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Halal o Haram in Islam

describes the islamic concept of halal and haram things about eating habits.it will help u in learning the true concept of islamic eatings in the light of quran and hadith only.

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usman_uet08
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
1K views

Halal o Haram in Islam

describes the islamic concept of halal and haram things about eating habits.it will help u in learning the true concept of islamic eatings in the light of quran and hadith only.

Uploaded by

usman_uet08
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Halal & Haram in Islam

Submitted to:
Sir Zahid Latif
Submitted by:
1. Muhammad Usman (08-chem-02-B)
2. Allah Ditta (08-Chem-42-B)
3. Saqib Raouf (08-Chem-26-B)

Date: 8 June 2009

Department of Chemical Engineering


University of Engineering and Technology Lahore
Contents
Al-Halal (the lawful):..................................................................................................5
Al-Haram (the prohibited or unlawful):......................................................................5
Al-Makruh (the detested):..........................................................................................5
Explanation with Holy Quran:.....................................................................................5
Explanation with hadith:............................................................................................6
The Prohibition of Eating What Is Dead and Its Wisdom............................................9
The Prohibition of Flowing Blood..............................................................................11
Pork..........................................................................................................................11
That Which Is Dedicated to Anyone Other Than Allah..............................................12
Types of Dead Animals............................................................................................12
Reasons for the Prohibition of the Foregoing Categories.........................................14
Animal Sacrifices......................................................................................................15
The Exemption of Sea Food and Locusts.................................................................16
The Exemption of Sea Food and Locusts
Al-Halal (the lawful): That which is permitted, with respect to which no restriction
exists, and the doing of which the Law-Giver, Allah, has allowed.

Al-Haram (the prohibited or unlawful): That which the Law-Giver


has absolutely prohibited; anyone who engages in it is liable to incur the
punishment of Allah in the Hereafter as well as a legal punishment in this world.

Al-Makruh (the detested): That which is disapproved by the Law-Giver


but not very strongly. The makruh is less in degree than the haram, and the
punishment for makruh acts is less than for those that are haram, except when
done to excess and in a manner which leads an individual toward what is haram.

Explanation with Holy Quran:


The state of the world in relation to the eating of food at the advent of Islam was
that at one extreme every kind of meat was permitted and at the other all meat
was prohibited.

Then Allah addressed all human beings saying,

“O mankind! Eat of what is permissible and good on earth, and do not


follow the footsteps of Satan; truly he is an open adversary to you.”1

Thus He speaks to all the people on this globe, calling on them to eat of the good
things which He has provided for them on this vast, outspread table, the Earth, and
not to follow the ways of Satan, who has made it alluring to some people to
prohibit for themselves various wholesome things which Allah has made halal, thus
leading them toward the pitfalls of self-destruction.

Living habits are also concerned with halal and haram. As Quran says,

1. 'Do they have partners (with Allah) who have


prescribed for them in religion that concerning which
Allah has given no permission?'2

1 Al Quran (2:168)
But as far as living habits are concerned, the principle is freedom because nothing
can be restricted in this regard except what Allah Himself has prohibited. Here, to
do otherwise, is to be included in the meaning of His saying:

2. 'Say: Do you see what Allah has sent down to you for
sustenance? Yet you have made some part of it halal
and some part haram.' 3
This is a great and beneficent principle, on the basis of which we can say that
buying, selling, leasing, giving gifts, and other such matters are necessary
activities for people, as are eating, drinking, and the wearing of clothes. If the
Shari'ah says something concerning these mundane matters, it is in order to teach
good behavior. Accordingly, it has prohibited whatever leads to strife, has made
obligatory that which is essential, has disapproved that which is frivolous, and has
approved that which is beneficial. All this has been done with due consideration for
the kinds of activities involved, their magnitudes, and properties.

Explanation with hadith:


In this regard the Prophet (peace be on him) said:

“What Allah has made lawful in His Book is halal and what He has forbidden is haram,
and that concerning which He is silent is allowed as His favor. So accept from Allah His
favor, for Allah is not forgetful of anything. He then recited, "And thy Lord is not
forgetful."4

Salman al-Farsi reported that when the Messenger of Allah (peace be on him) was
asked about animal fat, cheese, and fur, he replied, "The halal is that which Allah
has made lawful in His Book and the haram is that which He has forbidden, and that
5
concerning which He is silent He has permitted as a favor to you."

2Al Quran (42:21)

3 Al Quran (10:59)

4 (19:64) (This hadith was reported by al-Hakim, cla88ified as sahih (sound), and quoted by al-Bazzar.)
Thus, rather than giving specific answers to what the questioner had asked, the
Prophet (peace be on him) referred to the general criterion for determining the
halal and the haram. Accordingly, it is sufficifor us to know what Allah has made
haram, since what is not includedin it is pure and permissible.

The Prophet (peace be on him) also said:

“Allah has prescribed certain obligations for you, so do not neglect them; He has
defined certain limits, so do not transgress them; He has prohibited certain things, so do
not do them; and He has kept silent concerning other things out of mercy for you and
6
not because of forgetfulness, so do not ask questions concerning them”.

5 (Reported by al-Tirmidhi and Ibn Majah)

6 (Reported by aI-Darqutni and classified as hasan (good) by al-Nawawi.)


Allah addressed the Believers in particular saying,
“Forbidden to you are the flesh of dead animals and blood and the flesh of

swine, and that which has been dedicated to any other than Allah, and that
which has been killed by strangling or by beating or by falling or by being
gored, and that which has been (partly) eaten by a wild beast except that
which you make lawful by slaughtering (before its death), and that which
has been sacrificed to idols....”7

This verse lists ten prohibited categories since animals which are killed by
strangulation, by a blow, by a fall, by being gored, or which are partly eaten by
wild animals all belong in the category of dead animals. Similarly, what is sacrificed
to idols falls into the category of that which is dedicated to anyone other than
Allah.

At another point is said in Quran,

“O You Who Believe! Eat Of The Good Things That We Have Provided For
You, And Be Thankful To Allah If It Is He Alone Whom You Worship.
Indeed, What He Has Forbidden To You Is The Flesh Of Dead Animals And
Blood And The Flesh Of Swine, And That Which Has Been Sacrificed To
Anyone Other Than Allah. But If One Is Compelled By Necessity, Neither
Craving (It) Nor Transgressing, There Is No Sin On Him; Indeed, Allah Is
Forgiving, Merciful.”8

7 Al Quran (5:4 (5:3))

8 Al Quran (2:172-173)
Also it is in Quran,

Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala tells them to eat of the good things of His providing and
to give thanks to Him for His favors. He then explains that no food is haram to
them except the four kinds mentioned in the ayah. The same four kinds, with some
further details, are mentioned at other places in the Qur'an:

Say: I do not find in what is revealed to me anything prohibited to an eater


in his food unless it be (the flesh of) that which is dead, or flowing blood,
or the flesh of swine, for that is indeed foul, or the abomination which has
been dedicated to anyone other than Allah. But if one is compelled by
necessity, neither craving (it) nor transgressing, then, indeed, thy Lord is
Forgiving, Merciful.9

Accordingly, the foods which are prohibited fall into four broad categories which
may be reclassified into ten detailed categories, as follows:

The Prohibition of Eating What Is Dead and Its Wisdom


1. The first thing mentioned in these verses concerning prohibited foods is the
flesh of "dead animals," that is, the beast or fowl which dies of natural
causes, without being slaughtered or hunted by men. There are obvious
reasons for this prohibition:

Eating the flesh of a dead animal is repugnant to civilized taste and is


considered by thinking people in all societies to be contrary to human
dignity. We also observe that all peoples possessing a revealed scripture
have prohibited it and that they do not eat the flesh of an aunless it is
slaughtered. However, the methods of slaughter may vary.

In whatever he does, the Muslim acts with a set purpose and; intention; he

9Al Quran (6:145)


does not use a thing nor reap its benefit without directing his intention, aim,
and effort toward it. The significance of slaughtering, which is a purposeful
act, the intention of which is to take the life of the animal in order to use it
as food, is to remove the slaughtered animal from the category of "dead
animals." Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala does not desire that man should eat of
what he did not intend or think of eating, as is the case with the dead
animal; conversely, slaughtering an animal or hunting it as game both
require an intention followed by effort and subsequent action.

If the animal died a natural death, it is quite likely that it died of some acute
or chronic disease, through eating a poisonous plant, or other similar
causes; hence eating its flesh would probably be harmful. The same is the
case when the cause of death is old age or starvation.

By prohibiting the flesh of a dead animal to human beings, Allah in His Mercy
provides source of food to animals and birds, who, in the words of the
Qur'an, constitute an ummah (nation) like themselves. The truth of this is
demonstrated by the fact that the carcasses of animals lying out in the open
are devoured by birds and animals.

This prohibition encourages the owner of an animal to guard it from disease


and malnutrition lest it die and be wasted. Accordingly, in the case of
disease, he will be quick to seek a cure for it or will hasten to slaughter the

animal.

The Prohibition of Flowing Blood


The second prohibition relates to flowing or liquid blood. (It is not prohibited to eat
the blood which remains in the flesh of the slaughtered animal after one has done his best to remove it.

(Trans.)) Ibn Abbas was asked about the spleen and he replied, "You can eat
it." The questioners said, "But it is blood." (In early times the spleen was believed to be

congealed blood. (Trans.)) He answered, "Only flowing blood is prohibited to you."


The reason for this prohibition is both that the drinking of blood is repugnant
to human decency and that it may likewise be injurious to health.

During the period of jahiliyyah, a person who felt hungry might jab a bone
or sharp object into the flesh of his animal, and collect and drink the flowing
blood. It was concerning this that the poet al'Ashi said: Never approach
animals that are dead, Nor take a sharp bone to pierce the live one.

Thus, since piercing the flesh of a living animal injures and weakens it, Allah

Ta'ala prohibited such a practice.

Pork
3. The third prohibited food is pork, that is, the flesh of swine. Since the pig
relishes filth and offal, its meat is repugnant to persons of decent taste;
moreover, recent medical research has shown that eating swine-flesh is
injurious to health in all climates, especially hot ones. Scientific research has
also shown that pork carries a deadly parasite (trichina), among others, and
no one can say what science may discover in the future which will shed more
light on the wisdom of this prohibition.

Allah the Almighty spoke the truth in describing His Messenger, Muhammad
(peace be on him), as the one who "makes unlawful what is foul."10

In addition to this, there are also some scholars who say that eating pork
frequently diminishes the human being's sense of shame in relation to what

is indecent.

10 Al Quran (7:157)
That Which Is Dedicated to Anyone Other Than Allah
The fourth prohibited category refers to an animal which is dedicated to anyone
other than Allah, that is to say, one which is slaughtered with the invocation of a
name other than the name of Allah—for example, the name of an idol. When
slaughtering an animal, the Arab polytheists would invoke the names of their idols,
such as al-Lat or al-Uzza. Such a practice is a devotional act addressed to someone
other than Allah and is a form of worship in which His glorious name is not
mentioned. In this case the reason for the prohibition is entirely related to faith: to
safeguard the belief in the Oneness of Allah, to purify worship, and to fight shirk
and polytheism in whatever form they may be expressed.

Indeed, it is Allah who created man and gave him control over everything on the
earth, subjecting the animal to his power and permitting him to take its life for food
on the condition that His name be pronounced at the time of slaughter.
Pronouncing the name of Allah while slaughtering the animal is a declaration that
one is taking the life of this creature by the permission of its Creator, while if one
invokes any other name, he has forfeited this permission and must be denied the

use of its flesh.

Types of Dead Animals


The preceding are the four principal categories of prohibited animal foods. As
revealed in the verse of Surh al-Maidah (5:4 (3)), to these four are added five
more categories which pertain to further classifications of the "dead animal," as
follows:

5. The strangled: an animal which has been strangled, for example, by a rope
around its neck, or suffocated, as for instance by putting its head into
something which produces suffocation.
6. The beaten: an animal which has been beaten to death by a club or similar
object.

7. The fallen: an animal which dies as a result of a fall from a high place, or by
falling into a gully or ravine.

8. The gored: an animal which dies as a result of being gored by the horns of
another animal.

9. That which has been (partly) eaten by wild beasts: an animal which

has been partially devoured by wild animals and dies as a result.

After naming these five categories, Allah makes an exception of

"That Which You Make Lawful By Slaughtering,"11

Means that if one comes upon such an animal while it is still alive, slaughtering
renders it halal as food. The correct understanding of "still alive" is that some sign
of life remains in it.

'Ali ibn Abu Talib said, "If you can slaughter the beaten, the fallen or the gored
animal while it (still) moves its hoof or leg, you may eat it." Commented al-
Dahak, "The people of the time of jahiliyyah used to eat them (dead animals);
then Allah prohibited them in Islam, excepting what is slaughtered. If it is
slaughtered while it (still) moves a leg, its tail, or an eye, it is halal (Some jurists
have said that there must be life in it, the signs of which are the flow of blood and
reflex movements)

Reasons for the Prohibition of the Foregoing Categories


We need not repeat the reasons stated in the preceding discussion concerning dead

11 Al Quran
animals, with the possible exception of the danger to health, which is not clear in
such cases. However, we wish to emphasize again the significance of prohibitions 5
through 9 above. The All-Wise Law-Giver wants to teach people to be kind to the
animal and to protect it from harm. One should not neglect it so that it can be
strangled, fall from a high place, or be gored in a fight with other animals, nor
torture it by severe beating, possibly resulting in its death, as vicious herdsmen,
particularly hired ones, sometimes do, even goading animals such as two bulls or
sheep to fight each other until one wounds or gores the other to death.

It is solely for this reason that Islamic jurists have prohibited the eating of the flesh
of an animal which has been gored to death, even if it was wounded by the horns
of the other and its blood has flowed; this prohibition holds even if the blood flowed
from a wound in the usual site of slaughter, the throat. According to my
understanding, the purpose behind this is to penalize the owner of such animals
who has left them unattended to gore each other to death; he is not to be
rewarded for this negligence by being permitted to make use of their flesh for food.
The reason for prohibiting the eating of animals partially devoured by wild beasts is
to preserve human dignity; a Muslim is not to degrade himself by eating the
leavings of animals. The people of the period of jahiliyyah were in the habit of
eating what had been left by wild animals, wof sheep, camel or cow, but
subsequently Allah prohibited this to the Believers.

Animal Sacrifices
10. The tenth caof prohibited animal food is that which has been sacrificed to
idols. During the period of jahiliyyah, stone altars stood in front of the idols
around the Ka'aba, and the polytheists would slaughter animals on or close
to these altars in order to seek nearness to the deities to which the altars
were assigned.
Such immolation is similar to "that which has been dedicated to anyone
other than Allah," as both involve the glorification of false deities. The
difference is that in case of "that which has been dedicated to anyone other
than Allah," the slaughtering did not take place in the vicinity of the idol and
only its name was mentioned over the object of sacrifice, while in the latter
case the immolation was done in front of the idol or on the altar assigned to
it, and it was therefore unnecessary to mention its name.

Since these altars were in the vicinity of the Ka'aba, it was possible to
imagine that these sacrifices were meant to render homage to the Sacred
House. The Qur'an, through an explicit declaration, removed this possibility
from the minds of people, classifying this practice in the same category as

that which is dedicated to anyone other than Allah.

The Exemption of Sea Food and Locusts


The Islamic Shari'ah has exempted fish, whales, and other sea creatures from the
category of "dead animals." When the Prophet (peace be on him) was asked about
the sea, he replied,

Its water is pure and its dead are halal12.

Says Allah Ta'ala: The game of the sea is permitted to you and so is its
food....13

and 'Umar explained, "Its game is what is caught from it and its food is what is
thrown out from it," while Ibn 'Abbas said, "Its food is its dead (animals)."

12 (Reported by Ahmad and other compilers of the Sunnah.)

13 Al Quran(5:99 (96))
In the two Sahihs of al-Bukhari and Muslim, it is reported on the authority of Jabir
that the Prophet (peace be on him) once sent some of his Companions on an
expedition. They found a dead whale by the sea and subsisted on it for more than
twenty days. On their return to Madinah, they told the Prophet (peace be on him)
about this and he said,

Eat the food which Allah has brought forth for you, and feed us from it if
you have any left. They then brought him some whale meat and he ate it14.

By the same token, locusts are exempted from the category of "dead animals." The
Prophet (peace be on him) gave permission to eat dead locusts, as the question of
slaughtering them does not arise. Said Ibn Abu Awfa, "We went with the Prophet
(peace be on him) on seven expeditions, and we ate locusts with him." (Reported by all
the authentic collections of ahadith excepting that of Ibn Majah.)

14 (Reported by al-Bukhari.)

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