Islamic Ruling on Sorcery and Fortune-Telling

All praise is due to Allah alone, and may peace and blessings be upon the final Prophet. To proceed:

Given the increasing number of charlatans today—those who claim to be “healers” and treat people through sorcery or fortune-telling—and their spread in certain regions, exploiting the simple-minded whose ignorance overwhelms them, I found it necessary, out of sincere advice for the sake of Allah and His servants, to clarify the grave danger this poses to Islam and Muslims. For it leads people to rely on other than Allah the Almighty, and it violates His command and the command of His Messenger (peace be upon him).

Permissibility of Seeking Treatment the Right Way

 

I say, seeking help from Allah: medical treatment is permissible by consensus. A Muslim may visit a doctor specializing in internal medicine, surgery, neurology, or otherwise, so he may diagnose his illness and treat him with permissible medications in Islam, using the knowledge of medicine he possesses. This falls under taking the lawful means and does not contradict reliance on Allah. Allah, the Most High, has sent down both illness and its cure, known to some and unknown to others. However, He has not placed the healing of His servants in what He has forbidden to them.

Therefore, a patient may not go to fortune-tellers who claim knowledge of the unseen in order to identify his illness, nor may he believe them in what they report. They speak through blind guesses about the unseen or summon jinn to assist them in what they desire. They are ruled as disbelievers and misguided if they claim knowledge of the unseen.

Prophetic Warnings Against Fortune-Tellers and Sorcerers

 

Muslim recorded in his Sahih that the Prophet (peace be upon him) said: “He who visits a diviner ('Arraf) and asks him about anything, his prayers extending to forty days will not be accepted.”

Abu Hurairah (may Allah be pleased with him) narrated that the Prophet (peace be upon him) said: “Whoever goes to a fortuneteller and believes what he says, he has disbelieved in that which was revealed to Muhammad.” Reported by Abu Dawud, and the four books of Sunan, and authenticated by Al-Hakim, with the wording: “Whoever goes to a diviner ('Arraf) or a fortuneteller and believes what he says, he has disbelieved in that which was revealed to Muhammad.”

And `Imran Ibn Husayn (may Allah be pleased with him) reported that the Messenger of Allah (peace be upon him) said: “He is not one of us who reads omens or has them read for him, or who performs soothsaying or has it performed for him, or who practices magic or has it practiced for him. And whoever goes to a fortuneteller and believes what he says, he has disbelieved in that which was revealed to Muhammad.” (Reported by Al-Bazzar with a good chain of narration.)

These noble hadiths forbid approaching fortune-tellers, sorcerers, and their likes—asking them, believing them, or seeking their services—and warn strongly against such actions.

Therefore, it is obligatory upon those in authority, market inspectors, and anyone with power or influence to forbid visiting sorcerers, fortune-tellers, and similar deceivers, and to prevent anyone from practicing such acts in markets or elsewhere. They must condemn them with the strongest condemnation, as well as those who approach them.

No one should be deceived by the fact that some of their statements occasionally come true, nor by the large number of people who visit them, for such people are ignorant and must not be imitated. The Prophet (peace be upon him) prohibited approaching, asking, or believing them because such acts are grave sins, immense dangers, and lead to disastrous consequences, as they are deceitful sinners.

The hadiths also indicate that the fortune-teller and the sorcerer are disbelievers, for both claim knowledge of the unseen, which is disbelief, and they only achieve their aims through serving the jinn and worshiping them, which is another act of disbelief and shirk. Whoever believes their claims of knowing the unseen is like them.

Anyone who receives such practices from those who perform them has been renounced by the Messenger of Allah (peace be upon him). A Muslim must not submit to what they claim is “treatment,” such as whispering talismans or pouring molten lead or similar superstitions. All such actions are sorcery and deception. Whoever accepts them assists them in their falsehood and disbelief.

Likewise, it is impermissible for any Muslim to go to them seeking information about whom his son or relative will marry, or about the affection or discord between spouses and their families, or anything of this kind; for all this pertains to the unseen which none knows except Allah the Almighty.

The Prohibition of Sorcery in the Quran

 

Sorcery is among the prohibitions that entail disbelief, as Allah the Exalted Said concerning the two angels: {The two angels never taught anyone without saying, “We are only a test ˹for you˺, so do not abandon ˹your˺ faith. Yet people learned ˹magic˺ that caused a rift ˹even˺ between husband and wife; although their magic could not harm anyone except by Allahs Will. They learned what harmed them and did not benefit themalthough they already knew that whoever buys into magic would have no share in the Hereafter. Miserable indeed was the price for which they sold their souls, if only they knew!} [Baqarah 2:102]

These noble verses show that sorcery is disbelief and that sorcerers cause separation between husband and wife. Additionally, the verses show that sorcery does not inherently bring benefit or harm; rather, it affects only by the universal decree of Allah, for Allah Created both good and evil.

The harm caused by these impostors—heirs of pagan practices—has become immense. They deceive the weak-minded with such forbidden acts. Indeed, we belong to Allah and to Him we return. Allah is Sufficient for us and He is the Best Disposer of affairs.

The verse also shows that those who learn sorcery learn only what harms them and brings them no benefit, and that they would have no share in the Hereafter. This is a tremendous warning indicating their severe loss in this world and the next. They sold their souls for the lowest price. Thus, Allah Condemned them saying: {Miserable indeed was the price for which they sold their souls, if only they knew!} Here “sold” means “traded away.”

We ask Allah for protection and safety from the evil of sorcerers, fortune-tellers, and all charlatans.

We also ask Him, Glorified be He, to shield Muslims from their harm, and to guide Muslim rulers to remain vigilant against them and enforce the ruling of Allah upon them, so that people may be relieved from their evil and corrupt practices. Indeed, He is Most Generous and Most Noble.

 

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