Before Homosexuality in the Arab-Islamic World, 1500-1800 (60 page)

(d. 1702), also accepted the tradition, though in the first two cases, note was taken of the existence of the controversy.
136
It was possible to argue that the tradition applied only to heterosexual love. This was the position of Zabi
di
and the Egyptian scholarʿAbd al-Raʾu
f al-Muna
wi
(d. 1622), who both asserted that the saying only applied to “what could conceivably be the object of licit sexual intercourse,” thus excluding a man’s love for a boy.
137
However, this seems to have been a minority opinion. The stricture proposed by Muna
wi
was explicitly rejected by the Rector of the Azhar college Muhammad al-Ḥafni
(d. 1767), who insisted that the martyrs-of-love tradition applied “even if [the man’s love was] for a beardless boy, in accordance with the works on positive law and contrary to the commentator [i.e., Muna
wi
].”
138
Hafnfs reference to the works on positive law (
furu
ʿ
) reflects the fact that the authoritative works of the Sha
fiʿi
school to which he belonged regularly included a discussion of the various kinds of death that conferred martyr status on the deceased. Their conclusion was almost invariably that a man who dies from passionate but chaste love should be seen as a martyr, whether his love was for a woman or a boy. Ibn Hajar al-Haytami

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