New Age Islam Staff Writer
4 Dec ember
2020
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Women’s
marriageable age is a vital issue in multicultural and multi-racial societies
like India due to its strong association with the traditional family values,
religious biases and unceasing patriarchal beliefs in the majority and minority
societies. Therefore, the consequence is that the government’s decision in
India has faced criticism from a large section of the traditional religious
society citing the socio-religious and cultural justifications behind the early
marriageability ages of girls across religions in the country. But the
modernist thinkers of all religious schools of thought fear that this has put
the independence of adolescent girls at stake. Therefore, most of them applaud
the move.
A preponderance of
moderate and extremist views and socio-cultural prejudices in the social media
debates on women’s marriageable age has recently sprung up especially in the
Islamic circles. Significantly, this highlights the pros and cons of the higher
and lower margin of marriageable age for girls. A similar national discussion
stemmed in India with the budget speech of the finance minister Nirmala
Sitharaman, 2020-21, in February 2020 whereas she announced the revision of
women’s legal marriageable age from 18 to 21.
Most
important point in this debate is the distinction—which is often blurred or
missed out—between the age of puberty (bulugh) and maturity (rushd) to make
independent decisions regarding consent and other personal choices. Islamic
legal theorists and jurists (fuqaha) from Hanafi, Shaf’ai and Maliki schools
have divergent opinions on the age of girls’ marriageability that would reduce
the physical and other complications. Going by their legal rationality (illah
shar’yia), geographical conditions of different societies and socio-cultural
evolutions have to be taken into consideration. One would better apply
‘historicism’ or historical methodology to critically appreciate their legal
opinions (fiqhi ray’) on the customary practices in marriage. Established
Islamic schools of Jurisprudence recognise that the age of the marriage for
girls, especially consummation, must be postponed until they reach maturity and
not just ‘Bulugh’. Not just Hanafi
Sunni traditionalists, even modern Shi’a theologians should follow this
rational approach which is in sync with the Qur'anic injunctions on marriage.
As a matter of fact, there are no age limits fixed by the Qur’an for the Muslim
girls’ marriage. The key takeaway from the related Qur’anic verses in this
context is that Allah has exhorted the laws for babies (الاطفال) which are diametrically different
from teenagers who reach their puberty (Bulugh)
and an altogether different laws for those reaching of the "age of marriage"
(حتى اذا بلغوا النكاح) as clearly stated in the verse 4:6
and others. Please read this verse between the lines:
“Test the
orphans [children] until they reach the age of marriage, and then if you find
them mature of mind hand over to them their property” (Qur’an 4:6)
Notice the
Arabic word “Balaghu” (بلغوا) , which means “when they reached the age of marriage”,
clearly implies that they have to go through gradual physical, psychological
and mental stages, growing up in years. And they should be approached for their
affairs like marriage and property ownership after their proper mental
development so they could determine what is the best for them. These days,
whether a girl or a boy, becomes capable of managing their own affairs only
after at least their graduation which is generally completed at 20/21.
From the
above verse in Qur’an, one this is for patently clear: One must reach “full physical strength and
mental growth” (Ashuddahu) in adulthood and then only can reach "the age
of marriage" (Qur’an 4:6). Qur’anic terminology of “Ashuddah” entails
meanings including both maturity and puberty, divine wisdom and worldly
knowledge, material accomplishment and spiritual ripening, adulthood and
pubescence as detailed in the Qur’anic philology. Further to this point, the
following verses also give specific details which substantiate it:
Female-children would later be considered "Fataaya" (young ladies) only when they are ready to be
"wed" (4:25) and thus one is not permitted to get "Atfaal" (young children) married
(4:25, 24:59).
An Arabic
proverb often used in the Prophetic language in hadiths also reveals the same.
The Holy Prophet (pbuh) issued his advice to youth for marriage in these words:
"O Shabab! (young grown-ups) (يا معشر الشباب). But in a sheer ignorance of all
these nuances in hadith and Qur’an, literalists among Salafis and Sunnis, and
sometimes Shi’as, would ask the run-of-the-mill question: So what about Prophet
Muhammad's marriage with the then 9-year old Haz. Aisha r.a? Ironically, such
questions emerge from highly textualist interpretations of the Qur’an and
Hadith heavily influenced by the Hanbali aka Salafist Manhaj (methodology). They have caused ripples among Muslims and
non-Muslims about Islam and modern developments which directly impact the
issues like marriageability of Muslim girls in India's rural areas where
non-Muslim girls are equally married off at early ages.
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While the
self-evident verses in the Qur’an declare “maturity” and not just “puberty” as
minimum natural requirement for marriageability of girls, misleading
interpretations of "reaching the age of puberty" still exist in the
community. While Salafists and many Sunnis in general favour a literalist
interpretation of “Ashuddah” and “Bulugh” merely as ‘puberty’, modernist
Qur’an exegesis have defined puberty as ‘maturity’. Sunni scholars like Maulana
Inayatullah Subhani, author of acclaimed books on Islamic Law like Haqeeqat-e-Rajm, Javed Ahmad Ghamidi, a
reformist thinker and Shia theologians like Ayatollah Khomeini are some those
who define girls’ maturity as 'ability to manage affairs’, fulfil
responsibility of motherhood and appropriateness in social behaviour'. However,
these scholars are among the rarest of rare established Islamic experts who
have challenged the organised clergy who are at the loggerheads. But at the
same time, as a critical-traditionalist scholar of Islamic studies Maulana
Waris Mazhari points out, they too
indulge in the ‘Muslim apologia’ in their rebuttals to the textualist position
on the controversial hadith which reports that Hazrat Aisha r.a. was married to
the Prophet (pbuh) at the age of 6, 9 or 11.
The full hadith as reported here from Imam Bukhari’s collection is the main corpus from which all Sunni sects derive legitimacy for marriageability of girls at the minimum age of 9. It says: “Prophet married Aysha when she was 6 years old and he consummated his marriage when she was 9” (Bukhari, 64-65, 88). A similar hadith report says that Prophet’s marriage with Aisha was consummated when she was 11. Fundamentalist Islamist preachers like Zakir Naik quoted the same hadith to argue that even today “a Muslim girl’s marriage can occur at age of 11/12.” One can only be aghast at this dangerous Sunni-Salafist literalism.
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-women-feminism/the-marriageable-age-muslim-girls/d/123661
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