A prominent Muslim scholar, speaking at a Perrysburg mosque over the weekend, said the more than 20 U.S. states that have debated legislation barring judges from consulting “foreign laws” have been swept up in “Sharia hysteria.”
There is no way Sharia law, or the Islamic legal code, could influence the American judicial system unless it were enacted through the democratic process, and that’s not possible with Muslims making up about 3 percent of the population, Jamal Badawi said.
“That is a decision of the people, not a decision of a small minority.
“It is a question of accommodation and respect of the diversity of this country on which it was built,” said Mr. Badawi, an imam, author, and professor emeritus at St. Mary’s University in Nova Scotia, Canada, who holds a doctorate from Indiana University.
He is a member of the Islamic Juridical Council of North America, the European Council of Fatwa and Research, and the International Union of Islamic Scholars.
Speaking to 275 people at the Islamic Center of Greater Toledo on Saturday evening, Mr. Badawi compared fears that Sharia law will creep into the American secular court system to fears of Martians attacking Earth.
“Some people just have this hysteria that Sharia is something coming from Mars to destroy us. ‘The Martians are coming!’” Mr. Badawi said. “It’s a big myth. It’s a scare tactic.”
In reality, he said, Sharia is a religious code that Muslims follow, based on divine revelation from God, or Allah, to the Prophet Muhammad.
It focuses on broad applications for ethical orientation and values, with few specific rules.
“It is comprehensive and includes worship, moral, social, economic, and political aspects of Islamic living,” Mr. Badawi said.