To Westerners, the Arabic word Sharia often conjures up images of
amputations for Muslim thieves and stonings of adulterous women. But the
term actually encompasses all Islamic religious precepts -- including
how to pray -- and its interpretation differs from region to region.
Only a few Muslim countries, including Saudi Arabia and Iran, carry out
such harsh Sharia penalties today. And, some Muslim countries, such as
Tunisia and Morocco, have passed progressive laws giving women equality
with men -- in the name of Sharia. In recent years, imams at English
mosques have been adjudicating hundreds of requests from Muslim women
seeking religious divorces. Critics say these Sharia tribunals
constitute a parallel legal system that discriminates against women. But
researchers say they mainly free women to remarry in keeping with their
faith. After recent electoral gains by Islamist parties in Egypt,
Morocco and Tunisia, human-rights advocates worry that new governments
may reject progressive interpretations of Sharia for the harsher, Saudi-
or Iranian-style versions. CQ Global Researcher Sharia Controversy v.6-1 |
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