Excerpt:
The latest issue of the Islamic Horizons magazine of the Islamic Society of North America, a U.S. Muslim Brotherhood entity, has an article with an interesting message: The U.S could learn from Islamic law if it weren't for the "Islamophobes" bashing Sharia.
The theme of the article is that "Islamophobes" are twisting the meaning of Sharia, and it is up to Muslim-Americans to set the record straight. In a game of semantics reminiscent of the campaign to get the media to stop using the word "Islamist" and the "My Jihad" campaign, the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) is now turning to the words "Sharia" and "fiqh."
The article argues that critics are actually talking about siyasa, or Islamic administration. Sharia is "divine" and fiqh is Islamic legal rulings. Yet what the article doesn't explain is that Siyasa is fiqh and fiqh is part of Sharia.