On Jun 4, 9:32=A0pm, DKleinecke <
dkleine...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Jun 4, 4:04=3DA0pm, Yusuf B Gursey <
ygur...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > On Jun 4, 1:33=3D3DA0pm, Fariduddien Rice <
faridudd...@gmail.com> wrote=
:
>
> > > On May 19, 1:20=3D3D3DA0pm, Yusuf B Gursey <
ygur...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > > pre-Islamic female infanticide (wa'd al-bana:t), mentioned in the
> > > > Qur'an, was actually
> > > > practiced, as evidenced from a =3D3D3DA02nd Cent. BCE Sabaic inscri=
ptio=3D
> n fr=3D3D
> > om
> > > > Yemen, MAFRAY - Qutra 1.
>
> > > > the details are discussed in:
>
> > > > Manfred Kropp, Free and bound prepositions: a new look at the
> > > > inscription Mafray/Qutra 1 Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian
> > > > Studies, Vol. 28, Papers from the thirty-first meeting of the Semin=
ar
> > > > for Arabian Studies held in Oxford, 17-19 July 1997 (1998), pp.
> > > > 169-174
>
> > > > Stable URL:
http://www.jstor.org/stable/41223623
>
> > > > "It is unlawful for anyone of the tribal-alliance of Matara to kill
> > > > his daughter"
>
> > > Assalamu alaikum,
>
> > > Thanks for sharing this information regarding female infanticide in
> > > pre-Islamic Arabia.
>
> > > I have read that female infanticide still occurs today, in India and
> > > China. In China, the practice is connected to China's one-child
> > > policy. For example, see
>
> > >
http://www.gendercide.org/case_infanticide.html
>
> > > The Qur'an, of course, condemns female infanticide...
>
> > > "When the female (infant), buried alive, is questioned - For what
> > > crime she was killed" (Yusuf Ali translation, 81:8-9)
>
> > > Describing the practices of the Arabian polytheists, the Qur'an also
> > > says in meaning:
>
> > > "When news is brought to one of them, of (the birth of) a female
> > > (child), his face darkens, and he is filled with inward grief! With
> > > shame does he hide himself from his people, because of the bad news h=
e
> > > has had! Shall he retain it on (sufferance and) contempt, or bury it
> > > in the dust? Ah! what an evil (choice) they decide on" (Yusuf Ali
> > > translation, 16:58-59)
>
> > > Fariduddien
>
> > revisonists counter that the Qur'an isthe only evidnce for this
> > practice in Pre-Islamic Arabia. the inscription counters this
> > argument.
>
> > furthermore the way it is phrased "it against the <s3n> {to kill his
> > daughter etc.}"
>
> > the phoneme /s3/ was pronounced [s] and corresponds etymologically to
> > Arabic sin. the word anticipates Arabic sunna(t) (doubled consonants
> > were not indicated in South Arabian writing)
>
> > that Arabic had a special verb for infanticide (wa'd) shows that this
> > practice was widespread.
>
> I don't see any reason to doubt that old-fashioned men in historical
> Arabia practiced infanticide. There is plenty of evidence for
some have argued against a particular bias towards infant girls.
> infanticide in other cultures close to Arabia two thousand years ago.
> Nor should there be any doubt that Islam prohibited infanticide. The
> core of Islam is set of moral commands - such as the prohibition
> against alcohol and against any sexual activity outside of marriage -
> of which a prohibition of infanticide is in clear agreement.
>
> There are a few loose ends still unresolved - not that they matter
> much. The verb w'd may mean female infanticide by burying alive or it
> may mean infanticide of either sex by any means - or perhaps the
wa'd means infanticide in general. but there are two passages in the
Qur'an that specifically refer to female infanticide.
> meaning varied from place. I incline toward the second reading because
> there are references - in the hadiths and, I think in the Qur'an - to
> not killing one's children because of poverty
>
> Another loose end is how effective the Islamic prohibition actually
> was. =A0We know that the prohibition of sex outside of marriage was
> quite ineffective (and some revisionists have taken the phrase about
> "those whom your =A0right hand possesses" as clear evidence that the
> Qur'an has been meddled with and altered please the powerful.)
>
I don't find any problem with that phrase. it may ruffle modern
sensibilities but no more.
> The almost underground practice of female genital mutilation still
> endures as a legacy from the bad habits of pre-Islamic Arabia. I will
> be very reluctant to deny that infanticide does not still occur among
> Mulsims.
yes, there have been articles on it.