SHARIA LAW
IN GREAT BRITAIN
The Enclaves Within: Why Britain Must Reclaim Its Sovereignty from Parallel Legal Systems
It is a quiet erosion, the kind that happens not with the blast of a cannon but with the slow, deliberate shuffle of paperwork and the quiet murmur of acquiescence. For decades, the British people have been told that multiculturalism is a strength, that diversity is our dynamism, and that to question the importation of foreign cultural practices is to be “un-British.” Yet, we now find ourselves confronting a reality that cannot be spun by the progressive left: there are over 80 Sharia Courts operating within Great Britain, wielding significant authority over the lives of British citizens, and effectively creating a parallel legal system.
When we look at this fact 80 courts functioning under Islamic law on British soil we are forced to confront a devastating conclusion. It is over for the British if they do not wake up. The nation has lost itself. In a fit of tolerance so extreme it borders on self-harm, the British establishment has given in to a culture that does not assimilate, does not respect Western values, and treats the hospitality of the host nation as a right rather than a privilege.
This is not a matter of religious freedom; it is a matter of sovereignty. For too long, the political class has hidden behind the veil of “cultural sensitivity” while allowing a parallel society to flourish, one where the hard-won rights of British citizens particularly women are contingent upon which door they walk through.
The Illusion of a Single Law
The foundational principle of any sovereign nation is the uniformity of law. In the United Kingdom, we pride ourselves on the legacy of the Magna Carta, the development of common law, and the principle that no man is above the law, and that the law applies equally to all. This principle is the bedrock of a free society. It ensures that a woman in London has the same legal rights and protections as a man in Manchester, regardless of their background.
The existence of Sharia Courts shatters this principle. While proponents argue that these are merely “advisory” or deal only with “family matters,” this is a distinction without a difference. In practice, these councils often operating out of mosques or community centers issue binding religious divorces (talaq) and rule on matters of inheritance and domestic disputes. For many Muslim women, the social and familial pressure to submit to these courts is so immense that the “advisory” nature becomes a coercive reality.
When a nation permits a parallel legal structure to adjudicate the lives of its citizens based on religious doctrine rather than parliamentary law, it has surrendered a piece of its sovereignty. We would never tolerate the establishment of Canon Law courts enforcing strict Catholic doctrine on family matters with the tacit approval of the state; we rightly maintain the separation of church and state. Yet, we have made an exception for Sharia, afraid to be labeled “Islamophobic” for defending the principle of one law for one people.
The Problem of Non-Assimilation
For centuries, the British Isles were a melting pot. Waves of Huguenots, Irish, Jews, and other groups arrived on these shores. While they maintained their cultural heritage, they ultimately assimilated into the British framework of governance, language, and law. They came to *be* British. They understood that they were guests in a nation with a long, established history and that to succeed, they had to respect the customs and legal structures that made Britain what it was.
The current crisis is different. We are witnessing the institutionalization of a culture that does not seek to assimilate but rather to carve out enclaves where British law is secondary. The Sharia Courts are the legal manifestation of this separatism. When a community insists on using a legal framework derived from a 7th-century Arabian context rather than the British Parliament of the 21st century, it signals a refusal to integrate.
This refusal is not merely cultural; it is ideological. There are strains of Islamic thought that view the world in binary terms: Dar al-Islam (the House of Islam) and Dar al-Harb (the House of War). In this worldview, Britain is not a homeland to be loved and cherished, but a temporary abode where Muslims are a minority until the establishment of Islamic supremacy. Whether every individual believer subscribes to this is irrelevant; the existence of formal courts that reject British jurisdiction in favor of religious law suggests that this separatism is being structurally enforced.
Guests Who Have Overstayed Their Welcome
There is a concept in civilized society regarding the treatment of guests. When you invite someone into your home, you offer them hospitality, protection, and kindness. In return, the guest is expected to respect the house rules, treat the host’s family with decency, and show gratitude for the shelter provided. For decades, the British people have been extraordinarily generous. We have opened our welfare state, our National Health Service, and our cities to waves of migration.
But what happens when the guests begin to rewrite the house rules? What happens when they demand that the host’s daughter abide by a different set of laws than the one she was born under?
We have seen the ugly fruits of this lack of appreciation. From the Rotherham and Rochdale grooming gang scandals where predominantly British-Pakistani men were allowed to rape vulnerable white British girls for years because authorities were terrified of being called racist to the “Trojan Horse” scandal where hardline Islamists attempted to take over state schools in Birmingham, the pattern is clear. The establishment’s refusal to assert British cultural and legal dominance has led to a breakdown in social trust and, in the most tragic cases, the systematic abuse of the most vulnerable members of society.
The Sharia Courts are not operating in a vacuum. They are part of an ecosystem that tells migrants and their descendants that they are not truly British, that their loyalty belongs to the ummah (global community) rather than to the United Kingdom. When a woman seeks a divorce through a Sharia Council because she is told her civil divorce is “invalid in the eyes of God,” she is being subjected to a coercion that the British state enables through its willful ignorance.
The Betrayal of Women’s Rights
Perhaps the most damning aspect of the conservative argument against these courts is the betrayal of the principle of equality under the law a principle conservatism holds dear as a guardian of civilizational order. The left, which claims to be the vanguard of women’s rights, has remained largely silent on the issue of Sharia Courts because it requires criticizing a minority culture. Conservatives, who are often accused of not caring about women’s rights, should be the loudest voices against this.
We know that in many Sharia-based adjudications, the testimony of a woman is valued at half that of a man. We know that women face immense pressure to reconcile with abusive husbands to “preserve the family unit” according to religious doctrine. We know that the concept of obedience (ta’a) in marriage is used to enforce patriarchal structures that British feminism ostensibly tore down generations ago.
When the British state allows these courts to exist, it is effectively telling British Muslim women: “Your rights as a British citizen end where your community’s religious leaders say they begin.” This is a betrayal of every suffragette who fought for the vote and every jurist who worked to ensure that a woman’s body and future belong to her alone. A sovereign nation protects its citizens from internal tyranny as much as external threats. By outsourcing justice to religious tribunals, we have abandoned these women to the tyranny of the clerics.
Reclaiming the Nation
So, what is to be done? It is not enough to lament that “it is over.” There is a path forward, but it requires a radical reassertion of British sovereignty and culture. First, the government must end the tacit recognition of Sharia law. The High Court’s 2020 ruling that Sharia councils do not constitute a “parallel legal system” was a semantic dodge. Parliament must pass legislation clarifying that any attempt to adjudicate family law on the basis of religious doctrine, where it contradicts British law, is a matter of legal coercion and is subject to prosecution.
Second, we must end no-fault mass migration. We cannot absorb the world’s poor while maintaining the integrity of our institutions. A nation is a finite entity; it has a culture, a history, and a legal tradition that must be preserved for the native population and for those immigrants who genuinely wish to join it. We need a moratorium on immigration from high-risk areas until we can assure that those who come here do so with the intention of becoming British, not of creating a micro-state governed by pre-Enlightenment rules.
Third, we must re-instill civic nationalism. We must stop apologizing for British history and start teaching the principles of the Enlightenment, common law, and parliamentary sovereignty as the supreme goods they are. Immigrants should be required to pass rigorous tests not just on “life in the UK,” but on the philosophical underpinnings of Western liberalism including the separation of law from religion and the primacy of individual rights over communal religious diktat.
Britain has not yet fallen. But the existence of 80 Sharia Courts is a symptom of a deeper rot: a loss of confidence. The British people have been told for so long that their culture is oppressive, their history is shameful, and their values are outdated that they have begun to believe it. They have allowed themselves to be displaced in their own country.
We must stop giving in. We must stop apologizing. We must reclaim the principle that in Great Britain, there is only one law, and it applies to everyone equally regardless of faith, ethnicity, or origin. If we do not, then the quiet erosion we see today will become a permanent collapse. The guests will have become the masters, and the hosts will have no home left to defend.
#ShariaLaw #Sharia #GreatBritain #England



.png)





.png)







.png)












.jpg)
.jpeg)
.jpg)

.jpeg)










