Judaism, Islam and the death penalty
Sunday, August 12th, 2012[ by Charles Cameron — surprising infrequency of capital punishment, though mandated in Sharia and Torah ]
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I’m always struck by formal parallelisms, particularly in matters religious — so when I came across this fascinating reference to the infrequency of capital punishment by stoning in the Ottoman Empire in a book review today (upper panel):
I was immediately reminded of a similar Jewish reluctance to use capital punishment — stoning being one of the four choices — as recorded in Tractate Sanhedrin (lower panel)
And i thought the Dalai Lama (inset) might like it too…
Of course, there’s more detail and nuance to be had in each case, but the parallelism is nevertheless instructive.
Sources:
Review of Kadri in Pakistan’s Express Tribune
Jewish Virtual Library, Capital Punishment
On a personal note, highly subjective: you gotta love R. Akiva — but you gotta respect R. Simeon, too.
As usual, life is nuanced and — dare I say this? — “systems dynamic”.