User:Unflavoured/Sodomy in Islam

Youth conversing with suitors
Miniature illustration from the Haft Awrang of Jami, in the story A Father Advises his Son About Love. Freer and Sackler Galleries, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.

Islamic views on anal sex (luti, the "sin of Lot's people") stretch from widespread practical acceptance to condemnation by Islamic law.[1]

Anal sex in Islamic law (Sharia) edit

Sunni view edit

Islamic law, or shariah, developed during the 8th and 9th centuries in several different "schools" based varying interpretations of the Quran and the hadith, or reported sayings of the Prophet.[2] Generally speaking, since sexual relations under shariah are only permissible within heterosexual marriage, it follows that sex outside such marriage is adultery and/or fornication, both of which attract punishments.[3] Homosexual sodomy, defined as adultery or fornication or both, thus attracts the same penalties as those crimes (flogging or death), although the exact punishment varies with schools and scholars.[4] In practice, few modern Muslim countries have legal systems based fully on shariah, and an increasing number of Muslims do not look to shariah but to the Quran itself for moral guidance.[5]

Shiite view edit

The position regarding male/female sexual intercourse is not clear-cut, but the majority of Shiah interpreters hold that (l) anal intercourse is not haram provided the wife agrees, but nevertheless is strongly disliked, and (2) and if the wife does not agree, then it is preferable to refrain. The reasoning is essentially the humane argument that: ""Woman is a means of your pleasure, therefore do not harm her."[6]

  1. ^ Schmitt
  2. ^ Jivraj&de Jong, p.2
  3. ^ Jivraj&de Jong, p.2
  4. ^ Jivraj&de Jong, p.2
  5. ^ Jivraj&de Jong, p.2
  6. ^ Al-Islam.org