Rights in Islam are divided into two categories. One concerns divine rights (Huququllah) and the other, human rights (Huququl Ibad). Though divine rights are superior to human rights, this difference is only a matter of belief or doctrine.
In theory, divine rights and human rights are different; but in a practical sense, both the rights: divine and human, are so interrelated that sometimes it becomes impossible to separate one from the other. In fact, it is the observance of divine rights that paves the way for observance of human rights in the true sense of the word. For instance, the first and foremost divine right is Tawheed, that is, to declare the oneness of God, without associating anything with Him.
As the Quran says: Say, “He is God, the One. He is self-sufficient He begets not, nor was He begotten.” (THE QURAN, 112: 1-3)
This belief of Tawheed helps man realize the fact that there is nothing superior to, or greater than God. All creatures, including human beings, irrespective of their external differences, are equal in dignity as well as in responsibility before the one and only God. Anyone who abuses or humiliates or ridicules others, abuses the Creator indirectly. Such commandments abound in the Quran and Hadith and show that divine rights and human rights are so interdependent that they become complementary to one another.