Before Homosexuality in the Arab-Islamic World, 1500-1800 (61 page)

BOOK: Before Homosexuality in the Arab-Islamic World, 1500-1800
12.2Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
, one of the most prominent Sha
fiʿi
jurists of the early Ottoman period, opined as follows:
If he [a man] looks licitly at the beardless boy, as in the case of the involuntary glance, and passionate love for the boy results, and he is chaste and keeps the love secret, it is not implausible that it should then be said that he is a martyr, since there is no transgression involved.
139
 
The equally authoritative Sha
fiʿi
jurist Shams al-Di
n Muhammad al-Ramli
(d. 1596) concurred. As mentioned in the previous chapter, he stressed that the martyrs-of-love tradition applied to the love of boys as long as it was involuntary:
If we assume that the love is involuntary in the sense that he [the lover] cannot choose to end it, then there is nothing to prevent him from gaining martyrdom, since in that case there is no transgression involved.
140
 
A student of Ramli
, Sultan al-Mazza
ḥi
(d. 1665), reiterated the opinion in unambiguous terms:
The considered ruling of our teacher al-Ramli
and others is not to differentiate between beardless boys and others, the premise being chastity and keeping the love secret.
141
 
A host of other jurists expressed their opinion that the martyrs-of-love tradition also applied to the love of boys.
142
The following passage by the Rector of the Azhar at the time of the French occupation of Egypt, ʿAbdallah al-Sharqa
wi
(d. 1811), is representative:
Among the martyrs ... [is] one who dies from passionate love if he refrains from transgressions of religious law ... and keeps the love a secret ... whether the passionate love is for what could become available for licit intercourse or not, such as a beardless boy, according to authoritative verdicts. And the assertion of some [scholars] that loving him is a transgression and that he can never become available [for licit intercourse] and thus cannot lead to martyrdom should be understood to pertain to voluntary love, whereas if the love is involuntary, chaste, and kept a secret, in cases where he is [involuntarily] led to love a beardless boy, or is [legally] allowed to look, and love takes hold of his heart without willing what is not permitted, and this leads to his death, then there is no disagreement in his obtaining martyrdom. And how appropriate are the words of the poet:
The lovers’ torment in this world is enough, by God Hell shall not torment them thereafter!
Rather, eternal paradise shall be their adorned home, to be enjoyed by them in reward for their patience.
How could it be otherwise, and they have loved chastely and kept their love secret? Thus attests the tradition ...
143
 
 

Other books

The Last Refuge by Craig Robertson
Felix (The Ninth Inning #1) by Lindsay Paige, Mary Smith
Fortune's Favorites by Colleen McCullough
Dolled Up to Die by Lorena McCourtney