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BoyBach
Feb 26, 2008, 01:07 PM
Turkey is preparing to publish a document that represents a revolutionary reinterpretation of Islam - and a controversial and radical modernisation of the religion.

The country's powerful Department of Religious Affairs has commissioned a team of theologians at Ankara University to carry out a fundamental revision of the Hadith, the second most sacred text in Islam after the Koran.

The Hadith is a collection of thousands of sayings reputed to come from the Prophet Muhammad.

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Commentators say the very theology of Islam is being reinterpreted in order to effect a radical renewal of the religion.

Its supporters say the spirit of logic and reason inherent in Islam at its foundation 1,400 years ago are being rediscovered. Some believe it could represent the beginning of a reformation in the religion.

Turkish officials have been reticent about the revision of the Hadith until now, aware of the controversy it is likely to cause among traditionalist Muslims, but they have spoken to the BBC about the project, and their ambitious aims for it.

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An adviser to the project, Felix Koerner, says some of the sayings - also known individually as "hadiths" - can be shown to have been invented hundreds of years after the Prophet Muhammad died, to serve the purposes of contemporary society.

"Unfortunately you can even justify through alleged hadiths, the Muslim - or pseudo-Muslim - practice of female genital mutilation," he says.

"You can find messages which say 'that is what the Prophet ordered us to do'. But you can show historically how they came into being, as influences from other cultures, that were then projected onto Islamic tradition."

The argument is that Islamic tradition has been gradually hijacked by various - often conservative - cultures, seeking to use the religion for various forms of social control.

Leaders of the Hadith project say successive generations have embellished the text, attributing their political aims to the Prophet Muhammad himself.

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According to Fadi Hakura, an expert on Turkey from Chatham House in London, Turkey is doing nothing less than recreating Islam - changing it from a religion whose rules must be obeyed, to one designed to serve the needs of people in a modern secular democracy.

He says that to achieve it, the state is fashioning a new Islam.

"This is kind of akin to the Christian Reformation," he says.

"Not exactly the same, but if you think, it's changing the theological foundations of [the] religion. "

Fadi Hakura believes that until now secularist Turkey has been intent on creating a new politics for Islam.

Now, he says, "they are trying to fashion a new Islam."

Significantly, the "Ankara School" of theologians working on the new Hadith have been using Western critical techniques and philosophy.

They have also taken an even bolder step - rejecting a long-established rule of Muslim scholars that later (and often more conservative) texts override earlier ones.

"You have to see them as a whole," says Fadi Hakura.

"You can't say, for example, that the verses of violence override the verses of peace. This is used a lot in the Middle East, this kind of ideology.

"I cannot impress enough how fundamental [this change] is."

- BBC News Link (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/7264903.stm)


Interesting. More preparations for further integration into the EU? Or maybe an attempt to become a 'leading' Islamic nation?



elcid
Feb 26, 2008, 01:27 PM
- BBC News Link (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/7264903.stm)


Interesting. More preparations for further integration into the EU? Or maybe an attempt to become a 'leading' Islamic nation?

I think both. I think that after 1400 years it is due to be completly looked at. We had the Reformation, it is required to get down to core beliefs again. Doubt it will do much good in the middle east though.

Ugg
Feb 26, 2008, 02:25 PM
I think both. I think that after 1400 years it is due to be completly looked at. We had the Reformation, it is required to get down to core beliefs again. Doubt it will do much good in the middle east though.

Well, the Reformation didn't happen overnight you know.

Since Islam has no central authority like Catholicism, Orthodoxy and many Protestant sects, I doubt it will have a huge impact outside Turkey.

I'm sure the wacko Wahibis will denounce it as much if not more than they do Judaism.

geese
Feb 26, 2008, 04:01 PM
Well, the Reformation didn't happen overnight you know.

Since Islam has no central authority like Catholicism, Orthodoxy and many Protestant sects, I doubt it will have a huge impact outside Turkey.

I'm sure the wacko Wahibis will denounce it as much if not more than they do Judaism.

Wacko Wahabi's! I'm using that phase again!

The Whacko's would probably use it as a shabby justification to kill other Muslims though.

Queso
Feb 26, 2008, 04:54 PM
I've never understood adherence to the Hadith. In the Qu'ran Allah makes it quite clear to Mohammed that what's in the book isn't to be added to, yet Muslims the world over then go and follow all this stuff that's tacked on.

If it walks like herecy and talks like herecy it ought to be burned at the stake. Right? :D

skunk
Feb 26, 2008, 04:58 PM
I think it's excellent, and could happen in no more appropriate place.

blackfox
Feb 26, 2008, 05:51 PM
Interesting developments. As far as the "reformation" commentary, you could say this is more of a "counter-reformation" of Islam.

I would characterize the austere, strict-interpreter Wahabists and movements such as the Taliban and the larger grass-roots politicalization of Islam as a reformation of sorts.

Of course, as attractive as that movement can seem - much like the Lutherans and Calvinists of times past, eventually people will stop reacting against something and realize that they don't like the new system they've opted into.

Again, as to the point of the OP, this seems like the best kind of development for the synthesis of Islam into the modern world. Perhaps we should try this on the Evangelical movement.

NAG
Feb 26, 2008, 05:54 PM
Yeah, it is great they are going back and rediscovering the more logical and reasonable roots.

Gelfin
Feb 26, 2008, 05:56 PM
Not my religion and not my country, but nevertheless I am a bit skeptical of the idea of a religious reformation undertaken on the recommendation of a government committee.

Crawn2003
Feb 26, 2008, 06:02 PM
I hate to say it but I have a feeling that this will be looked on as influence from the West and denounced as heresy.

At least this "reform" is from inside an Islamic country or it would be entirely shot down.

~Crawn

skunk
Feb 26, 2008, 06:09 PM
Not my religion and not my country, but nevertheless I am a bit skeptical of the idea of a religious reformation undertaken on the recommendation of a government committee.Most Turks will see it as continuing in the great tradition of Kemal Atatürk.

NAG
Feb 26, 2008, 06:19 PM
I hate to say it but I have a feeling that this will be looked on as influence from the West and denounced as heresy.

At least this "reform" is from inside an Islamic country or it would be entirely shot down.

~Crawn

They'll say this no matter what. Fundamentalists are like that basically by their own definition.

Gelfin
Feb 26, 2008, 06:33 PM
Most Turks will see it as continuing in the great tradition of Kemal Atatürk.

I understand, and I greatly respect people who are capable of sincerely operating within a wider purview than their own immediate self-interest if indeed that be the case.

In fact, I hesitate to even mention it given the obvious value of a sincere reform movement, but all I'm saying is, if "Ankara School" Islam ends up with a prominent hadith along the lines of "I heard the Prophet say, 'vote AKP,'" don't say I didn't warn you.