Mufti (pronounced muhf-tee (U) or muff-tee (non-U))
(1) Civilian clothes, in contrast with military or other
uniforms worn (as applied to persons who usually wear a uniform (used in the English-speaking
world except North America); the synonym is civvies.
(2) As Islamic scholar & jurist expert in the shari’a
law and the interpretation of legal principles written in the Koran who issues
fatwas.
(3) In the Ottoman Empire, a deputy to the Sultan’s chief
adviser on matters of Islamic law.
(4) As Grand Mufti, a senior figure in some Islamic
systems.
(5) The acronym of Minimum Use of Force and Tactical
Intervention, used in the military and law enforcement.
1580-1590: From the Ottoman Turkish مفتی (müftî), from
the Arabic مُفْتِي (muftī) (one who delivers a fatwa (literally “deliverer of formal
opinion”), from مُفْتٍ (muftin), the
active participle of أَفْتَى (ʾaftā) (to give), a conjugated
form of fata (he gave a (legal)
decision). The use to describe civilian
clothes (worn by military officers when off-duty) as opposed to military
uniform dates from 1816 and was a term used in the British Indian Army under
the Raj. The origin is murky but is
presumed to reference a mufti’s costume of robe and slippers in stage plays of
the time and was thus a synecdoche for plain clothes. The archaic alternative spellings in English
were muftee & mufty; the noun plural is muftis.
Of Muftis, the Sheikhs, Mullahs, Imams and Ayatollahs
Sheikh Hasina Wazed (b1947; Prime Minister of Bangladesh 1996-2001 & since 2009).
Like many religions, In Islam there are a number of titles, some of which seem to overlap and the use in one place can in detail differ from the duties and responsibilities undertaken in another. An added complication is that Islam does not have the same distinctions between religious and other matters familiar in many other faiths. A Mullah (the word a substitute for molvi or molai) is one who has studied and attained a degree in the fields of Hadith, Tafseer & Fiqh from any authentic Jamia or Madrassah (University of Islamic Sciences) and holds a qualification of Sanad or Ijazat-e-Hadees. A student is announced Scholar (Molvi) in a graduation ceremony after when he has attained Ijazat e Hadith from his teacher of Hadith (Sheikh-ul-Hadith). With this qualification, the graduate is deemed able to understand & explain Ahadith (plural of Hadith (the entire collection of hadiths (sayings and deeds) of Muhammad within a particular branch of Islam or Islamic jurisprudence). A Mufti is one who, after graduating, has undertaken further study in a specialization in one or more of the field such as law or history. A Mufti is able to issue a fatwa, a written authorized verdict on any of the Islamic problems brought to his attention. The best known of these judgments are those associated with Dar-ul-ifta (the institution with the authority to write and publish verdicts on the Islamic issues of every nature). A Grand Mufti is the highest ranked Mufti at a Dar-ul-ifta and can be thought of as something like a chief judge in a court but, because Islam is structurally more integrated than the pattern understood in many countries, such comparisons are merely indicative.
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini (1900-1989; supreme leader of Iran 1979-1989).
The widely used Sheikh is often misunderstood. It is an honorific title for someone and need
not be formally conferred and, unusually, it can be used by women; a mark of
respect vaguely similar to “sir” in English or “san” in Japanese. However, in some parts of the Arab world, Sheikh
can be used instead of mufti (or molvi).
An Imam is a leader, the term used for a recognized religious scholar or
authority in Islam and in Sunni Islam, it is the Imam is the one who leads formal
prayers, even in locations beyond a mosque and for a mosque formally to be
constituted, there must be an imam to lead the prayers, even if in
circumstances it may be someone from the gathered congregation rather than an appointed
official. Such a person is chosen on the
basis of their knowledge of the Quran, and Sunnah (the prophetic tradition) and
their good character; their age is not relevant. Imams, formal and otherwise are almost always
male and in some traditions exclusively so but in some cultures women certainly
lead women in prayer and there is a long history of women fulfilling the role when
the congregation is comprised exclusively of family members, even if it
includes men. The Sunni branch of Islam
does not have imams in the same sense as the Shi'a where the role is best understood
in the position of Ayatollah, the most famous of which are those of the Islamic
Republic of Iran. The founder of that
state, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, was within the country usually referred to as
“the Imam”, a courtesy title not extended to his successor.
The Führer and the Grand Mufti, Berlin, 1941.
The 1941 meeting in Berlin between Adolf Hitler (1889-1945; Nazi head of government 1933-1945 & head of state 1934-1945) and the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem (Mohammed Amin al-Husseini (1897–1974) Mufti (Grand Mufti after 1922) of Jerusalem 1921-1948) cast a long shadow. In 2015 then Israeli prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (b 1949; prime minister 1996-1999 & 2009- 2021) claimed Hitler at the time of the meeting was not considering exterminating the Jews, but only expelling them from Europe and that it was al-Husseini who inspired the genocide of the holocaust to ensure they didn’t come to Palestine. Mr Netanyahu is marvelously unscrupulous and inclined, where there's some gap or inconsistency in the historical record, to insert alternative facts which suit his purposes.
The only record of the meeting is the official German report,
published decades ago and there’s nothing in it to support Mr Netanyahu’s
accusations. Of course, an official
government record of a meeting involved his head of state may not be a complete
record of the conversation and it may be that the views attributed to the mufti
by Mr Netanyahu are exactly those expressed to the Führer and not included in
the official record for reasons of political sensitivity. It’s just that there’s no basis for the
accusation and that all the available evidence does confirm the Nazis had
months before the meeting taken the decision to proceed with the holocaust and
the planning was well-advanced before the mufti arrived in Berlin. The mufti was anti-Semitic and collaborated
with the Nazis as a broadcaster and propagandist, helping recruit Balkan
Muslims to form a division of the Waffen-SS.
He also appears to have known about the Holocaust as early as 1943 but
there is no evidence to support the assertion he was in 1941 either its inspiration
or even an advocate.
Australia’s most entertaining mufti was the Egyptian-born
Sheikh Taj
El-Din Hamid Hilaly (b 1941; Mufti of Australia 1988-2007), After a quiet start he was never far from the
news but his most celebrated moment came in 2006 when he delivered a sermon
discussing the relationship between rape and the clothing women choose to wear. The essence of his message was:
Were one to leave uncovered meat in the street, in the garden, in the park or in the backyard, just leave it without a cover, when the cat comes and eats it, is that the fault of the cat or the uncovered meat? Of course it is the fault of the uncovered meat. If she was in her room, in her home, in her hijab, no problem would have occurred.
Covered meat: Lindsay Lohan in hijab (al-amira).
After repeating his comments in public, there was an
unfavorable reaction and he issued a statement: "I unreservedly apologize
to any woman who is offended by my comments. I had only intended to protect
women's honor, something lost in (the newspaper’s) presentation of my talk. I would like to unequivocally confirm that
the presentation related to religious teachings on modesty and not to go to
extremes in enticements. This does not condone rape. I condemn rape. Women in our Australian society have the
freedom and right to dress as they choose; the duty of man is to avert his
glance or walk away."