Ordinary, nontechnical usage was, as has been seen in the first chapter, not as strict. Juridically, however, a person who accused another of being a lu ti on the grounds that he had kissed, caressed, or had intercrural intercourse with a boy would be liable to eighty lashes for false accusation of unlawful intercourse. According to the Ḥanafi , Sha fiʿi and Ḥanbali schools, anal intercourse between a man and a woman (other than a wife or concubine) and anal intercourse between two men were instances of the same type of transgression, and merited the same punishment. By contrast, sexual intercourse between women (siḥa q) was considered an independent transgression and was not assimilated terminologically, or in terms of punishment, to anal intercourse between men.
In assessing the gravity of a sexual sin, the mode of intercourse was more important than the genders of the partners. Illicit vaginal intercourse between a man and a woman was a graver sin, and was punished more severely, than kissing, caressing, or intercrural intercourse between men, or sexual intercourse between women. The latter acts, which did not involve phallic penetration of the vagina or anus, were apparently not considered by Sunni jurists to be “major sins” (kaba ʾir) at all. 121 The Egyptian Sha fiʿi jurist Sulayman al-Bujayrimi (d. 1806), after expounding the rulings of his school on zina and liwa ṭ, added that nonpenetrative sexual intercourse such as “intercrural intercourse (mufa khadhah) or hugging or kissing” were not major sins unless done repeatedly, and should be punished by discretionary chastisement, which ought to be milder than the least severe ḥadd punishment. 122 The Sha fiʿi jurist Muhammad al-Khaṭi b al-Shirbi ni (d. 1570) likewise stated that discretionary chastisement, and not hadd, applied to cases of intercrural intercourse, inserting the penis in orifices other than the anus or vagina such as the navel [ sic! ], the “preliminaries” of intercourse (which in light of the preceding presumably refers to kissing and fondling), or intercourse between two women. 123 Even the otherwise severe Ibn Hajar al-Haytami