Taking the law into the church’s hands
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Practicing Muslims on a daily basis implement the regulations and
standards of their activities by Islamic law, such as praying,
fasting, and interrelation with others and so forth. The idea for a
non-Muslim country, such as Canada, to allow the Muslim community to
arbitrate and settle disputes by the standards of their faith is one
to be welcomed, but at the same time to be cautioned.
The concern lies in who will select the panel and by what
standards? No ordinary Muslim can advise or settle disputes without
first having the credentials and experience. To add, not only would
the panelists need to be experts in Islamic jurisprudence, but they
must also be familiar with the different schools of thought, in
addition to the laws of country in which they reside and their former
homeland. This is a monumental task that needs careful deliberation.
Most importantly, the implementation of Islamic law cannot be
fully exercised until the infrastructure of an Islamic society is
functioning properly.
IMAM SAYED
MOUSTAFA AL-QAZWINI
Islamic Educational Center
of Orange County
Costa Mesa
In Canada, Jewish religious courts of law have long conducted
cases in a manner consistent with the requirements of secular
arbitration law. They are highly esteemed and their rulings, usually
centered on business and commercial disputes, are legally binding and
enforceable in the secular court system.
Normally Muslims are required to obey the shariah, but if they
live under a non-Muslim government, as hundreds of thousands do in
Canada, they are excused from that obligation. The proposal to
establish courts based on Islamic law has pitted Muslims who feel
they can fulfill their religious duties under shariah against those
who believe such law discriminates against women.
Women opposed to shariah courts argue that Islamic family law
dictates that male heirs receive a greater share of inheritance than
females; that only husbands may initiate divorce; that fathers are
usually awarded custody of children, and in extreme cases, that
fathers may force their underage daughters to marry. I have read that
many Muslim women have fled to Canada to escape repressive regimes.
They fear that Muslim women would be pressured into relying on the
shariah panels instead of secular courts, to their disadvantage.
But how could the government of a nation that prides itself on
tolerance allow Jewish courts and forbid Muslim ones as coercive?
Should a democracy determine whether one set of religious law is
respectable, while another is too inherently sexist to coexist with
secular laws?
How ironic that the Jewish B’nai Brith of Canada endorsed Muslim
tribunals while numerous Muslim organizations have launched bitter
protests. The B’nai Brith said, “Multicultural guarantees under the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms includes the right of all
faith-based or religious groups to operate their own arbitration
courts in family law matters -- as long as participants do so
voluntarily and with due process and fairness.”
The Muslim Canadian Congress demanded they be rejected, calling
the proposal unconstitutional. The Canadian Council of Muslim Women
proclaimed, “We want the same laws to apply to us as to other
Canadian women.”
Obviously, the decisions reached by Muslim courts on matters of
personal status would have to be consistent with Canada’s charter of
rights and freedoms. If participation is voluntary and informed, I
see no objection, though the protests from those who might well come
under the authority of shariah must be accorded a full hearing.
RABBI MARK S. MILLER
Temple Bat Yam
Newport Beach
Americans already have this right. Christians believe we have a
Biblical mandate to settle disputes within our own community and not
take it to the secular court level. It is viewed as shameful to ask
the world to settle a family dispute.
To this end, our first level of settlement, as listed in Matthew’s
Gospel account, is personal confrontation. If that doesn’t work, we
take a witness. If that doesn’t work, the elders and then the entire
congregation are brought in. In broader cases, there are Christian
arbitration courts and services available. In the end, all parties
need to agree to the authority of these courts. These agreements are
in secular legal language that is binding in a court of law. This
type of arbitration guarantees that our values as Christians will be
upheld in the process of determining the case.
On a secular level, daytime television is full of examples of this
happening. In order to get your case on “The People’s Court,” for
example, participants must agree to abide by the ruling and drop any
further legal action. Christian courts, councils, and elder boards
use this same type of agreement.
That being said, I see no reason why two Muslim parties could not
agree to have their disagreement settled by an Imam who understands
their culture, rather than a secular culture that does not.
The only problem would come if all Muslims would be forced into
Muslim arbitration court, or Jews into one Jewish arbitration court
or Christians into one Christian arbitration court. Both parties must
first agree on the foundations upon which these courts will make
their decisions. The articles given us for reference mention several
differing views on shariah law. People of these differing views may
need differing courts to arbitrate a settlement.
Bottom line, these courts are helpful and legal and should be
encouraged, but not forced.
SENIOR ASSOCIATE
PASTOR RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity
Costa Mesa
Wouldn’t it be lovely if Christians would settle disputes among
ourselves in the manner prescribed by Jesus in Matthew (18:15-17):
between the two disagreeing parties or, if necessary, including two
or three sister/brother Christians to adjudicate? If only we
Christians would take to heart Saint Paul’s words to the Corinthians
(1 Cor. 6:1-8): “When any of you has a grievance against another, why
do you file a lawsuit and ask a secular court to decide the matter,
instead of taking it to other Christians to decide who is right? ...
Such lawsuits are already real defeats for you.”
Alas, we Christians are not able to settle conflicts within the
family and we sometimes seem to race to civil courts to settle our
disputes for us. At this, I believe, Jesus weeps.
Since Christians cannot provide exemplary guidance for Muslims or
Jews or anyone else on this one I am grateful again for the
separation of Church and State in our country, which seems to me to
prohibit what Canadian law apparently allows. Our civil courts reject
cases concerned solely with canon laws of Christian churches, so I
wonder why religious groups would want to take cases, which are
currently responsibilities of civil courts, upon ourselves.
It would be very important for people of faith to clarify our
motivations, if this was ever attempted. With regard to “civil and
business claims,” religious groups should not be able to allow what
the law of their country prohibits and/or what is required by basic
principles of human rights such as the “truths” held to be
“self-evident” by the Declaration of Independence.
VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
Too often, women’s rights take a back seat to respect for cultural
diversity. Such things as ritual genital mutilation (“clitorectomy”)
in Sudan and laws requiring women to wear veils in public in Saudi
Arabia are thus tolerated. Equal rights laws should be enforced and
alternative legal systems which conflict should not be publicly
supported.
In the United States, we have chosen the Constitution -- not
shariah -- as our system of law. If both parties in a dispute want to
consult their clergy and use their religious organization as an
agreed-upon means for private settlement, they have the right to do
so in many situations. But in matters where agreements need to be
legally binding, the issue should be subject to review by secular
lawyers and courts -- and follow state law. This should apply whether
the religion is Islam, Judaism, Christianity, Buddhism or any other
tradition.
The Shariah/Muslim family tribunals “will ghettoize and further
marginalize women,” according to the Canadian Council of Muslim
Women. In their study of shariah arbitration, they are disturbed to
find that no records are kept, court oversight is not required,
arbitrators do not have to be trained in civil law or shariah, and
there are no norms for settlements about alimony and support
payments. They describe Muslim decrees as “arbitrary,” rather than
consistent with a standardized code of jurisprudence.
Another important consideration is the extent to which consent to
arbitration may be considered truly be voluntary, or if women might
experience undue pressure from family, community and religious
affiliation. The film “Osama” is an abject portrayal of one woman’s
unsuccessful struggle for freedom during the Taliban regime.
A proposal similar to the one being considered in Canada was
wisely rejected in England as contrary to the universal rights
granted to all. A solution to the backlog of civil cases cannot be at
the expense of justice and human rights.
REV. DR. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
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