TG123
Regular Member
I agree with your approach, and think that Islam does teach point 2. I think that the hadiths do state clearly however, that Muhammad did command that some animals be killed. Some of them, like crows and rabid dogs and poisonous snakes and mice, are harmful. Others, like the salamander, pose no more threat to humans than frogs, which are not to be killed. And others, like kites, are actually quite beneficial.Just a summation of how I see things.
Based upon the Ahadith and taking simply the intent of them the conclusion I come to:
1. We are not specifically commanded to kill anything
2. It is allowed for us to kill animals that are harmful or dangerous.
My own actions are when I find something that poses a threat is I that will take it and move it to an area where it poses no problem. I am not required to kill them. but if I were not able to catch them, or was afraid to capture them, there would be no sin in my killing them
While Muhammad ordered kites and salamanders to be wiped out because of the harm they allegedly pose to people, he didn't say anything (to my knowledge) about animals like jackals and baboons, which actually do cause a lot of destruction to livestock and farms and sometimes whole villages.
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