Monday, June 10, 2013

Logic behind the Prohibition of Consuming Dead Animals in Islam


Allah The Exalted says in the Holy Quran:
 
Prohibited to you are dead animals, blood, the flesh of swine, and that which has been dedicated to other than Allah, and [those animals] killed by strangling or by a violent blow or by a head-long fall or by the goring of horns, and those from which a wild animal has eaten, except what you [are able to] slaughter [before its death]... (Al Quran 5:3)

The death of an animal before its slaughter could be due to its infliction with a certain disease or virus.  It could also be due to old age.  In truth, these two reasons are sufficient to prohibit this type of meat.  In addition, when an animal is dead without being properly slaughtered and allowing its blood to drain from the body, the blood becomes trapped in the body.  This is a serious problem because blood carries body wastes including carbon dioxide, urea, uric acid, microorganisms, parasites, and products of food assimilation and metabolism that are transported via the veins and arteries and their tributaries in the animal’s body. Most of these substances have a potential to rot and decay if trapped in the body, especially if the body has been left for a period long enough to allow the start of its decay. The body of a dead animal reserves blood with all sediments and toxins, particularly which are in the arterial blood. Blood could then prevail in the tissues and thus the toxins start to function in all body cells; therefore, the dead body changes colour and the superficial veins are filled with blood, and blood circulation stops with no chance of leaking any amount of blood outside the body. The dead body becomes a spoilt deposit for diseases and microbes. The work of decay then starts in the body, affecting the meat in colour, taste and smell. That is why the meat of dead bodies is foul and extremely unhealthy.

For these reasons, the wisdom and logic behind the divine prohibition of carrion is evident.