you said :"knowing that in the Quran, there is NO WHERE stated that ALCOHOL is haram !! the Quran only states: do not approach prayers when you are drunk !!"
I'm sorry you are wrong - please read and learn :
hamr or khamrah is the word used in the Quran to denote a fermented beverage that intoxicates a person when he/she drinks it. It is sometime translated as “wine”.
The general rule in Islam is that any substance that get people intoxicated when taken is unlawful (haram), both in small and large quantities, whether it is alcohol, drugs, fermented raisin drink, or any other form.
Intoxicants were forbidden in the Qur'an through several separate verses revealed at different times over a period of years (6). At first, it was forbidden for Muslims to attend to prayers while intoxicated (4:43). Then a later verse was revealed which said that alcohol contains some good and some evil, but the evil is greater than the good (2:219). This was the next step in turning people away from consumption of it. Finally, "intoxicants and games of chance" were called "abominations of Satan's handiwork," intended to turn people away from God and forget about prayer, and Muslims were ordered to abstain (7):
“ O you who believe! Truly, intoxicants and gambling and divination by arrows are an abomination of Satan's doing: avoid it in order that you may be successful * Assuredly Satan desires to sow enmity and hatred among you with intoxicants and gambling, and to hinder you from the remembrance of Allah and from prayer. Will you not then desist?” (5:90-91)
you said :"knowing that in the Quran, there is NO WHERE stated that ALCOHOL is haram !! the Quran only states: do not approach prayers when you are drunk !!"
I'm sorry you are wrong - please read and learn :
hamr or khamrah is the word used in the Quran to denote a fermented beverage that intoxicates a person when he/she drinks it. It is sometime translated as “wine”.
The general rule in Islam is that any substance that get people intoxicated when taken is unlawful (haram), both in small and large quantities, whether it is alcohol, drugs, fermented raisin drink, or any other form.
Intoxicants were forbidden in the Qur'an through several separate verses revealed at different times over a period of years (6). At first, it was forbidden for Muslims to attend to prayers while intoxicated (4:43). Then a later verse was revealed which said that alcohol contains some good and some evil, but the evil is greater than the good (2:219). This was the next step in turning people away from consumption of it. Finally, "intoxicants and games of chance" were called "abominations of Satan's handiwork," intended to turn people away from God and forget about prayer, and Muslims were ordered to abstain (7):
“ O you who believe! Truly, intoxicants and gambling and divination by arrows are an abomination of Satan's doing: avoid it in order that you may be successful * Assuredly Satan desires to sow enmity and hatred among you with intoxicants and gambling, and to hinder you from the remembrance of Allah and from prayer. Will you not then desist?” (5:90-91)
intoxicants = alcohol