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From a legal point of
view Islam views marriage as an 'aqd or contract. Like
any other contract the marriage contract requires full and free
consent of the parties concerned. The parents or guardian of any
of the parties may give advice, choose a marriage partner or use
persuasion, but the final decision to enter into a marriage must
be the result of a free choice on the part of each partner, even
though this freely made choice may consist of nothing but
accepting the choice of one's parents or guardian. This right of
free choice is fairly well recognized in the case of men but
(unfortunately) not in the case of women. In the Holy Qur'an we
read:
- Do
not inherit women against their will" (4:19)
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And in Hadith we find
traditions like the following:
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"Khansa bint Khidhan
who had a previous marriage, related that when her father
married her and she disapproved of that, she went to the
Messenger of God and he revoked her marriage." (Bukhari, Ibn
Majah)
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"A [girl who was not
married] came to the Messenger of God and mentioned that her
father had married her against her will, so the Prophet
allowed her to exercise her choice." (Abu Da'ud, on the
authority of Ibn 'Abbas)
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Just as any adult can
enter into any legal contract, so also any adult man or woman
can arrange his or her own marriage, provided that during the
process of arranging the marriage there is no sexual contact, in
other words, there is no dating in the North American style. It
is well known that Khadijah (ra), the Prophet's first wife
arranged her own marriage with the Prophet. It is true that this
happened before Muhammad (saw) received prophethood. But if an
arrangement by a woman of her own marriage were so shameful in
the eyes of Allah as it is in the eyes of some Muslims, then He
would have somehow prevented His Messenger from such a marriage.
Moreover, there are some ahadith which show that even after
receiving prophethood Muhammad (saw) did not disapprove of women
arranging their own marriage. We quote here one such hadith:
- "A
woman came to the Messenger of God and offered herself to him
(in marriage). When she had stood for a long time (without
receiving an answer) a man got up and said: Messenger of God!
Marry her to me if you have no need of her. He asked the man
if he had anything to give her as dower (marriage gift), and
when he replied that he had nothing but the lower garment he
was wearing, the Prophet said: Look for something, even though
it be an iron ring. Then when the man had searched and found
nothing, God's Messenger asked him whether he new anything of
the Qur'an. When the man replied that he knew Surah so and so
and Surah so and so, God's Messenger said: Go away, I give her
to you in marriage. Teach her some of the Qur'an." (Bukhari
and Muslim on the authority of Sahl bin Sa'd)
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In this hadith a woman
is arranging her own marriage but the Prophet does not rebuke
her or admonish her in any other way. Thus while it may not be
the best thing for a woman to do, she can if she wishes, make a
marriage proposal for herself without being blameworthy in the
eyes of God.
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What are the terms
involved in the marriage contract? This contract involves two
things: First, a gift from the husband to the wife, which may be
a sum of money, an object of some value such as a ring or such
non-material things as acceptance of Islam or teaching a part of
the Qur'an(1). Second, a commitment from both parties
to try to make life physically comfortable for each other and to
provide emotional, psychological and spiritual happiness to each
other, with the responsibility for taking care of economic needs
generally falling on the shoulders of the man.(2)
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At the time of the
marriage both partners should have the fullest possible
intention of keeping the marriage commitment for life, although
under some extreme circumstances it may perhaps be possible to
enter into a marriage contract on a temporary basis.(3)
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Even though the marriage
commitment is for life, should it so happen that after marriage
the two partners find it impossible to live together the Islamic
law provides for the termination of the marriage contract. The
termination of the marriage contract can be initiated by any
party which has decided that the other party cannot or will not
satisfactorily fulfill the commitment implicit in the marriage
contract, namely, to provide enough physical, emotional,
psychological and spiritual happiness. It is evident that the
judgment as to whether a marriage partner is getting enough
satisfaction out of his or her marriage is a subjective one and
therefore belongs entirely to the partner himself or herself.
Consequently, for the dissolution of marriage Islam does not
require that a partner prove to some authority such as a court
that there has indeed been a failing on the part of the other
partner in the fulfillment of his or her marital obligations. It
is enough for the dissatisfied partner to say that he or she can
no longer love or respect the other partner to be able to
continue living with him or her. Third parties such as
relatives, the community, etc. can and indeed should (4:35) get
involved at some stage of marriage difficulties and try to
prevent the break-up of the marriage through counseling, etc.;
but they cannot oblige any marriage partner to remain in the
marriage bond, as for example the catholic church or the Hindu
tradition that obliges couples to remain tied in marriage until
one of the partners dies.
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A man can on his own
dissolve the marriage by following a prescribed procedure, the
details of which need not concern us here. A woman can dissolve
the marriage by asking the husband to divorce her and if he
refuses can go to court which should arrange the terms of
dissolution as regards to compensation and order the husband to
dissolve the marriage.(4) To avoid this procedure the
woman can include in the marriage contract the condition that
she can dissolve the marriage without having to go to court.
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The party which
initiates the divorce may have to pay some compensation to the
other party. This compensation may be the return of the marriage
gift in the case of a woman initiating the divorce(5)
and payment of an alimony in the case of a man taking that step.(6)
Again, the details of these matters are out of the scope of this
article.
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The degree by which the
husband has greater right
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In the above outline of
the legal view of marriage in Islam, man and women are
completely equal partners except in the following respects:
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1) Both parties make the
equal responsibility to provide physical, emotional,
psychological and spiritual happiness to each other, but men
generally have the added responsibility to provide for the
economic needs of the wife.
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2) In case the husband
initiates divorce, he is obliged by religious law to pay some
maintenance expenses (2:241). This prescribed alimony belongs to
the wife by right. However, when the woman initiates the divorce
she does not pay any compensation to the husband as requirement
of religious law; she need at most return part of what she
received from the husband as dower if such payment is helpful in
an amicable settlement. (2:229)
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3) A man can divorce his
wife on his own while a woman needs to go through court or
introduce into the marriage a clause giving her the right to
divorce her husband.
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In regard to the above
differences the Holy Qur'an says:
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"And (wives) shall
have rights similar to those (the husbands have) over them, in
accordance with justice, (except that) husbands' rights are a
degree greater." (2:228)
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"Husbands are
guardians (qawwamun) of wives because God has favoured
some more than others and because they (i.e. husbands
generally) spend out of their wealth." (4:34)
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The first of the above
two Qur'anic statements occurs in a long passage dealing with
divorce and should be understood in relation to that context.
The degree by which husband's rights are greater should
therefore be understood as the degree by which the husband is
freer than the wife to break the marriage bond. This, however,
is not a very big degree since as stated earlier the wife can
get out of the marriage bond whenever she wants to, practically
without giving any reason. It is only that she has to follow a
more indirect procedure.
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The second Qur'anic
statement refers to the greater responsibility husbands
generally have as protectors and providers of women and to the
greater say this gives them in making decisions.
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The fact that husbands'
rights are a degree greater does not effect the claim that in
Islam men and women have equal rights, since men's greater
rights within the marriage relationship do not mean that
men also enjoy greater rights outside that relationship
and since within the marriage relationship men's greater rights
are completely justified by their greater responsibility. We
must remember here that whenever we talk about members of a
society having equal rights it is never precluded that members
of that society cannot freely enter into terminable arrangements
in which some take greater responsibility and therefore also
have greater rights. Equality of rights can only be asserted on
the assumption of equality of responsibility. This principle
sometimes works in favor of women. For example, as mothers women
give much more to children than do men as fathers and so Islam
recognizes greater rights of mothers over children than of
fathers except where economic considerations demand otherwise.
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(1)See
the hadith quoted earlier in which the dower for marriage
consists of the husband teaching a portion of the Holy Qur'an to
the wife. In the following hadith it consists of the husband
accepting Islam:
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"Umm Sulaym had become a
Muslim before Abu Talha and when he asked her in marriage she
said: "I have become a Muslim. so if you also become one I shall
marry you." Abu Talha accepted Islam and that was the dower
arranged between them." (Nasa'i on the authority of Anas)
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This hadith also
supports the view that men and women can arrange their own
marriage.
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(2)See
Qur'an 4:34. The wife can, however, with her own free will
choose to share part of the economic burden. Khadijah helped the
Prophet and Asma, the daughter of Abu Bakr, helped her poor
husband Zubayr.
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(3)This
is the shi'a view. Sunni traditions admit that temporary
marriage was at some point in time allowed in Islam but say that
this was later forbidden.
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(4)See
Qur'an 2:229 in the light of the following hadith:
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"The wife of Thabit bin Qays came to the Prophet and said,
"Messenger of God, I do not reproach Thabit bin Qays in
respect of character or religion but I do not want to be
guilty of kufran regarding Islam (meaning that she did not
like him enough as a marriage partner and so was afraid she
might not give him the respect and love due to a husband)."
God's Messenger asked her if she would give back to Thabit his
garden, and when she replied that she would, he told him to
accept the garden and declare the divorce." (Bukhari, Nasa'i,
Tirmidhi, Ibn Majah and Bayhaqi, on the authority of Ibn Abbas)
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(5)See
the hadith quoted in the previous note. The wife is not
obligated by religious law to pay the compensation and need only
do so as part of a settlement with the husband. (Qur'an 2:229)
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(6)"For
divorced women a reasonable maintenance (should be provided).
This is a duty on the righteous." (Qur'an 2:241)
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First published in Al-Ummah, Montreal, Canada in 1984.
Copyright, Dr. Ahmad Shafaat. The article may be reproduced for
Da'wah purpose with proper references.
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