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Animal Rights in Islam |
Animal Rights in Islam The teachings of the Qur'an and the Tradition of the Prophet (pbuh)
led Muslims, regardless of their education or social status, to be
kind to animals. Ahmad Ibn Hanbal reported that once, Umar ibn al-Khattab, expressed his desire for a meal of fresh fish. His aid, Yarfa', without telling him, jumped on the back of one of Umar's camel and traveled for two nights going and two nights returning to buy a basket of fresh fish to Umar. When he arrived home, he washed the camel. But when Umar learned of what his aid did, he said to him: 'let me look at the camel first.' He went to the camel and inspected it very closely, suddenly he turned to his aid saying: 'you forgot to wash the sweat and its ears. You tortured an animal for Umar's desires! By Allah, 'Umar will never taste the fish, take your basket away from me.' Based on the enormous wealth of Islamic teachings regarding the respect and protection of animals and the environment, the renown Muslim jurist Izz ad-din abd as-Saalam, formulated the following legal opinion on the right of livestock and animals from human beings: A person who owns livestock, must spend on them the provision that
their kinds require, even if they have aged or sickened such that
no benefit comes from them; he should not burden them beyond what
they can bear; he should not put them together with anything by which
they would be injured, whether of their own kind or other species,
whether by breaking their bones or butting or wounding; he should
slaughter them gently and with kindness; when he slaughters them,
he must neither flay their skins nor break their bones until their
bodies have become cold and their lives have passed away; he should
not slaughter young within their sight but he should separate them;
he should make comfortable their resting places and watering places;
he should put their males and females together during their mating
seasons; he should not discard those which he takes as game; and neither
shoot them with anything that breaks their bone nor bring about their
destruction by any means that renders their meat unlawful to eat.
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