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Is It Permissible To Eat Raw Meat?
Posted by Raja Haseeb on February 17, 2026 at 3:09 pmPlease guide us about raw meat/uncooked meat/fish
Mahnoor Tariq replied 2 months, 1 week ago 2 Members · 3 Replies -
3 Replies
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Is It Permissible To Eat Raw Meat?
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Mahnoor Tariq
Contributor February 17, 2026 at 7:10 pmIslamically speaking, there is no specific prohibition on eating raw meat as long as the animal itself is halal and properly slaughtered. The Qur’an forbids certain things clearly (like pork, blood, carrion), but it does not say that meat must be cooked in order to be lawful. So from a purely legal perspective, raw meat of a halal animal is still halal.
However, Islam also teaches that a person should not harm themselves. Preserving life and health is a core objective of Shariah. If something is known to cause harm, then consuming it knowingly becomes blameworthy — not because it is “raw,” but because it is harmful.
From a biological point of view, raw meat can carry bacteria and parasites. Raw chicken and minced beef are particularly risky because of Salmonella, E. coli, and other infections. Raw fish (like sushi) can be safer if properly handled and frozen to kill parasites, but it still carries some risk. Cooking meat significantly reduces these dangers.
So the ruling is balanced that raw meat is not automatically haram. But if eating it exposes a person to serious health risk, then it would go against the Islamic principle of avoiding harm. Permissibility depends on the type of meat, hygiene, and safety — not on the fact that it is uncooked. -
Raja Haseeb
Member February 17, 2026 at 10:24 pmThe problem is Ghamdi shb mentioned chzon ki hurrmat ikhlaqi wajuhat ki bunnyad pa hoti ha na ka, tabbi lihaz sa? Can you plz clarify it?
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Mahnoor Tariq
Contributor February 17, 2026 at 11:10 pmThe core of the framework is distinguishing between Religion (Deen) and Reason (Aql).Religious Prohibition (Haram) is based on Tazkiyah (purity of the soul). Things like pork, blood, or carrion are declared Haram because they are morally and spiritually “Rijs” (filthy). Eating them stains the human Fitrah (nature). This is a moral boundary set by God that we wouldn’t necessarily know through biology alone.
Raw meat (like chicken or minced beef) is not listed as Haram because it isn’t “spiritually filthy.” However, it can be physically dangerous. Religion doesn’t need to tell you “don’t drink poison” or “don’t eat rotten food” because God has already given you Aql (Reason), common sense and Instinct to figure that out.
Islam focuses its prohibitions on moral values because that is where humans stumble the most. We don’t need a Prophet to tell us that a parasite will make us sick—our survival instinct tells us that. But we do need guidance to understand what harms our character and our relationship with the Creator.
The fact that the basis of Hurmat is moral doesn’t mean the biology is irrelevant; it just means that “Haram” is a specific religious category for spiritual filth.
While the meat itself might not be “Haram,” the act of knowingly harming yourself is strictly prohibited. The Quran is explicit:
“And do not throw yourselves with your own hands into destruction.” (2:195)
If you eat raw meat knowing it carries a high risk of severe illness or death, you are violating the command to preserve the life Allah gave you. If a person knowingly consumes something that leads to their death, it falls under the category of self-harm or even “slow suicide.” The “sin” here isn’t the meat—it’s the irresponsibility and the neglect of your own life.
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