A New
Muslimah Has Married A Muslim Man Without Her Family's
Knowledge
Islamic Rulings -
Living Shariah Verdicts
Islamic Questions & AnswersI am a Chinese girl married to a Lebanese
Muslim man. The main reason for this is that I have
become Muslim… we got married in the Islamic manner,
but this marriage was done without the knowledge of
our families, because of some difficult circumstances.
Do you think that this is haraam? I mean, is it
against the Qur'aan?.
Praise be to Allaah.
The evidence from the Qur'aan and Sunnah indicates
that a woman should not get married without a wali
(guardian) to look after her and protect her
interests, lest she be deceived by the devils among
men. Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning):
"Wed them with the permission of their own folk
(guardians, Awliyaa' or masters)"
[al-Nisa' 4:25]
It was narrated from Abu Moosa al-Ash'ari that the
Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him)
said: "There is no (valid) marriage without a wali
(guardian)." Narrated by the five and classed as
saheeh by Ibn al-Madeeni.
Al-Tirmidhi said: This is the correct view concerning
this issue, based on the hadeeth of the Prophet (peace
and blessings of Allaah be upon him), "There is no
marriage without a wali (guardian)," according to the
scholars among the companions of the Messenger of
Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him),
such as ‘Umar ibn al-Khattaab, ‘Ali ibn Abi Taalib,
‘Abd-Allaah ibn ‘Abbaas, Abu Hurayrah and others.
If one of your close male relatives is a Muslim, such
as your father, brother, uncle or cousin, then he is
your wali with regard to marriage, and your marriage
is not valid without his permission and consent. He
should do the marriage contract for you himself or
appoint someone to do it on his behalf.
If all your close male relatives are non-Muslims, then
a kaafir cannot be the wali (guardian) of a Muslim.
Ibn Qudaamah said: With regard to a kaafir, he cannot
be the wali of a Muslim in any situation, according to
scholarly consensus.
Ibn al-Mundhir said: Those from whom we acquired
knowledge are unanimously agreed on that.
Imam Ahmad said: We have heard that ‘Ali allowed a
marriage done by a brother, but he rejected a marriage
done by a father who was a Christian. Al-Mughni,
7/356.
And a Muslim cannot be a guardian for the marriage of
his kaafir children's marriage. Shaykh al-Islam Ibn
Taymiyah was asked about a man who had become Muslim;
could he still be a wali for his children who were
people of the Book?
He replied: He cannot be their guardian with regard to
marriage, or with regard to inheritance. A Muslim
cannot do the marriage contract for a kaafir woman,
whether she is his daughter or anyone else. And a
kaafir cannot inherit from a Muslim or a Muslim from a
kaafir. This is the view of the four imams and their
companions among the earlier and later generations.
Allaah has severed the ties of guardianship between
believers and disbelievers in His Book, and has
decreed that they should have nothing to do with one
another, and that the ties of wilaayah (guardianship)
exist among the believers. (32/35) But a Muslim woman
should tell her family about that and seek their
approval, so that this will help to open their hearts
to Islam.
The question here is: what should a Muslim woman who
does not have a Muslim wali do?
The answer is:
A Muslim who is in a position of authority or status
should do the marriage contract for her, such as the
head of an Islamic centre, the imam of a mosque, or a
scholar. If she cannot find anyone like this, then she
should appoint a Muslim man of good character to do
the marriage contract for her.
Shaykh al-Islam said: In the case of a woman who does
not have a wali among her relatives, if there is in
her locality a representative of the ruler or the
chief of the village, or a leader who is obeyed, then
he can do the marriage contract for her with her
permission. (32/35).
Ibn Qudaamah said:
If a woman does not have a wali or a ruler, then there
is a report narrated from Ahmad which indicates that a
man of good character may do the marriage contract for
her with her permission. (7/352).
Al-Juwayni said: If she does not have a wali present,
and there is no (Muslim) ruler, then we know
definitively that closing the door of marriage is
impossible in sharee'ah, and whoever has any doubt
about that does not have a proper understanding of
sharee'ah. To suggest that the door of marriage may be
closed is as bad as suggesting that people may be
prevented from earning a living. Al-Ghayaathi 388.
Then he stated that the ones who should do that (do
marriage contracts for women who have no wali) are the
scholars.
Conclusion:
If the marriage contract was done in this manner, and
the imam of an Islamic Centre in your country or a
Muslim man of good character did the marriage, then
your marriage is valid. But if you did the marriage
yourself (with no wali) then you have to go with your
husband to the nearest Islamic centre and repeat the
nikaah (marriage contract), and let the head of the
centre, for example, be your wali in marriage.
With regard to your husband, he does not have to tell
his family, because there is no stipulation that the
husband should have a wali.
And Allaah knows best.
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