Istibra’ for Captive or Purchased Female Slaves
✍ By: Imran Ayoob Lahori
A captive, purchased, or similarly acquired female slave must observe istibra’ before intercourse:
Meaning of Istibra’:
From the verb استبرأ (form X), meaning “to seek clearance.” In Islamic legal terms, it means waiting a set period to ensure the womb is free from pregnancy before intimacy.
[al-Fiqh al-Islami wa Adillatuhu 9/2709; al-Sharh al-Saghir 2/677]
① Abu Saʿid al-Khudri (RA) narrated:
“A pregnant woman should not be approached until she delivers, and a non-pregnant woman should not be approached until she menstruates once.”
[Sahih: Sunan Abi Dawud 2157, 1889; Musnad Ahmad 3/28; al-Hakim 2/195 – authenticated on Muslim’s conditions]
② Abu al-Darda (RA) narrated:
The Prophet ﷺ invoked such a curse upon one who intended intercourse with a pregnant captive that it would enter the grave with him.
[Sahih Muslim 1441; Abu Dawud 2156; Ahmad 5/195]
③ al-ʿIrbad ibn Sariyah (RA) narrated:
“Do not approach captive women until they have delivered what is in their wombs.”
[Sahih: Sunan al-Tirmidhi 1564, 1669; Ahmad 4/167]
These narrations prove it is haram to have intercourse with a pregnant slave until childbirth and with a non-pregnant one until one menstrual cycle passes. The Shafiʿi, Hanafi, Thawri, Nakhʿi, and Maliki schools all hold this position.
[Tuhfat al-Ahwadhi 5/171; al-Umm 5/96; al-Mabsut 12/152]
Narrated by Rafiʿ ibn Thabit (RA):
“It is not lawful for a man who believes in Allah and the Last Day to water another man’s crop (meaning pregnancy) with his own water (semen).”
[Hasan: Sunan Abi Dawud 2158–2159, 1890; Musnad Ahmad 4/108; Sunan al-Tirmidhi 1131; al-Darimi 2/230; Ibn Hibban 4850; al-Bayhaqi 9/62]
Similarly, Ibn ʿAbbas (RA) reported from the Prophet ﷺ:
“Do not water another man’s crop with your own water.”
[al-Hakim 2/56 – authenticated by al-Hakim and al-Dhahabi]
The same ruling applies to purchased, gifted, or otherwise acquired female slaves. Ibn ʿUmar (RA) said:
“If a slave woman who has been cohabited with is gifted, sold, or freed, her womb should be cleared with one menstrual cycle. A virgin does not require istibra’.”
[Bukhari, before H. 2235, Kitab al-Buyuʿ]
Conclusion:
✍ By: Imran Ayoob Lahori
A captive, purchased, or similarly acquired female slave must observe istibra’ before intercourse:
- If she is menstruating, one menstrual cycle.
- If she is pregnant, until childbirth.
Meaning of Istibra’:
From the verb استبرأ (form X), meaning “to seek clearance.” In Islamic legal terms, it means waiting a set period to ensure the womb is free from pregnancy before intimacy.
[al-Fiqh al-Islami wa Adillatuhu 9/2709; al-Sharh al-Saghir 2/677]
Evidence from the Sunnah
① Abu Saʿid al-Khudri (RA) narrated:
“A pregnant woman should not be approached until she delivers, and a non-pregnant woman should not be approached until she menstruates once.”
[Sahih: Sunan Abi Dawud 2157, 1889; Musnad Ahmad 3/28; al-Hakim 2/195 – authenticated on Muslim’s conditions]
② Abu al-Darda (RA) narrated:
The Prophet ﷺ invoked such a curse upon one who intended intercourse with a pregnant captive that it would enter the grave with him.
[Sahih Muslim 1441; Abu Dawud 2156; Ahmad 5/195]
③ al-ʿIrbad ibn Sariyah (RA) narrated:
“Do not approach captive women until they have delivered what is in their wombs.”
[Sahih: Sunan al-Tirmidhi 1564, 1669; Ahmad 4/167]
Scholarly Consensus
These narrations prove it is haram to have intercourse with a pregnant slave until childbirth and with a non-pregnant one until one menstrual cycle passes. The Shafiʿi, Hanafi, Thawri, Nakhʿi, and Maliki schools all hold this position.
[Tuhfat al-Ahwadhi 5/171; al-Umm 5/96; al-Mabsut 12/152]
Reason for the Ruling
Narrated by Rafiʿ ibn Thabit (RA):
“It is not lawful for a man who believes in Allah and the Last Day to water another man’s crop (meaning pregnancy) with his own water (semen).”
[Hasan: Sunan Abi Dawud 2158–2159, 1890; Musnad Ahmad 4/108; Sunan al-Tirmidhi 1131; al-Darimi 2/230; Ibn Hibban 4850; al-Bayhaqi 9/62]
Similarly, Ibn ʿAbbas (RA) reported from the Prophet ﷺ:
“Do not water another man’s crop with your own water.”
[al-Hakim 2/56 – authenticated by al-Hakim and al-Dhahabi]
Application Beyond Captives
The same ruling applies to purchased, gifted, or otherwise acquired female slaves. Ibn ʿUmar (RA) said:
“If a slave woman who has been cohabited with is gifted, sold, or freed, her womb should be cleared with one menstrual cycle. A virgin does not require istibra’.”
[Bukhari, before H. 2235, Kitab al-Buyuʿ]
Special Cases
- No Menstruation: Wait until there is a clear sign of no pregnancy.
- Virgin or Young Slave: Istibra’ is not necessary, as her womb’s clearance is already certain.
- Dispute Among Scholars:
- Some require istibra’ even for virgins and young girls, based on the hadith wording “ولا غير حامل” (non-pregnant), which they take generally.
- Others (including Ibn ʿUmar, Ibn Taymiyyah, and Ibn al-Qayyim) exempt them, citing the same narration of Ibn ʿUmar and the incident of ʿAli (RA) in Yemen selecting a slave girl from the spoils and the Prophet ﷺ not objecting — understood to mean she was a virgin.
Conclusion:
- Mandatory istibra’ for pregnant captives/slaves (until childbirth) and non-pregnant menstruating slaves (one menstrual cycle).
- No istibra’ for virgins or girls where pregnancy is not possible.
- Ruling applies equally to captives, purchased, gifted, or otherwise acquired slaves.