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In the Name of God, the
Compassionate, the Merciful,
And may Peace and Blessings be upon
the Prophet Muhammad
Open
Letter to His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI
In the Name of God, the
Compassionate, the Merciful,
Do not contend with
people of the Book except in the fairest way ….
(The Holy Qur’an, al-Ankabut,
29:46).
Your Holiness,
With regards to your lecture at the
University of Regensburg in Germany on September 12th
2006, we thought it appropriate, in the spirit of open
exchange, to address your use of a debate between the
Emperor Manuel II Paleologus and a “learned Persian” as the
starting point for a discourse on the relationship between
reason and faith. While we applaud your efforts to oppose
the dominance of positivism and materialism in human life,
we must point out some errors in the way you mentioned Islam
as a counterpoint to the proper use of reason, as well as
some mistakes in the assertions you put forward in support
of your argument.
There is no Compulsion in Religion
You mention that “according to the
experts” the verse which begins, There is no compulsion
in religion (al-Baqarah 2:256) is from the early
period when the Prophet “was still powerless and under
threat,” but this is incorrect. In fact this verse is
acknowledged to belong to the period of Quranic revelation
corresponding to the political and military ascendance of
the young Muslim community. There is no compulsion in
religion was not a command to Muslims to remain
steadfast in the face of the desire of their oppressors to
force them to renounce their faith, but was a reminder to
Muslims themselves, once they had attained power, that they
could not force another’s heart to believe. There is no
compulsion in religion addresses those in a position of
strength, not weakness. The earliest commentaries on the
Qur’an (such as that of Al-Tabari) make it clear that some
Muslims of Medina wanted to force their children to convert
from Judaism or Christianity to Islam, and this verse was
precisely an answer to them not to try to
force their children to convert to Islam. Moroever, Muslims
are also guided by such verses as Say: The truth is from
your Lord; so whosoever will, let him believe, and whosoever
will, let him disbelieve. (al-Kahf 18:29); and
Say: O disbelievers! I worship not that which ye worship;
Nor worship ye that which I worship. And I shall not
worship that which ye worship. Nor will ye worship that
which I worship. Unto you your religion, and unto me my
religion (al-Kafirun: 109:1-6).
God’s Transcendence
You also say that “for Muslim
teaching, God is absolutely transcendent,” a simplification
which can be misleading. The Quran states, There is no
thing like unto Him (al-Shura 42:11), but it also
states, He is the Light of the heavens and the earth
(al-Nur 24:35); and, We are closer to him than his
jugular vein (Qaf 50:16); and, He is the
First, the Last, the Inward, and the Outward (al-Hadid
57:3); and, He is with you wherever you are (al-Hadid
57:4); and, Wheresoever you turn, there is the Face of
God (al-Baqarah 2:115). Also, let us recall the
saying of the Prophet, which states that God says, “When I
love him (the worshipper), I am the hearing by which he
hears, the sight by which he sees, the hand with which he
grasps, and the foot with which he walks.” (Sahih al-Bukhari
no.6502, Kitab al-Riqaq)
In the Islamic spiritual,
theological, and philosophical tradition, the thinker you
mention, Ibn Hazm (d. 1069 CE), is a worthy but very
marginal figure, who belonged to the Zahiri school of
jurisprudence which is followed by no one in the Islamic
world today. If one is looking for classical formulations
of the doctrine of transcendence, much more important to
Muslims are figures such as al-Ghazali (d. 1111 CE) and many
others who are far more influential and more representative
of Islamic belief than Ibn Hazm.
You quote an argument that because the
emperor is “shaped by Greek philosophy” the idea that “God
is not pleased by blood” is “self-evident” to him, to which
the Muslim teaching on God’s Transcendence is put forward as
a counterexample. To say that for Muslims “God’s Will is
not bound up in any of our categories” is also a
simplification which may lead to a misunderstanding. God
has many Names in Islam, including the Merciful, the Just,
the Seeing, the Hearing, the Knowing, the Loving, and the
Gentle. Their utter conviction in God’s Oneness and that
There is none like unto Him (al-Ikhlas 112:4) has
not led Muslims to deny God’s attribution of these qualities
to Himself and to (some of) His creatures, (setting aside
for now the notion of “categories”, a term which requires
much clarification in this context). As this concerns His
Will, to conclude that Muslims believe in a capricious God
who might or might not command us to evil is to forget that
God says in the Quran, Lo! God enjoins justice and
kindness, and giving to kinsfolk, and forbids lewdness and
abomination and wickedness. He exhorts you in order that ye
may take heed (al-Nahl, 16:90). Equally, it is to
forget that God says in the Qur’an that He has prescribed
for Himself mercy (al-An’am, 6:12; see also
6:54), and that God says in the Qur’an, My Mercy
encompasses everything (al-A‘raf 7:156). The word
for mercy, rahmah, can also be translated as love,
kindness, and compassion. From this word rahmah
comes the sacred formula Muslims use daily, In the Name
of God, the Merciful, the Compassionate. Is it not
self-evident that spilling innocent blood goes against mercy
and compassion?
The Use of Reason
The Islamic tradition is
rich in its explorations of the nature of human intelligence
and its relation to God’s Nature and His Will, including
questions of what is self-evident and what is not. However,
the dichotomy between “reason” on one hand and “faith” on
the other does not exist in precisely the same form in
Islamic thought. Rather, Muslims have come to terms with
the power and limits of human intelligence in their own way,
acknowledging a hierarchy of knowledge of which reason is a
crucial part. There are two extremes which the Islamic
intellectual tradition has generally managed to avoid: one
is to make the analytical mind the ultimate arbiter of
truth, and the other is to deny the power of human
understanding to address ultimate questions. More
importantly, in their most mature and mainstream forms the
intellectual explorations of Muslims through the ages have
maintained a consonance between the truths of the Quranic
revelation and the demands of human intelligence, without
sacrificing one for the other. God says, We shall show
them Our signs in the horizons and in themselves until it is
clear to them that it is the truth (Fussilat
41:53). Reason itself is one among the many signs within
us, which God invites us to contemplate, and to contemplate
with, as a way of knowing the truth.
What is “Holy War”?
We would like to point out that “holy
war” is a term that does not exist in Islamic languages.
Jihad, it must be emphasized, means struggle, and
specifically struggle in the way of God. This struggle may
take many forms, including the use of force. Though a
jihad may be sacred in the sense of being
directed towards a sacred ideal, it is not necessarily a
“war”. Moreover, it is noteworthy that Manuel II Paleologus
says that “violence” goes against God’s nature, since Christ
himself used violence against the money-changers in the
temple, and said “Do not think that I came to bring peace on
the earth; I did not come to bring peace, but a sword...”
(Matthew 10:34-36). When God drowned Pharaoh, was He going
against His own Nature? Perhaps the emperor meant to say
that cruelty, brutality, and aggression are against God’s
Will, in which case the classical and traditional law of
jihad in Islam would bear him out completely.
You say that “naturally the emperor
knew the instructions, developed later and recorded in the
Quran, concerning holy war.” However, as we pointed out
above concerning There is no compulsion in religion,
the aforementioned instructions were not later at all.
Moreover, the emperor’s statements about violent conversion
show that he did not know what those instructions are and
have always been.
The authoritative and traditional
Islamic rules of war can be summarized in the following
principles:
1)
Non-combatants are not permitted or legitimate
targets. This was emphasized explicitly time and again by
the Prophet, his Companions, and by the learned tradition
since then.
2)
Religious belief alone does not make anyone the
object of attack. The original Muslim community was
fighting against pagans who had also expelled them from
their homes, persecuted, tortured, and murdered them.
Thereafter, the Islamic conquests were political in nature.
3)
Muslims can and should live peacefully with their
neighbors. And if they incline to peace, do thou incline
to it; and put thy trust in God (al-Anfal 8:61).
However, this does not exclude legitimate self-defense and
maintenance of sovereignty.
Muslims are just as bound to obey
these rules as they are to refrain from theft and adultery.
If a religion regulates war and describes circumstances
where it is necessary and just, that does not make that
religion war-like, anymore than regulating sexuality makes a
religion prurient. If some have disregarded a long and
well-established tradition in favor of utopian dreams where
the end justifies the means, they have done so of their own
accord and without the sanction of God, His Prophet, or the
learned tradition. God says in the Holy Qur’an: Let not
hatred of any people seduce you into being unjust. Be just,
that is nearer to piety (al-Ma’idah 5:8). In this
context we must state that the murder on September 17th
of a innocent Catholic nun in Somalia—and any other similar
acts of wanton individual violence—‘in reaction to’ your
lecture at the University of Regensburg, is completely
un-Islamic, and we totally condemn such acts.
Forced Conversion
The notion that Muslims are commanded
to spread their faith “by the sword” or that Islam in fact
was largely spread “by the sword” does not hold up to
scrutiny. Indeed, as a political entity Islam spread
partly as a result of conquest, but the greater part of its
expansion came as a result of preaching and missionary
activity. Islamic teaching did not prescribe that the
conquered populations be forced or coerced into converting.
Indeed, many of the first areas conquered by the Muslims
remained predominantly non-Muslim for centuries. Had
Muslims desired to convert all others by force, there would
not be a single church or synagogue left anywhere in the
Islamic world. The command There is no compulsion in
religion means now what it meant then. The mere fact of
a person being non-Muslim has never been a legitimate
casus belli in Islamic law or belief. As with the
rules of war, history shows that some Muslims have violated
Islamic tenets concerning forced conversion and the
treatment of other religious communities, but history also
shows that these are by far the exception which proves the
rule. We emphatically agree that forcing others to
believe—if such a thing be truly possible at all—is not
pleasing to God and that God is not pleased by blood.
Indeed, we believe, and Muslims have always believed, that
Whoso slays a soul not to retaliate for a soul slain, nor
for corruption done in the land, it shall be as if he had
slain mankind altogether
(al-Ma’idah
5:32).
Something New?
You mention the emperor’s
assertion that “anything new” brought by the Prophet was
“evil and inhuman, such as his alleged command to spread by
the sword the faith he preached.” What the emperor failed
to realize—aside from the fact (as mentioned above) that no
such command has ever existed in Islam—is that the Prophet
never claimed to be bringing anything fundamentally new. God
says in the Holy Qur’an, Naught is said to thee
(Muhammad) but what already was said to the Messengers
before thee (Fussilat 41:43), and, Say
(Muhammad): I am no new thing among the messengers (of God),
nor know I what will be done with me or with you. I do but
follow that what is Revealed to me, and I am but a plain
warner (al-Ahqaf, 46:9). Thus faith in the One
God is not the property of any one religious community.
According to Islamic belief, all the true prophets preached
the same truth to different peoples at different times. The
laws may be different, but the truth is unchanging.
“The Experts”
You refer at one point
non-specifically to “the experts” (on Islam) and also
actually cites two Catholic scholars by name, Professor
(Adel) Theodore Khoury and (Associate Professor) Roger
Arnaldez. It suffices here to say that whilst many Muslims
consider that there are sympathetic non-Muslims and
Catholics who could truly be considered “experts” on Islam,
Muslims have not to our knowledge endorsed the “experts” you
referred to, or recognized them as representing Muslims or
their views. On September 25th 2006 you
reiterated your important statement in Cologne on August 20th
2005 that, “Inter-religious and inter-cultural dialogue
between Christians and Muslims cannot be reduced to an
optional extra. It is, in fact, a vital necessity, on which
in large measure our future depends.” Whilst we fully concur
with you, it seems to us that a great part of the object of
inter-religious dialogue is to strive to listen to and
consider the actual voices of those we are dialoguing with,
and not merely those of our own persuasion.
* * *
Christianity and Islam
Christianity and Islam are
the largest and second largest religions in the world and in
history. Christians and Muslims reportedly make up over a
third and over a fifth of humanity respectively. Together
they make up more than 55% of the world’s population, making
the relationship between these two religious communities the
most important factor in contributing to meaningful peace
around the world. As the leader of over a billion Catholics
and moral example for many others around the globe, yours is
arguably the single most influential voice in continuing to
move this relationship forward in the direction of mutual
understanding. We share your desire for frank and sincere
dialogue, and recognize its importance in an increasingly
interconnected world. Upon this sincere and frank dialogue
we hope to continue to build peaceful and friendly
relationships based upon mutual respect, justice, and what
is common in essence in our shared Abrahamic tradition,
particularly ‘the two greatest commandments’ in Mark
12:29-31 (and, in varying form, in Matthew 22:37-40),
that, the Lord our God is One Lord; / And thou
shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all
thy soul, and with all thy understanding, and with all thy
strength: this is the first commandment. / And the second
commandment is like, namely this, Thou shalt love thy
neighbour as thyself. There is none other commandment
greater than these.
Muslims thus appreciate the following
words from the Second Vatican Council:
The church has also a high regard for
the Muslims. They worship God, who is one, living and
subsistent, merciful and almighty, the Creator of heaven and
earth, who has also spoken to humanity. They endeavor to
submit themselves without reserve to the hidden decrees of
God, just as Abraham submitted himself to God's plan, to
whose faith Muslims eagerly link their own. Although not
acknowledging him as God, they venerate Jesus as a prophet;
his virgin Mother they also honor, and even at times
devoutly invoke. Further, they await the day of judgment and
the reward of God following the resurrection of the dead.
For this reason they highly esteem an upright life and
worship God, especially by way of prayer, alms-deeds and
fasting. (Nostra Aetate, 28 October 1965)
And equally the words of the late Pope
John Paul II, for whom many Muslims had great regard and
esteem:
We Christians joyfully recognize the
religious values we have in common with Islam. Today I would
like to repeat what I said to young Muslims some years ago
in Casablanca: “We believe in the same God, the one God, the
living God, the God who created the world and brings his
creatures to their perfection” (Insegnamenti, VIII/2,
[1985], p. 497, quoted during a general audience on May 5,
1999).
Muslims also appreciated your
unprecedented personal expression of sorrow, and your
clarification and assurance (on the 17th of
September) that your quote does not reflect your own
personal opinion, as well as the Cardinal Secretary of State
Tarcisio Bertone’s affirmation (on the 16th of
September) of the conciliar document Nostra Aetate.
Finally, Muslims appreciated that (on September 25th)
in front of an assembled group of ambassadors from Muslim
countries you expressed “total and profound respect for all
Muslims”. We hope that we will all avoid the mistakes of the
past and live together in the future in peace, mutual
acceptance and respect.
And all praise belongs to God, and
there is neither power nor strength except through God.
Signed:
(in
alphabetical order)
H.E.
Allamah Abd Allah bin Mahfudh Bin Bayyah,
Professor, King Abd Al-Aziz University, Saudi Arabia
Former Vice President; Minister of Justice; Minister of
Education and Minister of Religious Affairs, Mauritania
Professor Dr. Allamah Muhammad Said Ramadan Bouti,
Dean of Department of Religion, University of Damascus,
Syria
H.E.
Professor Dr. Mustafa Cagrici,
Grand Mufti of Istanbul
H.E.
Shaykh Professor Dr. Mustafa Ceric,
Grand Mufti and Head of ‘Ulema of Bosnia and Herzegovina
H.E.
Shaykh Nezdad Grabus,
Grand Mufti of Slovenia
Shaykh Al-Habib Ali Mashhour bin Muhammad bin Salim
bin Hafeeth,
Imam of the Tarim Mosque and Head of Fatwa Council, Tarim,
Yemen
Shaykh Al-Habib Umar bin Muhammad bin Salim bin
Hafeeth,
Dean, Dar Al-Mustafa, Tarim, Yemen
Professor Dr. Farouq Hamadah,
Professor of the Sciences of Tradition, Mohammad V
University, Morocco
Shaykh Hamza Yusuf Hanson,
Founder and Director, Zaytuna Institute, CA, USA
H.E.
Shaykh Dr. Ahmad Badr Al-Din Hassoun,
Grand Mufti of the Republic of Syria
Shaykh Dr. Izz Al-Din Ibrahim,
Advisor for Cultural Affairs, Prime Ministry, United Arab
Emirates
H.E.
Professor Dr. Omar Jah,
Secretary of the Muslim Scholars Council, Gambia
Professor of Islamic Civilization and Thought, University of
Gambia
Shaykh Al-Habib Ali Zain Al-’Abideen Al-Jifri,
Founder and Director, Taba Institute, United Arab Emirates
H.E.
Shaykh Professor Dr Ali Jum’a,
Grand Mufti of the Republic of Egypt
Professor Dr. ‘Abla Mohammed Kahlawi,
Dean of Islamic and Arabic Studies, Al-Azhar University
(Women’s College), Egypt
Professor Dr. Muhammad Hashem Kamali,
Dean, International Institute of Islamic Thought and
Civilization (ISTAC), Malaysia
Professor of Islamic Law and Jurisprudence, International
Islamic University, Malaysia,
Shaykh Nuh Ha Mim Keller,
Shaykh in the Shathili Order and Senior Fellow of
Aal al-Bayt Institute for Islamic Thought (Jordan), U.S.A.
H.E.
Shaykh Ahmad Al-Khalili,
Grand Mufti of the Sultanate of Oman
Shaykh Dr. Ahmad Kubaisi,
Founder of the ‘Ulema Organization, Iraq
Allamah Shaykh
Muhammad bin Muhammad Al-Mansouri,
High Authority (Marja’) of Zeidi Muslims, Yemen
Shaykh Abu Bakr Ahmad Al-Milibari,
Secretary-General of the Ahl Al-Sunna Association, India
H.E.
Dr. Moulay Abd Al-Kabir Al-Alawi Al-Mudghari,
Director-General of the Bayt Mal Al-Qods Al-Sharif Agency,
Former Minister of Religious Affairs, Morocco
H.E.
Shaykh Ahmad Hasyem Muzadi,
General Chairman of the Nahdat al-Ulema, Indonesia
Shaykh M. Iqbal Sullam,
Vice General-Secretary, Nahdat al-Ulema, Indonesia
H.E.
Professor Dr. Seyyed Hossein Nasr,
University Professor of Islamic Studies, George Washington
University, Washington D.C, USA
H.E.
Shaykh Sevki Omarbasic,
Grand Mufti of Croatia
H.E.
Shaykh Muhammad Abdullah B. Qarachay,
Deputy Mufti of Russia
H.E.
Dr. Mohammad Abd Al-Ghaffar Al-Sharif,
Secretary-General of the Ministry of Religious Affairs,
Kuwait
Dr.
Muhammad Alwani Al-Sharif,
Head of the European Academy of Islamic Culture and
Sciences, Brussels, Belgium
Shaykh Dr. Tariq Sweidan,
Director-General of the Risalah Satellite Channel
Professor Dr. H.R.H. Prince Ghazi bin Muhammad bin Talal,
Chairman of the Board of the Aal al-Bayt Institute for
Islamic Thought, Jordan
H.E.
Ayotollah Muhammad Ali Taskhiri,
Secretary General of the World Assembly for Proximity of
Islamic Schools of Thoughts (WAPIST), Iran
H.E.
Dr Abd Al-Aziz ‘Uthman Al-Tweijri,
Director-General of the Islamic Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization (ISESCO), Morocco
H.H.
Justice Mufti Mohammed Taqi Uthmani,
Vice President, Dar Al-‘Ulum, Karachi, Pakistan
H.E.
Shaykh Naim Trnava,
Grand Mufti of Kosovo
H.E.
Shaykh Muhammad Al-Sadiq Muhammad Yusuf,
Grand Mufti of Uzbekistan
Shaykh Abd Al-Hakim Murad Winter,
Shaykh Zayed Lecturer in Islamic Studies, Divinity School,
University of Cambridge, U.K.
Director of the Muslim Academic Trust, U.K.
H.E.
Shaykh Mu’ammar Zukoulic,
Mufti of Sanjak, Bosnia
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