The "tolerant" Sharia was successfully applied to a prostitute, based on the verse "eaten by the goat." However, Imam Al-Bukhari—may God reward him and feed him a bird—transmitted it to us in the "purified" Prophetic Sunnah in his book, the "most authentic" book after the Book of God, which constitutes three-quarters of the religion and even annuls God's words, after he saw monkeys stoning an adulterous monkey, so he remembered that verse which the "goat" had eaten while the companions were occupied with the mourning of God's Messenger.
So all the men of the village, the "angels of the earth," the infallible ones, pure from faults, mistakes, and sins, stoned her relentlessly. After they ensured her death, they covered her with three black shrouds so her nakedness wouldn't be exposed, because this is an "honor and dignity" that the infidel West, liberals, and secularists try to strip from her.
And in the evening, ladies and gentlemen, after they prayed the Isha prayer, pleaded to their Lord with supplication, weeping in humility, and turning to Him with sincerity and loyalty.
In the pitch-black darkness, so that their friends wouldn't see them, they went around to the beautiful women to take pleasure in them after the day's fatigue and toil. They remembered that charming beauty whom they had stoned before evening—how kind and generous she had been with them.
For she was not like those women who demand payment in advance. One of those noblemen burst into tears and said to himself: "God have mercy on her, she used to be patient with us until the end of the month!!"
The Moral:
This story raises deep questions about the concept of justice and societal hypocrisy.
It exposes the double standards and the contradiction between declared principles and actual practices. The story reminds us that the application of Sharia must be with fairness and justice, not with selfishness and hypocrisy.
It also criticizes the reliance on weak narrations to justify cruel acts and reveals the misuse of religion to cover immoral practices.