Haraam

Part of a series on Islam
Usul al-fiqh

(The Roots of Jurisprudence)

Fiqh
  • Qur'an and Sunnah
  • Taqlid (imitation)
  • Ijtihad (interpretation)
  • Ijma (consensus)
  • Madh'hab (school of law)
  • Minhaj (method)
  • Qiyas (analogical reasoning)
  • Urf (society custom)
  • Bid‘ah (innovation)
  • Madrasah (school/seminary)
  • Ijazah (authorization)
  • Istihlal (legalization)
  • Istihsan (discretion)
  • Risalah (dissertation)
Ahkam
  • Halal (legal)
  • Wajib/Fard (obligatory, duty)
  • Mustahabb (favoured)
  • Mubah (neutral)
  • Makruh (disliked, abominable)
  • Haraam (illegal, prohibited)
  • Baatil (void, incorrect)
  • Fasiq (corrupt)
Scholarly titles
  • Mujtahid (scholar of islamic law with comprehensive understanding of the texts and reality)
  • Marja (authority)
  • Alim (scholar; pl. Ulema)
  • Mufti (cleric)
  • Mufassir (interpreter)
  • Qadi (judge)
  • Faqīh (jurist)
  • Muhaddith (narrator)
  • Mullah
  • Imam
  • Mawlawi
  • Sheikh
  • Mujaddid (renewer)
  • Hafiz
  • Hujja
  • Hakim
  • Amir al-Mu'minin in reg. hadith
  • Maulana

Haraam (Arabic: حرام‎) (often Haram) is an Arabic term meaning "forbidden". In Islam it is used to refer to anything that is prohibited by the faith. Its antonym is halal.

The religious term haraam can be applied to:

Haraam has, over the years, accumulated additional non-traditional uses to it. In Arabic-speaking countries, saying "haraam" can mean, "what a shame" or "what a pity" (this meaning has been adopted by Modern Hebrew slang as well). This can be used formally or between friends. Children are commonly told not to mistreat other children or animals because it is 'haraam'.

Haraam also applies to ill-gotten wealth obtained through sin. Examples include money earned through cheating, stealing, corruption, murder or any means that involves harm to another human being. It is prohibited in Islam for a true Muslim to profit from such Haraam actions. Any believer who benefits from or lives off wealth obtained through Haraam is a sinner.

The word also appears in Amharic, the national language of Ethiopia. It connotes the same idea of prohibition on religious grounds, however it is used by Christians in the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church, including bans on pork (more out of Jewish dietary laws, not Islamic).

Haraam is best known to non-Arabs by means of the related word harem, referring to the forbidden area of the palace where the women were quartered.

The Hebrew cognate Herem refers to the highest ecclesiastical censure in the Jewish community.

Contents

Quranic verses

Well known verses that are commonly referenced in regard to unlawful food or drinks

He hath forbidden you only carrion, and blood, and swineflesh, and that which hath been immolated to (the name of) any other than God. But he who is driven by necessity, neither craving nor transgressing, it is no sin for him. Lo! God is Forgiving, Merciful.
How should ye not eat of that over which the name of God hath been mentioned, when He hath explained unto you that which is forbidden unto you unless ye are compelled thereto. But lo! many are led astray by their own lusts through ignorance. Lo! thy Lord, He is Best Aware of the transgressors.

Fornication

And come not near unto adultery. Lo! it is an abomination and an evil way.
Those who invoke not, with God, any other god, nor slay such life as God has made sacred except for just cause, nor commit fornication; - and any that does this (not only) meets punishment.

Shirk (Idolatry)

Say: I am forbidden to worship those on whom ye call instead of God. Say: I will not follow your desires, for then should I go astray and I should not be of the rightly guided.
[Qur'an 6:56]

Hadith

The Hadith is a compilation of the sayings of the Prophet Muhammad and there are a several sayings of the Prophet that relate to unlawful acts or food in the Islam religion. Below are some sayings from the Hadith collections:

Food and prohibition of alcohol

In an incident narrated by Rafi’ bin Khadij, the Prophet told Muslims who wanted to slaughter some animals using reeds,

Use whatever causes blood to flow, and eat the animals if the Name of Allah has been mentioned on slaughtering them... .
—Bukhari
Allah’s Messenger forbade the eating of the meat of beasts having fangs.
—Narrated by Bukhari, Narrated Abu Thalaba
The Prophet said: "Allah has forbidden alcoholic drinks. Whoever this verse reaches while they still possess any of it, they are not to drink nor to sell.".
—Narrated Abi Said, Muslim

Fornication

Prophet Muhammad explained: "If one of you were to be stabbed in the head with a piece of iron it would be better for him than if he were to touch a woman whom it is not permissible for him to touch."

Shirk (Idolatry)

It is reported on the authority of Ibn Mas'ood that Muhammad said: "Whoever died while supplicating another deity besides Allah, will enter the Fire."
—Narrated by Bukhari

The aforementioned quote has also been considered responsible for the Anti-Muslim sentiments across the Globe.

See also

References

External links