In answer to questions regarding whether it is permissible to watch people on television or in public not dressed according to the Islamic dress code, for example watching a female television presenter who does not wear the hijab
While the Quran prescribes what Muslims should wear on public, there are no Quranic verses or hadith narrations to help us formulate a clear policy regarding watching people not dressed according to the Islamic dress code. Many scholars have issued fatwas prohibiting watching non-hijabi women on television, or watching soccer matches where the men wear athletic shorts that end above the knee. But their prohibitions are not based on any clear evidence–they are extending the logic of the Islamic dress code into a different domain. Due to the lack of clear evidence regarding this issue, it is best to follow the common sense policy that the majority of Muslims already follow, which is to avoid watching sexually suggestive material while considering everything else neutral (such as watching non-hijabi television presenters and actresses).
Each person should judge the matter for themselves and according to each circumstance. When watching TV, it is sufficient to look away when sexually suggestive material is shown (for example certain scenes of a film).
According to a fatwa on IslamWeb.net (associated with the Qatari Fatwa Authority):
Channels like those are not primarily intended for those who desire to indulge in looking at women. The appearance of unveiled women has become a widespread afflication. Therefore, saying that it is forbidden to help in benefiting from anything in which the image of an adorned woman might appear is a difficult position to hold. The main purpose of those channels is to follow news and programs, not to look at women. Watching those channels while lowering one's gaze from adorned women if they appear is permissible, and there is no strong argument to prohibit it.
The Saudi scholar Dr. al-Sharīf al-ʿAwnī says regarding watching non-hijabi women on TV:
I cannot say with certainty that it is forbidden. I rather lean towards considering it a disliked thing. And if a Muslim can avoid it then it is better.
Source:
- IslamWeb/Qatari Fatwa Authority fatwa (Arabic PDF)
- Dr. al-Sharīf al-ʿAwnī’s fatwa (Arabic PDF)
what about the verse “lower your gaze and guard chastity?”
And
What about ” do not look at the thigh whether living or dead”?
Face and hands
Looking and seeing are different things. If you watch TV, you see the woman but you don’t look at her directly. It is only a real woman’s sight, not a real woman. It is stated that it is not forbidden to look at the image of women’s body in the water or in the mirror according to some Shafi‘i jurists, even with lust (see Hashita Qalioubi and Amira Ali Sharh Al-Mahali on the Platform for the Two Students, Vol. 3, p. 209, Dar Al-Fikr: “وخرج به رؤية الصورة في الماء أو في المرآة فلا يحرم ولو مع شهوة” and Habib’s masterpiece on Sharh al-Khatib, vol. 4, p. 372, Dar al-Fikr: “وخرج به رؤية الصورة في نحو المرآة ومنه الماء فلا يحرم ولو مع شهوة”.
Assalamu Alaykum, regarding the fatwa of Abd Al-Rahman Al-Suhaym, the Arabic text seems to be talking about the ruling of women looking at men, NOT men looking at women. Please clarify, Jazaakum Allahu Khairun.