Temporary
marriage catches on in Afghanistan
MAZAR-I-SHARIF,
Afghanistan - Twenty-nine-year-old mechanic Payenda Mohammad
was married last month in a simple ceremony in this northern
Afghanistan town, but the marriage only lasted four hours.
Which was exactly what he
wanted.
“Nobody would give me
their daughters to marry because I didn’t have family or
money,” says Payenda, who ended up in Iran after his parents
and a sister were killed in a bombing raid about 15 years ago.
“I started doing short
marriages in Iran,” he says. “When I came back to
Mazar-i-Sharif, I continued,” he says. He’s now been married
20 times.
In a country where most
marriages are for life and all divorces are a scandal, the idea
of the contract or temporary marriage is beginning to catch on.
Afghanistan’s majority
Sunni Muslims bans the marriages, known as fegha in the main
Dari language, but the Shiites accept them and some people here,
like Payenda, got the idea from Iran.
Such marriages were rare
in Afghanistan before the Sunni-dominated Taleban regime was
overthrown in late 2001, ending 25 years of war.
But with the return of
many of the nearly two million Afghans who fled to Shiite Iran
during the conflict, contract marriages have been gaining
popularity - although they are still unusual.
The process is simple. To
get married, a couple takes an oath in front of an imam that
makes them man and wife for a stipulated period of time - from a
few hours to a few years.
Afterwards they can then
choose to marry each other again or move on.
Shiite clerics defend the
practice as something that benefits both the men and women.
“For a man it means he
doesn’t have to think about women or sex. For a woman, it
means she has a husband to feed and take care of her and her
children,” said Sayed Barat Ali Razawi, a Shiite mullah in
Mazar-i-Sharif.
He says the Prophet
Mohammed himself gave permission for soldiers to have short
marriages while they were away from home, and for women to marry
temporarily if their real husbands had died.
Abuse
of contract marriages
Sunni Muslims say this is
wrong.
“In my opinion contract
marriage is just for sex,” says Mullah Azizullah Mofley, a
Sunni cleric, insisting the prophet later outlawed the practice.
Young people “abuse
contract marriages just for sex by marrying for just one or two
hours,” he says.
But Nader Nadery, from the
Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission, says the
contract marriage is not a way to legitimise sex but an attempt
to find a practical solution to difficult circumstances like
poverty.
“It is not a new trend
to overcome a strict moral code,” Nadery says. “It started
hundreds of years ago.”
In a normal marriage, an
Afghan groom must pay a dowry that can be worth anything from
1,000 to several thousand dollars. He then has to pay for the
wedding party, which can cost hundreds more.
“I waited for five years
but no one came to our house to marry me,” says Nazira, whose
first husband was killed by the Taleban.
“My father was so poor
that he couldn’t feed our family. One day a man came to our
house and told my father that he wanted to marry me for seven
months. My father had heard about contract marriages so he
accepted,” she says.
Her husband Mohammad Asef,
a 38-year-old shopkeeper, learned the custom in Iran, where he
had gone to work for a year after his wife died, leaving him
with two children.
“When I returned to
Afghanistan my aunt helped me find this woman,” he says,
gesturing to Nazira, with whom he is halfway through a six-month
contract.
Mohammad is her second
contract husband.
“Short marriages have a
lot of benefits for women whose husbands have died,” she says,
as her husband serves customers in the store.
“It helps them look
after their children better and they don’t need to go out for
sex. Also, we don’t have to pay for a wedding party because
with a short marriage we just go to a mullah.”
She says a regular
marriage would have cost them 3,000 dollars.
“It is very
difficult,” Nazira says. “Where would we find that kind of
money?”
AFP
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