my husband & I spoke in detail before deciding to marry, and I made myself clear that I was not interested in a husband who smoked, for a variety of reasons. He was a smoker and stated he had wanted a reason to quit for a long time, and would quit. After about a month of not smoking, I agreed to marry him, the night of our marriage following the ceremony I found out that he was still smoking and had not completely quit. He asked that I be patient because he was still trying... Its 5 years and two kids later. Does a woman have any rights, or means by which she can be recompensed for unfulfilled agreements?
Given the choice I would not be in this situtation which I was deceived to be in.
What the sister did by stipulating the condition that her
husband give up smoking is something good, for which she is to be
commended.
Smoking is an evil action and is haraam according to
sharee’ah. It goes against the sound nature of man (fitrah) and harms a
person’s health and the health of those around him. He is like the one who
works the bellows: either he will burn your clothes or you will notice a
foul smell coming from him.
But it is very strange that the sister has put up with her
husband for so long after finding out that he had not stopped smoking. She
has stayed with him for five years, during which she had produced two
children. This is a long time, and it indicates that she accepts or does not
care what he does. It is well known that no one would put up with such a
thing for so long.
The conditions which a wife stipulates for her husband prior
to marriage give her the choice, if her husband goes against them. If she
wants, she may annul the marriage, and if she wants she may forego those
conditions and stay in the marriage.
If a woman foregoes her conditions or she knows that her
husband has gone against the conditions of marriage but accepts that, which
indicates that she has foregone these conditions, then she has no right to
annul the marriage after that.
This is what seems to be the case here: if the sister had put
up with it for a reasonable amount of time, or she had refused to stay in
the marriage as soon as she found out that her husband was still smoking,
then she could have annulled the marriage and taken her rights in full,
until her husband really gave up smoking.
But she stayed for so long and had two children in the
meantime, so I do not think it is permissible for her to ask for annulment
of the marriage, let alone ask for compensation for her husband not
fulfilling the conditions of the marriage contract.
The husband has to fear Allaah and he should realize that
what he is doing is a major sin, to which may be added a further sin, namely
not fulfilling the conditions stipulated in the marriage contract. The
conditions of marriage are the most binding of conditions and are the most
important before Allaah, because through them intimacy becomes permissible.
It was narrated that ‘Uqbah ibn ‘Aamir said: The Messenger of
Allaah (S) said: “The conditions which most deserve to be fulfilled are
those by means of which intimacy becomes permissible to you.”
Narrated by al-Bukhaari, 2572; Muslim, 1418.
No comments:
Post a Comment