Encyclopedia of Islam



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Shamil

  

619  J




Further reading: Moshe Gammer, Muslim Resistance 

to the Tsar: Shamil and the Conquest of Chechnia and 

Daghestan (London: Frank Cass, 1994); Anna Zelkina, 

In Quest for God and Freedom: The Sufi Response to the 

Russian Advance in the North Caucasus (New York: New 

York University Press, 2000).



sharia



(Arabic: path to a source of water; 



also Persian and Urdu: 

shariat)

Sharia is the law of Islam based on God’s sovereign 

commandments and prohibitions as conveyed by 

the q


Uran

, and on the 

sUnna

 of Muhammad and 



his Companions, as embodied in the 

hadith


. It is 

often identified with another concept of Islamic 

law—jurisprudence (

fiqh

). Thus, it can be defined 

as both the infallible revealed law of God and the 

fallible, ongoing efforts undertaken by human 

beings, particularly the 

Ulama


 and Muslim judges, 

to interpret 

revelation

 and apply it to particular 

sociohistorical contexts. Like the understanding 

of revealed law in rabbinic Judaism, Muslims have 

for centuries seen the sharia as a process wherein 

jurists and judges debated legal rulings and inter-

pretations in their efforts to apply revelation to all 

areas of human conduct. They thought that sharia 

should be relevant not only to matters of worship, 

but also to family life, 

dietary

 

laWs



, business trans-

actions, 

crime

 

and



 

pUnishment

, warfare, dress, 

hospitality, and even the exchange of greetings. 

Also, just as following a path to water (the literal 

meaning of sharia) entails the nourishment of the 

body, following God’s sharia promises material and 

spiritual benefits to Muslims. It is the way to win 

God’s blessing in this world and salvation in the 

aFterliFe

. In actual practice, the sharia has under-

gone a complex history of development, interact-

ing with other legal traditions and local 

cUstomary

laW

. One of the chief duties of Muslim ruler was to 



uphold the sharia, while the ulama and judges had 

the responsibility of studying it, teaching it, and 

interpreting it. The centers for their activities were 

the madrasas and the courts in all the major cities 

found in lands under Muslim rule.

Historically, the sharia has become embodied 

in different traditions of Islamic jurisprudence 

known as madhhabs (schools, ways). In Sunni 

Islam there are four madhhabs: the Malikis, the 

Hanafis, the Shafiis, and the Hanbalis. These 

schools are not religious sects with different theo-

logical doctrines, however. Since the 10th–11th 

century all four have accepted a system of juris-

prudence based on four “roots” (usul al-fiqh). Two 

of these are based in revelation—the Quran and 

sunna. Two are based on methods of interpreting 

revelation—

ijmaa

 (consensus) and qiyas (ana-

logical reasoning). To a greater or lesser degree all 

schools have allowed for the derivation of indi-

vidual legal opinions based on reason (

ijtihad

), 


but reason has often been circumscribed by the 

forces of tradition and imitation (taqlid) of the 

legal authorities of the past. Though the Shia have 

tended to follow a more devotional form of Islam 

wherein the Imams are held in higher esteem 

than the law, they have also developed their own 

legal traditions. These bear close resemblance to 

the Sunni legal traditions. The legal tradition in 

t

Welve


-i

mam


 s

hiism


 is known as the Jaafari Legal 

School, named after J

aaFar

 

al



-s

adiq


 (d. 765), the 

sixth Imam. It developed two chief branches: the 

a

khbari


 s

chool


 and the U

sUli


 s

chool


. The Ismaili 

Shia, though often known for their esoteric inter-

pretations of Islam, also follow the sharia, but 

under the guidance of their Imam and his agents. 

In the distant past there were extremist Shii sects, 

the 


ghulat

, which were believed to have claimed 

that the sharia had been abrogated.

Today, the sharia is understood in Muslim 

nations variously as a basis for law within the 

framework of a predominantly secular legal system 

modeled after those of western Europe and Britain, 

or as applicable to only limited areas of law, espe-

cially marriage, divorce, and inheritance law. This 

is one of the results of colonial rule in Muslim 

lands during the 19th and 20th centuries. Where 

it has occurred—in countries such as Libya, Egypt, 

Jordan, Bahrain, Pakistan, and Malaysia—a system 

of dual courts exists to accommodate the two 

traditions of law. Alternately, in countries such as 

Saudi Arabia and Iran the sharia stands in ideo-

logical  opposition to Euro-American secular law. 

K  620  

sharia



However, even in these countries, it is not the only 

law of the land. Creating governments exclusively 

based on the sharia is a major tenet of today’s 

Islamist movements, both radical and gradualist. 

In non-Muslim countries some jurists and legis-

lators have proposed limited adoption of certain 

elements of the sharia for Muslim immigrants and 

citizens, but such suggestions have met with pub-

lic outcries. The public perception of the sharia in 

Europe and North America, as well as among non-

Muslim minorities in Muslim lands, is that it is 

an inflexible, tyrannical system of medieval rules. 

Muslim reformers and modernists, on the other 

hand, argue that this is incorrect, that the sharia’s 

perceived faults are the result of corrupt or poorly 

educated Muslim authorities, as well as the indi-

rect effects of 

colonialism

. To counteract negative 

interpretations of the sharia, they are reexamining 

its foundations and history, in order to bring it 

into greater conformity with universal notions of 

JUstice

hUman



 

rights


, and gender equality.

See also a

boU


 e

l

-F



adl

, k


halid

; a


llah

; h


anaFi

l

egal



  s

chool


;  h

anbali


  l

egal


  s

chool


;  i

slamism


madrasa


;  m

aliki


  l

egal


  s

chool


reneWal


 

and


reForm

 

movements



; s

haFii


 l

egal


 s

chool


; s

hiism


.


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