Nikah (Sexual Consummation of Marriage): Difference between revisions
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This page references scholarly, reliable sources that define or describe the [[Arabic]] term '''nikah''' (or the root n-k-h) as meaning "sexual intercourse", or the contract of ''sexual intercourse'', or [[marriage]] as a contract for ''sexual intercourse'' (for the payment received by the bride for nikah, see [[Purpose of the Mahr]]). | |||
==Definitions== | ==Definitions== | ||
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El Alami, Dawoud. Marriage Contract in Islamic Law. London: Graham & Trotman, 1992. | El Alami, Dawoud. Marriage Contract in Islamic Law. London: Graham & Trotman, 1992. | ||
Maghniyyah, Muhammad Jawad. Marriage According to Five Schools of Islamic Law. Tehran: Department of Transliteration and Publication, Islamic Culture and Relations Organization, 1997.}} | Maghniyyah, Muhammad Jawad. Marriage According to Five Schools of Islamic Law. Tehran: Department of Transliteration and Publication, Islamic Culture and Relations Organization, 1997.}} | ||
===J S Schacht=== | ===J S Schacht=== | ||
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{{Quote|Tove Stang Dahl, The Muslim family: a study of women's rights in Islam, Scandinavian University Press, 1997, p. 52|The legitimate form of sexuality is therefore an outcome of marriage - nikah ('''the concept nikah means both marriage and sexual intercourse''').}} | {{Quote|Tove Stang Dahl, The Muslim family: a study of women's rights in Islam, Scandinavian University Press, 1997, p. 52|The legitimate form of sexuality is therefore an outcome of marriage - nikah ('''the concept nikah means both marriage and sexual intercourse''').}} | ||
===Voices of Islam=== | |||
====Nargis Virani: Voices of life: family, home, and society==== | |||
{{Quote|Vincent J. Cornell (2007), Voices of life: family, home, and society, p. 59 (Marriage in Islam by Nargis Virani).|Allowable sexual relations in the Qur’an are designated by the term '''nikah, which connotes both marriage and intercourse''' (Qur’an 2:221, 230, 232, 235, 237; 4:3, 6, 22, 25, 127; 24:3, 23, 33, 60; 28:27; 33:49, 50, 53). Marriage prevents sexual frustration and the temptation to sin (Qur’an 24:32).}} | |||
{{Quote|Vincent J. Cornell (2007), Voices of life: family, home, and society, p. 59 (Marriage in Islam by Nargis Virani).|TERMS FOR MARRIAGE IN ISLAM | |||
Among Muslims, the most commonly used term for marriage is '''nikah, which literally means “sexual intercourse.”''' As a legal term, nikah denotes the situation resulting from a contract entered into by a Muslim man and a Muslim woman, which legitimizes cohabitation and sexual intercourse between the signers of the contract in the eyes of God and their co-religionists.}} | |||
{{Quote|Vincent J. Cornell (2007), Voices of life: family, home, and society, p. 60 (Marriage in Islam by Nargis Virani).|In Muslim countries where Arabic language and culture predominate, '''marriage is referred to as zawaj, literally, “pairing.”'''}} | |||
====Ziba Mir-Hosseini: Voices of Change==== | |||
{{Quote|Vincent J. Cornell (2007), Vol. 5, Voices of Change, pp. 85-113 (Islam and Gender Justice, by Ziba Mir-Hosseini).|Marriage, as defined by classical jurists, is '''a contract of exchange whose prime purpose is to render sexual relations between a man and a woman licit'''. Patterned after the contract of sale, which served as a model for most contracts in Islamic jurisprudence, it has three essential elements: the offer (ijab) by the woman or her guardian (wali), the acceptance (qabul) by the man, and the payment of dower (mahr), a sum of money or any valuable that the husband pays or undertakes to pay to the bride before or after consummation.<BR><BR>The marriage contract is called '''‘aqd al-nikah (literally ‘contract of coitus’)'''. In discussing its legal structure and effects, classical jurists often used the analogy of '''the contract of sale''' and alluded to parallels between the status of wives and female slaves, to whose sexual services husbands/owners were entitled, and who were deprived of freedom of movement.}} | |||
===Sexuality in Islam=== | ===Sexuality in Islam=== | ||
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===Women and international human rights law=== | ===Women and international human rights law=== | ||
{{Quote|Kelly Dawn Askin, Dorean M. Koenig, Women and international human rights law: vol.3, Transnational Pub, 2008|In the medieval treatises, marriage was known as nikah, referring to licit sexual intercourse, and the marriage contract was understood as an agreement permitting the husband sexual access to the wife in return for his commitment to pay ...}} | {{Quote|Kelly Dawn Askin, Dorean M. Koenig, Women and international human rights law: vol.3, Transnational Pub, 2008|In the medieval treatises, marriage was '''known as nikah, referring to licit sexual intercourse''', and the marriage contract was understood as an agreement permitting the husband sexual access to the wife in return for his commitment to pay ...}} | ||
===Studies in Modern Islamic Law and Jurisprudence=== | ===Studies in Modern Islamic Law and Jurisprudence=== | ||
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{{Quote|Oussama Arabi, Studies in Modern Islamic Law and Jurisprudence, BRILL, 2001, p. 150 |In the Muslim normative universe, love and sexual emotions between the sexes ought to acquire a lawful form, a fact which is echoed '''in Islamic law where legal sexual intercourse (nikah)''' could only be in the form of a contract (‘aqd): “Legal union according to the Law is the contract of marriage (al-nikah fi’l shar’ ‘aqd al-tizwij). Sexual intercourse (wat’), without a contract, is illegal intercourse (safah, laysa bi-nikah).}} | {{Quote|Oussama Arabi, Studies in Modern Islamic Law and Jurisprudence, BRILL, 2001, p. 150 |In the Muslim normative universe, love and sexual emotions between the sexes ought to acquire a lawful form, a fact which is echoed '''in Islamic law where legal sexual intercourse (nikah)''' could only be in the form of a contract (‘aqd): “Legal union according to the Law is the contract of marriage (al-nikah fi’l shar’ ‘aqd al-tizwij). Sexual intercourse (wat’), without a contract, is illegal intercourse (safah, laysa bi-nikah).}} | ||
===Fundamentals of | ===Fundamentals of [[Ijtihad]]=== | ||
{{Quote|Muhammad Taqi Amini, Fundamentals of Ijtehad (I.A.D. religio-philosophy), Idarah-i Adabiyat-i Delli, 1980|[...] Imam Abu Hanipha [...] argues that the verse uses the word Nikah and it literally means the ‘union’ therefore it means ‘sexual intercourse’ [...]}} | {{Quote|Muhammad Taqi Amini, Fundamentals of Ijtehad (I.A.D. religio-philosophy), Idarah-i Adabiyat-i Delli, 1980|[...] Imam Abu Hanipha [...] argues that the verse uses the word Nikah and it literally means the ‘union’ therefore it means ‘sexual intercourse’ [...]}} | ||
===Muhaqqiq al-Hilli, the renowned thirteenth-century Shi'ite jurist=== | |||
{{Quote|Hilli (1985: 428). Quoted by Ziba Mir-Hosseini in volume five of Voices of Islam, pp. 85-113|Marriage etymologically is uniting one thing with another thing; it is also said to mean '''coitus and to mean sexual intercourse''' … it has been said that it is '''a contract whose object is that of dominion over the vagina''', without the right of its possession. It has also been said that it is a verbal contract that first establishes the right to sexual intercourse, that is to say: it is not like buying a female slave when the man acquires the right of intercourse as a consequence of the possession of the slave.}} | |||
===Muslim women in law and society: annotated translation of al-Tahir al Haddad al-Ṭāhir Ḥaddād=== | ===Muslim women in law and society: annotated translation of al-Tahir al Haddad al-Ṭāhir Ḥaddād=== | ||
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{{Quote|Harald Motzki, Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾan: Vol 3, Brill, 2003, p. 276|Aims of marriage | {{Quote|Harald Motzki, Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾan: Vol 3, Brill, 2003, p. 276|Aims of marriage | ||
(1) In the Qurʾān, marriage is, first of all, the favored institution for legitimate sexual intercourse between a man and woman...}} | (1) In the Qurʾān, marriage is, first of all, the favored '''institution for legitimate sexual intercourse''' between a man and woman...}} | ||
===Sidi Khalil, the prominent fourteenth-century Sunni Maliki jurist=== | |||
{{Quote|Ruxton (1916: 106). Quoted by Ziba Mir-Hosseini in volume five of Voices of Islam, pp. 85-113|When a woman marries, she sells a part of her person. In the market one buys merchandise, '''in marriage the husband buys the genital ''arvum mulieris'''''. As in any other bargain and sale, only useful and ritually clean objects may be given in dower.}} | |||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
*[[ | *[[Glossary of Islamic Terms]] | ||
==External Links== | ==External Links== | ||
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*[{{Reference archive|1=http://inthenameofallah.org/Marriage+in+Islam+OR+Nikah.html|2=2012-07-19}} Marriage in Islam/ Nikah] | *[{{Reference archive|1=http://inthenameofallah.org/Marriage+in+Islam+OR+Nikah.html|2=2012-07-19}} Marriage in Islam/ Nikah] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Women]] | ||
[[Category:Shariah (Islamic Law)]] | |||
[[Category:Marriage]] | |||
[[Category:Sex]] | |||
[[Category:Criticism of Islam]] | |||
[[Category:Pre-Islamic Arabia]] |
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This page references scholarly, reliable sources that define or describe the Arabic term nikah (or the root n-k-h) as meaning "sexual intercourse", or the contract of sexual intercourse, or marriage as a contract for sexual intercourse (for the payment received by the bride for nikah, see Purpose of the Mahr).
Definitions
Francis J. Steingass
English-Arabic Dictionary: For the Use of Both Travellers and Students
“MARRIAGE ziwaj; zija-t; nikah. –(demand in marriage) hatab, yahtub”
“MARRY (take in marriage) tazawwaj, yatazawwaj; ta’ahhal, yata’ahhal. –(given in marriage) zawwaj, yuzawwij.”A comprehensive Persian-English dictionary
Note that the American Heritage Dictionary defines Venery as "1. Indulgence in or pursuit of sexual activity. 2. The act of sexual intercourse."
A Dictionary of Andalusi Arabic
An English and Arabic Dictionary
Arabic-English dictionary for the use of students
“To marry a. o. to."
"To ally by marriage."
"Marriage-contract; formula of marriage."
"Marriage. Marriage-contract."
"Conjugal intercourse."
"Polygamist."
"Married (woman)."
"Women, wives.”"
The New Encyclopedia of Islam
Literally the act of sexual intercourse, nikah is the term by which marriage is referred to in the Qur'an. Islamic law defines nikah as a civil contract whose main function is to render sexual relations between a man and woman licit. Any sexual relations outside the nikah contract constitute the crime of zina (illicit sexual relations) and are subject to punishment. In practice, nikah is enacted in a ceremony intertwined with religious symbolism and rituals such as the recitation of al-Fatiha, the first verse of the Qur'an, usually performed by religious functionaries, although Islamic law does not positively prescribe any service. See also Marriage.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bousquet, Georges Henry. "La Conception du Nikah selon les Docteurs de la Loi Muslamane." Revue Algerienne. (1948): 63-74. El Alami, Dawoud. Marriage Contract in Islamic Law. London: Graham & Trotman, 1992.
Maghniyyah, Muhammad Jawad. Marriage According to Five Schools of Islamic Law. Tehran: Department of Transliteration and Publication, Islamic Culture and Relations Organization, 1997.J S Schacht
First Encyclopaedia of Islam
Marriage on trial: Islamic family law in Iran and Morocco
Islam, A concise introduction
Muslim women in changing perspective
Sharia – The Islamic Law
Sexual ethics and Islam: feminist reflections on the Qur’an, hadith, and jurisprudence
The Nigerian Legal System: Public Law
The Muslim family: a study of women's rights in Islam
Voices of Islam
Nargis Virani: Voices of life: family, home, and society
Ziba Mir-Hosseini: Voices of Change
The marriage contract is called ‘aqd al-nikah (literally ‘contract of coitus’). In discussing its legal structure and effects, classical jurists often used the analogy of the contract of sale and alluded to parallels between the status of wives and female slaves, to whose sexual services husbands/owners were entitled, and who were deprived of freedom of movement.
Sexuality in Islam
Women and international human rights law
Studies in Modern Islamic Law and Jurisprudence
Fundamentals of Ijtihad
Muhaqqiq al-Hilli, the renowned thirteenth-century Shi'ite jurist
Muslim women in law and society: annotated translation of al-Tahir al Haddad al-Ṭāhir Ḥaddād
The Risala of 'Abdullah ibn Abi Zayd al-Qayrawani (310/922 - 386/996) A Treatise on Maliki Fiqh
Law of desire: temporary marriage in Shi'i Iran
“[…] Hilli…writes that nikah is a “sort of ownership” and that it is “similar to the [contract of] sale,” on the other hand he emphasizes that “the purpose of the exchange of the vagina, mu’avizih-i buz’, is reproduction and recreation, and not just financial exchange” […]
“The ambivalence regarding classification of the definition of the contract of marriage is underscored by the confusion surrounding the definition of the term nikah itself. Emphasizing its literal meaning, some have interpreted it as intercourse, vaty.4 Others, stressing its contractual and obligational aspects, have referred to it as an ‘aqd, a contract. Citing Sahib-I Javahir, Murata writes: “For the Sunnis nikah means intercourse, and since marriage implies intercourse, then the word nikah has been used in the contract” (1974, 2). In contrast, Murata continues, Raghib maintains, “Intercourse is not the meaning of nikah because of its shamefulness, qubh, but that it is used as an analogy for that [intercourse]. Therefore the real meaning of nikah is ‘aqd, contract” (see also Jabiri-Arablu 1983, 174-75; Farah 1984, 14; “Nikah” 1927, 912).”
[…] “Noting the diversity of opinions, Langarudi, a contemporary Iranian Shi’i scholar […] argues [...] “intercourse is the raison d’etre of marriage” (5)
“Likewise, Imami defines nikah as a “legal relationship, created between a man and a woman as a result of a contract that permits them to enjoy each other sexually” (1971, 4:268)”Islamic Marriage (Nikaah) Handbook for Young Muslims, Muslim Wedding and Marriage Guide
In Islam, marriage is not restricted to a platonic relationship between husband and wife, nor is it solely for procreation. The Islamic term for marriage, "Nikah" literally means sexual intercourse. So why has Islam provided extensive rules and regulation regarding sex? This was because Islam has fully understood that sexual instincts cannot and must not be repressed. They can only be regulated for the well being of human beings in this life and for their success in the hereafter.
Essays in Arabic literary biography
Al-Nafzawi (fl. ca 1380 – 1440) by Lois A Giffen from the University of Utah.