Fatwa

views updated May 23 2018

FATWA

Technical term for the legal judgment or learned interpretation that a qualified jurist (mufti) can give on issues pertaining to the shariʿa (Islamic law).

Originally only a mujtahid, that is, a jurist satisfying a number of qualifications and trained in the techniques of ijtihad ("personal reasoning," the fourth source of Islamic law after the Qurʾan, the Prophet Muhammad's sunna, and ijma, or consensus), was allowed to issue a legal opinion or interpretation of an established law. Later, all trained jurists were allowed to be muftis. Fatwas are nonbinding, contrary to the laws deriving from the first three sources, and the Muslim may seek another legal opinion. The fatwas of famous jurists are usually collected in books and can be used as precedents in courts of law.

Because most Muslim countries stopped following the shariʿa during the twentieth century and adopted secular legal systems, fatwas are issued mostly on a personal basis or for political reasons. The practice of having a government-appointed mufti issue fatwas justifying government policy has been a major criticism by reformist contemporary Muslim movements. However, many of the latter often allow individuals without the requisite legal training to issue fatwas. Such edicts may be considered by their followers as binding but they are not recognized by the jurists or the rest of the Muslim community as legitimate juristic opinions.


Bibliography


Masud, Muhammad Khalid; Messick, Brinkley; and Powers, David S., eds. Islamic Legal Interpretation: Muftis and Their Fatwas. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1996.

wael b. hallaq updated by maysam j. al faruqi

Fatwa

views updated Jun 08 2018

FATWA

A fatwa (pl. fatawa) is an advisory opinion issued by a recognized authority on law and tradition in answer to a specific question. Fatawa can range from single-word responses (e.g., "Yes," "No," or "Permitted") to book-length treatises. Although typically focused on legal matters, fatawa also treat more general religious issues, including theology, philosophy, creeds, and ˓ibadat (religious obligations or acts of worship). Traditionally, despite numerous exceptions (particularly since the eleventh century), the issuer of fatawa, termed a mufti—whose authority derives from his knowledge of law and tradition—has functioned independently of the judicial system, indeed often privately.

While court rulings rely on the sifting of evidence and conflicting testimonies, muftis assume the facts presented by their questioners, which, obviously, can bias the answer. Moreover, a fatwa differs from a court judgment, or qada˒, not only in its wider potential scope—for instance, although ˓ibadat are essential parts of Islamic law, they transcend the jurisdiction of the courts—but also because the qada˒ is binding and enforceable, "performative," while the fatwa is not. Instead, it is "informational," and, while decisions of shari˓a courts usually pertain only to the specific cases they adjudicate, thus setting no legal precedents, fatawa are very often collected, published, and cited in subsequent cases.

See alsoLaw ; Mufti ; Religious Institutions .

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Schacht, Joseph. Origins of Muhammadan Jurisprudence. Oxford, U.K., and New York: Clarendon Press, 1979.

Weiss, Bernard G. The Spirit of Islamic Law. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1998.

Daniel C. Peterson

Fatwā

views updated Jun 11 2018

Fatwā (Arab.). In Islamic law, a legal opinion, given on request to an individual or to a magistrate or other public official, concerning a point of law wherein doubt arises, or where there is not an absolutely clear ruling in existence. One qualified to give such an opinion is a muftī, who would pronounce according to a particular madhhab (‘school of law’). A fatwā may be contested, but only on the basis of existing precedent and law; it cannot, therefore, be regarded as an ‘infallible pronouncement’, but it commands assent where it can be seen to be well-grounded. See also SHAIKH AL-ISLĀM.

Fatwa

views updated May 23 2018

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fatwa

views updated May 21 2018

fat·wa / ˈfätwä/ • n. a ruling on a point of Islamic law given by a recognized authority.

fatwa

views updated Jun 11 2018

fatwa a ruling on a point of Islamic law given by a recognized authority. In 1989 a fatwa calling for the death of the British novelist Salman Rushdie was issued by Ayatollah Khomeini following the publication of Rushdie's novel The Satanic Verses.