CHARGING FOR
HIJAMAH?? FEES OF A CUPPER FROM AN ISLAMIC PERSPECTIVE!!
ANSWER............
In the name of Allah, Most Compassionate, Most Merciful,
With the exception of a few, the position of the
overwhelming majority of classical scholars (jumhur) – which includes the four
main Schools of Islamic law – is that it is permitted to charge a fee for
cupping (hijama), and the earnings of a cupper would be lawful (halal).
(Al-Mawsu’a al-Fiqhiyya 18/17, Radd al-Muhtar ala ‘l-Durr al-Mukhtar 6/52,
Al-Mughni 6/133, & Al-Muntaqa sharh al-Muwatta 4/425)
This view is based on the following hadiths:
1) Sayyiduna Abdullah ibn Abbas (Allah be pleased with him)
relates, “The Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him & give him peace) had
cupping performed on him, and he paid the person who cupped him. If it had been
unlawful, he would have not paid him.” (Sahih al-Bukhari 1997 and Sahih Muslim
1578)
2) Sayyiduna Anas ibn Malik relates, “Abu Tayba cupped the
Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him & give him peace); so he ordered that a
sa’ [a specific weight] of dates be given to him, and ordered his owners to
reduce his levy.” (Sahih al-Bukhari 1996 and Sahih Muslim 1577)
3) Sayyiduna Anas ibn Malik relates, “The Messenger of Allah
(Allah bless him & give him peace) would be treated with cupping, and he
never withheld anyone’s wages.” (Sahih al-Bukhari 2160)
As such, the position of all four Schools of Islamic law is
that it is permitted to charge a fee for cupping, and this includes the Hanbali
School according to the more relied-upon and famous opinion within that School.
There is, however, another less famous opinion that it is only permitted for a
slave and not a free person. Some others said that it is not permitted neither
for a slave nor a free person. This position is due to some other hadiths which
indicate impermissibility; for example:
1) Sayyiduna Rafi’ ibn Khadij (Allah be pleased with him)
narrates that the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him & give him peace)
said, “The earnings from [selling] a dog is not pure (khabith), the wages of a
prostitute is not pure (khabith), and the income of a cupper is not pure
(khabith).” (Sahih Muslim 1568)
2) Ibn Muhayyisa al-Ansari relates from his father that he
asked permission from the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him & give him
peace) to accept payment for cupping, but he refused him from doing so. He
continued to ask and seek his permission until he (Allah bless him & give
him peace) said, “Feed [of its earnings] your water-carrying camel and your
slave.” (Sunan Tirmidhi 1277, Musnad Ahmad 5/435, Abu Dawud 3/266 and others)
In explaining the correct context of these hadiths, Imam
Nawawi (Allah have mercy on him) states:
“The scholars disagreed in relation to the earnings of a
cupper. The majority of them, from the early (salaf) as well as later (khalaf)
ones, state that the earnings of a cupper and consuming from such earnings is
not unlawful – neither for a free person nor a slave. This is the famous
(mashhur) opinion of Imam Ahmad [as well]. However, his opinion as narrated in
one narration from him – which is [also] the opinion of the jurists from the
hadith scholars – is that it is unlawful for a free person but not a slave, and
their reliance is on these [above mentioned] and similar hadiths. The majority
of the scholars base their opinion on the hadith of Ibn Abbas (Allah be pleased
with him) that “the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him & give him peace)
was cupped, and he paid the person who cupped him. If it had been unlawful, he
would not have paid him.” (Recorded by Bukhari and Muslim) They [the majority
of scholars] understood the hadiths of prohibition to indicate that it is
somewhat disliked (makruh tanzih), and that the hadiths encourage abstinence
from lowly occupations, and encourage good manners and noble professions. Had
it been unlawful [to charge a fee], the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him
& give him peace) would not have differentiated between a free person and
slave, for it is [generally] impermissible for one to feed one’s slave that
which is not halal.” (Al-Minhaj sharh Sahih Muslim, p: 1199)
Likewise, Imam Hafiz ibn Hajar al-Asqalani (Allah have mercy
on him) states in his celebrated Fath al-Bari that the majority of scholars are
of the opinion that the income of a cupper is lawful due to the hadith of
Abdullah ibn Abbas (Allah be pleased with him) recorded by Bukhari [quoted
above]; and in it, Abdullah ibn Abbas (Allah be pleased with him) refutes those
who say the earnings of a cupper is unlawful [when he said, “If it had been
unlawful, he would have not paid him”]. As such, although a cupper’s profession
is unfitting, it is not unlawful; and thus the scholars consider the rebuke in
the hadith to indicate somewhat dislike-ness (makruh tanzih). Some scholars are
of the opinion that the prohibition is abrogated, some say it is only unlawful
for a free person, whilst others say it is only unlawful when the job is not
properly defined. (Adapted from Fath al-Bari 4/579)
The great Hanbali jurist, Imam Ibn Qudama (Allah have mercy
on him), says that it is permissible to hire a cupper to treat one with
cupping, and his earnings are lawful. This is the view of Sayyiduna Abdullah
ibn Abbas, Imam Malik, Imam Shafi’i and the Hanafis… However, some scholars
regard the earnings of a cupper to be impermissible, because the Messenger of
Allah (Allah bless him & give him peace) said, “The earnings of a cupper
are evil (khabith)”, and he said regarding the earnings of a cupper, “Feed it
to your water-carrying camel and your slave.” The proof that it is permissible
and not unlawful is the hadith narrated by Ibn Abbas (Allah be pleased with
him) who said, “The Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him & give him peace)
had cupping performed on him, and he paid the person who cupped him. If it had
been unlawful, he would have not paid him.” As for the Messenger of Allah’s
(Allah bless him & give him peace) statement “Feed it to your slave”, it is
[actually] a proof that the cupper’s earnings are lawful, because it is not
permitted for one to feed one’s slave that whose consumption is unlawful… As
for terming the earnings as “evil (khabith)”, it does not necessarily mean that
it is unlawful, because the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him & give him
peace) called garlic and onion “khabith” even though they are both lawful.
Rather, the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him & give him peace) disliked
it somewhat for a free person, due to the lowly nature of this profession…
There is no clear text from Imam Ahmad (Allah have mercy on him) regarding the
prohibition of a cupper’s earnings… (Adapted from Al-Mughni 6/133)
In conclusion, there are ‘apparently’ contradictory hadiths
regarding the charging of a fee for cupping others. The overwhelming majority
of classical jurists give preference to those that indicate its permissibility;
and as such, they agree that it is permissible to charge a fee and that one’s
income would be halal. As for the hadiths that indicate its impermissibility,
they interpret them in the following ways:
1) The hadiths merely show that charging a fee is somewhat
disliked and better to avoid; but nevertheless lawful.
2) They merely indicate that the profession of cupping is a
lowly profession.
3) They indicate that cupping, by nature, is a voluntary
chore; and thus it is best not to charge for it, especially when others are in
need.
4) They are in reference to the job of a cupper which is not
properly defined, in which case his earnings would be unlawful (haram) due to
the uncertainty.
5) The hadiths are abrogated. This was the view of Imam
al-Tahawi (Allah have mercy on him).
6) They are in reference to the practice found during the
pre-Islamic days of ignorance (jahiliyya) of cupping animals and thereafter
selling the blood to those who consumed it.
As such, there is no sin on you if you charge a fee for
providing the service of cupping (hijama) to others, and your earnings would be
lawful (halal). Moreover, since your service includes patients being seen by a
qualified doctor, using clean clinical equipment and other related aspects, it
will not even be disliked. It is best, however, if you charge primarily for
your time, the doctor’s time and the usage of equipment; but offer the very act
of cupping free, with the intention of helping others and seeking reward from
Allah. But note that even charging for cupping itself is not haram or sinful.
And Allah knows best
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