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Lying
is a common part of human relationships. People lie for a variety of reasons.
They may lie as part of self-presentation, in order to present a more favorable
image to others. People may also lie in order to minimize conflict, because lying
may make disagreements less obvious. Although lying may serve useful functions
in these respects, it can also be damaging to relationships. An exposed lie
undermines trust and sows suspicion, because a person who has been lied to is
likely to mistrust the person who lied in the future.
Some people even lie due to habit at first impulse. ‘Everyday lies are really
part of the fabric of social life,’ says Bella DePaulo, a psychologist and
lying expert at the University of Virginia. Her research shows both men and
women lie in approximately a fifth of their social exchanges lasting 10 or more
minutes; over the course of a week they deceive about 30 percent of those with
whom they interact one-on-one. Furthermore, some types of relationships, such
as those between parents and teens, are virtual magnets for deception. Lying is
considered integral to many occupations: we see lawyers constructing
far-fetched theories on behalf of their clients or reporters misrepresenting
themselves in order to gain access to good stories.
Lying is a despicable vice, rampant in our societies. Deceiving
others with the canny use of words is seen as clever. Public figures lie. Governments
lie. One of the distinctions of our age is that lying no longer carries the
stigma it once did. Today lying has become institutionalized. It is the way many
of us live now, right from the top, because we figured out that if we are
persuasive enough, lying works. Countries are invaded and wars are started
based on lies. “We” never lie, we just bend the truth a little, put a spin, having
no intention to mislead, but the “others” are liars. Ours is a society that
has perfected the “art” of lying. Gone are the days when a lie destroyed the
liar’s dignity and deprived him of our trust.
Islam views lying as a serious vice. God says in the Quran:
“And do not say that of which you have no knowledge.” (Quran
17:36)
The Prophet, may the mercy and blessings of God be upon
him, stressed the importance of always being truthful and the seriousness of
habitual lying, “Truthfulness leads to piety and piety leads to the Paradise. A man should be truthful until he is written down as truthful with God. Lying
leads to deviance and deviance leads to the Fire. A man will lie until he is
written down as a liar with God.” Truth is to
state what corresponds with reality, how things are, and is the opposite of
lying. The malice of lying is tied to hypocrisy as described by the Prophet
Muhammad, “If anyone has four characteristics, he is a pure hypocrite, and if anyone
has one of them, he has an aspect of hypocrisy until he gives it up: whenever
he is trusted, he betrays his trust; whenever he speaks, he lies; when he makes
an agreement, he breaks it; and when he quarrels, he deviates from the truth by
speaking falsely.” The Prophet’s
teaching is that we try our best to free ourselves of hypocrisy by keeping our
trusts, telling the truth, keeping our promises, and not speaking falsely.
Islamicly, the most heinous lie is against God, His
prophets, His revelation, and bearing false witness. We should be careful not
to make false excuses like ‘I was too busy or I forgot,’ or say
words that can be taken as promises by others like ‘I’ll call back tomorrow,’
with no such intention. At the same time, not lying should not be confused
with impoliteness, ‘saying at it is,’ but we should be careful not to lie about
little things when no one apparently gets hurt. This can be done by carefully
choosing our words.
Is “Never lie!” an absolute principle of Islam or are
there exceptions? Suppose that a would-be murderer comes knocking on your door,
looking for his victim. Is the morally correct answer, “She’s hiding upstairs,
hoping you will go away”? Philosophers like Kant wrote as if this was in fact
the morally correct thing to do, but Islamicly, lying is justified in such
cases.
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