Qaradawi Denies Allowing Intoxicant
IslamOnline
By IOL Staff
DOHA — Prominent Muslim scholar Sheikh Yusuf Al-Qaradawi, the president of the International Union for Muslim Scholars, denied having said it would be allowed for Muslims to consume alcohol.
"Sheikh Qaradawi's fatwa did not allow Muslims to consume even a drop of intoxicant," his office said in a statement mailed to IslamOnline.net.
The prominent scholar issued a fatwa last week that consuming drinks containing tiny quantities of alcohol that is "constituted naturally through fermentation" did not violate Islamic teachings.
"The fatwa was issued in response to a question from the Qatari Standards and Specifications Autho (QSSA) on allowing 0.05 percent of alcohol constituted naturally through fermentation," the statement explained.
It stressed that the percentage was not set by Sheikh Qaradawi but rather by the QSSA which considers it the maximum percentage of alcohol naturally constituted through fermentation.
"Qaradawi set conditions for allowing this quantity that it must be tiny and ineffective, especially when it is constituted naturally by fermentation and is not manufactured.
QSSA Director Mohamed Saif al-Kuwari defended the fatwa.
"The fatwa came to address a pressing need for it. We were always receiving calls and inquiries from the public about allowing such percentage of alcohol in our specifications. This percentage of ethylic alcohol which result from naturally fermentation is something normal in all types of fruits."
Controversy
The statement refuted claims that the fatwa would encourage people to drink alcohol.
"Such people do not wait for a fatwa or an advice from a scholar (for consuming alcohol). They know they violate the orders of Allah."
The fatwa had sparked controversy and criticism from some newspapers in Qatar, where Sheikh Qaradawi is based.
"The fatwa will open the door to those who want to consume drinks containing small proportions of alcohol under the pretext that neither the Qur'an nor the Sunnah (Prophet Muhammad's deeds) defined the proportion," wrote Abdullatif al-Mahmud, editor of the Ash-Sharq daily.
But the statement issued by the office of Sheikh Qaradawi insisted that the fear of being misunderstood by some can not be a pretext for asking scholars to clarify Islamic rulings.
Ash-Sharq thanked Sheikh Qaradawi for the explanatory statement, saying it acted out of fear that some parties might misinterpret the fatwa.
Islam prohibits any beverage that get people intoxicated, both in small and large quantities, whether it is alcohol, drugs, or something else.
source:
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