http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/should-triple-talaq-be-outlawed/article17355643.ece?homepage=true

LEFT, RIGHT, CENTRE | COMMENT
Should triple talaq be outlawed?

Zakia Soman Kamal Faruqui Syeda Hameed  FEBRUARY 24, 2017 00:15 IST
UPDATED: FEBRUARY 24, 2017 03:35 IST

Zakia Soman, co-founder of Bharatiya Muslim Mahila Andolan, an
autonomous organisation, and a co-petitioner in the triple talaq case
before the Supreme Court, writes:

It is the constitutional obligation of the government to enable Muslim
women to obtain a level playing field
There are four or five judgments where the triple talaq provision has
been struck down as invalid. But it has not led to this un-Koranic
practice being rooted out from our society. Triple talaq continues to
be the most common method of divorce. We had done a sample study of
4,710 women and found that out of 525 women who were divorced, 349
were victims of triple talaq. While the courts have settled the
matter, we have to look at the unjustness of the entire process. How
can we accept that a man can simply utter the word talaq thrice or
communicate it through phone with no witness deemed necessary and
where the burden is on the wife to legally contest it? There is no law
binding the man, he can just act on his whim. This is absolutely
unfair and must be stopped.

Seeking a level playing field

Let me cite a case from Madhya Pradesh where a woman who did not wake
up when her husband returned late from work received talaq thrice when
she was asleep! She was informed about her husband’s decision by her
mother-in-law. It is a convoluted argument to say that triple talaq is
not an issue only because a few judgments have declared it invalid.
Why should a man have unilateral powers to divorce, and the woman just
comply? What is wrong in seeking a level playing field between husband
and wife? Such arguments only further the patriarchal order.

As far as the Koran is concerned, triple talaq is just not valid.
There are verses calling for reconciliation and mediation over a
period of 90 days involving both sides. The objective is that the
woman should not be rendered a destitute. Also, when the final
pronouncement of talaq is made, the women should not be menstruating.
This is an evolved system of jurisprudence calling for just and fair
divorce.

All we are seeking is that the Supreme Court should lay down the
procedure for talaq based on the talaq-e-ehsan method. There is a
debate about personal laws being violative of fundamental rights. But
the personal law being practised by the Muslim community in India is
not based on Koranic injunctions. Rather triple talaq is a violation
of the tenets of justice and fairness.

Gender justice is a central tenet of the Koran and gender inequality
and triple talaq are in violation of the Koranic principles. In fact,
in the Koran, the very conception of humankind is based on an equal
footing between man and woman. But patriarchal misinterpretations and
distortions rule our lives. Any talk of reform in personal law is
brushed aside as interference in religious matters.

On a Uniform Civil Code

As far as our position on the Uniform Civil Code (UCC) is concerned,
we are clear that a secular law alternative must be available to every
citizen. This alternative exists in the form of the Special Marriages
Act. But abolition of triple talaq and UCC are two separate issues.
The UCC question applies to the entire Indian population, not just
Muslims. Muslim personal law needs drastic reform just like the Hindu
code or the Christian laws. There has been a legal discrimination of
Muslim women in our country. Muslim women are still subject to the
Muslim Personal Law (Shariat) Application Act, 1937 which is silent on
triple talaq, nikah halala and polygamy. We need to be brought on a
par with Hindu sisters and Christian sisters who have a legal
recourse. The Hindu women have the Hindu Succession Act and the Hindu
Marriage Act. We are a patriarchal society and it is not as though
Hindu and Christian women have attained equality. But they do not face
legal discrimination the way Muslim women do.

It is the constitutional obligation of the government to enable Muslim
women to obtain justice. It is not about the BJP or the government but
about gender justice for Muslim women.



Kamal Faruqui, former chairperson of the Delhi Minorities Commission
and founder-member of the All India Muslim Personal Law Board, writes:

Triple talaq is a Koranic injunction. But it depends on the terms
drawn up in the marriage contract
The pronouncement of triple talaq is acceptable to all four schools of
thought in Islam and though not desirable, it is very much a Koranic
injunction. Those who criticise it do not understand the Koran. Having
said that, I should also state that eventually it comes down to the
nikahnama, which is a contractual obligation between the two parties.
If the terms of the contract do not have provisions against triple
talaq and have not been contested before being accepted, the
pronouncement of talaq at one go or over the prescribed period of
three months is allowed in the Koran. Don’t forget that Islam is the
first religion in the world to institutionalise marriage. Nikah
imposes conditions, prescribes equality of women, maintenance of
children and so on.

Conditions for triple talaq

But please don’t assume that the Koran does not condone talaq. It has
been described as one of the worst options to be exercised only under
extenuating circumstances. It allows for an exit when the marriage
breaks down but only under certain conditions. The talaq-e-ehsan, one
form of divorce, is over a period of three months and it is only after
the completion of the third month that you are no longer man and wife.
The talaq-e-bidat or triple talaq at one go allows the man to exhaust
all the options at once. Again, if the nikahnama has proscribed it,
then the man cannot take recourse to this divorce. Divorce is one of
the worst things in the institution of marriage and allowed only in
extreme situations. Even when a person goes to buy a pen, he is bound
by contractual agreement. In the case of a nikah/marriage, the
contract is between two parties in the presence of at least two
witnesses. We are governed by the Muslim Personal Law (Shariat)
Application Act, 1937, and if the Supreme Court says this must be
revisited, we will oppose it.

Many misconceptions

I also wish to clear the misconception on the number of triple talaqs
practised among Muslims. We moved RTIs to find out the divorce rates
among the religions in India and I can share with certitude that it is
the least prevalent among Muslims. It is rare among Muslims. And those
who practise it are usually the uneducated and the poor who do not
know their Koran or those who are misled by others. It is also
incorrect to say that triple talaq has been banned in 22 countries; it
has been regulated in most of said countries. You could have concerns
about why is it that a man can take recourse to uttering talaq and not
the woman. Under Islam, the man shares the greater responsibility in
marriage as far as maintenance of his wife and children are concerned.
He has many duties to fulfil and many responsibilities too. That is
why he has been given the responsibility of ending the marriage only
when it breaks down. Women too have the option of khula. She will have
to approach the qazi if her husband is absconding, of bad character
and so on.

We will plead before the apex court to have a separate department with
people who are well-versed in the Sharia laws if at all the court
wishes to mediate on the matter. So far, the courts have been very
careful in interpreting personal laws — which are part of the
fundamental right to religion for every citizen of the country.


Syeda Hameed, Women’s rights activist, educationist, a former member
of the Planning Commission, and the first woman Qazi from Lucknow,
writes:

Why rake up matters that have already been settled by the SC and
create discord between communities?
Back in 2002, the Supreme Court had given its ruling on triple talaq
in the Shamim Ara v. State of U.P. case — when Justice R.C. Lahoti and
Justice P. Venkatarama Reddi said a mere pronouncement of talaq in
response to a woman’s plea for maintenance cannot be treated as
pronouncement of talaq. In order to be valid, talaq has to be
pronounced according to the Koranic injunction. Triple talaq, in fact,
was banned in 2002 by the apex court and I don’t recall the All India
Muslim Personal Law Board and other affiliates protesting against the
judgment. There was a similar judgement from the Aurangabad Bench of
the Bombay High Court in the Dagdu Pathan v. Rahimbi case (2002) which
struck down triple talaq. So I am perplexed why Shayara Bano, who
recently filed a public interest litigation before the Supreme Court,
was not advised by her lawyers that the issue had been addressed and
settled in the past.

Cues in the Koran

An unnecessary controversy has been created now when all the
contesting parties that are shouting had earlier kept quiet. The whole
triple talaq issue is repugnant to Islam and those who say it
legitimises Islam are doing a great disservice to Islam.

The whole point of talaq is to find a dignified way of getting out of
a marriage that has irrevocably broken down. But it is not that
simple. It is actually very difficult to get out of marriage. The
Koran states the conditions which have to be observed. Triple talaq
must be pronounced over three months. One per month. During the
months, mediation is essential with both parties being represented
during the negotiation. This is a Koranic injunction and it is only
after following these conditions that talaq is granted and once
granted is irrevocable. You cannot say that you uttered the word in a
drunken stupor; neither can you pronounce it over the phone or send it
on email or fax it or send a text message. But I feel that the
community has to look within and take the lead in reforming such
reprehensible practices, or else the state will interfere with
personal laws. And it has already been settled that personal law is in
sync with the constitutional rights guaranteed to all citizens.

Egalitarian treatment

On the issue of polygamy, which is again being contested in court, it
is conditional on so many things as spelt out in the Koran, which
makes it abundantly clear that it is against human nature to give
egalitarian treatment to everyone. So, the concept of four wives is
simply not possible if you follow the letter and spirit of Koran. It
specifies that in case there is more than one marriage, it is
essential that identical treatment is given to each wife. But since
this is not possible given human nature, it is best to have only one
wife. The Prophet married Hazrat Khadija. She was 15 years older than
him, she was a widow, and he worked for her. It was she who proposed
marriage. This is the Prophet’s Sunnah (practice). What example does
it provide for the believers?

×
Islam is going through a turbulent phase world over and this issue can
be used as an excuse to create discord between communities giving rise
to a communal situation. I also fear that the hardliners will raise
the spectre of ‘Islam in danger’ through this issue. I am afraid this
is not the right time to debate on matters that have been settled by
the courts.

All views as told to Anuradha Raman



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