Darulifta Ahlesunnat
(Dawateislami)
Question
What do the scholars of Islam say concerning the following matter: is it permitted
for women to have more than one ear or nose piercing? Having multiple piercings
on the nose or ear is common practice in some places, but is this permissible?
بِسْمِ اللہِ
الرَّحْمٰنِ الرَّحِیْمِ
اَلْجَوَابُ بِعَوْنِ الْمَلِکِ
الْوَھَّابِ اَللّٰھُمَّ ھِدَایَۃَ الْحَقِّ وَالصَّوَابِ
In Islam, women are not prohibited from
adorning themselves as long they remain within the boundaries of Islamic law.
One method of beautification is to pierce the ears and hang jewellery from
them. During the blessed era of the Prophet صَلَّى الـلّٰـهُ عَلَيْهِ وَاٰلِهٖ وَسَلَّم,
women pierced their ears, and he did not forbid them from this. This is what
led jurists to declare this a permissible act.
Women in the time of the Prophet صَلَّى
الـلّٰـهُ عَلَيْهِ وَاٰلِهٖ وَسَلَّم
did not pierce their noses. When jurists found woman in various localities
piercing their noses as a form of adornment, they also declared this
permissible. Piercing the nose has the
same intention of adornment as piercing the ears, which meant beautification
was not restricted to the latter action.
After this preamble, the answer to the question posed is as follows:
piercing the nose and ears and hanging jewellery from them for the purpose of
beautification is permissible.
If honourable Muslim women in a region have multiple piercings in their
nose or ears, and hang jewellery from them for the purpose of increasing their
beauty; there is no harm in this. The beautification that is attained from one
piercing can also be attained from many piercings.
The style of adornment differs region to region. In one location it
might be common to pierce the right nostril, some areas may prefer to pierce
the left, whilst others may pierce both. Similarly, some women may have one ear
piercing and wear earrings. Others may have many ear piercings in order to wear
more jewellery (this is common in some regions of Pakistan), with it not being
considered an unrefined practice in their respective lands. Multiple piercings
for the purpose of beautification is permissible.
Adopting a style of piercing that is practised by unbelieving women,
such as piercing of the nasal septum and hanging a pendant through; this is not
allowed. This practice is not found amongst upstanding Muslim women. This is
because it is prohibited to imitate both disbelievers and transgressors, and
this shall be considered altering the creation of Allah without the approval of
Islamic law, which is totally impermissible.
Yet, there any countless trends and customs across the world. If this type of piercing is common in an area
amongst righteous Muslim women, it is permissible to wear such piercing in that
location. Otherwise, it is impermissible
for the reasons mentioned previously.
Allah states regarding permissible adornment:
قُلۡ مَنۡ
حَرَّمَ زِیۡنَۃَ اللہِ الَّتِیۡۤ اَخۡرَجَ لِعِبَادِہٖ وَ الطَّیِّبٰتِ مِنَ الرِّزۡقِ
ؕ
Say you (O Beloved), 'Who has made unlawful the adornment of Allah which
He has brought forth for His bondsmen, and pure sustenance?'[1]
Evidence for piercing the ears can be found from the following hadith:
عن ابن عباس رضي اللہ عنهما أن النبي صلى اللہ عليه وسلم صلی يوم العيد ركعتين، لم يصل قبلها ولا بعدها، ثم
أتى النساء ومعه بلال، فأمرهن بالصدقة، فجعلت المرأة تلقي قرطها
ꜤAbdullāh b. ꜤAbbās reports that the Prophet صَلَّى الـلّٰـهُ عَلَيْهِ وَاٰلِهٖ وَسَلَّم
offered two units of
salah on Eid. He never offered any units of salah before or after this. He then
went to the womenfolk with Bilāl and ordered for
them to give charity. A woman took off her earrings and cast them (into the
clothing of our master Bilāl رَضِىَ الـلّٰـهُ عَـنْهُ).[2]
It is written in Fatḥ al-Bārī regarding this hadith:[3]
واستدل به على جواز ثقب أذن المرأة لتجعل فيها القرط وغيره مما يجوز لهن
التزين به
In Fatāwā Qāḍī Khān:[4]
و لا بأس بثقب أذن الطفل لأنهم كانوا يفعلون ذلك في الجاهلية و لم ينكر
عليهم رسول اللہ صلى اللہ عليه و سلم
Al-Baḥr al-Rāʾiq and Tabyīn
al-Ḥaqāʾiq discuss women piercing the ears:[5]
وكذا يجوز ثقب أذن البنات الأطفال لأن فيه منفعة الزينة، وكان يفعل ذلك في
زمنه عليه الصلاة والسلام إلى يومنا هذا
من غير نكير
In Al-Ikhtiyār li TaꜤlīl al-Mukhtār:[6]
ولابأس بثقب اذن البنات الاطفال لانہ ایلام لمنفعۃ الزینۃوایصال
الالم الی الحیوان لمصلحۃ تعودالیہ جائزکالختان
ꜤAlaˈ al-Dīn al-Ḥaṣkafī said:
ولا بأس بثقب أذن البنت والطفل استحسانا ملتقط. قلت: وهل يجوز الخزام في الأنف، لم أره
Ibn ꜤĀbidīn al-Shāmī
comments on the above by saying:[7]
لا بأس بثقب أذن الطفل من البنات وزاد في الحاوي القدسي: ولا يجوز ثقب آذان
البنين قلت: إن كان مما يتزين النساء به كما هو في بعض البلاد فهو فيها كثقب القرط
وقد نص الشافعية على جوازه
After citing al-Shāmi’s text, Imam Aḥmad Razā Khan
added:
اقول: و لا شک ان ثقب الاذن کان شائعا فی زمن
النبی صلی اللہ تعالی
علیہ وسلم وقد اطلع صلی اللہ تعالی علیہ وسلم ولم ینکرہ
ثم لم یکن الا ایلاما للزینۃ فکذا ھذا بحکم المساواۃ
فثبت جوازہ بدلالۃ النص المشترک فی العلم بھا المجتھدون وغیرھم
کما تقرر فی مقررہ
I say there is no doubt women having their ears pierced was widespread in
the era of the Prophet صَلَّى الـلّٰـهُ عَلَيْهِ
وَاٰلِهٖ وَسَلَّم. He knew well of this,
but did not prohibit it. The pain caused by this (piercing the ears) is only
for the sake of adornment, and this (piercing the nose) also. The ruling of
both is the same. Permissibility of piercing the nose is established through
textual implication, the knowledge of which is found between mujtahids and
non-mujtahids alike, as proven in its place.[8]
The permissibility of the style of piercing is dependent upon the
societal practices of the time. If there is no cause of prohibition (like
resembling the disbelievers etc.), then there is no problem in this form of
beautification, due to its establishment by way of Dalalat
al Nass.
With regards to nose piercings, Imam Aḥmad
Razā Khan said:
فان الثابت بدلالۃ النص
کالثابت بالنص
They are free to choose the right side or left side. This is not a
matter of Islamic law. It is dependent upon the custom of the time, so they can
pierce whichever side they wish.[9]
In relation to the prohibition of altering the creation of Allah, the
Quran announces:
فِطۡرَتَ
اللہِ الَّتِیۡ فَطَرَ النَّاسَ عَلَیۡہَا ؕ لَا
تَبۡدِیۡلَ لِخَلۡقِ
اللہِ ؕ
(that is) the established nature by Allah
upon which He has created people. Do not change what Allah has created.[10]
It is also mentioned in the Quran:
وَّ لَاُضِلَّنَّہُمۡ
وَ لَاُمَنِّیَنَّہُمۡ وَ لَاٰمُرَنَّہُمۡ فَلَیُبَتِّکُنَّ
اٰذَانَ الۡاَنۡعَامِ وَ لَاٰمُرَنَّہُمۡ فَلَیُغَیِّرُنَّ
خَلۡقَ اللہِ ؕ وَ مَنۡ یَّتَّخِذِ الشَّیۡطٰنَ
وَلِیًّا مِّنۡ دُوۡنِ اللہِ فَقَدۡ خَسِرَ خُسۡرَانًا مُّبِیۡنًا ﴿۱۱۹﴾ؕ
‘I swear I will definitely lead them astray, and
I will certainly arouse (sinful) desires in them, and I will definitely order
them that they will pierce the ears of animals (this is a ritual of idol
worshippers), and I will definitely order them that they will change the
creation of Allah.’ And whoever chooses the Devil for a friend instead of
Allah, he has indeed suffered a manifest loss.[11]
A hadith in Ṣaḥīḥ Muslim explains:
لعن اللہ
الواشمات و المستوشمات و النامصات و المتنمصات و المتفلجات للحسن المغيرات خلق اللہ
تعالى
Allah has cursed women who tattoo and have themselves tattooed, those
who pluck hair from faces and have it plucked, those who make spaces between
teeth for beautification, and those who change what Allah has created.[12]
Women piercing other parts of the body falls under this warning. Allama Badr al-Dīn
al-ꜤAinī writes:
ھو غرز إبرۃ أو مسلۃ
ونحوھما فی ظھر الکف أو المعصم أو الشفۃ وغیر ذلک
من بدن المرأۃ حتی یسیل منہ الدم ثم یحشی
ذلک الموضع بکحل أو نورۃ أو نیلۃ لقدلعن الشارع
من صنعت ذلک من النساء لأن فیہ تغییر الخلقۃ الأصلیۃ
It [tattooing] is the insertion of a needle etc., into the back of the
hand or the wrist, or the lip or other part of the body of a woman until the
skin bleeds. Following this, the area is filled with antimony, quicklime or
indigo. Allah curses the women who do this because it is changing the original
nature of creation.[13]
Regarding
imitating a nation, the Prophet صَلَّى الـلّٰـهُ عَلَيْهِ
وَاٰلِهٖ وَسَلَّم said:
من تشبہ بقوم فھو منھم
Whoever imitates a nation is from them.[14]
In Fatāwā Razawiyya:
Care should be taken to avoid resemblance with women and transgressors.
For example, it is disliked for a man to wear a shirt with lace trim, even if
does not exceed four fingers, due to its resemblance with the apparel of the
transgressors and women. Scholars say if someone requests for the clothing or
footwear of wrongdoers to be made for them (like the apparel of the naturalists
in our time), it is disliked for the tailor or cobbler to fulfil this request,
as they will be abetting sin. This establishes how it is sinful to adopt the
attire of sinners.[15]
He further wrote:
The universal principle in relation to clothing is that whichever
apparel is the style of disbelievers, innovators, and transgressors, is
disliked or forbidden. In some cases, it can be an act of disbelief, in
accordance with the degree of its specificity to them.[16]
In Bahār-i-Sharīʿat:
This hadith is a universal principle. It distinguishes which people
should and should not be imitated in clothing, habits and mannerisms.
Resembling the disbelievers and transgressors is evil, and imitating the pious
is praiseworthy. There are levels to this resemblance and each has a different
ruling. Even the least level of imitation of the disbelievers and transgressors
is disliked. Muslims should be distinguishable, and they should not resemble
non-Muslims.[17]
وَاللہُ اَعْلَمُ عَزَّوَجَلَّ وَرَسُوْلُہ
اَعْلَم صَلَّی اللّٰہُ تَعَالٰی عَلَیْہِ
وَاٰلِہٖ وَسَلَّم
Answered By: Mufti Muhammad Qasim Attari
Ref No: SAR-7803
Date: 15 Ramadan
1443 AH/14 April 2022
[1] Al-Quran, 7:32, Translation from Kanz al-Īmān
[2] Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhārī, vol. 7, p. 158, published in Beirut
[3] Fatḥ al-Barī, vol. 10, p. 331, published in Beirut
[4] Fatāwā Qādī Khān, vol. 3, p. 251, published in Beirut
[5] Baḥr al-Raʾiq,
vol. 8, p. 554, published by Dar al-Kitab al-Islami
[6] Al Ikhtiyār li TaꜤlīl al-Mukhtār , vol. 4, p. 167, published in Beirut
[7] Radd al-Muḥtār, vol. 6, p. 420, publisher Dar al-Fikr, Beirut
[8] Fatāwā al-Razawiyyah, vol. 23, p. 482, Raza Foundation, Lahore
[9] Ibid
[10] Al-Quran, 30:30, Translation from Kanz al-Īmān
[11] Al-Quran, 4:119, Translation from Kanz al-Īmān
[12] Ṣaḥīḥ Muslim, vol. 2, p. 205, published in Karachi
[13] ꜤUmdat al-Qārī, vol. 22, p. 97, published in Beirut
[14] Sunan Abī Dāwūd, vol. 2, p. 203, published in Lahore
[15] Fatāwā al-Razawiyyah, vol. 22, p. 137, Raza Foundation, Lahore
[16] Fatāwā al-Razawiyyah, vol. 22, p. 184, Raza Foundation, Lahore
[17] Bahār-i-Sharīʿat,
vol. 3, p. 407, Maktabat al-Madina, Karachi
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