Mardin Fatwa & New Mardin Declaration

(Written by S Iftikhar Murshed and shared by Wequar Azeem)

A very interesting article.Does this mean that both Western Media and Muslim Media are wrongly blaming Wahabbism as the root cause of terrorism? Who is the real culprit? Taliban, JUI and majority of NWF is Deobandi. Although Deobandi and Wahabbi are considered cousins, but they hate each other and has differences in ideology. Are Deobandi happy that Wahabbis are getting all the blame and they are getting a free pass?  ( F. Sheikh).

Article

Friday,28th March 2014 marked the fourth anniversary of the adoption of the New Mardin Declaration by globally renowned Muslim theologians and academics from across the world including Saudi Arabia, Turkey, India, Senegal, Kuwait, Yemen, Bosnia, Mauritania, Iran, Morocco and Indonesia. They convened at the picturesque south-eastern Turkish city of Mardin on March 27-28, 2010 and accomplished more in a few hours than what that grotesquely inept outfit known as the Organisation of the Islamic Conference has been able to achieve in the four decades of its futile existence.


The meeting, which was jointly organised by the Artuklu University and the Global Centre for Renewal and Guidance, was chaired by the famed scholar and former vice president of Mauritania, Sheikh Abdullah bin Mahfudh ibn Bayyih. In the two days that the conference lasted, it critically examined and then exposed the deliberate textual distortions of the Mardin fatwa of Taqi ad-Din Ahmad ibn Taymiyyah (1263-1328). It is from the corrupted version of this decree that Al-Qaeda and its affiliated networks have derived their ideology which justifies mass murder and destruction in the name of Islam.


Though the fatwa was issued more than 700 years ago, its relevance to the terrorism-plagued contemporary world is undiminished. This was recognised by the Mardin scholars who accordingly decided “to take the fatwa from the specific geographical focus for which it was intended to a broader global focus and from the contingencies of Ibn Taymiyyah’s time to a timeless understanding.”


Ibn Taymiyyah was born in Haran, an obscure little town in the Mardin region, and was only seven at the time of the Mongol invasion of the area. His family, which consisted of some of the most well-known theologians of the times, was forced to flee to Damascus which was then ruled by the Mamluks of Egypt. But the damage insofar as Ibn Taymiyyah was concerned had already been done. At that tender age he had witnessed the atrocities perpetrated by the Mongols and was traumatised. Hideous memories of Mardin haunted him for the rest of his life. 


In Damascus he was taught Islamic jurisprudence by his father and steeped himself in the teachings of the Hanbali school of thought. Although Ibn Taymiyyah was soon acknowledged as the foremost religious authority of his times, he also became controversial. As early as 1293, he came into conflict with the local authorities for protesting the sentencing of a Christian on charges of blasphemy. Five years later he was accused of anthropomorphism (ascribing human characteristics to God) as well as for contemptuously criticising the legitimacy of dogmatic theology. 


Around that time Ibn Taymiyyah accompanied a delegation of the ulema to Mahmud Ghazan, the ruler of Mongol Empire’s Ilkhanate branch in Iran in order to persuade him to stop attacking Muslims. But suddenly ghastly scenes and images from his early childhood in Mardin came back to Ibn Taymiyyah, and, unable to restrain himself, he told the ruler bluntly: “You claim that you are a Muslim and you have with you muftis, imams and sheikhs but you have invaded us and reached our country for what? While your father and your grandfather, Hulagu, were non-believers, they did not attack and kept their promise. But you promised and broke your promise.”


This impassioned outburst brought Ibn Taymiyyah to the adverse notice of the authorities. He was subsequently jailed on several occasions for contradicting the opinions of the jurists and theologians of his day. On the orders of the Mamluk rulers of Cairo he was imprisoned in Damascus from August 1319 to February 1321 for propounding a doctrine that curtailed the ease with which a Muslim male could divorce his wife. He was incarcerated again in 1326 until his death two years later for issuing edicts that conflicted with the thinking of those in authority. 


But his fame had spread far and wide and his bier was followed by 20,000 mourners, many of them women who considered him a saint. It is ironic that Ibn Taymiyyah’s grave became a place of pilgrimage even though he was an exponent of the fundamentalist strand of Islam and is considered one of the principal forerunners of the Wahhabis.


It is against this background that the scholars at the Mardin conference moved on to a textual examination of Ibn Taymiyyah’s actual decree. He was pointedly asked whether his beloved land, Mardin, was an abode of war (dar al-kufr) or the home of peace (dar al-Islam). His answer was that an unprecedented composite situation had emerged. Mardin was neither an abode of peace where the Shariah prevailed nor was it a land of war because the inhabitants of the region were believers. Therefore, he decreed that “the Muslims living therein should be treated in accordance to their rights as Muslims, while the non-Muslims living there outside the authority of Islamic law should be treated according to their rights.”


This superbly nuanced ruling, which came to be known as the Mardin fatwa, was unmistakably peaceful in intent and was in accord with the teachings of Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal (d. 855) who prohibited rebellion even against unjust authority in order to stave off anarchy and indiscriminate bloodshed. But the text was subsequently changed to read: “…while the non-Muslims living there outside the authority of Islamic law should be fought as is their due.”


This was done through the substitution of two letters in a single word. In the second version the word ‘yuamal’ (should be treated) had been rendered as ‘yuqatal’ (should be fought) as a result of which the purport of the decree was drastically altered. According to Sheikh Abd al-Wahab al-Turayri, an internationally acknowledged authority on Islamic jurisprudence and a former of professor at Riyadh’s al-Imam University, the only known copy of the original fatwa was the Zahiriyyah Library manuscript which had been archived at the Asad Library in Damascus. But unfortunately this was either not widely known or had been deliberately ignored. 


The corrupted version made its first appearance more than a hundred years ago in the 1909 edition of Ibn Taymiyyah’s ‘Fatawa’ that was printed and published by Faraj Allah al-Kirdi. This did incalculable damage because the error was never rectified and was not only republished time and again but also rendered into English, French and several other languages. 


It was used by the Egyptian ideologue Muhammad abd al-Salam Faraj (1954-1982) for his book ‘Al-Faridah ahl-Gaibah’ which posits that jihad is the sixth pillar of Islam and, in the words of Sheikh Abd al-Wahab al-Turayri, “has become a manifesto for militant groups” including Al-Qaeda and its affiliates. Faraj established the Jamaat al-Jihad in 1981 which assassinated President Anwar Sadat on 
October 6 of that year. He was executed six months later.

For the first time ever the distortions in the text of Ibn Taymiyyah’s fatwa were exposed and corrected by the Mardin conference. This was a remarkable achievement and was acclaimed worldwide as a crippling blow to the ideology of terrorism. The New Mardin Declaration which was adopted on the conclusion of the conference affirms unambiguously: “Anyone who seeks support from this fatwa for killing Muslims or non-Muslims has erred in his interpretation…It is not for a Muslim individual or a Muslim group to announce and declare war or engage in combative jihad…on their own.”


This is a sobering thought for the Pakistan government which has committed the supreme folly of initiating direct talks with the TTP, the first round of which was held 
on Wednesday. The outcome of the Mardin conference was summed up by its spokesman who said that the meeting had brought together “scholars and theologians from different persuasions within Islam. But united they stood: Islam condemns terrorism and indiscriminate murder.” This is the message that the government’s panel of negotiators should convey to the TTP shura as the futile talks with the outlawed group gathers momentum.

  

3 thoughts on “Mardin Fatwa & New Mardin Declaration

  1. Sorry I do disagree .

    Deoband like JI all agree that jihad can only be evoked by the State , no private group can do that , I have started to write on the roots of Taliban , they have evoked jihad this according to all religious schools including deoband is not allowed .
    The roots lie elsewhere , there are a number of parents of Taliban thought but these are not in Pakistan . The present deoband leadership in Pakistan is both dishonest and corrupt but they at best would only be interested in milking this issue for financial or political gains , they do not have the depth or commitment to seek basic changes in figh .
    Best regards
    Javed Rashid

    as we have friends On facebook,,,(we will debate partly separately) all the best,

    • Javed Rashid Sahib, thanks for the comments. I wish for everyone’s benefit, you should have elaborated on your statement;

      “The roots lie elsewhere , there are a number of parents of Taliban thought but these are not in Pakistan”.

      Here are some facts to consider. Darul Uloom Deoband was established on the teachings of Shah Waliullah in 1866. This seminary was the source of Islamic revival , anti-colonial and anti-imperialist ideology. Darul Uloom has seeds of political Islam from the beginning. They vigorously opposed Muhammad Ali Jinnah for the creation of Pakistan. Moving fast forward, they created Majlis-e-Ahrar-e-Islam in 1929, a militant political and religious party that continue to work in Pakistan and has fiery leaders like Atta Ullah Shah Bokhari and Shorish Kashmiri. It further developed following organizations; Jamiat-e-Ulma Islam, Tablighi Jamaat,Sipah-e-Sahaba,Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, Taliban, Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan. Some of these were banned in Pakistan due to militant activities. Majority of the population in NWF Pakistan and Afghanistan is Deobandi and has very miniscule presence of Wahabis.
      As per Heritage online;
      “Some 15 per cent of Pakistan’s Sunni Muslims would consider themselves Deobandi , nearly 65% of the total seminaries (Madrasah) in Pakistan are run by Deobandis, 25% by Barelvis, 6% by Ahle Hadith( Wahabi) and 3% by various Shia organizations. The Deobandi movement in Pakistan was a major recipient of funding from Saudi Arabia from the early 1980s up until the early 2000s, whereby this funding was pulled in favor of the rival Ahl al-Hadith( Wahabi) movement.”

      As pert Times in UK;

      “,Aabout 600 of Britain’s nearly 1,500 mosques are run by Deobandi affiliated scholars, and 17 of the country’s 26 Islamic seminaries follow Sunni Deobandi teachings, producing 80% of all domestically trained Ulema.

      I think same may be true about other Western countries. Although we hear a lot of Saudi funding going to Wahabbi Mosques in Western countries, but in reality their presence is minuscule as compared to other Sunni sectors. Just look around near our own neighborhood.

      Wahabism belive in purity of Islam more than Deobandi , but they shy away from Political Islam and armed confrontation. This is the major difference between the two. Saudi Arabia made a deal with Al-Wahhab to bring Wahabism in Saudi Arabia because of its ideology to follow the ruler, even if the ruler is corrupt. This suited Al-Saud dynasty very well.

      Osama Bin laden needed foot soldiers for its own ideology and he found them in Afghanistan and NWF of Pakistan which is overwhelmingly Deobadi and has majority of Madrasahs run by Deobandi. Most of Saudi and USA money went to these soldiers and Madrassas ( Deobandi) during war with Russia, and later by Saudi Arabia only until unfortunate 9/11. After 9/11 money to Taliban was reduced and more money went to Wahabbis who mostly used it for preaching their ideology of purity of Islam and shy away from armed confrontation.

      At present Deobandi political leaders like Maulana Fazul-Ur-Rahman of JUI, who has significant members in national and provincial assemblies, are acting as the protectorate of Taliban and TTP. One can hardly name a Wahhabi leader in Pakistan who has such a clout.

      I think it is a mistake not to distinguish between Wahabbis and Deobandi because it gives a cover to Deobandi who are happy that all the blame is thrown at Wahhabis. It is even a bigger mistake, as some authors do, to lump it all together and make it a “ Wahabism phenemon” or Whahabi Sundrome”. I think Wahhabism has become an easy punching bag for many of the commentators and authors, and even Muslims at large, to blame every evil on them and perhaps feel satisfied that real culprit has been found.

      Fayyaz Sheikh

  2. Salafis are yet another critical group whose influence far outweighs their numbers. Many of the groups engaged in terrorism gain their inspiration from the pure brand of Islam of the Salafis, as practed by the first generation of sahaba. They are also being funded by a host of Wahabi and orthodox groups from the oil rich states. The infusion of petro-dollars and religion has changed the puritans into interventionists. The Saudi funding of madrassahs and religious centers in Pakistan since the time of Zia ul Haq to teach a particularly puritanical strain of Islam has intensified the intolerance towards Shia and other groups. The effects of such evangelical orthodoxy cannot be minimised. These groups are fomenting actual and social wars that are deconstructing muslim nations for decades to come.

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