Hisbah


Hisbah is an Islamic doctrine which means "accountability". Hisbah is an individual or collective duty to intervene and "enjoin good and forbid wrong" in order to maintain the norms of sharia. The doctrine is based on an expression from the Quran. Differences in scholarly debates over the duty to “command right and forbid wrong” stemmed from the positions taken by jurists on questions regarding who precisely was responsible for carrying out the duty, to whom it was to be directed, and what its performance entailed. Often, these debates were framed according to what Michael Cook calls the “three modes” tradition, a tradition based on a prophetic hadith which identifies the “heart”, “tongue”, and “hand” as the three proper “modes” by which one should fulfill the obligation. Depending on a number of factors both intrinsic and extrinsic to their legal schools, scholars apportioned this labor in differing ways, some reserving the execution of the duty by “tongue” for the scholars and by “hand” for the political authorities or those, such as the muḥtasib, invested with the authority to carry out the duty on their behalf, and others arguing that these modes extended to all qualified believers. In modern times, the term has been used in some countries as a rationale for Islamic religious police.

Description

The Hisbah has the following major aspects:
For example, in Saudi Arabia, the state establishment responsible for hisbah is the Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice, or hay'a.
In a minority of Islamic states, namely Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Aceh province of Indonesia, and Iran, there is an establishment of Islamic religious police. In some places, it is state-established; in others, it is independent of the state.
Hisbah doctrine has been invoked by Islamic prosecutors in cases of apostasy and acts of blasphemy. For example, in Egypt, Nasr Abu Zayd, a Muslim scholar "critical of old and modern Islamic thought" was prosecuted under the doctrine when his academic work was held to be evidence of apostasy.