Saturday, January 24, 2015

Ahl Al Bayt Should Sue Charlie Hebdo



WHY DO WE INSIST ON SLANDERING PROPHETS?

Free speech is a fundamental human right, but freedom of any kind should never be at the expense of another of Allah’s creation.  Plato, in his Republic, was one of the first to explore the tension between individual freedom and the need to restrain that freedom so that others might be free. 
Today, however, we seem to have forgotten that individual freedom of expression has limits.  In Western law, slander and libel are considered serious infringements on the rights of other individuals.  As an attorney and member of the bar in the United States, I have been asked to help clients seek redress for defamatory statements made by individuals and by journalists. 
Slander and libel are both torts, civil harms, under American and European law.  Both are forms of defamation.  Defamation is the publication of untrue and damaging statements.  Defamation that is visible, for example in the print media, or in a letter or other written documents, is called libel.  Defamation that is audible, such as on television, radio, or as part of a speech or lecture, is called slander.

In order to show defamation, a plaintiff to a court case would have to show:
1.      That the person made a false and defamatory statement regarding the plaintiff
2.      That the person made an unprivileged publication to a third party
3.      That the person acted negligently in doing so
4.      That the plaintiff was damaged by the statements

For private individuals, defamation claims can be fairly straight forward.  Typical examples include falsely accusing a person of committing a crime of morale turpitude, or of committing a felony crime, as well as subjecting a person to ridicule, such as impugning a person’s morality, character or integrity.  Statements that might impair a person’s economic or financial well-being or that cause others to refrain from socializing with that person are also defamatory.
While these types of defamatory harms would appear to apply to everyone, public figures have had a harder time pursuing such claims legally.  Public figures are expected to have a thick skin.  Because of their public presences, they are considered to be legitimate targets of investigation in terms of their moral and legal behavior.  We look up to public figures as role models, so we expect them to embody society’s values.  They almost have a fiduciary duty toward society, a duty born of the special treatment we give them.  Fame comes with responsibilities.  We expect famous people to live up to those responsibilities and so we allow them to be subject to more close scrutiny in regards to their characters and behaviors. 
However, how far should we allow this to go?  We are all familiar with tabloid newspapers.  Some exaggerate truth to make things sound more “sexy.”  After all, their goal is to sell a product, their paper or tabloid website or TV program.  The exaggerated claims they make are somewhat like product “puffing,” the type of exaggeration product manufacturers or shop keepers use to sell products.  We have historically allowed exaggerations, but not slander or libel. 
Exaggeration is not the same as lies.  Ethically, it may really be just as immoral, but we have historically tolerated it.  P.T. Barnum said something to the effect that there is a sucker born every minute.  We are adults, we assume that we will know exaggeration when we see it, and take such claims “with a grain of salt.”  However, even here we have set social limits.  We would not tolerate someone who took advantage of a person with cognitive limitations or who defrauded someone based on such puffing and exaggeration.  We call this fraud. 
Slander and libel are like fraud; the claims are false, in fact they are patent lies; and the other person is harmed by it.  Fraud is considered a criminal act, as well as a tort, but slander and libel are only civil claims.
Shariah Law, the Divine Legislation, has taken a different view of defamation.  Islamic Law does not tolerate fraud or false claims.  Gharar is haram under Shariah Law.  Gharar is a term that indicates any form of vague or undisclosed terms or conditions in a contract.  It is a serious crime in Islam.  La Gharar and La Riba are the foundations of Islamic Finance and Economic Law.  Violating these two principles puts one in a state of harb or war with Allah SWT. 
Shariah Law is designed to protect and promote the Maqaasid or Objectives of the Law.  These include protection of faith, of life, of property, of lineage and dignity and of the intellect.  Defamatory statements go to the heart of the Maqaasid in that they attack a person’s dignity, but they can also destroy a person’s economic life, and impact all the other maqaasid as well. 
We may have heard of the term Qadhaf.  Qadhaf is sometimes translated as slander, but it is a particularly insidious form of slander – false accusations of sexual misconduct.  People love to sling mud.  We see it all the time in the media, accusations of sexual promiscuity and misconduct by celebrities.  Because they are public figures, we seem to tolerate it.  We love to think of these proxies for our own dreams as having rich lives, full of all sorts of material pleasures. While this may seem fine to some, in reality it denigrates those individuals and cheapens our whole society.  Role models are expected to elevate us all, not drag us into a cess pit. 
While Western society might tolerate such cheeky innuendos and accusations, Islam does not.  Allah SWT did not tolerate the false accusations of sexual misconductby the Prophet’s wife, Aisha RA, flung around by the loose lips of some.  False accusations of sexual misconduct are punishable by 80 lashes and impugning of any future testimony.  Allah SWT has sent a clear message that He will no tolerate such behavior.  It is nasty, dirty and foolish.  We all may snicker at the innuendos, but in reality, it is a disgusting form of backbiting.  It is sleazy and it makes anyone who touches it sleazy.
Qadhaf, however, only refers to false statements of sexual misconduct.  Other forms of slander and libel are also haram in Islam.  These forms would not be punishable by the Hadd punishment of 80 lashes, but would be punishable as a Ta’zir crime, with punishment at the discretion of the judge, depending on the specific facts of the case.  This includes fines, impugning of any future testimony, and a lesser number of lashes. 

SLANDERING PROPHETS

Human societies all agree that defamation is a serious breach of the social contract.  Living in society means, a Plato mentioned, that we have to balance rights.  We all have rights and we have to consider the rights of others.  Freedom can never be unrestricted; to have it be so would be unjust. 
Speaking of justice, throughout human history, we have had public figures who have spoken out in favor of justice.  Some have died in the struggle for justice in human society.  They have reminded the people of their duties and responsibilities toward one another, and have spoken out against oppression and evil.  Many of these figures we call Prophets.  Ibrahim, Musa, Isa, and Muhammad SAW all spoke out against injustice.  They were champions of the poor and oppressed.  The Pharisees rebuked Isa AS for hanging out with the poor.  So did the elites who rebuked Salih AS, and Muhammad SAW. 
Yes, these men were public figures I suppose, but why do we insist on defaming them?
I understand that those who advocate this so called free speech are using the founders of religions or philosophies as a symbol to speak out against the oppressive and unethical actions of those who claim to be the followers of that founder.  We use Isa AS as a symbol for Christianity as a whole, and any time we want to ridicule or speak out against some aspect of Christianity or some group of its adherents who are acting unethically, we defame Christ instead. 
A picture of Jesus (AS) covered in urine might be a way of expressing the idea that Christianity is not to the liking of the “artist”, and so should be pissed on.  However, is it really necessary? Is it really art?  Yes, I suppose it is an expression of something, but art is quite often so full of itself as to be mere arrogance. 
Admittedly, Islamic culture is not as obsessed with symbols as is Western culture.  The Arabs are a matter-or-fact people, and the Qur’an is Mubeen, clear.  Although it contains the most soaring passages of spiritual insights, it does so in a clear and un-confusing manner. 
So it is natural that Muslims would find symbolic expressions aimed at pointing out unethical behavior by those who claim to be the adherents of Islam, unintelligible.  All we see is hate.  And in reality, despite all the claims of free speech and free artistic expression, what we have seen is nothing but hate. 
Repeatedly insisting on publishing material that is known to offend people is nothing more than hate.  Certainly the reactions of some who claim to be Muslim have been not only unacceptable, but haram and fasaad (criminal) in Islam as well.  The events in France at the Charlie Hebdo publishing firm are criminal under any law, including Shariah Law.  But, the repeated publications of offensive cartoons is also criminal.  It defames a person who came to support the poor, the orphan, girls, women, widows, slaves, debtors, all who are needy and oppressed. 
As a descendent of the daughter of this man of peace and love, I am personally offended by the defamation.  Innuendos of pedophilia, of sexual misconduct, of depravity are the worst forms of slander and libel.  Depictions of my ancestor as a war-monger and killer are equally disgusting.  Lest these advocates of hate speech forget, defamation is a civil cause of action.  Perhaps, we who are descended from the daughter of the Prophet should sue on his behalf, or if the law does not permit to sue on behalf of the deceased, then on our own behalf, for defamation.  We could do so in both France and United States, with any renumerations going to charities. 

THE LOST BOYS

The individuals who perpetrated the crimes in France were misguided, foolish young people, who were easily brainwashed into violence.  Arabs form an underclass in French society, much as Hispanics do in the United States.  Many are poor, have little education, and little prospects of enjoying the material life depicted in the media and advertising.  The young man who took hostages in the Jewish grocery had a criminal history and had spent time in prison for theft.  The two brothers who attached the publishing house had a propensity for violence and no understanding of the religion or the man they claimed to be defending.  Moreover, despite the fact that violent elements in Yemen have claimed association with the attack, it is not likely it was organized by any real group, other than the two criminals who carried it out. 
Al-Qaeda – it means “the leaders.”  It is a Hollywood created name, if there ever was one.  We in America pronounce it “El –Kaydah,” which ironically means “the plot.” 

Innahum yakeedoona kaydan
Waakeedu kaydan
Famahhili alkafireena amhilhum ruwaydan

Al-Tariq  86: 15. As for them, they Are but planning,
16. And I am planning.
17. Therefore grant a delay To the unbelievers:
Give respite to them Gently (for awhile).



So the young men who attacked Charlie Hebdo claimed to be associated with El Qaeda, and the other man claimed to be associated with ISIS.  Clearly none of these men were really Muslim or really had anything more than criminal intent.  It is a shame they fell through the cracks, and that because of the racism and anti-immigrant sentiment that pervades many Western countries, they were unable to find a more productive and healthy way to use their talents and energies. 
The world is filled with disgruntled young men of every ethnic and religious background.  We have created them.  We have killed their fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters. We have destroyed their societies.  We have railroaded them into poverty.  We open factories in their home countries; then, we hire only women, who are subjected to hideous working conditions and monthly pregnancy tests.  So the men are forced to look for work outside their countries; low paying jobs no one will do – menial, physically draining, back-breaking, demeaning, and most of all, not the glamorous material paradise kind of jobs advertised on TV and the Internet.
These immigrants saddled with tremendous stress.  Their families gave them all their money to go to the West.  They have the expectations of so many riding on their backs.  But it is more expensive here than they thought.  They live in poverty, not the luxury they imagined.  And they expected to send money home.  Some support whole villages.  They are torn between two worlds, not belonging to either.  Homesick and depressed, they feel like failures because they did not get rich.
Now their sons are growing up in this surreal world.  The depression of the parents infects their souls. They begin to hate their parents and their back-home mentalities. They are brainwashed in school, taught about the new culture, the superior culture.  But soon enough, these sons figure out, they are not really included in that new superior culture.  They never will be.  They are brainwashed to crave the tech toys, the wide screen TVs, the I-phones, and they will spend every last dollar or Euro to get them.  But even with all those toys, they will never be accepted.  And the homelands of their fathers won’t accept them either.  They are lost.
The lost boys – children of vampires.  The vampires are the societies that suck their blood dry, suck their spirits dry.  The materialistic societies have sucked the life out of their parents, and now it’s after them too.  No wonder they strike out. 

EXTREMISM


We live in a society that craves extremes.  Extreme sports, extreme partying, extreme games, extreme entertainment, extreme everything.  France has just experiences a clash of extremism.  Charlie Hebdo is an extremist too.  Extreme satire – extreme speech – extreme entertainment.  Why else would they choose to publish the same offensive cartoon on the day they returned to publication?  In such an extremist atmosphere, is it any wonder that the lost boys chose extreme violence as a means for expressing their angst?  Let me ask you, if picture of Jesus AS in piss, and cartoons of the Prophet as a violent and ugly madman are artistic expression protected by freedom of speech, then why is not the expression of these young men not? 
Well, they killed people.   Yes, and under both Western and Shariah law they have committed a crime.  But how many times have Western armies killed?  How many wedding parties have been bombed in Afghanistan?  We apologize….  “Oh, it was a mistake.”
The world is drowning in extreme hate.  No one is innocent.  We all have the blood of innocents on our hands.  When will it stop? 
On the same day as Charlie Hebdo, 2000 people were killed in Nigeria by the Boku Haram. 
“There is a hole in the bottom of the earth, where the blood pours out at the end of the day, when the usual amount of people have died.”  (Desecration). 


What is the solution?  Islam is … if we really follow it.  But most of us don’t.  I pray more of us will. 




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