Question: May you continue
your efforts for propagation of Islam. I have a confusion. At this critical
situation when all non-believers are together for crushing Muslims, is
Jihad ard-i- Kafayah (collective obligation)?
Answer: This is a very delicate question that you have
asked. You are right: the whole non-Muslim world seems to be united against
Islam and its followers. But don’t you think that the real responsibility
for such withering international relations rests mainly with the Muslims
themselves? Except for the Prophet Muhammad (sws) and his Companions (rta),
rest of the Muslims had only been authorized by their Lord to present the
message of Islam in a lucid and most appropriate manner; but they went
so much further as to threatening the world into subjugation, in case they
didn’t embrace Islam. This undoubtedly gave rise to a nameless fear that
cannot be overcome even by telling them time and again that Islam is indeed
the torchbearer of peace and universal brotherhood.
As far as your question is concerned, it must be kept
in mind, that the only Jihad that an Islamic state can undertake is against
injustice and persecution. It must be noted that this war against persecution
may as well be waged against all the perpetrators of persecution, be it
a Muslim country or a non-Muslim one, if diplomatic efforts fail to resolve
the crisis. The Qur’an reads:
What has come upon you that you fight not in
the cause of God, and for the oppressed men, women, and children, who pray;
‘Get us out of this town, O Lord, whose people are oppressors; so raise
for us from Yourself one who will protect and raise for us from Yourself
one who will help. (4:75)
Only a state has the authority to launch
an armed struggle against persecution. The directives for Jihad were given
when Muslims succeeded to establish an Islamic State in Madinah. The implication
evidently is that the authority to uplift arms rests with an Islamic state
only. No individual or a group of individuals have been authorized to undertake
this job. The Prophet (sws) is reported to have said:
A Muslim ruler is the shield [of his people].
An armed struggle can only be carried out under him and people should seek
his shelter [in war]. (Bukhari: No. 2957)
The jurists also subscribe to this view.
Thus, Sayyid Sabiq has delineated in Fiqhu’l Sunnah:
Among Kafayah obligations, the third category
is that for which the existence of a ruler is necessary e.g. Jihad and
execution of punishments. Therefore, only a ruler has this prerogative.
Because, indeed, no one else has the right to punish another person.1
(Jhangeer Hanif)
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