Explore Verses Related to Slavery
At a Glance
📖 Quranic Context
A major theme in Islamic jurisprudence (Fiqh) and ethics, focusing on regulation, humanization, and eventual abolition.
Islam reframed the master-slave relationship within a framework of divine accountability and human dignity, consistently promoting manumission.
💭 Theological Perspective
Islam considers freedom (hurriyyah) to be the natural state of human beings.
Recognized the humanity and spiritual equality of the enslaved, mandating kindness and prohibiting abuse.
The Quranic trajectory is one of gradual, systematic dismantlement of slavery from within society by restricting its sources and multiplying avenues for freedom.
Freeing a slave ('tahrir raqabah') is established as one of the highest acts of piety and a primary means of atonement for major sins.
📜 Hadith Perspective
The Prophet Muhammad's teachings and actions consistently modeled humane treatment, encouraged manumission, and set precedents for limiting the institution.
- "They are your brothers whom Allah has placed under your authority."
- The expiation for striking a slave is to free them.
- Prophetic examples of freeing slaves personally and through state funds.
Classical jurists codified the Quranic reforms, although the full abolitionist trajectory was a subject of later scholarly development.
💎 Deeper Insights
The Islamic legal framework created a 'Freedom Fund' by institutionalizing manumission as a primary channel for two of Islam's Five Pillars: Zakat (obligatory charity) and as an alternative for Hajj violations. This effectively made the Islamic state and every pilgrim a potential liberator, creating a constant economic pressure towards emancipation that was unique in world history.
— Al-Qurtubi, Contemporary Fiqh Councils
The Quranic term for freeing a slave, 'Fakku Raqabah' (فَكُّ رَقَبَةٍ) in Surah Al-Balad (90:13), literally means 'untying the neck.' This powerful legal and spiritual metaphor goes beyond simple release; it implies removing a yoke of bondage and restoring full human dignity, framing slavery as an unnatural restriction that must be actively 'undone' to achieve righteousness.
— Al-Tabari, Linguistic Analysts of the Quran
