Human Rights in Islamic Jurisprudence Why Should All Human Beings Be Inviolable?
Künye
ŞENTÜRK, Recep. "Human Rights in Islamic Jurisprudence Why Should All Human Beings Be Inviolable?". The Future of Religious Freedom: Global Challenges,(2013):290-311.Özet
In the diversity of their religious communities, Muslim cities of the Middle Ages,
such as Istanbul, Jerusalem, Baghdad, Samarkand, Bukhara, and Cairo, looked
like the modern New York, San Francisco, Berlin, Paris, and London. In contrast,
European cities during the Middle Ages were quite homogeneous, usually encompassing
one predominant Christian denomination. This continued more or less
until the second half of the nineteenth century. Since then Western cities have
clearly turned into cosmopolitan metropolitan centers housing diverse faith and
ethnic groups.
What made Muslim cities during the Middle Ages similar to modern cosmopolitan
centers? I contend that it was because they operated under norms of
Islamic jurisprudence regarding universal human rights, particularly freedom of
religion. This finding is surprising given the lagging status of religious freedom
in many Muslim-majority nations today, and it suggests that recovering that
classical Islamic tradition could have enormous global significance.