Hudud

Hudud

Hudud (Arabic حدود, also transliterated hadud, hudood; singular hadd, حد, literal meaning "limit", or "restriction") is the word often used in Islamic literature for the bounds of acceptable behaviour and the punishments for serious crimes. In Islamic law or "Sharia", hudud usually refers to the class of punishments that are fixed for certain crimes that are considered to be "claims of God." They include theft, fornication, consumption of alcohol.

Overview

Hudud offenses are one of four different kinds in Islamic Penal Law ["The Constitution of Iran : politics and the state in the Islamic Republic" / by Asghar Schirazi, London ; New York : I.B. Tauris, 1997 p.223-4] :

*Qisas - meaning retaliation, and following the biblical principle of "an eye for an eye."
*Diyya - compensation paid to the heirs of a victim. In Arabic the word means both blood money and ransom.
*hudud - fixed punishments
*Tazir - punishment, usually corporal, administered at the discretion of the judge

Hudud offenses are defined as "claims of God," and therefore the sovereign was held to have a responsibility to punish them. All other offenses were defined as "claims of [His] servants," and responsibility for prosecution rested on the victim. This includes murder, which was treated as a private dispute between the murderer and the victim's heirs. The heirs had the right to compensation and to demand execution of the murderer (see qisas), but they could also choose to forgive.

Hudud offenses include: "Between Vision and Reality: Law in the Arab World", Guy Bechor, IDC Projects Publishing House, 2002. pp. 105-110]

*Drinking alcohol (sharb al-khamr, شرب الخمر)
*Theft (sariqa, السرقة)
*Highway robbery (qat' al-tariq, قطع الطريق)
*Illegal sexual intercourse (zina', الزناء)
*False accusation of zina' (qadhf, القذف) [1] [Joseph Schacht, "An Introduction to Islamic Law" (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1973), pp. 178-181]
*Rebellion against the ruler
*Apostasy (irtidād or ridda, ارتداد) includes blasphemy. (Unlike the five offenses listed above, not all jurists consider apostasy to be a hudud offense.Fact|date=July 2008)

In traditional Islamic legal systems, there were very exacting standards of proof that had to be met if hudud punishments were to be implemented.

There are minor differences in views between the four major Sunni "madhhabs" about sentencing and specifications for these laws. It is often argued that, since Sharia is God's law and states certain punishments for each crime, they are immutable. However, with liberal movements in Islam expressing concerns about hadith validity, a major component of how Islamic law is created, questions have arisen about administering certain punishments. Incompatibilities with human rights in the way Islamic law is practised in many countries has led Tariq Ramadan to call for an international moratorium on the punishments of hudud laws until greater scholarly consensus can be reached [ [http://www.tariqramadan.com/article.php3?id_article=0277?lang=en Tariq Ramadan discusses his call for a moratorium on Hadud] ] .

It has also been argued, that the Hudud portion of Sharia is incompatible with humanist or Western understanding of human rights. For example a "Washington Times" editorial called Pakistan's Hudood ordinance::a set of laws passed in 1979 in response to pressure from hardline Islamic political groups that odiously punished rape victims while making it difficult to convict the perpetrators. [http://www.washtimes.com/op-ed/20061116-090021-3966r.htm]

Punishments

The punishments vary according to the status of the offender - Muslims generally receive harsher punishments than non-Muslims, free people receive harsher punishments than slaves, and in the case of zina', married people receive harsher punishments than unmarried.

In brief, the punishments include:

*Capital punishments - by sword/crucifixion (for highway robbery with homicide), by stoning (for zina' when the offenders are mature, married Muslims)
*Amputation of hands or feet (for theft and highway robbery without homicide)
*Flogging with a varying number of strokes (for drinking, zina' when the offenders are unmarried or not Muslims, and false accusations of zina')

Requirements for conviction

Only eye-witness testimony and confession were admitted. For eye-witness testimony, the number of witnesses required was doubled from Islamic law's usual standard of two to four. Moreover, only the testimony of free adult Muslim males was acceptable (in non-hudud cases the testimony of women, non-Muslims and slaves could be admitted in certain circumstances). A confession had to be repeated four times, the confessor had to be in a healthy state of mind, and he or she could retract the confession at any point before punishment.

However, while these standards of proof made hudud punishments very difficult to apply in practice, an offender could still be sentenced to corporal punishment at the discretion of the judge (see tazir), if he or she was found guilty but the standards of proof required for hudud punishments could not be met.

Adultery

The punishment of adulterers under Islamic law is stoning. It is not mentioned in the Qur'an but "derives its authority from hadith literature references which are imputed by many," according to Kemal A. Faruki. [cite book | last=Faruki | first=Kemal A. | title=Voices of Resurgent Islam (ed. John Esposito)| pages=286 | publisher=Oxford University Press | year=1983 | id=ISBN 0-19-503340-X] There are certain standards for proof that must be met in Islamic law for this punishment to apply. In the Shafii, Hanbali, Hanafi and the Shia law schools the stoning is imposed for the married adulterer and his partner only if the crime is proven, either by four male adults eyewitnessing the actual sexual intercourse at the same time, or by self-confession. In the Maliki school of law, however, evidence of pregnancy also constitutes sufficient proof. [cite web | author=Buba Iman | url=http://www.zawaj.com/qaradawi/marriage.html | work=Jenda: A Journal of Culture and African Women Studies, Vol. 1.2 (2001) | title=Safiyatu's conviction untenable under sharia|ISSN=1530-5686] Scholars such as Fazel Lankarani and Ayatollah Sanei hold that stoning penalty is imposed only if the adulterer has had sexual access to his or her mate. [cite web | url=http://www.lankarani.org/Persian/ahkam/jm2/j20.html | work=Official website of Grand Ayatollah Fazel Lankarani | title=On Capital Punishments] [cite web | url=http://www.feqh.org/fa/books/book07-4.htm#n266|work=Grand Ayatollah Saneyi| title=Resaleye Touzih al-Masayel ] Ayatollah Shirazi states that the proof for adultery is very hard to establish, because no one commits adultery in public unless they are irreverent. [cite web | url=http://www.alshirazi.org/maghalat/akhlagh/48.html | work=Official website of Grand Ayatollah Shirazi| title=Shamime Rahmat] For the establishment of adultery, four witnesses "must have seen the act in its most intimate details, i.e. the penetration (like “a stick disappearing in a kohl container,” as the fiqh books specify). If their testimonies do not satisfy the requirements, they can be sentenced to eighty lashes for unfounded accusation of fornication." ]

odomy

The sodomy aspect of sexual expression is questioned by the Qur'an, notably in the story of Lot found in verses Quran-usc-range|7|80|84 Fact|date=February 2007.

Theft

Malik, the originator of the Maliki judicial school of thought, recorded in [http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/fundamentals/hadithsunnah/muwatta/041.mmt.html The Muwatta] of many detailed circumstances under which the punishment of hand cutting should, and "should not", be carried out. Commenting on the verse regarding theft in the Quran, Yusuf Ali says that most Islamic jurists believe that "petty thefts are exempt from this punishment" and that "only one hand should be cut off for the first theft." [cite book | last=Ali | first=Abdullah Yusuf | title=The Meaning Of The Holy Qur'an (11th Edition) | pages=259 | year=2004 | publisher=Amana Publications | id=ISBN 1-59008-025-4] Maududi also agrees that petty theft is exempt, although he admits that jurists disagree as to the exact dividing line. [cite book | author=Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi | title=The Meaning of the Qur'an, Volume 2 | pages=451 | year=2000|publisher=Islamic Publications] In Shi'a law, the penalty for the first theft is interpreted as the severing of the four fingers of the right hand based on hadith authentic to them, [ "Selection of Tafsir Nemooneh", Grand Ayatollah Makarim Shirazi, p. 28, volume 1, on verse 5:38 ] and this penalty will be applied only if the thief is adult, sane, has stolen from a secure place, was not under compulsion or misery, and does not repent before the crime is proved, among other conditions. [cite web | url=http://www.lankarani.org/Persian/ahkam/jm2/j20.html | work=Official website of Grand Ayatollah Fazel Lankarani | title=On Capital Punishments] [cite web | url=http://www.maarefislam.com/doreholomvamaarefislam/bookscontent/noormalakout/noor1/noor1.2.htm | work=Ayatollah Haj seyyed Muhammad Hussein Tehrani| title=Noor Malakoote Quran]

Explanations for punishments

John Esposito explains that some Muslims justify these punishments in general terms because they punish crimes that are "against God and a threat to the moral fabric of the Muslim community." He observes that Islamic law provides strict regulations regarding evidence in cases involving these crimes, and that false accusations are seriously punished. [cite book | last=Esposito | first=John L. | title=What Everyone Needs to Know About Islam| publisher=Oxford University Press | pages=150, 151 | year=2002 | id=ISBN 0-19-515713-3] Esposito also observes that Muslim reformers have argued that "these punishment were appropriate within the historical and social contexts in which they originated but are inappropriate today and that the underlying religious principles and values need to find new expression in modernizing societies." [cite book | last=Esposito | first=John L. | title=What Everyone Needs to Know About Islam| publisher=Oxford University Press | pages=151 | year=2002 | id=ISBN 0-19-515713-3]

William Montgomery Watt believes that "such penalties may have been suitable for the age in which Muhammad lived. However, as societies have since progressed and become more peaceful and ordered, they are not suitable any longer." Gerhard Endress, professor of Islamic Studies at Ruhr University, states that at the time of advent of Islam, several social reforms happened in which a new system of marriage and family, including legal restrictions such as restriction of the practice of polygamy, was built up. Endress says that "it was only by this provision ("backed up by severe punishment for adultery"), that the family, the core of any sedentary society could be placed on a firm footing." [ Gerhard Endress, Islam: An Introduction to Islam, Columbia University Press, 1988, p.31 ]

See above section on adultery for an examination of the requirement of proof of same.

Commenting on the verses related to amputation of the limbs of thieves, Maududi writes that "here and at other places the Qur'an merely declares that sodomy is such a heinous sin... that it is the duty of the Islamic State to eradicate this crime and... punish those who are guilty of it." [cite book | author=Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi | title=The Meaning of the Qur'an, Volume 2 | pages=48-52 | year=2000 | publisher=Islamic Publications]

There is a movement among some modern liberal Muslims to "re-interpret Islamic verses about ancient punishments," in the words of Professor Ali A. Mazrui. He states that the punishments laid down fourteen centuries ago "had to be truly severe enough to be a deterrent" in their day, but "since then God has taught us more about crime, its causes, the methods of its investigation, the limits of guilt, and the much wider range of possible punishments." [cite web | last = Mazrui | first = Ali A. | url=http://igcs.binghamton.edu/igcs_site/dirton27.htm | title = Liberal Islam versus Moderate Islam: Elusive Moderation and the Siege Mentality | accessdate = 2006-07-03]

Further reading

* Muhammad Ata Alsid Sidahmad, "The Hudud: the seven specific crimes in Islamic criminal law and their mandatory punishments". ISBN 983-9303-00-7
* Chris Horrie C. and Chippindale P. "What Is Islam?" Virgin Books, 2003. ISBN 0-7535-0827-3

References

See also

* Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam
* Tazir
* Zia-ul-Haq's Islamization
* Hudood Ordinance

External links

* [http://jsmawais.googlepages.com/Booklet.pdf Lies & Distortions by the Media about Hudood Ordinance] (of Pakistan)
* [http://www.karamah.org/docs/Zina_article_Final.pdf An Islamic legal analysis of the rape laws in Pakistan]
* [http://www.globalwebpost.com/farooqm/writings/gender/rape_fiqh.html Rape and Hudood Ordinance: Perversions of Justice in the Name of Islam] by Dr. Mohammad Omar Farooq
* [http://muslim-canada.org/Islam_myths.htm Islamic Law: Myths and Realities]
* [http://www.newkerala.com/news2.php?action=fullnews&id=28322 Thousands of Pakistani women face charges under Islamic laws]
* [http://www.washtimes.com/op-ed/20061116-090021-3966r.htm Women's rights in Pakistan] - November 17, 2006 editorial in the "Washington Times"
* [http://sherirao.wordpress.com/files/2006/11/hudood.pdf critics (blog) ]
* [http://www.hakam.org/articleQ&AHudud.htm Q & A on the Hudud and Qisas Enactment] , Hakam


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