Heaven on Earth: A Journey Through Sharia Law
Material type:
- 9781847920171
- 23 340.59 KADH
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St Aloysius Library | Others | 340.59 KADH (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | Donated by V. T. Rajshekar | D05344 |
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340 BORS Segregation and Desegregation in India: a Socio legal study | 340.092 COCJ Journey to justice | 340.112 FULM Morality of Law | 340.59 KADH Heaven on Earth: A Journey Through Sharia Law | 341.2 MCCT Tibet: The position in International law | 341.2422 RONE European Community: Fact Book | 341.481 KLYI International Law And The Black Minority In The U.S. |
Almost 1400 years after the prophet muhammad first articulated gods law - the sharia - its earthly interpreters are still arguing over what it means hardliners reduce it to amputations, veiling, holy war and stonings others say that it is humanitys only guarantee of a just society in heaven on earth, sadakat kadri, a london-based criminal barrister and prize-winning writer, sets out to see who is right travelling the islamic world, he encounters a cacophony of legal claims at the ancient indian grave of his sufi ancestor, unruly jinns are exorcised in the name of the sharia in pakistans madrasas, stern scholars ridicule his talk of human rights and demand explanations for nato drone attacks in afghanistan in iran, he hears that god is forgiving enough to subsidise sex-change operations - but requires the execution of muslims who change religion all muslims are guided by the sharia - whatever their interpretation of it - and the stories of compulsion and violence are just part of a much bigger picture many of islams first judges refused even to decide cases for fear that a mistake would damn them, and scholars from delhi to cairo maintain that governments have no business enforcing faith in this illuminating and important book, sadakat kadri draws on islams past and present to show us why the promise of a perfect social order can be compelling but reality will always intrude and when human beings attempt to apply divine justice, they risk creating not a heaven on earth - but something much closer to hell
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