DR. ABU AMEENAH BILAL
PHILIPS
The
State of Qatar is to mark Anti-Drugs Day on June 26 as part of a global
campaign against illicit drugs. The production, sale and consumption of
intoxicating addictive drugs have become a world-wide problem. Today, hardly
any country is safe from its destructive influence. The number of lives lost
and ruined yearly because of drugs is unimaginable. Furthermore, the problem
has been increasing exponentially with every decade. Due to the increased
awareness of law-enforcement agencies around the world to the problem, an
international war against drugs was declared some years ago and international
bodies, like the UN, have made it a significant part of their agenda. However,
for one-fifth of the world’s population, the anti-drugs campaign began 1,400
years ago, when the rest of the world was drowning in drug-crazed debauchery.
It began in a small city called Madinah, in the north of Arabia when the
following Qur’anic verses (5: 90-91) were first revealed to Prophet Muhammad (peace
be upon him) and his followers:
“O
Believers! Intoxicants, gambling, idolatry and fortune-telling are abominations
devised by Satan. So, avoid them in order to be successful. Satan seeks to stir
up enmity and hatred among you through intoxicants and gambling, and hinder you
from the remembrance of Allah and from regular prayer. So, will you not then
desist?” (Qur'an, 5:90-91)
The
term used in the revelation, khamr, refers to all forms of intoxicating
drugs as Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) stated, “Every
intoxicant is khamr and every form of khamr is haraam (forbidden).” The
Prophet (peace be upon him) was also quoted as saying: “Every
intoxicant and every narcotic is unlawful,” and, “If a substance
intoxicates when taken in large quantities then even small quantities of it are
forbidden.” The most common and popular intoxicating drug in the seventh
century was alcohol and it remains until today, in spite of the wide variety of
synthetic drugs which are currently on the market. Consequently, its
production, sale and consumption were all absolutely abolished with the
revelation of this verse in the heart of Arabia 14 centuries ago. War on Drugs
Clauses in the Prohibition
It
is worth noting that the prohibition of drugs in these two Qur’anic verses
addresses a number of socio-religious issues with far-reaching implications.
Label: Branding Drugs as an Abomination (Rijs).
By
labeling drugs as filth in this verse, Allah addresses the natural inclination
of human psychology to avoid what is filthy, dirty and nasty. No matter how
clean and pure something might seem at first, once someone informs that it is,
in fact, impure and filthy, humans are naturally inclined to avoid it. The
divine label of “filth” also counters the various enticing names which
people may give to drugs, like ecstasy, ice, etc. Prophet Muhammad (peace be
upon him) also referred to drugs as filth saying, “Intoxicants are the
mother of all filthy and evil acts.”
Classification: Equating drugs to Gambling and Idolatry
The
Almighty put intoxicating substances in the same category as gambling, where
most people lose their savings, become addicted and destroy their lives. The
harm of gambling is so well known that most countries have laws prohibiting
most of its forms. Taking drugs is a big gamble. Many people die from it and
most have their lives ruined. Only a few who become addicted to it manage to
escape its clutches and return to a normal life. In these verses drug
consumption is also put on par with sacrifice to false gods; something so
objectionable that most societies today have abandoned it. When a person takes
drugs, he sacrifices his health, his wealth and his faith to the false gods
which his own desires have become, as the Almighty said, “Have you seen the
one who makes his desires his god?” (Qur’an)
Health
and wealth are blessings from God which are to be used in beneficial ways
pleasing to God. They are responsibilities about which everyone will be asked
on the Day of Judgment. The Prophet (peace be upon him) said, “No
one’s feet will move from his place of resurrection until he is asked about
five things: his health and how he used it, his wealth from where he earned it
and how he spent it, ...”
Drug
consumption is also made equivalent to fortunetelling, which is absolutely
forbidden in Islam. Fortunetelling, which claims knowledge of the unseen and
the future belonging exclusively to God, is a major act of disbelief. Thus,
Allah implies that the very faith of those who consume drugs comes into
question. Prophet Muhammad (peace
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be
upon him)
reiterated this point by saying, “A person is not a believer while he drinks
alcohol.”
By classifying
drugs on a par with games of chance, idolatrous practices and the
fortunetelling, all of which have been pronounced as absolutely forbidden, the
prohibition of drugs is further emphasized.
Satanic
Origin: Branding them as devised by Satan.
Allah identified
the origin of drugs for humans to realize that they are weapons of their most
avowed enemy, Satan. In the battle for human souls, Satan uses a variety of
tools which he beautifies and makes alluring in order to trap human beings
Avoidance:
Emphasizing the Prohibition by using Avoidance.
Allah’s use of
the imperative ‘avoid’ makes the injunction much stronger and more
comprehensive than it would have been had the word ‘prohibited’ been used
instead. The implication here is that one should not only refrain from the
consumption of drugs but also anything to do with their production and
distribution should be avoided. Consequently, the Prophet (peace be upon him)
said, “Ten people are cursed due to intoxicants, the one who prepares it,
the one for whom it was prepared, the one who consumes it, the one who carries
it, the one to whom it is carried, the one who pours it, the one who sells it,
the one who benefits from its sale, the one who buys it and the one for whom it
was bought.”
He further
emphasized the importance of avoidance by stating, “One should not sit at a
table at which alcohol is consumed.” Furthermore, the Prophet (peace be
upon him) prohibited Muslims from even keeping the containers in which
alcohol was traditionally kept.
Success:
Linking the avoidance of Drugs to Prosperity
In the above
verse, the Almighty also made the avoidance of intoxicants a precondition for
prosperity. People naturally desire success and wealth and they despise failure
and poverty. Thus, Allah addresses the human psyche by promising success to
those who avoid intoxicants. When the wealth normally consumed by addicts is
recycled, the financial benefits to society are quite tangible. However, the
social benefits to both the individual and family are even more priceless.
Furthermore, real wealth, is as the Prophet (peace be upon him) said
“richness of the heart and soul, and not an abundance of
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property.”
It is contentment which those who take drugs seek but never find, and that only
comes from a sober search for God.
Ultimate success
is paradise, so the Prophet (peace be upon him) informed that, “One who
consumes drugs and does not repent will not drink it in the Hereafter even if
he enters Paradise.”
Sows
Discord and Hatred
In these verses,
the Almighty points out that Satan uses drugs to create enmity among people. It
has been proven statistically that the majority of hate-crimes are committed by
those under the influence of drugs.
Hinders
Remembrance of God and Prayer
The Almighty
warned of the most evil consequence of drug consumption; that it prevents
people from remembering God and making regular prayer, which is their regular
means of remaining in contact with God. Once the consciousness of God is lost,
corruption quickly fills the vacuum and those under the influence easily commit
the most heinous of crimes without any sense of shame or morality. Intoxicated
people are very susceptible to the most perverse suggestions. They lose their
shyness and moral values leading to some of the most incredibly evil acts.
Reports of
drug-crazed fathers raping their own baby daughters, husbands killing their
wives and eating them, and so on, abound in newspapers around the world. In one
narration from the Prophet (peace be upon him) he was reported to have
said, “Intoxicants are the mother of despicable acts and the greatest of
major sins. Whoever consumes them abandons regular prayer, and rapes his mother
or his aunt.” Prayer is a deterrent against indecency and sinfulness, as
the Almighty said (Qur’an) and it is the foundation of remembrance of God.
Allah points out that the consumption of drugs breaks the believers’ main link
with God and thereby destroys spiritual well-being. In order to further
emphasize its danger to prayer, the Prophet (peace be upon him) said, “The
prayer of one who drinks alcohol will not be accepted for forty days and nights.”
A
Rhetorical Question
This verse is
concluded with a rhetorical question, “Will you not, then, desist?” This
grammatical construction creates the strongest possible threat. On hearing it,
the Prophet’s companion’s response was, “We do, Our Lord: We do!” After
hearing all the
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expressions
of prohibition and grasping their implications, can an intelligent person
ignore warning? This question addresses common sense and reason. It invites the
thinking person to make the necessary steps to help remove this destructive
channel from society.
History
Repeats Itself
Descriptions of
Madinah at the time when these verses were revealed to Prophet Muhammad (peace
be upon him) illustrate the impact that they had on the fledgling community
there. Historians reported that the streets of Madinah flowed with wine, as
containers were broken and poured in the streets, and even those who had cups
of wine in their hands and others who had wine glasses at their lips, stopped
immediately and emptied them in the streets.
The prohibition
of drugs has remained a way of life for Muslims from that day until today.
Though some elements of Muslim society have indulged at different points in
history, and many modern Muslim governments have become lax and permissive, for
the vast majority of Muslims, the production and consumption of drugs remains
prohibited. In the West and East, governments of countries like, USA, Canada,
Russia, etc., have at varying times in the 20th century and for varying lengths
of time prohibited the production, sale and consumptions of alcohol, however,
these periods of prohibition all came to an end. Drugs cannot be eliminated by
legislation alone. Legislation is a beginning, it is a tool, but the will to
implement the legislation has to come from the power of faith within the
population as a whole. The various successful anti-addiction programmes, like
Alcoholics Anonymous, which were developed in the secular West all require
individuals trying to overcome their addictions to call on God, the Higher
Power, to help them succeed.
by
Dr. Bilal Philips Qatar’s Guest Centre
www.bilalphilips.com
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