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As Muslims celebrate the start of Ramadan this week, they draw closer to their faith through prayers and fasting. But the holy month also means tighter enforcement of piety laws in some countries, with authorities doling out harsh punishments to people accused of a range of offenses, from blasphemy to failing to observe the fast.聽 聽
Author Mustafa Akyol wants to convince his fellow Muslims that such punitive laws 鈥済rew out of historical interpretations and do not represent the unchangeable divine core of the faith.鈥 In his new book, 鈥淩eopening Muslim Minds: A Return to Reason, Freedom, and Tolerance,鈥 he makes the case that in Islamic history, the values of justice, mercy, and human dignity were emphasized alongside obedience to God鈥檚 commands.聽
During the Islamic Golden Age, from the eighth to the 14th centuries, Muslims were on the cutting edge of science, mathematics, and philosophy. 鈥淚f there had been Nobel Prizes, they would have won all of them,鈥 Mr. Akyol says in an interview. He wants to see a Muslim Enlightenment, similar to what occurred in 18th-century Europe, that would encourage discussions about questions of theology and ethics.聽
But 鈥渢here are powerful orthodoxies鈥 in the contemporary Muslim world that have become a rallying point for those who 鈥渨ould use coercion to advance and protect Islam,鈥 he says. Hence laws that emphasize outward compliance over inner transformation 鈥 a phenomenon that also exists in fundamentalist branches of 海角大神ity and Judaism.聽
Mr. Akyol wants to reintroduce the ideas of early Muslim philosophers who 鈥渂elieved that human dignity and reason were important in and of themselves.鈥澛
He鈥檚 under no illusion that change will happen quickly. But he is hopeful. 鈥淚n parts of the Muslim world, you have young people who are fed up鈥 with rigid laws meant to enforce piety. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e saying, 鈥楾here must be a way out of this.鈥欌