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Muslim
Marriage Contract in American Courts
Lecture by Professor Azizah Y. al-Hibri of T. C. Williams School of Law, University of Richmond, followed by
transcript of Q&A session.
Minaret of Freedom Banquet, May 20, 2000
Let me first thank Imad-ad-Dean Ahmad and the Minaret of Freedom for their
kind invitation to address this distinguished audience. My remarks tonight are
not just about Virginia courts. Other courts in other states face similar issues. But
an order from a Virginia court led me to take a good look at the problems facing
Muslim women in American courts and address them in a serious and professional
way.
Last spring a court order came across my desk, by chance, in which a judge
said that Islamic law of marriage is contrary to public policy in Virginia. That
is a very serious statement to make, because anything that is contrary to public
policy in any state is struck down. The question becomes what is the status of
Muslim marriage contracts in Virginia? Several cases have come to my attention
since that time.
"When you divorce women and they fulfill the term of their “iddah”,
the Qur'an said, "either take them back on equitable terms or set them free on
equitable terms; but do not take them back to injure them or to take undue
advantage; if anyone does that He wrongs his own soul" (2:231).It also
said: "…[T]he parties should either live together in kindness or leave
each other charitably …" (2:229).But there are very few Muslim marriages
at the divorce stage where the parties separate charitably. It's very
unfortunate and it is against what the Qur'an says. Often the husband does not
want to pay the last part of the mahr. The result is that expert witnesses are
called to testify about what should happen under the Islamic marriage contract.
In the Virginia case, the transcript revealed that the court reached this
conclusion based on the testimony of an expert witness. That witness was a
Muslim professor of religion in a prestigious Virginia university. My search
could not uncover, however, the content of that testimony because the parties
decided to keep it un-transcribed, and hence unavailable to the public.
This result is disappointing especially in light of an e-mail I received a
few months ago from an advocate of the High Court in the jurisdiction where the
marriage contract in this Virginia case was entered into. Though now living in
the U.S., this Muslim couple was married outside the U.S. To avoid personalizing
this case, let us call their country of origin “Country X.” When I was
traveling two summers ago to Country X, I mentioned that an Islamic marriage
contract executed in that country was found unenforceable in an American court. I
addressed the bar association and the judges of Country X. They were very
concerned about the situation and wondered what they needed to do to make their
marriage contracts enforceable in Virginia and other American jurisdictions. Having
no idea why the American judge made his decision, I could offer no definite answer. The
discussion made its way to the newspapers in that country, because there are
many Muslims in the U.S. who married there before immigrating.
The court decision is alarming because Virginia has a large Muslim population
whose marital relations are based on Islamic marriage contracts. There are at
least seven million Muslims in the US, and a large concentration of Muslims in
North Virginia alone. Richmond has several mosques. All of them are likely to
have been involved in the preparation and execution of Muslim marriage contracts. Are
we to conclude that all these marriage contracts (I'm sure many in this room are
parties to one of their own) are all null and void in Virginia?
The most disturbing aspect of the order is that it was based on testimony by
an expert Muslim. The judge reached this opinion not because he had a certain
image of or bias against Islam. He listened to an expert Muslim witness and
based on that testimony he reached his conclusion. The problem that this fact
reveals is very basic. Many Muslim men, whether imams of mosques or professors
of religion, are not sufficiently familiar with Islamic law. Often, they confuse
their cultural beliefs and practices with Islam itself. An American judge has no
way of discerning the difference in the absence of more reliable sources of information. If
I am a non-Muslim American judge and a Muslim expert witness, a Muslim professor
of Islam (how more reliable can an expert witness be?) or the imam of a masjid
walks into my court, then I am inclined to believe that I am going to get the
real story.But that is not always the case.There are some important issues about
who can, with authority, interpret Islamic laws, and the judges are not aware of
this.
Now consider the fact that the Islamic marriage contract used in this country
is usually a one-page document. Fill in your name and the name of your spouse,
the names of two witnesses, the name of the imam, the amount of the mahr, and
underneath in fine print it says “governed by Islamic law." That's it. What is
a judge to do with that, given the separation of church and state? The judge
can't tell the clerk, "Go back to the Qur'an and tell me what the Qur'an
says" or “what does Islamic jurisprudence say?" We have not told the
judges what the parties contracted upon; we just told the judges to go back to
Islamic law. You can immediately see that we have inadequate marriage contracts.
Suppose the judge looks at the document, and it either uses the word mahr or
sadâq, and says here is the amount of money the prospective husband agrees to
pay to the prospective wife. What is “mahr”? That is a basic term of the
contract and the judge has no idea what it means. While a statement about Qur'an
or Shari`ah may clarify many issues for a Muslim judge, it does very little to
enlighten an American non-Muslim judge. Consequently, she has to rely on an
expert witness who may provide, as I've seen often happen, incorrect
information.
In one case an imam was willing to testify that
the husband owed nothing to his wife because she left him. Sometimes we get so
attached to this world that we're willing to sell away the other world to save a
few dollars.
In Islam if a woman wants out, she gives back the
dowry money. That's called khul`. There is an exception to the rule; a woman can seek judicial divorce for
harm (dharar) without losing her delayed mahr. The husband need not
physically torture her; under Jordanian law, under Kuwaiti law, just verbal
abuse is sufficient. The imam did not go into the exceptions. It may not have
been intentional. Perhaps he didn't know. In this case the husband transmitted
venereal disease to the woman, and therefore the harm was clearly established. It
was not a question of fact, but the imam did not mention the exceptions.
In one case a man ordered his wife to leave the house, and sent her to
live with her brother, her only relative in the US. He simply did not want her
around anymore. He then waited a year and sued her for divorce on the grounds of
abandonment. Other Muslim women told me that they know of several Muslim men who
tired of their wives and forced them to go back to their country of origin. Then
they sued them for abandonment.
I went to the imam and council of the mosque and I explained to them the
importance of the case because it was taking place in a jurisdiction neighboring
that where the judge stated that Islamic law was against public policy in Virginia. I
said, "It is your Islamic duty to see that Islamic law is properly observed
in this case. Otherwise we will have one precedent of ignoring Islamic law piled
on top of another. I need your help." I didn't get that help. The
leadership just listened and stared. And argued. After two weeks I found out it
was very hard for them to support Islamic law in this because it meant the
husband would have to pay. But the husband was the son of a major donor to the
mosque.
On one occasion a well-known Islamic scholar said to me, "Mahr is the
bride price." This is abhorrent. It is my suspicion that it is such testimony
that the judge heard in his court that led him to say "slavery is over in
the U.S., if Islamic marriage law says women are sold into marriage, then we
will not enforce it in this country."
The interpretation of mahr as bride price is clearly contradicted by the
Qur'an, which states that sadâq is a gift (nihlah) from the husband to the wife. Yet,
if a witness were to testify in an American court that sadâq is bride price,
then we should not be surprised if the judge was offended and refused to enforce
the terms of the marriage contract. Is this what happened in the Virginia case? We
do not know because the public record is not complete.
It's not just the expert witnesses. It's also the lawyers. In Islam there is
a form of marriage in which the woman retains for herself, in the marriage
contract, the right to divorce her husband. It's called "keeping the ’ismah
in her hand." This language, “keeping the ’ismah,” has two different
meanings in the Muslim world. In some countries (Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, etc.)
it means the woman may divorce at will. In other countries it could mean that
the husband loses the right to divorce and only the woman can divorce, which is
an extreme result. And there are certain jurisdictions which will allow the
woman to keep the ’ismah in her hand, but she could lose it very easily, so
you have to learn all these jurisdictional distinctions.
In one case, a woman had written in her marriage contract that the ’ismah
was in her own hand (malaktu amri biyadi), so that she could divorce at will. This
meant that, when she wanted to divorce, she would simply tell her husband
"I divorce you" and then goes to an imam to record the divorce, and
she would be done. The husband’s input/consent is not required for this process. This
form of divorce is very different from khul`, which does not involve ’ismah,
but involves giving up the woman’s mahr and, some argue, obtaining the consent
of the husband.
In the khul` form of divorce, the wife tells the husband "I want to
leave you; take your mahr and go." Traditionally this has been interpreted to
mean that the wife must first get the husband's consent to khul`, which is not
really in the prophetic tradition. In that tradition, the Prophet said to a
woman who had received a garden as her mahr, "Are you willing to return the
garden?" She said: “yes,” and they were pronounced divorced. Yet many Muslim
countries require the consent of the husband, and that has led to husbands
blackmailing their rich wives. In some cases, the husband demanded not only the
return of his mahr, but also an additional bonus of hundreds of thousands of dollars. For
this reason, women who cannot obtain khul` for lack of spousal consent, end up
asking for judicial divorce. So, what kind of a right is this khul`? It is
almost useless!
That is why in the 1960s a court in Pakistan revisited the issue and
concluded from the Qur’an and the prophetic tradition that the consent of the
husband is necessary in the case of khul`. Under this view, you have a khul`
when the woman says "Here's your mahr and goodbye. "Nobody picked up
on this Pakistani opinion although it was excellent jurisprudentially. But, in
January of this year, al-Azhar in cooperation with the Egyptian government
changed the law of khul` so that the consent of the husband was no longer
required. Some journalists protested that the change spelled the end of Islamic
law in Egypt; but the change in the law was passed and now Egypt follows the
prophetic tradition of granting khul` without the consent of the husband. Although
it is too early to say, there are other countries getting ready to follow suite.
Let me go back to the case where the woman had kept her ’ismah.Her lawyer
was a Jewish woman familiar with the Jewish law of divorce. Encouraged by the
general similarities between Jewish law and Muslim law, she extended that
analogy to the law of khul`. But Jewish law does not have a counterpart
(as far as I know) to khul`, as understood by the Pakistani and Egyptian jurisdictions. So,
to divorce, the Jewish woman must obtain the consent of her husband, which
consent can be unreasonably withheld (this is the get process). Further the
judge or rabbi is unable to grant the woman judicial divorce.
In the case at hand, although the consent of the Muslim husband was not
required, the wife asked him to sign her declaration of divorce to document the
fact that he was on notice. The lawyer, believing that the signature of the
husband was necessary, examined it very carefully and was troubled by it. She
noted that it was quite different from his signature on the other documents. She
said, "I'm afraid that we might not have his consent to the divorce."
I said, "Your client is not relying on her husband’s consent for
divorce, she's using the ’ismah form of divorce; the signature is not
necessary and is not part of the evidence." The lawyer said she did
not know that about Islam. The same is the case with Christian lawyers. They
analogize to their own religion and some of these analogies just don't work. So
you have to educate your lawyers who are from other faiths about how Islamic law
works so that they can then give the right presentation to the courts.
Many women do not even know their rights under the marriage contract in Islam. I'll
start with sadâq. It is a gift from the husband to the wife. The amount
of the sadâq is to be agreed upon by the two parties while negotiating the
marriage contract. They may agree that the full amount would be due at the time
of the marriage, or that part of it would be postponed to a later date, which is
more common since the young husband may not have the cash up front. Often, the
largest portion of the sadâq is postponed to the earlier of the divorce or
death of one of the spouses. In either event, the postponed amount of the sadâq
becomes due immediately without any court action. You don't have to go to court
to get your muta`akhir (the delayed part). In the case of death of the
husband, the sadâq becomes a senior debt against his estate, separate from the
wife's inheritance rights. Thus even if the estate would become exhausted by
debt repayment, the wife would still get her sadâq first and without delay.
The sadâq is a pure right of the woman herself. She is free to spend it any
way she pleases. No one may touch it, not even her father or her husband. In
some countries I visited they told me that women were being pressured by to show
their love for their husbands by saying "I forgive you the muta`akhir, you
don't have to pay me the latter part of the mahr.” Then, when they get
divorced they realize they weren't very smart to do that. Another mode of
customary pressure on the woman is to say "You get more barakat, more
blessings, if you ask for a man to give you two or three dollars." Then when the woman gets divorced at fifty she is in trouble because that is all
that she gets on her way out of the house.
What I have said about the mahr is true about all the money of the woman.
Islam gave the woman full financial independence. No one has the right of
guardianship over her money. This is the reason that Abu Hanifah says that the
woman has the right to enter and execute her own marriage contract without a
wali, because if she is free and independent with regard to money, marriage is
much more important and we should give her self-sufficiency in marriage.
This situation follows from two basic Islamic legal concepts. First, a
married Muslim woman is legally entitled to her financial independence. Her
husband may not touch any of her assets. Second, the husband is obligated to
support his wife, even if she is wealthier than he is. She has no obligation to
support her husband. Any money she gives him is regarded as charity or gift or a
loan.
These legal facts are part of a larger framework of Muslim women's rights. In
this larger framework, a Muslim woman retains her maiden name upon marriage and
is not obligated to perform housework If she chooses not to cook, her husband is
obligated to bring her prepared food. Understand that all of the major imams
take this position. This is not a "women's lib" position. These facts
rest on the recognition by Muslim jurists that the marriage contract is not a
service contract. The recognition is based on the Qur'anic view of the marriage
contract: it is not for service, but for muwaddah wa rahmha, for sakînah, for
human companionship. It is not entered into so that the husband can find
somebody to cook and iron his clothes. Where the sadâq is large, it is usually
viewed by the woman as an important security net for later years. That is why
women say, "I don't want your money now, but on death or divorce, I want a
million dollars. "That was not uncommon in my circle in Lebanon. Of
course, when the lira dropped in value there was a wave of divorces. Then, the
shari’ah courts intervened and adjusted the amount of the mahr to inflation;
and then things stabilized.
Because of these large sadâq demands, the government in the United Arab
Emirates placed a cap on the amount of sadâq. This action by the government of
the Emirates is questionable because the Qur'an gave the women the right to any
amount they please and let the market forces determine whether they could get it
or not.When the khalifah Umar ibn al-Khattab said "I want to cap the mahr"
an old woman stood up in the mosque to argue with the khalîfah of all the
Muslims.
We do not know this woman's name; she didn't belong to an influential tribe. All
we know is that she was an old woman in the back of the mosque and said,
"You cannot take away from us what God gave us."
He said, "What is that?"
She cited the Qur'anic verses that "even if ye had given the latter a
whole treasure for dower take not the least bit of it back: would ye take it by
slander and a manifest wrong?" (4:20) and Umar said, "The woman is
right and the khalîfah is wrong," and he took back his idea. Yet now we
see government again putting a cap on these.
In many Muslim countries, the tendency, usually introduced by the parents, is
to minimize the amount of the sadâq, as a way to of showing upper class
stature, or piety. In these cases, women suffer upon divorce, especially if they
had moved to the US, lost their families, and have no ability to support
themselves. Consider the similar story of Shah Bano in India. A rich husband
divorced a 70-year-old woman and gave her a very minimal settlement–like a
hundred dollars. (That was also the case in Virginia, where the judge
said that the Islamic law of marriage was against public policy. Had he said
otherwise, and enforced the contract, this older woman who was in her late
forties, would have been given about $300 and sent into the streets of India
with no means of support.) In the Shah Bano case, the woman went to court
and asked the husband, "Is this all you're going to give me? After
all my life with you? At aged 70, you're rich and I'm going to get
pennies?" The non-Muslim Indian court intervened and tried to
interpret Islamic law so as to give her maintenance. The act of a non-Muslim
court trying to interpret Islamic law was unforgivable. There were riots in the streets. Finally,
Shah Bano dropped her case under pressure from the Muslims community who did not
want to give the Indian government further opportunity to interfere.
Faced with Muslim marriage contracts, some American judges may treat them as
prenuptial agreements. If they do, then our usual American laws about property
distribution and other financial matters upon divorce would not apply. Instead,
the marriage contract provisions will take over. The first consequence of this
view has usually been that the sadâq provision will represent the full
financial settlement between the parties. Where the amount of the sadâq is high
and the length of marriage short, in one case I saw, even the lawyer for the
woman refused to go after the husband for the full amount of the sadâq. He said, "She lived with him for only three months. Why should he should
give her $50,000?"
I said, "That's her sadâq. If he spent only one minute with her and
consummated the marriage, she gets $50,000."The lawyer had real difficulty
understanding that. These are the sorts of things we need to explain to the
women, to the lawyers, and to the judges.
The policy of not enforcing the terms of the Islamic marriage contract causes
problems for the majority of Muslim women in America, many of whom use the
sadâq as a security package. It may also create constitutional issues relating
to the free exercise clause, because Muslims would be restricted then from
exercising fully their religion. But then what is a judge to do?
One thing we can do for the judge when we execute a Muslim marriage contract
is to define the terms, define all the rules, make it clear which madhhabwe are
following, which point of view this couple is committed to. This means that a
marriage contract would be much thicker than this presentation, something like a
book. That's exactly what I'm hoping to work on at the National Humanities
Center next year. I'm hoping my book will include: What are the definitions of
the various concepts in the Islamic marriage contract? What are the rules of the
various madhhabs? And how do they work in the case of divorce? Then the
marriage contract could be a page or two with an appendix, which is the whole
book, that explains to the judge so that the judge does not have to go and ask
an "expert" witness who does not know what the rules are. So we can
safeguard the position of Muslim people from here on if they use the Muslim
marriage contract. However, I don’t know what to do about those women who have
gotten married already in other jurisdictions and did not safeguard their
rights.
Even with this book, the question remains: Is the Muslim marriage contract a
pre-nuptial agreement that cuts off the rights of Muslim women under American
law or not? Is the Muslim marriage contract a representation of all the woman’s
financial rights at divorce? If the answer is yes, it means that her sadâq is
all that she is going to get upon divorce whether she is 50 or 20, or 80.But
there are other notions in the Qur'an beyond the concept of mahr that have been
ignored for a long time that actually specify a more equitable distribution of
marital property among the spouses. It is time for us in America to develop this
jurisprudence and hope that other jurisdictions around the world will find it
interesting enough to for them to adopt.
[Questions and Answers]
Q.: Please clarify the concept of ’ismah.
Al-Hibri: The concept of ’ismah, or the wife’s right to it, in a
marriage, is a right that a woman negotiates with her groom at the time of the marriage. It
is a condition of the marriage contract, which he may accept or reject. If the
groom is not willing to accept it, then the woman may not wish to proceed with
that marriage. If the groom accepts the condition, then it should be recorded in
the contract as a condition of the marriage. Once the condition becomes part of
the contract, then the woman does not need the permission of the husband to
exercise it. Permission of the husband is no longer relevant.
Q.: In the marriage contract you can pretty much negotiate everything
including the fact that you do not want him to get married to other women.
Al-Hibri: You can put a variety of conditions in the marriage contract,
not just the ’ismah condition. One such condition is to require the groom not
to move his prospective wife from her city or country. If he does, she is
divorced from him at her option. Some major jurists have accepted that condition
as valid. Others have accepted, for example, the condition that if the husband
marries another woman (polygamy) the first wife is entitled to divorce at her option. However,
some jurisdictions do not accept certain conditions. For example, this last
condition about not allowing a husband to marry a second wife is rejected by
some jurisdictions as against sharî`ah and therefore null and void. Any
condition viewed as contrary to sharî`ah or contrary to the intent of the
marriage contract–for example if you make a condition that you will not have
sexual relations–is considered null and void, but the contract remains valid. So,
it is a complex situation.
Q.: What is being done in terns of abusive marriage in this country
through the legal system and particularly with regard to Islamic marriages?
Al-Hibri: I got a call from a Muslim convert, a woman who said "I
really want to be a good Muslim, but I'm so black and blue that I can't do it
anymore."
I said, "What do you mean?"
She said, "Well, I'm trying as hard as I can to be a good wife, but my
husband's beatings have gotten so much worse that I just cannot bear it."
I said, "Why do you have to bear it?"
She said, "I talked to the imam and he said it's my fault, that I
provoked my husband and that I have to be obedient and he will stop beating me
up."
I said, "Did you talk to anyone in your community?"
She said, "Yes. The women told me, 'You better not be such a bad wife
that you bad-mouth your husband in public and now people know that he beats you
up; that's not a very nice thing for a wife to do.' I'm at my wit's end. I've
tried being obedient; I've tried being nice; I've tried being a good Muslim and
I'm black and blue."
I said, "That's not what being a good Muslim is about."
I sat on a task force of religious leaders that the Virginia legislature had
put in place to study violence against women. There were various religions
represented around the table. According to one Christian voice at the table,
there are some Christians–not many–who believe that it is okay for the
husband to beat the wife to discipline her. People have local customs or
cultural beliefs that they then say are religious. There are others who do not
know enough about their religion. This poor woman was a convert; she thought
this was part of Islam. My feeling is that the first thing we need to do is to
educate the community about what Islam says about abusing women. That's why in
my lecture I managed to throw in a few words about the fact that verbal abuse
alone is sufficient for a grant of divorce in Kuwait, Jordan, and maybe a couple
of other places. Islam does not condone the mistreatment of any human beings,
not even a cat, according to the Prophetic hadith. We need to do something
about that. It is a serious problem.
Q.: I don't think we necessarily have to follow other countries whether
Saudi Arabia or Jordan or whatever. We need Muslim scholars in North America to
study the teachings of the religion and engage in ijtihâd. Whatever was
in the past should not limit us except what is in the Qur'an and sunnah, and
other schools of thought are just there to learn from and not necessarily to limit. My
interpretation of sadâq is that it is part of the initiation of the contract of
marriage but if there is a divorce a woman should certainly have other rights
and in accepting sadâq she isn't giving away her other rights. Maybe you could
clarify that.
Al-Hibri: Any time you hear about a problem in Islam and a ruling about
that problem, the main question to ask is this: Is the result just? Because the
hallmark of Islam is justice. If the result is not just, then something is very wrong. Somebody
misapplied the law; some issue got messed up. So in a general fashion, I would
say, "Yes, you're right." But if you are going to be a legal
scholar, a jurist, the next question is: "What are you hanging your hat on?
Or, what are you hanging your turban on?" What is the jurisprudential
argument, the Qur'anic verse, the hadith that you're relying on. That is the question. That's
what I need to write about because no one has done it. Why haven't they done it? There's
a very easy answer. Why is it that for over fourteen hundred years no one cared
about the fact that all a Muslim woman gets upon her divorce is her sadâq,
which may be pennies? Some husbands may give her also a dress or two, a pair of
shoes, something to make her happy, because the Qur'an recommends a mat`a for a
divorced woman, and that has been interpreted to mean something minor that would
make her happy. It could be a handbag; you can buy it from Paris if you want to
be nice. That's it. I'm not exaggerating; that's what happens. You are welcome
to say otherwise, but where's the jurisprudence for it? What I have discovered
is that the Qur'an does give a basis for additional financial rights for the
woman but no one bothered to develop those sufficiently because everyone was
living in a Muslim country. In a Muslim country you have the notion of al-takâful
al-ijtimâ`i. If a woman gets divorced it's not a big deal. Now it's a big
deal, but historically, "It's only a husband." She goes back to her family,
brothers, father, and sisters. That's her family. Husbands come and go. In our
families the real basic relationship is the blood relationship. You can divorce
a husband; you cannot divorce a brother or a father. So under Islamic law when
she gets divorced, guess who has to maintain her? Her father. She doesn't need money. Even
if has her independent fund of money, and she never has to pay a penny. If her
father is poor, her brother pays, if her brother is poor, her uncle pays, and so
on. And if she has no one, the head of her state pays. She is never left with no
one to maintain her. Plus, why does a man want to give the woman too much money?
She's more controllable if you say sit in my home and I'll maintain you. So,
it's patriarchy and it's old family arrangements that are different from today. Today,
she does not have the family arrangement in the U.S. Today, if she gets
divorced, she's out on the street. She might not have children. Her parents are
God knows where–if they're still alive. She has nobody. It is not a luxury for
her to look back to the Qur'an and ask what more financial value can she have in
her marriage.
You speak about ijtihâd. What you're talking about is something that
is very popular these days. "Let's do Islamic ijtihâd for America. What
does that mean? First of all, Islamic ijtihâd for America is not going to be
that different from ijtihâd in any other part of the Muslim world because there
are certain things that are fixed in Islam. Monotheism is one of them.`ibidât,
items of worship usually do not change, but mu`amalât, human dealings, are
subject to variety from society to society. What does that mean? A free-for-all? You
can do whatever ijtihâd you want? No. We have guidelines. The way
we have worked those guidelines is first you study the Qur'an. If you want
me to take you seriously, first you better know the Qur'an in Arabic. I don't
want to work with you from a translation. I give an example. I have a Ph.D. in philosophy. I'm
not only a law professor. I taught philosophy. I was an admirer of Hegel. I
studied Hegel quite a bit, but I never called myself a Hegelian, an expert on Hegel. Do
you want to know why? I could never read German. That's just a standard
professional requirement in this country. Why would we have a lesser requirement
for Islam? You read the Qur'an in Arabic and understand it; you read the hadith;
you read the jurisprudence of the major imams and then come talk to me. If you
read, for example, the jurisprudence of Imam Abu Hanifah, you will find out that
he himself specifies in his reasoning his cultural assumptions. All right. I'm
no longer living in the culture of Imam Abu Hanifa, but I'm bound by the
Qur'an. His reasoning is good. You throw out his assumption; what happens
to the remainder of the fiqh? That's how you rejuvenate fiqh. There
are rules and regulations. It's not like I'm making something out of nothing. I'm
still relying heavily, first of all on the Qur'an, then on the hadith, and then
on the jurisprudence of those before me because I respect their work. People
must understand that it is not that easy to do ijtihâd for America because you
still have to know what happened before America.
Q.: What is the difference between a pre-nuptial agreement and the
Islamic marriage contract?
Al-Hibri: It could be a nuptial agreement rather than a pre-nuptial
agreement, because you sign it at the same time as the marriage. Then you have
to study under the laws of the various jurisdictions, what is the difference in
counting an agreement as nuptial rather than pre-nuptial. By the way, it could
also be post-nuptial, because many have a civil marriage followed by an Islamic marriage. I
don't recommend it, by the way. What does that mean for their rights? You have
to study specific jurisdictions to see what is the impact in each case. For
those of you who say, "I wish I'd heard this lecture earlier, I would have
negotiated a better marriage contract," if your husband is enlightened,
please remind him that it is not too late, you can always amend.
Q.: Suppose I pass away and my wife inherits my social security and my
pension, would that offset the sadâq mutta'akhir?
Al-Hibri: It’s a very good question. The first time I came across the
question of pensions and such things was in connection with illegal polygamous
marriages in this country, although it happens in other countries as well. Someone
would be officially married to one wife and he goes and marries another
Islamically, but she is not his wife under American law, because he already has
another wife. The question is: Is he treating the two equally? The answer is no. As
hard as he tries only the legally recognized wife will get the pensions,
etc. Suppose you are 40 or 50 years old–it doesn't matter–and you
divorce your wife today. Under Islamic law, she is entitled right now to the
delayed part of the mahr if there is any (you might have paid her up front). But
you want to give it to her later. As corporate finance professor, I'm going to
ask you, what happened to the time-value of money? What she's entitled to is her
mahr now, in one installment at the value of the dollar today. What about the
payments she's going to get later which you didn't factor in? That's under civil
law. The question is whether she's entitled to them at all. Maybe, maybe not,
depending on the ijtihâd you develop. But let's assume she's not entitled to
the money. You paid her the mahr and now she's getting extra money from you. Then
it’s between her and God if she's going to take money she is not entitled to. But
that doesn't waive your right to pay her sadâq when it's due. That's your duty. The
other payment, if she believes she's not entitled to it, it is her duty to give
it back to you. Let me give you an example. I know of a case where the court
awarded a woman a large amount of money and the women had conscience pangs. It
was inheritance money, not sadâq. She had a disagreement with others who
would have inherited more under Islamic law. She said: “what should I do? Shall
I not go under American law?" I said: “no,” because if she didn't go under
American law she would have gotten nothing, as the others weren't going to give
her her share. I said, "Get it under American law, then give back the part
you think they're entitled to. It's okay. If you're in a society where you
cannot establish Islamic justice, use the American system, get the payments and
then give back whatever you think is beyond what you deserve.
Q.: Would you elaborate on why you do not recommend a civil ceremony be
combined with an Islamic contract?
Al-Hibri: That's not what I said. I said you should have the religious
ceremony first and then the civil one. If you have the civil one first, then you
are married in the eyes of the law but not in the eyes of God and there are
complications resulting from that. You either do them at the same time or you do
the Islamic one first. Perhaps the best approach, in my view, is to do them at
the same time if you can. I have to study that from the legal point of view of
the various jurisdictions before I write about it. When I write about it, I
don't know how I will come out, so please don't listen to me now, wait a little
bit longer.
Imad-ad-Dean Ahmad: I don’t know if there may be a simpler question buried
beneath that seemingly complex one. A number of Muslims I know are not aware
that if you have a marriage license and you have a marriage ceremony performed
by a recognized imam, that ceremony is recognized by the state. In other words,
you have performed the ceremony you are licensed to perform. You are married in
the eyes of the law provided the imam registers that marriage with the county in
which it is performed. This is separate from the more complex questions of what
are the terms of the marriage, not whether you're married.
Al-Hibri: In that case you have a nuptial contract. But you do not
always have a recognized imam doing the marriage ceremony, then it would not be
recognized in the eyes of the state. These things could get complicated. I know
a case where a woman had two husbands. How? One under Islamic law,
one under American law. She couldn't divorce the other one. She wanted to
divorce the one under Muslim law; she couldn't. She wanted to divorce the one
under civil law, but she didn't have the money to divorce him. So she was stuck
with two and actually had none. This could get sticky.
Imad-ad-Dean Ahmad: One should make sure that the county would accept
the imam's filing.
Q.: Beyond educating the courts, lawyers, and Muslim scholars, do you
see in America, where so many of us are converts and don't know Arabic, and are
struggling to understand the subtleties of Islam, is there any movement towards
pre-marital counseling so that a couple, before getting married, can gain an
understanding of these various options? Do we have enough imams capable of
carrying out pre-marital counseling without making things worse. Even before
that do we even have a beginning of preparation for education for adulthood? Do
you see any movement in that direction? Will you put out your book in paperback?
Al-Hibri: I'm trying to think who I will have publish my book. If it's
a university press, it's not going to be as accessible to Muslims who need it as
a marriage document. We'll resolve these issues once the book is written. But
you're asking some very important questions. Let me first comment about my
condition that somebody who does jurisprudence ought to have read the Qur'an in Arabic. I
want to point out to you that some of the major jurists in the early history of
Islam were not Arabs. They just studied Arabic and learned the language of the
Qur'an and did excellent jurisprudence. Being an Arab is not a requirement, just
knowing Arabic. Unfortunately, these days not even Arabs know Arabic; so its'
not enough to be an Arab either. A major example of this is what colonialism did
in Algeria. When the French closed down all the religious schools and then they
opened limited French schools for the elite in Algeria and created different
strata of Algerians who could not communicate with each other because some are
thinking and educated in French and some are thinking and educated in Arabic,
although they don't necessarily read Arabic very well. I think that's part of
what we're seeing in Algeria now, a lack of communication. Arabs in the Muslim
world, as a result of colonialism, no longer have a handle on the Arabic language. But,
if you're going to write about the Qur'an whether you're an Arab or a non-Arab,
then the first thing you should do is to learn Arabic. Or, if you don't know
Arabic, at least in that case show humility, for heaven's sake. We have people
writing like they are the successors of Malik and Abu Hanifah and they are
explaining the Qur'an in ways that are ridiculous.And when criticized they take
offense and are aggressive about it rather than showing humility. You can't do this. This
is not a political party. This is not about who's going to win the argument. The
argument is won in the afterlife. Look at what the Muslims jurists did
throughout the centuries. Every one who ever wrote something and was worth
anything ended his chapter with Allahu a`lam. God knows best. And Malik
himself said, "Don't emulate me; take from where I took. "In
other words, every one of you should think for him/ herself. Malik himself
forbade the khalifah from imposing the Maliki madhhab on the people of that
country, which was the Abbassid Empire. Today, we are less knowledgeable
scholars than those big ones I'm talking about, but we have no humility. We all
think we have the answers. Step number one: let's be humble. Sometimes we're
more wrong than right. As Abu Hanifah said, "I'm a human being. I say right
things and I say wrong things. Just take what accords with the sunnah and the
Qur'an and leave out the rest. "I tell you the same. What can someone
like you do? You're a good Muslim, but you don't know Arabic. What should you do? Give
Up? No. You befriend someone like me. [Laughter] No, it's true; we
team up. When you have a verse you don't understand you speak to someone who
knows Arabic. You team up. As far as the social services, we definitely need
that.
Q.: You mentioned that Islamic law exempts a woman from cooking and she
could ask for prepared food, like calling for pizza, or something like that.
Al-Hibri: Hopefully better. [Laughter]
Q.: I was struck by listening to a distinguished imam who went much
farther than that and said that strictly speaking a woman is not required to do
house chores at all and that housework has never been part of the marital duties
and that in fact a woman could ask to be paid for doing housework.
Al-Hibri: I said the marriage contract is not a service contract. In fact she
doesn't even have to nurse the baby unless the baby will take no other nurturing
except the mother's. Then it becomes a humanitarian thing. She is then required
to nurse the baby. If she's divorced and nurses the baby, the father must pay
her to nurse the baby.
Q.: If that is indeed the case, then isn't it ironic that the Muslim woman is
proclaimed as a persecuted woman when she's in fact a spoiled woman.
Al-Hibri: She's not, unfortunately. We'd love to say that, but she's not. Because
while I've told you about all this jurisprudence, I've also studied the personal
status codes or family laws of the various Muslim countries and in the various
codes they say that part of her duties is to oversee the house. That is, if she
has maids she has to oversee them and if there are no maids she oversees
herself; she does the cooking and cleaning herself. Where did this come from? Why
is it in the family status codes of several Muslim countries? Partly
culture. Abu Zahrah, the well-known Egyptian jurist says you go according
to custom in many ways. Custom has entered many of our laws. This is supposed to
be a positive thing. Remember, in the Qur'an it says, "…I made you into
nations and tribes so that you get to know each other." God did not
want to straightjacket all Muslims to be alike. God wanted the customary and
cultural variations. But what happened was that the customary laws that were
introduced into the Islamic laws of Muslim countries, became obsolete and
oppressive in time; but thanks to the new Jahiliyyah, Muslims forgot the
non-sacred origins of these laws and preserved them.
Source: http://www.minaret.org
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