Birth Control in Islam

Re: Birth Control in Islam

If this was true women wouldn't be allowed to take those pills that delay their periods when they go on Hajj (which they obviously are)..

Re: Birth Control in Islam

Women should not take the pills it is better

Re: Birth Control in Islam

You just give out statements even after a couple of posters asked you to provide reference.

Re: Birth Control in Islam

LOL

Re: Birth Control in Islam

You just fart fatwas everywhere you go don't you. Easy on the moolies.

Re: Birth Control in Islam

Whoa thats rude!

But farting fatwas is awesome :D

Re: Birth Control in Islam

Sir I am not issuing Fatwa I talk on the basis of Quran and Hadees

Re: Birth Control in Islam

No you don't.

Re: Birth Control in Islam

Yes I do if you don't want to list your problem

Re: Birth Control in Islam

If I don't want to what?

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Ghamdi / Al Mawrid organizations views on family planning:

[Monthly Renaissance - Query

T](Monthly Renaissance - Query)hey say it is okay…

Re: Birth Control in Islam

this sounds fabricated. coz if this is true then i just lost a lil belief in islam.

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A fabricated hadees should not make you lose your faith . It should make you thank Allah(SWT) that Allah gave you wisdom to judge fabrication from truth.

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but i'm not sure if that's fabricated or not. i'm hoping it is. could someone give us more insight on it??

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I know this cartoon Ghamdi very well they are here only to make happy government and elite class of Pakistan so they can get money most scholars around the muslim world say it is not okay at all

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This is not fabricated and their some who just want to run away from the truth because they don't want to stop follow evils but don't worry Islam is the fastest growing Deen in the world and most of them are women

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Mukobhai - I have been very patient with you. Hoping again and again - that perhaps in this next post of yours - or the one after that - or the one after that - you will provide something other than your opinion on an infinite loop.

By repeating mostly the same thing over and over again. You have made your OPINION on the matter very clear.

Is it really too much to expect from you to provide a link - a source - a reference - for your opinions.

It is refreshing to hear views like yours - they would be more valuable if you put in a little more effort in trying to justify your opinions.

Re: Birth Control in Islam

Ask your question on www.eshaykh.com

I saw a similar question there by someone and they had referred the people to Sheikh Ali Gomaa, mufti of Egypt who is renown for his fatwas however I can’t actually find his response anywhere. This shaykh is of the shaafi madhab but the websites directors are of the hanafi madhab and obviously regard this shaykhs opinion so I think there wouldn’t be a problem there.

You do have to create a username but once you’ve asked there other people in a similar situation will be able to get an answer too, also they have a whole board of scholars who will point you in the right direction, I think you should ask for sources if you want them. Sometimes they just give a direct answer, also specify your madhab so they can answer accordingly.
Hope that helps :slight_smile:

Edit: FOUND IT!
Muslim Religious Leaders Issue a National Fatwa in Support of Family Planning

In the Philippines’ Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) – composed of the provinces of Basilan, Lanao del Sur, Maguindanao, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi, and Marawi City – fertility rates are far higher and contraceptive prevalence rates much lower than in the rest of the country. Maternal and infant death rates in ARMM are also among the highest in the country.
One reason for this has been the lack of clear guidelines about the role of family planning in Islam. To clarify the matter, in early 2004, the Assembly of Darul Ifta – the biggest and most influential group of Muslim religious leaders in the country – issued a national fatwa (religious decree) on reproductive health and family planning, a landmark event. Many see the fatwa as a major breakthrough towards improving family planning practice in the region and consequently helping to reduce maternal and infant deaths.

The idea of a fatwa was first brought up by the participants of the first ARMM Health Congress held in Manila in June 2003. The Congress, convened by the ARMM Regional Government with technical assistance from USAID’s The Social Acceptance Project-Family Planning (TSAP-FP), brought together various stakeholders – ARMM government officials, local government officials, provincial health officers and religious leaders.

A group of these religious leaders (identified jointly by the Commission on Population, USAID’s TSAP-FP and the United Nations Population Fund or UNFPA) underwent a series of orientation seminars on family planning and Islam, and then crafted a draft fatwa. In a conference in Davao City in October 2003, the draft fatwa was presented by the Assembly of Darul Ifta to about 80 religious leaders from Mindanao. The conference generated many valuable comments and suggestions, which were used to refine the fatwa. The revised fatwa, written in English, was sent by the UNFPA to Egypt for translation into Arabic. On November 23, 2003, both English and Arabic versions were signed by 23 members of the Assembly of Darul Ifta. In January 2004, through USAID’s TSAP-FP, a group of religious leaders went on a study tour in Cairo, Egypt. The highlight of the trip was an audience with the Grand Mufti of Egypt, Dr. Ali Gomaa, who gave his blessing, orally and in writing, to the fatwa prepared by the Filipino religious leaders. On March 10, 2004, in a colorful and festive ceremony in Davao City, the Assembly of Darul Ifta officially launched the national fatwa.

More Muslim couples are beginning to realize that family planning practice can indeed improve the quality of their lives.

Although there are no sources here, so if you want them, eshaykh is the best way to go. It’s where I go if I feel unsure about anything.

Sorry about how long this is getting, I just found this: http://www.islamopediaonline.org/fatwa/what-ruling-morning-after-pillSo from all this and my very limited knowledge I would conclude that birth control is fine if it prevents the sperm and the egg fusing, however once the process of fertilisation has occurred then it is the same as abortion which is wrong.

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LMAO. Yet you never provide references. Where in the Quran or Hadith does it say birth control pills are haram?

Re: Birth Control in Islam

Once a person came to HAZRAT MUHAMMAD SAW said he want to marry a very beautiful girl and kept on asking HAZRAT MUHAMMAD SAW but than he said that their is one problem that is in that girl family less children are born and when HAZRAT MUHAMMAD SAW heard this he turned his face away and said marry those girl who love you more and also have more children