Sharia concerns are baseless
By Jamal
Kanj
October 4,
2015
http://gdnonline.com/Details/26509/Sharia-concerns-are-baseless
Lagging in the polls, Republican presidential
candidate Donald Trump came from behind ranting Mexican migrants. Trump
exploited a real topical complex issue to mobilise the White Republican base
and rode to the top of the ticket deriding Mexicans.
Ben Carson was however more inventive. He created a
fictitious candidate to rally the same delusional crowd. Carson declared that
the Muslim faith could disqualify a person from being a US president.
Within days, Carson crowded Trump to the top of the
Republican ticket by bashing the imaginary Muslim candidate. Even though there
was none, Carson made the “Muslim candidate” the hottest topic for US news and
talk shows outdoing Trump’s sordid attacks against Mexican immigrants.
In one of his tirades, Carson claimed that “Muslims
feel that their religion is very much a part of your public life and what you
do as a public official,” and warned against the creeping Muslim “Sharia.”
Never mind that Carson must not understand that
Islamic jurisprudence even in Muslim majority countries clearly states that
“non-Muslims are not required by law to follow Islamic religious or social
standards (Sharia).”
Academically speaking, the Republican candidate’s
baseless concerns over the Sharia are hogwash and cheap electioneering
demagoguery; unless Carson plans to become a Muslim and move to a place
governed by the Sharia. But even then, he will have difficulties. There are at
least 50 Muslim majority countries around the world where the vast majority are
not governed by Sharia.
Instead of arguing a very unlikely fictional
scenario, Carson should be most troubled by his support to American policies,
like the invasion of Iraq when the US replaced a very secular constitution with
a new dominated by religious authorities.
Carson should also know that the only secular
democracy in the Middle East is a Muslim country: Turkey. The other widely
acclaimed democracy, Israel, is a Jewish and not a secular democracy.
In propagating fear mongering to indulge the ignoble
Republican Evangelist base, Carson brings up unintentionally an important
issue: Religion and the Constitution.
It is indisputable that religions across the board
are not compatible with many aspects of the US constitution. But it is not the
imaginary Muslim candidate who is a threat to the constitution. It is the
Republican contestants who have made religion an important part of their
candidacy and are attempting to subjugate the US constitution to their belief.
Recently, Carson along with most Republican
candidates rallied behind Kim Davis, who preached her own definition of “God’s
authority” to subjugate the law of the land and refused to issue same sex
marriage licences in Rowan County, Kentucky.
Carson explained to Fox news that Davis was
right to defy the Supreme Court’s interpretation of the US constitution. “This
is a Judeo-Christian nation in the sense that a lot of our values and
principles are based on our Judeo-Christian faith,” he said. Translating to how
faith should guide “a public official” in conducting their life.
Putting aside Carson’s xenophobic demagoguery and
his pandering to the extreme right-wing Republican base, it would be worth
noting that women were elected to head two of the world’s most populous Muslim
countries – an ambitious reality women in the US are still struggling to
achieve more than a decade later.
When John F Kennedy’s faith was questioned in 1960,
he eloquently said “... it may be a Catholic against whom the finger of
suspicion is pointed, in other years it has been, and may someday be again,
a Jew – or a Quaker or a Unitarian or a Baptist ... Today I may be the victim,
but tomorrow it may be you.”
Neither faith nor race is an indicative of a good
leader. Kennedy was a good example. An anti-abolitionist with the “right faith”
could have succeeded in mobilising Carson’s reactionary crowd a century ago.
Ironically, Carson, the black man, couldn’t have qualified to vote in that
election.
* Mr Kanj
(www.jamalkanj.com) writes weekly newspaper column and publishes on several
websites on Arab world issues. He is the author of “Children of Catastrophe,”
Journey from a Palestinian Refugee Camp to America. A version of this article
was first published by the Gulf Daily News newspaper.
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