Falling in love with a boy was widely considered to be an involuntary act, and as such outside the scope of religious condemnation. Many, perhaps most, religious scholars were prepared to concede that a person who died from unconsummated love for a boy could earn the status of a martyr (
shahīd
), which would guarantee him a place in heaven. The “martyrs-of-love” tradition, mentioned in the previous chapter, though perhaps never completely uncontroversial, seems to have been regarded as respectable by most scholars. In the fifteenth century, its authenticity was upheld by influential experts on
ḥadīth
such as Ibn Hajar al-ʿAsqala
ni
(d. 1449) and Muhammad al-Sakha
wi
(d. 1497), and it found its way into
al-Ja
miʿ al-ṣaghi
r,
a very influential compilation of traditions by Jala
l al-Di
n al-Suyu
ṭi
(d. 1505). In the popular topically arranged reworking of Suyu
ṭi
ʾs compilation by the Meccan-based scholar ʿAli
al-Muttaqi