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- 180 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
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Animal Welfare in Islam
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About This Book
A comprehensive guide to Islam's position on animal welfare and the issue of halal.
This pioneering modern classic examines the Islamic principles of kindness and compassion toward animals. It compares animal sacrifice as practiced by the world's major religions and highlights the ethical issues that the mass production of meat raises, advocating alternative ways to produce halal meat in an appropriate manner.
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Yes, you can access Animal Welfare in Islam by Al-Hafiz Basheer Ahmad Masri in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Theology & Religion & Islamic Theology. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
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Topic
Theology & ReligionSubtopic
Islamic TheologyCHAPTER ONE
ISLAMIC CONCERN FOR ANIMALS
Preamble
CRUELTY TO ANIMALS has existed throughout the ages. It takes various forms and guises, from cockfighting to cat burning, from sheer overloading of beasts of burden to downright neglect and abuse. Animals have died, and are dying, harsh deaths in traps and snares to provide fur coats and ornaments for the wealthy, and they have been hunted throughout the world for the sheer sport and morbid pleasure of man. However, until very recently the acts of cruelty were on a smaller and individual scale. What has changed now is the nature and extent of the cruelty, which is practised on a much subtler and wider scale. The most alarming aspect of the current streak of cruelty is that it is being justified in the name of human needs and spurious science. Scientific and pharmaceutical experiments on animals are being done to find cures for diseases most of which are self-induced by our own disorderly lifestyle.
To satisfy his ever-increasing demands and fads, man has begun to use his technological might and scientific prowess to transform increasing numbers of animals into food products. In laboratories, scientists are producing new genetic variations that may be amenable to low cost intensive methods of rearing. Many stock-keepers are more concerned with finance than the moral principles of animal husbandry, and look upon their livestock as meat and milk machines.
Even the once proud farmers have started yielding to temptation. The medieval sport of the feudal nobility to chase and kill animals for fun is still in vogue. Anglers hook up fish, and throw them back into the water maimed ā just to while away their time. All kinds of denizens of the forest are fair game for the trophy-hunters. There is a large-scale carnage of fur-bearing animals. All this, and much more, is being done to satisfy human needs most of which are non-essential, fanciful, wasteful and which can be satisfied by alternative humane products which are easily available.
In this foul climate, the protests of animal welfarists are only just beginning to be heard. The politico-economic pressures of international balance of power and monetary balances of payment give little scope to state-legislators for moral considerations: and so millions of helpless animals go on suffering torture.
Why is it that human attitudes towards animals are so tardy in changing? The organised religious institutions could have played an important role in educating the general public. Almost ninety per cent of the worldās population owes allegiance to one or other of the major religions. Each of these religions has the benefit of platforms wherefrom it could influence and educate captive audiences. But, one seldom hears from their pulpits any sermons preaching the word of God about animals or respect for nature. Perhaps the clerics of our religions are too busy preparing their respective laities for the Life Hereafter to spare any thought for the so-called ādumb beastsā and the ecology which sustains us all.
Human greed and self-indulgence needed some excuse, however flimsy, to exploit animals; and the institution of religion offered them that excuse by disseminating the creed of manās unconstrained dominion and domination over the rest of Godās creation. It is true that all religions have tried in their respective ways to strike an equitable balance in the mutual rights and obligations between man and the rest of the species. The Scriptures of all religions contain expostulations on all kinds of cruelty to animals, but they have ceased to be taken seriously ā either by theologians or the public.
The religious institutions are supposed to be there to give guidance to their respective followers in all kinds of moral problems. If all the churches and temples, all the mosques and synagogues were to make a concerted effort to bring their moral influence to bear, it would not only educate their laities, but would also put pressure on the politicians and the economists of the world ā most of whom are sitting on the fence. Perhaps some religious leaders, though, still suffer from the misconceptions of the Middle Ages when they believed that their only business was to deal with the human soul. Since animals are thought to have no soul, they are not considered to be the responsibility of organised religion.
Let us hope a day will dawn when the great religious teachings may at last begin to bear fruit; when we shall see the start of a new era when man accords to animals the respect and status they have long deserved and for so long have been denied.
MANāS DOMINION OVER ANIMALS
Both science and religion assert that man is the apex of creation. Science bases this claim on manās physiological superiority over the rest of the animated world, while religion bases it on manās psychical excellence and potential. Islam too, declares man as the best of Godās creation and designates him as His vicegerent (KhalÄ«fah) on earth. So far, it all sounds very flattering, but is this position of pre-eminence unconditional? Let us see how the Islamic concept of vicegerency is meant to work. A conscientious study of this concept involves a study of issues such as:
Who is this man who has been appointed as Godās representative on earth? Does anyone who possesses human features qualify for this exalted rank, or are there any qualifying conditions attached to this office? If there are any qualifying conditions, what are they?
Islamās corroboration of manās claim of superiority over the other species is circumscribed by mental, moral and physical limitations in the exercise of this power. Man should use animals out of necessity and with compassion, humility and loving care rather than with malevolence, avidity or greed for the satisfaction of creature-comforts, luxurious pleasures and self-indulgence. All the major religions have taught compassionate and humane treatment of animals. It is neither feasible nor necessary for a religion to lay down in its scriptures detailed rules and regulations covering every aspect of life. Each religion has tried in its own way to lay down the basic principles and to nurture in man a sense of responsibility as the custodian of nature. In our age of ever-increasing human mastery over nature, this responsibility has also increased proportionately.
The QurāÄn, while declaring manās vicegerency, makes it clear in the following verses, that the appointment is not unconditional:
āHe [God] it is Who made you vicegerents on earth; he who disavows, the burden of disavowal will be on him ā¦ā (QurāÄn 35:39)
āCertainly, We created man in the best make.ā (QurāÄn 95:4)
However, in the very next sentence the QurāÄn makes it clear what happens to those who fail to conform to the conditions, in these words:
āthen We reduce him to [the status of] the lowest of the low.ā (QurāÄn 95:5)
Man is the only species which has been endowed with the ability to differentiate between evil and virtue and to exercise his freedom of choice. Animals are capable of differentiating between āgood and badā in the material sense, but not in the moral and ethical sense. In the following verses, the QurāÄn tells us about those humans who misuse their freedom of choice and transgress ā they lose the status of human beings in the spiritual sense and are reduced to the status of animals:
āā¦ they are those whom Allah has rejected and whom He has condemned and has turned into [the nature of] apes and swine, because they served...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Editorās Note
- Publisherās Note
- Transliteration Table
- Contents
- Preface
- Comments and Abbreviations
- Saying of Some Muslim Sages
- Chapter One: Islamic Concern for Animals
- Chapter Two: Vegetarianism v/s Meatarianism
- Chapter Three: Animal Sacrifice
- Chapter Four: įø¤alÄl Meat ā the Bone of Contention
- Index