Sexual Relations with their Female Slaves
Answered by Shaykh Irshaad Sedick
Question Summary
Is it permissible for men to have sexual relations with their female slaves, and why?
In the Name of Allah, the Most Merciful and Compassionate.
Based on the fact that slavery no longer exists, which is completely aligned with the objectives of Sacred Law, this question is predominantly a theoretical one. When slavery existed, it was permissible for men to have sexual relations with their female slaves. The relationship was quite similar to husbands and wives, but this needs some context and explanation to discern possible wisdom in the law.
Context
The English term “slave” and ‘slavery’ carries the nuances of meaning that history, especially western history, added. A standard English dictionary definition of a slave is ‘someone legally owned by another person and forced to work for that person without pay.’ This notion of slavery reducing human beings to things owned by other people has been a significant theme in how the West understood the concept. It was crucial to how abolitionists understood slavery in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries when the movement to end slavery began. But the roots of this definition go further back to the roots of Western heritage. They lie in Roman law, which divided people into two categories: the free (a free person has the ‘natural right’ to ‘do as he pleases unless prevented by the force of law’) and slaves, who exist as the property of others. [Brown, Slavery, and Islam: What is Slavery?]
Sacred Law on Slavery
Before discussing the laws about slavery in Islam, the most crucial point to note is that it does not carry the exact nuances of meaning as the English definition of ‘slave,’ and one should instead understand it in light of the Sacred Law regarding the treatment of slaves.
Islam Does Not Encourage Slavery
Islam does not encourage slavery at all, but it does offer detailed laws on the fair treatment of slaves, should it exist. At the core, Islam does not encourage slavery but encourages the emancipation of slaves. Allah, the Most Merciful and Compassionate, encourages taking the difficult path as opposed to the easy-way-out: “And what can make you know what is [breaking through] the difficult pass. It is the freeing of a slave. Or the feeding on a day of severe hunger. An orphan of near relationship. Or a needy person in misery. [Qur’an 90:12-16]
Protecting Women From Violence and Harm
Islam limited the ways that people could take slaves to only the case of legitimate warfare. Often in combat, the healthy males of an opposing side may have been killed, and the women among them would be without providers (in a world wherein males are usually the breadwinners). In this case, the bereaved women and children may have been raped, tortured, and killed – as is prevalent throughout history – and left to fend for themselves. Or, they can be protected from this harm by being taken by the victorious army and cared for as they would their wives.
Sacred Law’s Approach
The third option is precisely what Sacred Law advocates, along with reintegration into the newly-formed Muslim society through emancipation or familial integration wherein the ‘master’ has a child with his concubine, leading to their freedom.
Unlike Roman slavery, where the status of a child’s mother determined its status, the prominent position in the Shariah was that a slave woman who gave birth to her Master’s child became free when her Master died, as did her child. Until then, he could not sell her. Far from being natally alienated from her child, its status as the child of a freeman ensured the mother’s freedom. [Brown, Slavery, and Islam: What is Slavery?]
Why is it Permissible?
The Qur’an permits marriage between free and slave Muslim men and women [Qur’an 2:221], and it allows the male owner of a female slave to take her as a concubine slave (surriyya) that is a female slave whose Master has a sexual relationship with her. Allah, the Most Merciful and Compassionate, says: “And they who guard their private parts. Except from their wives or those their right hands possess [concubine slaves], for indeed, they will not be blamed.” [Qur’an 23:45-6]
Wisdom in Laws Regarding the Treatment of Slaves
The essence of slave-treatment in Islam is in the widely transmitted hadith in which the Prophet, may Allah bless him and give him peace, says: “Your slaves are your brethren, whom Allah has put under your control. Feed them what you eat, clothe them from what you wear, and don’t burden them with work that overwhelms them. If you give them more than they can do, then assist them.” [Agreed Upon]
One possible wisdom in the permission (for man to have intercourse with his concubine slave) is that she benefits from some of the rights of a wife. Along with fair and dignified treatment, the concubine slave’s basic and financial needs are generally her Master’s responsibility, thus resembling the marital relationship, and Allah knows best.
If and when slavery exists, Islamic Sacred Law proceeds to emancipate the slaves over time. Gradual integration into society has historically proven to be more successful than the immediate abolishment of slavery that historically led to war (as in the history of the United States).
Sacred Law Seeks to Abolish Slavery
There are several verses in the Qur’an from which the scholars of Sacred Law derived various laws about the treatment of slaves. Still, overwhelmingly the general instruction of the Qur’an is to free slaves either as a voluntary good deed for the sake of Allah or in fulfillment of several different expiations for various sins or crimes.
Conclusion
In conclusion, we reiterate that slavery no longer exists and that this is well-aligned with the objectives of Islamic Sacred Law. When slavery existed, Islam provided the best set of principles for fair treatment, rights, emancipation, and reintegration of slaves back into society. Unfortunately, the practices related to slavery have historically stained the word ‘slavery,’ with many negative nuances of meaning that had no bearing in the Sacred Law context. These nuances often make their way into contemporary misconceptions, which seek to superimpose them onto the Sacred Laws concerning slavery. Islam is free from such evils, and Allah knows best.
Shaykh Irshaad Sedick was raised in South Africa in a traditional Muslim family. He graduated from Dar al-Ulum al-Arabiyyah al-Islamiyyah in Strand, Western Cape, under the guidance of the late world-renowned scholar, Shaykh Taha Karaan.
Shaykh Irshaad received Ijaza from many luminaries of the Islamic world, including Shaykh Taha Karaan, Mawlana Yusuf Karaan, and Mawlana Abdul Hafeez Makki, among others.
He is the author of the text “The Musnad of Ahmad ibn Hanbal: A Hujjah or not?” He has served as the Director of the Discover Islam Centre and Al Jeem Foundation. For the last five years till present, he has served as the Khatib of Masjid Ar-Rashideen, Mowbray, Cape Town.
Shaykh Irshaad has thirteen years of teaching experience at some of the leading Islamic institutes in Cape Town). He is currently building an Islamic online learning and media platform called ‘Isnad Academy’ and pursuing his Master’s degree in the study of Islam at the University of Johannesburg. He has a keen interest in healthy living and fitness.