Valentine's Day gets Egyptian seal of approval

Image source, Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Image caption, Valentine's Day is very popular in Egypt
  • Author, News from Elsewhere...
  • Role, ...as found by 麻豆官网首页入口 Monitoring

The Muslim clerics who issue religious rulings in Egypt have said that their co-religionists can celebrate Valentine's Day with a clear conscience.

The Dar al-Ifta says " on a special day aren't breaking any rules, the Youm7 news site reports.

This comes as a relief to many people, as the holiday is very popular - Egypt even has its own version of Valentine's Day dating back to the 1970s, marked on 4 November - but the .

The Dar al-Ifta originally handed down its ruling in a video in 2017, in response to a question about the November date, but the Egyptian and .

'Expressing emotions'

In the video, Sheikh Ahmed Mamdouh explains that there is "no problem with dedicating certain days to celebrating certain events... as long as nothing against Islamic law or religion takes place. , such as by exchanging gifts and kind words".Valentine's Day has been a lightning rod for religious controversy in the Muslim Middle East for decades, given its Christian origins, with senior Saudi clerics like Sheikh Muhammad ibn al Uthaymeen condemning it as a "bad innovation that ... stokes passion and desire and occupies the mind with shallow thoughts".

And hardliners of the Salafi school of Islam in Egypt are still quoting the Sheikh this week, , the Dostour daily reports.You may also be interested in:

But Valentine's Day has also come out of the cold in Saudi Arabia, to some degree.

Image source, @arabnews/Twitter

Image caption, Arab News promotes love poetry on Twitter

Leading cleric Sheikh Ahmad al-Ghamdi had a change of heart two years ago, and declared that the holiday is a ".

This year the Saudi English-language newspaper Arab News has even recommended pre-Islamic Arabic love poetry and on Valentine's Day, although the rest of the Saudi media has made little mention of it.

Reporting by Dina Aboughazala and Samia Hosny