The Ruling on Apostasy
Official Fatwa of the Mufti of Greater Washington,
Sheikh Mohammed Ali Al-Hanooti
The issue of apostasy falls under the umbrella of man's free will,
freedom of expression and belief. The Holy Qur'an states unequivocally that
nobody
can be compelled to either become a Muslim or remain one. In Surah 4:
137, Allah says, "Behold, as for those who come to believe, and then deny the
truth, and again come to believe and again deny the truth and
thereafter, grow stubborn in their denial of the truth, God will not forgive them,
nor
will He guide
them in any way." This ayah very clearly shows that even after
rejecting Islam twice, no punishment is prescribed for the
apostates.
The punishment for apostasy mentioned in Islamic literature is derived
from hadiths whose authenticity is not certain (as these hadiths are ahad
-from
one source,
but not mutawatir- from a consensus of sources). Even among those
scholars who accept them as authentic, there is vast difference of
opinion on the interpretation and elaboration of the hadiths. Such
hadiths have been traditionally cited as justification for executing apostates,
but
these were
circumstantial rulings where legal authorities of that time deemed the
punishment justified, as the act of apostasy in question, or
in
some cases,
mass apostasy was comparable to treason or to an organized crime
outfit, where the apostates would ally themselves with the
opponents
of the state.
Such hadiths, which have, in the past, been cited to justify punishment
for apostasy, therefore, cannot stand against the Qur'an, which provides no
textual
evidence for such action. On the contrary, the Qur'an states in Surah
10: 99: "If it had been the will of your Lord that all the people
of
the world
should be believers, all the people of the world would have believed!
Would you then compel them against their will to believe?"
In conclusion, the Qur'an is the definitive clear authority for
protecting the rights of an individual in expressing himself in faith and
supercedes
any of the distorted interpretations of the hadiths in question.
Executing a person because of conversion to another faith contradicts the Qur'an,
the
ultimate source of Shari'ah.
Sheikh Mohammed Ali Al-Hanooti
Mufti of Greater Washington
Please also read the opinion by Dr Shiakh Ahmad Kutty