My Guest Blogger is free lance writer, Araceli Z. Lorayes. In this article she questions the incorporation of Sharia or Shari'ah law into the Philippine judicial systerm
The Constitutionality of Shari'ah (or Sharia)
by Araceli Z. Lorayes
Reprinted by permission of the author. This article first appeared in the Philppine Inquirer, May 12, 2015
The Constitutionality of Shari'ah (or Sharia)
by Araceli Z. Lorayes
Reprinted by permission of the author. This article first appeared in the Philppine Inquirer, May 12, 2015
RETIRED chief justice Hilario Davide has declared that the formation of Shari’ah courts is within the bounds of the Constitution, and that the decisions of these courts can be reviewed by the Supreme Court. This is a variation of the Shari’ah provisions contained in the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law, which envision a separate judicial system with Shari’ah courts whose decisions may only be reviewed and/or reversed by a Shari’ah high court.
I am not a lawyer, but doesn’t either scenario violate the constitutional mandate on the inviolable separation of church and state? Shari’ah is divine law; the BBL itself acknowledges Shari’ah’s sacred origins in the Koran and the Sunnah.
The Koran is more than a divinely-inspired holy book like the Bible. For Muslims the Koran is itself divine, directly equivalent to Jesus Christ of Christianity. It is Allah’s Word, revealed directly to Muhammad, dictated word for word by the Angel Gabriel from tablets stored in Heaven. The Sunnah, which recounts the acts and teachings of the Prophet Muhammad, is almost as sacred as the Koran.
Given the Koran’s divine nature, how can the Supreme Court possibly review and/or reverse decisions of Shari’ah courts? Under Shari’ah the ultimate authority is the Koran, NOT the Constitution.
If Shari’ah is divine law, then by extension Shari’ah courts are religious courts even if they resolve secular issues. (Shari’ah governs all aspects of Muslim life, making no distinction between religious and secular.) The BBL is explicit insofar as the secular jurisdiction of the Shari’ah courts is concerned, but is silent on the religious nature of the courts. However, Section 6 Subsection g under Article X, which gives the Shari’ah District Court jurisdiction over “all other personal and real actions” of Muslims, seems to hold the door open to the intermingling of religious and secular functions.
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