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"Necrophilia: Unthinkable Depravity": In a shocking incident in Varanasi, the body of a 5-year-old girl, recently buried by her grieving father, was exhumed and found Mohd Rafiq alias Chhotu sleeping alongside her, triggering a major police investigation

actions. This incident has not only left a family in mourning but also posed grave questions about the sanctity and safety of final resting places
 |  Satyaagrah  |  Islam
Body of a 5 year old innocent girl was taken out of the grave from the cemetery and Mohd Rafiq alias (Chhotu) was found sleeping with her
Body of a 5 year old innocent girl was taken out of the grave from the cemetery and Mohd Rafiq alias (Chhotu) was found sleeping with her

In a deeply disturbing incident that has shaken the city of Varanasi, an unimaginable act of desecration has occurred at the Rewari Talab cemetery. A young man, in a state of inebriation, grotesquely exhumed the body of a five-year-old girl, who was laid to rest only two days earlier. This act, beyond the realms of human decency, was discovered when the girl's father, a resident of Sadanand Bazaar in the Dashashwamedh area, visited her grave. The child had tragically passed away in a hospital the previous Wednesday and was buried that night around 9:30 pm.

The Laksa police station, acting on the information provided by the devastated father, apprehended the accused, addressing this egregious breach of societal norms. This incident not only represents an appalling violation of the sanctity of the child's final resting place but also underscores a worrying lapse in moral and ethical standards within the community. The horror of the act has deeply affected the grieving family, casting a shadow of sorrow and disbelief over the entire community. As the authorities proceed with their investigation, questions about security, respect for the deceased, and societal values inevitably arise, demanding attention and action to prevent any recurrence of such a shocking event.

The chilling details surrounding the desecration of a young girl's grave in Varanasi have become clearer, revealing a disturbing series of events. The father's suspicion was first aroused by the unusual appearance of the soil atop his daughter's grave. Heartbreakingly, when he dug up the grave, he discovered it empty, leading to a frantic search that ended in a horrifying discovery.

Mohammed Rafiq, known locally as Chhotu, a grave digger by profession and resident of the Rewari Pond area, was found in a corner of the cemetery, asleep next to the missing body of the child. This macabre scene was uncovered by the child's father, who immediately alerted the police, fearing further desecration of his daughter's body.

The Laksa police swiftly responded to the scene, arresting Rafiq and taking the young girl's body into custody. The shock of this discovery has reverberated throughout the community, raising serious concerns about cemetery security and the mental state of those employed within. Rafiq's subsequent admission of being heavily intoxicated at the time of the incident only adds to the complexity of the case. He claimed during police interrogation that his drunkenness was so severe he had no awareness or understanding of his actions.

This incident has not only left a family in mourning but also posed grave questions about the sanctity and safety of final resting places. The local community is now grappling with the implications of this act, and the authorities are under pressure to ensure that such a violation does not recur. The case of Mohammed Rafiq, while highlighting issues of substance abuse, also underscores the need for stringent monitoring and evaluation of individuals who have access to sensitive and emotionally charged areas like cemeteries.

Mohammed Rafiq, while in custody, repeatedly insisted to the police that he had not engaged in any wrongful acts with the young girl's body. Overwhelmed with the gravity of his actions, Rafiq expressed remorse, questioning what face he would show to his family and acquaintances after committing such a heinous act. ACP Dashashwamedh Awadhesh Kumar Pandey confirmed that Rafiq has been arrested and a case registered. The child's body has been sent for post-mortem, and if any further violation is confirmed, the legal charges against Rafiq will be accordingly intensified. This distressing case has not only brought grief to the family but also highlighted grave concerns about the safety and sanctity of burial sites.

Islamic Necrophilia: Or, "Every Hole Is a Goal"

This article was written by by Raymond Ibrahim, PJ Media on February 8, 2019. it was Originally published under the title "Yes, Some Islamic Scripture, Commentaries, and 'Fatwas' Permit Necrophilia."

A Muslim man who sexually violated a number of corpses was recently sentenced on February 1 in the UK. According to the report:

A warped "monster" who broke into a funeral parlour before having sex with a woman's corpse has been jailed for six years. Kasim Khuram, 23, forced his way into a Co-op undertakers before violating a dead body at around 1.40am on November 11 last year. A court heard how he lifted the lids of several coffins before selecting his victim. Khuram then removed the body from the coffin, took off her clothes and then "interfered with her" in the chapel of rest, leaving her face down on the floor.

Another female body was found face down in a coffin with her lower clothing pulled down while seven other corpses, including a baby, were disturbed. Police were alerted by the alarm at the funeral parlour on Walsall Road, in Great Barr, Birmingham, and turned up to find the depraved pervert still at the scene. Officers said he was "more concerned" about leaving his watch behind. Khuram, who had been drinking vodka and smoking mamba, told officers: "I bet you think I've been sh***ing them don't you?" and sickeningly added: "every hole is a goal."

At a time when Islam is associated with any number of troubling practices, can this too be laid at its feet? Alas, while necrophilia is a depravity not unique to any one modern culture, only Islam contains scriptures, commentaries, and fatwas (Islamic decrees) permitting the macabre practice.

As with most of Islam's problematic teachings, necrophilia is traceable to Muhammad.

According to a hadith (a recorded tradition concerning the sayings and doings of Muhammad) that exists in six of Islam's classical reference texts (including the important Kanz al-'Umal and al-Hujja fi Biyan al-Mahujja), Muhammad once took off his shirt, placed it on a dead woman, and then descended into and "lay with her" in the grave.

As they hurled dirt atop the corpse and Muhammad, the grave diggers exclaimed:

O Prophet, we see you doing a thing you never did with anyone else.

To this he responded:

I dressed her in my shirt so that she may be dressed in heavenly robes, and I lay with her in her grave so that the pressures of the grave [also known as Islam's torments of the grave] may be alleviated from her.

One can interpret this, and there certainly is no absolute reason to maintain that Muhammad was actually copulating with the corpse. There are, however, some hurdles.

First: The two Arabic words (ataja' ma'ha اضطجع معها) which I translate above as "lay with her" are indeed used in Arabic to mean "intercourse." This is similar to the English idiom "to lay with her," which can literally mean nothing more than laying down with a woman, but often is a reference to sex. More than a few Muslim clerics have made this linguistic observation.

Second: Sunni Islam's four orthodox schools of jurisprudence (or madhahib al-fiqh) -- namely, al-Hanafi, al-Hanbali, al-Maliki, and al-Shafi'i -- implicitly permit necrophilia. None of them actually address it on its own; rather, they give it a nod when it comes up in the context of other topics. In the section on adultery, the Maliki teaching is this:

If a husband enters his dead wife -- any which way, from front or behind -- there is no penalty for him. ( Sharh Mukhtasar al-Khalil fi al-fiqh al-Maliki)

Similarly, Shafi'i rulings on ablution point out that it is unnecessary to rewash the body of the dead -- male or female, adds the Hanbali madhhab -- after penetrating it, though the penis of the penetrator does require washing. (Although a few English translations of these pivotal Arabic texts appear online, most are poor and inaccurate. I may at some point collate and freshly translate all of the relevant ones, of which there are more than a few.)

Regardless of all the above, it is not for the non-Muslim -- certainly not for me -- to tell Muslims what their texts are really saying and teaching. That is the job of their ulema: scholars and clerics devoted to learning the deep truths of Islam. Thus, the real question: Do modern-day ulema permit necrophilia?

The lamentable answer is "yes." For instance, in 2011 a leading Moroccan cleric and founding member of the International Union of Muslim Scholars, Sheikh Abdul Bari Zamzami, issued a fatwa permitting the Muslim husband to copulate with his dead wife. He prefaced his decree by saying that, although he does not necessarily approve of this act, it is not for him to ban what Islam permits. As proof, he cited the aforementioned rulings of Islam's schools of jurisprudence.

In April 2012, when the Muslim Brotherhood's Muhammad Morsi was president of Egypt, news that Islamist Egyptian parliamentarians were trying to pass a law legalizing necrophilia appeared. Although Al Ahram, Egypt's most reputable paper, reported the story, it was quickly dismissed as a hoax in Western media (which often happens when Islam makes the news in ways that do not comport with Western sensibilities). As one journalist argued: "This ugly rumor and hoax ... should be doubted for the simple reason that no Egyptian Islamist sheikh, or any other Imam, has ever been reported to approve of necrophilia."

That may have been true then, but not now. In late 2017, necrophilia was again mentioned and legitimized, and this time by Sheikh Sabri Abdul Raeuf -- a professor at Egypt's Al Azhar, the Islamic world's most prestigious madrassa.

During a televised show in Egypt, the Sheikh-professor was asked if it is permissible for a husband to penetrate his wife after death. He replied: "It is not favorable in Islam; however the Islamic law considers it as Halal," meaning "permissible," not a sin or crime.

A Youm7 Arabic report titled (translation) "The Books of Al-Shafi'i, Al-Hanbali, and Al-Hanafi Reveal That Sex With a Corpse Is Not Adultery" verified the professor's claim.

Here, I would be remiss not to point out that this excursus on Islam's position concerning necrophilia should not be interpreted as meaning necrophilia is a normal or widespread activity among Muslim societies. Indeed, whenever it makes the news in the Arab world, most Muslims -- as can be expected of most decent people of whichever creed -- respond with incredulity, and revulsion.

Rather, the point here is that Islamic jurisprudence is so legalistically slavish to old, sometimes bizarre, texts and is often ambiguously worded as to legitimize much that is offensive to modern sensibilities. And not only does this provide a moral -- sometimes even pious -- cover for deviants; it can attract them.

Just as pedophiles, rapists, sex-slavers, misogynists, psychotic mass murderers, extortionists, and those eager to be "breastfed" by women or to drink camel urinecan find support in the teachings of Islam in ways that followers of other religions cannot, so too can those with depraved proclivities for the dead.

Raymond Ibrahim, author of the new book, Sword and Scimitar, Fourteen Centuries of War between Islam and the West, is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Gatestone Institute and a Judith Rosen Friedman Fellow at the Middle East Forum.

References:

https://varanasitoday.com
https://www.meforum.org 

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