Wine
Drinking in Islam
by Abul
Kasem
April 14, 2005
Wine and liquor (including beer, whisky, brandy,
Martini, vermouth, gin, vodka, Champagne , Port, Sherry... ) are
great taboos in Islam. It is a great sin even to hold a bottle of
one of these dreadful stuffs, not to talk of dropping a single drop
of these haram liquids into one's ( I mean, a Muslim's) throat.
Ask any Muslim and he will surely attest to what I have diligently
written just now. There are severe prescribed (read Islamic) punishments
for the production, distribution, sale, trading and consumption
of these egregious products. Would you care to know that this is
truly a sheer hypocrisy in Islam? When one carefully reads the Qur'an
one cannot but be utterly shocked at the unbridled flow of supreme
wine and dazzling sex-damsels reserved for the best of the adherents
of the faith, while totally forbidding this 'heavenly' liquids in
this world. Believe it or not in Islamic Paradise it is only non-stop
fountain of wine and unlimited supply of women (read sex) for the
pious believers (male, of course). If these earthly drinks (wine)
are so notorious then why Allah has to reserve their exclusive pleasures
for the after world? Why one (a Muslim) must die first to enjoy
these subsequent supreme delights? --one may legitimately ask.
Did Qur'an really forbid the consumption of
wine? Let us open the infallible Qur'an, the uncontaminated words
of Allah, and carefully read in chronological order the relevant
verses (note: the numbers inside the brackets indicate the chronological
order):
Wine and gambling -- some good but great sins...
2:219 (87)
002.219
YUSUFALI: They ask thee concerning wine and gambling. Say:
"In them is great sin, and some profit, for men; but the sin
is greater than the profit." They ask thee how much they are
to spend; Say: "What is beyond your needs." Thus doth
Allah Make clear to you His Signs: In order that ye may consider-
This verse clearly exhorts the comparative merits
and demerits of gambling and drinking wine. It, by no means, makes
consumption of alcoholic drinks unlawful. This verse even states
that one should carefully spend only his left-over money (after
his living expenses) to engage in such treats (i.e., wine consumption,
gambling), thus guiding the believers not to overspend in the consumption
of liqueur and gaming.
Here is another verse on the consumption of
wine (?):
Can't go to a mosque intoxicated or after having
touched a woman... 4:43 (92)
004.043
YUSUFALI: O ye who believe! Approach not prayers with a mind
befogged, until ye can understand all that ye say,- nor in a state
of ceremonial impurity (Except when travelling on the road), until
after washing your whole body. If ye are ill, or on a journey, or
one of you cometh from offices of nature, or ye have been in contact
with women, and ye find no water, then take for yourselves clean
sand or earth, and rub therewith your faces and hands. For Allah
doth blot out sins and forgive again and again.
Most erudite Islamic scholars associate this
verse with the non-attendance in a mosque when intoxicated (or after
having sex with a woman). It is of course true that there is no
use to attend prayers when one is drunk. However, what these learned
scholars forget to mention is that the word 'defogged' does not
necessarily mean a state of drunkenness. This state could arise
due to many reasons, such as: a family quarrel, a physical fight,
an over dose of sleep, suffering from a severe headache, a mental
disorder... ..and so on. Therefore, relating this verse only to
intoxication is rather too simplistic, to say the least. In fact,
in its literal meaning, this verse has nothing to do with wine drinking.
It even does not mention the word wine or any intoxicant. Therefore,
this verse cannot be used to prohibit the consumption of alcohol.
Let us read the next verse:
Intoxicants (wine and spirit) and gambling are
Satan's handiwork, avoid them... 5:90 (112)
005.090
YUSUFALI: O ye who believe! Intoxicants and gambling, (dedication
of) stones, and (divination by) arrows, are an abomination,- of
Satan's handwork: eschew such (abomination), that ye may prosper.
This is the verse the zealot Islamists often
use to justify the legal prohibition on all affairs dealing with
alcoholic drinks. Read this verse once again. There is no way this
verse makes alcoholic drinks illegal to consume, produce, distribute,
sale or trade. Along with other acts like, gambling, divination...
etc. this verse merely declares the danger of intoxicants. This
is similar to the present-day government warning on the dangers
of smoking tobacco products. Despite severe warning notices on every
packet of cigarette sold, the habit of smoking continues. No country
(except perhaps Bhutan ) has ever tried to ban or make smoking illegal
and a punishable offence - at least not yet, so far. The same argument
can be easily extended for the consumption of wine during Muhammad's
time. You see, Allah (i.e., Muhammad) was quite a smart person not
to force an immediate ban on the consumption of wine, because He
knew this would bring immediate retaliation from His adherents who
were so used to daily drinking of wine. So, Allah merely advised
His followers to eschew this bad habit without He taking a clear
stand on the outright banning of drinking wine. While His injunction
on the eating of pork and pork products was absolutely unmistakeable,
He was quite hesitant in taking such a decisive step on wine drinking.
If Allah chose He could have easily promulgated an outright ban
on wine. But He did not. Allah (i.e., Muhammad) simply took the
step akin to the steps taken by many of today's governments regarding
smoking.
So, why there is a total ban on alcoholic drinks
in Islam? The answer lies in hadis. You see, all ahadith were compiled long after Muhammad's
death - at least 200 years later. In fact, very soon you will learn
that many of those devout Islamic Caliphs were habitual drinkers
of wine before the dubious (and often questionable) ahadith
were used as legal codes to run the lives of Muslims.
There is very little doubt that all these so-called
Sahih ahadith do proclaim a total ban on wine and any other
alcoholic drink. Such haram drinks cannot even be used in
a medicine.
As told before, in the holy Qur'an, wine (or
any alcoholic drink) is largely treated as harmful, although there
might be minor benefits in it. Certainly, the Qur'an did not proclaim
a total ban on the consumption of wine, if we understood the meaning
of verse 5:90. It simply exhorted the believers to avoid this harmful
drink.
This means: if we are to believe the hadis,
then Qur'an is wrong or, alternatively, if we take the Qur'an as
the infallible words of Allah then all those ahadith dealing
in alcoholic drinks are absolutely fabricated, if not outright lies.
Did the companions of the apostle of Allah drink
wine? What a outrageous question is this! - you may say. Here is
the answer - though most Muslims will simply deny the truth.
You see, most of Muhammad's companions (except,
perhaps Umar and Abu Bakr) were habitual drinkers. Don't you believe
this? Here is a hadis from Sahih Bukhari that tells us Hamzah,
the 'Lion of Islam' was a real drunkard and womanizer of the first
order. In fact, while he (Hamzah) was drunk Muhammad was so scared
of him that he (Muhammad) dared not approach him. The arrant, violent
and unruly behavior of Hamzah, while drunken was one of the prime
reasons to motivate Muhammad to proclaim the avoidance of wine.
Let us read this hadis from Sahih Bukhari
Hamzah, in drunken state killed the she-camel
of Ali... 4.53.324
Volume 4, Book 53,
Number 324:
Narrated Ali:
I got a she-camel in my share of the war booty
on the day (of the battle) of Badr, and the Prophet had given me
a she-camel from the Khumus. When I intended to marry Fatima, the
daughter of Allah's Apostle, I had an appointment with a goldsmith
from the tribe of Bani Qainuqa' to go with me to bring Idhkhir (i.e.
grass of pleasant smell) and sell it to the goldsmiths and spend
its price on my wedding party. I was collecting for my she-camels
equipment of saddles, sacks and ropes while my two she-camels were
kneeling down beside the room of an Ansari man. I returned after
collecting whatever I collected, to see the humps of my two she-camels
cut off and their flanks cut open and some portion of their livers
was taken out. When I saw that state of my two she-camels, I could
not help weeping. I asked, "Who has done this?" The people
replied, "Hamza bin Abdul Muttalib who is staying with some
Ansari drunks in this house." I went away till I reached the
Prophet and Zaid bin Haritha was with him. The Prophet noticed on
my face the effect of what I had suffered, so the Prophet asked.
"What is wrong with you." I replied, "O Allah's Apostle!
I have never seen such a day as today. Hamza attacked my two she-camels,
cut off their humps, and ripped open their flanks, and he is sitting
there in a house in the company of some drunks." The Prophet
then asked for his covering sheet, put it on, and set out walking
followed by me and Zaid bin Haritha till he came to the house where
Hamza was. He asked permission to enter, and they allowed him, and
they were drunk. Allah's Apostle started rebuking Hamza for what
he had done, but Hamza was drunk and his eyes were red. Hamza looked
at Allah's Apostle and then he raised his eyes, looking at his knees,
then he raised up his eyes looking at his umbilicus, and again he
raised up his eyes look in at his face. Hamza then said, "Aren't
you but the slaves of my father?" Allah's Apostle realized
that he was drunk, so Allah's Apostle retreated, and we went out
with him.
Even Muhammad's lifelong companion/servant,
Anas b. Malik was a butler or a bar tender - serving wine to his
customers. His main business was probably running a pub.
Read this hadis from Sahih Muslim.
Anas b. Malik was serving wine to a group of
ansars when the announcement on the ban on alcoholic drink was pronounced...
Sahih Muslim: 23.4884, 4886
Book 023, Number 4884:
Anas b. Malik reported: I was standing amongst
the uncles of my tribe serving them Fadikh while I was the youngest
of them, when a person came and said: Verily the use of liqour has
been prohibited. They said: Anas, spill it away. So I spilt it.
He (one of the narrators. Sulaiman Taimi) said that he asked Anas
what that was (the Fadikh). He said: It had been prepared from unripe
and ripe dates. Abu Bakr b. Anas said: It was their liquor in those
days. Sulaiman said: A person narrated it to me from Anas b. Malik
that he had said so.
Book 023, Number 4886:
Anas b. Malik reported I was serving wine to
Abu Talha, and Abu Dujana. and Mu'adh b. Jabal admidst a group of
Ansar when a visitor came to us and said There is a fresh news;
the (verses) concerning the prohibition of liquor have been revealed.
So we spilt it on that day; and it was a mixture of dry dates and
fresh dates. Anas b. Malik said: While Khamr was declared unlawful,
the common liquor of theirs was then a mixture of dry dates and
fresh dates.
Hadis number 4886 clearly mentions the names
of some of Muhammad's dearest minions who were habitual drinkers
of wine. Therefore, how was it possible for Muhammad to raise the
ire of his most trusted companions by taking away their regular
pleasure? - one may surely wonder.
Even the ordinary Jihadists were drinkers of
wine. Some of them drank alcoholic drink during the battle of Uhud!
Some Jihadists drank alcohol on the day of Uhud...
Sahih Bukhari: 4.52.70
Volume 4, Book 52,
Number 70:
Narrated Jabir bin Abdullah:
"Some people drank alcohol in the morning
of the day (of the battle) of Uhud and were martyred (on the same
day)." Sufyan was asked, "(Were they martyred) in the
last part of the day?)" He replied, "Such information
does not occur in the narration."
How about Muhammad? Did he ever drink wine?
Unbelievable though it may seem, Muhammad did actually consume wine!
Here is the proof.
While elaborating on the wine drinking habits
of some of the Caliphs of Islam, Phillip K. Hitti, the eminent historian
of the Arabs writes, "Khamr, made of dates was the favourite.
Ibn Khaldun argues that such personages as al-Rashid and al-Ma'mun
used only nabidh, prepared by soaking grapes, raisins or dates in
water and allowing the juice to ferment slightly. Such drink was
judged legal under certain conditions by at least one school of
Moslem jurisprudence, the Hanafite. Muhammad himself drank it, especially
before it was three days old." (History of the Arabs; Philip K.
Hitti, ch. xxvi, p.337)
In case you thought that P.K. Hitti was an infidel
author, so his words cannot be trusted, here is a foot note that
he cites to back up his claims.
Foot note 5: Mishkah, vol. ii, pp.172-3; ibn
Hanbal, Musnad ( Cairo , 1313), vol.i, pp. 240, 287, 320; Bukhari,
vol. vi, p.232
In the same book, on p.227, Phillip K. Hitti
lists the name of habitual drinkers among the Ummayad Caliphs; such
as:
- Yazid I (680-683): he was Muawiyah's son.
He drank daily and won the title Yazid al-Khumur, the Yazid
of wines.
- Abd al-Malik (685-705): he drank once a month;
but drank so heavily that he had to use ant-vomiting medicine
to pacify his drinking bout.
- Al-Walid I (705-715): he drank every other
day.
- Hisham ((724-743): He drank every Friday
after the divine service.
- Al-Walid II (743-744): Yazid II's son. He
would swim habitually in a pool of wine of which he would gulp
enough to lower the surface appreciably. He also shot the Qur'an
to pieces with his bow and arrow.
Professor Phillip K. Hitti authenticates his
claims by foot-noting impeccable Islamic historians, such as: Aghani,
Iqd, Masudi and Al-Nawaji.
Clearly, all those Caliphs (the protectors of
Islam) knew Muhammad's Islam exceedingly well, because they ruled
immediately after Muhammad's death. If wine was haramzed
by Muhammad they would have definitely refrained from consuming
such haramized stuff; since none of them was reported to
have consumed a single piece of pork and/or any other haram
food.
The total ban on the consumption of wine was
truly enforced by the Abbasids, whose founder Abu al-Abbas, having
the sobriquet al-Saffat (the blood shedder) was an absolutely
cruel, deranged, despotic warlord who was bent to proclaim his brand
of extreme chastisement (read Islam) through mindless torture and
barbarism. It was during the Abbasid period that the first comprehensive
compilation of hadis (Bukhari) was completed. This was around
830-840 - almost 200 years after Muhammad's death.
The question is: who knew Muhammad's Islam better
- the Ummayad's, who were in charge of Islam soon after his death,
or the Abbasid's whose brand of Islam was instituted after a long
elapse of almost 200 years?
Even the Abbasid Caliph al-Mamun was a regular
drinker of wine. (Hitti, p.306)
Here are a few ahadith on the 'haramisation'
of alcoholic drink (I have cited only the main message, for details
refer to the hadis number quoted):
Sahih
Bukhari:
All intoxicant drinks including wines are haram...
1.4.243
The selling of alcoholic drinks were made unlawful
in the year of the conquest of Mecca ... Sahih Bukhari: 5.59.590
Usury and trade in alcoholic drink were banned
at the same time... 6.60.64, 65, 66
Sahih
Muslims:
Drinking and selling of wine is forbidden...
: 10.3835, 3836, 3838, 3839
Every drink that causes intoxication is forbidden...
23.4956, 4957
Wine cannot be used as a medicine; it is an
ailment... 23.4892
Sunaan
Abu Dawud:
Wine is not a medicine but a disease... : 28.3864
Malik's
Muwatta:
The making and selling of wine is haram... Malik's
Muwatta: 42.5.12
Wine is a work of Satan... Malik's Muwatta:
42.5.15
Conclusion:
The Qur'an does not at all proscribe wine drinking. The ban on alcoholic
drinks was certainly a later innovation by the Abbasids. They used
questionable ahadith to institute such a ban. No one condones
the harmful effects of excessive drinking; but it is simply too
harsh the Islamic penalty (from 80 lashes to death for the repeat
offenders) for occasional indulgence in a cup or two of red wine.
As suggested by many cardiologists, this may even be beneficial
for health, While the infidels enjoy wine and beat the Muslims hands
down in maintaining good health and hygiene, the Muslims, on the
other hand, mostly suffer from ill-health and poor hygiene. They
must reflect on this reality and let those Muslims who like to drink
in limited quantity do so without fear or prejudice. This is a basic
right of a citizen which is often denied in Islamic Paradises. This
forced inhibition on drink is totally unfair and tormenting. The
Qur'an confirms that they have the right to consume alcohol - if
they choose so.
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Abul Kasem writes from Sydney , Australia .
Comments can be sent to humanist882004@yahoo.com
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