Zinā is the technical term for any act of illicit sexual affair in the Sharī'ah. Literally, it connotes the act of casting lustful gaze at the opposite gender, engaging in dirty and flirtatious talks, listening, touching and making such
Muslim reported on the authority of Abū Hurayrah that the Messenger of Allāh ﷺ said:
إِنَّ اللَّهَ كَتَبَ عَلَى ابْنِ آدَمَ حَظَّهُ مِنَ الزِّنَا، أَدْرَكَ ذَلِكَ لاَ مَحَالَةَ ، فَزِنَا العَيْنِ النَّظَرُ،
Verily, Allāh has decreed for every son of Ādam his share of Zinā, which he will inevitably commit. The Zinā of the eyes is looking, the Zinā of the tongue
This hadīth confirms that every human being is guilty of the crime of Zinā in the literal sense, since everyone falls into it all the time,
The punishment for Zinā in Islām depends on marital status of the
فإذا كان الزاني حراً محصناً رُجم حتى الموت رجلاً كان أو امرأة ، وهو محل إجماع
"If the Zāni is a freeborn who is married, he is to be stoned to death, whether male or female.
Ibn Qudāmah رحمه الله said:
وأجمع عليه أصحاب محمد صلى الله عليه وسلم ، وعن أحمد رواية أنه يجلد ويرجم ، والمذهب الرجم فقط ، كما اتفق الفقهاء على أن الزاني غير المحصن رجلاً كان أو امرأة يجلد مائة جلدة إن كان حراً ، وأما العبد والأمة فحدهما
"The Companions of the Prophet all agreed on this issue. A report from Imām Ahmad states that such a Zāni be flogged a 💯 times & then stoned to death. However, the position of the Hanābilah madh-hab is stoning to death only.
Furthermore, the Sharī'ah perspective on Zinā has NOTHING to do with CONSENT. What distinguishes Zinā from licit intercourse is MARRIAGE, not CONSENT. This is also why the concept of MARITAL RAPE has NO BASIS in the Sharī'ah.
Concerning rape, the technical term for it in the Sharī'ah is الاغْتِصابُ.
Imām Mālik رحمه الله in his Muwatta' (2/734) said:
الأمر عندنا في الرجل يغتصب المرأة بكراً كانت أو ثيبا : أنها إن كانت حرة : فعليه صداق مثلها , وإن كانت أمَة : فعليه ما نقص
"Our position on the rapist who forcefully has carnal knowledge of a woman whether she's single or married is that, if she's a freeborn, he must pay her the dower of a woman of her status and
Ibn 'Abdilbarr in al-Istidhkār 7/146 further elaborates on the issue when he submitted thus:
"The scholars have all agreed the rapist shall be given the hadd punishment if credible proofs necessitating such punishment are established against him, or he confesses to committing it.
لَوْ يُعْطَى اَلنَّاسُ بِدَعْوَاهُمْ, لَادَّعَى نَاسٌ دِمَاءَ رِجَالٍ, وَأَمْوَالَهُمْ, وَلَكِنِ اَلْيَمِينُ عَلَى اَلْمُدَّعَى عَلَيْهِ
"If people were given whatever they claimed (in disputes), some people would claim the lives and wealth of
In the narration by Al-Bayhaqī:
اَلْبَيِّنَةُ عَلَى اَلْمُدَّعِي, وَالْيَمِينُ عَلَى مَنْ أَنْكَرَ
"The burden of proof lies on the claimant, and oath must be taken by the one rejecting the claim."
However, if the victim was able to prove that the rapist gagged her mouth and restrained her, or knocked her out by the aid of pills or gas, or
"The penalty of those who wage war against Allāh and His Messenger and seek corruption in the land is to be killed, or crucified, or to have their hands and feet cut on alternate sides, or to be banished from the land. That is their disgrace in this world,
In a situation (though rare) where the victim of rape is a male, scholars of Islām have differed on the appropriate ruling in this regard.
فَصْلٌ: وَإِنْ أُكْرِهَ الرَّجُلُ فَزَنَى، فَقَالَ أَصْحَابُنَا: عَلَيْهِ الْحَدُّ. وَبِهِ قَالَ مُحَمَّدُ بْنُ الْحَسَنِ، وَأَبُو ثَوْرٍ؛ لِأَنَّ الْوَطْءَ لَا يَكُونُ إلَّا بِالِانْتِشَارِ، وَالْإِكْرَاهُ يُنَافِيهِ. فَإِذَا وُجِدَ الِانْتِشَارُ انْتَفَى
Ibn Qudāmah رحمه الله notes:
"Chapter: If a man was forced to commit Zinā and he commits it, our companions (Hanābilah) said: he shall face the hadd punishment.
He continues:
وَقَالَ الشَّافِعِيُّ، وَابْنُ الْمُنْذِرِ: لَا حَدَّ عَلَيْهِ؛ لِعُمُومِ الْخَبَرِ، وَلِأَنَّ الْحُدُودَ تُدْرَأُ بِالشُّبُهَاتِ، وَالْإِكْرَاهُ شُبْهَةٌ، فَيَمْنَعُ الْحَدَّ، كَمَا لَوْ كَانَتْ امْرَأَةً،
"Ash-Shāfi'ī and ibn al-Mundhir said: he shall not face the hadd punishment, based on the general implication of the texts,
Finally, it is important to abide by the clear rules that Islām has