Malaikah
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Something I really need to know, to what degree is it allowed for the Muslims to bend certain Islamic laws, if it means that the outcome is in the best interest for the Muslims, and that there isn't a halal alternative?
Does there need to be a very high chance of success before someone can do something haram? So, if a person needed to do something haram because there was no other alternative and the benefit would be great, but the chance of success are very small indeed, it is allowed for the person to do it?
What about if the things that the Muslims are trying to achieve through means involving haram because there is no other way, aren't a serious need that the Muslim have? It would be more of a privilege, or something that the Muslim could live without... and means there will be only a small amount of sacrifice?
And does the magnitude of the sin involved need to match the magnitude of the benefit that we desire to achieve? For example, being involved in a massive riba deal so one can set up a swimming pool with a halal enviroment (segregation etc...). The sin here is just huge, but the need isn't!
Also, who is allowed to decide whether rules can be broken or not? Should the decision be left up to the people of knowledge, or can individuals make the decision themselves, based on their own logic, even though they do not have knowledge of Islam?
Lastly, how do we know when we should be sacrificing our own desires and rights and living with the injustice with patience, and when we should be working to remove the injustice even if it involves haram means?? What classifies as something that brings a greater good to the Muslims?
For example, a Muslim woman forsaking hijab to excel in a certain field with the intention of paving the way for other Muslim women to enter the field without having to sacrifice their hijab... keeping in mind that there is no great need for Muslim women to enter the field, when it can be left up to the men (even though it would be great if Muslim women had the field open to them), and that the person doing it hasn't consulted with others in such a way as to gain the support of the Muslim community and perhaps other non-Muslims in the field, and that the chances of the person actually being successful are very slim?
Sorry that it is so long and with so many questions, but it is something that I really need to know!

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