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Islamic
Ruling on Smoking
In
the name of God, the Compassionate, the MercifuI
Foreword
Hussain
A. Gezairy, MD, FRCS
Regional Director for the
Eastern Mediterranean Region of
the World Health Organization
This
year, the WHO reached its fortieth year; long may it continue.
This kind of occasion calls for a moment of reflection to review what
has been achieved. WHO is proud of the successes it has achieved through
its many complementary programmes and is making steady progress towards
the attainment of the common goal of health for all.
WHO
is particularly proud of the emerging common action, in which everyone
is involved, in favour of promotion and protection of health. Health is
indisputably the responsibility of both individuals and of society. Individuals,
regardless of position or occupation have a fundamental role to play in
health. Health is not the sole preserve of physicians or health authorities;
everyone must participate in attaining health for all, in fulfillment
of the Quranic injunction
Cooperate with each
other for righteousness and piety, not for wrongdoing and enmity. Housewives,
farmers, factory workers, teachers, soldiers, indeed everyone, young or
old, can work for health or against it. Moreover, the role of individuals
does not stop at the protection of their own health through healthy behavior,
such as maintaining cleanliness, observing a sensible diet and taking
regular exercise, but extends to avoidance of those things that are harmful
to health, both one's own health and that of others.
It is universally
accepted that the exercise of one's human rights should not infringe on
the rights of others. Anyone who unjustly kills another threatens the
rights of everyone because, as the Quran states, it is the same as killing
everyone. The same is true for those who pollute the water supply, damage
the environment or neglect to immunize their children, since these contribute
to spreading and increasing disease and thereby threaten increasing disease
and thereby threaten everyone's right to a healthy life.
Smoking is, perhaps,
one of the most important threats to individual and community health.
It is no secret that 2.5 million people die in the world each year from
smoking-related diseases, including lung cancer, chronic bronchitis,
pulmonary emphysema, coronary heart disease and cancer of the bladder,
smoking causes one death evenly 13 seconds. To date not a single benefit
of smoking has been identified.
Tobacco is unique among the
substances in which people indulge in being completely harmful, to individuals,
families and community. Even alcohol was acknowledged by God as having
some benefits, when He said: When they ask I you (Muhammad) about wine
and gambling, say: There is great offense and I some bent:fit in them
both, but their offense is greater than their benefit. Nevertheless, He
prohibited the drinking of alcohol completely because its harmful effects
outweighed any benefits that might be derived from it. What, then, can
be said of tobacco smoking, for which not a single benefit can be found
and on whose harmful effects even smokers are unanimous.
One of the worst Finns of smoking
is that known as passive smoking and which refers to the involuntary inhalation
by nonsmokers of other people's cigarette smoke, whether in the office,
on public transport or in the home. Passive smoking is estimated to be
responsible for 4000 to 5000 deaths every year in the United States of
America, around 1000 in Britain and 500 in Canada, while women who are
nonsmokers but whose husbands smoke are at much greater risk of contracting
lung cancer than women married to nonsmokers.
Religion has a strong influence in
the Eastern Mediterranean Region. Many of the principles of Islam call
upon people to look after their health, to avoid health hazards and risks
and to raise their standards of hygiene. The Eastern Mediterranean Regional
Office of the World Health Organization sought the opinions of a number
of eminent Muslim scholars with regard to the Islamic ruling on smoking.
We gratefully acknowledge the thorough and detailed replies received from
these distinguished scholars. The general consensus concerning the Islamic
ruling was that smoking is either completely prohibited or abhorrent to
such a degree as to be prohibited.
The Regional Office considered it
incumbent upon it to make these findings available to the public. This
booklet consists of a summary of the legal opinions of each of the scholars
consulted, followed by the full text of their submissions. There is, inevitably,
a certain amount of repetition in the material, especially with respect
to the supporting health information cited by the scholars.
We hope that smokers, having read these rulings, will
respond for the sake of their personal health and that of their families,
friends and fellow citizens by giving up smoking, in compliance with the
words of God, Believers, respond to God and the Prophet when He calls
yo£t to that which gives you life.
Muharram
1409 AH
August 1988
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