“In post- 9/11 America ,
Culture Talk focuses on Islam and Muslims who presumably made culture only at
the beginning of creation, as some extraordinary, prophetic act. After that, it
seems Muslims just conformed to culture.”[1]
Islam is persistently poised against modernity, and ‘modernity’ is defined from
standpoint of western culture whose
beliefs are different from Islam. Western culture is not same as modernity, and
as far as modernity is concerned all answers to questions raised by ‘modernist’
can be found within the fold of Islam. It is a sheer question of wanting to do
justice without overstepping the precinct of judicial process.[2]
“Elasticity of laws is the greatest test of their beneficence and usefulness” [3]
and even though laid down over a millennium ago the law is capable of such
interpretation that can suit the modern society as well. Islam has laid down
laws, but unfortunately, as in other systems, people have abused the law. However,
one must be cautious that it is not what people do that is Islam, but is what
texts have to say.
While there are numerous
issues in Islamic Law that have been debated in the context of modernity,
discussion on triple talaq has gained
relevance after the recent judgment delivered by the Bombay High Court in Dilshad Begum v. Ahmadkhan Hanifkhan Pathan[4]
wherein the court has reiterated that
for divorce to be legal it must be preceded with honestly attempted arbitration
or mediation proceedings.
In Islam, “Talaq is the most detestable before God
of all permitted things”.[5]
Prophet Mohammad looked upon the custom of divorce as
a calculated to undermine the foundation of society. Intricate,
inseparable connection between Islam, Shariat and Mohammad increases the bearing
of this statement on interpretive application of divorce laws in Islam.
First of all, it should
be known that there are three methods of divorcing by recitation of words, “I
divorce thee”: Talaq-e-Ahsan[6], Talaq-e-Hasan[7], and Talaq-e-Biddat (or Triple
Talaq), of which the first one is
most preferred way of divorcing and the last one is the most abhorred. It is talaq-e-biddat or Triple Talaq that has always been a subject of
consternation amongst Islamic scholar, lawyers and society.
Talaq-e-biddat, where biddat means an unlawful innovation, is a divorce that consists of
either making a pronouncement of divorce during the woman’s menstruation period
or to pronounce two or three divorces at once or to issue a divorce in a Tuhr in which sexual intercourse with
the wife took place. The traditional Hanafi law treats talaq-e-biddat, an improper
talaq, as an action ‘bad in religion
but good in law’. If a man divorces his wife by saying “I give you three
divorces” or by saying: “I divorce you” three times, it is considered an
unlawful act and an innovation. It is sinful to divorce irrevocably in this
manner; nevertheless such it is valid and operative.[8]
We have
witnessed the zeal of the Indian Supreme Court in utilizing the provisions of
Article 142 – the power to do complete justice, to dissolve marriage of parties
that have been suffering in totaled marriages merely because there is no
provision in law that could liberate them.[9]
The recent decision of the Supreme Court in Naveen Kohli v.
Neelu KohlĂ[10],
suggesting to the Parliament to provide for ‘irretrievable breakdown
of marriage’ in statutory law demonstrates that it is no longer feasible for
law to chain two irreconcilable persons.[11]
When juxtaposed with these developments, Islamic law of divorce seems progressive
in as much it permits both women and men to divorce their spouse without
resorting to unnecessary long litigations in the Court[12];
“the true Islamic law in fact stood for what is now known as the ‘breakdown
theory’ of divorce”[13]. Conceding that men have more power to alter
legal relationship than women, and therefore there are provisions within the
precincts of present law as laid down in the Holy Quran that do not permit
arbitrary divorce.
However, as in the case of marriages covered under the Special
Marriage Act, 1954 and the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 there is no ‘statutory’
provision in Islamic law that would mandate that alternative methods of dispute
resolution must be honestly resorted to before divorce is granted.[14] Islamic Law also requires
one last attempt to be made by the parties before marriage is dissolved by
either of them, and the source of such law is located not in statutes but in
the Quran. We have often been swayed by the media and do to even attempt a
study of true spirit of Islam that is
pervasive in its law. Justice Krishna Iyer has observed, “The view that
the Muslim husband enjoys an arbitrary, unilateral power to inflict instant
divorce does not accord with Islamic injunctions ...... Indeed a deeper study
of the subject discloses a surprisingly rational, realistic and modern law of
divorce. ...”[15].
According to the Holy Quran: “And if ye fear breach between
them (man and wife), then send a judge chosen from his family and a judge
chosen from her family if they desire reconciliation, God will cause them to
agree; verily, God is knowing and apprised of all.”[16]
There is thus, a clear requirement in The Holy Quran to
attempt to solve the matrimonial dispute by alternative methods, failing which
divorce may be granted. “The Prophet restraint the power of divorce possessed
by the husband; he gave to the women the right of obtaining a separation on
reasonable grounds; and towards the end of his life he went so far as
practically to forbid its exercise by the
men without the intervention of arbiters or a judge.”[17]
Judicial approach in this decade has undergone a
strategical change to accommodate dynamics of evolving jurisprudence in a
system of law that is perceived to be static.
In Shah Bano era, attempts to
‘modernize’ Muslim personal laws, especially the laws affecting women’s right,
have met with stiff resistance within the Muslim community primarily because it
was seen as imposition of outside ‘assimilative’[18] rules on them. However,
the present approach has changed, to find solutions within Islam relying on
settled rules; courts in India
it is politically wiser for the courts to not embark on finding the law in the holy
texts through interpretative acrobatics. Judgments that do not go against the
religion, which is opium for insecure masses, will have more legitimacy. Therefore,
ideal situation would be to find ameliorative provisions within the religion
instead of importing and imposing it. “Indian courts have proved a more
hospitable forum for protecting and promoting women's rights than political
branches or minority institutions”[19], because they have been
able to develop strategies to.
Even though the practice of triple talaq has been abolished in many Islamic nations, it still prevails
in India .[20] Since political organs have
failed to discharge their obligation, duty now rests with the courts to set at
naught the controversy that looms over triple talaq. Courts have at more than one occasion declared it to be
illegal, if there was no arbitration or mediation proceeding conducted prior to
declaration of divorce by the husband.
In 1981 Jiauddin
Ahmed v. Anwara Begum[21],
Baharul Islam, C.J., held that “In our opinion the correct law of ‘talaq’ as ordained by Holy Quran is: (i)
that talaq must be for a reasonable
cause; and (ii) that it must be preceded by an attempt at reconciliation
between the husband and wife by two arbiters, one chosen by the wife from her
family and the another by the husband from his. If their attempts fail, talaq may be effected….” The said ratio
was re-affirmed in the same year in Rukia
Khatun v. Abdul Khalique Laskar[22], and in 1993 in Zeenat Fatema Rashid v. Md. Iqbal Anwar[23]. These judgments have been approved by
scholars as being reflective of the correct perspective of Islamic law.[24]
In 1998, the
Madras High Court in Saleem Basha v. Mrs. Mumtaz Begam [25]
has taken the same view in this regard
that a husband cannot divorce his wife on his whims and caprice, and it is
imperative for a valid talaq that the
parties must attempt to solve their dispute by alternative means.
In 2002, the Dagdu
v. Rahimbi Dagdu[26] the Bombay High Court has
relying upon the decisions quoted above has held that the husband must prove
that all conditions precedent including the condition of holding arbitration or
mediation have been fulfilled before the courts would give recognition to such
divorce.[27]
This decision has been approved very recently by the Bombay High Court in Dilshad Begum v. Ahmadkhan
Hanifkhan Pathan[28].
In 2004, the Allahabad High Court, speaking
through Justice I.M. Quddusi has taken a similar view in Sadiqunnisa v. State of U.P .[29].
These cases reflect that judicial response to
abuse of law is more vibrant that political responses from the legislators. These
judicial opinions together have lit a new torch that seeks to pull out Muslim Personal
law from the deep abyss of darkness and ignorance. The beauty of these
decisions is that unlike in Shah Bano,
judges here have not embarked upon interpretation
of the Holy Quran, which is clearly not their domain. Judicial process of deciding
cases on Muslim Personal Law has graduated to a new dimension where reforms are
being located within the four corners of Islamic Law. It is submitted that the
ratio decidendi of Dilshad Begum case
delivered by the Bombay High Court and of several other cases cited above are
here to stay.
[1]
Mamdani, Mahmood (2005), “Good Muslim, Bad Muslim: Islam, the USA and the Global War Against Terror”, Permanent
Black, New Delhi ,
p.18.
[2]
Noorani, A.G. (1998), “Shah Bano: Bangladesh Shows the Way”, in Shah Bano and the Muslim Women's Act A
Decade on: The Right of Divorced Muslim Women to Mataa, Readers and
Compilations Series 25-26, Women Living Under Muslim Law, Readers and
Compilations Series, 1998, noting that the High court Division in Bangladesh
has interpreted Aiyats 2:240-242 of Quran to gold that a divorced women has the
right to receive a reasonable sum for maintenance for an indefinite period
beyond iddat. The same conclusion when reached by the Indian Supreme Court in
Shah Bano Case had met with great opposition from Muslims.
[3]
Ameer Ali (1923), “The Spirit of Islam”, Low Price Publications, Delhi , p.230.
[4]
MANU/MH/0014/2007.
[5]
Supra N.3, p.244. Unequivocally declaring divorce is abghad-ul-mubahat – “worst of all permitted things”.
[6]
Talaq-e-Ahsan (most preferred) divorce is to make one pronouncement of divorce
to the wife, in an interval between menstruations (Tuhr), in which no sexual
intercourse with the wife has taken place. After which she is left until her
waiting period (Iddah) is over.
[7]
The Ahsan (preferred) divorce is to pronounce three divorces in three separate
intervals of Tuhr, in which no sexual intercourse with the wife has taken
place.
[8]
This is based on the analogy drawn from Zihar, which is divorce by equating
one’s wife with women in ‘prohibited degrees’. Zihar has been condemned in the
Holy Quran as “evil and false”, yet such a divorce is
valid. (The Holy Quran, 58: 1-5).
[9]
Ashok Hurra v. Rupa Bipin Zaveri, (1997) 7 SCC 565.
[10]
AIR 2006 SC 1675.
[11]
See Himanshu Raman Singh (2007),
Irretrievable Breakdown of Marriage: Expanding Contours of Divorce Law, THE
EDICT (1) I 21 (January, 2007).
[12]
Mahmood, Tahir (Tr.) (2002), “Compendium of Islamic Law”, The All India Muslim
Personal Law Board, New Delhi, p.87, “… it is also true that if there is no
temperamental compatibility between the parties, or the man feels that he
cannot as husband fulfill the woman’s rights, or because of mutual difference
of nature Gods limits cannot be maintained, keeping the marriage intact in such
situations or to compel the parties by legal restrictions to continue in the
marital bond may be more harmful for the society. The Shariat, therefore,
regards divorce as permissible although it is an undesirable act.”
[13]
Tahir Mahmood (2003), “The Muslim Law of India”, Butterworth, Mumbai, p.88.
[14]
The Family Courts, Act, 1984, Section 9.
[15]
Yusuf v. Sowramma, AIR 1971 Ker. 261, para. 7.
[16]
The Holy Quran, 4:35.
[17]
Supra N.3, Delhi ,
p.244.
[18]
Pratibha Jain (2005), Balancing Minority
Rights and Gender Justice: The Impact of Protecting Multiculturalism on Women’s
Right in India, 23 Berkeley J. Int’l L. 201, 208.
[19]
Id. , 218.
[20]
See Talha A. Rahman (2006), Codification
of Islamic Law of Marriage: To be or not to be, THE EDICT (3) III 32 [April
2006].
[21]
(1981) 1 GLR 358, para. 11.
[22]
(1981) 1 G.L.R. 375.
[23]
1993 (2) Crimes 853, para. 5.
[24]
Supra N.13, p.109.
[25]
1998 CriLJ 4782 (Mad.)
[26]
II (2002) DMC 315.
[27]
Id. , para.
32.
[28]
MANU/MH/0014/2007.
[29]
Criminal Revision No. 327/2002 decided on 02.08.2004.