There Can Only Be One Law of the Land
Opinion
Earlier this month Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams stunned much of his own church and the rest of the world by saying that it seems unavoidable that elements of Sharia will be adopted into the British legal system. His argument was that doing so would make the law of the land more palatable to Muslims, and thereby ensure community cohesion. The archbishop’s statement was met with condemnation in Parliament and public hysteria akin to an announcement that Saladin was back from the grave, rattling the gates of London.
But perhaps even more disconcerting was one of the reasons Williams offered as justification for his thinking: “We have Orthodox Jewish courts operating in this country.” To the archbishop, the system of beit din that has long operated in the United Kingdom, as well as here in the United States, offered some sort of evidentiary support for argument. It doesn’t.
British law makes no concessions to rabbinic law. To the contrary, the findings of a beit din are embraced by secular law on both sides of the Atlantic only when they conform to the demands of the secular code.
When a beit din adjudicates a financial dispute, for example, the ruling will be recognized by a secular court only when the beit din proceedings conform to the requirement of prevailing laws governing arbitration agreements, including elements that the beit din would not ordinarily insist upon, such as representation by counsel. In matters of child custody, a beit din that has overseen a divorce can offer suggestions that may or may not be accepted by a family law court, which always sees itself as the final authority concerning child welfare.
In short, it is rabbinic law that accommodates and makes concessions to a secular law it respects as the binding law of the land, not the other way around.
Some were quick to defend Williams by repackaging his remarks. He was not, they argued, advocating the importation of Sharia criminal law, complete with stoning adulterers and cutting off the hands of thieves. This, to be fair, is true. All he wished to see, they said, was that two Muslims be given the opportunity to use Islamic courts to settle financial disputes and family matters, just as the Jews do in beit din. This, however, is likely not true. Muslims can already do that, and if they are moderate Muslims, they are indeed already doing that.
But what has really gotten people exercised is the archbishop’s statement that “I think it’s a misunderstanding to suppose that… people don’t have other affiliations, other loyalties which shape and dictate how they behave in society, and that the law needs to take some account of that.” There are more than a few people who believe that those competing affiliations and loyalties — which Williams would like the law to recognize and accommodate without quite telling us how — are not so compatible with Western life as we know it.
Many Muslims often feel alienated because these other affiliations and loyalties, as understood by more extreme interpretations of Sharia, do not permit them to acknowledge the authority of the dhimmis of Western secular law. Telling our friends that the findings of an Islamic court will be recognized only if that court hearkens to the expectations of the dhimmi is not likely to leave them singing “God Save the Queen.” Only complete autonomy, as a law within the law, will likely be acceptable to them, and Williams seems ready to offer that to them in limited areas.
That offer, the archbishop ought to know, finds no evidentiary support in the beit din system. There is, however, a lesson Williams would do well to take away from the Jewish experience with the law.
An old story from this side of the pond, probably apocryphal, says it best. A new immigrant living on New York’s Lower East Side finds nowhere to erect a sukkah except for his fire escape. He is summoned to court. The judge berates him for flouting the law of the land, lecturing him about how he no longer lives in the shtetl and must accommodate to new norms.
“I will take no excuses,” declares the judge. “That booth of yours must go. I will give you 10 days to remove it, or find you in contempt of court.”
The Jew did not put up a fight.
The story says much about the attitude of first-generation immigrants. You could live with secular law if you found a way to thwart it or work around it. The next generation of Jews didn’t work at cross-purposes to the law, but became attorneys and judges themselves.
Too often, though, they gave up many of their Jewish practices and values in the process. The generation after that learned that they could be attorneys and judges and not have to give up any of their Jewishness. Jews had long lived with the talmudic rule that “the law of the land is the law,” except where the local law directly contravened some halachic proscription or banned the performance of an affirmative obligation.
In time, they learned that rabbinic law did not essentially grate on Western sensitivities, so they could safely predict that Western legal systems would not ask them to violate rabbinic law. They learned that the law of the land was a friend, not a foe. They could live comfortably under a non-Jewish legal master without compromising their Jewish beliefs and practices.
Arbitration law in the United States and the United Kingdom does not require, either in a beit din or in a hearing conducted by American Arbitration Association, that the arbitration panel adhere to each and every detail of secular law. It recognizes the flexibility of private arbitration to resolve disputes in a way that law can not. Judicial reviews of arbitrations look only to see if they are fundamentally fair — without corruption, with reasonable due process, representation by lawyers, and other such criteria.
Muslim courts should be encouraged to operate within the norms of the secular courts in exactly the manner that the Jewish beit din does. This much Sharia — which is already available without Williams’s help — would be a good thing for all of us.
Some non-Muslims fear that this will prove to be the first step in the incursion of Sharia in Western life, and the ones to follow will not be so innocuous. It is more likely, however, that for many Muslims the very opposite will happen.
Like Jews, Muslims will learn in time that the state is not bent on destroying them. Muslims who turn to the secular courts to uphold Sharia decisions will encounter cognitive dissonance. Having been taught about the evils of the detested kafirs, they will instead meet people of honesty, integrity and many shared values — and move toward closer association with them.
Rabbi Michael Broyde, a law professor at Emory University, is a rabbinical court judge in the Beth Din of America. Rabbi Yitzchok Adlerstein, a professor of Jewish law and ethics at Loyola Law School, is a rabbinical court judge in the court of the Rabbinical Council of California.
Comments
In the UK something very strange seems to have happened. Politicians and the establishment seem to have become obsessed with promoting and funding religions but seem to be in almost total conflict with the People who, even when they believe in a Supreme Being are not impressed with the standards of religious doctrine of any kind.The problem is that we would like there to be a God but there is no evidence that one exists or that such a Being who could create a Universe would even understand the concept of morality and ethics or have any interest in us at all.
As a Christian, I was disappointed in the Archbishop of Canterbury's comments. I emailed his office the following:
"Your published defense of the Archbishop of Canterbury's comments regarding sharia law succeeded only in painting the man as a religious bureaucrat, not a Christian leader. People of Western nations understand sharia to stand for a host of repugnant practices that Islamists are attempting to impose upon Western culture. These include cab drivers and store owners refusing to serve blind patrons because of their use of aid dogs, harems (polygamy), right to wife beating, honor killings, female mutilation, etc. If the Archbishop had only a minimal awareness of the reality of THESE sharia issues and their perception in Western minds, he should have provided strong Christian leadership in these matters instead of coming across as a technocratic bumbler. Your scholarly defense of his remarks only buttressed that image."
The rabbi misunderstands the archbishop's suggestion. The archbishop clearly stated this was a suggestion...one of many for the purpose of giving Muslims validation in British society--in order to stem the influence of terrorist groups. The comparison to Beit Din, as the rabbi explains its m.o.: "the ruling will be recognized by a secular court only when the beit din proceedings conform to the requirement of prevailing laws.." was exactly the comparison made by the archbishop.
Williams is, to put it mildly, a moron. One of many increasingly found in the hierarchies of Western Christendom. These fools are the spawn of the peace Movements of the 60's. His remarks were met by scathing denunciation and he has been forced to amend and backfill the nonsense which came from his lips.
In the days when British law forbade shops to open on Sundays, Jewish storekeepers could get an exemption if they closed on Shabbat instead. With their main competitors shuttered, the delis and corner stores did a roaring trade among the gentiles on the Christian Sabbath, when there was little else to do.
I don't recall any complaints about a small minority getting an edge then.
"I don't recall any complaints about a small minority getting an edge then."
Reread the article. The rabbis are talking about a community within a community - Muslim extremists, whose views will be reinforced within the wider Muslim community if the moderate majority, who conform to the wider culture no less than everyone else within it, see that exemptions can and will be given to those who sanction bus bombings (like in London on 7/7) and suicide bombings (like the doctors who drove a 4x4 full of kerosene into Heathrow Airport).
"I don't recall any complaints about a small minority getting an edge then."
Reread the article. The rabbis are talking about a community within a community - Muslim extremists, whose views will be reinforced within the wider Muslim community if the moderate majority, who conform to the wider culture no less than everyone else within it, see that exemptions can and will be given to those who sanction bus bombings (like in London on 7/7) and suicide bombings (like the doctors who drove a 4x4 full of kerosene into Heathrow Airport).
With respect to the Rabbis and their scholarship, may I suggest they re-examine the issues by first leaving their biases behind? The Rabbis do not need to suggets that we Muslims have conflicting loyalties that may be opposed to "Western life as we know it", such allegations have been and are being made about Jews and are met with deserved contempt. Islam requires that Muslims abide by the law of the land as long as that law does not serve to underimne one's faith...just as Jews laws do. Sharia is made up of 4 elements: the Quran, which is uncontestable, the Hadith, Reason and Discussion (these last 3 are open to debate). Sharia laws are designed to protect life, property, faith and the mind. To be sure sharia laws have been written by some extreme people, but there is so much diversity of thought among Muslims, that trying to find one set of code that all could embrace, might be a task beyond human reach. Suggesting that "Only complete autonomy, as a law within the law, will likely be acceptable to them" is an unfair judgment that we Muslims do not deserve any more than pre-judgments serve other minorities. There may be a few harsh punishments for certain crimes, but the burden of proof is so high that it is almost impossible to fulfill it and bring down punishment on the accused. Your commenters should understand that Wife-beating, Honor murders and Female genital mutilations (FGMs) are found among a few cultures of Eastern Africa ranging from Egypt to Tanzania and have as much to do with Islam as beards have to do with Judaism. As for the distractionist dive into suicide-bombing. This is no more a Muslim trait sanctioned by Sharia, than the prepartion of cyanide-bombs or importing of SAMs and building of bombs against Muslim in the US, is a trait of "secular" laws. We are all humans we the same predispositions for good and evil as are found among Jews, Christians and others. Pointing fingers at "them" to stoke the fires of fear, does not help anyone.
I have not seen a thing in the Archbishop's statements by which he suggests any Shiaria standard would, or even could, supersede existing British secular law. The authors do not quote any such staement. Thus their statement about rabbinical standards applies exactly to Shiaria standards: "British law makes no concessions to rabbinic law. To the contrary, the findings of a beit din are embraced by secular law on both sides of the Atlantic only when they conform to the demands of the secular code." Canada is a clear precedent - it refused to give privilege to Jews over Muslims - so Canada simply got rid of the entire privilege argument by repealing its accomodation to rabbinic law.

Print this article
Email this article
Other articles by Michael Broyde and Yitzchok Adlerstein
More in Forward Forum
I was directed here by an RSS news feed. I am a secular humanist and was very concerned by the Archbishops comments. I had to comment to say how interesting and positive this article is. I confess to not previously knowing much of the beit din system so I thank the writers for enlightening me.