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Last Update: 20:45 GMT, Wed., Jun. 18, 2008 / Jumada Alakhirah 14, 1429
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Misyar
Marriages
A
Puzzle or a Solution? |
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By
Aisha Dahiru Atta |
July
17, 2005 |
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For
anyone who has ever watched a toddler who has just begun learning motor skills
trying to put a puzzle together, you might relate to what I personally call
“the mommy itch.” This is the “itch” you get watching your babies
attempt new stuff: the one that makes you want to keep them upright when they
are taking their baby steps and stumbling all over the place, the one that makes
you want to sit in class with them on the first day of school and in this case,
the one that makes your hand hover and itch to move your children’s hands ever
so slightly so that they can fit the star-shaped puzzle piece into its right
slot and stop trying to force it into the circle shape!
Well,
I felt a real strong mommy itch when I read an article by Mariam Al Hakeem in Gulf
News online (21 May 2005) called “Misyar
Marriages Gaining Prominence Among Saudis.”
Luckily, this time I get to indulge my itch.
What
Is Misyar Marriage?
Misyar
marriage seemingly is a new phenomenon in Saudi where, as in most of our Muslim
Ummah everywhere, there is an alarming rise in the number of unmarried women. In
her article, Mariam Al Hakeem wrote
Misyar
is described as a form of marriage in which the wife gives up her rights
offered under the religion, including the right to have the husband living
with her in the same house and providing her with necessary expenses. In
short the woman gives up the right to have an independent home. The husband
may come to see her at her parent’s home at whatever time he chooses for
himself, or at a time agreed by the two.
In
Saudi Arabia, the dowry paid by most men is exceedingly high and, hence, many of
them simply cannot afford to marry one, never mind more than one, wife. Dowries
in Saudi Arabia are reported to be as high as a million riyals in the higher
classes and 40,000 for the working class. Even for a country as rich as Saudi,
these exorbitant dowries are making it impossible for men to afford marriage. I
have heard of Nigerian men born and raised in Saudi going back home to marry and
taking their wives back to Saudi.
In
Nigeria where I come from, the amount of dowry varies from tribe to tribe but is
usually not so high as to be such a discouraging factor for marriage. Yet this
form of marriage also occurs here with the difference being that the couple
still live together but the woman becomes maintainer of the home. In every way.
Is this misyar?
The
Qur’an says:
[And
among His signs is this, that He created for you mates from among yourselves,
that you may dwell (live) in tranquility with them, and He has put love and
mercy between your hearts. Undoubtedly, in these are signs for those who
reflect.]
(Ar-Rum 30:21)
[But
do not make a secret contract with them except in terms honorable, nor resolve
on the tie of marriage till the term prescribed is fulfilled.]
(Al-Baqarah 2:235)
The
above verse (2:235) is referring to widows in the period of `iddah, but I
refer to it because Allah Most High clearly talks about approaching women with
honorable intentions and terms. These terms have been stated in numerous
verses in the Qur’an and expanded on in the Prophets Sunnah. The different but
complementary roles of the man and woman in marriage are very clear in the
Qur’an and Sunnah .
The man maintains the home and the
woman takes care of it and the family. History, though, has recorded that our
beloved Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him) married Khadijah when she
possessed far more wealth than he. But they did not live apart. They shared a
roof, a home, and a life until her death 24 years later.
It
cannot be argued that times have changed and in numerous parts of the world
women are economically empowered, more so than the men in many cases. In the
West, if the woman takes on the financial responsibility of the family, then the
man will usually adopt the role of homemaker. This arrangement affords a balance
of roles and a continuation of the family unit itself.
Women
Giving Up on Themselves
When
we encourage women to give up the rights afforded them by Allah Most High, are
we not in danger of doing far more damage to the Islamic family and our value
system than we could ever foresee? My personal opinion is that we already have
far too many seemingly “functional” families that are functioning
dysfunctionally. The problems are numerous and would necessitate another article
entirely, but they cut across the many geographical divides of our Ummah:
absentee parents, consumerism, media and pop influences, and so on.
When
we make it possible for a man to simply visit his wife when and if he pleases at
either his or her convenience without any of the expected responsibility,
then how are the man and woman to form a bond that is in the way of Allah Most
High? When they have children, will he also visit his them only at times that
are convenient to him? More importantly, at this point will the woman still bear
the sole responsibility of sheltering, feeding, as well as rearing the children
in the way of Islam?
There
are, of course, many questions to be asked of this prescribed solution to
spinsterhood, but the most important one would have to be whether it is legal in
Shari`ah. I will not attempt pretence at knowledge of the Shari`ah that would
qualify me to answer that, but I most certainly feel it bears serious looking
into.
Al
Hakeem’s article cites quotes prominent Saudi scholar Shaikh Abdullah Bin
Sulaiman Bin Menie, who is a member of the Supreme Ulama Council, as saying that
misyar is legal since it meets the requirements for a lawful marriage
under Islam.
She
writes
Shaikh
Menie said the conditions agreed by the wife do not affect the validity of
the marriage and the wife can still demand her full rights, including having
the husband live with her and provide for her expenses. The husband in this
case is free to agree to her terms or opt for divorce, he added.
He
cited the case of Al Sayida Souda, one of the wives of Prophet Mohammad
(Peace Be Upon Him), who agreed to give up her right of having the Prophet
spend every alternate night with her in favour of the Prophet's other wife,
Al Sayida Aisha.
In
Muhammad, His Life Based on the Earliest Sources, Martin Lings (may Allah
have mercy on him) writes that the reason Sawdah (Souda) gave up this right was
her age. She was old and, recognizing the Prophet’s fondness for `A’ishah,
gave up her nights to `A’ishah willingly (272). The Prophet still maintained
and took care of Sawdah in every other way, in his home.
Impact
on Family
Doubtless,
the issue of spinsterhood in our Ummah is one that bears scrutiny. But what of
the issue of fairness, kindness, and the indisputable significance of the family
in our quest to seek the pleasure of our Most Forbearing and Merciful Creator,
Allah Most High? The learned Sheikh Menie says the woman in misyar may
later demand her rights and the man may choose to divorce her if he cannot grant
them; how can she come back to demand what she willingly gave up? Is Allah Most
High not Most Wise in granting those rights in the first place and not making
provision for this voluntary sacrifice?—which is only on her part, mind you.
In
a situation where the man has fallen on hard times or the like, there is
everything right in the woman easing his burden if she is able to do so. But I
do not see this form of marriage as such, since the woman does not share a roof
with him or enjoy his guardianship in any form right from the start.
Marriage
today is truly difficult enough, even practiced as the Prophet’s Sunnah
teaches. The first and biggest casualties when there is a problem, continue to
be our children, our Ummah, and, by natural progression, our deen.
Legalizing a variation on what Allah Most High has allowed and our beloved
Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him) taught has only ever led to the
weakening of our Ummah. History has shown this and we continue to see it.
But
Allah Most High alone knows best.
In
satisfying my mommy itch, I beg the forbearance of my brothers and sisters. My
hand still hovers over this puzzle and I humbly ask that I ever so gently shift
the star towards its position on the board by suggesting the simplest beginnings
of a possible solution: Let’s pay the dowries
exactly as enjoined by Allah Most High and taught by our beloved Prophet
Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon him).
Aisha
Dahiru Atta is a mother and a wife, and the cofounder of an Islamic school. She
runs workshops on parenting and Islamic education in Nigeria. She has a degree
in sciences and is working on a master degree in teaching.
Sources:
Lings,
Martin. Muhammad: His Life Based on the Earliest Sources. (Rochester, VT:
Inner Traditions International, 1983).
Read
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