Jamal A. Badawi provides
a brief and authentic exposition of the teachings of Islam regarding
women.
PREFACE
Family, society and
ultimately the whole of mankind is treated by Islam on an ethical
basis. Differentiation in sex is neither a credit nor a drawback
for the sexes. Therefore, when we talk about status of woman in
Islam it should not lead us to think that Islam has no specific
guidelines, limitations, responsibilities and obligations for men.
What makes one valuable and respectable in the eyes of Allah, the
Creator of mankind and the universe, is neither one's prosperity,
position, intelligence, physical strength nor beauty, but only one's
Allah-consciousness and awareness (taqwa). However, since in the
Western culture and in cultures influenced by it, there exists a
disparity between men and women there is more need for stating Islam's
position on important issues in a clear way.
I. INTRODUCTION
The status of women
in society is neither a new issue nor is it a fully settled one.
The position of Islam
on this issue has been among the subjects presented to the Western
reader with the least objectivity.
This paper is intended
to provide a brief and authentic exposition of what Islam stands
for in this regard. The teachings of Islam are based essentially
on the Qur'an (God's revelation) and Hadeeth (elaboration by Prophet
Muhammad).
The Qur'an and the Hadeeth,
properly and unbiasedly understood, provide the basic source of
authentication for any position or view which is attributed to Islam.
The paper starts with
a brief survey of the status of women in the pre-Islamic era. It
then focuses on these major questions: What is the position of Islam
regarding the status of woman in society? How similar or different
is that position from "the spirit of the time," which
was dominant when Islam was revealed? How would this compare with
the "rights" which were finally gained by woman in recent
decades?
II. HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES
One major objective
of this paper is to provide a fair evaluation of what Islam contributed
(or failed to contribute) toward the restoration of woman's dignity
and rights. In order to achieve this objective, it may be useful
to review briefly how women were treated in general in previous
civilizations and religions, especially those which preceded Islam
(Pre-610 C.E.). Part of the information provided here, however,
describes the status of woman as late as the nineteenth century,
more than twelve centuries after Islam.
Women in Ancient Civilization
Describing the status
of the Indian woman, Encyclopedia Britannica states:
In India, subjection
was a cardinal principle. Day and night must women be held by
their protectors in a state of dependence says Manu. The rule
of inheritance was agnatic, that is descent traced through males
to the exclusion of females.
In Hindu scriptures,
the description of a good wife is as follows: "a woman whose
mind, speech and body are kept in subjection, acquires high renown
in this world, and, in the next, the same abode with her husband."
In Athens, women were
not better off than either the Indian or the Roman women.
"Athenian women
were always minors, subject to some male - to their father, to their
brother, or to some of their male kin.
Her consent in marriage
was not generally thought to be necessary and "she was obliged
to submit to the wishes of her parents, and receive from them her
husband and her lord, even though he were stranger to her."
A Roman wife was described
by an historian as: "a babe, a minor, a ward, a person incapable
of doing or acting anything according to her own individual taste,
a person continually under the tutelage and guardianship of her
husband."
In the Encyclopedia
Britannica, we find a summary of the legal status of women in the
Roman civilization:
In Roman Law a woman
was even in historic times completely dependent. If married she
and her property passed into the power of her husband . . . the
wife was the purchased property of her husband, and like a slave
acquired only for his benefit. A woman could not exercise any
civil or public office . could not be a witness, surety, tutor,
or curator; she could not adopt or be adopted, or make will or
contract. Among the Scandinavian races women were:
under perpetual tutelage,
whether married or unmarried. As late as the Code of Christian
V, at the end of the 17th Century, it was enacted that if a woman
married without the consent of her tutor he might have, if he
wished, administration and usufruct of her goods during her life.
According to the English
Common Law:
...all real property
which a wife held at the time of a marriage became a possession
of her husband. He was entitled to the rent from the land and
to any profit which might be made from operating the estate during
the joint life of the spouses. As time passed, the English courts
devised means to forbid a husband's transferring real property
without the consent of his wife, but he still retained the right
to manage it and to receive the money which it produced. As to
a wife's personal property, the husband's power was complete.
He had the right to spend it as he saw fit.
Only by the late nineteenth
Century did the situation start to improve. "By a series of
acts starting with the Married women's Property Act in 1870, amended
in 1882 and 1887, married women achieved the right to own property
and to enter contracts on a par with spinsters, widows, and divorcees."
As late as the Nineteenth Century an authority in ancient law, Sir
Henry Maine, wrote: "No society which preserves any tincture
of Christian institutions is likely to restore to married women
the personal liberty conferred on them by the Middle Roman Law."
In his essay The Subjection
of Women, John Stuart Mill wrote:
We are continually
told that civilization and Christianity have restored to the woman
her just rights. Meanwhile the wife is the actual bondservant
of her husband; no less so, as far as the legal obligation goes,
than slaves commonly so called.
Before moving on to
the Qur'anic decrees concerning the status of woman, a few Biblical
decrees may shed more light on the subject, thus providing a better
basis for an impartial evaluation. In the Mosaic Law, the wife was
betrothed. Explaining this concept, the Encyclopedia Biblica states:
"To betroth a wife to oneself meant simply to acquire possession
of her by payment of the purchase money; the betrothed is a girl
for whom the purchase money has been paid." From the legal
point of view, the consent of the girl was not necessary for the
validation of her marriage. "The girl's consent is unnecessary
and the need for it is nowhere suggested in the Law."
As to the right of divorce,
we read in the Encyclopedia Biblica: "The woman being man's
property, his right to divorce her follows as a matter of course."
The right to divorce was held only by man. "In the Mosaic Law
divorce was a privilege of the husband only .... "
The position of the
Christian Church until recent centuries seems to have been influenced
by both the Mosaic Law and by the streams of thought that were dominant
in its contemporary cultures. In their book, Marriage East and West,
David and Vera Mace wrote:
Let no one suppose,
either, that our Christian heritage is free of such slighting
judgments. It would be hard to find anywhere a collection of more
degrading references to the female sex than the early Church Fathers
provide. Lecky, the famous historian, speaks of (these fierce
incentives which form so conspicuous and so grotesque a portion
of the writing of the Fathers . . . woman was represented as the
door of hell, as the mother of all human ills. She should be ashamed
at the very thought that she is a woman. She should live in continual
penance on account of the curses she has brought upon the world.
She should be ashamed of her dress, for it is the memorial of
her fall. She should be especially ashamed of her beauty, for
it is the most potent instrument of the devil). One of the most
scathing of these attacks on woman is that of Tertullian: Do you
know that you are each an Eve? The sentence of God on this sex
of yours lives in this age: the guilt must of necessity live too.
You are the devil's gateway: you are the unsealer of that forbidden
tree; you are the first deserters of the divine law; you are she
who persuades him whom the devil was not valiant enough to attack.
You destroyed so easily God's image, man. On account of your desert
- that is death - even the Sop of God had to die). Not only did
the church affirm the inferior status of woman, it deprived her
of legal rights she had previously enjoyed.
III. WOMAN IN ISLAM
In the midst of the
darkness that engulfed the world, the divine revelation echoed in
the wide desert of Arabia with a fresh, noble, and universal message
to humanity: "O Mankind, keep your duty to your Lord who created
you from a single soul and from it created its mate (of same kind)
and from them twain has spread a multitude of men and women"
(Qur'an 4: 1).
A scholar who pondered
about this verse states: "It is believed that there is no text,
old or new, that deals with the humanity of the woman from all aspects
with such amazing brevity, eloquence, depth, and originality as
this divine decree."
Stressing this noble
and natural conception, them Qur'an states:
He (God) it is who
did create you from a single soul and therefrom did create his
mate, that he might dwell with her (in love)...(Qur'an 7:189)
The Creator of heavens
and earth: He has made for you pairs from among yourselves ...Qur'an
42:1 1
And Allah has given
you mates of your own nature, and has given you from your mates,
children and grandchildren, and has made provision of good things
for you. Is it then in vanity that they believe and in the grace
of God that they disbelieve? Qur'an 16:72
The rest of this paper
outlines the position of Islam regarding the status of woman in
society from its various aspects - spiritually, socially, economically
and politically.
1. The Spiritual Aspect
The Qur'an provides
clear-cut evidence that woman iscompletely equated with man in the
sight of God interms of her rights and responsibilities. The Qur'an
states:
"Every soul will
be (held) in pledge for its deeds" (Qur'an 74:38). It also
states:
...So their Lord accepted
their prayers, (saying): I will not suffer to be lost the work
of any of you whether male or female. You proceed one from another
...(Qur'an 3: 195).
Whoever works righteousness,
man or woman, and has faith, verily to him will We give a new
life that is good and pure, and We will bestow on such their reward
according to the their actions. (Qur'an 16:97, see also 4:124).
Woman according to the
Qur'an is not blamed for Adam's first mistake. Both were jointly
wrong in their disobedience to God, both repented, and both were
forgiven. (Qur'an 2:36, 7:20 - 24). In one verse in fact (20:121),
Adam specifically, was blamed.
In terms of religious
obligations, such as the Daily Prayers, Fasting, Poor-due, and Pilgrimage,
woman is no different from man. In some cases indeed, woman has
certain advantages over man. For example, the woman is exempted
from the daily prayers and from fasting during her menstrual periods
and forty days after childbirth. She is also exempted from fasting
during her pregnancy and when she is nursing her baby if there is
any threat to her health or her baby's. If the missed fasting is
obligatory (during the month of Ramadan), she can make up for the
missed days whenever she can. She does not have to make up for the
prayers missed for any of the above reasons. Although women can
and did go into the mosque during the days of the prophet and thereafter
attendance et the Friday congregational prayers is optional for
them while it is mandatory for men (on Friday).
This is clearly a tender
touch of the Islamic teachings for they are considerate of the fact
that a woman may be nursing her baby or caring for him, and thus
may be unable to go out to the mosque at the time of the prayers.
They also take into account the physiological and psychological
changes associated with her natural female functions.
2. The Social Aspect
a) As a child and an
adolescent
Despite the social acceptance
of female infanticide among some Arabian tribes, the Qur'an forbade
this custom, and considered it a crime like any other murder.
"And when the
female (infant) buried alive - is questioned, for what crime she
was killed." (Qur'an 81:8-9).
Criticizing the attitudes
of such parents who reject their female children, the Qur'an states:
When news is brought
to one of them, of (the Birth of) a female (child), his face darkens
and he is filled with inward grief! With shame does he hide himself
from his people because of the bad news he has had! Shall he retain
her on (sufferance) and contempt, or bury her in the dust? Ah!
What an evil (choice) they decide on? (Qur'an 16: 58-59).
Far from saving the
girl's life so that she may later suffer injustice and inequality,
Islam requires kind and just treatment for her. Among the sayings
of Prophet Muhammad (P.) in this regard are the following:
Whosoever has a daughter
and he does not bury her alive, does not insult her, and does
not favor his son over her, God will enter him into Paradise.
(Ibn Hanbal, No. 1957).
Whosoever supports
two daughters till they mature, he and I will come in the day
of judgment as this (and he pointed with his two fingers held
together).
A similar Hadeeth deals
in like manner with one who supports two sisters. (Ibn-Hanbal, No.
2104).
The right of females
to seek knowledge is not different from that of males. Prophet Muhammad
(P.) said:
"Seeking knowledge
is mandatory for every Muslim". (AlBayhaqi). Muslim as used
here including both males and females.
b) As a wife:
The Qur'an clearly indicates
that marriage is sharing between the two halves of the society,
and that its objectives, beside perpetuating human life, are emotional
well-being and spiritual harmony. Its bases are love and mercy.
Among the most impressive
verses in the Qur'an about marriage is the following.
"And among His
signs is this: That He created mates for you from yourselves that
you may find rest, peace of mind in them, and He ordained between
you love and mercy. Lo, herein indeed are signs for people who
reflect." (Qur'an 30:2 1).
According to Islamic
Law, women cannot be forced to marry anyone without their consent.
Ibn Abbas reported that
a girl came to the Messenger of God, Muhammad (P.), and she reported
that her father had forced her to marry without her consent. The
Messenger of God gave her the choice . . . (between accepting the
marriage or invalidating it). (Ibn Hanbal No. 2469). In another
version, the girl said: "Actually I accept this marriage but
I wanted to let women know that parents have no right (to force
a husband on them)" (Ibn Maja, No. 1873).
Besides all other provisions
for her protection at the time of marriage, it was specifically
decreed that woman has the full right to her Mahr, a marriage gift,
which is presented to her by her husband and is included in the
nuptial contract, and that such ownership does not transfer to her
father or husband. The concept of Mahr in Islam is neither an actual
or symbolic price for the woman, as was the case in certain cultures,
but rather it is a gift symbolizing love and affection.
The rules for married
life in Islam are clear and in harmony with upright human nature.
In consideration of the physiological and psychological make-up
of man and woman, both have equal rights and claims on one another,
except for one responsibility, that of leadership. This is a matter
which is natural in any collective life and which is consistent
with the nature of man.
The Qur'an thus states:
"And they (women)
have rights similar to those (of men) over them, and men are a
degree above them." (Qur'an 2:228).
Such degree is Quiwama
(maintenance and protection). This refers to that natural difference
between the sexes which entitles the weaker sex to protection. It
implies no superiority or advantage before the law. Yet, man's role
of leadership in relation to his family does not mean the husband's
dictatorship over his wife. Islam emphasizes the importance of taking
counsel and mutual agreement in family decisions. The Qur'an gives
us an example:
"...If they (husband
wife) desire to wean the child by mutual consent and (after) consultation,
there is no blame on them..." (Qur'an 2: 233).
Over and above her basic
rights as a wife comes the right which is emphasized by the Qur'an
and is strongly recommended by the Prophet (P); kind treatment and
companionship.
The Qur'an states:
"...But consort
with them in kindness, for if you hate them it may happen that
you hate a thing wherein God has placed much good." (Qur'an
4: l9).
Prophet Muhammad. (P) said:
The best of you is
the best to his family and I am the best among you to my family.
The most perfect believers
are the best in conduct and best of you are those who are best
to their wives. (Ibn-Hanbal, No. 7396)
Behold, many women
came to Muhammad's wives complaining against their husbands (because
they beat them) - - those (husbands) are not the best of you.
As the woman's right
to decide about her marriage is recognized, so also her right to
seek an end for an unsuccessful marriage is recognized. To provide
for the stability of the family, however, and in order to protect
it from hasty decisions under temporary emotional stress, certain
steps and waiting periods should be observed by men and women seeking
divorce. Considering the relatively more emotional nature of women,
a good reason for asking for divorce should be brought before the
judge. Like the man, however, the woman can divorce her husband
with out resorting to the court, if the nuptial contract allows
that.
More specifically, some
aspects of Islamic Law concerning marriage and divorce are interesting
and are worthy of separate treatment.
When the continuation
of the marriage relationship is impossible for any reason, men are
still taught to seek a gracious end for it.
The Qur'an states about
such cases:
When you divorce women,
and they reach their prescribed term, then retain them in kindness
and retain them not for injury so that you transgress (the limits).
(Qur'an 2:231). (See also Qur'an 2:229 and 33:49).
c) As a mother:
Islam considered kindness
to parents next to the worship of God.
"And we have
enjoined upon man (to be good) to his parents: His mother bears
him in weakness upon weakness..." (Qur'an 31:14) (See also
Qur'an 46:15, 29:8).
Moreover, the Qur'an
has a special recommendation for the good treatment of mothers:
"Your Lord has
decreed that you worship none save Him, and that you be kind to
your parents. . ." (Qur'an 17:23).
A man came to Prophet
Muhammad (P) asking:
O Messenger of God,
who among the people is the most worthy of my good company? The
Prophet (P) said, Your mother. The man said then who else: The
Prophet (P) said, Your mother. The man asked, Then who else? Only
then did the Prophet (P) say, Your father. (Al-Bukhari and Muslim).
A famous saying of The
Prophet is "Paradise is at the feet of mothers." (In Al'Nisa'I,
Ibn Majah, Ahmad).
"It is the generous
(in character) who is good to women, and it is the wicked who insults
them."
3. The Economic Aspect
Islam decreed a right
of which woman was deprived both before Islam and after it (even
as late as this century), the right of independent ownership. According
to Islamic Law, woman's right to her money, real estate, or other
properties is fully acknowledged. This right undergoes no change
whether she is single or married. She retains her full rights to
buy, sell, mortgage or lease any or all her properties. It is nowhere
suggested in the Law that a woman is a minor simply because she
is a female. It is also noteworthy that such right applies to her
properties before marriage as well as to whatever she acquires thereafter.
With regard to the woman's
right to seek employment it should be stated first that Islam regards
her role in society as a mother and a wife as the most sacred and
essential one. Neither maids nor baby-sitters can possibly take
the mother's place as the educator of an upright, complex free,
and carefully-reared children. Such a noble and vital role, which
largely shapes the future of nations, cannot be regarded as "idleness".
However, there is no
decree in Islam which forbids woman from seeking employment whenever
there is a necessity for it, especially in positions which fit her
nature and in which society needs her most. Examples of these professions
are nursing, teaching (especially for children), and medicine. Moreover,
there is no restriction on benefiting from woman's exceptional talent
in any field. Even for the position of a judge, where there may
be a tendency to doubt the woman's fitness for the post due to her
more emotional nature, we find early Muslim scholars such as Abu-Hanifa
and Al-Tabary holding there is nothing wrong with it. In addition,
Islam restored to woman the right of inheritance, after she herself
was an object of inheritance in some cultures. Her share is completely
hers and no one can make any claim on it, including her father and
her husband.
"Unto men (of
the family) belongs a share of that which Parents and near kindred
leave, and unto women a share of that which parents and near kindred
leave, whether it be a little or much - a determinate share."
((Qur'an 4:7).
Her share in most cases
is one-half the man's share, with no implication that she is worth
half a man! It would seem grossly inconsistent after the overwhelming
evidence of woman's equitable treatment in Islam, which was discussed
in the preceding pages, to make such an inference. This variation
in inheritance rights is only consistent with the variations in
financial responsibilities of man and woman according to the Islamic
Law. Man in Islam is fully responsible for the maintenance of his
wife, his children, and in some cases of his needy relatives, especially
the females. This responsibility is neither waived nor reduced because
of his wife's wealth or because of her access to any personal income
gained from work, rent, profit, or any other legal means.
Woman, on the other
hand, is far more secure financially and is far less burdened with
any claims on her possessions. Her possessions before marriage do
not transfer to her husband and she even keeps her maiden name.
She has no obligation to spend on her family out of such properties
or out of her income after marriage. She is entitled to the "Mahr"
which she takes from her husband at the time of marriage. If she
is divorced, she may get an alimony from her ex-husband.
An examination of the
inheritance law within the overall framework of the Islamic Law
reveals not only justice but also an abundance of compassion for
woman.
4. The Political Aspect
Any fair investigation of the teachings of Islam o~ into the history of
the Islamic civilization will surely find a clear evidence of woman's
equality with man in what we call today "political rights".
This includes the right
of election as well as the nomination to political offices. It also
includes woman's right to participate in public affairs. Both in
the Qur'an and in Islamic history we find examples of women who
participated in serious discussions and argued even with the Prophet
(P) himself, (see Qur'an 58: 14 and 60: 10-12).
During the Caliphate
of Omar Ibn al-Khattab, a woman argued with him in the mosque, proved
her point, and caused him to declare in the presence of people:
"A woman is right and Omar is wrong."
Although not mentioned
in the Qur'an, one Hadeeth of the Prophet is interpreted to make
woman ineligible for the position of head of state. The Hadeeth
referred to is roughly translated: "A people will not prosper
if they let a woman be their leader." This limitation, however,
has nothing to do with the dignity of woman or with her rights.
It is rather, related to the natural differences in the biological
and psychological make-up of men and women.
According to Islam,
the head of the state is no mere figurehead. He leads people in
the prayers, especially on Fridays and festivities; he is continuously
engaged in the process of decision-making pertaining to the security
and well-being of his people. This demanding position, or any similar
one, such as the Commander of the Army, is generally inconsistent
with the physiological and psychological make-up of woman in general.
It is a medical fact that during their monthly periods and during
their pregnancies, women undergo various physiological and psychological
changes. Such changes may occur during an emergency situation, thus
affecting her decision, without considering the excessive strain
which is produced. Moreover, some decisions require a maximum of
rationality and a minimum of emotionality - a requirement which
does not coincide with the instinctive nature of women.
Even in modern times,
and in the most developed countries, it is rare to find a woman
in the position of a head of state acting as more than a figurehead,
a woman commander of the armed services, or even a proportionate
number of women representatives in parliaments, or similar bodies.
One can not possibly ascribe this to backwardness of various nations
or to any constitutional limitation on woman's right to be in such
a position as a head of state or as a member of the parliament.
It is more logical to explain the present situation in terms of
the natural and indisputable differences between man and woman,
a difference which does not imply any "supremacy" of one
over the other. The difference implies rather the "complementary"
roles of both the sexes in life.
IV. CONCLUSION
The first part of this
paper deals briefly with the position of various religions and cultures
on the issue under investigation. Part of this exposition extends
to cover the general trend as late as the nineteenth century, nearly
1300 years after the Qur'an set forth the Islamic teachings.
In the second part of
the paper, the status of women in Islam is briefly discussed. Emphasis
in this part is placed on the original and authentic sources of
Islam. This represents the standard according to which degree of
adherence of Muslims can be judged. It is also a fact that during
the downward cycle of Islamic Civilization, such teachings were
not strictly adhered to by many people who profess to be Muslims.
Such deviations were
unfairly exaggerated by some writers, and the worst of this, were
superficially taken to represent the teachings of "Islam"
to the Western reader without taking the trouble to make any original
and unbiased study of the authentic sources of these teachings.
Even with such deviations
three facts are worth mentioning:
1. The history of Muslims is rich with women of great
achievements in all walks of life from as early as the seventh century
(B.C.)
2. It is impossible for anyone to justify any mistreatment of woman by
any decree of rule embodied in the Islamic Law, nor could anyone dare
to cancel, reduce, or distort the clear-cut legal rights of women given
in Islamic Law.
3. Throughout history, the reputation, chastity and maternal role of Muslim
women were objects of admiration by impartial observers.
It is also worthwhile
to state that the status which women reached during the present
era was not achieved due to the kindness of men or due to natural
progress. It was rather achieved through a long struggle and sacrifice
on woman's part and only when society needed her contribution and
work, more especial!; during the two world wars, and due to the
escalation of technological change.
In the case of Islam
such compassionate and dignified status was decreed, not because
it reflects the environment of the seventh century, nor under the
threat or pressure of women and their organizations, but rather
because of its intrinsic truthfulness.
If this indicates anything,
it would demonstrate the divine origin of the Qur'an and the truthfulness
of the message of Islam, which, unlike human philosophies and ideologies,
was far from proceeding from its human environment, a message which
established such humane principles as neither grew obsolete during
the course of time and after these many centuries, nor can become
obsolete in the future. After all, this is the message of the All-Wise
and all-knowing God whose wisdom and knowledge are far beyond the
ultimate in human thought and progress.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
The Holy, Qur'an: Translation of verses is heavily based on A.
Yusuf Ali's translation, The Glorious Qur'an, text translation, and Commentary,
The American Trust Publication, Plainfield, IN 46168, 1979.
Abd Al-Ati, Hammudah, Islam in Focus, The American Trust Publications,
Plainfield, IN 46168, 1977.
Allen, E. A., History of Civilization, General Publishing House, Cincinnati,
Ohio, 1889, Vol. 3.
Al Siba'i, Mustafa, Al-Alar'ah Baynal Fiqh Walqanoon (in Arabic), 2nd.
ea., Al-Maktabah Al-Arabiah, Halab, Syria, 1966.
El-Khouli, Al-Bahiy, "Min Usus Kadiat Al-Mara'ah" (in Arabic),
A 1- Waay A l-lslami, Ministry of Walcf, Kuwait, Vol.3 (No. 27), June
9, 1967, p.17.
Encyclopedia Americana (International Edition), American Corp., N.Y.,
1969, Vol.29.
Encyclopedia Biblica (Rev.T.K.Cheynene and J.S.Black, editors), The Macmillan
Co., London, England, 1902, Vol.3.
The Encyclopedia Britannica, (11 th ed.), University Press Cambridge,
England, 191 1, Vol.28.
Encyclopedia Britannica, The Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc., Chicago, III.,
1968, Vol.23.
Hadeeth. Most of the quoted Hadeeth were translated by the writer. They
are quoted in various Arabic sources. Some of them, however, were translated
directly from the original sources. Among the sources checked are Musnad
Ahmad Ibn Hanbal Dar AlMa'aref, Cairo, U.A.R., 1950, and 1955, Vol.4 and
3,SunanIbnMajah, Dar Ihya'a Al-Kutub al-Arabiah, Cairo, U.A.R., 1952,
Vol.l, Sunan al-Tirimidhi, Vol.3.
Mace, David and Vera, Marriage: East and West, Dolphin Books, Doubleday
and Co., Inc., N.Y., 1960.
|