EGYPT: ITS NO JOKE, FATWA BANS CINEMATIC WEDDINGS, DIVORCES
(ANSAmed) - CAIRO, OCTOBER 3 - Film scenes of marriage and
divorce are outlawed in a new fatwa (religious edict) issued by
Al-Azhar University - considered by Sunni Muslims to be the most
prestigious school of Islamic learning - because they are "not
a laughing matter".
To back their move, local English newspaper the Egyptian
Gazette reported, Al-Azhar scholars have relied upon the word of
the prophet Mohammed, who dictated that some issues were not
subject to humour.
As such, scriptwriters must avoid devising scenes that
involve marriage and divorce, said Sheikh Farahat el-Mongi, a
member of Al Azhar's Fatwa Committee, who added: "How can we
joke when we watch a young man and woman getting legally married
on TV?"
However, some wonder why the issue of marriage and divorce
has emerged nowadays, since such scenes have been viewed for
many years on Egyptian screens.
El Mogi explained that prohibiting marriage scenes is better
than an actress bearing the guilt of being married to two
husbands - one in real life, and one in front of cameras.
However not everyone agrees: Amna Nosseir, also on Al-Azhar
University staff, as a professor of Islamic Jurisprudence, said
that the fatwa portrays a negative image of Islam.
"Actors portray human society and ... when marriage takes
place in a film or a soap opera it isn't valid, as there is no
true intention .. and it isn't performed in public," she said,
Nosseir described such fatwas as "baseless", arguing that
that such edicts trigger anti-Islam campaigns.
For his part, scriptwriter Mohamed Suleiman said Al-Azhar
"is above intruding into such trivial matters", and that he
and his colleagues "strongly reject the rigid censorship of
social drama that aims to convey a purposeful message."
(ANSAmed)
2007-10-03 15:30