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Al-Sanhuri and Islamic Law: The Place and Significance of Islamic Law in the Life and Work of 'Abd al-Razzaq Ahmad al-Sanhuri, Egyptian Jurist and Scholar, 1895-1971 [Part II] Author(s): Enid Hill Source: Arab Law Quarterly, Vol. 3, No. 2 (May, 1988), pp. 182-218 Published by: BRILL Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3381872 . Accessed: 19/09/2013 09:50 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . BRILL is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Arab Law Quarterly. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions AL-SANHURI AND ISLAMIC LAW The Place and Significanceof IslamicLaw in the Life andWorkof Abd alRazzagAhmadal-SanhuriEgyptianJuristand Scholar18991971*t EnidHill: VII. THE NEW EGYPTIAN CIVIL CODE I)rafting,Oppositionand Consensus A committee to revisethe EgyptianCivilCodewas formedin March1936, and alSanhuriwasappointedto it. The ostensiblereasonforestablishingthe committeewas recognitionof the necessityof unifying and accordinglyrevising- the two existing civilcodesin anticipationof the end of the MixedCourtsin 1949andtheirabsorption into one nationalcourtsyseem.This committeewas, however,disbandedafterthree monthsfor reasonsthat were "not entirelyclear",afterit had adoptedthe few preliminaryprinciplesthat formedthe first four articlesof the code (Ziadeh)(1968), pp. 137>141). A secondcommitteewas formedin November1936whichset out rulesgoverning guaranteesand shufa (pre-emption).This committeewas also dissolved- in May 1938 beforefinishingits work. A thirdcommitteewas formedin late 1938,limited to al-SanhuriandLambert,whomal-Sanhurihadbroughtintothe projectpursuantto the opinionof the Ministryof Justicethat the codificationwould "best be accomin its first stages.An accountof the work of the complishedby two individuals>' mitteeis contailledin a seven-volumepublicationof the Ministryof Justice:al-Qanun al-madani:Majmu'atal-'malal-tahdiriya,(n.d.-probably 1949)pp. 5-9 andpassim (See Ziadeh,p. 141). On 24 April1942the completionof the draftwaspubliclyannouncedby al-Sanhuri at a lecturegiven underthe auspicesof the RoyalGeographicSocietywherehe summarisedthe work on the Code and opened the matterfor public discussion(alSanhuri,1942)*The draftcode, he said, had beenconstructedusingcomparisonsof of theEgyptiancourts)andthe Islamic morethan20 moderncodesnthe jurisprudence Sharina(Ziadeh,(1968))p. 142)* The draftcode wasto be openfor commentfor threeyears.In 1945a committeeof fiveheadedby al-Sanhuristudiedthe commentsandproposals,madesomerevisions, andprepareda draftfor submissionto the legislature.A specialSenatecomrnitteewas createdto studythe draftcode (p. 143). * Copyright( 1987The AmericanUniversityin CairoPressand reprintedhereby permissionof the 1, Spring1987 Volume10, Monograph inSocialScience, publisher.FromCsiroPapers t The firstpartof thisarticleappearedin [1988]ALQ33. I t This study would nol have been possibIewithoutthe variousformsof help and encouragement receivedfrommanypeople. 182 This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions AL-SANHURI AND ISLAMIC LAW 183 On 30 May 1948the Senatecommitteebegana specialsessionandinvitedmembers of the Egyptiancourts,the BarAssociation,andmembersof the law facultyof Cairo University.Reportssay that al-Sanhuriwas "single-minded"in defendinghis code a trulyphenomeandcounteringopposition,in the courseof whichhe "demonstrated and that the jurisprudence", nal knowledgeof both the Shan'a and comparative oppositionin the Senatewas "ephemeral"(p. 144). Ephemeralor not, "the questionof the utilisationof the Shari'a. . . occupieda sizeablepart of the committee'stime" (p. 145). A specialissue of al-Muhamah(the journalof the EgyptianbarAssociation)in March1948, containing"a bitterattack" on the proposedcode, had been circulatedamongthe membersof the Senatecommittee. The journal'scriticismswereendorsedby membersof the Courtof Cassation, includingHasanal-Hudaybi(who laterbecameheadof the MuslimBrethrenfollowing Hasanal-Banna'sdeath)andone, MuhammadSadiqFahmi,who hadbeeninstrumentalin formingthe oppositiongroupof mainlyAzhariprofessorsandin circulating the journalamongthe Senatecommitteemembers.He was also chief spokesmanfor the oppositionin the committeehearings.Ziadehhas summarisedthe attackof this groupon the draftcode: On the one hand, it was maintained that the old code, which, with some exceptions, had been based on French law, was in need only of some modificaiion here and there, and that it was only right and proper to preserve the "legal culture" already occurring to Egypt. On the other hand, it was maintained that should a complete recodification be allowed, such recodification should be based on the Shari'a.(p. 143) "The chargesseem inconsistent",commentsZiadeh,and explainsthis inconsistency by the fact thatthe oppositiongroupwascomposedbothof secularlawyerstrainedin the Frenchlegaltraditionandprofessorsof Islamiclaw at al-Azhar. One gets a sense here, however,that thereis morethanmeets the eye. As will be referredto in partIX, al-Sanhuricertainlyhadpoliticalenemies,especiallyamongthe WafdParty.It was not to be the last time thata modusvivendifor oppositionwas to be forgedbetweenWafdistpoliticiansandmembersof the MuslimBrotherhood.Whatis moreinteresting,however,is the contentioncontainedin this statementof opposition that when and if a recodificationtook place it should be one basedon the Shari'a, while a caveatwas addedby al-Hudaybithat "alllegislationshouldbe basedon the Koran"(p. 143). The call for recodificationto be "basedon the Shari'a",as well as al-Hudaybi's reservation,is a demonstrationpar excellenceof the basic differencebetween alSanhuri'sapproachto an islamicisationof Egyptianlaw andthatof the Islamicmovements. The differenceis not superficial.Howevermuchthe exigenciesof politicsmay bringtogetherthoseof a basicallysecularorietltationwith the proponentsof religious revival, there cannot, it appears,be an acceptanceon the part of the latterof any approachto the revivalof Islamiclaw not basedfull-squarewithinreligion. Al-Sanhuri'sapproachwas clear.The versionof his call to revisethe Codeprinted in Frenchis almostidenticalwith the earlierprescriptionin Le Califatas concernsthe way scholarlyand scientificwork shouldprecederenovationof law in ArabIslamic states: This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 184 LAW QUARTERLY ARAB of the rules of Islarriiclaw) must be . . . point of departure(to restore the original energy The from the temporal part. The religious part, separation of the religous part of Muslim law the monopoly of the Muslim theologians. we avoid in our examination, should remain the which (1938b), p. 623). (al-Sanhuri, to expresshis distinction Arabicversion,however,uses a differentphraseology The with whicha Western the religousandthe secular(or temporalWameaning betmreen below, since how alhas no trouble. The Arabicversionis reproduced audience languageis instructive phrasedhis secularismwithintheidiomsof the Arabic Sanhuri above. the contextof whathasbeen discussed in scientific renovation, in order to rescue it do not deny that the Shari'ais in need of solid We with the limitations to which the latter-day intellectual stagnation and allow it to break from urlstswere tled. be based on a study of the Shan'aaccording We proposed in LeCalifalthat this undertaking law. This new sludy is based on the distinction tothe new scientific method of cornparative it is not the former but the latter that it our rules; religious rules and legal (qanuniyya) between associatesreligion with Islamic jurishere. We make a distinction between a rule which concern a respected in the heart, and a rule resting on prudence,and which depends on faith and is s<:ientific our of purview the within that comes foundationof pure legal logic. It is the latter . 13) 1 p. 1936d), ( (al-Sanhuri, . invesligations have been more methodological The issue for the opposition,however,seems to of the Senatedebate.In the course the during thansubstantive,as was demonstrated of oppositionreferredto sameissue of al-Muhamahthat containedthe statement on the Shan'a, "to show be based above,was a "samplelaw of contract"allegedto howit couldbe done". derived from the Shannsand insisted that had Al-Sanhurireviewed the provisions that had been done so. He then took up the sample draft gladly itbeen possible to derive more, he would have group and demonstrated, principle by principle, ofthe law of contracts prepared by the Fahnii be based on the Shari'ait was in point of fact based that,although the sample draft purported to "that the provisions in the Sadiq sarnple on modern codes. "If it were true," he declared, code were Shan'a rules, then we would draft draft which agree with the provisions of the the provisions of the draft code itselfn'(Ziadeh, havebeen justified in clainiing Shari'aorigin for publicaiion, pp. 88-93). (1968), pp. 145-146, from Ministry of Jusiice of al-Sanhuriandthe tourdeforce Withoutwishingto detractfromthisperformance unintendedhappenswhenthe thatit undoubtedlywas, it wouldseemthatsomething its substantiveidentitywouldseem Shari'sis put into an alienformat.Somethingof thatis, thereis anal-Sanhurito to mergewith the alienmethodologyof form unless, underlyingthe legalrules and providethe theoreticalexpositionas to the principles theirgenealogy. drewthe teeth of the oppositionand in the In any case, al-Sanhuri'sperformance as to whetherthe Shari'ahad Senatechamber"onlyone deputyraisedthe question received".On 15 enthusiastically been sufficientlyutilised",and the "draftlaw was revised al-Sanhuri's to an end, October1949, the day when the MixedCourtscame codebecamethe lawof Egypt(Ziadeh,p. 146). This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions AL-SANHURI AND ISLAMIC LAW 185 VIII. IS THE REVISED CIVIL CODE ISLAMIC? Assessments of Scholarsand Critics The issue of basingEgypt'slaws on the Shari'ais an old one. QadriPasha,as earlier noted, did his condificationsof Islamiclaw in the 1870sin anticipationof theiruse as the law of new nationalcourtsestablishedin 1883.The Egyptianrulersof that time, however,opted to preparea code based on the Code Napoleonalthoughit appears thatmoreof QadriPasha'scode was includedthanis usuallyrealised(supra, partVI). When the projectof the revisionof the code was first in the air in the mid-1930s calls were again raised for the codificationof the Shan'a (see Ziadeh, pp. 20, 13S139). The MuslimBrethren,in particular,sincetheirfoundingin 1928(anduntil their abolitionas a party in 1954), continuouslyhad as a prominentgoal that the Shari'abecome the law of Egypt (p. 137; see also Harris(1964), chapterIV). And there continueto be calls today to make the laws Islamic.Draft codes, purportedly basedon the Shan'a,werepreparedby a cornmissionset up in 1978,but no definitive actionon them has been taken. It wouldappearthatconcernwith makingthe lawsof EgyptIslamic,or "moreIslamic",is endemic. The issueof islamicisationof lawis, perhaps,pre-eminentlyan issueof nationalism, at leaston one level. Whereasal-Sanhuriwascertainlyhimselfa nationalist,workedin variousnationalistcauses(see partIX), andwas consciousof his workon the revision of the code as a contributionto Egyptian,as well as Arab,nationalism(see partXII), on the popularlevel the law must be recognisably Islamic.If the Shan'arulesbecome embeddedin the modern,abstractlanguageof codes so that they lose their identity except to the legal-lyerudite,islamicisationhas not, for all practicalpurposes,taken place.The verdicton the popularand fundamentalist levelas to whetheral-Sanhuri's civil code is Islamic-or sufficientlyso-must clearlybe in the negative. For legalscholars,al-Sanhuri'sclaimthat: We adoptedfrom the Shari'a all that we could adopt, havingregardto sound principlesof modernlegislation;and we did not fall shortin this respect(Anderson,(1954), p. 30 quoiing Ministryof Justicep. 85) was, of course, takenseriously,and the new code was examinedin termsof whatits debt to the Shan'apurportedto be. However,just as certainstandardsand expectationsof his criticswereevidentat the timeof the debateon the revisedcode, so also areotherkinds of standardsand preconceptionsoperatingamongthose who view alSanhuri'sworkthroughWesterneyes. The main commentaryin Englishon the new Egyptiancivil code remainsthat of JND Anderson(1954)where"the debt to the Shan'aof the civil code"is categorised as beingof fourkinds: (1) The Shari'ais "one of the sourcesfromwhichan appropriaterule or principle may be derivedby the courtsin defaultof any relevantprovision"in the code or custom('ury)(as providedin Art. 1 of the Code); (2) The Shari'a"irifluencedthe choice"between"certainconceptson whichEuropeancodesaredivided"(e.g., objectivityas opposedto subjectivityin obligations); This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions ARAB LAW QUARTERLY 186 (3) "A few principlesor provisions"were "newlyborrowedfrom the Shari'a, whetherexclusively,chiefly,or in part"; (4) There were "principlesor provisionstaken over by the previouslegislation fromtheShan'ain wholeor in partandpreserved. . . in theiroriginalor amended fonn". (Anderson,(1954),p. 31) Andersonquotes (as does also Ziadeh,p. 144) the remarkmade by al-Sanhuri beforeffie Senatecommitteein 1948that "threequartersor five-sixthsof the provisionsof this law are basedon the decisionsof the Egyptiancourtsand on existing legislaiion"(Andersonp. 30, quotingfromthe Ministryof Jusiicep. 70). Although the contextof this remarkwas the refutationof a criticismthat the multiplicityof foreignsourceswouldcauseprob}emsin referringto the historicalsourcesin orderto solvea legalproblem,it wouldappearto indicate andthis is thesenseof Anderson's use of the quotation- that"thedebtto theShan'aof the newcivilcode"wassmall.A recentlyexpressedviewin Egyptby a legalscholaris alsothattherulestakenfromthe Shari'awere"of limitedscope . . . andmanyof thesehadbeenin the old code>> (A1bishri,(1985),p. 629). Al-Sanhurihimself,writingsome twentyyearslater,saysthat"the new code continues to be representativeof Westerncivil culture,not Islamiclegal culture"(alSanhuri,(1962),p. 12).His viewwasthatEgypt'sWestern-based civillawhadbecome partof thecountry'slegalcultureandtherefore';asuddenreturn(to Islamiclaw)would havebeendifficultandwouldhavecauseddisturbances andconfusion"(p. 13). If the new code hadnot becomecomprehensively Islamicit had, however,become Egyptianised-not only in the extensivereferencingof "the jurisprudenceof the Egyptiancourts"but alsoin the methodof codificationitself. The rulesincorporated fromforeigncodeshadbeeneclecticallychosenon the basisof al-Sanhuri's analysisof theirsuitabilityto Egyptianconditionsandhis notionof justicedistilledfromhis comparaiivestudies, includingthe Shan'a,and, one can presume,his own legal and judicialpracticein Egypt.As he toldthe Senatecommittee,thelegalrulestakenfrom foreigncodes "havean existenceindependentof the sourcesfrom which they are taken' (Ziadeh,p. 144, quotingMinistryof Justicepp. 7W71).Moreover some of therulgsof foreignorigintakenfromthe old code hadalreadybeen filteredthrough theEgyptianenvironmentin theirapplicationby Egypt'sjudgestO controversies arislilg Wlt lln t ;leenvlronment. Egyptianisation,however,is itself not withouta connectionto Islamiclaw. In his callfor the revisionof codesat the timeof mountingeffortsin the countryto achieve national independence,al-Sanhurihadsaid: . . . . Itis incumbent on us first and foremost to Egypiianize the jurisprudenceand make it completelyEgypiian . . . and in this . . . the IslamicShan'ais before us . . . since it is the most itIlportantelement in the intellectual development growing in our land; . . . and this heritage can be a meansof breathing the spirit of independence into our jurists and legislators. (quoted in alBishri)p. 628) Al-Sanhuri had repeatedlyemphasisedthat law was "a living thing" continuously "growing and taldngnourishmentfromits environment".Judicialinterpretationof lawis certainlyone way of makingadjustmentsin law to its environment both to This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions AL-SANHURI AND ISLAMIC LAW 187 changingsocial and economicconditionsas well as being a way of incorporatinga country'scustomsand traditionsinto its formalised law. Al-Sanhuri'sfirst scholarly work(1925) had been an investigationof how legal evolutionhad occurredin an area of English judge-madelaw. Concerning al-Sanhuri'suse of Egyptian judicial cleclslons: . . . By taking account of the decisions of the Egyphan courts and opinions of the jurists, al-Sanhuri represented the environment of transactions in real life, so that legal rule could come from the marunersof the people, their way of life, and their modes of interaciion. (al-Bishri, p. 629) Egypt certainlyhas deep rootsin her Islamicpast, includingthe legalrelationsof thatcivilisation.Thus, to the extentto which Egypt'sjudgestookaccountof the legal andsocialrelationsembeddedin the culture, partsof that legaltraditionwouldhave been preserved.But it must also be remembered that, for much of the time since 1876, Egypt's legal historyhad includedforeign judgesapplyingessentiallyforeign lawin mixed courts,andal-Sanhuriwas as aware of this as anyone.Nonetheless,it is undeniablethat he viewed the jurisprudenceof the Egyptiarlcourts as centrally importantto the revisionof the code. Certainly, theoretically, the use of these Egyptiandecisionscould haveservedas a conduitof legalcustomsand traditions,Islamic orotherwise,into the codifiedlaw. The validationof this propositionmust, however, awaita detailedexaminationof the contextand contentof the courtdecisionscited by al-Sanhuri in his commentarieson the new code. Nonetheless,the "debtto the Shan'a" thatAndersoncites as beingin explicitform isnot inconsiderable.Brieflysummarisedit is: Principles orprovisions takenfromthepreviouslegislation, which concern: the disposiiion of death propertyduring sickness; ghubn(lesion inadequacy of price or other defect in a purchase); riskin purchasing; planting or building on leased land; ownership of different stories in the same building or a party wall; shufa (pre-emption rights); gifts; the principle of no inheritance until after payment of debts. Provisions "newlyborrowed" fromtheShari'a,which concern: the duraiion of the meeiing at which a contract is concluded; legal capacity; lease of waqf property; contract of hikr(rent for land or building for an extended period); terminationof lease on death of lessee and terminaiion of lease "for serious and unforeseen circumstances;" release of debt by unilateral declaraiion. Andersonalso includesinfluencesof the Shan'ain the guidingof "choiceof certain concepts . . . when Europeancodesaredivided"as follows: An objective rather than a sllbjective tendency; principles applicable to the abuse of rights, using both subjective and objeciive tests; legal consequences of excepiional and unpredictable events; provisions regardingassignment of debt. (Anderson, pp. 31A5). Thecompletelegislativehistoryof the new codeis containedin the Ministryof Justice publicationpreviouslycited, publishedshortlyafter the (:ode was passed into law. In additionto the explanatorymemorandum accompanying the new codeandthe Senate debateverbatim,thesevolumescontaina detailed account, articleby ariicle,of the code indicatingchangesfromthe old code, discussionsin the draftingcommittees, This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 188 ARAB LAW QUARTERLY anddiscussionsof the sourcesof individualarticlesandintent.Onlyby goingthrough these sevenvolumeswill it be possibleto assesswhetherAndersonhas pickedup all the explicitand implicit"debtsto the Shan'a".It wouldalso be interestingto comparethe finalresultwithal-Sanhuri's ownextensivedetailingof possibilitiesof further incorporation of Islamicrulesof lawin his 1936articleproposingthe revisions. Anderson'slisting does, however,conformfairlycloselywith a brief summaryof the Islamic rules in the code that al-Sanhuriincludedin an article written later (al-Sanhuri,(1962),p. 12). The maindivergencesconcernthe way in whichareasof law are defined.There also seems to be somedifferenceof opinionas to whethera coupleof the rulesor principlescomefromthe old codeorwerenewlyadded,but this differencemay be more apparentthan real due to differentlevels of specificityat whichareasof law areidentifiedin the twoarticles. Al-Sanhurialso pointsin this articleto anotherfeatureof the new code, namelyan innovationof "flexibility".The new code, he says, had substituted"flexiblestandards"in placeof "inflexiblerules",so that "solutionscan changewhen conditions change"(al-Sanhuri,(1962),p. 14). ChafikChehata,once with the Facultyof Law in CarioUniversity,subsequently Professorassociatedwith the Facultede droitel desscienceseconomiques of Paris,has also writtenon the new Egyptiancode, firstin a seriesof articlesin theffournaldes TnbunauxMixtesduringthe 1940s(Chehata,(194648)), thenconcerningspecifically "lessurvivances musulmanes" in it (Chehata,(1965)).His categorisingof the areasof the Shan'a influenceis differentfromAnderson'sas is alsohis generalassessmentas to the extentof the debt. Chehata'sprimaryconcernis with areasof law in contrastto Anderson'sprimary divisioninto kind and sourceof influence.Chehata'sbasicdivisionis threefold:(1) mattersof obligationor personalrights;(2) mattersof propertyrights;and(3) Muslim law as a formalsourceof Egyptianlaw. It is in Chehata'sareaof propertyrightsthat Anderson's"new provisions"and "provisionsfrom previouslegislation"appear. These areprovisionsof Shan'alaw, Chehataremarks)"applieddirectly". As concernsthe subjectof obligations,"its historicalsourceis Romanlaw . . . (but)a generaltheoryof obligationwasnot completelyconstructedby the Romans". The theoryof obligationfound in thosemodernlegalsystemsbasedon Romanlaw wasdevelopedfromvariouselementsin Romanlawby meansof glossing."In Muslim law", coniinuesChehata: valuable elements are furriishedto us by the scholarsof jurisprudence,allowing us, in our turn, to elaboratea general theory that can correspondto that elaboratedfrom Roman law. (p. 844) This is whatChehatahimselftriedto do in his Theonegeneralede l'obligation en droit Musulmanhanefite(1936). Such was also the intentionof al-Sanhurias he workedon the new Civil Codeof Iraq(see suprapartV andal-Sanhuri,(1936c)),in variousworksconcerningtheoryof contractsand of obligation,and of coursein his subsequentstudy of the sources of legal rights(195F1959). Thus it is not sufficientto point to particularprovisions in specifiedarticlesthatdirectlyincorporatea Shan'alegalrule to comprehendwhat al-Sanhuriwas tryingto do in makingthe new code "moreIslamic".The principles This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions AL-SANHURI AND ISLAMIC LAW 189 underlyinglegal right or obligationin Islarniclaw influencewhat rules are selected from variousmoderncodes. Al-Sanhurihas indicatedthat this was his intentionand Chehataconfirmsthatit is indeedto be foundin the new code: In general,the spiritthat dominatesthe subject(of obligaiion)in Muslimlaw is an Qbjeccive tendency.... The Egypiianlegislatorof 1949 has opted for this objectivetendencyand throughthis bias has linked up againwith the line of Muslimjudicialthoughtof the past. Althoughhe has not borroweddirectlyfromthe Muslimsourceswhichinspirethis tendency, by recognizingthe biasunderlyinglegalsoluiions,has chosenthosesolutionsin Westerncodes whichareconsistentwith this new concepiion.(Chehata,(1965),p. 844) All commentatorson the new EgyptianCivilCodereferto the provisionsin Article 1 providingthat, in the absenceof an appropriate text in the law, the Shan'a is) after (but before"naturaljusticeand the rulesof equity")to be a sourceof law. sCcustom> Chehatarefersto the makingof Islamiclaw a "formalsourcein all mattersof civil law"as "themost importantinnovationof the EgyptianCivilCode."Thus: for Muslim society . . . the Muslim law (the spirit which animatesit and the fundameIltal reasoningbehindits injunction)becomesa kindof preludeto naturallaw, strictly speaking, and he predlcts that: aftersornetime has elapsedtherewill be, throughthe practiceof the courts- helpedof course by the new Egyptianlegaldoctrine-a new receptionof Islamiclaw. (p. 853) The Shan's may, however,actuallybe morethana "preludeto naturallaw"in this first articleof the EgyptianCode. Precedingreferenceto the IslamicSharia in the firstarticlethe judgeis enjoinedto ;'decideaccordingto custom'. The contentionhas been madethatin Egypt"custom' ('urf)is for the mostpart,Islamiclaw. In Egyptiansociety are found many customs('adat)which are practicesknownto people ir their transactions,and which are suitabletools for interpreiingthe will of contractingpariies. (al-Bishri,(1965),p. 630) But thereis ;'no widespreadlegal consciousness'that they constitute'a requiredor determinaterule".Custom(urJ)in its technicalmeaningis knownusually"onlyinsofaras it is a rulethatcomesfromthe Shan'a . . . eitherfromthe worksof Islamicjurists or rootedin their sources(masadir)"(p. 630). That is, judicialinterpretationin referringto custom(as urf) wouldbe in pointof factreferringto Islamiclaw. Both the Libyanand Syriancodes)in the correspondingarticles,specifyresortto the Shan'a beforecustoms.One Westernscholarhas hypothesisedthat "the variants in phrasing"in thesecodesindicate"a somewhatdifferentapproach"to theShan'aas a sourceof law (Liebesny,(1975), p. 95). However,consideringthe extensivecorrespondencebetweenlegallyrelevant"custom"andtheShari'ain the Egyptiancontext alludedto above, the practicaleffect of this reversedpriorityin directingthe judgeto a sourceof law outsidethe Codemay, in fact, be negligible. Somethingof significancedoes, however,suggestitself. Certainlyal-Sanhuriwas awareof the subtletiesof the legal meaningof 'urf.What, then, has he done? One This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 190 ARAB LAW QUARTERLY couldlook at it in two ways. Eitherhe has madethe new code appearto be less susceptibleto evolutionin an Islamicdirection(throughthe courts'jurisprudence) than it actuallyis (beingbut anotherinstanceof clothingIslamicsubstancein "modern" form);or, he hasprovidedfor a morepopulist and Egyptian interpretation of Islamic law beforethe Shan'a is to be openedup in its entirety.Perhapshe intended both. Whatthencanbe saidof al-Sanhuri'srevisedCivilCode is it or is it not Islamic? Al-Sanhuri's ownclaimswererelativelymodestas concernsthe islamicisation of the Code.He neversaidthathe hadproducedan "Islamic Code".It was rathera beginning, the settingof a direction."The Egyptian legislator twentyyearslater;"thata step had been takentoward believed",he was to write returningto the Islamicjurisprudence" (al-Sanhuri,(1962),p. 13). How then, to assessthis beginningstep?How does one estimatethe extentof the incorporation andlorinfluenceof Islamiclaw on this Code?Does one countarticles, calculate ratios,seekunderlyingprinciplesof legalright?Ordoes form so overwhelm substance as to makethe quest ultimatelymeaningless? Is the geniusof Islamiclaw, afterall, its historicalform and method?Is it indeed inseparablefrom its original foundation and thus inseparablefrom religion?Or-inasmuch as al-Sanhuri'sCivil Codehas weatheredthe yearswell, has proveditselfa veryrespectedandserviceable codeoes it reallymatterwhetherit is or is not, or to what extent,Islamic? Now thatis a questionfor whichthereis a verycertain answer:Yes, it doesmatter. The issue of Islamiclaw is firstand foremosta politicalquestion.It is partof the continuing struggletakingplacein the wakeof the expansionof Westerncapitalism andwith it the spreadof Westernculture.Todaythe issueis "dependency'conomic,political,cultural while in al-Sanhuri'sday it was called"the nationalquestion" politicalindependenceandnationalsovereignty. Giventhe centralityof law to anation-state'spoliticalsymbolismand cultural identity,it wouldseem mandatory that the lawcomefrom"the nation'swomb" a phrase usedin 1936(justas the first revision committeemet) by a judgeof the supremeShari'acourt, whosecall for the restoration of the Shan'awas, he said, not for religiousreasons but fromthe "dictate of patriotism". A nationis disiinguishedfrom other nationsby its individualcharacteristics, chief among which is its jurisprudence . . . Upon my life, the (existing)legislationis not of the nation's womb. (quotedin Ziadeh,p. 140) Al-Sanhuri'spatnoticsentimentsare not in question. Whereasthe projectof the revision of the CivilCodewas no "restoration of the Shari'a"pureand simple,from its incepiionto its promulgationit wasinspiredby concernsof nationalistpolitics. Norwasit al-Sanhuri's onlypoliticalact. Activitiesinvolvinghimin issuesthat concerned Egypt'spoliticalindependenceand nationalstatusbegan when he was young and continuedfor muchof his life. These activitiesweremany and various,at times embroiling himin thepartypoliticsof his day,at timesallowing himto utilisehis legal talents. Afterthe CivilCode,his othermajorcontributionto the buildingof national legal institutionsand a modernlegalculturein Egyptwashis workon the Mailisaldawla. This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions AL-SANHURI AND ISLAMIC LAW 191 IX. NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL POLITICS Politicianand Minister Al-Sanhuriwas caughtup in the currentsof politicsin Egypt fromthe beginningof his professionallife. He wasa youngassistant(wakil)in the niyabalX in Mansuraat the time of the (1919)revolution.He joinedthe Wafdistmovementandorganiseda successful strike of employeesin his office and, as a result was transferredto distant Asyut, in UpperEgypt(Rhattab,(1971))p. 4). In 1934 al-Sanhuriwas againinvolvedin politics,or allegedlyso. He was temporarily suspendedfrom the universitywhen the governmentaccusedhim of questionablepoliticalactivities,namelyforminga groupof studentswhich,underthe guiseof being a literaryand culturalgroup)was pursuingpoliticalaims (Castro,(1984), pp. 85-86)* Al-Sanhuridefendedhimself in an interviewpublishedin al-Ahram on 19 August 1934)wherehe deniedthe accusationof havingfoundeda politicalgroup. Whenal-SanhurireturnedfromIraqin 1936he was appointedDean of the Faculty of Law at Cairo Urliversity. Withinthe year,however)he left the university"forpoliticalreasons".It is safeto assumethatthese"politicalreasons"wereconnectedto his longstandingcontroversieswith the Wafdandhis associatlonwithAhmadMaherand Nuqrashi.He left the Wafdwhentheydid in 1937andjoinedthemwhentheyformed the Saadistparty,whichpartyal-Sanhurirepresentedin variousministriesthereafter. A series of governmentappointmentsensuedfor al-Sanhuriover the next twelve years, includingthat to the Mixed judiciaryof Mansura(1938-1939), interspersed with the practiceof lawin 1942and 1945/46.Whenesrer a Wafdistcabinetcamein, he was predictablyput out or transferred. Nahhas hated Sanhurl and pursued him vindiciively over the years. In 1937 Nahhas fired him from his deanship and the civil code committee . . . (and) Nahhas forced him out once more in 1942. (RiedX(1981), pp. 15F155). Al-Sanhuriis listed as being a deputy(wakiE)in the Mmistryof Education(1939) and in the Ministryof Justice(1944). He was appointedMinisterof Educationrepresenting the Saadist Party in a cabinet under Ahmad Maher and Nuqrashi (1945-1946).Then he was brieflya Ministerof State(RoyalCounsellor)and in 1947, when NuqrashisucceededIslamicSidqi as PrimeMinister,he was againappointed Ministerof Education.Thereis scantdocumentationof his activitiesin thesegovernment posts. One eulogistsays that "he set out huge projectsof educationincludinga programfor eradicatingilliteracy"(Khattab,1971). A contemporaryemployeein the Ministryof Educationrecollectsthatit was durmg al-Sanhuri'stime that the school systemof Egypt becameunified.Anothercontemporaryin the Ministryclaimedthatunderhim it was"amodelof the ministriesat that tirne'>and quotesal-Sanhurias saying,on the occasionof his departure: I succeeded with most of my projects there. I only fell down in two matters: (eliminating the 12 See E Hill Makkama! (1979a),chapters1 & 2 foran explanation of the EgyptiallNiyaba as an institution its historicaldevelopment,structureandfunctions.See alsoHill (1979b),pp.11S134. This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 192 ARAB LAW QUARTERLY pracocesoi) privatelessonsand giving roomsin the Ministryto seliioremployees.(Allam, (1986),p. 160) Irregularitieson the lower levels of governmentlife, it would seem, were just as intractableas the variouscorruptionson a largerscalewith which governmentand countrywereplagued. Dunng this periodalsohe was, of course,workingon the revisionof the CivilCode andhe continuedwriiinglegaltreatises.Buthe alsoappearsto havewrittenforseveral popularpoliticaljournalssuchas al-Hilal,al-Siyasaandal-Balagh.At the sametime his legacyto the LawFacultycontinuedin the use thereof materialshe hadprepared earlier,namelya basictext bookfor law students,Usulal-qanun(Principlesof Law) (al-Sanhuri,(1941)). FromJanuaryto May 1937he was editorof the journalal-Qanunwal-iqlisad(Law andEconomy)al-Sanhuri,(1937)).In 1937alsohe headedthe Egyptiandelegationto the SecondInternational Congressof Comparative Lawat The Haguewherehe again defendedthe Shari'a. In the sectionfordroitonentalat thatCongresstherapporteur notediithehighquality of the discussions"and that, for the firsttime, discussionhadtakenplacein Arabic. The Congressvoted to invite delegatesfrom "all universitieswhere there are professorsor scholarswho are interestedin Islamiclaw" to attendthe next conference. The Congressalsoadopteda resolutionstatingthat"Islamiclawis ableto adapt itselfto the needsof life" (Congres,(1937),pp. 53-54). Al-Sanhuripresenteda paper entitled,"La responsibilite civileetpenaleendroitmusulman" (al-Sanhuri,1937)). By the 1940sal-Sanhurihadbecomeprominentin publiclife andhis namebeganto appearamongthe membersof Egyptiandelegationssent abroadto representEgypt and to negotiatemattersof nationalpoliticalconcern.In 1946he is notedas having headedthe Egyptiandelegationto a conferenceon Palestinein Londonand in the sameyearan Egyptiandelegationto the UnitedNations.But it is the 1947representationmade to the UN that had historicalimpact.Al-Sanhuriwas a memberof that delegation,one of the "distinguishedjurists"whoaccompanied Nuqrashi,"anhonest man". The latter, as PrimeMinister,led this delegationwhich presented"Egypt's complaint"againstEngland,an effort on the part of the Egyptiangovernmentto transferthe ineffectualnegotiationswith Britainover continuedoccupationand the questionof nationalindependencefor Egypt(as well as for the Sudan)to an internationalforum. At the UN it was the questionof the occupationby Britainof the Sudanunder the aegis of the Anglo-EgyptianCondominiumof 1899 with which Egypthad hadlittle to do sincethe 1920s thatwasthe centerof the complaint.The UN adjournedEgypt'srequestsinedie, a defeatfor Egyptin her firstattemptto use the new forumof internationaldiplomacy,and for Nuqrashia personaldefeatwhich was turnedinto a success as it fueled increasedanti-imperialist demonstrationsat homeand he was givena hero'swelcomewhen he returned(see Berque,(1972),pp. 600 603;655456;and pessim). One of al-Sanhuri's"researchinterests",notesa recentbibliographical entry,was "negotiationson the Egyptianquestion"(Allarn,(1986),p. 159). Also duringthis periodal-Sanhuriwas involvedwith establishingthe Instituteof This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions AL-SANHURI AND ISLAMIC LAW 193 High Arab Studies,a creationof the ArabLeague.He becameheadof its legal division wherehe gavelecturesand supervisedtheses(see MIDEO, (1954),(1957). The Institute still exists, as an adjunct to ALESCO-The Arab League Educational, Scientificand CulturalOrganisation. This was the closesthe cameto seeingthe establishmentof an Arabuniversity- an aspirationhe seemsto haveheld, alludedto hereandtherein the briefaccountsof his life. In 1946he becamea memberof the Group(maima') of the ArabicLanguagewhose conferenceshe participatedin and for whom he workedon projectsdevelopingthe Arabiclanguage,notablyin the committeeconcerninglaw andeconomics(seeMajallatal-maima' (1953, etc.; Allam, (1968), p. 158). In one of theirmeetings,in 1948he gavea presentationon the Arabiclanguageby likeningit to the law(al-Qulali,(1972); Majallatal-majma', (1953),pp. lll-115). For these twelve years, then, al-Sanhuriwas active very active-on the stage of nationalpolitics and its intellectuallife. He joined the SaadistParty, the party of AhmadMaherand Nuqrashi,formedin 1938 followingtheir expulsionby Nahhas fromthe Wafdcabinetin late 1937.It was "theeffendis' party,thatof . . . technicians and managers"(Berque,(1972),p. 630). But AhmadMaherwas murderedin February 1945 in the parliamentbuildingsa month after the electionsthat had given his partya sufficientpluralityto form a government.Maherhad just obtainedapproval fromparliamentto declarewaron the Axis in orderto ensureEgypt'sparticipationin the United Nations. Maherwas succeededby Nuqrashiwho was himselfassassinated threeyearslater,afterissuingan orderfor the dissolutionof the MuslimBrotherhood, a measuretakenunderthe impositionof martiallaw to counterthe risingterrorismin the countrythat had eruptedfollowingthe declarationof the Stateof Israeland the Palestinewar. Al-Sanhurispoliticalfortunesparalleledthose of his countryduring these times. He too sufferedfromwhat the countryand its politicswereenduringthe repeatedcollapseof governments. Politicalintrigueandthe tripartitejockeyingfor positionandpowerbetweenWafd, Palaceand British,and its exacerbationdllringthe yearsfollowingthe SecondWorld War, had distortedEgypt'spoliticsandoftenunderminedbothgenuineandcosmetic efforts of reform.Palaceand cabinetintrigueshad their counterpartsin the streets. Demonstrationsand strikes, terrorismand violence, seemed to have become an integralpartof Egypt'spoliticalculture. Al-Sanhuri'spoliticalfortuneswere still, however,on the rise, and in March1949 he was appointedto the top positionin the newly formedMajlisal-dawla.The circle hadin a sense beencompleted.He resignedhis partyaffiliationandresumedthe mantle of jurist. But the politicalforcesin Egyptof thosedaysdid not let anyoneremainpolitically neutralfor long, and certainlynot an Egyptian-Arab nationalistwho had workedfor overtwentyyearsto promoteEgypt'sintellectualandlegalindependenceandher participaiionin internationalfora. It was inevitablethatthe politicsof the countrywould not bypass even the respected juridical personalitythat al-SanhuriPasha had become-especially such a figure,who used the weaponsof legallanguageand principles of rightagainsthis politicalopponents. This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 194 ARAB LAW QUARTERLY X. CONSTITUTIONALIShl AND POLITICS Presidentof the Mailisal-Dawla His appointmentasra'is(president) thatis, chiefjusticef theMajlisal-dawla(the }ierarchyof administrativecourts and body that issues advisoryopinions)in 1949 providedas-Sanhuriwith an excellentpositionfromwhich to developthe spiritof independencein Egypts judiciaryandadherenceto law in the wholestructureof the government.It wasan institutionwhichhadonlyshortlybeforebeenestablished in 1946. Al-Sanhuriaffirmsthat the Mailis al-dawlais patternedon the French Conseil dnEtat(al-Sanhuri,(1950),p. 1). Evenamongcountrieswith a definedadministrative law and specialisedtribunalsto applyit) the FrenchConseild>Etatis "a uniqueinstituiion"(David, (1972), p. 131). Datingbackto 1799,it has grownup as a separate judicialstructureexercisingfar-reachingand independentsupervisionover officials, agenciesandtheirfunctionaries;thatis, overall thattouchesthe executionof the law and lts abuse.It is not the guardianof the constitutionexplicitly,but as guardianof the executionof Iawit becomesinvolvedwith issues that in othersystemsare dealt with as constitutionalcases. When the Frenchadministrativeapparatusfirst acquiredindependencefrom the judicialpower in 1790, Rene David (doyen of Frenchlegal scholars)tells us) "it understoodthe dangerof arbitraryactionandcorruptionthatmenacesthoseholding power",and it introduced"a self-limitationof its powers".The institutiondesigned for this purposewas to becomethe ConseildnEtal,and remainsthe meansby which the Frenchadministrative apparatusis regulated.Fromthe Presidentof the Republic to mayors,ministersand prefectsand all who are associatedwith executivepower, "allaresubjectin Franceto havingtheiractivitiessubmittedto criticismandcensure by the ConseildnEtat"(David, (1960)I, p. 329. Al-Sanhurirecountssomethingof the pasthistoryof the EgyptianMajlis al-dawla andfiftyyearsof attempts to establishit in his prefatoryarticleto the firstissueof the journalof the Mailis al-dawZain 1950: The establishmentof the EgyptianMailisal-dawlawas precededby othereffortsln the past. The firstattemptwasin 1879,followedby a secondtryin 1883,but thattoowasdestinednot to have a successfuloutcome.The governrnental JudiciaryCommitteeopposedthe systemof a Mailisal-dawla.(al-Sanhuri, (1950),p. 2)13 It shouldbe rememberedthat the EgyptianMinistryof Justicehad in its midst a personageknownas the "judicialadviser".The post was establishedfrom the early days of the occupationand filled by an Englishmanuntil 1936)fromwhichvantage In an ariiclepublishedin France,al-Sanhuri givesa littlemorebackground on theseearlyattempts. The firsttirnethe Egyptianlegislatortriedto givethe countrya Conseild2Etatwasby a decreeof 23 April 1879. . . It was to havethreefunctions:legislativeconsultaiiveand adjudicative.But for reasonsconnectedwiththe situationof the publicdebtandthestate'sfinances,this lawwasnot executed. In the organiclaw of May 1883, the legislatoralsoanticipatedthe creationof a "conseild etat"whose functionswereliniitedby the decreeof 22 September1883to beingconsultaiiveandlegislaiiveonly, and excludingthatof adjudicaiion. Butthis reforrn,forpoliiicalreasons,wasalsosuspendedby thedecreeof 13 November1884.(al-Sanhuri,1952: 578). This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions AL-SANHURI AND ISLAMIC LAW 195 pointconsiderableinfluenceon the governmentwasexerted,judiciarycommitteesnot excluded.There is no waythe Britishwouldhavelookedkindlyon the establishment of a Mailis al-dawlain theirmidst. It wouldhave been yet anotherfeatureof French law, the baneof the Briiishin Egyptand, moreover,an institutionquiteincompatible with the needsof an occupationregime,givenits ethosandraisond'etreas guardianof rightsarldlibertiesfromadministrative abuse However, al-Sanhuri,writingin 1950)praisesthe previouswork of the Judiciary Committee Its work,he tellsusZhadbeen"re-examined" in 1923.Thatwasthe year, be it remembered,of the EgyptianConstitutionwhich set up an independentparliamentarysystem of government,and Briiishhegemony?at least ostensibly,began to diminish.But thereis an additionalreasonwhy al-Sanhurichoosesto view the Judiciary Committee(at least in "re-examined"forrn)in a favorablelight. Whereasit did noe have all the attributesof a Mailisal-dawla(functionsoffatwa and the legislation only)) it "contributedgreatserviceto the country",and was C'theprimarybasis on which the presentMailisal-dawlawas set up" (al-Sanhuri,(1950).pp. 2-3). A new judicialinstitutionfor Egypt, which clearlyand admittedlywas patterned closely on the French Conseild'Etat, nonethelesscan be seen to have grown from somethingalreadyexistingin the country.And al-Sanhurihas a point.The Mailisaldawlaof Egyptdidtakeon the functionsof issuingadvisoryopinions(fatawa) aIldof advisingon anddraftinglegislation(althoughit wasto becomemuchmorethanthat). Something new coming out of something old that was a favorite theme of al-Sanhuri's,somethinghe continuouslystressedin his legalwork, and the title of a piece he wrotefor the popularmagazine)al-Hilalin 1949.The editorshadaskedhim to writeon 4'thenew"fora specialissue concerning"al-Jadid",but)he says, he could not writeon '<thenew"unlesshe added"theold', because'vthenewcomesout of the old" and "the Ilewof todaywill be the old of tomorrow"(al-Sanhuri)(1949),p. 6). It had been new circumstancesthathadallowedthe Mailisal-dawlato be born: After the MontreuxTreatyand espeeiallyafterthe eaneellationof the capitulaiions(andafter the departureof the last EnglishJudieialAdviser),a Mailisal-dawlabecamepossiblein Egypt and the (:ommitteedrafteda lawin 1939proposingthe establishmentof a Mailisal-dawla,followedby a moreeompletedraftin 1941.(al-Sanhuri,(1950),pp. 2-3) Then there was trouble. From the momentthe 1941 proposalwas reportedin the newspapers,"a violentstormof protestarose". It wasdeseribedas a statewithina state,as a fourthpower,in additionto havinglegislativeand exeeutiveand judieialpowers, ... it wouldbe a poweraboveaXthe others.... Its powerto eaneelexecutivedeeisionswouldviolatemixiisterial responsibilitybeforeParliament,it would take away the legislaiivesupremacyof the cabinet,. . . it would interferein controversies betweenministriesand it would siir up the employeesand corruptthe workof agenciesand authoriiiesof government. . . (And in addiiion)it would trarlscendthe jurisdictionof the courtsand havepowerlike no otherorganizationeverhadbefore . . . and, it wouldviolatethe Constitution(!). (p. 28) The Mailisal-dawlawasnonethelessfoundedin 1945"asan initiativeof the parliament itselft', saysal-Sanhuri)and adds:s<Certainly therewasgreatcourageshownby those who introducedthatlaw and supportedit> (pp. 28-29). Whatal-Sanhurisown This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions ARAB LAW QUARTERLY 196 rolewas in the draftingof the law and its final successis not clear.Therewas, however,a configuration of personsin poliiicalpostsat the timethatsuggests al-Sanhuri's handnot farin the background.Throughout1945 Nuqrashiwasin the governmentas Saadistprime miriisterof a coaliiioncabinet,and al-Sanhuriwas Ministerof Education. Al-Sanhurihimselfhad been Deputy Minister in the Ministryof Justicein 1944,a iime whenthe projectof establishingthe Mailisal-dawla wasalmostcertainly under discussion.Moreover,the successorto Nuqrashias Saadistprime minister, IbrahimAbdal-Hadi,wasstillin thatofficewhen al-Sanhuriwasappointedto the top postin the Mailis al-dawla. Whatevermayhavebeenthe backgroundof the politics involved,one cannotimaging a posiiionin Egyptat that time moresuitable for al-Sanhuri'sparticulartalents, penchantfor creaiionof legalinstitutions,and long-standing interestin publiclaw.14 In the wordsof a FrenchIslamiclegalscholar: He succeeded in giving this institution, still in its first years of existence, a real independence vis-a-vis the government, and made it the symbol of judicialreform in the country. (ECellefonds, (1958),p. 476) Once in the positionof ra'isMaylisal-dawla,he undertook,to make it into "a toweringfortressof the protectionof rightsand the guardianof liberties"(Mursi, 1980).His decisionsin thesecourtsareremembered, notablyfor: (1) Furtheringthe right of the administrative judiciarypowerto exercisesupervision over the constitutionality of law. "Whilethe judicialpowersupervises the legislativepower,it does not undertaketo legislate."Hourever,"if legislation is in oppositionto the constitution,it is its duty not to apply it" (alQulali,(1972); (2) Supportingthe freedomof the pressand the expressionagainstgovernment ordersto banpublicationsor cancelor denypublishing licenses;and (3) Offering legal redress of grievancesfor those who claimed to have been wrongedby administrativeor other governmental aciion (al-Qulali,(1972); Mursi,(1980). The establishmentof the rightof judicial supervisionover the constitutionality of laws was, says al-Sanhuri,"the most importantdecision that the Egyptianjudiciary has issuedin the modernage"(al-Sanhuri,(1950,p. 11) and"a pointof realtransformaiion in the positionof the Egyptaincourtsin this matter,in view of the position occupied by the court of the administrativejudiciary (al-gada'al-idari)"(p. 10). Although the decisionwas issuedon 10 February1948, before al-Sanhuricameonto the court,he immediatelyreinforcedthis newlydefined competence of the courtsin the first issue (January1950)of the journalof the Majlisal-dawla,of which he was lAIn 1949 there was a major revision of the Mailis al-dawla with which al-Sanhuriseems not tO have been happy, further suggesting that he had had a close connection with the 1946 law. "Under the law of hewrites,"the sections of the Egyptian 1946", Conseild'Etat had links with each other, whereas the law of 1949 has not been fortunate in the modifications in this respect". The changes brought about created separate administrative structures for opinions and legislation on the one hand and litigation on the other. In doing this the 1949 law has, he says, "set up a barrier between the sections". The Conseilhas thereby "lost of itshomogeneity" and "there is no longer the much collaborationindispensablebetween the different sections" (p. 578). This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions AL-SANHURI AND ISLAMIC LAW 197 editor. Two long articleson the subjectwere containedin this issue and he himself discussesthe matterat somelengthin his introduciion. "The right of supervisionover the constitutionalityof laws is not found in the FrenchConseil d'Etat,"he writes,but: if the Frenchjudiciarysiick to old opinionsthatsayit is not permittedfor themto look at the consiituiionalityof law, we do not have to acceptthese textsin Egypt . . . We must liberate oulselvesfromthe nooseof iniitaiingothers . . . We see thatthe conveniionsin Francearedifferentfromthoseof Egypt.(p. 12) He explainsthe matterto a Frenchreadershipsomewhatdifferently: Althoughthe principleof nonaccountability of actsof legislativepoweris adIrdtted in Egyptas in France,the Conseil d'Etatof Egypt,in contrastto Frenchjurisprudence,hasrecogriizedthe rightof examinaiionof constitutionalityof lawsand, a fortion, of decree-laws,even aftertheir raiificaiionby the parliament. The decree-law,beforebeingratifiedby parliament,consiitutesan actof executivepower;thus the decree-lawcomeswithinthe formalandorganiccompetenceof the EgypiianConseil dEtat to annulexecutivedecisions;and thereforeit has authorityto annula decree-lawas it has to annulall otheradministrative decrees.(al-Sanhuri,(1952),p. 580) The authorityto annulexecutivedecreesby an administrativejudiciaryis not synonymous,certainly,with the right to void lawswhichoriginatein the legislature.In this articlecomparingthe Egyptianand Frenchconseilsd'etatal-Sanhuridoes not, however,discussthe basis for the extensionof the powerof judicialreviewin Egypt overlegislativeacts. He tells his Frenchreadership: That which contributedto asseriingthe supervisionof the constitutionalityof laws is the absence,in Egyptianlegislaiion,of texts susceptibleof being interpreted,as in France,in a sensethatforbidsthe judgeto considerconstitutionality. (p. 580) The natureof this power,and the reasoningwhichunderliesits assertionis discussed in the two articlesin the journalof the Mailisal-dawlareferredto above.Al-Sanhuri summarisesthemin his introduction. Accordingto al-Sanhuri,the judge'srole is to interpretthe lawsand see that they are executedonstitutional laws and ordinarylaws. All laws carrythe presumption of executability.However,if the judgefindstwolawsin conflict(includingthe constitution, which has a certainpresumptionof priority),he cannotapplyboth of them. He doesnot, however,void one of the laws.He refrainsfromapplyingit to the casehe is judging."The judgmentlooks firstat the constitutionality of decree-lawsand goes fromthere to the constitutionalityof law itselfr'(al-Sanhuri,(1950)pp. 11-13). The decision,he says, "is long and complex",andhe proceedsto givehis own reasoningas to what the right rests on. ';Thereis no doubtthat the administrativejudiciarymay void a decree-lawfor its non-constitutionality." If we stop there "the matteris simple". However,al-Sanhuriis of the opinionthatthe judiciary whetheradministrative judiciaryor the regularjudiciary has the duty to be the supervisorsof the constitutionalityof "lawitself:', that is of parliamentary legislationwhetherthe legislative powerexercisedis strictlydefinedor discretionary,and in regardto both the formand the substanceof the law. This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 198 ARAB LAW QUARTERLY The Makkamatal-naqd(Courtof Cassation)hadactuallyprecededthe administrative courtin issuinga judgmentof the matterbut its rulingon the constitutionalright was "extemporaneous", says al-Sanhuri,and then an appealcourtissueda contrary decision.The latterstatedcategorically thatthelegislaturewasthe soleauthorityas to the constitutionality of its legislation.It is this opinionthatal-Sanhllricounterswhen givinghis ownreasoningas to the rightand-the dutyof the judicialauthorityto review the consiitutionality of laws. "Thelssueis notwhetherlawis an actof legislativesovereigntyor not, norwhether the legislatureis using definedor discretionarypower."The fact of the matteris ratherthat "theadministrative judiciarydoesnot actuallynullifyadministrative regulaiions,leavealonelegislaiion.An opponentof a lawmaynot askthe courtto declare the lawvoid fromits incepiion,but rathermayaskthatit not be applied."Al-Sanhuri reasoned: Is it possible for judges to apply legislation when their opinion as to its constitulionality differs from that of the legislature?The basis of this right (of substituting their opinion for that of the legislature) is not, however, found in any text of the Egyptian Constitution nor is it a general principle. Judging the constitutional correctness of legisIation, objectively speaking, is judicial work. And if it is said that the principle of the separation of powers is violated, it may be answered: The judiciary exercises supervision over parliament's opinion (about the constitutionality of legislation) not by initiating legislation as that would be interference with the legislative power- but by a judicial act. The applicable constitutional principle is that powers should be exercised in accordance with the Constitution. The parliament contradicts this principle if it issues legislation that opposes the Constitution, and rather than apply unconstitutional laws the judges record this violation. Thus it is permitted that judges look at the constitutionalityof laws-indeed it is their duty tO do so-in order to prevent application of legislation which, in their estimation, infringes the constltutlon. Administrative judges and regular judges are equal in this competence. And if it is said this reality is not equivalent to an authority to nullify an administrativeorderand certainly not authority to nullify a law) the answer is: It is not nullifying a legislaiive command as the judicial decision does not nallify the law in quesiion. Rather, the decision limits itself to the impossibility of applying the law in the case at hand. (al-Sanhuri,(1950) p. 15-16) If this doesnot seemto be the full powerof "judicialreviewX' it comesclose. Confirmationof the authoritythatthis judicialdecisionconferredon the Egyptianjudiciary and reinforcementof its independenceof executiveandlegislativepoweris foundin the factthat,evenafter18yearsof pressureon the judiciaryfromthenewregime)that regimestill foundit necessaryto establisha specialhighcourtdirectlyunderexecutive authorityto rule on questionsof constituiionality.The precipitatinginstance)of course,had been the wholesaledismissalof judgesin the iCmassacre of the judiciary" in 1969by an act of the Presidentof the Republic)and the subsequentissuingof a courtdecisiondeclaringthe executiveactionillegal. The ConstitutionalCourtestablishedin 1970(althoughin the firstyearsit did not carrythe title of a constitutionalcourt)remainsoutsidethe regularjudicialstructure, andits judgesare appointeddirectlyby the executiveandnot pursuantto the advice of the High JudiciaryCouncilupon which sit membersof the judiciary.However, This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions AL-SANHURI AND ISLAMIC LAW 199 although consetuiional questionsnow are submittedto the ConstitutionalCourt, issues concerg civil rightsarestill usuallytakento the Majlisal-dawlaby virtueof its coniinuing funciion as protectorof ciiizens from arbitraryand unwarranted governmentaction.Thus whereasrefusalto applylaws for reasonsof unconstitutionality is no longerformallypossible,the Mailisal-dawlaretainsits authorityto review execuiive action, and it continuesto be adviserto both the executiveand the legislature. Laws, before they are submittedto the People'sAssemblytodaymust still be passedon by the Mailisal-dawla. The Mailis al-dawlais consideredby someto havea greaterindependencevis-a-vis executivepowerthan the regularjudiciary,althoughsome of this independencewas erodedby law in 1972, when the compositionand competenceof the High Judiciary Collncilwas alteredin regardto judicialappointments.The Mailisal-dawlaretained its essentialethos, however,and a hard-foughtstrugglein 198X198Shas restoreda measureof its independencein the appointmentof judgesvis-a-visthe Ministryof Justice,representativeof executivepower. Al-Sanhuriheaded the Majlis al-dawla from 1949 until the political "crisis of March"in 1954. The Wafdgovernmenttriedto put al-Sanhuriout of the Majlis1dawlain 1950,but he foughtbacksaying: Between me and them (the politicians of the Wafd) is the consiitution and the law of the Mailis aI-dawla. . . How can I allow the government to deal arbitrarilywith the Mailisal-dawlawhen it is the body supposed to impose just treatment of people when the governrnentwrongs them? (Mursi, (1980)) Several of the eulogies reproducea statementascribedto an unnamedEnglish journalistof the time, who is quoted as saying:"Thereis no judgein Englandlike himt" (al-Qulali,Mursi,Khattab). Amongthe chargeslevelledagainsthim was the claimthat his formerpoliticalaffiliation preventedhis taking a posiiion as judge. Al-Sanhurirepliedthat there was nothingin the Constitutionor the lawsthat forbadehim being presidentof a judicial bodyafterhavingbeenministerfor a politicalparty)thathe hadseveredhis partyconnectlons and there was nothing that interferedwith his independenceas a judge. Moreover,he is quoted as saying, "The historyof the Egyptianjudiciaryis full of namesof judgeswho havebeenministersandaffiliatedwith politicalparties"(Mursi, (1980). The referencehere, commentsMursi, is obviouslyto Abd Al-Aziz Fahmi, once head of the Liberal-Constitutionalist Party,who becamepresidentof an appeals court and then Presidentof the Courtof Cassation,the highestjudicialofficeof the regularjudiciary.ls Al-Sanhuriinauguratedthe publishingof the journalof the Majlisal-dawlain 1950, andhe wrotea lengthyintroductionexplainingthe backgroundof theMajlisal-dawla, introducingthe articlesof thatfirstissue and indicatingwhat the journalintendedto publish in future. It was to have three sections, he said: the first for researchand 15 'Abd al-Aziz Fahmi is remembered today by the legal/judicial professions as Egypt's most eniinent xudge. He had gone to Paris with Saad Zaghlul, was a member of the drafting commission for the 1923 Constitution, and Minister of Justice. Al-Sanhuri wrote a eulogy to him that was published in the Majallat Majlisal-dawla in 1951. This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 200 ARAB LAW QUARTERLY studies, the secondto concernconnectionsbetweenjudicialdecisionsand jurisprudence in administrative law, and a thirdseciionfor documents.He is listed as ratis al-tahrtr(editor)on the coverof thisfirstissue. Whenthe revolutioncamein 1952,al-Sanhurisupportedthe FreeOfficersandwas legaladviserand draftsmanfor the Revolutionary CommandCouncil,by virtueboth of the functionof the Mailisal-dawlaas legaladviserto the governmentandhis owr personalsupportfor the Revolution. It was the Mailisal-dazvlaunderal-Sanhurithatprovidedthefatwa settingout the legal foundationfor Decreelaw No. 121of 1952,by siipulatingthe procedureto be followedwhen the heirto the thronewasunderagefollowingan abdication.Existing law coveredonly the case of an underaged successorfollowingthe death(not abdication)of the king. Had the latterprocedurebeenfollowed)it wouldhavemeantcalling the Wafdistparliamentbackinto sessionto administerthe constitutionaloathto a "regencyorganisation".The decree-lawalloweda "temporary regencyorganisation" to have the oath administeredby the Councilof Ministers.The 1923Constitution, Article237 requiredthe PermanentRegencyto take its oath beforethe parliament (Shakra,(1985))pp.l73-175; esp. 173n.2).l6 The fact of powerafterthe 1952revolutiondid not translateimmediatelyor easily into anotherbasisof legitimacy.Firstthe parliamentwent, then the parties then the Constitution.Whilethe old lawsremained,new lawsbecamesuperimposed,and the independenceof the judiciarybecamesubordinatedtO concernswith the independenceof Egypt. But neitherold lawsnor judiciarycompletelylost theirvitality.The judiciarywas to resistcooptationas a bodyand only in 1969did the finalonslaught come, by an executivedecreewhich was challengedand reversedby the judiciary itself. Duringthe first 18 monthsof the Revolution,whenal^Sanhuri was still in placein the Mailisal-dawla,the old legalitieswerestretchedbut they werenot ignored,and the Maylisal-dawlabecameinvolvedwithallowingapprovalof the decree-lawrestrictirlg politicalparties. MuhammadNaguib's memoirsindicatethat al-Sanhuriwas opposedto this lawbut "yieldedto thepersistenceof SulimanHafiz",his deputy?and the argumentthat "thepartieshavebeencorrupted,whichnegatesthe realmeaning of parliamentary democracy".However,al-Sanhurihedgedhis agreementby including the provisothat"thegovernmentwouldnot interfereunlessit wasnecessary. . . and such interferencewouldbe underthe directsupervisionof the Mailisal-dawla" (Shakra,(1985), pp.30W301). Shakratakesthematerialforhis discussionon this issuefrom:7Abdal-FattahHasan,Dhikrayyal siya(PotiticalMemoires)(Cairo(1974)pp. 137-139);WahidRa'fat,Fusul(Decisions)(Cairon.d.) pp. 12>130); IbrahilnFarag,DhiArayyat siyasiyya (PoliticalMemoires)(Cairo(1983)pp. 8>84); 'Abdal'Azim Ramadan,Nasirwa azmalmaris(NasserandtheCrisisof March)(Cairon.d., pp. 27, 3W31); AhmadHamrush,Qissalthawrat23yulyu(The Storyof the July23rdRevolution)(Cairon.d., p. 235). BothRafat and Ramadan,it is pointedout, exercisehindsightin criticisingthe Decree-lawof 1952as beinga beginningof the erosionof constitutional government.Ra'fathadbeentheheadof theseciionof theMailisal-dawlathat had issuedthe fatwaon whichthis decree-lawwasbased.Ramadan,Hamrush,andHasanall quoteSuliman Hafiz, al-Sanhuri'sdeputyin the Mailisaldawla) as saying:'I, togetherwith al-Sanhuri,brought aboutthe victorywe wantedfrom'AliMaher"(quotedin Shakra,(1985),pp. 17S-176).'AliMaher,party andPalaceintimateandsometimestrongmanof Egyptianpolitics,hadbeeninstalledby the FreeOfficers as headof a civiliancabinetto runthe government. 16 siLya This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions AL-SANHURI AND ISLAMIC LAW 201 Al-Sanhuriis saidto havebeenworkingon the draftof a newconstitutionfor Egypt dllringthe earlyperiodof the Revolution,(Gami'i,(1972)). He was known to have been amongthe proponentsof a returnto consiitutionalrule and continuedto be a defenderof the Majlisal-dawlaagainstgovernmerltinterference.The issue of return Comto civilianrulebecamepartof the powerstrugglebothwithinthe Revolutionary mandCouncil(RCC)andoutside)anderuptedinto whathasgonedownin the history of Egyptas "theCrisisof March"of 1954. On 26 March 1954 the Bar Associationhad a turbulentmeetingwheredemands weremadefor a returnto civiliangovernment.On 29 Marchthe RCCannouncedthat period"in January1959 it would continueto functionuntil the end of the sCtransition (Ziadeh (1968), pp. 15S157). On 29 Marchalso, al-Sanhuriwas ousted by force fromthe Mailisal-dazvla. Massdemonstrationsertlpted)reachingtheirpeakon 29 Marcharlddemonstrators surroundedthe buiIdingof the Mailis al-dawlain Giza. Al-Sanhuriwas attackedby "whohad been misledby biasedinformationcirculatedby someof the demonstrators someopportunists",accordingto a statementby the Ministerof Interior.They "drew blood' and al-Sanhuriwastakenhomeby SalahSalem.Nasservisitedhim laterin the eveningto checkon his condition(al-Ahram,30 March1954). It is believedthat "somearmyelements"had incited the mob and instigatedthe attack(Ziadeh, (1968), p. 156) It is claimedthat the reasonfor the assaulton the Mailisal-dawlaandal-Sanhuriat thattimein particularwasthe publicationin al-Akhbar(newspaper)that the Mailis al-dawlawas 'saboutto issue deerees(sac)againstthe Revolueon . . . (and) it had been rumoured that Dr al-Sanhuri was to become Prime Minister for the four months until the election of a constituent assembly>'(Shakra) (1985) p. 590). Whatever was fact or fiction from that murky episode, on 16 April 1954: the names were publishedof 38 leading poliiicianswho, becausethey served as ministers betweenFebruary6) 1942and July 23, 1952and belongedto the Wafd,Liberal-Constitutionalist)or Saadistparties,aredeprivedof theirpoliticalrightsfor 10 years.(TheTimes,London, 17 April 1954) They were C'heldto blamefor the stateof corruptionwhichpervadedEgypt7spolitical life" from the date when the Brltish governmenthad sent tanks to the Palace to impose a Wafd governmenton King Farouk. Al-Sanhuri'sname was, of course, amongthem. XI. SYNTHESIS OF THEORY AND PRACTICE lNheMajorTreatises The incidentat the Mailisal-dawla)followedby the decreenamingal-Sanhurias one of those whose "politicalrights"were taken anvay,effectivelyended his public life. Thereafter,he workedat homeon al-Wasit,the firstvolumeof whichhadappearedin 1952,and for a time continuedto lectureat the Instituteof High ArabStudies. He was also called upon to assist with the draftingof moreArabcodes and basic This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 202 ARAB LAW QUARTERLY legislaiion.In 1953he hadgoneto Libyaforthatpurpose,as Libyawantedto abolish its ItaliaIlcode. In 1959he went eoKuwait,wherehe decidedagainstprovidinga civil code, but includedmuch of what had constitutedothercivil codes in the Kuwaiti commercialcode, provideda mantimelaw, a law of compensation,and a law establishingthe primarycourtsw He alsoworkedon the constitutionsof SudanandBahrain.He was askedlo go to the UAE to drafttheirfederallegislationbut ill healthpreventedhim fromtravelling to observelocalcircumstances,somethinghe considerednecessaryfor the draftingof legislaiion. Out of his lecturesat the ArabStudiesInstituteon comparative law cameMasadir al-haqqji al-fiqhal-islami,a six-partworkwhichis now publishedin two volumes(alSanhuri,(195F1957)).The title, in the wordsof Linantde Bellefonds,whotranslates it into Frenchas "Lessources dudroilsubjectif',is "somewhatconfusing".He explains that it is "a studyof the ruleswhich the free will (volontet) shouldtakeinto account whenthatwill is appliedto posiiivelaw (quandcelle-ciestappeleea avoirdeseffiets jundiques)"(Bellefonds,(1958),p. 477). The work,continuesBellefonds,is an examinationof a questionthathas engaged the attentionof modernMuslimjurists,namelyto extracta generaltheoryof legal actionfromthe dispersedelementsin the greatclassicaltreatiseswhichdo not attempt to synthesise.Thatwhichdistinguishesal-Sanhuri'sworkfromothersis the manner (lXespnl)in whichthe workis approached.Thanksto his long experiencein Western jurisprudence he has an ability,lackingin otherwriters,to give to legalphenomena) includingthatof Muslimlaw, a universalandpermanentcharacter,"thoughtby some to be missingfromMuslimlaw"(p. 477). Al-Sanhuri,in his prefaceto the Masadiraexplainswhathe means: Masadiral-haqqare the bases from which right, legally speaking, derives; this right is a benefit having monetary value (qimamaliyya)which the law protects. We are not concerned here with public rights or rights connected to personal status because) legally speaking they do not have a monetary value. We are confining ourselves to rights having monetary value. Such rights are personal and material, as they are designated in Western jurisprudence. (al-Sanhuri, (1954)> p. S) He explainsfurther; In Western law there is an esseniial distmciion between personal right (al-haqq al-shakhsi) and material right (al-haqqal-'ain29. It is the spinal column in Western law which derives from Roman law, and the source of this right, whether personal or material, is the most precise of subjects, although it is most vague in Western law. We will attempt here to specify them in Western law and then deal with them in Islc law. That way we will put Islamic law beside Western law as regards those features that have central importance .... We will deal with Islamic law in the way we deal with Western law to see whether personal and material right in Islamic law is to be found in the sense known in that Western law which derives from Roman law, and whether we can attribute all these sources to legal conveyance and legal fact in the meaning known in Western law. (p. 5) Bellefonds,bothat the beginningof his reviewof this andagainin closing,recommendsat the workbe translatedso that it "canbe put in the handsof all jurists" (Bellefonds,(1958),p. 478). Sincethishasnot occurredwe can,perhaps)considerit a This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions AL-SANHURI AND ISLAMIC LAW 203 hereticalnotion.The"heresy"is, of course,to suggestthatbasicareasof concernto withtheIslamicShari'a,or that couldbenefitby comparison Westernjurisprudence schoin theShan'a,notjustfororientalist valuable theremightpossiblybesomething larsbutforWesternjurists. workin anotherreview Bellefondscommentsfurtheron the valueof al-Sanhuri's throughhasmaintained writtenwhenthefifthvolumewaspublished.As al-Sanhuri of justicein perhapstheremaybeprinciples comments, outhiswritings,thisreviewer legalareas in corresponding "morejust"thanprinciples Islamthatcanbe considered in thelawsof theWest. The construciions of the jurists of Islam in the area of agency . . . are not only in advance of the last stage of Roman law, but in many respects they show themselves superior to the systems presently prevailing in the West. (Bellefonds, (1959), p. 638) referredto by Bellefonds featureof thisworkof al-Sanhuri Anothernoteworthy in referenceto this he says,takesthe opportunity concernsobligation.Al-Sanhuri, subject: to excavate the Muslim notion of usury and indicate its evoluiion, providing a study which is probably the most valuable that we have on this question; complexinitsintentionto remindsus thatMuslimlawis "particularly andBellefonds (1958),p. 477). (Bellefonds, andillicitprofitin legalrelations" preventallcharlce Thematterof usuryin Islamiclawseemsto engendergreatinterestin Islamiclaw commentsquotedaboveareparticularly circlesin bothEastandWest.Bellefonds' interestingin the light of commentson the subjectby anotherscholar,Majid Khadduri,one who straddlesbothEastandWest.In referenceto howal-Sanhuri notes: of "usury"in Islamiclaw,Khadduri dealtwiththeproblemof theprohibition Drafting the Iraqi Civil Code, Sanhuri consciously avoided grappling with the problem of interest, partly because it was not dealt with in the Majalla,the code that had been in force in Iraq, and partly because it would arouse the opposition of scholars who considered it contrary to Islamic standards. In practice, however, interest had already become part of the economic system, notwithstanding that its use in business trarusactionshad yet to be jusiified. In Egypt, the situaeon was somewhat different from Iraq as its former civil code, a replica of the French Civil Code, took interest for granted. (Khadduri, (1984), p. 208) he with Islamicstandards" revisedthe codes "in accordance Whenal-Sanhuri havejustifiedinterest"onIslamicgrounds".It is his to Khadduri, should,according continue,agreethat: didnotdo so. Somepeople,Khadduri claimthatal-Sanhuri and interest as a a distinciion between usury as a transaciion between money lenders (murabin), transactiorl between economic instituiions. . . and investors must be made. . . Sanhuri, accepting without hesitaiion the disiinciion between interest and usury, recognized interest but he failed to provide a raiionale for it. (p. 209) the matterof the use of Islamiclawfor the civilcodes Dr Khadduriapproaches It withIslamicstandards." fromthepointof viewof therevisionbeing"inaccordance purposedoesnot beginto of al-Sanhuri's is my contentionthatsucha description lawwhichhe haddeveloped of themethodof comparative thecomplexity encompass containsa certaindialectic. andwithwhichhe wasworking.Hismethod,moreover, This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 204 ARAB LAW QUARTERLY He not only positedIslamiestandardsagainstthe existingeode, but also included usage of that eode in Egypt-its interpretationand applieationby the Egyptian eourts.In addition,he eonsideredthe mostrecent innovationsof Westernlegalthinking as it eoneernedthe requirements for "justiee"of partieular "modern"eonditions. In this most sensitivematterof usury/interest as referredto by the abovementioned two eommentators on al-Sanhuri'swork,one eandemonstrate,I believe, al-Sanhuri's methodand the distinetionhe makesbetweenthe "seientifiestage"of workand the 4'legislaiivestage"in the refurbishingof Islamielaw for moderr;use. The Masadir representsworkof the "seientifiestage"essentially.There,as Bellefondsexpressesit, he "exeavates";thatis, he exploresthe waysin whieh legalconceptshavebeen dealt with by varioussehoolsof Islaniielawandthe great Islamiescholarsof jurisprudence, how these eoneeptshavebeeomeelaborated,and in whatwaysthey havedeveloped and ehangedover the eourseof the eenturiesand from one legal mind to the next. Thatthereis a progressionor developmentin thinkingof the Islamiescholars(if only by virtueof havingto applyeonceptsto new circumstanees) is takenfor granted.In "exeavations"-archeologieal or legal-one findseaehsucceedingconstructionbuilt upon structureswhich were developedpreviously. The plight of Islamic law in "moderntimes," as I readal-Sanhuri'sformulationof the issue, is not thatit didnot historieally progressand not thatit cannot,but ratherthatgreatlegal mindsstopped workingon legalproblemsin the lightof new circumstances andthus the law ceased toevolve. Therefore,it wouldseem that it is not an issueof "the theoreticalquestionof the harmonybetween Western and Islamic legal standards" that Khadduriclaims al-Sanhuri doesnot resolve(p. 209n)but rathera concernwith turningagainto developingthe Islaniiclegalconcepts,this timein the lightof new("modern")conditions. Thatthereis no "harmony"is not the point. We should not expectthereto be one. Otherwise Islamielawwouldnot be distinctiveand"oneof theworld's greatlegalsystems",and the exereiseof developinga comparative lawwithinal-Sanhuri'sframeof referenee with Islamiclawas a mainpillarwouldhaveno meaning. Therefore,in orderfor the theoretiealstatusof "usury"to be grappledwith under modern eonditionsone mustunderstandthe variationsof circumstanees andcontexts under whieh it has been dealtwith in the past. If al-Sanhuri "readilyaceepts"that "interest" is distinguishablefrom "usury"then his excavationspresumablymust have shownhim that"interest"neitherhasnor canbe consideredto be the evolution of the eoneeptof "usury,"andthe rationalefor "interest" restselsewhere.Andthatis where the examinationof "modern"systemsenters. As Bellefondsnotes,eachvolumeof theMasadirhasa twofold ation. Thereis an internalcomparisonbetweenthe doctrinesof comparativeorganisthe differentschools of Muslimlaw andrelationshipsbetweenthem,andthena consideration of legalconeepts in "thegreatEuropeanlegalsystems,ancientand modern"(Bellefonds,(1958), p. 477). Some eoneeptsof what eonstitutes"just"legal relations are the same or similar, some different.Some eoneeptsappearin one systemand do not appearin another. How wasRomanlawglossedandlaterrevisedforuse in the European eodes?A study of modernlegalsystemsmoreoverimpliesa coneernwithhow these statesdealtwith This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions AL-SANHURI AND ISLAMIC LAW 205 theirown "legislativestage".Usuryandinterestare distinguishedin modernWestern law;usurywas condemnedby bothhistoricalsystems.The recordof whereandwhen and how the distinciionappearedin those systemsand whereit has, is the stuff of whichal-Sanhuri's"comparative-historical method"is composed. The Masadir,as the recordof al-Sanhuri'sworkin his prescribed"scientificstage", is colossalin scope: Rarelyaremodernscholarsof jurisprudence emboldenedto comparethe Muslimsystemto that of other civilizaiions.The gulf separaiingthem appears too large.It takesall the learriingof al-Sanhurito succeedin construciinga bridgebetweenthem. (Bellefonds,(1958),p. 478) The "bridge"as should be noted, is not "harmony",as such but identificationof theoreticaland actuallegal relationshipsand conceptsof lawr of justice---which eachreflects.Comparisonon a basisof theoryis an entirely differentpropositionthan casuisticcomparisons.And it is the formerwherein is to be found the core of al-Sanhuri'smethod. Al-Sanhuri'swork on the moderncodes had indeed, as Bellefondsnotes, "servedhim well" (p. 478). It certainly sensitisedhim to the matterof theoreticalstructuresunderlyingisolated legal concepts and thereforeconnecting them. Then thereis the matterof the rich detailthat has been producedin the courseof thedevelopmentof theory. Mostmodernwriters,when dealingwith the classical writers,arenot able, as al-Sanhuriis, to separate sharplybetweenthat which is their own innovaiionand that which has been taken fromelsewhere.If one day this work is translatedthe Westernreaderwill be amazedby the richness of informationconcernlng,notably,developments pointedout by the authorin German,Roman, Latin, etc. legal systems,that his methodof discoveringrelationshipswith the Muslim systemhaveled him to study.(p. 478) Wherethe Masadirrecordsthe dialecticbetweenancientand modern,Easternand Western legal systems,al-Wasitcontainsanotherkind of dialectic, or rather,a new, more advanced,synthesisof theoryand practicethat the new Civil Codeof Egyptand by extensiorlthoseof otherArabstates represents. Al-Sanhurihad been working on the synthesis of theory and practice, in fact, throughout his life, and his work had a pattern.As he tells us in the introductionto thefirst volume of al-Wasit, it is the middle work between the summarywork (al-Waiiz) andthe fullyelaboratedwork(al-Mabsut).Perhapsthe title is best rendered Middle Commentazy. But thereneverwas a mabsat.Al-Sanhuriis quotedas sayingin 1968: Al-Wastl becamemoreelaboratedthan I had anticipated.I wanted but it becarnethe long elaboraiion.I do not believethereis it to be of mediumlength morein me. (Mursi,l9SO)) It forms,however,thecomprehensivetreatiseon Egypt'scivil law, writtenby the person who was most knowledgeableby far as to the meaning and intentionof the provisions of the new code, how andwhy it hadbeenset out in the wayit had, andhow it should be interpreted;how it wasuniqueandindependentas a code, andhow the civil law of Egyptbecame,in a word, Egyptianised. This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions ARAB LAW QUARTERLY 206 It is possibleto tracehow he hadbegunpreparingthisworkfromhis firstwritings in Arabic.He tells us in the introduciionof al-Mujiz (1938)thathe hadnot intended to issue the mujiz until after he had come out with the mabsut)for which he had alreadybroughtout the first part, Nazanyyalal-aqd in 1934. However,he was to decidethatthe need fora mujizwas at leastas great.He hadin mxnd,he says,"a concisevolume,not anabridgement,to makeit detailedbutwithoutelaboraiion,to meet generalneedsas well as thoseof the judiciary".Becausehe wasparticularly cognisant of the needs of the latter, "many judicialdecisionswere includedin the notes", althoughhe restrictedhimself "to Egypiiancourt decisions")that is, to what he believedwasneededby the practitionerof law. Thereis no differencebetweenthe two books(Nazanyyatal-'aqdandal-Mujiz)exceptthatin the abridgementthe issueshavebeenmademoreconcise.Whoeverreadsal-Mujizcanproceed to ffie mabsutwhich is moredetailed.The maiiz pavesthe way for the mabs1lt. (al-Sanhuri (1938c),p. 1) In 1966he publishedanothershortenedversion,al-Wajiz,l7 whichis the firstthree books of al-Wasitsummarised.In it, however and this is how it primarilydiffers fromthe mujiz the theoryof obligationsin Egypiianjurisprudence is revisedaccording to the changesin the newCivilCode. In these volumes'Abd al-Razzaqal-Sanhuri scholar,law-giver,and jurist has producedfor Egyptandthe worlda scholarshipof comparative jurisprudence on civil law unrivalledin breadthand scope, whereinIslamiclaw is prominentlyfeatured, dealtwith in termsof theoryand as contemporary practice,andis placedbesideand treatedon a parwith "thegreatlegalsystemsancientandmodern". But theworlddoesnot knowabouttheseworks,andfewin Egyptindicatethatthey realise,otherthanin verygeneralterms,whattheycomprehend. XII. THE LEGAL TERRAIN OF ARAB UNI-TY Towardsan ArabCivilCode Whereastherehas beenan altnostcompletescholarlysilencein Egypton al-Sanhuri) anarticlehe publishedin 1962aboutthe possibilityof a uniformArabcivil code has occasionedrecentcommentin a paperby Tariqal-Bishri)an Egyptianscholarand authorwho is alsoa seniorjudgein theMailisal-dawla.This paper(al-Bishri)( 1985)) considers"the legalquestionn'as regardsthe statusof the IslamicShari'aversusthat ofthe positivelaw. It was presentedat a colloquiumon "The HeritageandContemporaryChallengesto the ArabNation"held in CairoduringSeptember1984under theauspicesof the Centerfor ArabUnityStudies.The applicationof IslaniiclawconL7 Al-waiizandal-mujiz havealmostthe samemeaIiing:"summary" or "outline"or a synonymthereof, indicating a shortenedor abbreviated work This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions AL-SANHURI AND ISLAMIC LAW 207 tinues to be an issue in contemporaryEgyptianpolitics, while "the heritage"(alturath)is a topic of researchand discussionengenderingmuch interestin Egypt's intellectualcircles. In his introductionto al-Wasit al-Sanhurihadexpresseda hopethatthe time would come when the juristsof the Arabcountrieswould co-operatein producingan Arab civil code "underpinnedby Islamicjurisprudence andthe lawsof all the countriesthat haveparticipatedin the Arabcivtilization" (al-Sanhuri,(1952)w). In 1962he wrote: I believethatArabunityis a naturalthingas the Arabpeoplesareone naiion;. . . the strongest supportof Arabunity is culturalutiity,and the most importantbasisfor unifyingcultureis a unifiedlegalculture.(al-Sanhuri,(1962),p. 7) To knowwhatmaybe possiblefor developmentin the future"athoroughstudyof the pastis necessary"andthen, "anexaminationof the present"(p. 7). In his detailingof the task ahead,thereare strongechoesof the projectfor the futurehe had outlined more than35 yearsearlierin Le Califat. The "thoroughstudy of the past" that al-Sanhurirecommendsin 1962 has two aspects, which in turn are each dividedinto stages:(1) a study of the "foundingof Islamicjurisprudence",first "in the ages beforethe time of the foundingof the four mainschools'X,then "a considerationof the traditionalviewsand the differenttrends in legal thirlkingincludingthe rules underlyingthe work of the Islamicjurists";(2) then comes the workof comparativestudyof the differentschools,not only the four main ones, but othersas well "to ascertainwhatis similarand whatdifferentin legal thinking".Then comesthe workof comparingthem with modernWesternjurisprudence: to see wherethe Islamicjuriststoppedin developingthe law,whetherin thebasicrulesor in the detailedprovisions.Thenthesedetailsshouldbe developedon the basisthatthe Islamicjurists setn using their wording,style and logic. When Islamic jurisprudenceneeds development) develop it, but when it conformsto the civilizaiionof the presentage, leave it as it is. (pp. 27-28) Such studieswill be arduous,he says, and will take "scoresof years"beforethere can be "a renaissancelike that which occurredin Romarllaw", so that Islamiclaw "willbe suitableforthe modernage"(p. 28). He emphasisesthatsuchan activitydoes not involve simply takingpreceptsof Westernlaw and "tryingto make them come from Islamiclaw or claimingthatWesternlaw is Islamiclaw"(p. 29). This articleindicatestwothings. Firstly,al-Sanhurihasremainedfirmin the essentials of both the task aheadand the methodfor makingthe Shan'a"suitablefor the modernage". Secondly,it also indicatesthat al-Sanhuridoes not considerhimselfto have completedthe task as specified.There is still plenty of work remainingto be done by others. The "past"as al-Sanhurispecifiesit, also includesthe experiencesof Arab countries. Thereare threesituations: (1) thosestateswhichcontinuedwith an "unwritten" (i.e. uncodified)versionof the IslamicShari'a(SaudiArabiaand Yemen);(2) those stateswhichwereunderOttomancontrolduringthe secondhalfof the l9th century, where the Majallawas applied(Syria,Palestine,East Jordan,Iraq and Libya) and This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 208 ARAB LAW QUARTERLY wherethis law remainedthe civil law afterthe fall of the Ottomanempireand the adventof the Frenchand Britishmandates(andin the case of Libya, Italianrule). OI11Y Lebanon,he says,changedits civillawtOonepatternedon the Frenchcode;and (3) thosestateswhichborrowedFrenchlaw (Egypt,Lebanon,Tunisia,Algerianand Morocco)(pp. W10). The implicaiionhereis thatthereis not suchgreatlegaldiversity in the Arabworldas mightbe assumed.Moreover,priortOthe l9th century,he pointsout, uncodifiedIslamicjurisprudence wasappliedthroughouttheregion(p. 8). In termsof legal reform)says al-Sanhuri,the Arabworldhas passedthroughtWO stages:(1) the codification-albeitpariial-of Islamiclaw concerningcivil malters (whichhe specifiesas concerningfinancialtransactions(muXamalat al-maliyya)and coveringrealand personalrights)in the codificationsof theMajallaand the Murshid al-hayran; and(2) the new civil codesof EgyptarldIraq.This secondstageconstitutes "thepresent"for al-Sanhuri,in termsof boththeoryandpractice. The Iraqi code takes the Majallaas its main source,supplementedwith several recentlyenactedIraqilaws (mainlythe LandLawandotherlawsregardingproperty rights)and is closerto the Shari'athanis the EgyptianCivilCodewhich took as its basicstartingpointthe old Egyptiancivilcodes.However,the newEgyptiancodewas neededfor the Iraqicodeto be completed.The new Egyptiancodeservedas a model, al-Sanhurisays, in termsof the divisionsusedto organisethe Iraqimaterial,and for the additionallegalrulesneededto fillin certainareasof thecivillaw,textsweretaken fromthe Egyptiancode(pp. 1g20). It should be rememberedthat in his initialeffortsto producea new Iraqicode (suprapartV) al-Sanhurihadbegunwitha synthesisof "modernWesterncodes",and hisworkon thesecodeshadbeencompletedby the timehe returnedto de Iraqicode in 1943afterhis completionof the draftof the Egyptiancode. By the sametoken,his workon the Iraqicode, togetherwithhis scholarship andteachingof comparativelaw usingthe Majallaand the Murshid,had providedhim the basis for his workon the Islamiclaw provisionsin the Egyptiancode. The experiencesgainedfromhis initial workin Iraq,commentsthe abovementioned Egyptianscholar: openedIslaniicjurisprudence for him as it hadnot beenopenedfor him before, . . . therehe wasconfrontedwiththe problemsof its applicaiions,anditS intricacies,procedures,andinstrumentaliiies.(al-Bishri,(1985),p. 633) The Iraqicode, saysal-Sanhuri,was"thefirstmoderncodeto jointogetherIslamic jurisprudence and modernWesternlaw on an equal basis", and it was "the most importantexperiencein moderncivil codificaiion"(al-Sanhuri,(1962), p. 24). The newIraqicode therefore"takesgreatstrides"in al-Sanhuri's;'secondstage". Init we put togetherthecodifiedprovisionsof theIslamiclawandset thembesideWesternlaw, asrepresentedin the new Egyptiancode " . . and this pavesthe way for the thirdand final stage,the re-birthof Islamicjurisprudence) . . . for the daywhenthis jurisprudence becomes thesourcefor moderncilrilprovisions,whenit becomesas well-adaptedtO the currentsof the civilizaiion of the presentage as the mostmodernandprogressive codes. (pp. 22-23) Beforethis can happen,however,the detailedworkof developingIslarnicjurisprudence(indicatedabove)must takeplace. This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions AL-SANHURI AND ISLAMIC LAW 209 Islamiclawis asmuchanarchaiclawasis Romanlaw,butit is nolessprecisein itslogic,orin orin beingableto develop.(p.23) of expression, strength The outlinesof the futuredialecticarethus ableto be detected,if al-Sanhuri'sspecificationsarefollowed:Islamiclegal theoryversusWesternlegalrules,andwhen the Westernrulesreflecta differentunderlyingtheorythey areto be eliminatedand new rulesput in theirplace,rulesthatarereflectiveof Islamiclegaltheory. The goal towardswhichI an strivingis that therewill be an Arabcivil codederivedprimarily fromthe IslaIIiicShari'a.(p. 23) In light of the fact that al-Sanhuri'swork would seem to straddiethe two issues which, morethananyothers,energisescholarshipand politicsin Egyptand the Arab world - Arabunity andeheapplicationof Islamiclaw-the virtualoblivioninto which al-Sanhuri'swork has fallen may, perhaps,seem surprising.Certainlythe political showdownwith the leadersof the 1952Revolutionoverthe sanctityof the judiciary and the returnto a rule of law and constitutionthatendedhis publiclife in 1954has hadsomethingto do withthis. But thereis also, it wouldseem,anotherconsideration. Fromhis earliestwritingson the Caliphate,throughouthis laterscholarshipandcode draftings,al-Sanhuri'swork had a determinedsecularorientation.He consistently maintainedthat Islamas civilisationis separablefromIslamas religion,and that the developmentof Islamicjurisprudenceconcernedthe former. Al-Sanhuri'ssecularismcertainlydiffersfromthat of someonelike 'Abd al-Raziq. In the contextof the debateof the 1920s(suprapartIII) 'Abdal-Raziqmaintainedthat the Caliphatehad no basisin law, while al-Sanhuripresentedthe Caliphateas partof the public law of Islam. However, presenttrendswhich call for the renewedapplicationof Islamiclaw, generallydo not acceptthatIslamiclaw can be separatedfrom religion.Exemplifyingsuch trends,Tariqal-Bishriremarks: To the end, the matterfor him remainedstrictlydefinedwithinthe frameworkof pure,unconwith religionand its sources without conneciingthis jurisprudence taniinatedjurisprudeIlce, andoriginsin the Koranandthe Sunna.(al-Bishri,(1985),p. 633) The chargeof not connectingIslamicjurisprudencewith religionis certainlycorrect. Nothing additionalabout this needs to be said. But that he was operatingin a unconnectedwith its sourcesin the Koranand Sunna, realmof "purejurisprudence" I believe, is not tenable,inasmuchas thatis preciselyfromwherethe IslamicShurina, as developedby the legalscholarsof Islam,originallyderives. This complaintconcerningal-Sanhuris secularbias does, however, signify the dominantapproachto the revivalof Islamiclaw todayand why it is often associated Fundamentalism semanticallyandactually-signiwith "Islamicfundamentalism". fies goingbackto origins.In the contextof Islamiclaw, it meansignoringthe centuries of legal developmentand the jurisprudenceof the scholarsin favor of direct nterpretatlono t zeorlgma sources. The fundamerltalistapproachis for the masses, the methodof al-Sanhuriis for those learnedin the law. Our age is for the masses,not for jurist-scholars,and that perhapsis the real reason why one eulogy to al-Sanhuriwas entitled: "The Man WhomWe Forgot"(Gami'i,(1972)). . . . . This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 210 ARAB LAW QUARTERLY EPILOGUE ISLAMIC LAW AND CIVIL CODE Recent Developments 'Abd al-Razzaqal-Sanhurimay have been relegatedto the statusof minorpolitical actor,half forgotten,by the historicalmemoryof Egypt. The CivilCode, however, remainsthe basiclaw of Egypt, and al-Sanhuri'smulti-volumedcommentaryis still the authoritative basisfor its interpretation. The issue of islamicisingthe laws, however,is also verymuchpartof the present scene.Althoughmoreor less dormantduringthe 1950sand 1960s,theissuewasto reemergeat the beginningof the 1970s.Inevitably,the questionof the Islamiccontent of the CivilCodealsoappeared. Firstcamea new consiitutionin 1971,the firstconstitutionin Egypt'smodernhistorywhichprovidedexplicitlythat"theShari'ais a principalsourceof (Egypt's)law" (ARE,(1985a),p. 998;Habachy,(1985),p. 105).In 1971,however,constitutionalism was at a low ebb, andlittle attentionwas paidat the timeto the particularinnovation in Article2. Al-Sanhurihad, afterall, includedsimilarlanguagein the firstarticleof the CivilCode.Then therewas a movementon threefronts:The constitutionality of the CivilCodewaschallengedin the courts,committeesof theMailisal-sha'b(parliament) begandrafting"Islamiccodes", and Article2 of the 1971Constitutionwas amended. The constitutionalissue derivedfroma casewhichwas broughtbeforethe Majlis al-dawlaby one, FuadGudah,againstal-AzharUniversityto collectanunpaiddebtof someLE 592, beingthe balanceowedon the priceof surgicalinstrumerlts suppliedto the Facultyof Medicine.The courtheld for the plaintiffanddirectedal-Azharto pay the amountowingtogether withinterestat therateof 4 percent.The Rectorof al-Azhar appealed.In the courseof the appealproceedings,the constitutionality of Article226 of the CivilCodewaschallenged.Article226specifiesthatinterestshallbe chargedon debtsfromthe datea judicialclaimis submitted.In the pleaof non-constitutionality it was contendedthatArticle226 was in conflictwith the Shan'asince the Shan'a forbids the paymentof riba(usuallytranslatedas "interest").In its sessionof 3 April 1978the High AdministrativeCourtsuspendedits hearingsand sent the case to the Constitutional Court(ARE,(1985a),p. 993). Also in 1978,in its sessionof 17 December,the Mailisal-sha'bpasseda resolution forniinga specialcommitteeto study proposalsfor applyingthe rulesof the Shari'a andfor theircodification(ARE,(1982),p. 33).18On 20 June 1982specialcommittees wereformedto reviewthe workof the committeesforcodifyingtheShan'a.On 1 July 1982reportsof specialcommitteeswere subrIiittedtogetherwith draftcodes which were on that date referredto the Legislativeand ConstitutionalCommittee(ARE, (1982),pp. 3241; ARE, (1985b),p. 35). The draftcodeswereprintedas appendices to the transcriptof thatsessionof theMailisandincludedthe following: 18 There was an indication by Mumtaz Nassar, speaking in the Mailisal-sha'b, 4 May 1985, however, that work in this direction of some kind may have begun earlier:"Since 1976 the Mailis(al-sha'b) began the preparationof studies with the formation of committees and gathering materials, a number of the studies which . . . (concerned) legislating the Shari'ain all the texts of the present laws". (ARE, (1985b), p. 18) This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions AL-SANHURI AND ISLAMIC LAW 211 Draft Law of CivilTransactions(morethan 1,000articles); -- Draft Law of Evidence(181 articles); Draft Law of Liiigation(513 ariicles); Draft Law of CriminalPenalties(635 articles); -Draft Law of MaritimeCommerce(443 ariicles); -Draft Law of Commerce(776 ariicles);(1985b),p. 19)19 No furtheractionwas takenin the Mailisuntil4 May 1985. Meanwhile,in May 1980 the Constitutionof 1971 was amended.Passedby the Majlisal-sha'bandsllbmittedto referendumon 22 May 1980the languageof Article2 of the 1971Constitution henceforthwas to read: Islamis the religionof the StateandArabicis its officiallanguage.Islamicjurisprudence is the principalsourceof legislation.(ARE, (1980),p. 7) (emphasisadded) The purposeof this amendment,said the specialcommitteewhich had draftedthe amendmentin a reportsubmittedto andapprovedby the Mailisal-sha'bin July 1979, was "to requiretheMailisal-shanb,when seekinga ruleof law, to haverecourseto the rulesof the Shan'a to the exclusionof anyothersystemof law"andin orderto insure that "legislationdoes not contradictthe foundationsand generalprinciplesof the Shari'a"(quotedin ARE, (1985a),p. 997). The GeneralCommitteeof the Majlisalshab in a reportapprovedon 15 September1981was morespecificas to the meaning of the amendment: This amendrnentmeansthatit is no longerpossiblein the futureto enactanylegislationwhich contradictsthe rulingsof Islamiclaw. It alsomeansthe necessityof reviewingthe lawswhich werein effect beforethe applicationof the Constitutionof 1971and the amendingof them to bring them into conformitywith the rules of the Shari'a.(quoted in ARE, ( 1985a), p. 998/Habachy,(1985)p. 105) However,the Reportcautionsthat: thechangefromthe legalsystempresentlyexisiingin Egypt, . . . tOa completelyIslamiclegal systemwill requirepatienceandproceedingwith the utmostcareas regardspracticalconsiderations.... If the legal system in its entiretyis to be changed,a suitableperiodof iime is neededto allowthe compilationof theselawsandto organizethemwithinthe frameworkof the Koranand Sunna)and the opimonsof the Muslimjurists.(p. 998/p. 105) On4 May 1985, the decisionof the ConstitutionalCourtin the al-Azharcase was announced.Simultaneously,the Mailisal-sha'bwas debatingthe matterof the applicationof the Shan'a in Egypt. In rejectingthe pleaof the non-constitutionality of Article226 of the CivilCodethe Courtsaid: Onlythe legal enactInentsissued afterthe cominginto effect of the obligationto conformto IslamicLaw areaffected;. . . legalenactmentswhichante-datedthe amendmentarenot affectedby the obligaiionto conformbecausethey werein existencebeforethat limitationbecame duefor implementaiion.(p. 9971p. 104) 19As surrunarised by DeputySheikhSalahAbuIsma'ilduringthe debateof 4 May1985.Althoughthese draft codesappearedas partof the proceedingsof theMailisal-sha'bandbeartheirimprint,circulationhas beenextremelylimited. This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 212 ARAB LAW QUARTERLY The "truepurposeof the 1980amendmentto Article20 of the Constitution",saidthe Court,is that it is intendedto be "a limitationon the powerof the legislaliveauthority"as to the sourcesfromwhichit shoulddrawits rulesof law(p. 999/p. 105). Otherwise,the implicationwould be that "all past legislationwhich contradicts Shari'aprinciplesshouldbe scrapped",said the Court,and such a situationwould "clearlyleadto contradictions andconfusionin the judicialprocessin a mannerwhich wouldthreatenstability".Moreover: hadthe legislatorof theConsiituiionwantedto incorporate theprinciplesof theShari'a into the Consiituiionspecifically,or had he intendedthat these principlesbe enforcedby the courts withoutthe need to formulatethemas specificlegislaiivetextsaccordingto the set procedures of the Consiituiion--hedid not lackthe authorityso to provide,clearlyandexplicitly.(p. 999/ p. 105-106) However,restrictingtheapplicabilityof the constitutional amendmentto futurelegislation "does not exemptthe legislatorfrom responsibilityfor the past laws", continuedthe Court,especiallythose "in contradiction to the principlesof the Shari'a". It is, moreover,the legislator'sresponsibility"to takethe initiativein siftingout any infringementof the aforementionedprinciplesfrom the texts of these laws". Ultimately,in orderthattherebe harmonybetweenpastandfuturelegislation,"theyall mustagreewith theseprinciples"(pp. 999-1000/p.106). In assessingthe significanceof this decision,SabaHabachy,friendandcontemporary of al-Sanhuri,has highlightedtwo featuresfor particularcomment.In denying retroactiveeffect to the amendmentto Article2 andinterpretingthe changeto mean that the Sharinais to be the main sourceoffuturelegislation,"the responsibilityfor implementingArticle2 of the Constitutionas amended(has been) shiftedfrom the judicialto the legislativeauthority"(Habachy,(1986),p. 240). He aIsonotesthatthe Courthasquoteda "significantphrase"frompreparatory reportsconcerningthe proposedamendmentto Article2 of the Constitution.Thisphrasedeprecates: the changefrom the presentlegal systemof Egyptwhichgoes backmorethanone hundred yearsandits replacementby a completesystemof Islarniclaw. The sourceof the quotedlanguageis the Reportof the GeneralCommitteeof theMajlis al-sha'bat the time the Amendmentwasbeingconsidered(seeabove).The Court, commentsDr Habachy,"recognises. . . the necessityof changeof lawin the Shan'a accordingto the requirementsof timeandplace"(p. 240). The languagequoted by the Court,referredto above, carriesthe furtherimplication,of course,thatthe presentlegalsystemis alsopartof Egypt'slegalheritage. But the primesignificanceof this decision,althoughbasedon a legal technicality and addingnothingto the "centuries-oldargument"concernint,interest,is, for Dr Habachy,"that it has saved, not merelyArticle226, but the entire new Egyptian Codeof ProfessorSanhuriof whichthe articlein questionis a part"(p. 240). The savingof al-Sanhuri'sCivilCodewith one fell swoopof the judicialpen went largelyunnoticedbecause,on the sameday, Egypt'sConstitutional Courtannounced anotherdecision,anxiouslyawaitedfor manymonthsand muchmorepublicised.It was a case concerningfamilylaw, also broughtas a constitutionalchallengeon the strengthof the amendedArticle2 of the Constitution,this timeto the PersonalStatus This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions AL-SANHURI AND ISLAMIC LAW 213 Lawof 1979("Jihan'sLaw")whichwasdeclaredunconstitutional. This lawhaddone suchunspeakably'Cun-Islamic'' thingsas allowa divorcedwife to continueto live with her childrenin the apartrnent of marriage,andgive a wife the rightto applyfor a divorce when her husbandmarriedanotherwoman.20The Egyptian generalpublicwas at that momentin historyconsiderablymoreinterestedin apartments)divorcesand polygamousmarriagesthanin the savingof the CivilCode. Nor was there, generallyspeaking,public consciousnessof the debatethat same day in the Maylisal-sha'bon the same issue the meaningof the Constitutions amendedArticle2. The MailisaZ-shaXb debatetook placepursuantto the submission in that session of the Reportof the Committeeon Religious and SocialAffairs,the thirdsectionof whichwasentitled,<'Revision of the lawsinsofaras theyarein contradictionwith the rulesof theShari'a'.The Reportinterpretsthe constitutionalamendment as meaning: that the present laws should be reviewed in stages, in a scieniific manner, and those features that contradict the principles of the Shan'a, a matter on which all parties and political Orlentat1ons agree. revised . . Whenthe presentlegislativetexts arereviewed: what is not in contradiction with the principles of the Shan'a should be left alone, while that which does contradict the rules and principles of the Shari'ashould be revised) having concern for legisIative stability, and the judicial and jurisprudential heritage; and t}}e revisions should be in harmony with the condiiions of society. (ARE, (1985b), p. 13) TheReportspeaksof the CivilCodeas <'thebasiclawand support of the legalsystem ofthe State"and refersto a decisionof the Makkamat al-naqd (Courtof Cassation)in itssessionof 27 July 1980: which affirmed that the rules of the present Civil Code were enacted after lengthy study and reflection. Morever) the majority of them have their origin in the rules of the Shan'a, except in afew rare instances, as is confirmed in the explanatory memorandum (of the Code) where the origin of these rules in Islartiic jurisprudence is stated . .: (Therefore) there is no need to revise the rules of the present civil law; it is enough to amend the texts that conflict with the Shan'a.(p. 14) Anumberof deputiesspoke. Commentsrangedfrom expressionof supportfor the partof the Report that spoke of the applicationof Islamic legislationnot requiring abolition of all otherlaws)to the callingof attentionof the deputiesto the factthatthe draft Islamiccodeshadbeenlanguishingin committeesince 1982.All attestedto their support for the Shari'aandseveralspokeof the ;'purification of the laws" The governmenthada positionpaperon the issue,andat the close of the debatethe Government's communicationwas read. Therewere six points, the generalsense of which is as follows: (1) Egypt's legal system is one of stable laws which have their basis in the Shan'a)the CivilCodebeinga good example; The decision of unconstitutionality was, however, based on technical rather than substantive grounds. The Court said in its opinion that reform of family laws was not of sufficient urgency to justify the use of exceptional presidential decree-law powers delegated by the legislature for use in emergeneies or while the Mailis al-shayb wasin recess. 20 This content downloaded from 128.111.121.42 on Thu, 19 Sep 2013 09:50:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 214 ARAB LAW QUARTERLY (2) The judiciaryin Egyptis firmlyestablishedwithits system embeddedin the constitutionandthe lawswhichagreewiththe principlesof theShan'a;it wouldbe no smallmatterto rebuildsucha systemandmuchof valuein pasteffortswouldbe destroyedin the process.Thereforeit is preferableto work on developingwhat alreadyexists,accordingto the Shari'a; (3) The principlesof the Islamicreligioncall for a societyof equality,justice, sufficiency,toleranceandotherqualitiesof whichwe canbe justlyproud in frontof the wholeworld;andourworkis to assuresucha society; (4) There is consensuson the principlesof the Shan'a concerningcivil transactions;only in somedetailsis therecontroversy,andthe controversial issuesmust be studiedcarefully; (5) Egypt has never been isolated from the world and interactswith what happenstodaythroughoutthe world;we must find waysto surmount the present burdensof ourinternational commoditytransactions (amountingto morethanfifty per cent of GNP), so thatwe maybenefitfromthem; (6) All sects of Egyptiansocietyacceptdrawingour legislation fromthe Sharina and the applicationof Shan'aprinciplesconcerningsuch things as utility, necessity, andthe avoidanceof harm.(ARE,(1985b),p. 35) Amotionto approvethe Reportof the Committeeon Religious andSocialAffairsand thestatementof the Governmentwas passedby a showof hands.A motionto bring thedraftcodespresentlyin the LegislativeandConstitutional Committeeto the floor wasnot submittedto a vote because,the Speakerexplained"yet again",therewere presentlyno draftlaws or proposalsfor draftlaws beforethe present sessionof the Assembly,any suchmattersbeforea previoussessionhavingdiedwith the endingof thatsession.If any memberwishedto submitproposalsfor draft laws, he must first "clearthe road" of the restrictionsprescribedby the parliamentaryprocedures (p.35). 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