Question: To
what extent is suicide bombing allowed by Islam? Is not suicide, whatever
the reason maybe, prohibited in Islam? Is killing people in market places
including women, children and old people through suicide permitted in Islam?
If yes, then to what extent. We have recently seen such events in Kashmir
and now very much in Palestine.
Answer: Suicide
bombing cannot be objected to provided the following conditions are fulfilled.
1. It is carried out by a state against
an enemy against which war has been openly declared.
2. It does not target civilians of
the enemy country.
Consequently, individuals and groups
who carry out this activity against innocent civilians, as seems to be
the case in Kashmir and Palestine, are doing something which is totally
prohibited. No individual or group has been given the right to take human
life. Only a state has this authority. And a state too has this authority
over the combatants of an enemy against which war has been openly declared.
Clandestine suicidal attacks against a country with which a pact has been
made amounts to a breach of law which is a severe crime in the eyes of
Islam. Similarly, civilians and innocent citizens must be protected at
all costs if a state has to undertake such an activity. Muslims who kill
innocent civilians must know that they are violating the directives of
Islam and committing a crime against humanity. The Qur’an calls
the killing of an individual in this manner as tantamount to killing the
whole mankind:
He who killed a human being without the latter being guilty
of killing another or being guilty of spreading disorder in the land should
be looked upon as if he had killed all mankind. (5:32)
As far as the legitimacy of committing
suicide bombings if the above mentioned conditions are fulfilled is concerned,
let us first see why suicide is prohibited in Islam and whether such bombings
can be termed as suicide.
It must be appreciated that the basic
reason for which suicide is prohibited in Islam is that it amounts to rejecting
the scheme of the Almighty according to which He has created man to test
him through good and evil circumstances1
. One should also remember that the Almighty has specifically mentioned
in the Qur’an that He never burdens a person with a responsibility
he cannot bear2. So, however
tough be the circumstances, a person should boldly face them knowing that
they have been ordained for Him by the Almighty, and that he has also been
equipped with the required resilience by the Almighty to face them.
If the above bases are true, then
suicide bombings cannot bear the label of prohibition since a person is
not committing suicide out of depression and desperation by rejecting the
scheme of the Almighty. He is actually sacrificing his life to root out
oppression and injustice on this earth – the only reason for which today
a Muslim can wage Jihad – which surely is a noble cause.
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