Refleksi : Saya  pindah ke Malaysia yang telah menjadi dunia surga. Siapa yang 
tidak suka dunia surga, silahkan baris ditempat.

    
http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/romantic-dinner-for-five-polygamy-on-the-rise-in-malaysia/358252

February 12, 2010 
Sarah Stewart

 
Protesters during an anti-polygamy march in Jakarta in 2006. (SP File Photo)

Romantic Dinner For Five: Polygamy on the Rise in Malaysia


Rohaya Mohamad, a 44-year-old Malaysian doctor, chats happily about her plans 
for the evening, a romantic dinner for five with her husband - and his three 
other wives.

Rohaya and her family, which has produced 17 children aged between seven and 
21, are among growing numbers of Malaysians entering into polygamous marriages, 
a phenomenon that observers say is linked to rising "Islamisation".

Critics say that the practice, legal for Muslims who make up 60 percent of the 
multi-ethnic population, is out of step with modern times and that it degrades 
the lives of women and children.

But Rohaya and her fellow wives say the arrangement works just fine for them, 
allowing them to easily juggle childcare, domestic duties and careers in their 
busy households.

The undisputed head of the family, 43-year-old husband Mohamad Ikram Ashaari, 
shuttles between the women's separate homes, spending a night with each in 
rotation before they join up on the weekends for family time.

He has taken a new wife every five years, starting with Juhaidah Yusof, a 
softly spoken 41-year-old who takes care of all the youngsters, and concluding 
with pretty 30-year-old Rubaizah Rejab, an Arabic language teacher.

His second wife, divorce lawyer Kartini Maarof, introduced him to number-three 
Rohaya - who had sought the lawyer's services while divorcing her first 
husband, with whom she had seven children.

"She could see how busy I was so she offered me her husband. Initially I said 
no as I didn't want to hurt her... and my dad was really against it because 
polygamy has never been seen in a positive light," she says.

The family, part of the controversial Ikhwan Polygamy Club which says its 
mission is to improve the reputation of multiple marriage, believes it is a 
cure for social ills like adultery and pornography.

"Men by nature are polygamous, they have girlfriends and mistresses, they visit 
prostitutes - it is normal," says Rohaya. "God has made men like that."

"But in Islam there is a way out which means you must be responsible for the 
women you want to be involved with."

They shrug off criticism that the club has its roots in Al-Arqam, a group 
banned by the Malaysian government which called it an illegal Islamic sect.

There has been particular controversy over plans to spread the club abroad, 
with branches in Indonesia to add to its network of 1,000 members across 
Southeast Asia, Australia, the Middle East and Europe.

Mohamad Ikram is a director with Global Ikhwan, a company whose diverse 
activities include restaurants and noodle manufacturing and which also manages 
the club.

"We want to say that polygamy works if you follow the rules of God. We don't 
expect people to follow but we want to change the mindset," says Rohaya.

The women say that in such a big household, friction is inevitable but they 
have learned to resolve their problems. 

"It's a big family so it's normal that sometimes we argue, sometimes we get on, 
sometimes we get jealous," says Kartini.

The four wives seem to have an easy rapport with each other and their 
offspring, who troop in from school dressed in traditional flowing outfits 
before touching their foreheads to the hand of a visitor in a polite greeting.

But sociologist Norani Othman from pressure group Sisters in Islam says that 
these educated women and thriving children are not the typical polygamous 
family.

She says the practice's original purpose has been warped, and that the strict 
conditions to ensure women are fairly treated are routinely ignored.

"The Koran speaks of polygamy under certain circumstances - for example, a war 
where you have lots of war widows and orphans. Historically a kind of emergency 
or welfare measure," she says.

These days, men can rarely afford to properly care for multiple wives and 
hordes of children, particularly in Malaysia's urban areas where the practice 
is becoming increasingly popular.

Her research has found that first wives, who often refuse to sanction the new 
marriage, are cut off financially and emotionally - plunging them into poverty 
and depression.

Noraini says that up to five percent of marriages in Malaysia are polygamous, a 
figure that has risen as rules limiting multiple marriage have been watered 
down over the years.

"Over the past 15 years you can see a gradual increase... coinciding with the 
rise of Islamic revivalism, of Islamic fundamentalism," she said, adding it was 
likely there had been a further steep rise in the past few years.

"The impact of conservative Islam is that it gives an impression to ordinary 
faithful Muslims to just practice polygamy without seriously thinking of its 
repercussions."

But Mohamad Ikram and his family insist that polygamy can work well if those 
involved adhere to the rules laid out in the Muslim holy book, the Koran.

"I consider myself lucky that I have four wives, it reduces the temptation to 
commit sin," he says.

"Even though it's already enough, there's always the desire to have more - one 
isn't satisfied with just four," he adds with a smile.

AFP




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