In his insightful book Human Rights as Politics and Idolatry, Michael Ignatieff observes that "[t]he challenge of Islam has been there from the beginning."1 Ignatieff is not alone among Western observers. And in this context, I would like to begin by stating up front that I am neither an opponent of human rights per se nor among those tradition-bound Muslims- though that I am-who abstain from either endorsing the construct or rejecting it outright, presumably as an exercise of sorts in "passive resistance." Similarly, I do not believe, as another scholar characterizes the position of revealed religion, that "human rights are a secular usurpation of the rights of God."2 In fact, as I will show, for well over half a millennium,