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Tagged: Haram, Punishments
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Punishment Of Nudes
Posted by malik abdul on January 17, 2026 at 2:19 amWhat if someone’s nudes were leaked on the internet?
Can they forgiven after they have repented honestly?
What should be the punishment in this world according to Shariah?
Mahnoor Tariq replied 2 months, 3 weeks ago 2 Members · 1 Reply -
1 Reply
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Punishment Of Nudes
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Mahnoor Tariq
Contributor January 17, 2026 at 3:49 amFirst and most important: yes, a person whose private images were leaked can be fully forgiven by Allah if they repent sincerely. Allah’s door of mercy is never closed. He says:> “O My servants who have wronged themselves, do not despair of the mercy of Allah. Indeed, Allah forgives all sins.” (Qur’an 39:53)
If someone regrets what happened, turns back to Allah, resolves to protect themselves going forward, and seeks forgiveness, then their sin—if there was any—is between them and Allah and can be completely erased. Public exposure does not cancel repentance, and humiliation is not a condition for forgiveness. Islam does not want a person to be broken forever because of one mistake.
Now, regarding worldly punishment:Islamic law is extremely strict about proof and process. In cases like leaked images, there is no fixed hadd punishment for the victim. In fact, Islam strongly condemns exposing people’s private sins. The Prophet ﷺ said:
> “Whoever conceals the faults of a Muslim, Allah will conceal his faults in this world and the Hereafter.” (Sahih Muslim)
Allah also warns severely against spreading indecency:
> “Indeed, those who love that immorality should spread among the believers will have a painful punishment…” (Qur’an 24:19)
So the focus of Shariah is not punishing the exposed person, but protecting them and stopping the harm.
As for the one who leaked or shared the images, their sin is far more serious. They are guilty of:violating privacy,spreading indecency,humiliating another human being,and causing psychological and social harm.Such a person carries grave moral and religious responsibility, and if a legal system is in place, they may be punished under discretionary laws (ta‘zir) according to the harm they caused. Even if no court is involved, they are accountable before Allah for every share, every view, and every consequence.
If the images were published by the person themselves, then the moral responsibility is different: the sin lies in exposing one’s own awrah publicly. Even then, repentance wipes it away, and Islam still forbids others from resharing or exploiting that content. A past mistake does not give society permission to keep punishing someone forever.
The greater sin lies with those who leak, spread, and consume such content.Islam’s aim is not to destroy people after they fall, but to restore dignity, close doors to harm, and bring hearts back to Allah with hope, not despair.
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