Dgn ijab qabul di mana si cewek menyerahkan seluruh tubuhnya ke si
laki sbg ganti atas mas kawin, maka ini ga banyak beda dgn perbudakan
dan pelacuran.

Si cewek hrs nurut ke lakinya, ga boleh keluar rumah tanpa ijin, bisa
digebukin kalo dicurigai ga patuh, hrs siap ngelayani suaminya tiap
saat tanpa kecuali.

Ini ga beda dgn perbudakan sex, dan lbh parah dr pelacuran, krn
pelacuran itu cuma sebentar dan si cewek cuma sekedar melayani sex
aja, bukan sampe kerjaan rumah tangga.



On 6/1/13, Bukan Pedanda <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> Islam itu betul-betul agama najis...
> .
> ---
>
>
>
> First case of ‘slavery’ marriage reported in modern day Egypt
> Wednesday, 04 July 2012
>
> The first reported case of ‘melk al-yameen’ marriage in
> Egypt took place between Muslim cleric Abdul Raouf Aun (L) and a woman
> identified as Nadia. (File photo)
>  inShare
> By Al Arabiya with Agencies
>
> The first case of “melk al-yameen” (slavery) marriage was
> reported in modern day Egypt last week, a private Egyptian TV channel
> reported on Monday.
>
> The marriage ceremony was performed by the Muslim cleric Abdul Raouf
> Aun, reported the privately-owned Dream TV on its daily show
> ‘al-Haqeeqa’ presented by prominent Egyptian journalist Wael al-Ibrashy.
> Slave women or “melk al-yameen” are referred to in the Holy Quran as  “ma
> malakat aymanukum” or “those whom your right hand possesses”.  They are
> either women who have been taken
> captive during battles and then enslaved or descendants of slaves.
>
> This practice pre-dates Islam’s advent in the region but the religion
> later laid out rules on this issue in an attempt to abolish slavery. It
> allowed Muslims to have sexual relations with slave women who had been
> held captives in just and legitimate wars. A woman was freed if she
> became pregnant and her child would be born free.
>
> However, there has been no reported instance of this form of marriage for
> centuries.
>
> The TV report on the incident, the first to take place in Egypt,
> included a video of the entire ceremony. The marriage was between Aun
> himself and a woman who was identified as Nadia – who had a non-Egyptian
>  Arabic dialect – in the presence of guests.
>
> The ceremony began with Nadia repeating after Aun that she has
> “enslaved” herself to him as they both recited the Surat al-Ikhlas of
> the Quran. Then he congratulated and kissed her amid cheers, clapping
> and congratulations from the attendants.
>
> Aun then told Nadia that she can remove her hijab, and following his
> orders, she took off her headscarf and ‘abaya’, under which she was
> wearing a revealing red gown.
>
> In a traditional Muslim marriage, a wife speaks of her “acceptance” to
> marry her husband, not “enslavement”.  The “melk al-yameen” marriage,
> however, has no official documentation process. The wife has the right
> to divorce using the same Quranic verses the couple used to enter the
> agreement ─ in Nadia’s case, she would recite from Surat al-Ikhlas.
>
> What’s even more controversial, is that a woman who enters a “melk
> al-yameen” arrangement, does not need to wear the hijab, or wear
> long-sleeved clothes, or long dresses, said Aun.
>
> “We, Muslims, usually complicate things a lot,” Aun told Ibrashy during
> the TV show aired by Dream TV on Monday night. “The melk al-yameen and
> mutaa (temporary marriage among Shiites) were allowed during the time of
>  Prophet Mohammed (PBUH). We only acknowledge the normal, traditional
> marriage and even that we have complicated.
>
> “We have an incorrect view of the melk al-yameen and mutaa and have
> instead turned the traditional marriage into a trade. Instead of getting
>  married at the age of 16 or 17, a young man now gets married at the age
>  of 35 or even 40,” Aun said.
>
> “In the early days of Islam, there was no documentation of marriage at a
>  registrar. Both partners should mainly trust each other,” Aun said.
>
> Aun reportedly identified himself as an al-Azhar scholar, who memorized
> the Holy Quran during his childhood and studied fiqh (Islamic
> jurisprudence) for seven years. He then went on to study engineering at
> university level.
>
> “In the melk al-yameen marriage, the wife can remove her hijab. There
> are a large number of Muslim women who cannot bear to wear the hijab.
> When Caliph Omar bin al-Khattab walked in the street and encountered a
> melk al-yameen wife with her headscarf on, he would usually remove her
> hijab,” Aun said.
>
> “I want to show everyone that marriage should be based on love and
> compassion. It is not a trade. A husband reciting a few verses from the
> Quran can be a dowry,” he said meaning that dowry need not be a sum of
> money.
>
> The TV report also included few comments by his melk al-yameen wife,
> Nadia who said she felt this form of marriage was right for her.
>
> Aun explained that he and Nadia had originally married in Saudi Arabia
> in a documented ceremony   but he wanted to prove to everyone that melk
> al-yameen marriage was a good ritual that should be followed by
> everyone.
>
> Dr Abdullah al-Naggar, an al-Azhar scholar and professor in Islamic
> fiqh, was also invited as a guest on Ibrashi’s show. He slammed the
> whole incident as “nonsense” whose purpose was to “mess with the honor
> of Muslims.”
>
> “There is no more melk al-yameen nowadays. It is over. This woman who
> enslaved herself to that man should repent to God as should the man. A
> free person cannot enslave himself, according to Shariah (Islamic law).”
>
> Naggar explained that the term “melk al-yameen means slavery and there
> is no slavery today. Enslaving a woman means that her children will be
> slaves as well, and this means that we will have a new generation of
> slaves. Islam put an end to slavery.”
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>


------------------------------------

Post message: [email protected]
Subscribe   :  [email protected]
Unsubscribe :  [email protected]
List owner  :  [email protected]
Homepage    :  http://proletar.8m.com/Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Kirim email ke