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Khamr

Khamr (Arabic: خمر) is an Arabic word for wine or intoxicant.[a] It is variously defined as alcoholic beverages, wine or liquor.[1]

Timurid painting of courtly men enjoying khamr

In fiqh, it refers to certain forbidden substances, and its technical definition depends on the madhhab or legal school. Most jurists, including those from the Maliki, Shafiʽi, Hanbali, Ahl-i Hadith legal schools have traditionally viewed it as general term for any intoxicating beverage made from grapes, dates, and similar substances.[2] Hanafi jurists restricted the term to a narrower range of beverages.[2] Over time, some jurists classified other intoxicants, such as opium and khat, as khamr, based on a hadith attributed to Muhammad stating, "The Holy Prophet said: 'every intoxicant is khamr, and every intoxicant is forbidden.'"[2][3] Other traditions attributed to Muhammad, however, indicated that khamr may be made from two plants, the grapevine and the date palm.[4] There are some faqīhs, particularly of the Hanafi school, who take the concept of khamr literally and forbid only grape-based (or date-based) alcoholic beverages, allowing those made with other fruits, grains, or honey. This is, however, a minority opinion.[5][6]

Historically, many Muslim elites consumed alcohol, encompassing the reign of the Umayyads, the Abbasids, Islamic Spain (al-Andalus), and dynasties that ruled Egypt and the eastern, Persianate half of the Muslim world.[7] Islamic countries have low rates of alcohol consumption, and it is completely banned in several of them while strictly controlled in others (such as consumption being allowed only in private places or by non-Muslims). A minority of Muslims do drink and believe consuming alcohol is not Qur'anically forbidden.[8][9] Muslim-majority countries produce a variety of regional distilled beverages such as arrack and rakı. There is a long tradition of viticulture in the Middle East, particularly in Egypt (where it is legal) and in Iran (where it is banned).

Scriptural basis edit

Quranic verses that at least discourage alcohol include

They ask you about wine (khamr) and gambling. Say, "In them is great sin and [yet, some] benefit for people. But their sin is greater than their benefit."

"O you who acknowledge, Do not go near prayer, (Salat) while you are stupified (under influence), until you know what you are saying"

O you who have believed, indeed, intoxicants (khamr), gambling, [sacrificing on] stone altars [to other than God], and divining arrows are but defilement from the work of Satan, so avoid it that you may be successful.

According to a hadith where Imam Ahmad recorded what Abu Maysarah said, the verses came after requests by `Umar to Allah, to "Give us a clear ruling regarding Al-Khamr!"[13] Many Muslims believe the verses were revealed over time in this order to gradually nudge Muslim converts away from drunkenness and towards total sobriety, as to ban alcohol abruptly would have been too harsh and impractical.[14]

A minority of Muslims do drink and believe consuming alcohol is not Qur'anically forbidden.[8][15]

Punishment edit

The Quran does not prescribe a penalty for consuming alcohol.

Among hadith, the only reference for punishment comes from one by Anas ibn Malik (according to Murtaza Haider of Dawn.com in Pakistan), who is reported to have stated that Muhammad prescribed 40 lashes "administered with two palm branches ... for someone accused of consuming alcohol".[16] Saudi Arabian scholar Saalih al-Munajjid also states that a hadith report narrated by Sahih Muslim (3281) from Anas reports that Muhammad flogged someone who had drunk wine with palm branches stripped of their leaves and with shoes.[17]

Interpretation edit

All alcohol or only wine debate edit

Early caliphs distributed cooked wine (tilā’) to Muslim troops, considering that it was no longer intoxicating. However, fermentation could resume in the amphorae, and Caliph ‘Umar II had to prohibit drinking this beverage.[18]

Like the rationalist school of Islamic theology, the Muʿtazila,[19] early Hanafi scholars upheld the unlawfulness of intoxication, but restricted its definition to fermented juice of grapes[20] or grapes and dates.[21] As a result, alcohol derived by means of honey, barley, wheat and millet such as beer, whisky or vodka was permitted according to some minor faction of followers of Abu Hanifa and Abu Yusuf, although all forms of grape alcohol were banned absolutely.[22] This was in stark contrast to other schools of fiqh, which prohibit consumption of alcohol in all its forms, though Hanafis traced their view on intoxicants back to Umar (d.644) and Abdullah ibn Masud (c.653).[23][need quotation to verify]

Averroes, the Muslim Andalusi[24] polymath and jurist, explained it thus in his encyclopedia of comparative Islamic jurisprudence,

In their argument by way of reasoning they said that the Koran has explicitly laid down that the Illa (underlying cause) of prohibition of khamr is that it prevents the remembrance of God and breeds enmity and hatred…[this is] found only in a certain quantity of the intoxicating liquor not in what is less than that; it follows therefore that only this quantity be prohibited.[25]

This justification applies to use of alcohol in medicines, hygiene, perfumes etc. according to Hanafi school of thought and so this distinction between the legal status of wine and non-grape alcoholic beverages was reflected in early Hanafi legal doctrine. Hanafi jurists delineated drinking-related offences into two categories:

  1. Drinking grape-derived wine (punishment applicable on drinking "even a drop").[26]
  2. Intoxication from non-grape intoxicants (certainly prohibited from a religious-moral perspective, but may or may not qualify for criminal punishment).[27][need quotation to verify]

Since the second category of punishment was specific to the Hanafis (other schools punish drinking regardless of intoxication), they had to come with a legal definition of drunkenness. These definitions ranged from Ibn Qutaybah's, "[a drunk is he] whose intellect has left him so he does not understand a little or much (anything at all)" to Ibn Nujaym’s, "[a drunk is he who] does not know (the difference) between a man and a woman or the earth from the sky". Hanafi understanding of Shariah not only permitted adherents to indulge in alcoholic beverages but they could do so up to a near point of total "annihilation".[28]

However, from the 12th century, the Hanafi school embraced the general prohibition of all alcoholic beverages, in line with the other schools.[29]

Alcohol derived from honey, wheat, barley or corn is haram when used as an intoxicant, in an amount that intoxicates. But, if not used in any such manner, and intended to use for medical purpose, hygiene, perfume, etc., then it would be permissible.

Of punishment edit

According to scholar Muhammad Al-Munajjid of Saudi Arabia, the consensus of classical fuqaha’ for the punishment for consumption of alcohol is flogging, but scholars differ as to the number of lashes to be administered to the drinker, "the majority of scholars are of the view that it is eighty lashes for a free man" and forty for slaves and women.[30] A man convicted of consuming alcohol was given 80 lashes in a public square in the Iranian city of Kashmar on 10 July 2018.[31] In Pakistan the penal code, under "the Prohibition (Enforcement of Hadd) Order of 1979, awards 80 lashes to those convicted of consuming alcohol".[16] In Saudi Arabia lashes "can also be part of the sentence" for consuming alcohol, according to the British Embassy.[32] However, according to Murtaza Haider of Dawn.com in Pakistan, "a consensus (ijmāʿ) on how to deal with alcohol has eluded Muslim jurists for more than a millennium". The "Maliki, Hanbali, and Hanafi schools" of Islamic jurisprudence consider 80 lashes to be lawful punishment, the Shafi’i school calls for 40 lashes. "The Hadith does not cover the matter in sufficient detail. ... Is it 40 or 80 lashes? Can one substitute palm branches with a cane or leather whips? What constitutes as proof for consumption?"[16]

UAE Residents can drink alcohol at home and in licensed venues. Liquor licences are still required for Residents in Dubai but are no longer required for Residents in Abu Dhabi and other Emirates (save for Emirate of Sharjah) to purchase alcohol for personal consumption.

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ plural, khumūr (Arabic: خمور)

Citations edit

  1. ^ Hans Wehr, J. Milton Cowan (1979). A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic (4th ed.). Spoken Language Services.
  2. ^ a b c Juan Eduardo Campo (2009). "Dietary Rules". In John L. Esposito (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-530513-5.
  3. ^ Fahd Salem Bahammam. Food and Dress in Islam: An explanation of matters relating to food and drink and dress in Islam. Modern Guide. p. 1. ISBN 978-1-909322-99-8.
  4. ^ John Alden Williams (22 July 2010). The Word of Islam. University of Texas Press. pp. PT 116. ISBN 978-0-292-78667-7.
  5. ^ John Alden Williams (28 September 2020). Islam. Library of Alexandria. pp. PT 117. ISBN 978-1-4655-8103-7.
  6. ^ Malise Ruthven (23 October 1997). Islam: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University Press, UK. pp. PT 68. ISBN 978-0-19-154011-0.
  7. ^ https://academic.oup.com/book/49401/chapter-abstract/416649706?redirectedFrom=fulltext
  8. ^ a b "Alcohol and Islam: An Overview". APA PsycNet. 1999-06-01. Retrieved 2020-11-23.
  9. ^ "Nothing in the Quran Says Alcohol "is Haram": Saudi Author".
  10. ^ Quran 2:219
  11. ^ Quran 4:43
  12. ^ Quran 5:90
  13. ^ Ibn Kathir. "The Gradual Prohibition of Khamr (Alcoholic Drink)". Quran Tafsir Ibn Kathir. Retrieved 23 July 2018.
  14. ^ Cahyaningrum, Lutfi Fitriani (2020). Pentahapan Pengharaman Khamr Sebagai Landasan Dakwah Islamiyah Telaah Terhadap Al-Quran (skripsi thesis) (in Indonesian). IAIN Kudus.
  15. ^ "Nothing in the Quran Says Alcohol "is Haram": Saudi Author".
  16. ^ a b c Haider, Murtaza (29 October 2014). "Alcohol consumption in Pakistan: Don't mix sin with crime". Dawn. Retrieved 24 July 2018.
  17. ^ "Search Results - Search Results - alcohol lashing Anas Bin Malik (page 1) - Sunnah.com - Sayings and Teachings of Prophet Muhammad (صلى الله عليه و سلم)". sunnah.com.
  18. ^ Tillier, Mathieu; Vanthieghem, Naïm (2022-09-02). "Des amphores rouges et des jarres vertes: Considérations sur la production et la consommation de boissons fermentées aux deux premiers siècles de l'hégire" (PDF). Islamic Law and Society. 30 (1–2): 1–64. doi:10.1163/15685195-bja10025. ISSN 0928-9380. S2CID 252084558.
  19. ^ "Mutazilah", Encyclopaedia Britannica.
  20. ^ Sa'eedi al-Hanafi, Ghulam Rasool. Sharh Sahih Muslim.
  21. ^ "Alcohol: Its kinds, usage and Rulings | General Fiqh | Fiqh". www.central-mosque.com.
  22. ^ Ruthven, Malisse (1997). slam: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University Press. p. 55. The following is part of a discussion on prohibited liquors from the Hidayah of Burhanuddin al-Marghinani (d. 1197), a Hanafi faqih of Farghana in Central Asia (modern Uzbekistan). Beer, Whisky, and Vodka, according to this liberal Hanafi view, were permitted, although all forms of grape alcohol were banned absolutely: "..Liquor produced by means of honey, wheat, barley or millet is lawful, according to Abu Hanifa and Abu Yusuf (his most distinguished disciple)..
  23. ^ Saeedi, Ghulam Rasool. Sharh Sahih Muslim. p. 200.
  24. ^ Tamer, Georges (2011-02-01). "Averroism". Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE. Averroism is a philosophical movement named after the sixth/twelfth-century Andalusian philosopher Ibn Rushd (Averroes, d. 595/1198), which began in the thirteenth century among masters of arts at the University of Paris and continued through the seventeenth century.
  25. ^ Qurtubi, Ibn Rushd. The Distinguished Jurists Primer. p. 573.
  26. ^ Nyazee, Imran Ahsan Khan. Islamic Jurisprudence: Uṣūl Al-Fiqh. p. 311.
  27. ^ Fatawa-i Hindiyya. Maktaba Rahmaniyya. p. 344.
  28. ^ Morrow, John Andrew. Islamic Images and Ideas: Essays on Sacred Symbolism. p. 83.
  29. ^ Haider, Najam (2013). "Contesting Intoxication: Early Juristic Debates on the Lawfulness of Alcoholic Beverages". Islamic Law and Society. 20 (1): 48–89. doi:10.1163/15685195-0002A0002.
  30. ^ "Country Reports on Human Rights Practices Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor 2001 March 4, 2002". state.gov. United States Department of State. Retrieved 24 July 2018.
  31. ^ "Iranian man flogged 80 times for drinking alcohol as a child". BBC. 12 July 2018. Retrieved 24 July 2018.
  32. ^ "Q: Alcohol consumption in Saudi Arabia". answers.google.com. 25 June 2002. Retrieved 24 July 2018.

khamr, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, uses, texts, from, within, religion, faith, system, without, referring, secondary, sources, that, critically, analyze, them, please, help, improve, this, article, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, template, mes. For other uses see Khamr disambiguation This article uses texts from within a religion or faith system without referring to secondary sources that critically analyze them Please help improve this article May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Khamr Arabic خمر is an Arabic word for wine or intoxicant a It is variously defined as alcoholic beverages wine or liquor 1 Timurid painting of courtly men enjoying khamrIn fiqh it refers to certain forbidden substances and its technical definition depends on the madhhab or legal school Most jurists including those from the Maliki Shafiʽi Hanbali Ahl i Hadith legal schools have traditionally viewed it as general term for any intoxicating beverage made from grapes dates and similar substances 2 Hanafi jurists restricted the term to a narrower range of beverages 2 Over time some jurists classified other intoxicants such as opium and khat as khamr based on a hadith attributed to Muhammad stating The Holy Prophet said every intoxicant is khamr and every intoxicant is forbidden 2 3 Other traditions attributed to Muhammad however indicated that khamr may be made from two plants the grapevine and the date palm 4 There are some faqihs particularly of the Hanafi school who take the concept of khamr literally and forbid only grape based or date based alcoholic beverages allowing those made with other fruits grains or honey This is however a minority opinion 5 6 Historically many Muslim elites consumed alcohol encompassing the reign of the Umayyads the Abbasids Islamic Spain al Andalus and dynasties that ruled Egypt and the eastern Persianate half of the Muslim world 7 Islamic countries have low rates of alcohol consumption and it is completely banned in several of them while strictly controlled in others such as consumption being allowed only in private places or by non Muslims A minority of Muslims do drink and believe consuming alcohol is not Qur anically forbidden 8 9 Muslim majority countries produce a variety of regional distilled beverages such as arrack and raki There is a long tradition of viticulture in the Middle East particularly in Egypt where it is legal and in Iran where it is banned Contents 1 Scriptural basis 1 1 Punishment 2 Interpretation 2 1 All alcohol or only wine debate 2 2 Of punishment 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Notes 4 2 CitationsScriptural basis editQuranic verses that at least discourage alcohol include They ask you about wine khamr and gambling Say In them is great sin and yet some benefit for people But their sin is greater than their benefit Qur an 2 219 10 O you who acknowledge Do not go near prayer Salat while you are stupified under influence until you know what you are saying Qur an 4 43 11 O you who have believed indeed intoxicants khamr gambling sacrificing on stone altars to other than God and divining arrows are but defilement from the work of Satan so avoid it that you may be successful Qur an 5 90 12 According to a hadith where Imam Ahmad recorded what Abu Maysarah said the verses came after requests by Umar to Allah to Give us a clear ruling regarding Al Khamr 13 Many Muslims believe the verses were revealed over time in this order to gradually nudge Muslim converts away from drunkenness and towards total sobriety as to ban alcohol abruptly would have been too harsh and impractical 14 A minority of Muslims do drink and believe consuming alcohol is not Qur anically forbidden 8 15 Punishment edit The Quran does not prescribe a penalty for consuming alcohol Among hadith the only reference for punishment comes from one by Anas ibn Malik according to Murtaza Haider of Dawn com in Pakistan who is reported to have stated that Muhammad prescribed 40 lashes administered with two palm branches for someone accused of consuming alcohol 16 Saudi Arabian scholar Saalih al Munajjid also states that a hadith report narrated by Sahih Muslim 3281 from Anas reports that Muhammad flogged someone who had drunk wine with palm branches stripped of their leaves and with shoes 17 Interpretation editAll alcohol or only wine debate edit Early caliphs distributed cooked wine tila to Muslim troops considering that it was no longer intoxicating However fermentation could resume in the amphorae and Caliph Umar II had to prohibit drinking this beverage 18 Like the rationalist school of Islamic theology the Muʿtazila 19 early Hanafi scholars upheld the unlawfulness of intoxication but restricted its definition to fermented juice of grapes 20 or grapes and dates 21 As a result alcohol derived by means of honey barley wheat and millet such as beer whisky or vodka was permitted according to some minor faction of followers of Abu Hanifa and Abu Yusuf although all forms of grape alcohol were banned absolutely 22 This was in stark contrast to other schools of fiqh which prohibit consumption of alcohol in all its forms though Hanafis traced their view on intoxicants back to Umar d 644 and Abdullah ibn Masud c 653 23 need quotation to verify Averroes the Muslim Andalusi 24 polymath and jurist explained it thus in his encyclopedia of comparative Islamic jurisprudence In their argument by way of reasoning they said that the Koran has explicitly laid down that the Illa underlying cause of prohibition of khamr is that it prevents the remembrance of God and breeds enmity and hatred this is found only in a certain quantity of the intoxicating liquor not in what is less than that it follows therefore that only this quantity be prohibited 25 This justification applies to use of alcohol in medicines hygiene perfumes etc according to Hanafi school of thought and so this distinction between the legal status of wine and non grape alcoholic beverages was reflected in early Hanafi legal doctrine Hanafi jurists delineated drinking related offences into two categories Drinking grape derived wine punishment applicable on drinking even a drop 26 Intoxication from non grape intoxicants certainly prohibited from a religious moral perspective but may or may not qualify for criminal punishment 27 need quotation to verify Since the second category of punishment was specific to the Hanafis other schools punish drinking regardless of intoxication they had to come with a legal definition of drunkenness These definitions ranged from Ibn Qutaybah s a drunk is he whose intellect has left him so he does not understand a little or much anything at all to Ibn Nujaym s a drunk is he who does not know the difference between a man and a woman or the earth from the sky Hanafi understanding of Shariah not only permitted adherents to indulge in alcoholic beverages but they could do so up to a near point of total annihilation 28 However from the 12th century the Hanafi school embraced the general prohibition of all alcoholic beverages in line with the other schools 29 Alcohol derived from honey wheat barley or corn is haram when used as an intoxicant in an amount that intoxicates But if not used in any such manner and intended to use for medical purpose hygiene perfume etc then it would be permissible Of punishment edit According to scholar Muhammad Al Munajjid of Saudi Arabia the consensus of classical fuqaha for the punishment for consumption of alcohol is flogging but scholars differ as to the number of lashes to be administered to the drinker the majority of scholars are of the view that it is eighty lashes for a free man and forty for slaves and women 30 A man convicted of consuming alcohol was given 80 lashes in a public square in the Iranian city of Kashmar on 10 July 2018 31 In Pakistan the penal code under the Prohibition Enforcement of Hadd Order of 1979 awards 80 lashes to those convicted of consuming alcohol 16 In Saudi Arabia lashes can also be part of the sentence for consuming alcohol according to the British Embassy 32 However according to Murtaza Haider of Dawn com in Pakistan a consensus ijmaʿ on how to deal with alcohol has eluded Muslim jurists for more than a millennium The Maliki Hanbali and Hanafi schools of Islamic jurisprudence consider 80 lashes to be lawful punishment the Shafi i school calls for 40 lashes The Hadith does not cover the matter in sufficient detail Is it 40 or 80 lashes Can one substitute palm branches with a cane or leather whips What constitutes as proof for consumption 16 UAE Residents can drink alcohol at home and in licensed venues Liquor licences are still required for Residents in Dubai but are no longer required for Residents in Abu Dhabi and other Emirates save for Emirate of Sharjah to purchase alcohol for personal consumption See also editReligion and alcohol Nabidh Golden Crescent Hookah Islamic views on tobacco Hudood Ordinances Prohibition alcohol Order Maisir Gambling Opium in Iran Opium production in AfghanistanReferences editNotes edit plural khumur Arabic خمور Citations edit Hans Wehr J Milton Cowan 1979 A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic 4th ed Spoken Language Services a b c Juan Eduardo Campo 2009 Dietary Rules In John L Esposito ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 530513 5 Fahd Salem Bahammam Food and Dress in Islam An explanation of matters relating to food and drink and dress in Islam Modern Guide p 1 ISBN 978 1 909322 99 8 John Alden Williams 22 July 2010 The Word of Islam University of Texas Press pp PT 116 ISBN 978 0 292 78667 7 John Alden Williams 28 September 2020 Islam Library of Alexandria pp PT 117 ISBN 978 1 4655 8103 7 Malise Ruthven 23 October 1997 Islam A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press UK pp PT 68 ISBN 978 0 19 154011 0 https academic oup com book 49401 chapter abstract 416649706 redirectedFrom fulltext a b Alcohol and Islam An Overview APA PsycNet 1999 06 01 Retrieved 2020 11 23 Nothing in the Quran Says Alcohol is Haram Saudi Author Quran 2 219 Quran 4 43 Quran 5 90 Ibn Kathir The Gradual Prohibition of Khamr Alcoholic Drink Quran Tafsir Ibn Kathir Retrieved 23 July 2018 Cahyaningrum Lutfi Fitriani 2020 Pentahapan Pengharaman Khamr Sebagai Landasan Dakwah Islamiyah Telaah Terhadap Al Quran skripsi thesis in Indonesian IAIN Kudus Nothing in the Quran Says Alcohol is Haram Saudi Author a b c Haider Murtaza 29 October 2014 Alcohol consumption in Pakistan Don t mix sin with crime Dawn Retrieved 24 July 2018 Search Results Search Results alcohol lashing Anas Bin Malik page 1 Sunnah com Sayings and Teachings of Prophet Muhammad صلى الله عليه و سلم sunnah com Tillier Mathieu Vanthieghem Naim 2022 09 02 Des amphores rouges et des jarres vertes Considerations sur la production et la consommation de boissons fermentees aux deux premiers siecles de l hegire PDF Islamic Law and Society 30 1 2 1 64 doi 10 1163 15685195 bja10025 ISSN 0928 9380 S2CID 252084558 Mutazilah Encyclopaedia Britannica Sa eedi al Hanafi Ghulam Rasool Sharh Sahih Muslim Alcohol Its kinds usage and Rulings General Fiqh Fiqh www central mosque com Ruthven Malisse 1997 slam A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press p 55 The following is part of a discussion on prohibited liquors from the Hidayah of Burhanuddin al Marghinani d 1197 a Hanafi faqih of Farghana in Central Asia modern Uzbekistan Beer Whisky and Vodka according to this liberal Hanafi view were permitted although all forms of grape alcohol were banned absolutely Liquor produced by means of honey wheat barley or millet is lawful according to Abu Hanifa and Abu Yusuf his most distinguished disciple Saeedi Ghulam Rasool Sharh Sahih Muslim p 200 Tamer Georges 2011 02 01 Averroism Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE Averroism is a philosophical movement named after the sixth twelfth century Andalusian philosopher Ibn Rushd Averroes d 595 1198 which began in the thirteenth century among masters of arts at the University of Paris and continued through the seventeenth century Qurtubi Ibn Rushd The Distinguished Jurists Primer p 573 Nyazee Imran Ahsan Khan Islamic Jurisprudence Uṣul Al Fiqh p 311 Fatawa i Hindiyya Maktaba Rahmaniyya p 344 Morrow John Andrew Islamic Images and Ideas Essays on Sacred Symbolism p 83 Haider Najam 2013 Contesting Intoxication Early Juristic Debates on the Lawfulness of Alcoholic Beverages Islamic Law and Society 20 1 48 89 doi 10 1163 15685195 0002A0002 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor 2001 March 4 2002 state gov United States Department of State Retrieved 24 July 2018 Iranian man flogged 80 times for drinking alcohol as a child BBC 12 July 2018 Retrieved 24 July 2018 Q Alcohol consumption in Saudi Arabia answers google com 25 June 2002 Retrieved 24 July 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Khamr amp oldid 1216329865 All alcohol or only wine debate, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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