by Daniel Pipes
Beneath the deceptively placid surface of everyday life, the British
population is engaged in a momentous encounter with Islam. Three
developments of the past week, each of them culminating years' long
trends – and not just some odd occurrence – exemplify changes now
underway.
Home Secretary Jacqui Smith describes terrorism as "anti-Islamic."
First, the UK government has decided that terrorism by Muslims in the
name of Islam is actually unrelated to Islam, or is even anti-Islamic.
This notion took root in 2006 when the Foreign Office, afraid that the
term "war on terror" would inflame British Muslims, sought language
that upholds "shared values as a means to counter terrorists." By early
2007, the European Union issued a classified handbook that banned
jihad, Islamic, and fundamentalist in reference to terrorism, offering
instead some "non-offensive" phrases. Last summer, Prime Minister
Gordon Brown prohibited his ministers from using the word Muslim in
connection with terrorism. In January, Home Secretary Jacqui Smith went
further, actually describing terrorism as "anti-Islamic." And last week
the Home Office completed the obfuscation by issuing a
counter-terrorism phrasebook that instructs civil servants to refer
only to violent extremism and criminal murderers, not Islamist
extremism and jihadi-fundamentalists.
Second, and again culminating several years of evolution, the British
government now recognizes polygamous marriages. It changed the rules in
the "Tax Credits (Polygamous Marriages) Regulations 2003": previously,
only one wife could inherit assets tax-free from a deceased husband;
this legislation permits multiple wives to inherit tax-free, so long as
the marriage had been contracted where polygamy is legal, as in
Nigeria, Pakistan, or India. In a related matter, the Department for
Work and Pensions began issuing extra payments to harems for such
benefits as jobseeker allowances, housing subventions, and council tax
relief. Last week came news that, after a year-long review, four
government departments (Work and Pensions, Treasury, Revenue and
Customs, Home Office) concluded that formal recognition of polygamy is
"the best possible" option for Her Majesty's Government.
Third, the archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, endorsed applying
portions of the Islamic law (the Shari‘a) in Great Britain. Adopting
its civil elements, he explained, "seems unavoidable" because not all
British Muslims relate to the existing legal system and applying the
Shari‘a would help with their social cohesion. When Muslims can go to
an Islamic civil court, they need not face "the stark alternatives of
cultural loyalty or state loyalty." Continuing to insist on the "legal
monopoly" of British common law rather than permit Shari'a, Williams
warned, would bring on "a bit of a danger" for the country.
Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams says that Islamic law in Great
Britain "seems unavoidable."
Prime Minister Brown immediately slammed Williams' suggestion: Shari‘a
law, his office declared, "cannot be used as a justification for
committing breaches of English law, nor can the principle of Shari‘a
law be used in a civilian court. … the Prime Minister believes British
law should apply in this country, based on British values." Criticism
of Williams came additionally from all sides of the political spectrum
– from Sayeeda Warsi, the Tory (Muslim) shadow minister for community
cohesion and social action; Nick Clegg, leader of the Liberal
Democrats; and Gerald Batten of the United Kingdom Independence Party.
Secular and Christian groups opposed Williams. So did Trevor Phillips,
head of the equality commission. The Anglican church in Australia
denounced his proposal, along with leading members of his own church,
including his predecessor, Lord Carey. Melanie Phillips called his
argument "quite extraordinarily muddled, absurd and wrong." The Sun
newspaper editorialized that "It's easy to dismiss Archbishop of
Canterbury Rowan Williams as a silly old goat. In fact he's a dangerous
threat to our nation." It concluded acerbically that "The Archbishop of
Canterbury is in the wrong church."
Although widely denounced (and in danger of losing his job), Williams
may be right about the Shari‘a being unavoidable, for it is already
getting entrenched in the West. A Dutch justice minister announced that
"if two-thirds of the Dutch population should want to introduce the
Shari‘a tomorrow, then the possibility should exist." A German judge
referred to the Koran in a routine divorce case. A parallel Somali gar
courts system already exists in Britain.
These developments suggest that British appeasement concerning the war
on terror, the nature of the family, and the rule of law are part of a
larger pattern. Even more than the security threat posed by Islamist
violence, these trends are challenging and perhaps will change the very
nature of Western life.
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Britain's Encounter with Islamic Law
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