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IS TEDDY BEAR HARAAM?


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#1 Guest_Bubbles_*

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Posted 30 July 2003 - 06:03 AM

                    Salam Alaikum.

I just want to know if teddy bears and dolls are haraam?  :?  Is there any hadeeth sahih that deals with this matter. Also, how about Aishah r.a, she was still a small child when Rasulullah s.a.w married her. Did she have a doll like most girls, too.

I have one little cute orange cat (cuter than Garfield   laugh.gif ) and one cute girly doll... BUbbles from the Powerpuff cartoon series. I sleep with them every night and I hug them like how people hug pillow. Sometimes I watch TV with Bubbles... smile.gif

Anyway, I am worried if inshaAllah I marry a brother who insist that I give up my dolls because people said you cannot have them because they are idols?

Can you relate me any Quran or hadeeth on this issue please. I don't want to give up my little friends but if it's against Islam, inshaAllah I'll send them away...                    

#2 muslimsister

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Posted 30 July 2003 - 03:26 PM

                    Assalaam alaikum wa rahmatu Allahi wa barakatuh,

Sister, may I ask how old you are?  Here is a fatwa for you to read.

Question:


We know from Hadith that the Angels do not enter into a house where pictures/phograhps of living things (humans or animals )are displased.
What is the ruling for keeping the photographs of family relatives and pictures appearing in magazines/news papers etc. and toys like dolls and sruptures of animals.
Your kind reply based on teaching of Quran and Hadith is most kindly requested. May Allah bless you for this act of kindness.

Answer:

Praise be to Allaah.  

Firstly:

Image-making is of two types: one by hand and the other by means of machines.

Image-making by hand is haraam, and is in fact a major sin, because the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) cursed the one who does it. He did not differentiate between images that have a shadow (i.e., three-dimensional) or those that are simply drawn (two-dimensional), according to the more correct scholarly opinion, because of the general meaning of the hadeeth.  

With regard to image-making by means of machines, i.e. cameras, there is a difference of opinion among the later scholars on this matter. Some of them forbid it and some of them allow it.

In order to be on the safe side, it is better to avoid that, because it is one of the doubtful areas. And whoever is careful with regard to doubtful matters will protect his religious commitment and his honour. But if he needs to do that for a specific purpose such as proving his identity, there is nothing wrong with that because if there is a need, the matter is no longer doubtful.

Secondly:

With regard to keeping pictures, this is also of two types:

The first type is keeping images that are three-dimensional. Keeping them is haraam. Ibn al-‘Arabi narrated that there is consensus on this point. See Fath al-Baari, p. 388, vol. 10). He said: This consensus has to do with things other than girls’ dolls.

It was narrated that ‘Aa’ishah (may Allaah be pleased with her) said: “I used to play with dolls in the presence of the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) and I had friends who would play with me. When the Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) entered they would hide themselves and he would call them to come and play with me. Narrated by al-Bukhaari, no. 5779; Muslim, no. 2440.

The second type is images that are not three-dimensional. These are of different types:

1-     Those that are hung up to be venerated and respected, as in the case of pictures of kings, presidents, ministers, scholars etc. This is haraam because it involves exaggeration about a created being.

2-     Those that are hung up for the sake of memory, such as hanging up pictures of one's friends. This is also haraam, because of the hadeeth narrated in Saheeh al-Bukhaari from Abu Talhah (may Allaah be pleased with him), who said: “I heard the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) say: ‘The angels do not enter any house in which there is a dog or an image.’” Narrated by Muslim, no. 2104).

3-     Those that are hung up for the purpose of adornment. These are also haraam because of the hadeeth of ‘Aa’ishah who said: “The Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) came back from a journey and I had hung a patterned curtain on which there were images over (the door of) a room of mine. When the Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) saw it, he tore it and said, ‘The most severely punished of the people on the Day of Resurrection will be those who tried to imitate the creation of Allaah.’” She said: “So I made it into one or two cushions.” Narrated by al-Bukhaari, no. 5610; Muslim, no. 2107.

4-     Those that are treated with disrespect, such as images in carpets and pillows. Al-Nawawi narrated from the majority of scholars among the Sahaabah and Taabi’een that these are permissible.

5-     Those that have unfortunately become widespread and are difficult to avoid, such as images engraved on coins etc which have become a problem for the Muslim ummah. It seems to me that there is no sin on the one who acquires these without wanting to acquire images.

Thirdly:

With regard to dolls that children play with:

An exception is made in the case of children’s toys, which are not regarded as haraam or makrooh. But what are the toys which are exempted? We know that the toys of the past did not have eyes and lips and noses as they do nowadays. I think it is better to avoid these toys and limit oneself to those the kind of toys that were known previously.

See Fataawa al-‘Aqeedah by Shaykh Ibn ‘Uthaymeen, p. 66, 663, 679

And Allaah knows best.



Islam Q&A (www.islam-qa.com)                    

#3 muslimsister

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Posted 30 July 2003 - 03:31 PM

                    Assalaam alaikum wa rahmatu Allahi wa barakatuh,
Another fatwa to read, insha' Allah.
Question:


since we're not allowed to make images of humans and animals, should children be allowed to play with toys in the shape of humans or animals?.

Answer:

Praise be to Allaah.  

Shaykh Ibn ‘Uthaymeen (may Allaah have mercy on him) said:

With regard to those in which the shape is incomplete, in which there is only a part of the limbs or head, but the shape is not clear, there is no doubt that these are permissible, and these are like the dolls with which ‘Aa’ishah used to play. (Narrated in al-Bukhaari, 6130; Muslim, 2440).

But if the shape is complete, and it is as if you are looking at a person – especially if it can move or speak – then I am not entirely at ease with the idea of them being permissible, because this is a complete imitation of the creation of Allaah. It seems that the dolls with which ‘Aa’ishah used to play were not like this, so it is preferable to avoid them. But I cannot say that they are definitely haraam, because there are concessions granted to young children that are not granted to adults in such matters. It is natural for young children to play and have fun, they are not obliged to do any of the acts of worship so we cannot say that that they are wasting their time in idle play. But if a person wants to be on the safe side in such matters, he should cut off the head or hold it near the fire until it softens, then he should press it until the features disappear.



Majmoo’ Fataawa al-Shaykh Muhammad ibn ‘Uthaymeen (may Allaah have mercy on him), 2/277-278 (www.islam-qa.com)                    

#4 Guest_Bubbles_*

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Posted 31 July 2003 - 05:53 AM

                    My dolls, if you look at them, does not and cannot look like the real creations of Allah. They all look cartoon-like :wink: . And my girlie doll is very odd because she has a very big head (like humpty dumpty) and a body so small with her hands like a stick with no fingers. Its like, her head is like balloon and her body just a bit bigger than the string. Odd, right. Her eyes and lips are improper, the eyes are just rounds and the mouth is just one curve of a thread. She have no ears, no nose, etc. She is the total opposite of the Barbie doll. You can't change her clothes or brush her hair because there's no hair to brush. Anyone here watch Powerpuff Girl cartoon series?

Thanks Muslimsister. I guess I'll keep her and my little cat  biggrin.gif By the way, I'm 21 :oops:

Bubbles                    

#5 muslimsister

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Posted 31 July 2003 - 03:10 PM

                    Assalaam alaikum wa rahmatu Allahi wa barakatuh,
Dear sister Bubbles,
Masha' Allah, you are 21 years old.  You are a woman and of marriageable age.  The fatwas that I posted are exceptions for a child.  As you said, you would give them up for Allah.  biggrin.gif                    




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