Islam
and Divorce
The first point this chapter must make is that
divorce is contrary to the laws of nature. The annulling of the
marriage-bond and the separation of those who should be
life-partners is a denial of the true nature of man as created and
as at his best. Any society in which divorces become numerous,
with the consequent break-up of families, evidences its deviation
from nature and her requirements.
Psychologists, jurists and sociologists,
concerned by the effects of divorce on the moral and juridical
personality of those involved, have gone deep into the subject,
and given it as their considered verdict that the ejection of a
man and wife, let alone the children, from the warmth of home-life
into the cold unwelcome of any substitute establishment they may
find, deals a mortal blow to their spirits and exposes their
children to the onset of moral ailments and psychic traumas
against which family life had immunised and protected them. These
scientists further hold, almost to a man, that for these reasons
divorce should be rendered practically impossible by severe
sanctions, except in a few cases where some cause, generally from
outside, like the onslaught of insanity or criminality, makes an
exception to the rule.
But what should be done in cases of irreparable
breakdown of relationships? Must the partners stay in the hell
they have made? Or may a way-out be found for them? Christianity
says blankly. "No divorce!" But Islam more realistically
faces the consequences of irreparable breakdown as a fact, and
provides a way-out. Every possible safeguard is laid down in the
statute book to prevent such a way-out by divorce being abused.
But it is clear that the bankruptcy of the relationship is only
worsened by forcing the partners to stick together; and their
misery is only increased. Hence divorce, though stigmatized as
" the most loathsome of states in the eyes of the Lord"
is made possible when it is the better of two bad roads. It may
even be that the very separation removes the cause of the
irritation between man and wife, while the lapse of time in
absence softens the hearts and recalls the good points which had
been lost under the pains of discord; so that the couple seek
reunion, and in some cases actually start the same partnership up
again in pardon and joy.
Since Islam's aim is the firm establishment of
marriages, in the interests of this objective certain liberties
are denied. The right of divorce is given to the man only, except
in very exceptional cases. This is to safeguard the best interests
of women and save them from falling victim to passions.
Manifestly, if two people both have the right to institute divorce
proceedings, the basis of confidence is made very shaky on both
sides. What better safeguard can there be, therefore, than to give
the right of divorce proceedings primarily to the one who has by
nature more subjection to the powers of reason, and patience in
the face of lack of tenderness; and who stands to lose the sum he
has given as a marriage portion, as well as having to undertake
the financial burdens of the children's upbringing?
The differences in the constitution of a man
and woman are manifest. The head takes first place in the man's
decisions and the heart in the woman's. Reason and emotion are the
gifts given to each respectively in their creation. As Dr. Alexis
Carrel puts it: "The differences between men and women are,
obviously, the physical ones : and then, less obviously, the
internal ones like the dispositions of the nerves, the different
mental and emotional talents, both of which are of supreme
importance for the future of civilization. Partisans of Women's
Liberation aim at a false conception of equality,. as if that
desirable condition meant precise similarity and identity in
upbringing, employment, responsibilities and duties." .
It is for these reasons that Islam's
"Divorce is in the hand of the man." And it is in
consideration of the woman's delicacy of spirit that the power of
ending a shared life is not granted to her. Islam, in addition to
the manifold measures it has taken to make it easier for people to
enter the married state and start families, also makes it more
difficult to break up the home. Everything possible is done to
ensure happy sound home-life, for the sake of the family's members
and of the society to which they belong. It is therefore that it
is written in -"The Women", verse 19. "O men,
live with your wives in kindness and equity. If you dislike
anything in them, that may be the very point which God will use to
bring about much blessing."
In order to take away such feelings of dislike
and prevent their turning to hatred, and to remove their
discomfort, Islam awakens the man's conscience to live in kindness
and equity with patience, and not to cast off a wife who is
temporarily in disfavor, since it may be that goodness and
blessing may come through those very wives; so that it would be
stupid to end the relationship hastily. As is written in the
same"The Women", verse 128: "If a wife fears
cruelty or desertion on her husband's part, there is no obstacle
to their arranging an amicable settlement between them for which
the wife must renounce some of her rights. But if they return
through reconciliation and peace through such unselfishness, such
a settlement is better than separation and divorce."
The same dislike of divorce, as the most
detestable of extreme measures to be adopted only in the direst
emergency, is advanced by all Islam's greatest jurist-consults and
leaders, an attitude summed up in the sentence in the book
"Any woman who seeks to be divorced from her husband, save in
cases of extreme necessity, falls out of the grace and mercy of
the Lord." Or again in Vol. 3 of the "Enter upon
matrimony. but do not divorce your wives, since divorce shakes the
very throne Of God."
Islam fences in the man's power of divorce with
many limiting safeguards. A man may not put away his wife by
violence, harassment, injury or in a way which may drive her to a
life of immorality and corruption. Thus Islam has for centuries
surpassed anything yet achieved in Western countries, in its
initiative to remove differences and restore understanding in
family life. This is particularly true of the family courts, where
well-meaning relatives have a large say and everything is done to
bring about reconciliation. Causes of differences are deeply
studied; and, as relatives, they are able to go deep into
confidential matters without either of the couple feeling that
their private secrets are being exposed or their feelings
excoriated in too public an ambience. When the causes of the
difference have been brought into the light of day the members of
the family court exert all their powers of sincerity and' heart
and affection to bring about reconciliation and to quench the
fires of temper, exhorting both sides to unselfishness, tolerance,
and an effort to understand each other's point of view. Since both
man and wife respect these elders and have full confidence in
their compassionate affection, they frequently accept the family
court' s recommendations for adjustments they should make in their
relationships and behavior towards each other. As it is written in
Women" (verse 35): "Should you fear that division will
arise amongst them, appoint an arbitrator on the husband's side
and an arbitrator on the wife's side from amongst their relatives
and send them to them. As soon as they desire peace and
reconciliation the Lord will vouchsafe it to them for He is
all-knowing and all-wise."
Should the causes and roots of the initiation
of divorce proceedings prove to be too deep, so that there is an
irreparable breakdown in marital relationships, and all the
efforts of the relatives fail to bring about any sort of hope of
reconciliation, Islam in its realism recognizes that each party
must take their own road. It must be plain that such a family
court is far more likely to succeed than all the public courts of
law or marriage guidance clinics. In fact these only too often,
being strangers to the family and not privy to their inmost
secrets, merely increase the rift, because of the clumsiness of
their well-meaning efforts. A public court has the duty to hear
the evidences produced by both sides; and then, in the cold dry
heartless atmosphere in which only exact truth and not mercy or
clemency reigns, decide which side has most right and give verdict
accordingly. It has neither the heart nor the spiritual influence
of relatives to press for reconciliation, and cure the causes of
the quarrel. In the Quran, -"Divorce" ordains in
verse 2: "Two just persons from amongst yourselves shall bear
witness to the evidence before God when a divorce is
settled." Without these two witnesses, there is no legal
divorce. An advantage of their appointment is that they can exert
every pressure of affection and wisdom to avert the final
catastrophe for quite a period before reluctantly, if they have to
do so, agreeing that there is no other way out. They frequently
succeed in the better course.
It is further laid down that no divorce may be
made absolute save after the woman' s period of purification after
menstruation or childbirth is completed. This need to wait awhile
often proves a breathing-space in which the man's feelings of
tenderness once more assert themselves over his irritations, and
make him decide against divorce.
Further when a man finds sharing his life with
a particular woman wearisome and irksome and decides on divorce,
this decision of his does not suffice in itself to end their
living together not does it become effective until the expiry of
the period fixed during which a divorced or widowed
woman may not be married to another man: and this period also
gives a breathing-space which frequently results in the man's
change of heart and decision to continue the married bond with the
wife he planned to divorce.
Finally, after the execution of the formalities
for a "revocable divorce" a man may not expel his
wife from the home until the termination of the period of the
which may last anything up to three months, nor may the wife quit
their joint home except in a desperately exceptional case during
that period. As the "Divorce" enacts (verse 1):
"You may not expel women from their houses, nor may they
themselves quit, except if they have been proven guilty of some
open lewdness (during the period). These are limits set by
God. Should any man transgress these limits he does so at the
peril of his own soul, and to his own harm : for you know not
whether God may bring about some new situation later (than the
decision to divorce)."
No formalities are necessary to abrogate a
revocable divorce during these months. A mere indication of desire
for renewal of the marriage relationship by the man suffices.
Should the wife feel such hatred for her
husband that she repays him the statutory portion of marriage
settlement he had given her, or a portion of her own property,
that counts as her divorcing him; but this type of divorce is
revocable within the stated period, so that if she changes her
mind, and her husband agrees, he can still take her back into
their home.
By these many means Islam safeguards the holy
estate of matrimony from shipwreck on the rock of hasty decisions
onto which emotional storms may drive some couples.
Islam had also done much to protect the wife's
rights and to save her from having to continue to live in an
unhappy environment. Among beneficent measures are the following:
1. the wife can insert a clause in the marriage
contract ensuring that
(a) incompatibility of temperament
(b) maltreatment
(c) refusal of maintenance
(d) unannounced journeys
(e) the taking of another wife without consultation
are so provided against that if any of the
above five conditions is broken she can approach a lawyer to
obtain a divorce for her through the courts.
2. the wife can make it impossible for her
husband not to divorce her by being intolerably refractory,
vexatiously shrewish or deliberately incompatible in
relationships, familial, sexual or social;
3. the wife can resort to the courts if the
husband has been incapable or negligent in supplying her with
maintenance or has put obstacles in the way of her obtaining it ;
or if either partner deprives the other of conjugal rights or
fails in marital duties; the Muslim Qadhi, if the woman' s
plea is proved, can compel the husband to treat her right, to be
reconciled, to disburse the proper sums, to confer her rights upon
her in every form : and if the husband proves recalcitrant, or
refuses to obey the judge's orders, the judge can then compel him
to divorce his wife;
4. the wife can enter a plea in the Islamic
court and obtain an injunction if the husband accuses her of
lewdness, unchastity or unfaithfulness, or denies his own
paternity of her child : if the husband cannot prove his case the
judge will order the husband to separate himself from his wife in
accordance with the relevant legislation;
5. the wife may, in the case of intolerable
revulsion or aversion, in a simple fashion bring about a
discontinuance of their union by renouncing a large part of her
marriage portion, while freeing her husband from his obligation to
pay her alimony during the "Breathing -space period;
6 the wife, if the husband absents himself so
that no news of him reaches her and she falls into financial or
other difficulties, can resort to the courts and request a
divorce. the judge will then perform the necessary formalities to
annul her marriage contract.
It is written in (verse 229): "A
divorce is only permissible twice : after that the parties should
either hold together in equity or separate in kindness. It is not
lawful for you men to take back from your wives any of that
portion which you have given them except when both parties fear
that they would be unable to keep the God-ordained limits. If you
judges have reason to fear that the parties will be unable to keep
the God-ordained limits, so decree, for there will be no blame on
either of them if she hands over a sum in exchange for her
freedom. These limits are God-ordained so do not transgress them
since that is to wrong yourself as well as others."
In the "Exegetical Collection" it is
related in Volume I on page 167 that Ibn Abbas reported that wife
of Thabit bin Qais, sought audience of the Prophet and complained
to him: "O Apostle of God! I cannot stand one moment more of
life with , nor shall my head ever rest again on the same
pillow as his." After a pause she added : "I am not
accusing him of a lack of faith or of moral and marital virtues:
but I am afraid that I myself will fall into infidelity and
blasphemy if I have to spend another minute with him. I turned up
the tent-skirting and my eye fell on my husband in the middle of a
crowd of other men. He looked so ugly, a black-avised, dwarfish
runt, and I hated him, and I can't go on. ...!" She ran on
thus, and the Prophet, after absorbing her outpouring, tried to
advise and admonish her, but she paid him no heed. So he sent for
Thabit bin Qais and laid the situation before him. Thabit was
deeply attached to Jameelé, but self-sacrificingly and for her
sake agreed to take back the marriage portion he had settled upon
her - a beautiful garden - and give her a khul' divorce.
There are cases in which resort to the court by
the wife is statutory. There are also cases in which she can
divorce her husband without legal aid, as in cases of certain
grave chronic diseases like leprosy or elephantiasis; or because
of the onset of lunacy, or of physical defects which prevent
marital intercourse, like impotence or castration of the husband.
For these Feqh gives the wife haqq-i-faskh - the
right to the rescinding or annulment of the marriage, which "faskh"
is not the same as the khul' divorce, and does not involve
the same financial renunciations by the wife as khul' does.
Germany and Switzerland, in Europe, also
recognise lunacy as grounds for the annulment of a marriage or for
separation. France does not admit either grave chronic disease or
lunacy as an adequate ground, and insists that the healthy spouse
must care for the leprous or lunatic partner. Undoubtedly such
longsuffering and lovingkindness is highly praise worthy. while
extolling it as a counsel of perfection, Islamic realism prefers
to leave the partners free to choose separation or continued care,
according to their own conscience.
The West is suffering terribly from the laxity
it has allowed in the break-up of marriages and the violently
increasing incidence of divorce. These disasters are really
reactions to over-pressure by the churches, which prohibited and
condemned divorce one hundred percent for many centuries, while
the secular governments gave recognition to it. For instance,
divorce was totally prohibited in France until the French
Revolution of October 1789. In 1804, in response to popular
demand, divorce was legalised; but in the following 12 years it
increased so appallingly that the religious bodies brought renewed
pressure to bear, until in 1816 the law legalising divorce was
rescinded though physical separation of the parties was permitted.
However, public pressure built up again so much that in 1884
divorce within certain limits was legalised once more.
Here follow the conditions on which in Western
lands divorce for wife and husband was legal until recent times:
1. a criminal act committed by either party
which involves the penalty of life-imprisonment, exile, loss of
civil rights or temporary imprisonment with hard labour.
2. physical violence, mercenary prostitution,
and a few other similar criminal acts of the one partner against
the other.
3. adultery by either partner - though in such
cases the wife has the right of divorce only if the man commits
adultery with another woman in the house which belongs to his wife
and himself.
The following is the road by which a wife's
infidelity was proved : note it well! "The infidelity of a
wife must be proved completely in the eyes of the police. The wife
or the husband plan to be in different places for however a short
time. They must agree about some third person to be cited as
co-respondent and this person must be prepared to undertake this
service. And then at the stated hour the wife must be caught in flagrante
delictu with the third party', and the husband must have
the police on the spot to catch her out and so prove her
infidelity. Thus the police accompany the husband to the
trysting-place; and when they catch the wife in flagrante
delictu this is accounted adequate grounds for her husband
divorcing her." (The Law of Divorce and Renewal of Marriage
p.99).
See what a mass of further impurities the
impurity which wrought the need for divorce in the first place has
carried in its train. And this is the "civilised" world
of the West, which allows women entry into public and political
life, and with the other hand takes away her honour, her
femininity and the high standards which it should be her privilege
to set, and turns her chastity into a mercenary bargaining-point.
It must be admitted that since I first put pen to paper on this
matter, efforts have been made in many Western lands to eradicate
the worst of these abominations.
America makes divorce easier for both parties.
It is not surprising, therefore, that American divorce figures are
the highest of all.
The wise tremble at the results : the wisdom of
Islamic dispositions shines by contrast like the sun in darkness.
At a conference in Strasburg, statistics of one year's divorces
which could be attributed to the overwhelming desire of wives to
be "in the fashion" "a la mode", "comme
il faut" and to "keep up with the Joneses" in
modernity of garb and guise were quoted as being:
1. in France, 27% of all divorces;
2. in Germany, 33%;
3. in Holland, 36%;
4. in Sweden, 17%.
Not every Parisienne is an excessive slave of
fashion. Nonetheless it is reckoned that the costs of unnecessary
purchases made by women simply to keep up with "mode"
come to no less than 5,000 tomans per head (£300-£400 per head
per annum). Yet all this expenditure adds nothing to the woman's
natural beauty, moral stature, ease of spirit or calm mind!
European statesmen, and responsible thinkers
everywhere, are well aware of the danger, and fear it acutely. All
who possess the slightest sense of philanthropy must seek the
means of stemming the sweeping tide of this flood of evil through
the world.
Islam offers its regulations on family life,
matrimony, and the respective positions of men and women, as a way
which all nations might do well to follow remembering that it was
a Westerner Voltaire, who said: "The Prophet Mohammed reduced
the unlimited harems of unfortunate women maintained by
pre-Islamic potentates to a maximum of four wives: and his
legislation on marriages and divorces is the most noble and
effective ever conceived, formulated and enacted by any authority
at any time in the world's history, religious, political or
social."
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