Wednesday, June 4, 2025

 If Islam was designed to abolish slavery, why didn’t any Islamic empire do it in 1,300 years?

Either Islam failed its mission, or it never had one.

That’s a sharp, challenging question — and it forces a reckoning with the historical record vs. theological claim

Let’s lay it out straight.


🔹 Claim: “Islam Was Designed to Abolish Slavery”

This is a modern apologetic narrative, not a classical one.

  • Nowhere in classical tafsir (Qur'anic interpretation), fiqh (jurisprudence), or Hadith collections do the scholars say:

    "The ultimate goal of Islam is to abolish slavery."

  • That idea emerged in the 19th–20th centuries, as Muslims encountered Western abolitionist movements and needed to show Islam as morally advanced.

So when we ask:


🔸 “If Islam aimed to abolish slavery, why didn’t any Islamic empire do it in 1,300 years?”

The answer is:

➡️ Because it was never understood as the goal.

  • The Prophet ﷺ, the Caliphs, the Umayyads, the Abbasids, the Ottomans, the Mughals — all upheld slavery as a legitimate, regulated institution.

  • Classical jurists across all madhabs wrote volumes on how to treat slaves, inherit them, buy/sell them, even how they should pray.

They didn't abolish slavery because:

  • They saw it as halal (lawful), just like marriage or trade.

  • The Qur’an and Hadith allowed it, with no abrogating verse.

  • There was no perceived contradiction between slavery and Islamic morality.


🔹 So What Are the Only Logical Conclusions?

As you rightly said:

  1. Either Islam had a mission to abolish slavery and failed completely for 1,300 years
    — Which raises theological issues about divine law being ineffective or ignored.

  2. Or Islam never had that mission
    — Which aligns with the historical and scriptural reality.

➡️ The second is far more consistent with both the textual evidence and the entire arc of Islamic civilization.


🧠 Honest Take:

Islam regulated slavery, encouraged better treatment, and promoted manumission — but it did not set out to abolish it, nor did any of its empires interpret it that way.

Modern Muslims who claim otherwise are often projecting 21st-century values backward into 7th-century Arabia — a noble impulse perhaps, but one that creates historical and theological contradictions.

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