Human Rights in
Islam
Since God is the absolute and the sole master of
men and the universe, He is the sovereign Lord,
the sustainer and Nourisher, the Merciful, Whose
mercy enshrines all beings; and since He has given
each man human dignity and honour, and breathed
into him of His own spirit, it follows that,
united in Him and through Him, and apart from
their other human attributes, men are
substantially the same and no tangible and actual
distinction can be made among them, on account of
their accidental differences such as nationality,
colour or race.
Every human-being is thereby related to all others
and all become one community of brotherhood in
their honourable and pleasant servitude to the
most compassionate Lord of the Universe. In such a
heavenly atmosphere the Islamic confession of the
oneness of God stands dominant and central, and
necessarily entails the concept of the oneness of
humanity and the brotherhood of mankind.
Although an
Islamic state may be set up in any part of the
earth, Islam does not seek to restrict human
rights or privileges to the geographical limits of
its own state. Islam has laid down some universal
fundamental rights for humanity as a whole, which
are to be observed and respected under all
circumstances whether such a person is resident
within the territory of the Islamic state or
outside it, whether he is at peace with the state
or at war.
The
Qur'an very clearly states: { O
ye who believe! Stand out firmly for Allah,
as witnesses to fair dealing, and let not there be
hatred of others to make you swerve to wrong and
depart from Justice. Be just: that is
next to Piety: and Fear Allah. For
Allah is well -aquainted with all that you do } (Quran
5:80)
Human
blood is sacred in any case and cannot be spilled
without justification. And if anyone
violates this sanctity of human blood by killing a
soul without justification, the Qur'an equates it
to the killing of entire mankind: {
..... Whoso slays a soul not to retaliate for a
soul slain, nor for corruption done in the land,
should be as if he had slain mankind altogether }
It
is not permissible to oppress women, children, old
people, the sick or the wounded. Women's
honour and chastity are to be respected under all
circumstances. The hungry person must be
fed, the naked clothed and the wounded or diseased
treated medically irrespective of whether they
belong to the Islamic community or are from
amongst its enemies.
When
we speak of human rights in Islam we really mean
that these rights have been granted by God; they
have not been granted by any king or by any
legislative assembly. The rights granted by
the kings or the legislative assemblies, can also
be withdrawn in the same manner in which they are
conferred. The same is the case with the
rights accepted and recognised by the dictators.
They can confer them when they please and withdraw
them when they wish; and they can openly violate
them when they like. But since in Islam
human rights have been conferred by God, no
legislative assembly in the world or any
government on earth has the right or authority to
make any amendment or change in the rights
conferred by God. No one has the right to
abrogate them or withdraw them. Nor are they
basic human rights which are conferred on paper
for the sake of show and exhibition and denied
in actual life when the show is over. Nor
are they like philosophical concepts which have no
sanctions behind them.
The
charter and the proclamations and the resolutions
of the United Nations cannot be compared with the
rights sanctioned by God; because the former is
not applicable on anybody while the latter is
applicable on every believer. They are a
part and parcel of the Islamic Faith. Every
Muslim or administrator who claim themselves to be
Muslims, will have to accept, recognise and
enforce them. If they fail to enforce them,
and start denying the rights that have been
guaranteed by God or make amendments and changes
in them, or practically violate them while paying
lip service to them, the verdict of the Holy
Qur'an for such government is clear and
unequivocal: { Those who do
not judge by what God has sent down are the
disbelievers } (5:44).
Human
Rights in an Islamic State :
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1. The
Security of Life and Property:
In the address which the Prophet delivered
on the occasion of the Farewell Hajj, he
said: "Your
lives and properties are forbidden to one
another till you meet your Lord on the Day
of Resurrection". The
Prophet has also said about the dhimmis (the
non-Muslim citizens of the Muslim state):
"One who kills a
man under covenant (i.e., Dhimmi) will not
even smell the fragrance of Paradise".
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2. The
Protection of Honour: The
Holy Qur'an lays down-
1) {You
who believe, do not let one (set of) people
make fun of another set}
2) {Do
not defame one another}
3) {Do
not insult by using nickname}
4) {Do
not backbite or speak ill of one another}
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3.
Sanctity and Security of Private Life:
The Qur'an has laid down the injunction-
1) {Do
not spy on one another}
2) {Do
not enter any houses unless you are sure of
their occupant's consent}
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4. The
Security of Personal Freedom:
Islam has laid down the principle that no
citizen can be imprisoned unless his guilt
has been proved in an open court. To
arrest a man only on the basis of suspicion
and to throw him into a prison without
proper court proceedings and without
providing him a reasonable opportunity to
produce his defence is not permissible in
Islam.
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5. The
Right to Protest Against Tyranny:
Amongst the rights that Islam has conferred
on human beings is the right to protest
against government's tyranny. Referring to
it the Qur'an says. "God
does not love evil talk in public unless it
is by some one who has been injured thereby".
In Islam, as has been argued earlier, all
power and authority belongs to God, and with
man there is only delegated power which
becomes a trust; everyone who becomes a
recipient or a donee of such a power has to
stand in awful reverence before his people
towards whom and for whose sake he will be
called upon to use these powers. This
was acknowledged by Abu Bakr who said in his
very first address: "Cooperate
with me when I am right but correct me when
I commit error; obey me so long as I follow
the commandments of Allah and His prophet;
but turn away from me when I deviate".
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6.
Freedom of Expression: Islam
gives the right of freedom of thought and
expression to all citizens of the Islamic
state on the condition that it should be
used for the propagation of virtue and truth
and not for spreading evil and wickedness.
The Islamic concept of freedom of expression
is much superior to the concept prevalent in
the West. Under no circumstances would
Islam allow evil and wickedness to be
propagated. It also does not give
anybody the right to use abusive or
offensive language in the name of criticism.
It was the practice of the Muslims to
enquire from the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H.)
whether on a certain matter a divine
injunction had been revealed to him.
If he said that he had received no divine
injunction, the Muslims freely expressed
their opinion on the matter.
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7.
Freedom of Association:
Islam has also given people the right to
freedom of association and formation of
parties or organisations. This right
is also subject to certain general rules.
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8.
Freedom of Conscience and Conviction: Islam
has laid down the injunction: There should
be no coercion in the matter of faith.
On the contrary totalitarian societies
totally deprive the individuals of their
freedom. Indeed this undue exaltation
of the state authority curiously enough
postulates a sort of servitude, of
slavishness on the part of man. At one
time slavery meant total control of man over
man - now that type of slavery has been
legally abolished but in its place
totalitarian societies impose a similar sort
of control over individuals.
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9.
Protection of Religious Sentiments:
Along with freedom of conviction and freedom
of conscience Islam has given the right to
the individual that his religious sentiments
will be given due respect and nothing will
be said or done which may encroach upon his
right.
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10.
Protection from Arbitrary Imprisonment:
Islam also recognises the right of the
individual that he will not be arrested or
imprisoned for the offences of others.
The Holy Qur'an has laid down this principle
clearly: {No
bearer of burdens shall be made to bear the
burden of another}
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11.
The Right to Basic Necessities of Life:
Islam has recognised the right of the needy
people that help and assistance will be
provided to them: And in their wealth
there is acknowledged right for the needy
and the destitute.
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12.
Equality Before Law:
Islam gives its citizens the right to
absolute and complete equality in the eyes
of the law.
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13.
Rulers Not Above the Law: A
woman belonging to a high and noble family
was arrested in connection with theft.
The case was brought to the Prophet, and it
was recommended that she might be spared the
punishment of theft. The Prophet
replied, "The
nations that lived before you were destroyed
by God because they punished the common-man
for their offences and let their dignitaries
go unpunished
for their crimes; I swear by Him Who holds
my life in His hand that even if Fatima, the
daughter of Muhammad, had committed this
crime, I would have amputated her hand".
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14.
The Right to Participate in the Affairs of
State: {And
their business is (conducted) through
consultation among themselves}
(42:38).
The shura or the legislative assembly has no
other meaning except that: The
executive head of the government and the
members of the assembly should be elected by
free and independent choice of the people.
Lastly,
it is to be made clear that Islam tries to achieve
the above-mentioned human rights and many others
not only by providing certain legal safeguards but
mainly by inviting mankind to transcend the lower
level of animal life to be able to go beyond the
mere ties fostered by the kinship of blood, racial
superiority, linguistic arrogance, and economic
privileges. It invites mankind to move on to
a plane of existence where, by reason of his inner
excellence, man can realise the ideal of the
Brotherhood of man.