[Of the three issues relating to Muslim personal law in India — triple
talaq, nikah halala and polygamy — coming up soon for hearing before a
Constitutional Bench of the Supreme Court, the first is an
easy-to-pluck low-hanging fruit. Muslims who are hoping for a verdict
that declares these practices not only unconstitutional but also
“un-Quranic” confidently cite unambiguous verses from the holy
scripture on the issue of triple talaq and even nikah halala.
But on the issue of polygamy, they dither in taking a head-on stand
against the ulema’s centuries-old, male-centred interpretation of the
Quranic injunction.
...
The point, however, remains that there are today Islamic scholars,
women and men, who consider the current-day practice of polygamy as
un-Quranic, in letter and in spirit.]

http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/some-personal-questions-triple-talaq-muslim-personal-law-constitutional-bench-supreme-court-unislamic-4631087/

Some personal questions
Need to ask, on sidelines of triple talaq debate: Is polygamy
constitutionally valid? Is it un-Quranic?

Written by Javed Anand | Published:April 28, 2017 12:10 am

Of the three issues relating to Muslim personal law in India — triple
talaq, nikah halala and polygamy — coming up soon for hearing before a
Constitutional Bench of the Supreme Court, the first is an
easy-to-pluck low-hanging fruit. Muslims who are hoping for a verdict
that declares these practices not only unconstitutional but also
“un-Quranic” confidently cite unambiguous verses from the holy
scripture on the issue of triple talaq and even nikah halala.

But on the issue of polygamy, they dither in taking a head-on stand
against the ulema’s centuries-old, male-centred interpretation of the
Quranic injunction.

The Bharatiya Muslim Mahila Andolan’s affidavit in support of Shayara
Bano’s petition, for example, seeks the declaration of triple talaq
and nikah halala as un-Quranic, but is silent on the polygamy issue.
Numerous articles penned in recent months by Muslims for the print
media have also remained focused on triple talaq (instant divorce).
The odd comment piece on polygamy by a Muslim has, if anything, sought
to justify the practice among Muslims through a dubious reference to
the plight of Hindu “mistresses” who are “denied the right that a
second wife enjoys among Muslims”.

Even the late Bohra reformist, Islamic scholar and a tireless champion
for gender justice, Asghar Ali Engineer, remained opposed to a total
ban on polygamy since the Quran permits it under certain conditions.
Over 20 Muslim majority countries have outlawed triple talaq in recent
years. Many have also imposed strict court-supervised conditions
before a husband takes a second wife. But most have yet to take the
final step: Monogamy.

The ulema’s theological defence of polygamy hangs on a single verse of
the Quran which reads: “And if you fear that you may not be just to
the orphans, then you may marry whom you please of the women: Two, and
three, and four. But if you fear you will not be fair, then only one,
or what your right hand possesses (slaves)” (4:3).

The patriarchs of Islam forget to remind their flock of two other
relevant verses of the Quran which read: “You will not be able to
treat all women equally even if you wish to do so” (4:129), or, “Allah
has not made for any man two hearts” (33.4). It has been left to women
(some men too) scholars of Islam such as Amina Wadud, Asma Barlas and
others to point out that the continued justification of polygamy is
not a Quranic licence but a convenient male construct.

In her book Quran and Women: Reading the Sacred Text from a Woman’s
Perspective, Wadud points to the verse preceding 4.3 to argue that
both verses are specifically about the treatment of orphans, justice
to orphans. Wadud challenges the ulema’s blinkered notion of “treating
all women equally”.

“In fact, as far as they are concerned, the only measurement of
justice between wives is material: Can a man equally support more than
one wife? This is an extension of the archaic idea of marriages of
subjugation, because (this criteria of) fairness is not based on
quality of time, equality in terms of affection, or on spiritual,
moral and intellectual support.”
As relevant is the context of the revelation of these verses. The male
members in the then-miniscule Muslim population which was counted in
hundreds was seriously decimated in the battle of Uhud. This created a
major gender imbalance and the very survival of Islam’s followers was
at stake. Wadud, among others, systematically demolishes the common
justifications in support of polygamy of which there is neither
mention, nor sanction in the Quran.

First, there is the financial argument. Since women are financially
dependent on men, those who can afford it may marry more than one
wife. This is not an argument based on the Quran. Besides, it is no
longer true in today’s world that only men engage in paid work.
Two, the argument regarding women’s inability to bear children. This
too finds no mention in the Quran. Moreover, with the advance of
medical science, it is easy to establish whether infertility has to do
with the husband or wife. Also, in today’s world, there are multiple
options — adoption being only one of them — for a couple to raise
children even if the wife is not able to conceive.

Three, the argument that men have a stronger sexual drive than women.
This not only lacks Quranic sanction but, as Wadud argues, it is
un-Quranic. “It is clear that the Quran does not stress a high,
civilised level for women while leaving men to interact with others at
the basest level”.

Four, it is pointed out that the Prophet himself had multiple wives.
In a paper titled, ‘There are Worse Things Than Being Alone: Polygamy
in Islam, Past, Present and Future’, Heather Johnson makes two points.
One, all but one of Mohammad’s wives was a widow. “From all accounts
his marriages were inspired not by lust or greed but rather by
compassion and diplomatic design. Each of his wives came from a
different clan or tribe, his marriages to each was a political
alliance.”

Two, Johnson quotes verse 33.50 of the Quran to point out that certain
permissions were specifically, “Only for thee (Prophet) and not for
the believers (at large)”. In the mid-1990s, two judges from a
division bench of the Dhaka High Court had ruled that in the modern
context, the only possible interpretation of the Quranic injunction on
marriage was monogamy.

It is another matter that in the changed political dispensation in
Bangladesh a few days later, the Supreme Court had quashed the high
court order. Whether our Constitution Bench should limit itself to the
constitutional validity of triple talaq, nikah halala and polygamy, or
whether it should also examine them in the light of Quranic teachings,
as some petitioners have pleaded, may be a debatable question.

The point, however, remains that there are today Islamic scholars,
women and men, who consider the current-day practice of polygamy as
un-Quranic, in letter and in spirit.

The writer is Convener, Indian Muslims for Secular Democracy and
Co-editor, Sabrang India
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Peace Is Doable

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