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Would a vampire still be able to be a practicing Muslim?

Original question on worldbuilding.stackexchange by user2352714

I had debated whether asking this but given the very good answers on this question [How would Muslims adapt to follow their prayer rituals in the loss of Earth?] I thought it would be worth a shot. I have a character in my story who is a vampire and a practicing Muslim. Specifically not undead, but a living being with altered physiology and a craving for blood similar to alcoholism. They are more or less a normal person and don’t go around biting other living things.

Originally the idea was that the character satisfied their cravings for blood by making food with blood byproducts like blood sausage. However, upon further research, blood is one of the few foods that is completely haram with almost no exceptions. Given this, I’m not sure how I can depict them being both a vampire and a good Muslim, because if they were a good Muslim they’d abstain from blood entirely.

The only loophole I could think to this law is the degree that Muslims are allowed to eat non-halal foods in the event of necessity if there is no other food available. If this is correct this would mean that a vampire that has to feed on blood would be exempt from the restriction (because they need blood to survive), but my character would still not fall into the loophole.

Answer by Cort Ammon

Allah is Forgiving and Merciful.

In the case of eating forbidden food, the Qur’an offers an out for those who really did not want to eat it, but were compelled to by hunger. The Islam stack exchange has an answer which provides 4 verses to this end. Feel free to peruse the answer there, with the associated commentary, as they are naturally far more invested in these rules than others of us might be, but I will quote one of the verses here:

He has only forbidden to you dead animals, blood, the flesh of swine, and that which has been dedicated to other than Allah . But whoever is forced [by necessity], neither desiring [it] nor transgressing [its limit], there is no sin upon him. Indeed, Allah is Forgiving and Merciful. (2:173)

I remember the mental anguish of a vampire in Interview with a Vampire, who decided that human blood was no morally acceptable to drink, and tried his best to subsist on rats. In this case, the rules condemn all blood, not just human blood, so even the rats would fall under these rules.

Now if your vampire must kill a human to get their blood, that could be a different story. Murder of a believer may be more difficult to forgive. I will not speculate on what the Qur’an may say on killing non-believers to subsist. I am rather confident that none of the rules were designed to support vampires (Christianity has the same issue, as do many other religions), so the readings may become more tortured there. But at least the blood aspect of this scenario would be deemed acceptable. One might hypothesize that the vampire could put themselves into a position where killing is acceptable? Perhaps they engage in warfare as a "livelihood?" I don’t know the particular rules for Islam, but I have found all religions either have a clause permitting killing in warfare, or that religion doesn’t last very long.

Now one could explore an interesting corner case of human(?) psychology, riffing on the phrase “... desiring it...” Your vampire could live in mortal fear: “What if I start desiring it? What if blood starts to taste good and I crave it?” This could start to fall into a corner care of the rules. Islam, like all religions, calls for a degree of interpretation of the rules. Most practitioners who face a thorny issue, like which direction to face when praying in space, can seek a Fatwah, requesting a scholar help them with the interpretation. If your vampires are as secretive as they are in other stories, it could be particularly difficult to explain the circumstances around these inquiries without invoking too many questions.

And now I’m intrigued by how this interacts with Ramadan. There’s something decidedly not religious about “fasting” by sleeping through the entire sunrise to sunset period! And the daily prayers are interesting. Everything I’ve seen in my cursory search suggests they are an interesting challenge for people who work night shifts.

Answer by DWKraus

They Can Try:

I think this might be more of a writing SE question and less of a worldbuilding one. I’m on both stack-exchange sites, so I’ll try to hit both sides. It all has to do with the psychology of your character and the physiology you choose to have the vampire deal with. So there is no RIGHT answer, per se, but that’s a philosophical view. An "absolute" right or wrong answer might be better addressed by an Imam, though.

I have had vampiric characters who desperately tried to cling to their belief systems, to the point they went to a Catholic Church are received communion (and the magic/faith system of the game had interesting things to say about that...) A good book to read that deals with something somewhat similar is When Gravity Fails, a scifi novel about a Muslim character who doesn’t have much faith until after he gets cybernetic implants that are technically considered against the faith. Ironically something that made him more out of synch with his religion helped him find belief.

The struggle to be faithful in the face of a reality that makes it hard is a beautiful literary trope. In my mind, it is less critical if the character is technically following all the rules, and more important HOW he deals with the choices, and how he reconciles the seemingly impossible paradoxes of his new life. This sounds like the makings of a compelling plot element.