B
BornInMarch
Guest
Recently I was talking with some people about Islam, and one of the people I spoke with claimed Muhammad was a pedophile.
The person didn’t give any explanation, so I assumed he was probably just parroting something a pundit said or otherwise was being racist (i.e. assuming that all Arabs were pedophiles).
To confirm that the person was wrong, I looked up Muhammad’s Wives to be sure. Then I found that one of them was Aisha bint Abu Bakr.
Wikipedia states: “Traditional sources state that she stayed in her parents’ home until the age of nine when the marriage was consummated with Muhammad, then 53, in Medina, with the single exception of al-Tabari, who records that she was ten.”
Wiki Islam, a form of Wikipedia operated by Muslims, states: “She was the daughter of Muhammad’s best friend and head evangelist Abu Bakr. Muhammad selected the six-year-old Aisha in preference to her teenaged sister, and she remained his favourite wife. She contributed a major body of information to Islamic law and history. The paedophilic aspect of this relationship has institutionalised such marriages within Islam.”
So my question to Muslims is, how do you explain this?
In pretty much the entire world today pedophilia (an adult having sex with a pre-pubescent child such as a 9 year old) is considered one of the most heinous and unforgivable crimes someone can commit, so why would God give revelations to one? Does “consummating a marriage” mean something different in the Muslim World than it does in the Western World? Is someone just spreading misinformation? Or did a founder of a major religion really have sex with a 9 year old?
To be clear, I only want answers from MUSLIMS (or from people who have had a conversation with Muslims on this topic) All the other times I made posts asking about Islam, I got a lot of answers from Christians. In one thread I started asking how non-christian religions viewed Jesus, lots of Christians harassed the non-Christians. I don’t want that to happen here; only reply if your a Muslim, if you’ve talked to a Muslim on this, or if you intend to cite your sources.
The person didn’t give any explanation, so I assumed he was probably just parroting something a pundit said or otherwise was being racist (i.e. assuming that all Arabs were pedophiles).
To confirm that the person was wrong, I looked up Muhammad’s Wives to be sure. Then I found that one of them was Aisha bint Abu Bakr.
Wikipedia states: “Traditional sources state that she stayed in her parents’ home until the age of nine when the marriage was consummated with Muhammad, then 53, in Medina, with the single exception of al-Tabari, who records that she was ten.”
Wiki Islam, a form of Wikipedia operated by Muslims, states: “She was the daughter of Muhammad’s best friend and head evangelist Abu Bakr. Muhammad selected the six-year-old Aisha in preference to her teenaged sister, and she remained his favourite wife. She contributed a major body of information to Islamic law and history. The paedophilic aspect of this relationship has institutionalised such marriages within Islam.”
So my question to Muslims is, how do you explain this?
In pretty much the entire world today pedophilia (an adult having sex with a pre-pubescent child such as a 9 year old) is considered one of the most heinous and unforgivable crimes someone can commit, so why would God give revelations to one? Does “consummating a marriage” mean something different in the Muslim World than it does in the Western World? Is someone just spreading misinformation? Or did a founder of a major religion really have sex with a 9 year old?
To be clear, I only want answers from MUSLIMS (or from people who have had a conversation with Muslims on this topic) All the other times I made posts asking about Islam, I got a lot of answers from Christians. In one thread I started asking how non-christian religions viewed Jesus, lots of Christians harassed the non-Christians. I don’t want that to happen here; only reply if your a Muslim, if you’ve talked to a Muslim on this, or if you intend to cite your sources.