polite_gandalf wrote on May 28
th, 2014 at 1:15pm:
No this is not a product of islam, and the first thing I would point out is that the perpetrator didn't even mention islam as his justification, he cited family honour.
Sorry, Gandalf, but
EVERYTHING is shrouded, couched, and drenched in 'Islam' in that part of the world. Culture derives from religious text in most societies.
It's not necessary for them to state the obvious. The hadith cites the case of someone having been stoned for adultery, with no accompanying words of disapproval for this act.
polite_gandalf wrote on May 28
th, 2014 at 1:15pm:
As for punishment, the quran prescribes lashing (and the act itself has strict rules like not being allowed to bend the elbow - such that it does not cause serious injury, and is actually very mild) and/or house arrest.
So the Koran doesn't approve of ...
"100 lashes for adultery"? Is that correct?
Gandalf, if we're going to have this conversation, could we please keep it real? There's absolutely no point if you believe you owe it to the Muslim community to play Defence Counsel with a lot of dodgy and slippery rhetoric.
polite_gandalf wrote on May 28
th, 2014 at 1:15pm:
The ahadith have a couple of mentions of the prophet ordering stoning.
Ah-HA! Thank you. The sad thing is that
millions of Muslims living in the rural areas of the world take this as something they can emulate in their own village lives. It's sponsored by the hadith.
polite_gandalf wrote on May 28
th, 2014 at 1:15pm:
Here's what bothers me: you have the quran and ahadith - both mention different punishments. Any muslim will tell you that the quran trumps ahadith, yet the hudud fan club will always go with stoning.
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Hudud (Arabic: حدود Ḥudūd, also transliterated hadud, hudood; singular hadd, حد, literal meaning "limit", or "restriction") is the word often used in Islamic literature for the bounds of acceptable behaviour and the punishments for serious crimes. In Islamic law or Sharia, hudud usually refers to the class of punishments that are fixed for certain crimes that are considered to be "claims of God." They include theft, fornication (zina) and adultery (extramarital sex), consumption of alcohol or other intoxicants, and apostasy (see apostasy in Islam).
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polite_gandalf wrote on May 28
th, 2014 at 1:15pm:
And secondly, the quran is an actual specific command to muslims of how this should be punished. The ahadith is merely mentioning what the prophet did - doesn't say this is the prescribed punishment for all time and places.
But certain conclusions can be drawn from his example, surely? He was a model for all future generations of Muslim.
polite_gandalf wrote on May 28
th, 2014 at 1:15pm:
Common sense dictates that the quranic prescription is the actual law for muslims to follow, and the prophetic example mentioned in the ahadith - especially when it contradicts quranic law - is just an historical account of how The Prophet ruled in his time and place. It can be argued that those muslims who order stoning for adultery are directly violating quranic - and therefore islamic - law.
That doesn't hold water. Too many two-way bets here. Too much placing the chips on a whole lot of roulette numbers in the hope one will be a winner.