We will fight Daesh with ideas
Tunisia's religious scene is always full of activity. There is a rethink of a new issue in the Islamic religion every day. Most of the debates on this Tunisian religious stage focus on gender equality and the right of Muslim women to get married to non-Muslim men. The Tunisians brought in equality between men and women when it comes to inheritance, even as this is a settled issue in the Islamic religion.
Tunisian Minister of Religious Affairs Ahmed Adhoum
told al-Marjie that residents in the northern Tunisian city of Kairouan developed
a habit of preventing polygamy. He said this habit dates a long time back when
Abbasid caliph Abu Jaafar al-Mansouri fled the Umayyads to Tunisia in the year
709. The Abbasid caliph, he said, got married to a woman from Kairouan, whose
father insisted that the caliph does not marry another woman or his daughter
would have the right to divorce herself, writing this condition in the marriage
contract.
"This
was the first Islamic document banning polygamy," Adhoum
said.
He
said this document did not violate the rules of the Islamic religion. He added
that the Tunisians were inspired by the holy Quran in banning polygamy,
especially from verses that point out that it is so difficult for a polygamous
husband to treat all his wives equally.
Adhoum
said the Tunisians always work to find new interpretations of the religious
texts.
"But
this does not mean that they take the religious texts lightly," the
Tunisian minister said.
He
said Tunisia is a predominantly Islamic state that speaks Arabic.
Tunisia,
he said, is keen on its Islamic identity. He added that all the laws drafted by
the government are based on the Islamic religion.
"Nonetheless,
Tunisia tries to understand the religious texts in a way that suits the modern
times," he said.
He added that although Tunisia works to upgrade its
understanding of the Islamic religion, thousands of its citizens have joined
Daesh.
An estimated 6,000 Tunisian nationals have joined Daesh
in Iraq and Syria or swore allegiance to its self-styled caliph Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi, according to independent estimates in 2016.
Adhoum cast doubt on this figure. He said
this is an unofficial figure.
Citizens from everywhere in the world, he said, joined
Daesh, which means that the Tunisians were not alone in this.
He added that Daesh used religion to attract recruits and
also technology to reach the largest number of people everywhere.
"We have to formulate a new plan to counter the
efforts made by Daesh to influence our youth," Adhoum said.
"This plan must include the renewal of religious discourse and also the
use of modern technologies to counter work done by Daesh in this regard."
Immunity
and containment plans
Adhoum said Tunisia
adopted a comprehensive plan to fight terrorism.
The Religious Affairs
Ministry, he said, is an important component in the implementation of this
plan.
He added that the
plan depends on security solutions, but also depends on work made on the
intellectual front.
"The aim is for
us to find an intellectual response to ideas propagated by Daesh," Adhoum
said.
He said the Tunisians
were still at the beginning of the road.
"We have not
produced enough intellectual materials." Adhoum said. "But we are on
the right track in this regard."
Tunisia brought the small
religious classes, known by the Arabic plural name Katatib, back to life. The
Katatib stopped working in Tunisia during the French occupation of the North
African state (1881 – 1956).
Today, according to Adhoum,
there are 1,600 functioning Katatib in almost all Tunisian cities.
"I received my
earliest education at one of these Katatib," Adhoum said. "This was
where I was introduced to the Islamic religion."
He said Tunisia
modernized the Katatib to turn them into places where correct Islam is taught. Adhoum
added that children admitted into the Katatib also study languages and
computer.
Tunisia has already
approved 5,700 preachers to preach at its mosques, according to Adhoum.
He said these
preachers are well-known to his ministry and that they do not violate state
rules on what should and should not be said inside the mosques.
The countries of the
Maghreb, he said, encourage Sufism as a counter pole to extremism.
"Sufism has
always been present in our societies," Adhoum said.
He added that Sufi
ideas are capable of eclipsing and even defeating the ideology of the radicals.
Adhoum said so far,
his country has not received any of those who used to fight within the ranks of
Daesh in Iraq and Syria.
Nonetheless, he said,
Tunisia had prepared a plan to deal with those expected to return from the
frontlines in Iraq and Syria.