Interfaith Marriage in Islam: Classical Islamic Resources and Contemporary Debates on Muslim Women’s Interfaith Marriages †
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Muslim Marriages to Non-Muslims
2.1. Muslim Marriages to Mushriks
Do not marry unbelieving women (idolaters), until they believe. […] Nor marry (your girls) to unbelievers until they believe. […] Unbelievers do (but) beckon you to the Fire. But Allah beckons by His Grace to the Garden (of bliss) and forgiveness, and makes His Signs clear to mankind: That they may celebrate His praise.(The Qurʾān, 2:221)
2.2. Muslim Marriages to Ahl al-Kitāb (People of the Book)
This day are (all) things good and pure made lawful unto you. The food of the People of the Book is lawful unto you and yours is lawful unto them. (Lawful unto you in marriage) are (not only) chaste women who are believers, but chaste women among the People of the Book, revealed before your time,—when ye give them their due dowers, and desire chastity, not lewdness, nor secret intrigues if any one rejects faith, fruitless is his work, and in the Hereafter he will be in the ranks of those who have lost (all spiritual good).(The Qurʾān, 5:5)
2.2.1. Muslim Men’s Marriages to Ahl al-Kitāb
2.2.2. Muslim Women’s Marriage to Ahl al-Kitāb
- A.
- Muslim women are not allowed to marry Ahl al-Kitāb (People of the Book)
- Religious arguments
- Analogy of marriages
- b.
- Consensus on the Prohibition of Muslim Women’s Interfaith Marriages
- 2.
- Sociocultural arguments
- Husband’s impact on wife’s religiosity
- b.
- Gender roles and hierarchy within society and family: the effect of the understanding of ‘qiwamah’ in interfaith marriages
- c.
- Children’s religious identity
- B.
- Muslim women are allowed to marry Ahl al-Kitāb (the People of the Book)
- Critical reassessment of religious references
- 2.
- Sociocultural changes and their impact on the perception of marriages
I am not convinced that the evidence prohibiting Muslim women from marrying a kitabī is very strong. Muslim jurists took a very strong position on this matter--many of them going as far as saying if a Muslim woman marries a kitabī she is as good as an apostate. I think, and God knows best, that this position is not reasonable and the evidence supporting it is not very strong.
3. Interfaith Marriage and Gender Equality
Sometimes I compromise because a Muslim family wants the guy to convert, to say shahāda and the other side say no, not to be forced… In one case, a Muslim woman and Hindu man came to me, they wanted to get married. Hindu man said at first, even in principle, he would recite the shahāda, he believed in one God, and he had no problem with believing in the prophet. But later, his sister had married a Muslim man. He said his sister married a Muslim man and his [Muslim man] family did not force their daughter-in-law to become a Muslim. So, he said, why are you forcing me to become a Muslim?
4. Conclusions and Discussion
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The date of the revelation of the verse is not exactly known. For more information about the occasion of the revelation of the verse see (Muqatil Ibn Sulayman 1979; Elmalili n.d.). |
2 | Q. 60:10: ‘O ye who believe! When there come to you believing women refugees, examine (and test) them: Allah knows best as to their Faith: if ye ascertain that they are Believers, then send them not back to the Unbelievers. They are not lawful (wives) for the Unbelievers, nor are the (Unbelievers) lawful (husbands) for them. But pay the Unbelievers what they have spent (on their dower), and there will be no blame on you if ye marry them on payment of their dower to them. But hold not to the guardianship of unbelieving women: ask for what ye have spent on their dowers, and let the (Unbelievers) ask for what they have spent (on the dowers of women who come over to you). Such is the command of Allah: He judges (with justice) between you. And Allah is Full of Knowledge and Wisdom’ (The Qur’an, Chapter 60, Verses 10).—Throughout the article, I have quoted the Qur’an verses from Yusuf Ali’s (1982) translation. For more information about the revelation context of the verse 60:10 see (Afsaruddin 2014; Al-Jassas 1985; Lamrabet 2013; Qurtubi 1964). |
3 | Ahl al-Kitāb, the People of the Book, is a Qur’anic term referring to the possessors of divine books previously revealed by God. The term is originally applied to Jews, Christians, and Sabaeans but later it was extended by Muslim scholars to some other religious committees such as Zoroastrians and Hindus (for more information see Esposito 2003; Hasan 2015). In the text, unless otherwise stated, I will use the terms ‘ahl al-kitāb’ and ‘kitabī’ to refer Jews and Christians as this meaning is ostensibly used in most of the Islamic texts. |
4 | For more information about the abrogation of Q 2:221 by Q 5:5 or exception of ahl al-kitāb women from other non-Muslim groups mentioned in Q 2:221, as believers whom Muslim men can marry, see (Al-Jassas 1985; Sabuni 1980; Al-Tabarī 1988; Eskan 2007). |
5 | As Q.2:221 states: ‘and do not marry polytheistic (mushrik) women until they believe. (…) And do not marry polytheistic (mushrik) men [to your women] until they believe. (…) Those invite [you] to the Fire, but Allah invites to Paradise and to forgiveness, by His permission…’. |
6 | For more information about the interpretation of the term qiwamah in the Qur’anic commentaries and its effect on the understanding of Muslim woman’s interfaith marriage, see: (Azzam 2015); and for a critical reassessment of the interpretations of Q. 4:34 and the term qiwamah, see (Hidayatullah 2014; Lamrabet 2017; Welchman 2017; Abou-Bakr 2017). |
7 | For more information about how Muslim scholars in early Islam conceptualised marriage using the similar statement of ownership used to describe slavery see (Ali 2010; Friedmann 2003; Azzam 2015). |
8 | The name is pseudonymous as the imam did not want to be named in the study. |
9 | ‘It is an accepted fact that the terms of law vary with the change in the times’ (the Mejelle, 39), which is stated in the Mejelle, the Ottoman Court manual, as one of the maxims of the Islamic jurisprudence (Tyser et al. 2001). |
10 | For more information about the discussions on the issue and different opinions, see (Qaradawi 2003; Al-Judai 2004; Hasan 2012; Bin Bayyah 2012). |
References
- Abou-Bakr, Omaima. 2017. The Interpretive Legacy of Qiwamah as an Exegetical Construct. In Men in Charge? Rethinking Authoirity in Muslim Lagal Tradition. Edited by Jana Rumminger, Mulki Al-Sharmani and Ziba Mir-Hosseini. New York: Oneworld, pp. 44–64. [Google Scholar]
- Abou El Fadl, Khaled. 2016. “Fatwa On Christian Men Marrying Muslim Women (Updated)”. The Search for Beauty on Beauty and Reason in Islam. Available online: https://www.searchforbeauty.org/2016/05/01/on-christian-men-marrying-muslim-women-updated/ (accessed on 10 May 2022).
- Abou El Fadl, Khalid. 2011. “On Christian Men Marrying Muslim Women (Updated)”. Scholar of the House. Available online: http://www.scholarofthehouse.org/oninma.html (accessed on 23 May 2022).
- Abu Yusuf, Yaqub. 1962. Kitab Al-Kharaj. Cairo: al-Matba’ah al-Salafiyyah. [Google Scholar]
- Abu Zahra, Muhammad. 1957. Al-Ahwal Al-Shahsiyyah. Cairo: Dar al-Fikr. [Google Scholar]
- Admin. 1999. “Marriage With Non-Muslims”. Understanding Islam. Available online: http://www.understanding-islam.com/marriage-with-non-muslims/ (accessed on 17 May 2022).
- Admin. 2000. “Muslim Woman Marrying a Non-Muslim”. Understanding Islam. Available online: http://www.understanding-islam.com/muslim-woman-marrying-a-non-muslim-man/ (accessed on 17 May 2022).
- Admin. 2004. “Marriage to a Christian”. Understanding Islam. Available online: http://www.understanding-islam.com/marriage-to-a-christian/ (accessed on 17 May 2022).
- Admin. 2005. “Marrying a Non-Muslim Whose Conversion Is Insincere”. Understanding Islam. Available online: http://www.understanding-islam.com/interfaith-marriage-2/ (accessed on 7 June 2022).
- Afsaruddin, Asma. 2014. Qur’anic Ethics of Partnership and Gender: The Concept of Wilaya in Qur’an. Cile 1: 30–41. [Google Scholar]
- Aini, Noryamin. 2008. Inter-Religious Marriage from Socio-Historical Islamic Perspectives. Brigham Young University Law Review 2008: 669–705. [Google Scholar]
- Al-Hibri, Azizah. 2000. An Introduction to Muslim Women’s Rights. In Windows of Faith: Muslim Women Scholar-Activists in North America. Edited by Gisela Webb. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, pp. 51–71. [Google Scholar]
- Al-Jassas, Abu Bakr. 1985. Ahkamal-Qur’an. Beirut: Dar Ihya al-Turath al-Arabi. [Google Scholar]
- Al-Judai, Abdullah. 2004. Islam Ahad Al-Zawjayn, 1st ed. Beirut: n.p. [Google Scholar]
- Al-Razi, Fakhr-al-Din. 1989. Al-Tafsir Al-Kabir. Ankara: Akcag Yayinlari. [Google Scholar]
- Al-Sarakhsi, Abu Bakr. 1983. Al-Mabsut. Istanbul: Cagri Yayinlari. [Google Scholar]
- Al-Shafi‘i, Abu ʿAbdillah Muhammad ibn Idris. 1973. Kitab Al-Umm. Beirut: n.p. [Google Scholar]
- Al-Siba‘i, Iqbal. 2001. “Sheikhs’ Re-Evaluation Against Al-Qaradawi Because of His Fatwa That Allows a Non-Muslim Woman to Stay with Her Husband after Converting to Islam”. Arab West Report. Available online: http://www.arabwestreport.info/en/year-2001/week-31/8-sheikhs’-re-evaluation-against-al-qaradawi-because-his-fatwa-allows-non-muslim (accessed on 20 May 2022).
- Al-Tabarī, Muhammad. 1988. Tafsir Al-Tabarī: Jamiʻ Al-Bayan Fi Taʼwil Al-Qur’an. Beirut: Dar al-Fikr. [Google Scholar]
- Al-Toma, Batool. 2017. Interview by Ayse Elmali-Karakaya. Face-to-face interview. Leicester, UK, May 18. [Google Scholar]
- Al-Turabi, Hassan. 2006. “Asharq Al-Awsat Interviews Sudanese Islamist Leader Dr. Hassan Turabi”. Asharq Al-Awsat. Available online: http://english.aawsat.com/2006/04/article55266971 (accessed on 19 February 2017).
- Al-Yousuf, Heather. 2006. Negotiating Faith and Identity in Muslim-Christian Marriages in Britain. Islam and Christian–Muslim Relations 17: 317–29. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Al-Yousuf, Heather. 2016. Interview by Ayse Elmali-Karakaya. Face-to-face interview. Oxford, UK, May 3. [Google Scholar]
- Al-Zamakhsharī. 1987. Al-Kashshāf. Beirut: Dar al-kitāb al-Arabī. [Google Scholar]
- Ali, Abdullah Yusuf. 1982. The Holy Qur-an: Text, Translation and Commentary. Beirut: Dar al-Quran al-Karim. [Google Scholar]
- Ali, Kecia. 2006. Sexual Ethics & Islam: Feminist Reflections on Qur’an, Hadith, and Jurisprudence. Oxford: Oneworld Publications. [Google Scholar]
- Ali, Kecia. 2010. Marriage and Slavery in Early Islam. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Arweck, Elisabeth, and Eleanor Nesbitt. 2011. Religious Education in the Experience of Young People from Mixed-Faith Families. British Journal of Religious Education 33: 31–45. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Ata, Abe W. 2009. Us and Them: Muslim–Christian Relations and Cultural Harmony in Australia. Bowen Hills: Australian Academic Press. [Google Scholar]
- Atay, Huseyin. 2016. Interview by Ayse Elmali-Karakaya. Face-to-face interview. Ankara, Turkey, July 13. [Google Scholar]
- Ates, Suleyman. 2016. Interview by Ayse Elmali-Karakaya. Face-to-face interview. Istanbul, Turkey, July 8. [Google Scholar]
- Azzam, Leena Salah Fadl. 2015. The Regulation of Interfaith Marriages in Islamic Legal Discourse. Master’s thesis, American University in Cairo, Cairo, Egypt. [Google Scholar]
- Bardakoglu, Ali. 2016. Interview by Ayse Elmali-Karakaya. Face-to-face interview. Istanbul, Turkey, July 12. [Google Scholar]
- Bin Bayyah, Abdullah. 2012. Sina’atul Fatwa Wa Fiqh Al-Aqalliyyā. Beirut: Dar al-Minhaj. [Google Scholar]
- Buisson, Johanna Marie. 2016. Interfaith Marriage for Muslim Women: This Day Are Things Good and Pure Made Lawful Unto You. CrossCurrents 66: 430–49. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Cairo, Alexandre Vasconcelos. 2011. Fatwas for European Muslims: The Minority Fiqh Project and the Integration of Islam in Europe. Utrecht: Utrecht University. [Google Scholar]
- Cerchiaro, Francesco. 2019. Fighting for What? Couples’ Communication, Parenting and Social Activism: The Case Study of a ‘Christian-Muslim’ Families’ Association in Brussels (Belgium). Religions 10: 270. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Cerchiaro, Francesco. 2020. Identity Loss or Identity Re-Shape? Religious Identification among the Offspring of ‘Christian–Muslim’ Couples. Journal of Contemporary Religion 35: 503–21. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cerchiaro, Francesco. 2022. ‘When I Told My Parents I Was Going to Marry a Muslim…’: Social Perception and Attitudes towards Intermarriage in Italy, France and Belgium. Social Compass. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cerchiaro, Francesco, Stef Aupers, and Dick Houtman. 2015. Christian-Muslim Couples in the Veneto Region, Northeastern Italy: Dealing with Religious Pluralism in Everyday Family Life. Social Compass 62: 43–60. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cigdem, Recep. 2015. Interfaith Marriage in Comparative Perspective. Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hung 68: 59–86. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Dalgin, Nihat. 2003. İslam Hukuku Açısından Müslüman Bayanın Ehli Kitap Erkekle Evliliği. Islam Hukuku Arastirmalari Dergisi 2: 131–56. [Google Scholar]
- Dalgin, Nihat. 2005. Islam Hukukuna Gore Musluman Gayr-i Muslim Evliligi. Samsun: Etut Yayinlari. [Google Scholar]
- Daneshpour, Manijeh. 2003. Lives Together, Worlds Apart? Journal of Couple & Relationship Therapy 2: 57–71. [Google Scholar]
- Daneshpour, Manijeh, and Elham Fathi. 2016. Muslim Marriages in the Western World: A Decade Review. Journal of Muslim Mental Health 10: 1. [Google Scholar]
- Darwaza, Muhammad Izzat. 1963. Al-Tafsir Al-Hadith. Cairo: Dar al-Kutub al-ilmiyyah. [Google Scholar]
- El-Jercawi, Ali Ahmad. 2009. Hiqmetu Tashri ve Felsefatuhu. Cairo: Dar al-Fikr. [Google Scholar]
- Elmali-Karakaya, Ayse. 2020. Being Married to a Non-Muslim Husband: Religious Identity in Muslim Women’s Interfaith Marriage. In Research in the Social Scientific Study of Religion. vol. 31, Edited by Ralph W. Hood and Sariya Cheruvallil-Contractor. Leiden: BRILL, pp. 388–410. [Google Scholar]
- Elmalili, Muhammed Hamdi. n.d. Hak Dini Kur’an Dili. Istanbul: Eser Nesriyat.
- Erdogan, Mehmet. 2013. “Ne Elifimiz Ilk Idi Ne de Suzanne Ashman Son Olacak!” Garibce Blog. Available online: http://garibce.blogspot.co.uk/2013/01/ne-elifimiz-ilk-idi-ne-de-suzanne.html (accessed on 15 May 2022).
- Esack, Farid. 1998. Qur’an Liberation and Pluralism: An Islamic Perspective Of Interreligious Solidarity against Oppression. Oxford: Oneworld. [Google Scholar]
- Eskan, Selma. 2007. Islam Hukukunda Evlilik Engeli Olarak Din Farki Problemi. Ph.D. thesis, Ataturk Universitesi, Erzurum, Turkey. [Google Scholar]
- Esposito, John. 2003. The Oxford Dictionary of Islam. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Feise-Nasr, Mona. 2022. Muslim Women in Interfaith Partnerships in Germany. Religions 13: 193. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Friedmann, Yohanan. 2003. Tolerance and Coercion in Islam: Interfaith Relations in the Muslim Tradition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Froese, Regine. 2008. One Family, Two Religions: Child Belief or Child Grief in Christian–Muslim Families? British Journal of Religious Education 30: 37–47. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gaya, Alice. 2022. Identity Formation among Mixed Families in a Conflictual Society: The Case of Jewish–Muslim Families in Israel. Social Compass. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gomaa, Ali. 2011. Fatawa An-Nisaiyya. Cairo: Dar Al-Maktoum. [Google Scholar]
- Gungor, Ozcan. 2016. Iki Dunya Bir Aile. Ankara: Akcag Yayinlari. [Google Scholar]
- Haqqani, Shehnaz. 2018. Islamic Tradition, Change, and Feminism: The Gendered Non-Negotiable. Ph.D. thesis, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA. [Google Scholar]
- Haqqani, Shehnaz. 2022. A Guide for Muslim Women Married to Non-Muslim. In Tying the Knot: A Feminist/Womanist guide to Muslim marriage in America. Edited by Kecia Ali. Boston: OpenBU, pp. 17–30. [Google Scholar]
- Hargey, Taj. 2016. Interview by Ayse Elmali-Karakaya. Face-to-face interview. Oxford, UK, January 26. [Google Scholar]
- Hasan, Usama. 2012. “What Hapens to a Marriage If One of The Couple Converts to Islam?” Unity Blog. Available online: https://unity1.wordpress.com/2012/01/13/what-happens-to-a-marriage-if-one-of-the-couple-converts-to-islam/ (accessed on 20 April 2022).
- Hasan, Usama. 2015. From Dhimmitude to Democracy: Islamic Law, Non-Muslims & Equal Citizenship. London: Quilliam. [Google Scholar]
- Hidayatullah, Aysha A. 2014. Feminist Edges of the Qur’an. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Hoge, Dean R. 1995. Sociological Research on Interfaith Marriage in America. The Greek Orthodox Theological Review 40: 299–312. [Google Scholar]
- Ibn Abidin, Muhammad Amin. 1907. Radd Al-Muhtar Ala Al-Durr Al-Mukhtar. Dersaadet: Matbaa-i Osmaniyye. [Google Scholar]
- Ibn al-Arabi, Abu Bakr. 1974. Ahkam Al-Quran. Cairo: ‘Isa al-Babi al-Halabi. [Google Scholar]
- Ibn Ashur, Muhammad Al-Tahir. 2014. Al-Tahrir Wa’l-Tanwir. Amman: Dar al-Fath. [Google Scholar]
- Ibn Kathir, Ismail. 1999. Tafsir Al-Qurʾan Al-Azim. Riyadh: Dar al-Tayyibah. [Google Scholar]
- Ibn Qudamah, AbdAllah. 1984. Al-Muqni. Beirut: Dar al-Fikr. [Google Scholar]
- Imam, Imam Muhammad. 2001. “The European Fatwa Council Allows New Muslims to Remain with Their Non-Muslim Husbands”. Arab West Report. Available online: http://www.arabwestreport.info/en/year-2001/week-31/9-european-fatwa-council-allows-new-muslims-remain-their-non-muslim-husbands (accessed on 20 May 2022).
- Imam Malik, Malik ibn Anas. 1905. The Muwatta’. Beirut: Dar al-Sadr. [Google Scholar]
- Imam Mustafa. 2016. Interview by Ayse Elmali-Karakaya. Face-to-face interview. Leicester, UK, September 25. [Google Scholar]
- Jawad, Haifaa, and Ayse Elmali-Karakaya. 2020. Interfaith Marriages in Islam from a Woman’s Perspective: Turkish Women’s Interfaith Marriage Practices in the United Kingdom. Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs 40: 128–47. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kāsāni, AbuBakr. 1997. Bedâʾiʿu’s-Sanâʾiʿ Fî Tertîbi’ş-Şerâʾiʿ. Beirut: Dar al-Kutub al-’Ilmiyyah. [Google Scholar]
- Khan, A. S. n.d. Issues to Consider in an Inter-Faith Marriage. Zawaj.Com. Available online: http://www.zawaj.com/articles/interfaith.html (accessed on 15 May 2022).
- Kurttekin, Fatma. 2019. Religious Education of Children in Interfaith Marriages. Journal of Beliefs & Values 41: 272–83. [Google Scholar]
- Lamrabet, Asma. 2013. What Does The Qur’an Say about the Interfaith Marriage? pp. 1–8. Available online: http://www.asma-lamrabet.com/articles/what-does-the-qur-an-say-about-the-interfaith-marriage/ (accessed on 20 May 2022).
- Lamrabet, Asma. 2017. An Egalitarian Reading of the Consept of Khilafah, Wilayah and Qiwamah. In Men in Charge? Rethinking Authoirity in Muslim Lagal Tradition. Edited by Jana Rumminger, Mulki Al-Sharmani and Ziba Mir-Hosseini. New York: Oneworld, pp. 65–87. [Google Scholar]
- Leeman, Alex B. 2009. Interfaith Marriage in Islam: An Examination of the Legal Theory Behind the Traditional and Reformist Positions. Indiana Law Journal 84: 743–71. [Google Scholar]
- Mohammed, Khaleel. 2011. Interfaith Marriage Fatwa. Available online: http://forpeoplewhothink.org/Answers/Interfaith-Marriage-Fatwa.html (accessed on 21 February 2017).
- Mohammed, Khaleel. 2012. “Can Muslim Women Marry Non-Muslim Men?” YouTube. Available online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Kcp2W9V3C4 (accessed on 12 June 2022).
- Mohammed, Khaleel. n.d. Imam Khaleel Mohammed’s Defence of Inter-Faith Marriage. Available online: https://freethinkingstokie.files.wordpress.com/2012/04/eng_bothpages.pdf (accessed on 15 June 2022).
- Muhammad Salah, Sheikh. 2016. “Is Muslim Girl Allowed to Marry a Non Muslim Boy”. YouTube. Available online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eeCfd6P3csg (accessed on 1 June 2022).
- Muqatil Ibn Sulayman, Ebu Hassan. 1979. Tafsir Muqatil Ibn Sulayman. Cairo: al-Hay’a al-’Amma al-Misriyya lil-Kitab. [Google Scholar]
- Nomani, Asra. 2009. “The Doha Debates—Muslim Women’s Freedom to Marry”. YouTube. Available online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m9CHEhZL0OA (accessed on 22 May 2022).
- Office for National Statistics. 2016. 2011 Census: Religion of Female/Male Usual Residents by Number of Dependent Children in Family, by Religion of Spouse, by Religion of Youngest Dependent Child in Family, England and Wales. Available online: shorturl.at/emvZ5 (accessed on 3 August 2022).
- Parolin, Gianluca P. 2015. Interfaith Marriages and Muslim Communities in Scotland: A Hybrid Legal Solution? Electronic Journal of Islamic and Middle Eastern Law 3: 83–96. [Google Scholar]
- Philips, Bilal. 2006. “Marriage to Non Muslim—Contemporary Issues”. YouTube. Available online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7boA3baF2dg (accessed on 23 June 2022).
- Qaradawi, Yusuf. 1986. Fatawa Mu’asira. Kuwait: Dar al-Qalam. [Google Scholar]
- Qaradawi, Yusuf. 1994. The Lawful and the Prohibited in Islam (Al-Ḥalāl Wal-Ḥarām Fīl Islām). Indianapolis: American Trust Publications. [Google Scholar]
- Qaradawi, Yusuf. 2003. Fiqh of Muslim Minorities—Contentious Issues & Recommended Solution. Cairo: Al-Falah Foundation. [Google Scholar]
- Qurtubi, Muhammad. 1964. Tafsir Al-Qurtubi: Al-Jami’ Li-Ahkam Al-Qur’an. Cairo: Dar al-Kutub al-Misriyya. [Google Scholar]
- Qutb, Sayyid. 1966. Fi Zilal Al-Quran. Beirut: n.p. [Google Scholar]
- Sabuni, MuhammadAli. 1980. Ravaiu’l-Beyan Tefsiru Ayati’l-Ahkam Mine’l-Kur’an. Damascus: Maktaba al-Ghazali. [Google Scholar]
- Seamon, Erika B. 2012. Interfaith Marriage in America: The Transformation of Religion and Christianity. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. [Google Scholar]
- Sefkatli-Tuksal, Hidayet. 2016. Interview by Ayse Elmali-Karakaya. Face-to-face interview. Ankara, Turkey, July 13. [Google Scholar]
- Shaikh Ramzy, Hojjat Ramezanzadeh. 2016. Interview by Ayse Elmali-Karakaya. Face-to-face interview. Oxford, UK, October 19. [Google Scholar]
- Shatzmiller, Maya. 1996. Marriage, Family, and The Faith: Women’s Conversion to Islam. Journal of Family History 21: 235–66. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Stowasser, Barbara Freyer. 2009. Yusuf Al-Qaradawi on Women. In Global Mufti: The Phenomenon of Yusuf al-Qaradawi. Edited by Jakob Skovgaard-Petersen and Bettina Graf. London: C Hurst & Co. Publishers Ltd., pp. 181–211. [Google Scholar]
- The Presidency of Religious Affairs of Turkey. n.d. Müslüman Kadın Gayrimüslim Bir Erkekle Evlenebilir Mi? Available online: https://kurul.diyanet.gov.tr/Cevap-Ara/800/musluman-kadin-gayrimuslim-bir-erkekle-evlenebilir-mi- (accessed on 15 May 2022).
- Therrien, Catherine. 2022. ‘My Father Is Muslim and My Mother Is Christian: What about Me?’ Religious Identity and Agency within Mixed Families in Morocco. Social Compass. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Topcuoglu, Ali Aslan. 2010. Yahudilik, Hıristiyanlık ve İslam Hukukuna Göre Nikah Akdine Etkisi Bakımından Din Farklılığı. Din Bilimleri Akademik Arastirma Dergisi 10: 79–120. [Google Scholar]
- Tyser, Charles Robert, Demetrios G. Demetriades, and Ismail Hakki Efendi. 2001. The Mejelle: An English Translation of Majallahel-Ahkam-i-Adliya and a Complete Code on Islamic Civil Law. Lahor: The Book House. [Google Scholar]
- Voas, David. n.d. Religiously Mixed Marriages in England and Wales. UK Data Service. Available online: https://www.ukdataservice.ac.uk/media/604843/voas.pdf (accessed on 20 June 2022).
- Welchman, Lynn. 2017. Qiwamah and Wilayah as Legal Postulates in Muslim Family Laws. In Men in Charge? Rethinking Authoirity in Muslim Lagal Tradition. Edited by Jana Rumminger, Mulki Al-Sharmani and Ziba Mir-Hosseini. New York: Oneworld, pp. 132–62. [Google Scholar]
- Woesthoff, Julia. 2013. ‘When I Marry a Mohammedan’: Migration and the Challenges of Interethnic Marriages in Post-War Germany. Contemporary European History 22: 199–231. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Yasir Qadhi, AbuAmmar. 2009. “The Doha Debates—Muslim Women’s Freedom To Marry”. YouTube. Available online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m9CHEhZL0OA (accessed on 23 February 2022).
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. |
© 2022 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Elmali-Karakaya, A. Interfaith Marriage in Islam: Classical Islamic Resources and Contemporary Debates on Muslim Women’s Interfaith Marriages. Religions 2022, 13, 726. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13080726
Elmali-Karakaya A. Interfaith Marriage in Islam: Classical Islamic Resources and Contemporary Debates on Muslim Women’s Interfaith Marriages. Religions. 2022; 13(8):726. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13080726
Chicago/Turabian StyleElmali-Karakaya, Ayse. 2022. "Interfaith Marriage in Islam: Classical Islamic Resources and Contemporary Debates on Muslim Women’s Interfaith Marriages" Religions 13, no. 8: 726. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13080726
APA StyleElmali-Karakaya, A. (2022). Interfaith Marriage in Islam: Classical Islamic Resources and Contemporary Debates on Muslim Women’s Interfaith Marriages. Religions, 13(8), 726. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13080726