Istishhad () is the Arabic word for "martyrdom", "death of a martyr", or (in some contexts) "heroic death". Martyrs are given the honorific shaheed. The word derives from the Semitic root shahida (), meaning "to witness". Traditionally martyrdom has an exalted place in Islam. It is widely believed among Muslims that the sins of believers who "die in the way of God" will be forgiven by Allah.Lange, Christian (2016). Paradise and Hell in Islamic Traditions. Cambridge United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-50637-3. p.40 Shia Islam views on martyrdom have been profoundly influenced by internal Muslim conflicts, notably Husayn ibn Ali's martyrdom at Karbala in 680, shaping it as a central belief and practice.
In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, the term istishhad has been redefined by Mujahideen to emphasize the "heroism" of sacrifice, rather than portraying it as an act of Victimisation. This concept has evolved into a military and political strategy known among Jihadist groups as "martyrdom operations". although Western media commonly refer to them as . These acts contain "a central ideological pillar and organizational ideal" of waging "active jihad against the perceived enemies of Islam". Sunni Islamism figures such as Hassan al-Banna viewed martyrdom as a duty incumbent upon every Muslim, urging them to ready themselves for it and to excel in the "art of death". Contemporary Shi'ite perspectives on martyrdom have commonly followed similar paths.
The rise of deaths of Muslims in conflicts spanning regions such as Palestine, Afghanistan, Kashmir conflict, Chechnya, Iraq, and Iran has been accompanied by extensive literature glorifying these martyrs' actions. Jihadist terror groups, in particular Al-Qaeda, have "employed innovative modes of action and raised suicide terrorism's level of destruction and fatalities to previously unknown heights". Osama bin Laden referred to Muslims who had been massacred in numerous conflicts as evidence that the world regarded Muslims lives as "cheap" in his "declaration of war" on the United States in 1996.
There are at least five different kinds of martyrs according to the following hadith:
Indian lawyer Shahid Azmi is occasionally referred to as "Shaheed Shahid Azmi" ( the Martyr Shahid Azmi) because he was assassinated, or "Shaheed Advocate Shahid Azmi" (the martyred advocate), adding a title used to describe his role as a defence lawyer. Azmi defended young Muslims in India who had been wrongly accused of terrorism. Muslims are a persecuted minority in India where Hindutva and other Hindu nationalism are increasingly dominant ideologies. Azmi was 32 years old when he died. Reports that describe his death as martyrdom () say he sacrificed his life for truth and justice.(Author name in )
A particularly notable example of a progressive Muslim who was assassinated by terrorists is Benazir Bhutto, leader of the progressive left wing Pakistan People's Party, and former Prime Minister of Pakistan. She was assassinated in 2007 by a teenage extremist, who is thought to be connected to the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan. Many things in Pakistan, were named or renamed in her honour, referring to her by the title "shaheed" (martyr). Most of them related to education, particularly women's education, but there were also others, including Shaheed Benazirabad District (, ) in the province of Sindh. The district, previously known as Nawabshah District, was renamed in September 2008 when members of the Provincial Assembly of Sindh from Nawabshah lobbied for the district be renamed in her honour. Benazir's father and political predecessor, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, was executed by a military dictator and is also memorialized as a martyr.
Conservative Muslims also refer to assassinated leaders as martyrs. For example, Ismail Haniyeh – the civilian political leader of the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) – was assassinated by a bomb secretly planted in the bedroom where he slept while visiting Iran, killing Haniyeh and his bodyguard. The office of the Turkish president referred to Haniyeh's death as "his martyrdom" (in English). (in English) Palestinian sources in English also referred to Haniyeh as a "martyr" and referred to his death as "martyrdom" (in English). The same words were used in a translation of a statement by Hamas was published by Al-Jazeera English.
This language was used by Palestinian media, some international media, and even the bomber's family. The bomber's family condemned him publicly, describing his actions as unpatriotic and criminal, and announced they would not be holding funeral services for him.
Media referred to the bomber as a suicide bomber () and not a martyr.
Gaza's clans referred to the bombing as an act of suicide terrorism ().
"If the great martyr (Imam Husayn ibn Ali) ... confined himself to praying ... the great tragedy of Kabala would not have come about ... Among the contemporary ulema, if the great Ayatollah ... Shirazi ... thought like these people who, a war would not have taken place in Iraq ... all those Muslims would not have been martyred."`Ayatollah Khomeyni Message to Council of Experts,` broadcast 14 July 1983, FBIS-SAS-83-137, 15 July 1983; Brumberg, Reinventing Khomeinip.130
Death might seem like a tragedy to some but in reality...
If you have any tie or link binding you to this world in love, try to sever it. This world, despite all its apparent splendor and charm, is too worthless to be loved. Islam and Revolution, p.357
Khomeini never wavered from his faith in the war as God's will, and observers (such as Ayatollah Mehdi Haeri Yazdi, a grand ayatollah and former student with family ties to Khomeini) have related a number of examples of his impatience with those who tried to convince him to negotiate an end to the war even when it had become a stalemate with hundreds of thousands killed and civilian areas being attacked by missiles.Nasr, Vali, The Shia Revival, Norton, (2006), p.120
Some scholars (Ervand Abrahamian) argue that the idea of martyrdom was transform by Khomeini from the traditional Shi'i belief of "a saintly act", usually referring "the famous Shi'i saints who in obeying God's will, had gone to their deaths"; to "revolutionary sacrifice" done "to overthrow a despotic political order";Abrahamian, Khomeinism, 1993: p.29 and that Khoemini was heavily influenced by Iranian leftists individuals and groups active in the 1960s such as Ali Shariati, the Tudeh Party, Mojahedin, Hojjat al-Islam Nimatollah Salahi-Najafabadi.
Perang sabi was the Acehnese word for jihad, a holy war and Acehnese language literary works on perang sabi were distributed by Islamic clerics ('ulama) such as Teungku di Tiro to help the resistance against the Dutch in the Aceh War.
The recompense awarded by in paradise detailed in Islamic Arabic texts and Dutch atrocities were expounded on in the Hikayat Perang Sabil which was communally read by small cabals of Ulama and Acehnese who swore an oath before going to achieve the desired status of "martyr" by launching suicide attacks on the Dutch.
Perang sabil was the Malay equivalent to other terms like Jihad, Ghazawat for "Holy war", the text was also spelled "Hikayat perang sabil".
Fiction novels like Sayf Muhammad Isa's Sabil: Prahara di Bumi Rencong on the war by Aceh against the Dutch include references ro Hikayat Perang Sabil.
Mualimbunsu Syam Muhammad wrote the work called "Motives for Perang Sabil in Nusantara", Motivasi perang sabil di Nusantara: kajian kitab Ramalan Joyoboyo, Dalailul-Khairat, dan Hikayat Perang Sabil on Indonesia's history of Islamic holy war (Jihad).
According to Braithwaite and Braithwaite, children and women were inspired to do suicide attacks by the Hikayat Perang Sabil against the Dutch.
Hikayat Perang Sabil is also known as "Hikayat Prang Sabi".
Hikayat Perang Sabil is considered as part of 19th century Malay literature.
In Dutch occupied Aceh, Hikayat Perang Sabil was confiscated from Sabi's house during a Police raid on 27 September 1917.
This literary work has been used to explain Acehnese people women and children killed in battle by the Dutch, 700 of whom were killed 1904 alone.
Supporters have also described martyrdom/suicide operations as a military "equalizer" whereby pious Muslim martyrs use their willingness to sacrifice for their faith and their certainty in their reward in the afterlife to counter the Western unbeliever, who has "at their disposal state-of-the-art and top-of-the-range means and weaponry to achieve their aims. While we have the minimum basics ... We ... do not seek material rewards, but heavenly one in the hereafter", Hassan, a Hezbollah fighter, quoted by Hala Jaber.
By the early twenty first century, martyrdom operations by Muslims had also been turned against other Muslims, usually from groups the attackers did not regard as Muslims. Thousands of Muslims, particularly Shia, had become victims, not just initiators, of martyrdom operations, with many civilians and even mosques and shrines being targeted, particularly in Iraq. According to Scott Atran, in 2004 in Iraq there were 400 suicide attacks and 2000 casualties. Salafi jihadism ideologue Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi declared "all-out war" on Shia Muslims in Iraq in response to a US-Iraqi offensive on the town of Tal Afar.Al Jazeera article: "Al-Zarqawi declares war on Iraqi Shia", Accessed Feb 7, 2007. Link He described his view of the Sunni-Shia conflict in a February 2004 open letter to supporters where he argued for a cycle of attack and retaliation that would "awaken" those Sunnis who previously had not wanted a sectarian war to join his side.
In 2007, some of the Shia ulema have responded by declaring suicide bombing haraam:
At least one scholar, Shi'i cleric Sa'id Akhtar Rizvi, writes that while normally when a human being dies, their Akhirah "depends on one's faith and deeds", but that "the moment a believer is slain in the way of Allah, his eternal life begins". With a martyr there is no
"uncertainty ... suspense. Allah immediately bestows on the martyr the joy, the everlasting bliss and an immortal life. ... Those whose faith in the Creator is superfluous, can never solve the mystery of martyrdom. They feel puzzled as to why the Muslims, the true believers, appear eager to die in the way of Allah. They call them 'suicide squad'. But it is not suicide. Suicide implies termination of life, while martyrdom is continuation of life".
Acts of istishhad are governed by Islamic legal rules associated with armed warfare or military jihad. The rules governing jihad, literally meaning struggle but often called "holy war" by non-Muslims, are covered in exquisite detail in the classical texts of Islamic jurisprudence. In Orthodox Islam law, jihad is a collective religious obligation on the Muslim community, when the community is endangered or Muslims are subjected to oppression and subjugation. The rules governing such conflicts include not killing women, children or non-combatants, and leaving cultivated or residential areas undamaged. Bernard Lewis and Buntzie Ellis Churchill, Islam: The Religion and the People, Wharton School Publishing, 2008, pp. 145–153 Muhammad Hamidullah, The Muslim Conduct of State (Ashraf Printing Press 1987): pp. 205–208
For more than a millennium, these tenets were accepted by Sunnis and Shiites; however, since the 1980s militant Islamists have challenged the traditional Islamic rules of warfare in an attempt to justify suicide attacks despite clear contradictions to established Islamic laws.
Before the sudden resurgence in suicide bombings, the 1972 Lod Airport massacre – by the Japanese Red Army (JRA) at an Israeli airport – was one of the only suicide attacks in the Middle East. "The massacre was planned as a suicide attack and all three Japanese militants had intended to mutilate their faces with their grenades to make identification more difficult. Two of them died but Okamoto was wounded and captured."
It was one of only examples of political violence in the region where a militant killed himself.
It was carried of by Japanese foreign fighters from the JRA working with the Christian-led secular PFLP.
Some reports at the time labelled the 1972 Lod Airport massacre in Israel by the Japanese Red Army (JRA) a "Kamikaze" attack, but others have criticized the label, including the surviving attacker's interpreter
All three militants intended to die, but one survived.
In more recent reports call it a "suicide attack" or "suicide mission", even when referring to the attacker who survived.
The survivor confessed and hoped to be quickly executed.
He was assigned the same lawyer as Dov Gruner, who has seemingly done the same.
Mohammed Hossein Fahmideh, a 13-year-old Iranian boy who fought in Iran–Iraq War, is said – by former CIA operative Robert Baer – to be the first Muslim to have participated in such an attack in contemporary history. He strapped rocket-propelled grenades to his chest and blew himself up under an Iraqi tank in November 1980. Ayatollah Khomeini declared Fahmideh a national hero. According to Baer, the boy was used as an inspiration for further volunteers for martyrdom. A near identical tactic was used by Chinese Nationalists in the 1930s and 1940s (see above). The Iranian website, Tebyan Cultural Institute refers to the child's death simply as "killing himself", making no mention of either "suicide" or "martyrdom". According to Former CIA officer Robert Baer, "Ayatollah Khomeini's embattled Islamic republic adopted Fahmideh as a national hero and as an inspiration for further bloodshed and martyrdom".
Iranian basij volunteers ran through minefields to detonate buried and clear a safe battlefield path for following soldiers.
Inspired by the success of Hezbollah, the (Sunni) Palestinian nationalist group Hamas used suicide attacks intermittently in occupied Palestine.
Hamas first carried out suicide attacks – involved strapping the body of the mission carrier with explosives – in the Israeli towns of Afula and Khidara in the spring of 1994, it "described these operations as `amaliyat istishhadiya (martyrdom operations)" rather than the more secular a'maliyat fida'iyah (self-sacrifice operations). According to Palestinian anthropologist Nasser Abufarha, istishhadi did not previously exist in the Arabic dictionary. Istishhadi is different from the notions of shahid or fida'i in that istishhadi is the idea of proactively seeking martyrdom; an idea that is not traditionally Islamic.
Hamas introduced the term istishhadi with the aim of attaching religion to self-sacrifice because Hamas believes Islam is "the most solid ideology through which to achieve the goals of the Palestinian national struggle." The term 'amaliyat istishhadiya has caught on and "today, istishhad is the most frequently used term to refer to acts of sacrifice in the Palestinian resistance and is used by Islamic, secular, and Marxist groups alike".
According to U.S. American legal scholar, Noah Feldman: "The vocabulary of martyrdom and sacrifice, the formal videotaped pre-confession of faith, the technological tinkering to increase deadliness—all are now instantly recognizable to every Muslim." Feldman sees a worrying trend in the steady expansion of the targets of Istishhad since its debut in 1983 when successful bombing of barracks and embassy buildings drove the U.S. military out of Lebanon.
The Chicago Project on Security and Terrorism recorded a total of 3,699 suicide attacks in over 40 countries from 1982 to 2013.
Oxford-based Malaysian jurist Shaykh Afifi al-Akiti, issued his fatwa forbidding suicide bombing and targeting innocent civilians:
In January 2006, a Shia Marja' cleric, Yousef Sanei decreed a fatwa against suicide bombing declaring it as a "terrorist act" and the Saudi grand mufti as well as other Sunni scholars similarly denounced suicide attacks regardless of their offensive or defensive characterization. "Interview with Christiane Amanpour", CNN, February 2007
Scholar Bernard Lewis states, "At no time did the classical jurists offer any approval or legitimacy to what we nowadays call terrorism. Nor indeed is there any evidence of the use of terrorism as it is practiced nowadays". Similarly, Noah Feldman writes that the Islamic reasoning of suicide attackers is not convincing as martyrdom in Islam typically refers to another person killing a Muslim warrior, not the warrior pushing "the button himself". In addition, "The killing of women and children has proved harder to explain away as a permissible exercise of jihad." This "illustrates the nature of the difficulty of reconciling suicide bombing with Islamic law".
As Charles Kimball, the University of Oklahoma's Director of Religious Studies, pointed out that Islam "clearly prohibits suicide" by citing "the hadith materials, which are the authoritative sayings and actions of the prophet, Muhammad, includes many unambiguous statements about suicide: one who 'throws himself off a mountain' or 'drinks poison' or 'kills himself with a sharp instrument' will be in the fire of Jahannam. Suicide is not allowed even to those in extreme conditions such as painful illness or a serious wound". Other Islamic groups such as the European Council for Fatwa and Research cite the Quran'ic verse Al-An'am 6:151 as a prohibition against suicide: "And take not life, which Allah has made sacred, except by way of justice and law". "Euthanasia: Types and Rulings" Dr. Hassan Ali El-Najjar says that the hadith unambiguously forbid suicide. "Committing Suicide Is Strictly Forbidden in Islam"
Suicide tactics are controversial even within groups that use them.
An ecclectic assortment of militant movements who self-Identify as Islamic (such as Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Al-Qaeda, and ISIS) argue that suicide operations are justified according to Islamic law. This includes groups thar consider each other to be "devient idrologies" (the way Hamas describe ISIS and their sympathizers) or even outright non-Muslim (). Irshad Manji, author of The Trouble with Islam Today, in her retelling of a conversation with a leader of Islamic Jihad, she asked,
"What's the difference between suicide, which the Koran condemns, and martyrdom?" She took his reply at face value, he said "Suicide, is done out of despair. But remember: most of our martyrs today were very successful in their earthly lives". She wrote, "In short, there was a future to live for—and they detonated it anyway".
Another rationale provided for why istishhad is not against Islamic law is that the civilians caught in the crossfire "were destined to die". The Saudi exile Muhammad al-Massari explains that any civilian killed in an attack on the enemy "won't suffer but...becomes a martyr himself". The New York Times, June 10, 2007 During the 2006 Israel-Hezbollah war, Hezbollah secretary-general Hassan Nasrallah apologized for an attack on Nazareth that killed two Israeli-Arab children—but said the two children should be considered "martyrs". Al-Manar (Beirut), July 20, 2006
Further justifications have been given by Iranian cleric Ayatollah Mohammad Taghi Mesbah Yazdi, "when protecting Islam and the Muslim Ummah depends on martyrdom operations, it not only is allowed, but even is an wajib as many of the Shi'ah great scholars and Maraje', including Ayatullah Safi Golpayegani and Ayatullah Fazel Lankarani, have clearly announced in their fatwas".
Other clerics have supported suicide attacks largely in connection with the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. Sunni cleric Yusuf al-Qaradawi has supported such attacks by Palestinians in perceived defense of their homeland as heroic and an act of resistance.David Bukay, From Muhammad to Bin Laden: Religious and Ideological Sources of the Homicide Bombers Phenomenon, 2011. Shiite Lebanese cleric Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah, the spiritual authority recognized by Hezbollah, is reported to have similar views.
After the 7 July 2005 London bombings, journalist Mona Eltahawy published an op-ed in the Washington Post noting the fact that there were "22 and scholars who met at London's largest mosque to condemn the bombings but who would not criticize all suicide attacks", such as Sayed Mohammed Musawi, the head of the World Islamic League, who said "there should be a clear distinction between the suicide bombing of those who are trying to defend themselves from occupiers, which is something different from those who kill civilians, which is a big crime".Mona Eltahawy, "After London, Tough Questions for Muslims", Washington Post, 22 July 2005. After the knighting of Salman Rushdie in June 2007, Pakistan's acting Minister of Religious Affairs Muhammad Ijaz-ul-Haq publicly justified and called for a suicide attack against him. "Rushdie knighthood 'justifies suicide attacks'", The Guardian, 18 June 2007.
There have been conflicting reports about the stances of Sheikh Muhammad Sayyid Tantawy (who was then the Grand Imam of Al-Azhar- he is now deceased) and Sheikh Ahmed el-Tayeb (who was then the Grand Mufti of Egypt and is now the Grand Imam of Al-Azhar). Shortly after the September 11 attacks Sheikh Tantawy issued a statement opposing suicide attacks. Frank Gardner, "Grand Sheikh condemns suicide bombings", BBC, 4 December 2001. However, a translation from Al Azhar website quotes him as supporting suicide attacks on Jews in Israel as part of the Palestinian struggle "to strike horror into the hearts of the enemies of Islam"., April 4, 2002. Yet, in 2003 he was quoted again as saying "groups which carried out suicide bombings were the enemies of Islam", and that all suicide attacks were sinful including those against Israelis. His comments condemning all suicide attacks were echoed by Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad and Lebanese cleric Husam Qaraqirah. "Cleric condemns suicide attacks", BBC, 11 July 2003.
According to the Middle East Media Research Institute an Iranian Islamic theologian whom they referred to as Mohammad-Bagher Heydari Kashani, said "We had 36,000 student martyrs in, 7,070 of whom were under the age of 14. ... "They were a source of pride for us, and we must thank God for them". He said children should aspire to be like the Martyr Qasem Soleimani, an Iranian military leader who was assassinated by the United States on 3 January 2020.
However, the Pew Research Center has found decreases in Muslim support for suicide attacks. In 2011 surveys, less than 15% of Pakistanis, Jordanians, Turks, and Indonesians thought that suicide bombings were sometimes/often justified. Approximately 28% of Egyptians and 35% of Lebanese felt that suicide bombings were sometimes/often justified. However, 68% of Palestinians reported that suicide attacks were sometimes/often justified. In 2013, Pew found that "clear majorities of Muslims oppose violence in the name of Islam"; 89% in Pakistan, 81% in Indonesia, 78% in Nigeria, and 77% in Tunisia said that "suicide bombings or other acts of violence that target civilians are never justified".
Militant groups like Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad consider martyrdom as the highest form of sacrifice for the Palestinian cause, leading to acts of terrorism, including suicide bombings. This ethos is widespread in educational materials, visual media, community events, ceremonies, and has influenced the indoctrination of children from a young age, impacting the psychological well-being of Palestinian children.
Neighbiuring Israel – a Jewish state with a Muslim minority – has also glorified militant martyrdom in educational matetials and political propaganda, particularly Likud, the political successor organisation to two Zionist militant groups (Menachem Begin's Irgun and Yitzhak Shamir's Lehi).
In 2010 Likud introduced a new study unit to the school curriculum that focused on Olei Hagardom from these groups, including two who intentionally killed themselves with explosives.
The most passionate objections to this glorification of terrorist martyrdom came from two Muslim Knesset members members, Ahmed Tibi and Talab El-Sana, both from the Islmist faction United Arab List-Ta'a.
Some Jewish members also objected, including by comparing Netanyahu to Hamas.
The Quranic passage that follows is the source of the concept of Muslim martyrs being promised Paradise:
The importance of faith is highlighted in the following hadith:
It is thus not the outcome that determines the placement in Heaven but rather the intention.
Nonetheless, Paradise for a shahid is a popular concept in the Islamic tradition according to Hadith, and the attainment of this title is honorific.
Muhammad is reported to have said these words about martyrdom:
Several hadith also indicate the nature of a shahid's life in Paradise. Shahids attain the highest level of Paradise, the Paradise of al-Firdous.
Furthermore, Samura narrated:
A Muslim who is killed defending his or her property is considered a martyr.
One who dies protecting his property is also considered a martyr according to Hadith:
While the Qur'an does not indicate much about martyrs' death and funeral, the hadith provides some information on this topic. For example, martyrs are to be buried two in one grave in their blood, without being washed or having a funeral prayer held for them. The following Hadith highlight this:
Willingness to die in battle
Southeast Asia before the Cold War
Acehnese attacks on the Dutch
– via:
These poetic tales have been used to explain Acehnese people women and children killed in battle by the Dutch, including 700 Acehnese women and children killed in 1904.
Japanese occupation of Aceh
Hikayat Perang Sabil
Against the Spanish in the Philippines
Other casualties of war
Suicide bombings
Significance of martyrdom to suicide attacks
s
Earlier suicide attacks in other cultures
During the World Wars and interwar period organised use of suicide in combat was most common in [[East Asia]], where Abrahamic religions are only practiced by a small minority of the population.
particularly Imperial Japan Japanese kamikaze attacks during world war two.
Suicide bombings were used in China by the right-wing Nationalist government and their predecessors.
In the Xinhai Revolution, " Dare to Die" student corps were founded to fight against Qing dynasty rule. Sun Yat-sen and Huang Xing promoted the National Revolutionary Army's Dare to Die Corps.
Dare to Die squads frequently wielded traditional weapons such as swords in suicidal attacks against overwhelming odds.
They also used suicide bombings, strapping explosives to themselves to attack Imperial Japanese invaders during the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945) and broader the Second World War (1939-1945).
In one such attack Chinese soldiers killed themselves and destroyed four Japanese tanks.
During the 1937 Defense of Sihang Warehouse, a Chinese soldier reportedly detonated a grenade vest, killing 20 Japanese troops.
At the 1937 Battle of Shanghai, a suicide bomber halted a tank column by detonating himself beneath the lead vehicle.
During the 1938 Battle of Taierzhuang, Chinese suicide troops again charged at tanks with explosives strapped to their bodies.
Christian and Jewish militants and militaries
Alleged predecessors in Southeast Asia
After the Iranian Islamic Revolution
Iran-Iraq War
of self-inflicted martyrdom
Hezbollah
Spread to Sunni Muslims
First the targets were American soldiers, then mostly , including women and children. From Lebanon and Israel, the technique of suicide bombing moved to Iraq, where the targets have included mosques and shrines, and the intended victims have mostly been Shia Iraqi people. The newest testing ground is Afghanistan, where both the perpetrators and the targets are orthodox Sunni Muslims. Not long ago, a bombing in Lashkar Gah, the capital of Helmand Province, killed Muslims, including women, who were applying to go on Hajj to Mecca. Overall, the trend is definitively in the direction of Muslim-on-Muslim violence. By a conservative accounting, more than three times as many Iraqis have been killed by suicide bombings in the last 3 years as have Israelis in the last 10. Suicide bombing has become the archetype of Muslim violence—not just to frightened Westerners but also to Muslims themselves.Noah Feldman, "Islam, Terror and the Second Nuclear Age", New York Times, October 29, 2006
Religious-scholarly debate about suicide missions
Against suicide attacks
"If the attack involves a bomb placed on the body or placed so close to the bomber that when the bomber detonates it the bomber is certain yaqin to die, then the More Correct Position according to us is that it does constitute suicide. This is because the bomber, being also the Maqtul the, is unquestionably the same Qatil the = Qatil Nafsahu killing". Shaykh Afifi al-Akiti, "Defending The Transgressed By Censuring The Reckless Against The Killing Of Civilians"
Proponents of suicide operations
Public opinion on suicide attacks
Stereotypes and misconceptions
from the Quran and hadith
Quran
Hadith
See also
Sections
Notes
Citations
Bibliography
External links
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