When Yasmin met Archy

Feb 9th, 2008 11:46 am | By

Yasmin A-B explains what Archy doesn’t get. Too bad he didn’t ask her before he jotted down the speech.

What Rowan Williams wishes upon us is an abomination…He would not want his own girls and women, I am sure, to “choose” to be governed by these laws he breezily endorses. And he is naive to the point of folly if he imagines it is possible to pick and choose the bits that are relatively nice to the girls…Look around the Islamic world where sharia rules and, in every single country, these ordinances reduce our human value to less than half that is accorded a male; homosexuals are imprisoned or killed, children have no free voice or autonomy, authoritarianism rules

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Andrew Brown is Optimistic *

Feb 8th, 2008 | Filed by

He likes ‘the archbishop’s vision of a kinder, more feminist, sharia.’ Meanwhile, back on planet earth…… Read the rest



Sharia in Ontario, Almost *

Feb 8th, 2008 | Filed by

Homa Arjomand argued that the recommendations would push back Canadian law by 1,400 years.… Read the rest



BBC Claims ‘Mixed Reaction’ to Archbishop *

Feb 8th, 2008 | Filed by

Then scrapes bottom of barrel to find enough people in favour to justify claim.… Read the rest



The Archbishop’s Lecture in full *

Feb 8th, 2008 | Filed by

Dr Williams has been reading Tariq Ramadan.… Read the rest



Bishop Fumes at Reception of Sharia Idea *

Feb 8th, 2008 | Filed by

‘I believe he was standing up for the different faith communities.’ We know; that’s the problem.… Read the rest



Peter Tatchell Urges Mercy to Qaradawi *

Feb 8th, 2008 | Filed by

He wants to come to UK for medical treatment; let him. Perhaps a gay Israeli Jew will save him.… Read the rest



Sharia Okay As Long as it’s Liberal Sharia *

Feb 8th, 2008 | Filed by

‘The fundamental purpose of sharia is to achieve justice.’ Is it?… Read the rest



Bravo is it?

Feb 8th, 2008 9:40 am | By

Bravo, Rowan, says Jeevan Vasagar breezily. Well, he’s a man; easy for him to say.

In Tanzania, for example, Muslim family law applies to Muslim citizens. When it comes to questions of divorce, custody and inheritance, Muslim families settle their disputes at courts unique to their communities.

Yes we know, and Muslim family law treats women and men unequally. That is the problem.

There’s an interesting clash here – a classic liberal dilemma. Do you promote the rights of a minority community or do you worry more about the rights of Muslim women, who may get treated less generously under sharia than under secular law?

It’s not really a dilemma once you think about it hard enough. Just for one … Read the rest



Forced or arranged

Feb 7th, 2008 1:39 pm | By

There’s that report on Honour-based violence in the UK. It starts off by discussing forced marriage – and right away I got snagged by an obstacle.

According to most definitions, a marriage becomes forced if any coercion, physical or psychological, [is] used against either spouses [sic] in order to force them to consent. A forced marriage is not the same as an arranged marriage which occurs with the full consent of both parties.

No the obstacle isn’t how desperately the report needs copy-editing; it’s full of mistakes and typos, but that’s not the obstacle. The obstacle is that item about the full consent. What is full consent? Under what conditions is it possible? How prevalent are such conditions? All … Read the rest



An important pillar of our social identity hem hem

Feb 7th, 2008 1:04 pm | By

I transcribed something the Archbishop said just before the ‘bit of a danger’ remark.

A lot of what’s written suggests that the ideal situation is one in which there is one law and only one law for everybody. Now, that principle, that there’s one law for everybody, is an important pillar of our social identity as a Western liberal democracy, but I think it’s a misunderstanding to suppose that that means 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. An approach to law which simply said ‘There’s one law for everybody and that’s all there is to be said’ –

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A bit of a danger

Feb 7th, 2008 12:17 pm | By

I got a record number of email messages alerting me to the Archbishop’s fun new ideas on the subject of law and religion, which seems to hint that they may not be as sound as they are exciting.

Dr Rowan Williams told Radio 4’s World at One that the UK has to “face up to the fact” that some of its citizens do not relate to the British legal system.

Quite so. UK murderers, rapists, extortionists, batterers – they do not relate to the British legal system. Good idea to face up to that fact, if one hasn’t already. But is it a good idea to actually adopt ‘certain aspects’ of murderers’, rapists’, extortionists’, batterers’ law? I would say no.… Read the rest



Crimes of the Community *

Feb 7th, 2008 | Filed by

The full report. [pdf]… Read the rest



Listen Again to the Archbishop *

Feb 7th, 2008 | Filed by

People have other loyalties; the law needs to take some account of that. Oh yeah?… Read the rest



MySpace ‘Atheist and Agnostic’ Page Restored *

Feb 7th, 2008 | Filed by

Group’s founder said MySpace has shut down the 35,000-member webpage twice since 2004 founding. … Read the rest



Saudi: Woman Arrested for Sitting With Man *

Feb 7th, 2008 | Filed by

US woman jailed by Saudi religious police for sitting with a male colleague at a Starbucks in Riyadh.… Read the rest



Reactions to Archbishop’s Exciting Ideas *

Feb 7th, 2008 | Filed by

BBC talks to Gordon Brown’s spokesman and to Nick Clegg. They say one law is adequate.… Read the rest



Archbish Says Sharia is Unavoidable in UK *

Feb 7th, 2008 | Filed by

Thinks it’s ‘a bit of a danger’ to say there is one law for everyone.… Read the rest



Haggard Leaves Early *

Feb 7th, 2008 | Filed by

‘Spiritual advisers’ say he shouldn’t return to the ministry. Not straight enough yet.… Read the rest



What would Becket Do?

Feb 7th, 2008 | By R Joseph Hoffmann

Rowan Williams is not a bad man. He is certainly not a stupid man. He is an Oxford scholar and one in a long train of academic bishops who are as comfortable at High Table in Balliol or in lecture halls on the High Street as they are intoning the tropes of Elizabethan liturgy in clouds of incense at Canterbury.

Why then has the good bishop failed to be fitted for a new mitre, since the one he is wearing has clearly cut off circulation to his brain?

In an address from Lambeth Palace on February 7th, Williams delivered a lecture entitled “Islam in English Law: Civil and Religious Law in England.” I cannot imagine that anybody confronted with the … Read the rest