Muhammad Jalal Kishk

Muhammad Jalal Kishk (also Muhammad Galal Keshk) (19291993) was an Egyptian Islamist journalist and writer.,[1] his anti-leftist political views,[2] and thoughts on sex and homosexuality in Islam.[3]

Kishk wrote for the weeklies Akhbar al-Yawm and Ruz al-Yusuf and the periodical al-Risala until 1965. According to the Middle East Record, Kishk's "anti-leftist stand" may have led to his being "prevented from continuing his career in journalism".[2] But actually it was his anti-Nasser writings that led to his removal from these journals and eventual exile to Beirut, Lebanon in 1968.

Kishk gained some notoriety for his ideas concerning gender and sexuality in Islam.[3] [4])

In his book A Muslim's Thoughts about the Sexual Question, (1984), which was initially banned in Egypt, he examined contemporary Western scholarship about Christianity and Islam in relation to sex, with special attention to homosexuality.[5]

Kishk was concerned with the danger of

"the enemies of Islam and ... our civilization [having] the opportunity to publish their ideas and plant their poisons in the minds and hearts of our Muslim youth, who no longer follow an Islamic conduct nor are directed by Islamic thought."[6]

While Kishk disapproved of sexual relations between same sex couples, he noted that there was no prescribed punishment for it in Islam. He also analyzed those parts of the Quran that described Jannah(heaven/paradise) and concluded that "sex with youthful boys will be the reward for Muslim men who control their desires in this world by not practicing sodomy."[3]

Works

References

  1. Fouad Ajami (1992). The Arab Predicament: Arab Political Thought and Practice Since 1967. Cambridge University Press. pp. 62–70. ISBN 978-0-521-43833-9. Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  2. 1 2 "Workers' and Students' protests: the Issues". Middle East Record. 4: 795. 1968. Retrieved 2014-07-27.
  3. 1 2 3 Massad, Joseph Andoni (2007). Desiring Arabs. University of Chicago Press. pp. 203–4.
  4. Hasanain Kurum (May 11, 2001). "[Comment on Sheikh Tantawi's comments on sex in heaven]". Al-Quds Al-Arabi. London. [Muhammad Galal Keshk wrote] 'The men in Paradise have sexual relations not only with the women [who come from this world] and with 'the black-eyed,' but also with the serving boys. ...
  5. The book was discussed in Desiring Arabs By Joseph Andoni Massad
  6. Massad, Joseph A. (2007). Desiring Arabs. University of Chicago Press. p. 202.


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