wife Hafsah hint Umar. Women also
used to attend the Prophet's lectures. Because of this practice, a number of
ladies from the Household of the Prophet (s.a.w) excelled in hadith and fiqh.
In the history of Islam, we find the names of a number of women who equaled
most educated men in the religious sciences, arts, and literature. (d) The
legal and economic rights of women are also at a par with those of men. Islam
ensured economic independence of women by giving them a share in parent's property
(al-Nisa':7 and 11), and warning against depriving them of their inheritance
(al-Nisa': 19). A woman is entitled to hold and manage her property. She enjoys
the right to spend what she possesses and her husband cannot deprive her of her
dower (mahr) (al-Baqarah: 229, al-Nisa': 19-2 1 and 25), unless she voluntarily
forgoes it as a gift (al-Nisa': 24). If wronged, she is entitled to
compensation just like a man, and if she commits a civil offence, the Qur'an
says, her penalty is no less or no more than that of a man in a similar case
(al-M'idah: 41; al-Nur: 2). (e) In the marital contract, except in the case of
divorce, she is given the same rights that are granted to her husband. The
Qur'an explicitly commands men not to give women in marriage without seeking
their consent (al-Nisa': 19). Even the right of an infidel woman is respected
by the Qur'an, whichcommands Muslims not to violate the modesty and honour of
the women of mushrikün (al-Mumtahanah: 10-11). In our highly advanced age, the
troops of most civilized nations of the West deem it to be their legitimate
right to violate the honour of women of the enemy, for chastity and dignity of
woman have no value according to modern standards of culture and morality. A
Muslim woman also enjoys the right to choose her spouse of her free will. She
is entitled to dower (mahr) in accordance with the marriage contract. Though
polygamy is permissible in Islam, the conditions of being fair and just to all
the wives are so strict that practically it is discouraged. The third verse of
al-Nisa' says that if you fear that you will not be able to do justice to more
than one wife, he content with one wife only. . . . The conditions of justice
to wives are laid down in verse 33 of al-Nisa'. There are many verses in the
Qur'an which emphasize the sanctity of the home and the family and state the
mutual duties and rights of husband and wife for the sake of safeguarding the
family's welfare. Both of them are held responsible for the harmony of the
family. In case of differences, the husband and wife are advised to settle them
with the help of two arbitrators, one from each of the parties (al-Nisa': 35).
If it is not possible to live together, the provision to separation is open,
but according to a tradition of the Prophet (y) divorce is the worst of
permissible things in the eyes of God. A woman is entitled to receive her
expenses from her husband during the period of iddah, and a child horn in this
period belongs to the husband who is responsible for its expenses. Even the
much fussed about institution of temporary marriage (mut'ah) is now being
appreciated by some modern sociologists who consider it the best safeguard
against promiscuity.(f) Islam has also given political rights to women, as
stated in the twelfth verse of al-Mumtahanah in the Qur'an. The women of
Quraysh were given a right to take the oath of allegiance after satisfying them
fully of the conditions of submitting to it.56 By implication this verse gives
women the right to vote, a right for which women had to struggle and wait till
the twentieth century in the West.
Conclusion:
As elaborated in the beginning of the article, all human rights originate in
man's freedom and are secured by the fulfillment of obligations in society as
well as in a political set-up. A society which gives more rights to its members
is to be considered freer than those which either grant limited rights only or
do not ensure that they are safeguarded. In modern States, the ones which claim
to be open and free curtail constitutional rights one way or the other, and the
ones that are based upon the sovereignty of the working class deprive other
classes of human rights. Furthermore, the latter, through indoctrination and
regimentation of thought, transform human beings into machines. The technocracy
and bureaucracy of modern societies, both capitalist and socialist, are
concerned with the material aspect of man and, consequently, dehumanize all
social and human relations. Islam, on the other hand, ensures the fulfillment
of both the material and spiritual aspirations of man by giving all sections of
society equal rights and ensuring their execution and implementation by the
State. Thus Islam accepts the inherent freedom of man and its full utilization
and development, and organizes its socio-political superstructure accordingly.
The Islamic conception of human rights and its faithful implementation ensures
greater freedom to all sections of humanity than granted in any other system.
If we study the views of the spiritual leaders of Islam, we will see how they
disapproved of all acts of injustice and rejected all formulations that sought
to deprive man of his freedom.
NOTES:
40.Ibid, pp. 257-5 1.
41.Ibid, p.248.
42. Abbas Ali Amid Zanjaini, Huquq-e aqaliyyatha bar asas-e qanun-e qarardad-e
dhimnnah: barrasi-yi gushehha-ye az ,mafahim-e huquq-e bayn al-milal az nazar-e
fiqh-e Islami (Tehran: Nashr-e Farhang-e Islami, Autumn 1362 Sham.), pp. 57-58.
43. Ibid., pp. 77-78.
44. Ibid., pp. 78-80.
45. Ibid., pp. 84-85.
46. Ibid., p. 108.
47. Ibid., p. 116.
48. Ibid., pp. 119-25.
49. Ibid., ~ 11 9-20.
50. Ibid., pp. 123-24.
51.Ibid., pp. 164-65.
52. Ibid., pp. 186-87.
53. Ibid., pp. 180-7 1 (right to freedom of residence), 178-8 1 (legal rights),
193 (right to trade), 196 (right to agriculture), 197 (right to economic
freedom), and 202-3 (professional freedom).
54. "The Constitution of the Islamic Republic, op. cit., p. 145.
55. Syed Ameer Ali, op. cit., p. 256.
56. Dr. Khaza`i1i, op. cit., p. 60.