Ghazaly
Member
- For sustenance, the same with plants. It's prohibited in Sharia to take animals as target for no just cause, i.e. for food. It's prohibited to kill an animal for clothing, unless you will eat it & use its skin. Initially, since the Earth (& all creation) belongs to Allah, any human exercises of rights on the Earth is transgressive, unless by Allah's permission. That's why we have to slaughter our animals in the name of Allah, as a permission from Allah to take their lives for our own sustenance.Thanks!
I have no objections to Islam whatsoever (and I wouldn't dare) and I even like Sufism a lot.
There are some things about Islam that puzzle me though.
* Muslims are mostly not vegetarians, they kill innocent animals for food. Why is this acceptable to muslims?
- Animal wellbeing is paramount in Sharia, as enjoined by the Prophet (pbuh):
- "There is a reward for serving any animate (living being)."
- "There is no person who kills a small bird or anything larger for no just cause, but Allah, the Mighty and Sublime, will ask him about it –it will beseech Allah on the Day of Judgment saying: "O Lord, so and so killed me for no just cause".– "[just cause] is that you slaughter it and eat it, and do not cut off its head and throw it aside."
- "Do not take any living creature as a target."
- "There was a dog moving around a well whom thirst would have killed, an Israeli prostitute saw it and took off her shoe and watered it. So Allah forgave her because of that good deed."
- "A woman was punished and put in Hell because of a cat which she had kept locked till it died of hunger. She did not allow it either to eat or drink as it was confined, nor did she free it so that it might eat the vermin of the earth."
- "A doctor consulted the Prophet about extracting medicine from a frog but he prohibited killing it"
- "When the Prophet marched in his army from al-Araj in the direction of Mecca, he saw a ***** (on the way) whining over its puppies, while they were around her suckling. He commanded one of his men called Ja'il Ibn Suraq'a to stay by its side and guard it so that none of the army would harm it and it puppies"
- No. Sharia seeks to preserve the 6 sacred rights: faith, life, reason, family, property, & honor. Penalties (Hudud) are set to stop capital transgressions against these sacred rights. For instance, transgression against Life is punishable according to "soul for a soul" principle. However, Hudud occupy an insignificant part of the whole of Sharia. As I happen to mention this in a previous post, it's relevant here as well, when you hear Sharia Law it actually refers to Fiqh legal tradition [we don't actually use the term Sharia Law in Arabic at all, that's a western convention], Fiqh branches out in 8 main disciplines:* The Islamic Shariah law seems quite cruel and feels like a type of revenge. Is it part of Islam to take revenge?
- Fiqh Usuli (fundamental jrsprd) = legislation theory – ethical theory – legal theory – constitutional jrsprd – legal maxims...
- Fiqh Madhhabi (scholastic jrsprd) = Hanafi jrsprd – Maliki jrsprd – Shafi'i jrsprd – Hanbali jrsprd – & others...
- Fiqh 'Am (general jrsprd) = debate science – topical jrsprd – consensual jrsprd – differential jrsprd comparative jrsprd...
- Fiqh al-Furu' (branches of jrsprd) = of worship – of habits – of rights – of contracts – of property – of transactions – of relations – of care – of wills – of emancipation – of commerce – of trust – of companies, of endowments...
- Fiqh al-Qadaa (judiciary jurisprudence) = procedural jrsprd – lawsuit jrsprd– dispute jrsprd – proof jrsprd – criminal jrsprd – Penal jurisprudence...
- Fiqh as-Siyasa (political jrsprd) = political theory – administrative pltcs – judiciary politics (pltcs) – fiscal pltcs – public good pltcs – defense pltcs – international pltcs – social pltcs...
- Fiqh al-Fatawa (advisory jrsprd) = case jrsprd – methods of jrsprd – mutfi decorum...
- Tarikh at-Tashri' (history of jrsprd) = origins of jrsprd – developpment of jrsprd – biographies of jurists – of jurisprudents – of judges – of political theorists –
- Diyat (indemnities) = blood-money, wound indemnity...
- Qisas (retributions) = retributions, chastisements, atonements...
- Hubus (isolations) = restraint, confinement, imprisonment, exile...
- Taghrimat (damages) = compensations, fines, forfeits...
- Ta'zirat (discretionary) = discretionary rulings by the judge...
- Hudud (penalties) = what you're probably talking about. <<<< THIS.
- It's a direction of prayer, it's not the direction of Allah! Long story, but we believe the Kaaba is in tandem with Al-Bayt Al-Maamur –a sort of another Kaaba in the Heaven, through which our souls ascend to Heaven.* Allah is the Almighty and surely beyond place and time and yet muslims are instructed to pray to Allah in the direction of one particular spot on earth. Would Allah demand that of muslims and why is that needed?
- Prayer is a matter of ritual worship. We don't do it to exercise, we do it to worship as we are shown.* Islam does not prescribe meditation or yoga asana's (postures) as a means to serve or find Allah. Their form of prayer however seems like a mixture of half prostration to Allah (and in a worldly direction) as a ritual submission and also a very simple short form of yogic asana's. Why not go all the way and do proper (full) prostration to Allah, proper yogic asana's or even proper meditation?
- This is also a long story. To be brief, I'm gunna quote something I said here earlier:* Muslims are advised to do pilgrimage to Mecca and do a collective ritual turning around a stone. This ritual seems to be a remnant of a similar Indian type of ritual turning in the same direction around a stone phallus ("lingam") which symbolizes Shiva (God). Why, if Allah is Almighty and not to be objectified, is there any need to go on pilgrimage and perform a ritual around a special or holy stone on a fixed spot? Is this not also a type of stone or image worship?
We believe our souls established a covenan ( Ahd) with Allah to worship only Him. Then brought to this life as delegates ((Khilafa) to Allah in this Earthly domain to settle, cultivate the land & prosper (Istimar). In this life our yearning for God is actually the memory of our covenant, as if something we miss we are incomplete without. This memory is our innate state of being (Fitrah), which manifests in our faculty to seek the divine & recognize it when we see it. This faculty is reason (Aql), gift entrusted to us. We are responsible (Taklif) to uphold that trust (Amana) by preserving our innate state of being (Fitrah) -thus our covenant- until we return to Allah again after death. As delegates of Allah on the Earth, we exercise our rights with the boundaries which Allah has set for us, according to 3 levels of rights:
- Rights of Allah, worship & all that it entails.
- Rights of the self, sincere pursuit of truth & self-discipline.
- Rights of His creatures, good dealings towards creatures of Allah.
- Shahada – Testimony = this signifies our renewal of covenant with Allah so as to come under His boundaries.
- Salat – Prayer = this epitomizes the Right of Allah, an obligation to Allah to worship Him alone.
- Sawm – Fasting = this epitomizes the Right of the self, by self-disciplining & elevating the self.
- Zakat – Charity = this epitomizes the Right to His creatures, by giving out of your own wealth to the less fortunate, showing compassion spreading love.
- Hajj – Pilgrimage = this signifies the return back to Allah after fulfillment of covenant, it's a sort of pre-reeactement of the Day of Judgement where all are equal in the eyes of Allah, all dressing the same in a white cloth, as we will be dressed upon death.