Saturday, 26 October 2013

What makes a sex shop halal?

Comment: What makes a sex shop halal?

By
Katelyn Fossett

Source
Foreign Policy
Responding to apparent pent-up demand for tacky bachelorette parties, the 38-year old Turkish
 entrepreneur  Haluk Murat Demirel has opened the country's first halal (permissible in Islam) sex 
shop online. It's not the  first such enterprise in the world — successful predecessors can be found
in such varied locales as Bahrain, the Netherlands and Atlanta, Ga. — but the existence of such a
 market still raises some interesting  questions. For instance, what makes a sex shop halal? 
And what's behind their spread?

According to Hamza Yusuf, an American Islamic scholar and co-founder of Zaytuna College in 
Berkeley, Calif., the trend is, if anything, reflective of the adaptive qualities of capitalism — not 
any trend in the Muslim world, where items like herbal aphrodisiacs have been commonplace but 
under the radar for centuries.

"Muslim countries have all of these but they don't advertise them," he told Foreign Policy by phone. 
"It all goes back to the monetization of religion."

But if halal sex shop owners are motivated by profit, Islam itself has laid the groundwork for
 the business opportunity. While rigid rules govern pre-marital sexual relations in Muslim culture,
 the Quran and hadith (a record of the sayings of the Prophet Muhammad and his companions) 
make clear that sex within the confines of marriage is not purely for procreation, as it is in some
 Christian denominations.

 Muhammad told men not to leave their wives for more than six months so as to avoid sexual 
neglect, and there are even some well-known references to foreplay in the hadith. As Yusuf 
explains, "It's not a prudish culture . . . but decorum is still very important." For married Muslim 
couples, specific etiquette governs proper sexual relations, separating haram (forbidden) 
from halal.
"Online sex shops usually have pornographic pictures, which makes Muslims uncomfortable," 
Demirel, the Turkish shop owner, told Reuters. "We don't sell vibrators for example, because
 they are not approved by Islam."

According to Yusuf, there is some disagreement over the degree to which masturbation — and related 
sex toys — is prohibited. "Some scholars say it's forbidden, other says it's discouraged," he said. 
"Those who say it's discouraged say it's only to prevent fornication, or for relief." A section in the 
Quran, widely understood to ban masturbation, says that the "believers" are those "who protect their
 sexual organs except from their spouse. . . . Whoever seeks more beyond that [in sexual gratification], 
then they are the transgressors." Vibrators and similar toys also don't make it past an Islamic 
prohibition on the insertion of foreign objects into the body, according to Yusuf. He told FP
 that even enemas are discouraged.

Abdelaziz Aouragh, the owner of a Dutch halal sex shop called El Asira, told the Los 
Angeles Times in 2010, "There have been a lot of fatwas [Islamic rulings] concerning .
 . . [sex toys] . . . so it's very clear that they are not permissible. I would sell them if it was
 permissible but it's not." At Aouragh's online boutique, there are even separate places for 
men and women to log in, in keeping with the Islamic tradition of purdah, or sex segregation.

Halal sex shops also can't display pornographic imagery, since such images expose a person's
awrah, the Arabic word for areas forbidden from the public eye. According to Hamza Yusuf, women
 are not allowed to see the region stretching from the navel to the knees on another woman, 
and men are permitted to see only a woman's face and hands. Although Turkey is the only Muslim 
country where porn is technically legal, huge black markets dedicated to it run through Muslim countries 
with stringent anti-porn policies, with Pakistan leading the entire world in porn-related search in 
a recent Google analysis.Perhaps the most straightforward aspect of a halal sex shop is that they 
supply only halal-certified massage oils, lubricants and other such items. Halal items using animal 
byproducts, for instance, cannot include pork and must come from animals killed according to
 Islamic rules. 
According to Hamza Yusuf, condoms made with pig fat, for instance, would be haram.

As Yusuf pointed out, there's hardly anything revolutionary about products like aphrodisiacs in the 
Muslim world, and there has even been some coverage of the hush-hush parties in Muslim countries
 where sex toys can be bought and sold as casually as plastic containers at a Tupperware party. And 
for now, Demirel seems content with the "unexpected popularity" of his website (and the particularly
 unexpected  demand for women's products), which attracted 33,000 visitors on Sunday alone. 

We already knew that sex sells, but add centuries-old religious traditions to the mix, and 
you have yourself a great business model.
© Foreign Policy 2013

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