Her Guardians Refused To Arrange Her Marriage, So The Local Imam Did The Marriage Contract Without Documentation
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my question is about my marriage as to whether it is valid or not. I married my
husband two years ago I had no wali and no one was willing to be a part of mine
and his marriage their reason for me not to marry him was that he is already
married and has children and he is a different caste of Muslim. I married him by
speaking to the imam of our local mosques explained the situation to him and he
provided us with the witnesses and read our Nikaah however the Imam didnt have
the form we needed for a Nikaah namah. I married my husband out of fear of
committing a sin therefore I tried my best to arrange our marriage as quick as I
could.
My question is this:
1. Is my marriage valid?
2. If my marriage isnt valid what can I do to rectify this?
3. I don't have a nikaah namah can our nikaah be read again?
4. During this new nikaah being read can I put conditions down on our marriage.
Praise be to Allah
Firstly:
In order for a marriage to be valid it is stipulated that it be done by the
woman's guardian or his proxy, because the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah
be upon him) said: "There can be no marriage contract except with a guardian."
Narrated by Abu Dawood (2085), at-Tirmidhi (1101) and Ibn Maajah (1881) from the
hadith of Abu Moosa al-Ash'ari; classed as saheeh by al-Albaani in Saheeh
at-Tirmidhi.
The woman's guardian is her father, then his father (her grandfather), then her
son, then his son (her grandson – if she has a son), then her full brother, then
her brother through her father only, then her brothers' sons, then paternal
uncles, then their sons, then the father's paternal uncles, then the ruler. See:
al-Mughni (9/355).
This is the view of the majority of fuqaha', except the Hanafis who regard it as
permissible for a woman to arrange her own marriage without a guardian.
If a woman gets married without a guardian, or the imam of the mosque does her
marriage contract even though she has a guardian, then there is a difference of
opinion among the fuqaha' concerning such a marriage. If it happens, it is not
to be annulled, in light of the difference of scholarly opinion concerning that.
In many Muslim countries – including your country, Pakistan – the shar'i
judicial system is based on the madhhab of Imam Abu Haneefah (may Allah have
mercy on him), in which a woman's marriage without a guardian is regarded as
valid.
See the answer to question no. 173946
Secondly:
If the one who proposes marriage to you is compatible with you in terms of
religious commitment and character, and you accept him, then your guardian does
not have the right to refuse to give you in marriage to him, and if he refuses
then he is to be regarded as wilfully preventing your marriage (for no valid
reason), and guardianship passes to the next in line (among the relatives
mentioned above). If all of them refuse, then your marriage may be arranged by
the Islamic qaadi (judge) or one who is acting in his stead, such as the person
in charge of an Islamic centre.
Shaykh Ibn 'Uthaymeen (may Allah have mercy on him) said:
If the guardian refuses to arrange the marriage of a woman to a suitor who is
good in terms of religious commitment and character, then guardianship passes to
the next in line of male relatives on the father's side, the closest then the
next closest. If they refuse to arrange the marriage, as often happens, then
guardianship passes to the Islamic judge, and the Islamic judge may do the
marriage contract for the woman. If the case reaches him and he knows that her
guardians have refused to arrange her marriage, then he must do her marriage
contract, because he is in a position of general guardianship, so long as the
specific guardianship has not been carried out properly.
End quote from Fataawa Islamiyyah (3/148).
Shaykh Ibn Baaz (may Allah have mercy on him) said:
What the guardian must do is fear Allah and not wilfully prevent the woman's
marriage (for no valid reason); he should try hard to make marriage easy for
her. If a good and compatible suitor proposes to her, the guardian must be
easy-going with regard to the matter and should try hard to protect the chastity
of the woman under his guardianship and make it easy for her to get married, and
he should not be stubborn or make unreasonable demands with regard to the mahr
or the wedding feast and so on.
This is what he must do, and if he prevents her from getting married or makes
unreasonable demands in these matters, then she may refer the matter to the
court, if there is an Islamic court in her country, so that the court may
examine the case, and rebuke the guardian. But if the woman is living in a
country where she has no guardian, brother, father, or cousin, then the ruler
takes the place of the guardian, and her guardian is the ruler, because the
Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: "The ruler is the
guardian of the one who has no guardian." So the ruler takes the place of her
guardian and becomes her guardian, and he may arrange her marriage or appoint
someone to do so.
But if she is living in a country where there is no Muslim ruler or Muslim judge
or guardian, as in the case of Muslim minorities in the lands of the
disbelievers, then the head of the Islamic centre may arrange a marriage, if
they have an Islamic centre, because he is like the ruler in their case. The
head of the Islamic centre should examine her situation and arrange her marriage
to a good and compatible man, if she has no guardians and there is no Islamic
judge (qaadi).
If her guardian is far away, then he may be requested to appoint a proxy.
If his whereabouts are not known, then the next closest guardian may take his
place; the one who is next in line to him may take his place.
If she has no guardian except the one who is absent and whose whereabouts are
unknown, then the ruler may take his place.
End quote from Fataawa Noor 'ala ad-Darb by Shaykh Ibn Baaz (20/200)
Based on that, if your guardians all refused to arrange a marriage, and the imam
of the local mosque arranged your marriage and did your marriage contract, then
the marriage is valid, as mentioned above.
Thirdly:
If the proposal and acceptance were done in the presence of two witnesses, the
marriage is valid, even if it was not written down on the appropriate form or
was not recorded officially.
But documentation is essential nowadays, because dishonesty is becoming
widespread and because people tamper with the rights of others, as has been
explained previously in the answer to question no. 129851.
Therefore you must hasten to document this marriage officially.
And Allah knows best.
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