ABDULLAHI AHMED AN-NA‘IM
Charles Howard Candler Emeritus Professor of Law
Emory University
Origins
I was born on 6 April 1946 (but the civil administration official dated my birth certificate by the date my birth was reported to him, which was 19 November 1946) in the village of Al-Maqaweer, on the west bank of the Nile about 200 kilometers north of Khartoum. The first of eleven children of Ahmed An-Naim and Aisha Al-Awad Osman, four of my brothers and three sisters survived, while two brothers and one sister died in infancy.
My father Ahmed had no formal education. He had memorized parts of the Quran by heart, but with minimal reading and writing at the village Quranic school (madrasa). He started working on the village farms at the age of eleven to support his mother, two sisters, and one brother. As he explained to us as children, he was promoted to work as a stable boy, taking care of the horses of the Sudan Defense Force in the town of Shendi, across the Nile from Al-Maqaweer. He joined the Force as a private soldier at the age of seventeen, worked his way up the ranks – including through the transformation of the Sudan Defense Force into the Sudan Armed Forces after independence in 1956 – and retired as a Brigadier General (according to British military rank) in 1973.
My mother never learned to read or write. When I attempt to represent the role of my mother and other Sudanese Muslim women of her generation, I seek to explain how her role in private or family affairs was important but not visible in the community. Yet her influence in shaping social relationships within the community was highly significant as part of the leadership of our family.[1] Although she never received any formal education, she was the leader of modern education in our household, especially after my father died on 20 February 1980. While my mother exercised an important form of familial and communal leadership until her death on 12 January 1999, my father’s role in the education of all the children of our extended family was highly significant in the patriarchal society of Sudan. Despite the minimal formal education of our parents, all the surviving children of Ahmed and Aisha earned post-graduate or graduate degrees: four PhDs; one Orthopedic Surgeon; two Masters; and one Bachelor of Arts.
Our family is from northern Sudan, yet our life-experiences testify to the profound transformation of the whole country since the 1930s and 1940s. Sudanese communities throughout the country were traditionally pious Muslims, and many were organized as followers of major Sufi traditions like Tijaniya, Ghadriya, Khatmiya, and Samaniyya. With the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood in the 1950s, Sudanese Sufi orders began to lose their independent identities as they were co-opted into the broader and vaguely defined Brotherhood as a politico-religious organization. As the leadership of the traditional Sufi orders passed into the hands of the younger generation, the grassroots membership of the orders tended to adopt the political objectives and follow the leadership of the Muslim Brotherhood.
The struggle between traditional (madrasa) and secular education evolved, beginning in the early twentieth century and with regional variations, throughout Muslim communities from West Africa to Central, South, and Southeast Asia. As I recall from my own experience, learning the Quran by heart in madrasas was the norm across the Muslim world but started to recede as the material advantages of secular education (for example, employment in government and other modernist sectors) began to emerge. Over time, the decline of traditional education was confirmed by both the collapse of the institutions that had produced the scholars who teach in madrasas and the transformation of the social organization that had supported the traditional scholars/teachers through their social standing and financial viability.[2]
In accordance with the common practice of Sudanese communities at the time, I started my education by beginning to memorize the Quran in the village madrasa. Quranic education was an expectation (perhaps a mandate) of the traditional village elders, who resisted the creeping “modernization” effectuated by the western-style schools and better prospects for employment in the civil service or other modernist sector jobs with regular, though minimal, salary. The village traditionalists objected to government-sponsored civil education that promoted western lifestyles and was made visible in western-style clothing. But as I recall, there was little resistance to secular education among the Muslim public at large at the time, and it was gradually accepted as the norm for useful education for young people. By the time I reached school age, my father ended my madrasa experience without facing resistance. The primary educational concern of most Sudanese families became whether their children could earn a seat in the extremely competitive secular educational system with minimal or partial fees.
I started secular elementary and intermediate school (1952-1960) in Atbara (a town on the Nile north of our village) where my father was stationed at the time. When he moved to Omdurman, across the White Nile from the capital Khartoum, I went to Al-Ahfad Secondary School (1960-1964). In those formative years of my education, my father was conditioning me to set the best example for my siblings. Being the firstborn of my age group in our extended family, my father also charged me with setting a good example in civil education for the rest of the children of the family. Recalling that early phase in my education, it occurs to me now that such a decision would orient my life towards the secular. But it was not just a simple decision for me because in the context of the early 1950s, there were broader forces of modernization (and secularization) in Sudan. Yet, such personal choices have, over the last several decades, remained central in developing the ideological and political views of generations of Sudanese young people.
The problem with perceived competition among modernist and traditionalist perspectives is that such choices were seen in mutually negative terms: the benefits of secular education were rejected out of hand by the traditionalists, and the benefits of Quranic education were lost to the modernists. In my case, all I could do was memorize part of one section (juz) of the Quran before shifting to the civil educational system sponsored by the government, eventually graduating with a degree in law from the University of Khartoum (1965-1970).
The outcome of what I call “Origins” in the first section above, is that the forces of post-colonial change took me all the way from a village on the Nile to the national University of Khartoum, followed by the Universities of Cambridge (England) and Edinburgh (Scotland). I was able to benefit from those fascinating and expensive series of post-graduate studies abroad between 1971 and 1976 in comparative constitutionalism, human rights, criminology and criminal justice, all fully funded by scholarships from the Government of Sudan. Such is the scale and magnitude of the “privilege” I owe to the people of Sudan for the benefits of post-graduate studies. That extended sponsorship enabled me in due course to teach in English Common Law systems in the United States and Canada and take visiting appointments elsewhere. That academic proficiency became of strategic importance when I was forced into exile from Sudan since 1985.
But it is the formative influence of my Islamic education and experience, from the madras in my village in the early 1950s, through all stages of formal school education in Islamic history and religious studies, which shaped my basic cultural identity and core personality. On the academic side, the founding impact of my earlier school education in Sudan, followed by the formal study of Islamic Sharia law as part of my LLB at the Faculty of Law, University of Khartoum, constitute the scholarly anchor of my knowledge in the field. Until now in my late 70s, I am always grateful for the spontaneous and confident access I have to basic information and narratives of Islamic history, jurisprudence and literary traditions. The question for the next section is the dynamic of cultural and intellectual translation which took me from the 1980s to constructing my social and scholarly mission of both Islam and the Secular State (2008), on one hand, and Decolonizing Human Rights (2021), on the other hand, and the various stops in between.
Where I Am Going
My studies in England and Scotland were funded by the government of Sudan as part of the plan of the University of Khartoum to train young Sudanese graduates abroad to return to teach in their respective specializations. I was one of several colleagues in that “Sudanization” of law teaching program in the 1960s, and I duly took my position among the ranks of Faculty of Law teachers in 1976. By 1982, however, I was detained without charge or trial for 18 months for membership of the Islamic reform movement of Ustadh (revered Teacher) Mahmoud Mohamed Taha, which advocated methodological methods to develop a modernist interpretation of Sharia. I joined the movement in 1968, while I was a student of law at the University of Khartoum and continued to participate in its activities until it was banned and its founder and leader, Ustadh Mahmoud, executed for apostasy in January 1985 by the military regime of General Numeiri. Consequently, I left Sudan in April 1985, initially for a summer research visit to the Human Rights Program at Columbia University in New York City. I was a Fellow in that program for one academic year in 1981-82. After my short visit to Columbia University I took a series of visiting professor positions at several North American universities and human rights organizations.
Hoping to be able to return to Sudan, I held a series of temporary teaching and research positions until 1992, when it became clear to me that the Islamist regime, which had come to power through a military coup in 1989, was consolidating its authoritarian hold on the country. I took my first open-ended position outside Sudan in June 1993, as Executive Director of Africa Watch, based in Washington D.C. In 1995, after I had served as Executive Director for two years, Africa Watch was being transformed into a unit of Human Rights Watch. I resigned from that position in April 1995 because of disagreement with the leadership of the organization, to join the faculty of Emory University School of Law (Emory Law). I was granted tenure at Emory in 1997 and became the Charles Howard Candler Professor of Law in 1999.[3]
Being in exile from one’s native country, especially for those from the Global South like me, is usually assumed to be through the process of seeking asylum in another country. I was not, however, willing to apply for asylum. I saw in my human rights work how official authorities of so-called “host countries” were often hostile to asylum seekers and tended to humiliate them in order to discourage them and others from applying for asylum. Fortunately, when I came to the United States in 1993, Human Rights Watch sponsored my application for “permanent residence” as an “extraordinary professor or researcher”. When that application was approved, the Immigration and Naturalization Service granted me a document to travel internationally for my work on human rights. .[4] Emory University also sponsored my application for naturalization, and I was able to achieve this for myself, my wife, and all our five children by 2001, without applying for asylum in the United States or any other country.
My political exile from Sudan in 1985, the realization in 1992 that I could not return to my home country, and the loss of autonomy for Africa Watch in 1995 were all difficult hardships and transformative experiences that I neither invited nor expected. But Ustadh Mahmoud had taught us, his disciples, that such hardships are exercises in “retrospective reconciliation” which help us to accept the “will of God”, especially when past or current events seem to contradict our preferences. The spiritual exercise he recommended was to look back and see how what seemed to be negative developments at the time they happened were subsequently confirmed as positive changes. It is from this perspective that I can now see what may have seemed to be the negative experience of repression in Sudan and exile abroad as the positive outcome of professional transformation, stability and well-being for my family.
During my tenure as Charles Howard Candler Professor of Law at Emory University, I have directed four major studies about the reform of the normative system of Islam, commonly known as Sharia. Those studies explored the theory and practice of reforming the historical formulations of Sharia as a normative system developed by the scholars of the various schools of thought (Madhahib). The primary focus of each study was the tension between principles of Sharia and universal principles of human rights. Each study was conducted by examining aspects of Sharia in relation to the legal systems of modern nation States. These projects were funded by the Ford Foundation and implemented at Emory Law under the following working titles:
(1) a study on women’s access to, and control over, land in seven African countries;
(2) a global study of the theory and practice of Islamic Family Law;
(3) a fellowship program in Islam and Human Rights; and
(4) strategies for research and advocacy around the analysis and conclusions of my book, Islam and the Secular State (2008).
I also authored and edited thirteen books preparing the way for these projects to be implemented and building on their outcomes.[5] Collectively, these works reflect the arc of my commitment to the possibility of mutual synergy and interdependence of Islam and human rights.
This positive and pragmatic outcome can only be realized, I argue, through the effective collaboration of all human communities, though Muslims must take the lead regarding their own communities and local contexts. Similar collaboration is also necessary among other religious or cultural traditions, though each community should take the lead regarding its own challenges. collective work of Muslims everywhere and not through imposition by western claims of imperial universalism. From the perspective of what I call pragmatic optimism, I argue that paradigms like religions, cultures, human rights, and anti-imperialism can constitute mutually interdependent struggles for self-determination and social justice. Such possibilities, however, can only be realized in practice through the agency of human subjects, acting in solidarity with others engaged in similar struggles around the world.[6]
This is the value of the pragmatic approach to what I call the “double paradox”. One aspect of the paradox is the imperative of the universality of human rights and the reality of cultural diversity. The second aspect is the reality of the sovereignty of the nation-State as the necessary expression of the people’s demand for self-determination, yet that political and legal doctrine is the barrier to international accountability for human rights violations. According to that doctrine, only States can have obligations to protect human rights norms, yet only States can enforce those obligations against their citizens under domestic law. There is no possibility for enforcement against the citizens of any State except through the sovereign consent and cooperation of the State itself. Even if realistically viable, coercive international enforcement were possible, it would be is more likely to reflect mundane inter-State power-relations than sound principles of international law and relations.
The whole system of so-called protection of human righs was intended to enable and facilitate the so-called “civilizing mission” of the white man which was used to justify western colonialism and not the protection of human rights under the rule of law.[7] To overcome that negative experience, I recommend reconciliation for the paradox through the combined methodologies of cultural transformation and political mobilization, which mediates the double paradox. For the proactive adoption of this model of mediation, the membership of each culture must acknowledge the relativity of their own culture, instead of pretending its neutrality to justify its imposition on other cultures. To be clear on the point, liberalism is as relativist as any other culture and must therefore be mediated instead of imposed on any other culture. This is the rationale and purpose of my latest book, Decolonizing Human Rights (2021).
What I Owe for My Privilege
In conclusion, I offer some comments and suggestions from my indigenous Muslim culture of Sudan, which shaped my consciousness and worldview. Yet, I should emphasize, this is not to say or imply that I am exclusively and permanently defined by my cultural foundations or that my cultural formation is purely or permanently from one source or another. In fact, the privileges I received from my wide and complex experiences in Sudan and abroad have contributed to the formation and orientation of my attitudes and perspectives. Although I know and acknowledge that I sometimes fantasize or pretend that I am permanently of one time and place for life, or that I have effectively resisted all “alien” influences on my consciousness and ethical formation, the more I engaged issues of cross-cultural understanding of human rights, for instance, the more I gained a deeper commitment to the universality of these rights. Yet, I have also come to equally appreciate that the ultimate privilege of my life is precisely in the multiplicity and contestability of my cultural formation and transformation.
The concept of privilege in the sense of supreme benefit and kind consideration is a profoundly moral Islamic principle indicating the obligation of the recipient to reciprocate to at least the same value that which was generously given and, therefore, should be graciously received. I am trying constantly to shift roles in social exchange, reflecting a continuity of giving and receiving, so that more people are embedded in this exchange of roles. In religious charitable giving, the less that the giver is aware of giving and the more the receiver becomes, in turn, a giver, the religious value of spontaneous giving diminishes the distinction between giver and receiver.
These values should be easier to promote when we emphasize them as human values rather than material goods. In a well-known and oft-repeated Hadith, the Prophet said: “To smile in the face of your fellow human being is a religious charity”. The more giving and receiving are envisaged as interchanging and interactive roles, the more the continuity between the two is appreciated, and all the more can this continuity of giving and receiving promote social cohesion and the development of human compassion.
Because I benefit as a recipient, particularly of education, employment, and empowerment, I must find ways of reciprocating in the same value to the authors of such privileges I have received. In the normal, straightforward course of human relations, the recipient of the benefit would not be able to reciprocate in the short term but may be able to offer personal and collective commitment to reciprocity in the future. Again, in the normal, straightforward course of human relations, the recipient would seek to enhance and promote the effort to reciprocate. Perhaps you see now why I speak of the privileges of my earlier life, even those privileges that arose in hardship. Privilege and reciprocity cannot be separated. For me, the privileges I have received and my commitment to scholarship for social change cannot be separated. But the world that such social change strives for is also one that must be built by privilege and reciprocity. Not the privilege of unearned wealth or colonial domination, but the privilege that requires reciprocity and the passing of our privilege on to others.
All of this is commonly appreciated in the context of human relations among individual persons and groups. Yet, the lessons regarding privilege and reciprocity must also be learned in international relations among States. While such relationships are more complex than common human relations, it remains the case that judgements about privilege and reciprocity among the two or more sides in international relationships are still made by individual human beings, even when States or political parties are in competition among themselves. My point is that, while we must account for complexity, an ethic of privilege and responsibility applies not only among persons and communities but also among states in international relations.
But we should also consider the role of those international organizations and institutions promoting democratic self-governance and the rule of law. Again, we must acknowledge the fact that privilege and reciprocity among international actors is much more complex and difficult to evaluate in proportionate terms. Yet, in the final analysis, strategies and mechanisms for evaluating exchanges of support and service tend to (or should) follow a similar pattern in value and benefit over an extended period. But the ultimate voice and value of the self-interest of survival cannot be ignored by any of the actors or their organizations, such as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and European Union.
My privilege, and the reciprocity it calls me to live out, requires that my scholarship for social change is also critical. My responsibility in reciprocity to the Sudanese people, to my fellow Muslims, to colonized and formerly colonized people everywhere, requires that I name and denounce that which oppresses them as I work with them for positive social change. In this regard, my scholarship takes on a bilingual quality. I agree with a comment made by Dr. Sillas Allard, a colleague at the Center for the Study of Law Religion of Emory School of Law, on a draft of this essay, where he says:
. . . your writing, . . . is always balancing two audiences. On the one hand, you are writing to fellow Muslims, and this is how you have often framed your work, particularly Islam and the Secular State. But your writing also has, for lack of a better descriptor, a Western audience because the arguments to your Muslim audience are made on the grounds of self-determination, which is a decolonial argument to your Western audience. I read this as the rhetorical structure of both Islam and the Secular State and What Is an American Muslim? Your associated articles and lectures sometimes shifted attention more to the Western audience and more explicitly emphasized the argument for a decolonial possibility in international law and political thought. . . I think it is interesting to reflect on how your position and role, as well as your project have required navigating these two audiences and crafting a rhetorical persona that seeks to be authentic and legible to both communities of readers, which is a difficult task.
Although I agree with these thoughtful and kind remarks, I must acknowledge that my purpose is to explore the best each tradition has to offer, rather than simply comparing both analytically, or testing their policy implications. I also see my challenge including whether I am likely to succeed in persuading the two or more sides to this equation to promote consensus and act on it in shared commitment and creative cooperation. Can my attempts to be bilingual encourage others to do the same? Can my efforts at reciprocity inspire reciprocity in others, especially the privileged? This is the last major subject of my work and one that can only ever be left as a question, even as I have wrestled with it often, most extensively in my Tanner Lectures on Human Values.
[1] See my video interview with Harry Kreisler. UC Berkeley Events, Conversations with History, Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na’im (available online).
[2] See Wael B. Hallaq, “Can the Sharia Be Restored?”, in Yvonne Yazbeck Haddad & Barbara Freyer Stowasser (eds.), Islamic Law and the Challenge of Modernity (2004), pp. 21-54.
[3] During my term (1995-2022) as Professor of Law (now Emeritus) at Emory University School of Law, I also served as founding Director of the Center for International and Comparative Law, Emory University School of Law. I was also an Associate Professor in the Emory College of Arts and Sciences and Senior Fellow of the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University. My previous positions include Associate Professor at the University of Khartoum, Sudan, until 1985; Visiting Professor of Law at UCLA, 1985-1987; Fellow, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington, D.C., 1987-1988; Ariel F. Sallows Professor of Human Rights at the University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada, 1988-1991; Olof Palme Visiting Professor at Uppsala University, Sweden, 1991-1992; Scholar-in-Residence, Ford Foundation office, Cairo, Egypt, 1992-1993. I also served as Executive Director of Africa Watch (renamed Human Rights Watch/Africa 1993-1995), before joining the Faculty of Emory Law School in June 1995.
[5] For complete listing of all my publications, see
https://evolutionofsharia.org/cv/
[6] Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na’im, “Transcending Imperialism: Human Values and Global Citizenship”, in Suzan Young (ed.), The Tanner Lectures on Human Values (2011).