Question: Why is there a difference
of opinion among scholars on the question of photography? Does Islam, in
your opinion, prohibit it?.
Answer: Devout Muslims of the
sub-continent have always taken a firm stand against impressions resembling
living beings, whether hand-drawn pictures or photographs by the camera.
Many scholars of the Middle-East, on the contrary, have lately tended to
draw a line of distinction between the two: they are equally averse to
the former but have invariably shown inclination towards the permissibility
of photographs taken by cameras.
There are so many narrations of the
Prophet (sws) condemning the use of pictures considered reliable according
to the traditional criteria of authenticity that the direction certainly
cannot be overlooked.
One such Statement attributed to the
Prophet (sws), for instance, warns thus: ‘On the Day of Judgement creators
of images will be chastised and asked to inject in them life and they will
be unable to do so’. (Bukhari).
This warning led many scholars, specially
those belonging to the sub-continent, to believe that it is basically the
insult to the sanctity of life in objects attempted to be captured through
images that invites the displeasure of the Almighty. There is therefore
no difference whatsoever, according to them, whether the images are photographs
taken by a camera or hand-drawn pictures. Ironically, however, most of
them do not object to the pictures of plants, which, it is well known,
are equally living.
Many of the scholars belonging to
the Arab world were led to take a different stance on the issue because
of some other narrations, one of which can be translated thus: ‘Who does
a greater wrong than one who tries to create something like My creation.
Let them create a particle or a seed or a barley seed’. (Bukhari & Muslim)
They contended that since the real
cause of the Almighty's displeasure appears to be the inaccurate and deformed
results of pictures and sculptures, and since camera helps in capturing
the exact reflection of the original object, the consideration in the narration
doesn’t appear to be applicable to photographs. The late Shaykh Muhammad
Bakhit a former Mufti
of Egypt, for instance, opined that photography is an art of capturing
a shade or a reflection by a special technique. He clarified that what
is forbidden is to create a likeness which has no previous existence in
order to produce something similar to what Allah has created. Using camera
to take a picture is, on the contrary, no different from what we see in
the mirror.
Contrary to the two opinions on the
subject mentioned above, we believe that a careful consideration of all
the relevant narrations on the subject leads one to believe that images
were condemned not for any intrinsic evil in them, but primarily because
they contributed to the polytheistic tendencies of the people of that time.
It appears that idolatory and picture-worship were rampant in that period
and since the predominantly monotheistic attitude of Islam couldn’t have
tolerated even the slightest deviation from the cause of Tawhid
(monotheism), all types of images were condemned to start with. The
condemnation was intended for the purpose of blocking all ways leading
to the evil. There are examples in some other areas of Islam as well which
lead us to believe that if once an extreme step helps in obliterating an
evil, and the condemnation of the mere cause is not needed for the purpose,
Islam does not insist on continuing with restriction on such cases. When
intoxicants were banned, for instance, the Prophet of Allah (sws) had commanded
discontinuance of use of all containers traditionally used to serve them
even for othersiwe legitimate purposes. Once the extreme restriction helped
in erasing the obssession for intoxicants, the ban on the use of such containers
was lifted. We believe that the restriction on pictures and statues also
falls in the same category. Therefore, all images, whether paintings, statues,
or photographs which do not contribute to the cause of polytheism anymore
are permissible, if they do not violate other principles of Islam.
Statues and images carrying any religious
sanctity, for instance, would continue to be condemned for the same reason.
Pictures contributing to obscenity, likewise, would be disallowed though
for a different cause.
If the aforementioned point-of-view
is accepted, the naration quoted earlier would mean that the creators of
images who used to worship and pin all hopes of salvation on the lifeless
gods would be asked to inject life in their self-created deities to rescue
them from the wrath of the Almighty. The demand, naturally, would be meant
only to add insult to their injury. Unable to do so, they would curse themselves
for their past behaviour as mentioned in the Qur’an:
And [the polytheists] will be told: ‘Invoke your partners’.
They will call on them but they will not answer, and they will see the
torment [and wish] if only they had come to guidance. [28:64]
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