Part 3
By Khalil
Fabricated Sharia: An Analysis of ISIS’s Distorted Juridical System
After a close examination of ISIS’s intellectual and ideological foundations, whose roots trace back to the deviant doctrines of the early Khawarij in the first centuries of Islamic history, a fundamental question arises: how does this takfiri organization justify its killings, military campaigns, and claims to authority in the name of religion and Islamic law?
The construction of an elaborate apparatus of religious deception, coupled with the assertion that it alone was implementing “pure Sharia” as the basis of an Islamic caliphate, formed one of ISIS’s central pillars. It relied on this very framework to recruit followers, mobilize fighters, and establish footholds among populations and cities alike. Through it, the killing of opponents was recast as an act of worship, and the seizure of towns and territories was branded as “conquest.” With extraordinary brazenness and audacity, ISIS distorted and fabricated Sharia itself.
For this reason, a careful study of ISIS’s deviant juridical system is indispensable to grasping the depth of its departure from Islamic tradition. This article maintains that ISIS, operating as an opportunistic and self-serving movement, pursued a method of reverse engineering: it first fixed its political and military objectives and then, through the manipulation and falsification of religious texts, erected a legal and theological façade to legitimize them.
This process can be analyzed along three broad lines:
distortion in the method of understanding religion;
distortion in the rulings that were issued;
distortion in the ultimate objectives of Sharia.
The first distortion lay in the very method of interpreting religion. In fashioning a jurisprudence tailored to its own aims, ISIS abandoned the established principles of usul al-fiqh (Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence) that command consensus among the Islamic schools of law and the great jurists of the tradition. Its earliest and most conspicuous methodological deviation was a willful disregard for textual context and for the historical circumstances in which Qur’anic verses were revealed.
As an illustration, ISIS ignored the setting and occasions of revelation of the Qur’an’s verses concerning jihad, verses that were revealed in response to concrete acts of aggression by polytheists and Infidels, and instead pressed them into service for its own malign ends. These same verses were repurposed to rationalize indiscriminate violence and crimes against anyone deemed a political or ideological rival.
Such an approach stands in open contradiction to the interpretive methods recognized throughout Islamic legal schools, where careful attention to a verse’s background and causes of revelation is considered indispensable to sound understanding.
The second distortion consisted in suspending the very objectives of Sharia. Islamic jurists affirm that the ultimate aims of Islamic law are the preservation of religion, life, intellect, lineage, and property. ISIS, however, trampled these lofty Islamic and human values in practice. The mass killing of innocents, the destruction of institutions and infrastructure, and the deliberate manufacture of insecurity that tears apart the fabric of society were all, within ISIS’s juridical framework, justified by slogans such as “preparing the ground for the implementation of the caliphate.” In substance, this amounted to replacing the higher purposes of Sharia with narrow political and factional ambitions.
The third distortion was a calculated and systematic reliance on fabricated, weak, or baseless narrations. To legitimize its inhumane and un-Islamic conduct, as well as its apocalyptic and geopolitical claims, this takfiri and deviant group routinely invoked hadiths and narrations whose chains of transmission have been rejected or judged unreliable in authoritative works of hadith criticism and biographical evaluation.
This selective practice makes clear that ISIS’s governing criterion was not the authenticity of a report, but whether its content could be made to serve a pre-established ideology and creed.
It is therefore clear that ISIS’s jurisprudence was a counterfeit one. From the outset, the movement harbored criminal designs and only afterward fashioned religious pretexts to cloak them. This system of law was not devised to guide people, but to deceive them, to rationalize terror, and to spread fear. Grasping the mechanics of this deception is essential, for it reveals ISIS as among Islam’s most implacable enemies and shows how profoundly it has damaged the image of the faith through deliberate distortion.
Confronting such anti-religious and anti-human thought demands a sustained intellectual struggle and cannot be waged by weapons alone. Minds must be freed from these fabricated interpretations that are propagated in the name of Islam, and the falsifications at their core must be exposed with clarity and resolve.

















































