Sudanese woman sentenced to death for being a
Christian: Is this a modern day witch hunt?
By: Christian Pascal Ukegbu
By: Christian Pascal Ukegbu
Meriam Ibrahim is on death row in Sudan for refusing to renounce
Christianity. Hannah Strange explores what's really going on
Of all the places one does not want to fall
foul of religious diktats, Sudan ranks fairly high on the list. While in much
of the Middle East and North Africa, apostasy - the act of abandoning one's
faith - is deemed to be a criminal act, Sudan counts as one of few countries
which regard it as a mortal sin.
But in the more than two decades since Sudan
enacted its 1991 Criminal Code making apostasy punishable by death, no one has
actually been executed. So why Meriam
Ibrahim, and why now? Has Sudan become more religiously extreme, or is
there something else in play?
Even in the countries practicing the highest
degree of religious repression, actual application of such punishments is
relatively rare. Given the lack of a blanket penalty, it is doubtful whether
the real motivation is ever truly a question of religious morals. In recent
years, a number of high profile cases around the world have suggested instead a
personal or community grievance at work. In Pakistan, a Christian couple - Shafqat
Emmanuel and Shagufta Kausar - were sentenced to death in April for allegedly
sending a text message insulting the Prophet Mohammed to the imam of their
local mosque.
What's really going on?
But read beyond the headlines, and the
grudges and vendettas which fuel such complaints begin to reveal themselves.
The imam had long been involved in a dispute with the couple, their lawyer
said: he "made a threat with the full knowledge that they would face the
death penalty". They are far from alone: Asia Bibi, currently awaiting
execution from a windowless prison cell in Lahore, claims she had been in an
argument with one of the local women who reported her, and Pakistani human
rights campaigners say the country's laws on defaming Islam are often used as a
mean of settling scores.
A denunciation of blasphemy or apostasy,
then, has become the go-to, sure-fire means of taking out someone who offends
you, whom you might fear, envy or hate for a myriad of different reasons. In
essence, it has become the modern-day version of accusing someone of
witchcraft.
It wasn't so long ago that witch hunting was
in full, vengeful force in Britain: the town that I grew up in still has a ducking
stool in the local river - thankfully maintained purely for tourist titillation
these days.
It is practiced, still, in many countries
around the world - Thomas Muthee, a Kenyan preacher who gained international
attention for his association with Sarah Palin during her 2008
vice-presidential campaign, based his credentials on his successful exile of a
local "witch" named Mama Jane.
The hunting of witches is often fuelled - and
enabled - by dogmatic religious ideologies, be them Christian, Muslim or another.
While the victims, in the patriarchal societies where it usually takes place,
are often women - but not always. "The witch" has taken many guises
over the years - think the Communist, in the McCarthy era, or conversely the
anti-Communist under Stalin. Many political dissenters, or those espousing
alternative lifestyles, have been similarly branded in the past. It is no
coincidence that in Britain the last successful blasphemy prosecution was the
1977 verdict against Denis Lemon, the editor of Gay News, for publishing the
controversial James Kirkup poem, The Love that Dares to Speak Its Name.
In short, anyone considered to deviate from
the established norm can incur the wrath of the mob. The witches are the
outliers, and in the social and familial environment which Meriam inhabits, (who
just gave birth whilst wearing leg shackles) she certainly fits the
profile.
Daniel Wani,
Meriam's husband, with their newborn baby daughter Maya
THE FAMILY
POLITICS
According to Sudanese politicians, she was
denounced by her own half brother, who complained that she had gone missing for
a number of years and the family was then shocked to discover she had married a
Christian man. Meriam had always trodden her own path: her father having left
when she was six, she was raised not according to his Muslim faith but the
Christianity of her mother. She went on to become a successful, educated and
independent woman - a doctor who also owned a profitable general store in a
Khartoum shopping mall, who married a man - a US national also outside her
father's religion - of her own choosing.
If that wasn't offensive enough - to a
certain narrow patriarchal thinking - her case, like so many others, appears to
have the added impetus of personal grievance. According to her US legal team,
her relatives - from whom she was long estranged - brought the complaint out of
pure greed: Justice Centre Sudan, an NGO which is paying for her defence, said
her family appeared to have set their sights on her business. "They've
been doing really well and the business was growing … her half brother and half
sister must have heard about this and worked out she was a relative of theirs
because of her name," a spokesperson said
according to the Daily Mail. "The first thing Meriam knew about them
was when her half brother and half sister filed the lawsuit."
To the Sudanese government too, the role of
actual religious adherence is questionable. Clearly at least somewhat moved by
the international backlash, it has made the unusual move of putting out a
statement on the case, making clear Meriam's sentence is subject to appeal and
not final. Mohammed Ghilan, an expert in Islamic jurisprudence, told Al Jazeera
he believed the embattled government of Omar al-Bashir - an Islamist, who in
2008 became the first sitting head of state to be indicted by the International
Criminal Court for crimes against humanity - was using the case as a ploy to
appear as "defenders of Islam" and divert attention from internal
conflicts and perceived corruption.
"The punishment has little to do with
religion and serves as a political distraction," Mr Ghilan said, adding
that it was "an attempt to give the regime legitimacy with the more
conservative crowd".
So neither for those who provoked the
sentence or for those overseeing it, does religious morality appear to be the
overriding concern. It is for that reason that in general, apostasy and
blasphemy laws (which linger on the statute books in far many countries than
you might imagine - Britain dropped its own blasphemy law in 2008) only get
rare outings. They are there to be trotted out periodically as tools of
individual punishment, vengeance or political expedience. That is to say, when
someone, usually a woman, needs burning at the stake.
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