70. Until then the Jews had not become full-fledged subjects of the Islamic
state. Their relations with that state were based on agreements according to
which the Jews were to enjoy internal autonomy, and their disputes were to be
decided by their own judges and in accordance with their own laws. They were
not legally bound to place their disputes either before the Prophet (peace be
on him) for adjudication or before the judges appointed by him. But in cases
where it appeared against their interests to have their disputes judged according
to their own religious law they approached the Prophet (peace be on him) in
the hope that the Prophet might have a different ruling.
The particular case referred to here was that of a woman belonging to a respectable
family, who was found to be involved in an unlawful sexual relationship with
a man. The punishment for this in the Torah was that both be stoned to death
(see Deuteronomy 22: 23-4). But the Jews did not want to enforce this punishment.
Hence they deliberated among themselves and decided to put the case before the
Prophet (peace be on him), with the reservation that his judgement be accepted
only if it was other than stoning. The Prophet (peace be on him) decided that
the punishment should, in fact, be stoning. When the Jews declined to accept
the judgement, the Prophet (peace be on him) asked their rabbis what punishment
had been prescribed for such a case in their religion. They replied that it
was to strike the culprit with lashes, to blacken the face and to make the person
concerned ride on a donkey. The Prophet (peace be on him) asked them under oath
if the Torah had indeed prescribed that as punishment for adultery committed
by married men and women. They repeated the same false reply. However, one of
them called Ibn Sawriya who, according to the Jews themselves, was the greatest
living scholar of the Torah at that time, kept silent. The Prophet (peace be
on him) asked him to state on oath in the name of God, Who had emancipated them
from Pharaoh and had given them the Law, whether the punishment for adultery
provided for in the Torah was what they had mentioned. He replied: 'Had you
not put me under such a heavy oath, I would not have volunteered the correct
information. The fact is that the prescribed punishment for adultery is indeed
stoning, but when adultery became common among us our rulers adopted the rule
that when respectable people committed adultery they were left unpunished, whereas
when ordinary people were convicted they were punished by stoning. Later on
when this caused resentment among the common people we altered the law of the
Torah and adopted the rule that adulterers and adulteresses would be lashed,
their faces would be blackened, and they would be made to ride on donkeys, seated
in a backward-looking position.' This left the Jews with nothing to say and
the adulterer and adulteress were, in accordance with the order of the Prophet
(peace be on him), stoned to death. (Ibn Kathir, Tafsir, vol. 3, pp. 574-5 -
Ed.)