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Mutah or temporary marriges
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[quote]view about Islam from Understanding Islam web site Mut`ah" refers to temporary marriage. There is some scattered evidence in the books of the history and the cultural traditions of the Arabs that in certain situations, a temporary marital relationship between a man and a woman was considered to be acceptable among the pre-Islamic Arabs. There are certain narratives (hadith) that imply that for sometime, even the Prophet (pbuh) did not prohibit such a relationship. On the other hand, certain other narratives are held as evidence to the fact that the Prophet (pbuh) did not prohibit such a relationship at all, it was prohibited, later on - after the death of the Prophet - by the second caliph, `Umar ibn al-Khattab (ra). The Qur'an does not support this view. According to the very initial Surahs (chapters) of the Qur'an , like Surah Al-Muminoon and Surah Al-Ma`arij the Qur'an has specifically disallowed all sexual relationships, besides those, which are based on Nikah or those which were between a master and his slave girl[1]. The Qur'an says: And those who guard their chastity, except with their wives and their slave girls - for they are not to be blamed. But those who trespass beyond this [limit] are the ones who are transgressors. (Al-Ma`arij 70: 29 - 31) It must be kept in mind that a Mut`ah relationship makes a woman neither a wife nor a slave girl of a person, whereas the Qur'an specifically restricts sexual relationships of a person with his wife and his slave girls only. It should also be noticed that the particular word used by the Qur'an in the referred verse, which is translated as "wives" is "azwaj" plural of "zaujah". In the Arabic language, a woman with whom a person enters into a contract of Mut`ah is called the "Mamtu`ah" of the person, she is not referred to as the "zaujah" (wife) of the person. The verse, therefore, is evidence to the fact that no other relationship besides the one based on Nikah was allowed by Islam.[/quote]
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