Is it haraam to get money from the bank for free? Is it haraam to keep pictures for memory?
Mu' meneen Brothers and Sisters,
As Salaam Aleikum wa Rahmatullahi wa
Barakatuh. (May Allah's Peace, Mercy and Blessings be upon all of you)
One of our brothers/sisters has asked
this question:
Assalaamu
Alikum
Is it haraam to get money from the bank for free?
Is it
haraam to keep pictures for memory?
Or
Take them for memory?
What parts are removed from the beard and what parts you let grow?
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errors in the above statement. The forum does not change anything from
questions, comments and statements received from our readers for circulation in
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Answer:
Pictures and beard
In the name of Allah, We praise Him, seek His help and ask
for His forgiveness. Whoever Allah guides none can misguide, and whoever
He allows to fall astray, none can guide them aright. We bear witness that
there is no one (no idol, no person, no
grave, no prophet, no imam, no dai,
nobody!) worthy of worship but Allah Alone, and we bear witness that Muhammad
(saws) is His slave-servant and the seal of His Messengers.
Your
Question: Is it haraam to get money from the bank for free?
Firstly, it is against the very nature of any financial
institution like a ‘bank’ to give away any money for ‘free’ or without any
conditions attached!
But if there is available any such bank or institution,
who from the goodness of their heart gives away money for absolutely free
without any conditions attached, there is nothing in Shariah Law that places a
restriction on accepting such funds.
Islam neither considers a bank to be unlawful, nor does
Islam consider giving or receiving funds of mutual consent unlawful….but what
Islam considers and declares absolutely unlawful is the transactions that
involve the evil of ‘riba’ or interest and usury. If the transaction entails even an iota of
‘riba’, then that transaction is unlawful…regardless of whether that
transaction is done by a bank, an institution or an individual.
Your
Question: Is it haraam to keep pictures for memory? Or Take them for memory?
Allah Subhanah has singled out ‘shirk’ or associating
other deities with Allah as the one single biggest sin in Islam. Many amongst mankind through the ages used to
make images and portraits of the pious amongst them, and as times and
generations went by, the ignorant amongst them would start worshipping these
images of their deceased pious ancestors and thus involve themselves in the
abomination of ‘shirk’! Thus Allah and
His Messenger (saws) guided the believers to abstain from making and glorifying
images and portraits, and thus eliminated the very root that might lead some
amongst them to the evil path of ‘shirk’!
Sahih Al-Bukhari
Hadith 7.841 Narrated by Abu Talha
The Messenger of
Allah (saws) said, "Angels (of
Mercy) do not enter a house where there are pictures."
Sahih Al-Bukhari
Hadith 7.845 Narrated by Abu
Juhaifa
that he had bought
a slave whose profession was cupping.
The Prophet forbade taking the price of blood, and the price of a dog,
and the earnings of a prostitute, and cursed the one who took or gave (Riba')
usury, and the lady who tattooed others or got herself tattooed, and the picture-maker.
Sahih Al-Bukhari
Hadith 4.450 Narrated by Abu Salim
Once Gabriel
promised the Prophet (saws) that he would visit him, but Gabriel did not come,
and later on he said, "We, angels, do not enter a house which contains a
picture, or a dog."
Sahih Al-Bukhari
Hadith 7.834 Narrated by Muslim
We were with Masruq
at the house of Yasar bin Numair. Masruq saw pictures on his terrace and said,
"I heard 'Abdullah saying that he heard the Prophet (saws) saying, "The people who will receive the
severest punishment from Allah will be the picture makers.' "
Sahih Al-Bukhari
Hadith 4.448 Narrated by Abu Talha
I heard the Messenger
of Allah (saws) saying; "Angels (of Mercy) do not enter a house wherein
there is a dog or a picture of a living creature (a human being or an
animal)."
Sahih Al-Bukhari
Hadith 3.428 Narrated by Said bin
Abu Al Hasan
While I was with
Ibn 'Abbas a man came and said, "O father of 'Abbas! My sustenance is from
my manual profession and I make these pictures." Ibn 'Abbas said, "I will tell you only
what I heard from Allah's Messenger (saws).
I heard him (saws) saying, 'Whoever makes a picture will be punished by
Allah till he puts life in it, and he will never be able to put life in it.'
" Hearing this, that man heaved a
sigh and his face turned pale. Ibn
'Abbas said to him, "What a pity! If you insist on making pictures, I advise you to make pictures of trees and
any other unanimated objects."
Because
the concept of cameras and photography is a technological development of man
after the establishment of the Quran and the Sunnah, there is a difference of
opinion amongst the scholars regarding its permissibility. The majority of the scholars of Islam are of
the opinion that photography in its itself is not forbidden in Islam, because
it provides nothing but an exact reflection and mirror image of the creation of
the Supreme Creator as opposed to paintings, or portraits, or images, or the
sculptures of an animate objects, where there is a possibility that man can
make an imaginary addition/subtraction to the original creation of the Creator,
and are thus strictly forbidden in Islam.
The majority of the scholars are
also of the opinion that a believer must not decorate or display in his house
any pictures, images, idols, or photos of animate objects, as in light of the several narrations of the
Messenger of Allah (saws), the Angels of Mercy do not enter a house where there
are pictures (of animate objects).
Almost all the scholars of Islam
are unanimous in their opinion that there is no harm if one takes a portrait
photograph for necessary and legal reasons, and to comply with the modern
methods of identification like identity cards, driver’s license, passports, etc. Some opine that there is no harm if one
wishes to take photos of family and loved ones and keep them secured in albums
for memory; but if they abstain from it, it would be better and purer for them.
Sahih Al-Bukhari Hadith 3.267 Narrated by An Numan bin Bashir
The Prophet (saws) said "Both legal
(halaal) and illegal (haraam) things are obvious, and in between them are
(suspicious) doubtful matters. So whoever forsakes those doubtful things lest
he may commit a sin, will definitely avoid what is clearly illegal; and whoever
indulges in these (suspicious) doubtful things bravely, is likely to commit
what is clearly illegal. Sins are
Allah's Hima (i.e. private pasture) and whoever pastures (his sheep) near it,
is likely to get in it at any moment."
Your
Question: What parts are removed from the beard and what parts you let grow?
Growing a beard was considered
normal and natural for a man at the time of the Messenger of Allah (saws), whether he was a believer or not. Even the enemies of Islam like Abu Jahl and
Abu Lahb had beards! And because every
man naturally grew a beard, it was not
necessary for the Prophet (saws) to give an explicit command exhorting the
believers to grow a beard.
The only specific saying of the
Prophet (saws) regarding the keeping of beards arose when he saw that the
pagans used to grow both their beards and their mustaches long; thus he (saws) said to the believers:
Ibn 'Umar related
that the Messenger of Allah (saws) said: "Differ from the polytheists: let
your beards grow, and shave your moustache."
Related by
al-Bukhari and Muslim.
Al-Muwatta Hadith 51.7
Yahya related from Malik from Zayd ibn Aslam
that Ata ibn Yasar told him that the Messenger of Allah (saws) was in the
mosque when a man came in with dishevelled hair and beard. The Messenger of Allah (saws) motioned with
his hand that he should be sent out to groom his hair and beard. The man did so
and then returned. The Messenger of Allah (saws) said, "Isn't this better
than that one of you should come with his head dishevelled, as if he were a
Shaytan?"
Fiqh-us-Sunnah Fiqh 1.22
Letting one's beard grow and become thick
The beard is a feature of dignity and
manhood. It should not be cut so short that it appears like a shaved beard, nor
should it be left so long that it becomes untidy. Says al-Bukhari,
"Whenever Ibn 'Umar made the hajj or umrah, he would hold his beard in his
fist and, whatever exceeded his fist, he would cut off."
Although there is no specific command in Islam which
specifies the maximum length of the beard one may wish to grow, it is
absolutely imperative and in accordance with the guidance of the Messenger of
Allah (saws) that one should keep their beards neat and tidy. Thus if one shaves the perimeters of one’s
beard in their effort to shape it to keep their beards neat and tidy, there is
absolutely no harm.
Whatever written of Truth and benefit is only due to
Allah’s Assistance and Guidance, and whatever of error is of me alone. Allah Alone Knows Best and He is the Only
Source of Strength.
Your brother and
well wisher in Islam,
Burhan