Now, Darul Uloom issues fatwa saying waxing is ‘not good’

  • | Thursday | 19th July, 2018

It should be noted that Darul Uloom has called the practice khilaf e-adab and has not declared it ‘haram’ (forbidden).”Last week, Darul Uloom had said that application of mehndi on a woman’s hands by an unknown man is not acceptable under Sharia. The fatwa was issued on the query of a local resident who asked whether it was correct for Muslim women to let strange men touch their arms in order to help them wear bangles. In another controversial edict in February this year, the seminary had asked Muslim women to not wear bangles from men at bangle shops, terming the age-old practice “wrong and a big sin”. “Removing hair through waxing or shaving from other parts of the body is khilaf e-adab (against the culture),” the seminary said in its written reply to Aziz’s query.Asked about the controversial fatwa, Deoband-based cleric Maulana Salim Ashraf Qasmi said, “The fatwa is absolutely correct and is according to the Sharia Law. Muzaffarnagar: In yet another controversial fatwa, Deoband-based renowned Islamic seminary, Darul Uloom, has said that waxing and shaving are not considered to be good under the Sharia law.Replying to a query by Abdul Aziz, a local resident who wanted to know whether it is okay for a man or woman to shave or wax his/her arms and legs, the fatwa department of the seminary said that barring armpits, mustache and lower part of navel, removing hair from any other part of the body is not advisable under Sharia.

Muzaffarnagar: In yet another controversial fatwa, Deoband-based renowned Islamic seminary, Darul Uloom, has said that waxing and shaving are not considered to be good under the Sharia law.Replying to a query by Abdul Aziz, a local resident who wanted to know whether it is okay for a man or woman to shave or wax his/her arms and legs, the fatwa department of the seminary said that barring armpits, mustache and lower part of navel, removing hair from any other part of the body is not advisable under Sharia. “Removing hair through waxing or shaving from other parts of the body is khilaf e-adab (against the culture),” the seminary said in its written reply to Aziz’s query.Asked about the controversial fatwa, Deoband-based cleric Maulana Salim Ashraf Qasmi said, “The fatwa is absolutely correct and is according to the Sharia Law. It should be noted that Darul Uloom has called the practice khilaf e-adab and has not declared it ‘haram’ (forbidden).”Last week, Darul Uloom had said that application of mehndi on a woman’s hands by an unknown man is not acceptable under Sharia. In another controversial edict in February this year, the seminary had asked Muslim women to not wear bangles from men at bangle shops, terming the age-old practice “wrong and a big sin”. The fatwa was issued on the query of a local resident who asked whether it was correct for Muslim women to let strange men touch their arms in order to help them wear bangles.

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