Rape in Sharia

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Rape in Sharia In considered a serious sexual crime in Islam. Accordingly, sexual violation is regarded as a violation of moral and divine law.[1] Islam divided claims of sexual violation into 'divine rights' (huquq Allah) and 'interpersonal rights' (huquq al-'ibad): the former requiring divine punishment (hadd penalties) and the latter belonging to the more flexible human realm.[2]

In Islam, rape is called Zina Al-Zibr[3] or Ightisab,[4] and it falls under the rules of Hirabah.[5] Classical Islamic law (Shari'a) regarded the crime of sexual violation as a coercive zina, and therefore a hadd offence.[1] There is also a lack of recognition of marital rape by mainstream jurists.[6]

Islamic sources[]

An incident during the time of the Islamic prophet Muhammad would form the basis of later jurisprudence of rape:[7]

When a woman went out for prayer at dawn, a man attacked her on the way and raped her. She shouted but the rapist escaped. When another man came by, she complained: “That man did such and such to me.” And when a company of the Emigrants came by, she said: “That man did such and such to me.” They went and seized the man whom they thought had raped her and brought him to her. She said: “Yes, this is the man.” Then they brought him to the Messenger of God. When he (the Prophet) was about to pass sentence, the man who (actually) had raped her stood up and said: “Messenger of God, I am the man who did it to her.” He (the Prophet) said to her: “Go away, for God has forgiven you.” But he told the man some good words [Abū Dāwūd said: meaning the man who was seized], and of the man who had had intercourse with her, he said: “Stone him to death.”

Definition[]

Rape is considered a serious sexual crime in Islam and can be defined in Islamic law as: "Forcible illegal sexual intercourse by a man with a woman who is not legally married to him, without her free will and consent".[8]

Islamic law, like the legal systems of classical antiquity and the ancient Near East, does not contain a true equivalent of the modern concept of rape, which is in turn based on the modern notions of individual autonomy and inviolability of the body, particularly the female body. In modern terms, rape is at its most basic level a violation of another person's sexual autonomy. In the communally and patriarchically oriented societies of Late Antiquity, a woman's sexuality was construed as something in control of her legal guardian or owner rather than in her individual control. Therefore, the category of coercive sexual violation was not clearly differentiated from other categories, such as consensual violation of sexual norms (seduction).[9]

The terms ghasaba and ightasaba have been used by traditional jurists when discussing sexual assault and its punishment. Most jurists hold that rape is committing zinā by force, hence rape is known as zinā bī al-ikrāh (Arabic: زنا بالإكراه‎). Al-Shāfi‘ī defined rape as: "Forcing a woman to commit zinā against her will". To the Ḥanafis, illegal intercourse is considered rape when there is no consent and no deliberate action from the victim. In Mālik's view, rape refers to any kind of unlawful sexual intercourse (zinā) by usurpation and without consent. This includes instances when the condition of the victims prevents them from expressing their resistance, such as insanity, sleep or being under age. The Hanbalites, similar to the Mālikites, consider the use of any kind of force as a denial of consent from the victim. The threat of starvation or suffering the cold of winter are also regarded as against one's will.[8]

Relationship with zina[]

Classical Islamic law defined what today is commonly called "rape" as a coercive form of fornication or adultery (zināʾ).[10] This basic definition of rape as "coercive zināʾ" meant that all the normal legal principles that pertained to zināʾ – its definition, punishment, and establishment through evidence – were also applicable to rape; the prototypical act of zināʾ was defined as sexual intercourse between a man and a woman over whom the man has neither a conjugal nor an ownership right.[10] What distinguished a prototypical act of zināʾ from an act of rape, for the jurists, was that in the prototypical case, both parties act out of their own volition, while in an act of rape, only one of the parties does so. Jurists admitted a wide array of situations as being "coercive" in nature, including the application of physical force, the presence of duress, or the threat of future harm either to oneself or those close to oneself; they also included in their definition of "coercion" the inability to give valid consent, as in the case of minors, or mentally ill or unconscious persons. Muslim jurists from the earliest period of Islamic law agreed that perpetrators of coercive zināʾ should receive the ḥadd punishment normally applicable to their personal status and sexual status, but that the ḥadd punishment should not be applied to victims of coercive or nonconsensual zināʾ due to their reduced capacity.[10]

The crime of rape, according to Sunni Ḥanafī and Mālikī jurists, is as an act of zinā. If the consent was granted under coercion or in a defective legal capacity such as by a mentally impaired person, it is considered non-consent or invalid consent.[11]

Relationship with hirabah[]

The inclusion of rape within the purview of hirabah has had support throughout Islamic history.

The medieval Zahiri jurist Ibn Hazm defined hirabah as,

‘One who puts people in fear on the road, whether or not with a weapon, at night or day, in urban areas or in open spaces, in the palace of a caliph or a mosque, with or without accomplices, in the desert or in the village, in a large or small city, with one or more people… making people fear that they’ll be killed, or have money taken, or be raped (hatk al ‘arad)… whether the attackers are one or many.'[12]

It had significant support from the Maliki jurists.

Al-Dasuqi, for example, a Maliki jurist, held that if a person forced a woman to have sex, his actions would be deemed committing hiraba. In addition, the Maliki judge Ibn 'Arabi, relates a story in which a group was attacked and a woman in their party raped. Responding to the argument that the crime did not constitute hiraba because no money was taken and no weapons used, Ibn 'Arabi replied indignantly that "hirabah with the private parts" is much worse than hiraba involving the taking of money, and that anyone would rather be subjected to the latter than the former.[12]

In the Hanafi school of law, the term zina is taken to refer to illegal sexual intercourse, where rape is distinguished as zina bil jabr to indicate its forced and non-consensual nature whereas fornication and adultery fit zina bil ridha, which indicates consent. Though the terminology uses the term zina, nonetheless, they are two categorically different crimes as rape is treated as a tazeer (discretionary) crime by the judge and prosecuted based on circumstantial evidence (medical evidence, any number of witnesses, and other forensic evidence). It is fornication and adultery by mutual consent, or zina bil ridha, which retain their classical hadd punishments from the Qur'an and sunnah provided there are four witnesses (absent which they too default to tazeer, subject to discretionary punishments such as fining, imprisonment, or lashes). Nonetheless, gang rape or public rape, such as the sort that occurs during war, is still traditionally considered hirabah as that is more in line with its classical definition as a war crime or crime against civilization and society.[13]

Marital rape[]

The majority of Islamic jurists do not recognize marital rape as rape,[6] but some modern interpretations of Islamic law prohibit marital rape in other ways.[14][6] According to a hadith, a master could marry off a female slave without her consent, but needed to obtain her consent if he wanted to marry her after setting her free.[15]

writes that the crime of marital rape doesn't arise in classical Islamic jurisprudence, but they did address the issue of a husband injuring his wife sexually. For example, perineal tearing by the husband was criminalized and entitled the wife to monetary compensation.[16]

Kecia Ali states that the Hanafis allowed the husband to forcibly have sex with his wife if she didn't have a legitimate reason to refuse sex;[17][18] this is also indicated in the fiqh manual Al-Hidayah.[19] This particular Hanafi position was not prevalent in other schools of thought,[17] who neither authorized forced sex in marriage nor penalized it.[20] While medieval jurists classified rape under the crime of ightisab, no medieval jurist classified marital rape as such.[21] The term ightisab refers to "usurping something that belongs to another by force and against the person's will"; it denotes something "ugly" and "reprehensible".[22] Nevertheless, some medieval jurists made a distinction between forced and consensual sex within marriage.[21]

claims that Islamic law classified marital rape as an act of aggression against the wife. Marital rape can lead to prosecutions against the husband and the wife obtaining divorce, but the punishments are not as severe as they are against other forms of rape.[23]

According to Dar al-Ifta al-Misriyyah, Islamic scholars condemn when a husband uses violence to force his wife to sleep with him or asks his wife to have sexual intercourse during her menstrual period, in an abnormal sexual position, or during fasting hours in Ramadan. In response the wife has the right to take her husband to court and he must be punished for the act. According to this opinion, a wife has numerous grounds to refuse sexual relations with her husband, including if he has a contagious disease or if sexual intercourse hurts her body.[24] According to it Islamic law advises that the sexual intercourse between man and wife should be conducted with intimacy and love, and this would be supported by Quran 2:223:[24]

Your wives are as a tilth unto you; so approach your tilth when or how ye will; but do some good act for your souls beforehand; and fear Allah. And know that ye are to meet Him (in the Hereafter), and give (these) good tidings to those who believe.

— Qur'an, [Quran 2:223]

According to Georgetown University professor Jonathan A. C. Brown, Islamic law has historically handled marital rape differently from modern laws due to the fact that "sexual consent" is a modern-day concept and Islamic law was formulated in the pre-modern era.[25] Rather than being a violation of consent, sexual abuse within marriage was conceptualized as harm inflicted on the wife, and judges used the harm-reduction principle when judging these cases.[25] He states that historical records show that when experiencing sexual abuse, some women were able to go to court and force their husbands to desist and pay damages even in the pre-modern Muslim world.[25] Sadaf Jaffer, of the Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies, criticized Brown and his questioning of "whether Muslim wives have recourse to the idea of sexual consent in their relationships with their husbands".[26] According to Jaffer, Brown's position also "does not address the issue of a concubine’s lack of legal consent throughout much of Islamic history".[26]

Punishment of a convicted rapist[]

Rape is punishable in some circumstances by the ḥadd of zinā as well as in some circumstances by the ḥadd of ḥirābah and it is also complemented by ta‘zīr.[8]

Muslim jurists agreed that the punishment would not be averted even if the perpetrator claimed to be ignorant of the law. This is because of the immorality of the crime of rape and the severe harm it causes the victim.[27]

Ḥadd of zinā[]

Most classical scholars argued for applying the ḥadd penalty for zinā to a convicted rapist, which is stoning to death for the married (muḥsān), or a flogging of 100 lashes and deportation for the unmarried (ghair-muḥsān). They base their argument on a hadith which reports a rape case at the time of the Prophet, where the victim was excused and her rapist (who was married) was sentenced to be stoned to death.[8][28]

Ḥadd of Ḥirābah as a penalty for rape[]

Certain classical jurists (Al-Tabari and the Maliki Ibn al-'Arabi) and more modern interpretations (The Religious Council of Egypt among others) have classified the crime of rape not as a subcategory of zinā, but rather a separate crime of violence under hirabah (forcible and violent taking), i.e. a violent crime causing disorder in the land in the manner described in the Qur'an (5:33) as fasad (destructive mischief). A similar crime, for example, would be highway robbery, as it puts fear in people going out or losing their property through violence. Thus, the rapist will be considered to be under the category of people who are outlaws and a danger towards the peace and security of the society.[8]

Rape as Ta‘zīr[]

Some modern researchers maintain that offenders be allotted a ta'zir penalty upon the discretion of the authorities. To them, rape deserves a ta‘zīr penalty when a conviction is reached as a result of circumstantial evidence, such as marks of violence about the genitals, marks of violence on the body of the victim or accused, the presence of semen or blood-stains on the body or clothes of the victim or accused, or a medical report, all of which are sufficient for ta‘zīr only. Under the principle of al-fi‘l al-darr (Islamic law of Tort), it is possible for a victim to make a claim for moral damages, which may include violation of a person's freedom, dignity, reputation, social or financial status.[8]

Financial compensation[]

According to the Mālikī, Ḥanbalī, and Shāfiʾī schools of law, the rape of a free woman consisted of not one but two violations: a violation against a "right of God" (ḥaqq Allāh), provoking the ḥadd punishment; and a violation against a "human" (interpersonal) right (ḥaqq ādamī), requiring a monetary compensation. These jurists saw the free woman, in her proprietorship over her own sexuality (buḍʾ), as not unlike the slave-owner who owns the sexuality of his female slave. For them, in the same way that the slave owner was entitled to compensation for sexual misappropriation, the free woman was also entitled to compensation. The amount of this compensation, they reasoned, should be the amount that any man would normally pay for sexual access to the woman in question – that is, the amount of her dower (ṣadāq or mahr).[10]

Prosecution of rape[]

Caliph Umar accepted the testimony of a single individual who heard the rape victim call for help as evidence that rape occurred. Imam Malik accepted physical injuries on the victim as evidence that rape occurred.[29] If a woman claims to have been raped or sexually abused under duress, she will be acquitted of adultery in light of Qur'anic verse 24:33, which states that a woman has not sinned when compelled to commit this crime.[30]

According to Professor Oliver Leaman, the required testimony of four male witnesses having seen the actual penetration applies to illicit sexual relations (i.e. adultery and fornication), not to rape.[31] The requirements for proof of rape are less stringent:

Rape charges can be brought and a case proven based on the sole testimony of the victim, providing that circumstantial evidence supports the allegations. It is these strict criteria of proof which lead to the frequent observation that where injustice against women does occur, it is not because of Islamic law. It happens either due to misinterpretation of the intricacies of the Sharia laws governing these matters, or cultural traditions; or due to corruption and blatant disregard of the law, or indeed some combination of these phenomena.[31]

Abortion due to rape[]

As far as abortion in the context of rape, most[citation needed] jurists do not consider rape to be a valid reason: the sanctity of the new life takes precedence over the autonomy of the pregnant women.[32]

Muslim scholars have held that the child of rape is a legitimate child, and thus it would be sinful to kill this child. Scholars permit its abortion only if the fetus is less than four months old or if it endangers the life of its mother.[33]

When the pregnancy is unplanned and therefore unwanted, as in the case of rape, the parents, [have to/should, as adoption is unlawful] abort the fetus and thus prevent the disgrace that awaits both mother and child [..] the child born of rape, like one born of adultery (walad zina) is a more lowly member of society with regard of the rights he or she is guaranteed and the social status he or she can attain.

— [33]

Muslim scholars were urged to make exceptions in the 1990s following rapes of Kuwaiti women by Iraqi soldiers (in 1991) and the rape of Bosnian and Albanian women by Serb soldiers. In 1991, the Grand Mufti of Palestine, Ekrima Sa'id Sabri, took a different position than mainstream Muslim scholars. He ruled that Muslim women raped by their enemies during the Kosovo War could take abortifacient medicine, because otherwise the children born to those women might one day fight against Muslims.[33]

See also[]

  • Zina
  • Islamic sexual jurisprudence

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b Wolf, Leslie F. (10 December 2016). "Leslie F. Wolf; Sexual Violation in Islamic Law: Substance, Evidence, and Procedure By HINA AZAM". Journal of Islamic Studies: etw060. doi:10.1093/jis/etw060.
  2. ^ Semerdjian, Elyse (18 July 2017). "Sexual Violation in Islamic Law: Substance, Evidence, and Procedure". Journal of Middle East Women's Studies. 13 (2): 315–317. doi:10.1215/15525864-3861356. S2CID 149104901.
  3. ^ Farooq, Mohammad Omar (2013). Toward Our Reformation: From Legalism to Value-Oriented Islamic Law and Jurisprudence. International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT). p. 228. ISBN 978-1-56564-371-0. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
  4. ^ Al-Munajjid, Salih. "Ruling on the crime of rape - Islam Question & Answer". islamqa.info. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
  5. ^ Alotaibi, Hajed A. (2020). Minors' Crimes in Saudi Arabia: An Analytical Study on the Saudi Juvenile Justice. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 125. ISBN 978-1-5275-4616-5. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b c Susila, Muh Endriyo (2013). "Islamic Perspective on Marital Rape". Jurnal Media Hukum. 20 (2): 328.
  7. ^ Mohammad Hashim Kamali. Crime and Punishment in Islamic Law: A Fresh Interpretation. Oxford University Press. p. 67.
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Noor, Azman Mohd (1 January 2010). "Rape: A Problem of Crime Classification in Islamic Law". Arab Law Quarterly. 24 (4): 417–438. doi:10.1163/157302510X526724.
  9. ^ Hina Azam (2015). Sexual Violation in Islamic Law: Substance, Evidence, and Procedure. Cambridge University Press. pp. 16–17. ISBN 9781107094246.
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Kassam, Zayn. "The Oxford Encyclopedia of Islam and Law". Oxford Islamic Studies Online. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
  11. ^ Hina Azam (2013). "Competing Approaches to Rape in Islamic Law". In Marie A. Failinger; Elizabeth R. Schiltz; Susan J. Stabile (eds.). Feminism, Law, and Religion. Farnham, Surrey, England: Ashgate. pp. 328–329. ISBN 978-1-4094-7481-4.
  12. ^ Jump up to: a b Webb, Gisella - Windows of Faith: Muslim Women Scholar-Activists in North America p.130
  13. ^ Muhammad Taqi Usmani - The Islamization of Laws in Pakistan: The Case of Hudud Ordinances Archived 2012-10-21 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ ELEANOR ROSS. "World's Largest Gathering of Female Muslim Clerics Issue Fatwa Against Marital Rape, Child Marriage". Newsweek.
  15. ^ Suad, Salma (May 1990). The legal and social status of women in the hadith literature (PDF) (PhD). Retrieved 2020-08-05. according to the Hadith, if the slave's master was a Muslim he could give her in marriage without her consent. 005) It made no difference whether she was a virgin or a non-virgin unlike the free woman. However, her consent had to be obtained, if her master, having set her free, then marry her. Al-Shafii did not consider this a legal marriage unless the slave girl was set free before the marriage contract, (107) as the Prophet did with Safiyya and Juwairiyya.
  16. ^ Azam, Hina. Sexual Violation in Islamic Law: Substance, Evidence, and Procedure. Cambridge University Press. p. 19.
  17. ^ Jump up to: a b Kecia Ali. Sexual Ethics and Islam. p. 12. The Hanafi view that husbands were entitled to have sex forcibly with their wives when the latter did not have a legitimate reason to refuse sex was not widely shared outside that school. Even the majority of Hanafi thinkers who accepted this doctrine recognized a distinction between forced intercourse and more usual sexual relations between spouses; although both were equally licit, sex by force might be unethical
  18. ^ Al-jaziri, abd Al-rahman; Roberts, Nancy (2009). Islamic Jurisprudence According To The Four Sunni Schools Al Fiqh 'ala Al Madhahib Al Arba'ah. Fons Vitae. ISBN 978-1887752978. The followers of Imam Abu Hanifah said: "The right of the sexual pleasure belongs to the man, not the woman, by that it is meant that the man has the right to force the woman to gratify himself sexually.
  19. ^ ibn Abī Bakr Marghīnānī, ʻAlī (1870). The Hedaya, Or Guide: A Commentary on the Mussulman Laws. p. 141.
  20. ^ Kecia Ali (30 October 2010). Marriage and Slavery in Early Islam. Harvard University Press. pp. 120–. ISBN 978-0-674-05059-4. Non-Hanafis do not penalize a husband for forcing sex on his wife, but neither do they explicitly authorize it in the way that al-Khassaf does. For all, marital rape is an oxymoron; rape (ightisab) is a property crime that by definition cannot be committed by a husband.
  21. ^ Jump up to: a b Ali, Kecia (30 October 2010). Marriage and Slavery in Early Islam. Harvard University Press. p. 120. ISBN 9780674050594.
  22. ^ Sonbol, Amira El-Azhary. Women of Jordan: Islam, Labor, and the Law. Syracuse University Press. p. 205.
  23. ^ Azman Mohd Noor. "Rape: A Problem of Crime Classification in Islamic Law". Arab Law Quarterly. 24 (4): 429.
  24. ^ Jump up to: a b "Does marital rape exist in Islam?". Dar al-Ifta al-Misriyyah.
  25. ^ Jump up to: a b c A.C Brown, Jonathan (2019). Slavery and Islam. p. 283.
  26. ^ Jump up to: a b Jaffer, Sadaf (2017-05-21). "Trivializing consent and minimizing slavery within American academia". AltMuslimah. Retrieved 2020-08-21.
  27. ^ Intisar A. Rabb. Doubt in Islamic Law. Cambridge University Press. p. 223.
  28. ^ Jami` at-Tirmidhi, 17:37 Archived 2013-01-26 at the Wayback Machine, Sunan Abu Dawood, 38:4366
  29. ^ Abiad, Nisrine (2008). Sharia, Muslim States and International Human Rights Treaty Obligations: A Comparative Study. BICIL. p. 136. ISBN 978-1905221417.
  30. ^ Zakariyah, Luqman (2015). Legal maxims in Islamic criminal law : theory and applications. Leiden Boston: Brill Nijhoff. p. 141. ISBN 978-90-04-30487-1.
  31. ^ Jump up to: a b Leaman, Oliver (2013). Controversies in Contemporary Islam. New York: Routledge. p. 78. ISBN 978-0-415-67613-7.
  32. ^ Moosa, Ebrahim. "Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World". Macmillan Reference USA.[dead link]
  33. ^ Jump up to: a b c Rispler-Chaim, Vardit (2003). "Chapter 4: The Right Not to Be Born: Abortion of the Disadvantaged Fetus in Contemporary Fatwas". In Brockopp, Jonathan E (ed.). Islamic Ethics of Life: Abortion, War, and Euthanasia. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press. pp. 87–88. ISBN 9781570034718.
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