Why Allah Told Muslim Men to Lower Their Gaze

 


When the Qur’an instructed believing men to “lower their gaze and guard their private parts” (Surah An-Nur, 24:30), it was not an abstract rule. It was a direct response to the society in which the verse was revealed. To understand its weight, you have to picture Arabia before Islam.

A Culture Without Restraint

Pre-Islamic Arabia was not a society of modesty. Poetry—the media of its time—was filled with open eroticism. Poets like Imru’ al-Qais became famous for boasting of lovers and sneaking into tents. These verses were recited in markets, in front of men and women alike. Lust was not hidden; it was entertainment.

The marketplaces themselves were places where women faced harassment. Large fairs like Ukaz and Dhu al-Majaz drew traders, poets, and tribes from across Arabia. Women who appeared there often found themselves pursued or insulted. Fights broke out when a woman’s dignity was attacked. Safety depended on tribal power, not universal respect.

Exploitation of the Vulnerable

Slavery added to the problem. Slave women were treated as property. Some Quraysh nobles forced them into prostitution and profited from it. The Qur’an directly condemned this: “Do not compel your slave girls into prostitution if they desire chastity, seeking the temporary interests of this worldly life” (24:33). That command alone was a social revolution.

Marriage, too, lacked clear boundaries. A man could inherit his father’s wives. Short-term unions were common. Women could be exchanged between men without dignity or contract. Islam dismantled these customs and established marriage as a formal covenant.

Wine, Parties, and Looseness

Add to this the taverns and wine culture. Drinking parties blurred moral boundaries. Music, slave girls, and intoxication created an atmosphere where lust and exploitation thrived. Islam’s gradual prohibition of alcohol was not just about health. It was about social discipline.

Why the Gaze Matters

Against this backdrop, the command to lower the gaze was the first guardrail. The eye is the entry point of desire. A stare leads to a thought, a thought to an act. Islam did not wait until adultery to draw the line. It closed the door at its beginning.

That was the genius of it. Within one generation, the same Arabs who once celebrated their affairs in poetry became people who lowered their eyes in respect. Even enemies in Rome and Persia remarked on their discipline.

A Civilizational Correction

The command was not about condemning Arabs as uniquely corrupt. Other civilizations—Rome, Persia, India—had their own temples of lust and exploitation. But in Arabia, where poetry, slavery, and wine mixed freely, Islam intervened with direct rules. Lower your gaze. Guard your modesty. Treat others with dignity.

It was not restriction. It was protection. And it turned a culture of desire into a community of discipline.

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