Books That Speak About The Rulings On Marriage, Women, And Ways Of Making The Marriage Successful
Islamic Rulings -
Living Shariah Verdicts
Islamic Questions & Answers
I got married recently, and I previously asked you about my wish to have only
two children, for example. One month ago my wife had her first baby by
caesarean. She developed gestational diabetes during pregnancy, which had a
great impact on her food and diet, and she needed to take insulin daily for
three months. When I previously asked you about not wanting to have more
children in present-day circumstances, in which eighty percent of children have
bad attitudes and bad upbringings, because of society and satellite channels,
although all the hadiths speak of the virtue of having many children, you told
me: I cannot be certain that they will be bad. But in fact you gave me a
guarantee that they would not be evildoers! If we understood the hadiths about
having lots of children as you explain them, then there would be twenty of
children in every household. Were the households of the Sahaabah and Taabi'een
like that? I know that the fatwas say that it is permissible to delay a second
pregnancy for a few years, such as in the circumstances mentioned, but I want a
solution that an ordinary wife could cope with. Am I to understand that it is
obligatory to have a lot of children, and for the wife to spend nine months
being pregnant, a year breastfeeding, another nine months pregnant, another year
breastfeeding, and so on, until she has twenty children throughout her life,
because if we stop having children when we have ten children, then the fatwas
will not accept this, so long as it does not harm the mother? We all know how
difficult it is to raise children properly nowadays. Doesn't the wife have the
right to be able to give a proper upbringing to two or three children only for
fifteen years of the marriage, for example? Or is it obligatory for her to
produce ten children during that time? I am not objecting to the texts, but I
want to understand the hadiths in a logical manner. Why didn't the Sahaabah and
Taabi'een have twenty children from one wife? Isn't it unjust towards the wife
to make her a child-producing and breastfeeding machine, when it is possible for
her to get pregnant every year? How can she be free to teach the children, keep
them clean, look after them and tend to them if they get sick? Will the Prophet
be proud of our children on the Day of Resurrection, even if their religious
commitment is not sound?
Praise be to Allah
We hope that our brother will be certain that not one of the scholars said that
it is obligatory for a couple to produce children, and that if they do not
produce twenty children then they are sinning and deserve to be punished by
Allah!
Similarly, not one of the earlier or contemporary scholars – as far as we know –
has said that it is the fate of the wife to have a baby and breastfeed every
single year, or that if the couple choose to delay pregnancy and having
children, that is haraam.
We mention these facts to you, and ward off doubts based on illusion, so that we
can introduce the Islamic ruling, first of all, and so as to highlight that
everything that you mentioned in your question is not an argument that has any
sound basis, because the Islamic ruling is far removed from what you mentioned
in your question. In fact the Islamic evidence indicates that it is permissible
to delay having children. As Jaabir ibn 'Abdullah (may Allah be pleased with
said): "We used to engage in 'azl [coitus interruptus, a form of contraception]
at the time when the Qur'an was being revealed. Narrated by al-Bukhaari (5208)
and Muslim (1440). 'Azl (coitus interruptus) means ejaculating outside the
woman's vagina in order to avoid pregnancy.
Shaykh Ibn Baaz (may Allah have mercy on him) quoted this hadith as evidence for
it being permissible to space having children in order to give them a proper
Islamic upbringing, when he said:
If a woman has a lot of children, and it is difficult for her to give them a
proper Islamic upbringing because they are so many, then there is nothing wrong
with her taking something to space her pregnancies in order to achieve this
important purpose, so that pregnancy will not adversely affect her or her
children, as Allah has permitted 'azl for this and similar purposes.
End quote from Fataawa Noor 'ala ad-Darb by Ibn Baaz ed. by ash-Shuway'ir
(21/394)
Shaykh Ibn 'Uthaymeen (may Allah have mercy on him) said:
Taking contraceptive measures is permissible in principle, because the Sahaabah
(may Allah be pleased with them) used the method of 'azl (coitus interruptus)
during the time of the Messenger (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him), and
he did not forbid them to do that. But it is contrary to what is preferable,
because having a lot of children is something that is prescribed and is
desirable.
End quote from Fataawa Noor 'ala ad-Darb by al-'Uthaymeen (22/2)
On our website we have previously stated that it is encouraged to have a lot of
righteous children, in fatwa no. 13492.
So you may rest assured that if you and your wife decide to delay having
children, as you mentioned in your question, that is not regarded as a sin or
disobedience in principle, unless there are other considerations that have an
impact on this individual or personal choice, which may be dictated by
present-day circumstances:
Firstly:
If the decision to delay having children is widespread, at the societal,
national or ummah-wide level, then in this case it becomes a destructive and
negative choice, and in that case the ruling is that it is not allowed, because
it has moved from being a permissible and natural matter to one that is imposed
from without and will lead to negative consequences, and is therefore
blameworthy.
See: 119955
Secondly:
If the motive for delaying having children is fear for their provision and
livelihood, then this reflects a serious doubt concerning our belief in the will
and decree of Allah and our belief in the abundant provision of Allah and that
He will help those who strive to earn a living in the land. It reflects an
unjustified fear of the future and a failure to produce and strive. In that case
it is blameworthy and is not allowed, and there are clear fatwas that speak of
it.
This issue has been covered in fatwas no. 10033 and 127170
Thirdly:
If the reason for not having children is arguments and conflict between the
spouses, where one of them does not want children and the other one does, then
the one who is refusing does not have the right to do so, because having
children is a right of both spouses, and it is not permissible for one of them
to refuse with no excuse or good reason.
This issue has been covered in fatwa no. 190396
Fourthly:
If the motive for delaying having children, or ceasing to do so, is to follow
the cultural norms of non-Muslims and imitate them blindly, out of admiration
for their culture and infatuation with their way of life, then undoubtedly the
ruling in this case is that it is not allowed. One of the great principles of
Islamic teaching is that the individual Muslim should be independent in his
thinking and think within the framework of Islamic teaching; he should weigh up
pros and cons objectively in the light of the circumstances that he lives in,
and base his decisions on the Islamic principles in which he believes and with
which he grew up, far removed from the illusionary psychological influences that
are imposed by the media that represents the corporate powers that exist today,
and should free himself from feelings of inferiority in the face of what he sees
of the attitudes, customs and actions of the disbelieving nations.
Fifthly:
If the means of delaying having children is medicine or surgical procedures that
will prevent having children altogether (sterilisation), so that the woman or
her husband will lose the ability to ever have children, then this is a serious
transgression and is ingratitude for the blessing of Allah that He has bestowed
upon His slaves, and it is destruction of a great blessing that Allah has
instilled and created in them on the basis of great wisdom.
The Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) forbade such things. This
is the case concerning which there is no difference of opinion among the
scholars that it is prohibited, for it is the undermining of one of the most
important aims of sharee'ah and a blatant violation of one of the five
necessities that Islam came to protect, which are: religious commitment, life,
honour, wealth, and offspring.
See: 111969
These five cases are what the scholars refer to when they speak about spacing or
limiting the number of children. They are the reason why they spoke in strict
terms in many cases, so that no one would take undue advantage of the fatwas
which say that contraception is permissible.
That is why we have mentioned these five cases here, so as to draw attention to
them. In any other case, where a couple take an individual decision on the basis
of a genuine need, there is no blame on them for that.
See: 7205, 50326 and 118115.
Anyone who reflects on the statement of the International Islamic Fiqh Council
no. 39 (1/5), which has to do with family planning, will clearly understand that
the way in which it is drafted is very careful and clear, as we have explained
above. It says in the statement:
The session of the Islamic Fiqh Council held during its fifth conference in
Kuwait, 1-6 Jumaada al-Aakhir 1409 AH/10-15 December 1988 AH.
After studying the research papers presented by council members and experts on
the topic of family planning, and listening to the discussion that took place on
the topic,
And based on the fact that one of the aims of marriage according to Islamic
teaching is to produce children and preserve the human race, and that it is not
permissible to undermine this aim, because undermining it is contrary to the
texts of Islam and their teachings which call for having a lot of offspring,
protecting them and caring for them because protecting offspring is one of the
five holistic principles that are promoted by Islamic teaching,
The council determined the following:
Firstly: it is not permissible to promulgate laws restricting the freedom of
couples to have children.
Secondly: it is prohibited to completely eradicate the ability to have children
in the case of either the man or the woman, which is known as sterilisation, so
long as there is no necessary reason, according to Islamic standards, for doing
so.
Thirdly: it is permissible to use temporary methods of birth control for the
purpose of spacing pregnancies, or preventing pregnancy for a specific length of
time, if there is a valid reason, according to Islamic teachings, for doing so,
according to what a couple decide on the basis of mutual consultation and
consent, on condition that this does not lead to any harm and that the method
used is Islamically permissible and does not cause harm to any existing
pregnancy. End quote.