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Translation of
Malik's Muwatta:
Divorce
Section: The 'Irrevocable' Divorce
Book 29, Number 29.1.1:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
a man said to Abdullah ibn Abbas, "I have divorced my
wife by saying I divorce you a hundred times. What do
you think my situation is?" Ibn Abbas said to him, "She
was divorced from you by three pronouncements, and by
the ninety-seven, you have mocked the ayat of Allah."
Book 29, Number 29.1.2:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
a man came to Abdullah ibn Masud and said, "I have
divorced my wife by saying I divorce you eight times."
Ibn Masud said to him, "What have people told you?" He
replied, "I have been told that I have to part
absolutely from her." Ibn Masud said, "They have spoken
the truth. A person who divorces as Allah has commanded,
Allah makes it clear for him, and a person who obscures
himself in error, we make stay by his error. So do not
confuse yourselves and pull us into your confusion. It
is as they have said."
Book 29, Number 29.1.3:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Yahya ibn Said
from Abu Bakr ibn Hazm thatUmar ibn Abd al-Aziz had
asked him what people said about the 'irrevocable'
divorce, and Abu Bakr had replied that Aban ibn Uthman
had clarified that it was declared only once. Umar ibn
Abd al-Aziz said, "Even if divorce had to be declared a
thousand times, the'irrevocable' would use them all up.
A person who says, 'irrevocably' has cast the furthest
limit."
Book 29, Number 29.1.4:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Ibn Shihab that
Marwan ibn al-Hakam decided that if someone made three
pronouncements of divorce, he had divorced his wife
irrevocably.
Malik said, "That is what I like best of what I have
heard on the subject."
29.2 Divorce by Euphemistic Statements
Book 29, Number 29.1.5:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Umar ibn al-Khattab had heard in a letter from Iraq that
a man said to his wife, "Your rein is on your withers
(i.e. you have free rein)." Umar ibn al-Khattab wrote to
his governor to order the man to come to him at Makka at
the time of hajj. While Umar was doing tawaf around the
House, a man met him and greeted him. Umar asked him who
he was, and he replied that he was the man that he had
ordered to be brought to him. Umar said to him, "I ask
you by the Lord of this building, what did you mean by
your statement, 'Your rein is on your withers.'?" The
man replied, "Had you made me swear by other than this
place, I would not have told you the truth. I intended
separation by that." Umar ibn al- Khattab said, "It is
what you intended."
Book 29, Number 29.1.6:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Ali ibn Abi Talib used to say that if a man said to his
wife, "You are haram for me," it counted as three
pronouncements of divorce.
Malik said, "That is the best of what I have heard on
the subject."
Book 29, Number 29.1.7:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that
Abdullah ibn Umar said that statements like "I cut
myself off from you",or"You are abandoned", were
considered as three pronouncements of divorce.
Malik said that any strong statements such as these
or others were considered as three pronouncements of
divorce for a woman whose marriage had been consummated.
In the case of a woman whose marriage had not been
consummated, the man was asked to make an oath on his
deen, as to whether he had intended one or three
pronouncements of divorce. If he had intended one
pronouncement, he was asked to make an oath by Allah to
confirm it, and he became a suitor among other suitors,
because a woman whose marriage had been consummated,
required three pronouncements of divorce to make her
inaccessible for the husband, whilst only one
pronouncement was needed to make a woman whose marriage
had not been consummated inaccessible.
Malik added, "That is the best of what I have heard
about the matter."
Book 29, Number 29.1.8:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Yahya ibn Said
from al-Qasim ibn Muhammad that a certain man had taken
a slave-girl belonging to somebody else as a wife. He
said to her people, "She is your concern," and people
considered that to be one pronouncement of divorce.
Book 29, Number 29.1.9:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he heard Ibn
Shihab say that if a man said to his wife, "You are free
of me, and I am free of you, " it counted as three
pronouncements of divorce as if it were an 'irrevocable'
divorce.
Malik said that if a man made any strong statement
such as these to his wife, it counted as three
pronouncements of divorce for a woman whose marriage had
been consummated, or it was written as one of three for
a woman whose marriage had not been consummated,
whichever the man wished. If he said he intended only
one divorce he swore to it and he became one of the
suitors because, whereas a woman whose marriage had been
consummated was made inaccessible by three
pronouncements of divorce, the woman whose marriage had
not been consummated was made inaccessible by only one
pronouncement.
Malik said, "That is the best of what I have heard."
Section: What is Clear about Giving Wives Right of
Divorce
Book 29, Number 29.2.10:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
a man came to Abdullah ibn Umar, and said, "Abu Abd
ar-Rahman! I placed the command of my wife in her hand,
and she divorced herself, what do you think?" Abdullah
ibn Umar said, "I think that it is as she said." The man
said, "Don't do it, Abu Abd ar-Rahman!" Ibn Umar said,
"You did it, it has nothing to do with me."
Book 29, Number 29.2.11:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that
Abdullah ibn Umar said, "When a man gives a woman
command over herself, then the result is as she decides
unless he denies it and says that he only meant to give
her one divorce and he swears to it - then he has access
to her while she is in her idda."
Section: Circumstances in Which only One Pronouncement
of Divorce Permitted in Giving Wives Right of Divorce
Book 29, Number 29.3.12:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Said ibn Sulayman
ibn Zayd ibn Thabit that Kharija ibn Zayd ibn Thabit
told him that he was sitting with Zayd ibn Thabit when
Muhammad ibn Abi Atiq came to him with his eyes brimming
with tears. Zayd asked him what the matter was. He said,
"I gave my wife command of herself, and she separated
from me." Zayd said to him, "What made you do that?" He
said, "The Decree." Zayd said, "Return to her if you
wish for it is only one pronouncement, and you have
access to her."
Book 29, Number 29.3.13:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Abd ar-Rahman ibn
al-Qasim from his father that a man of Thaqif gave his
wife command over herself, and she said, "You are
divorced." He was silent. She said, "You are divorced."
He said, "May a stone be in your mouth." She said, "You
are divorced." He said, "May a stone be in your mouth."
They argued and went to Marwan ibn al-Hakam. He took an
oath that he had only given her control over one
pronouncement, and then she returned to him.
Malik said that Abd ar-Rahman declared that this
decision had amazed al-Qasim, who thought it the best
that he had heard on the subject.
Malik added, "That is also the best of what I have
heard on the subject."
Section: What is Not Clear in Giving Wives Right of
Divorce
Book 29, Number 29.4.14:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Abd ar-Rahman ibn
al-Qasim from his father that A'isha, umm al-muminin,
proposed to Qurayba bint Abi Umayya on behalf of Abd
ar-Rahman ibn Abi Bakr. They married her to him and her
people found fault with Abd ar-Rahman and said, "We only
gave in marriage because of A'isha." A'isha therefore
sent for Abd ar-Rahman and told him about it. He gave
Qurayba authority over herself and she chose her husband
and so there was no divorce.
Book 29, Number 29.4.15:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Abd ar-Rahman ibn
al-Qasim from his father that A'isha, the wife of the
Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, gave
Hafsa bint Abd arRahman in marriage to al-Mundhir ibn
az-Zubayr while Abd ar-Rahman was away in Syria. When
Abd ar-Rahman arrived, he said, "Shall someone like me
have this done to him? Am I the kind of man to have
something done to him without his consent?" A'isha spoke
to al-Mundhir ibn az-Zubayr, and al-Mundhir said, "It is
in the hands of Abd ar-Rahman." Abd ar-Rahman said, "I
won't oppose something that you have already completed."
Hafsa was confirmed with al-Mundhir, and there was no
divorce.
Book 29, Number 29.4.16:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Abdullah ibn Umar and Abu Hurayra were asked about a man
who gave his wife power over herself, and she returned
it to him without doing anything with it. They said that
there was no divorce. (i.e. The man's giving his wife
power over herself was not interpreted as a desire for
divorce on his part.)
Yahya related to me from Malik from Yahya ibn Said
that Said ibn al-Musayyab said, "If a man gives his wife
authority over herself, and she does not separate from
him and remains with him, there is no divorce."
Malik said that a woman whose husband gave her power
over herself and they separated while she was unwilling,
had no power to revoke the divorce. She only had power
over herself as long as they remained together.
Section: Annulment of Marriage by Husband's Vow to
Refrain from Intercourse (Ila)
Book 29, Number 29.5.17:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Jafar ibn
Muhammad from his father that Ali ibn Abi Talib said,
"When a man takes a vow to abstain from intercourse,
divorce does not occur immediately. If four months pass,
he must declare his intent and either he is divorced or
he revokes his vow . "
Malik said, "That is what is done among us."
Book 29, Number 29.5.18:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that
Abdullah ibn Umar said, "When a man makes a vow to
abstain from intercourse with his wife and four months
have passed he must declare his intent and either he is
divorced or he revokes his vow. Divorce does not occur
until four months have passed and he continues to
abstain."
Yahya related to me from Malik from Ibn Shihab that
Said al-Musayyab and Abu Bakr ibn Abd ar-Rahman said
about a man who made a vow to abstain from intercourse
with his wife, "If four months pass it is a divorce. The
husband can go back to his wife as long as she is in her
idda."
Book 29, Number 29.5.19:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Marwan ibn al-Hakam decided about a man who had made a
vow to abstain from intercourse with his wife, that when
four months had passed, it was a divorce and he could
return to her as long as she was in her idda.
Malik added, "That was also the opinion of Ibn
Shihab."
Malik said that if a man made a vow to abstain from
intercourse with his wife and at the end of four months
he declared his intent to continue to abstain, he was
divorced. He could go back to his wife, but if he did
not have intercourse with her before the end of her
idda, he had no access to her and he could not go back
to her unless he had an excuse - illness, imprisonment,
or a similar excuse. His return to her maintained her as
his wife. If her idda passed and then he married her
after that and did not have intercourse with her until
four months had passed and he declared his intent to
continue to abstain, divorce was applied to him by the
first vow. If four months passed, and he had not
returned to her, he had no idda against her nor access
because he had married her and then divorced her before
touching her.
Malik said that a man who made a vow to abstain from
intercourse with his wife and continued to abstain after
four months and so divorced her, but then returned and
did not touch her and four months were completed before
her idda was completed, did not have to declare his
intent and divorce did not befall him. If he had
intercourse with her before the end of her idda, he was
entitled to her. If her idda passed before he had
intercourse with her, he had no access to her. This is
what Malik preferred of what he had heard on the
subject.
Malik said that if a man made a vow to abstain from
intercourse with his wife and then divorced her, and the
four months of the vow were completed before completion
of the idda of the divorce, it counted as two
pronouncements of divorce. If he declared his intention
to continue to abstain and the idda of the divorce
finished before the four months the vow of abstention
was not a divorce. That was because the four months had
passed and she was not his on that day.
Malik said, "If someone makes a vow not to have
intercourse with his wife for a day or a month and then
waits until more than four months have passed, it is not
ila. Ila only applies to someone who vows more than four
months. As for the one who vows not to have intercourse
with his wife for four months or less than that, I do
not think that it is ila because when the term enters
into it at which it stops, he comes out of his oath and
he does not have to declare his intention."
Malik said, "If someone vows to his wife not to have
intercourse with her until her child has been weaned,
that is not ila. I have heard that Ali ibn Abi Talib was
asked about that and he did not think that it was ila."
Section: The Ila (Vow of Abstention) of Slaves
Book 29, Number 29.6.19a:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had asked Ibn
Shihab about the ila of the slave. He said that it was
like the ila of the free man, and it put an obligation
on him. The ila of the slave was two months.
Section: Dhihar of Free Men
Book 29, Number 29.7.20:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Said ibn Amr ibn
Sulaym az-Zuraqi that he asked al-Qasim ibn Muhammad
about a man who made divorce conditional on his marrying
a woman i.e. if he married her he would automatically
divorce her. Al-Qasim ibn Muhammad said, "If a man
marries a woman whom he has made as his mother's back,
i.e. has made haram for him, Umar ibn al-Khattab ordered
him not to go near her if he married her until he had
done the kaffara for pronouncing dhihar."
Book 29, Number 29.7.21:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
a man asked al-Qasim ibn Muhammad and Sulayman ibn Yasar
about a man who pronounced dhihar from his wife before
he had married her. They said, "If he marries her, he
must not touch her until he has done the kaffara for
pronouncing dhihar."
Book 29, Number 29.7.22:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Hisham ibn Urwa
that his father said that a man who pronounced a dhihar
from his four wives in one statement, had only to do one
kaffara. Yahya related the same as that to me from Malik
from Rabia ibn Abi Abd ar-Rahman.
Malik said, "That is what is done among us. Allah,
the Exalted said about the kaffara for pronouncing
dhihar, 'It is to free a slave before they touch one
another. If he does not find the means to do that, then
fasting for two consecutive months before they touch one
another. If he cannot do that, it is to feed sixty poor
people. ' " (Sura 58 ayats 4,5).
Malik said that a man who pronounced dhihar from his
wife on various occasions had only to do one kaffara. If
he pronounced dhihar, and then did kaffara, and then
pronounced dhihar after he had done the kaffara, he had
to do kaffara again.
Malik said, "Some one who pronounces dhihar from his
wife and then has intercourse with her before he has
done kaffara, only has to do one kaffara. He must
abstain from her until he does kaffara and ask
forgiveness of Allah. That is the best of what I have
heard. "
Malik said, "It is the same with dhihar using any
prohibited relations of fosterage and ancestry."
Malik said, "Women have no dhihar."
Malik said that he had heard that the commentary on
the word of Allah, the Blessed, the Exalted, "Those of
you who pronounce the dhihar about their wives, and then
retract what they have said," (Sura 56 ayat 3), was that
a man pronounced dhihar on his wife and then decided to
keep her and have intercourse with her. If he decided on
that, he must do kaffara. If he divorced her and did not
decide to retract his dhihar of her and to keep her and
have intercourse with her, there would be no kaffara
incumbent on him.
Maliksaid, "If he marries her after that, he does not
touch her until he has completed the kaffara of
pronouncing dhihar."
Malik said that if a man who pronounced dhihar from
his slave-girl wanted to have intercourse with her, he
had to do the kaffara of the dhihar before he could
sleep with her.
Malik said, "There is no ila in a man's dhihar unless
it is evident that he does not intend to retract his
dhihar."
Book 29, Number 29.7.23:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Hisham ibn Urwa
that he heard a man ask Urwa ibn az-Zubayr about a man
who said to his wife, "Any woman I marry along with you
as long as you live will be like my mother's back to
me." Urwa ibn az-Zubayr said, "The freeing of slaves is
enough to release him from that."
Section: Dhihar of Slaves
Book 29, Number 29.8.24:
ahya related to me from Malik that he asked Ibn
Shihab about the dhihar of a slave. He said, "It is like
the dhihar of a free man."
Malik said, "He meant that the same conditions were
applied in both cases."
Malik said, "The dhihar of the slave is incumbent on
him, and the fasting of the slave in the dhihar is two
months. "
Malik said that there was no ila for a slave who
pronounced a dhihar from his wife. That was because if
he were to fast the kaffara for pronouncing a dhihar,
the divorce of the ila would come to him before he had
finished the fast.
Section: The Option (of Slave-Girls Married to Slaves
when Freed)
Book 29, Number 29.9.25:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Rabia ibn Abi Abd
ar-Rahman from al-Qasim ibn Muhammad that A'isha umm
al-muminin, said, "There were three sunnas established
in connection with Barira: firstly was that when she was
set free she was given her choice about her husband,
secondly, the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him
and grant him peace, said about her, 'The right of
inheritance belongs to the person who has set a person
free,' thirdly, the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless
him and grant him peace, came in and there was a pot
with meat on the boil. Bread and condiments were brought
to him from the stock of the house. The Messenger of
Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, said,
'Didn't I see a pot with meat in it?' They said, 'Yes,
Messenger of Allah. That is meat which was given as
sadaqa for Barira, and you do not eat sadaqa.' The
Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace, said, 'It is sadaqa for her, and it is a gift for
us.' "
Book 29, Number 29.9.26:
ahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that Abdullah
ibn Umar said that a female slave who was the wife of a
slave and then was set free, had the right of choice as
long as he did not have intercourse with her.
Malik said, "If her husband has intercourse with her
and she claims that she did not know, she still has the
right of choice. If she is suspect and one does not
believe her claim of ignorance, then she has no choice
after he has had intercourse with her."
Book 29, Number 29.9.27:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Ibn Shihab from
Urwa ibn az-Zubayr that a mawla of the tribe of Banu Adi
called Zabra told him that she had been the wife of a
slave when she was a slave-girl. Then she was set free
and she sent a message to Hafsa, the wife of the
Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace. Hafsa
called her and said, "I will tell you something., but I
would prefer that you did not act upon it. You have
authority over yourself as long as your husband does not
have intercourse with you. If he has intercourse with
you, you have no authority at all." Therefore she
pronounced her divorce from him three times.
Book 29, Number 29.9.28:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Said ibn al-Musayyab said that if a man married a woman,
and he was insane or had a physical defect, she had the
right of choice. If she wished she could stay, and if
she wished she could separate from him.
Book 29, Number 29.9.29:
Malik said that if a slave-girl, who was the wife of
a slave, was set free before he had consummated the
marriage, and she chose herself, then she had no
bride-price and it was a pronouncement of divorce. That
was what was done among them.
Book 29, Number 29.9.30:
Yahya related to me that Malik heard Ibn Shihab say,
"When a man gives his wife the right of choice, and she
chooses him, that is not divorce."
Malik added, "That is the best of what I have heard."
Malik said that if a woman who had been given the
right of choice by her husband chose herself, she was
divorced trebly. If her husband said, "But I only gave
her the right of choice in one," he had none of that.
That was the best of what he had heard.
Malik said, "If the man gives his wife the right of
choice and she says, 'I accept one', and he says, 'I did
not mean that, I have given the right of choice in all
three together,' then if she only accepts one, she
remains with him in her marriage, and that is not
separation if Allah, the Exalted wills."
Section: Separating from Wives for Compensation
Book 29, Number 29.10.31:
Yahya related. to me from Malik from Yahya ibn Said
that Amra bint Abd ar-Rahman told him from Habiba bint
Sahl al-Ansari that she had been the wife of Thabit ibn
Qays ibn Shammas. The Messenger of Allah, may Allah
bless him and grant him peace, went out for the dawn
prayer, and found Habiba bint Sahl at his door in the
darkness. The Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him
and grant him peace, said to her, "Who is this?" She
said, "I am Habiba bint Sahl, Messenger of Allah." He
said, "What do you want?" She said, "That Thabit ibn
Qays and I separate." When her husband, Thabit ibn Qays
came, the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace, said to him, "This is Habiba bint Sahl.
She mentioned what Allah willed that she mention."
Habiba said, "Messenger of Allah, all that he has given
me is with me!" The Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless
him and grant him peace, said to Thabit ibn Qays, "Take
it from her," and he took it from her, and she stayed in
the house of her family.
Book 29, Number 29.10.32:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi from a mawla
of Safiyya bint Abi Ubayd that she gave all that she
possessed to her husband as compensation for her divorce
from him, and Abdullah ibn Umar did not disapprove of
that.
Malik said that divorce was ratified for a woman who
ransomed herself from her husband, when it was known
that her husband was detrimental to her and was
oppressive for her, and it was known that he wronged
her, and he had to return her property to her. Malik
added, "This is what I have heard, and it is what is
done among us."
Malik said, "There is no harm if a woman ransoms
herself from her husband for more than he gave her."
Section: Divorce of Men who Divorce for Compensation
Book 29, Number 29.11.33:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that Rubayyi
bint Muawwidh ibn Afra came with her paternal uncle to
Abdullah ibn Umar and told him that she had divorced her
husband for a compensation in the time of Uthman ibn
Affan, and he heard about it and did not disapprove.
Abdullah ibn Umar said, "Her idda is the idda of a
divorced woman."
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Said ibn al-Musayyab and Sulayman ibn Yasar and Ibn
Shihab all said that a woman who divorced for a
compensation had the same idda as a divorced woman -
three periods.
Malik said that a woman who ransomed herself could
not return to her husband except by a new marriage. If
someone married her and then separated from her before
he had intercourse with her, there was no idda against
her from the recent marriage, and she rested on her
first idda.
Malik said, "That is the best that I have heard on
the matter."
Malik said, "If, when a woman offers to compensate
her husband, he divorces her straightaway, then that
compensation is confirmed for him. If he makes no
response, and then at a later date, does divorce her, he
is not entitled to that compensation."
Section: Lian (Invoking Mutual Curses)
Book 29, Number 29.12.34:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Ibn Shihab that
Sahl ibn Sad as-Saidi told him that Uwaymir al-Ajlani
came to Asim ibn Adi al-Ansari and said to him, "Asim!
What do you think a man who finds another man with his
wife should do? Should he kill him and then be killed
himself, or what should .he do? Asim! ask the Messenger
of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, about
that for me." Asim asked the Messenger of Allah, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace, about it. The
Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace, was revolted by the questions and reproved them
until what he heard from the Messenger of Allah, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace. was intolerable for
Asim. When Asim returned to his people, Uwaymir came to
him and said, " Asim! what did the Messenger of Allah,
may Allah bless him and grant him peace, say to you?"
Asim said to Uwaymir, "You didn't bring me any good. The
Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace, was revolted by the question which I asked him."
Uwaymir said, "By Allah! I will not stop until I ask him
about it!" Uwaymir stood up and went to the Messenger of
Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, in the
middle of the people and said, "Messenger of Allah! What
do you think a man who finds another man with his wife
should do? Should he kill him and then be killed
himself, or what should he do?" The Messenger of Allah,
may Allah bless him and grant him peace, said,
"Something has been sent down about you and your wife,
so go and bring her."
Sahl continued, "They mutually cursed one another in
the presence of the Messenger, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace, and I was present with the people. When
they finished cursing each other, Uwaymir said, 'I shall
have lied about her, Messenger of Allah, if I keep her,'
and pronounced the divorce three times before the
Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace, ordered him to do it."
Malik said that Ibn Shihab said, "That was how the
sunna of a couple mutually cursing each other was
established (lian)."
Book 29, Number 29.12.35:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafic from
Abdullah ibn Umar that a man cursed his wife in the time
of the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant
him peace, and disowned her child. The Messenger of
Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him peace,
separated them and gave the child to the woman.
Malik said, "Allah the Blessed, the Exalted, said,
'The testimony of men who accuse their wives but do not
have any witnesses except themselves is to testify by
Allah four times that he is being truthful, and a fifth
time, that the curse of Allah will be upon him, if he
should be a liar. She will avoid punishment if she
testifies by Allah four times that he is a liar, and a
fifth time, that the wrath of Allah shall be upon her,
if he should be telling the truth. ' "(Sura 24 ayat 6).
Malik said, "The sunna with us is that those who
curse each other are never to be remarried. If the man
calls himself a liar, (i.e. takes back his accusation),
he is flogged with the hadd-punishment, and the child is
given to him, and his wife can never return to him.
There is no doubt or dispute about this sunna among us.
"
Malik said, "If a man separates from his wife by an
irrevocable divorce by which he cannot return to her,
and then he denies the paternity of the child she is
carrying, whilst she claims that he is the father, and
it is possible by the timing, that he be so, he must
curse her, and the child is not recognised as his."
Malik said, "That is what is done among us, and it is
what I have heard from the people of knowledge."
Malik said that a man who accused his wife after he
had divorced her trebly while she was pregnant, and he
had at first accepted being the father but then claimed
that he had seen her committing adultery before he
separated from her, was flogged with the
hadd-punishment, and did not curse her.
If he denied the paternity of her child after he had
divorced her trebly, and he had not previously accepted
it, then he cursed her.
Malik said, "This is what I have heard."
Malik said, "The slave is in the same position as the
free man as regards making accusations and invoking
mutual curses (lian). He acts in the lian as the free
man acts although there is no hadd applied for
slandering a female-slave."
Malik said, "The muslim slave-girl and the christian
and jewish free woman also do lian when a free muslim
marries one of them and has intercourse with her. That
is because Allah - may He be blessed and Exalted, said
in His Book, 'As for those who accuse their wives,' and
they are their wives. This is what is done among us.
Malik said that a man who did the lian with his wife,
and then stopped and called himself a liar after one or
two oaths and he had not cursed himself in the fifth
one, had to be flogged with the hadd-punishment, but
they did not have to be separated.
Malik said that if a man divorced his wife and then
after three months the woman said, "I am pregnant," and
he denied paternity, then he had to do lian.
Malik said that the husband of a female slave who
pronounced the lian on her and then bought her, was not
to have intercourse with her, even if he owned her. The
sunna which had been handed down about a couple who
mutually cursed each other in the lian was that they
were never to return to each other.
Malik said that when a man pronounced the lian
against his wife before he had consummated the marriage,
she only had half of the bride price.
Section: Inheritance of Children of Women against whom
Lian has been Pronounced
Book 29, Number 29.13.36:
Yaha related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Urwa ibn az-Zubayr said that if the child of the woman
against whom lian had been pronounced or the child of
fornication, died, his mother inherited from him her
right in the Book of Allah the Exalted, and his maternal
half-brothers had their rights. The rest was inherited
by the owners of his mother's wala' if she was a freed
slave. If she was an ordinary free woman, she inherited
her right, his maternal brothers inherited their rights,
and the rest went to the muslims.
Malik said,"I heard the same as that from Sulayman
ibn Yasar, and it is what I saw the people of knowledge
in our city doing."
Section: Divorce of Virgins
Book 29, Number 29.14.37:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Ibn Shihab from
Muhammad ibn Abd ar-Rahman ibn Thawban that Muhammad ibn
Iyas ibn al-Bukayr said, "A man divorced his wife three
times before he had consummated the marriage, and then
it seemed good to him to marry her. Therefore, he wanted
an opinion, and I went with him to ask Abdullah ibn
Abbas and Abu Hurayra on his behalf about it, and they
said, 'We do not think that you should marry her until
she has married another husband.' He protested that his
divorcing her had been only once. Ibn Abbas said, 'You
threw away what you had of blessing.' "
Book 29, Number 29.14.38a:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Yahya ibn Said
from Bukayr ibn Abdullah al-Ashajj from an-Numan ibn Abi
Ayyash al Ansari from Ata ibn Yasar that a man came and
asked Abdullah ibn Amr ibn al-As about a man who
divorced his wife three times before he had had
intercourse with her Ata said, "The divorce of the
virgin is one. Abdullah ibn Amr ibn al-As said to me,
'You say one pronouncement separates her and three makes
her haram until she has married another husband.' "
Book 29, Number 29.14.38b:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Yahya ibn Said
that Bukayr ibn Abdullah al-Ashajj informed him that
Muawiya ibn Abi Ayyash al-Ansari told him that he was
sitting with Abdullah ibn az-Zubayr and Asim ibn Umar
ibn al-Khattab when Muhammad ibn Iyas ibn al-Bukayr came
up to them and said, "A man from the desert has divorced
his wife three times before consummating the marriage,
what do you think?" Abdullah ibn az-Zubayr said "This is
something about which we have no statement. Go to
Abdullah ibn Abbas and Abu Hurayra. I left them with
A'isha. Ask them and then come and tell us." He went and
asked them. Ibn Abbas said to Abu Hurayra, "Give an
opinion, Abu Hurayra! A difficult one has come to you."
Abu Hurayra said, "One pronouncement separates her and
three makes her haram until she has married another
husband." Ibn Abbas said the like of that.
Malik said, "That is what is done among us, and when
a man marries a woman who has been married before, and
he has not had intercourse with her, she is treated as a
virgin - one pronouncement separates her and three make
her haram until she has married another husband."
Section: Divorce of Sick Men
Book 29, Number 29.15.40:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Ibn Shihab that
Talha ibn Abdullah ibn Awf said, and he knew that better
than them, from Abu Salama ibn Abd ar-Rahman ibn Awf
that Abd ar-Rahman ibn Awf divorced his wife irrevocably
while he was terminally ill, and Uthman ibn Affan made
her an heir after the end of her idda.
Book 29, Number 29.15.41:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Abdullah ibn
al-Fadl from al-Araj that Uthman ibn Affan made the
wives of ibn Mukmil inherit from him, and he had
divorced them while he was terminally ill.
Book 29, Number 29.15.42:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he heard Rabia
ibn Abi Abd ar-Rahman say, ''I heard that the wife of
Abd ar-Rahman ibn Awf asked him to divorce her. He said,
'When you have menstruated and are pure, then come to
me.' She did not menstruate until Abd ar-Rahman ibn Awf
was ill. When she was purified, she told him and he
divorced her irrevocably or made a pronouncement of
divorce which was all that he had left over her Abd
arRahman ibn Awf was terminally ill at the time, so
Uthman ibn Affan made her one of the heirs after the end
of her idda."
Book 29, Number 29.15.43:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Yahya ibn Said
that Muhammad ibn Yahya ibn Habban said, "My grandfather
Habban had two wives, one from the Hashimites and one
from the Ansars. He divorced the Ansariyya while she was
nursing, and a year passed and he died and she had still
not yet menstruated. She said, 'I inherit from him. I
have not menstruated yet.' The wives quarrelled and went
to Uthman ibn Affan. He decided that she did inherit,
and the Hashimiyya rebuked Uthman. He said, 'This is the
practice of the son of your paternal uncle. He pointed
this out to us.' He meant Ali ibn Abi Talib."
Book 29, Number 29.15.44:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard Ibn
Shihab say, "When a man who is terminally ill divorces
his wife three times, she inherits from him."
Malik said, "If he divorces her while he is
terminally ill before he has consummated the marriage,
she has half of the bride-price and inherits, and she
does not have to do an idda. If he consummated the
marriage, she has all the dowry and inherits. The virgin
and the previously married woman are the same in this
situation according to us."
Section: Compensation in Divorce
Book 29, Number 29.16.45:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Abd ar-Rahman ibn Awf divorced his wife, and gave her
compensation in the form of a slave-girl.
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that
Abdullah ibn Umar said, "Every divorced woman has
compensation except for the one who is divorced and is
allocated a bride-price and has not been touched. She
has half of what was allocated to her."
Book 29, Number 29.16.46:
Yahya related to me from Malik that Ibn Shihab said,
"Every divorced woman has compensation."
Malik said, "I have also heard the same as that from
al-Qasim ibn Muhammad."
Malik said, "There is no fixed limit among us as to
how small or large the compensation is."
Section: The Divorce of the Slave
Book 29, Number 29.17.47:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Abu'z-Zinad from
Sulayman ibn Yasar that Nufay, a mukatab of Umm Salama
the wife of the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant
him peace, or her slave, had a free woman as a wife. He
divorced her twice, and then he wanted to return to her.
The wives of the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant
him peace, ordered him to go to Uthman ibn Affan to ask
him about it. He found him at ad-Daraj with Zayd ibn
Thabit. He asked them, and they both anticipated him and
said, "She is haram for you. She is haram for you."
Book 29, Number 29.17.48:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Ibn Shihab from
Said ibn al-Musayyab that Nufay, a mukatab of Umm
Salama, the wife of the Prophet, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace, divorced his free wife twice, so he
asked Uthman ibn Affan for an opinion, and he said, "She
is haram for you."
Book 29, Number 29.17.49:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Abdu Rabbih ibn
Said from Muhammad ibn Ibrahim ibn al-Harith at-Taymi
that Nufay, a mukatab of Umm Salama, the wife of the
Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, asked
Zayd ibn Thabit for an opinion. He said, "I have
divorced my free wife twice." Zayd ibn Thabit said, "She
is haram for you."
Book 29, Number 29.17.50:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that
Abdullah ibn Umar said, "When the slave divorces his
wife twice, she is haram for him until she has married
another husband, whether she is free or a slave. The
idda of a free woman is three menstrual periods, and the
idda of a slave-girl is two periods.
Book 29, Number 29.17.51:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that
Abdullah ibn Umar said, "If a man gives his slave
permission to marry, the divorce is in the hand of the
slave, and nobody else has any power over his divorce.
Nothing is held against a man who takes the slave-girl
of his male slave or the slave-girl of his
female-slave."
Section: Maintenance of Slave-Girls Divorced when
Pregnant
Book 29, Number 29.18.51a:
Malik said, "Neither a free man nor a slave who
divorces a slave-girl nor a slave who divorces a free
woman, in an irrevocable divorce, is obliged to pay
maintenance even if she is pregnant, and he cannot
return to her."
Malik said, "A free man is not obliged to pay for the
suckling of his son when he is a slave of other people,
nor is a slave obliged to spend his money for what his
master owns except with the permission of his master."
Section: Idda of Women whose Husbands are Missing
Book 29, Number 29.19.52:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Yahya ibn Said
from Said ibn al-Musayyab that Umar ibn al-Khattab said,
"The woman who loses her husband and does not know where
he is, waits for four years, then she does idda for four
months, and then she is free to marry."
Malik said, "If she marries after her idda is over,
regardless of whether the new husband has consummated
the marriage or not, her first husband has no means of
access to her."
Malik said, "That is what is done among us and if her
husband reaches her before she has remarried, he is more
entitled to her."
Malik said that he had seen people disapproving of
someone who said that one of the people (of knowledge)
attributed to Umar ibn al-Khattab that he said, "Her
first husband chooses when he comes either her
bride-price or his wife."
Malik said, "I have heard that Umar ibn al-Khattab,
speaking about a woman whose husband divorced her while
he was absent from her, and then he took her back and
the news of his taking her back had not reached her,
while the news of his divorcing her had, and so she had
married again, said, 'Her first husband who divorced her
has no means of access to her whether or not the new
husband has consummated the marriage.' "
Malik said, "This is what I like the best of what I
heard about the missing man."
Section: Idda of Divorce and Divorce of Menstruating
Women
Book 29, Number 29.20.53:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that
Abdullah ibn Umar divorced his wife while she was
menstruating in the time of the Messenger of Allah, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace, Umar ibn al-Khattab
asked the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace, about it. The Messenger of Allah, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace, said, "Go and tell
him to take her back and keep her until she is purified
and then has a period and then is purified. Then if he
wishes, he an keep her, and if he wishes he should
divorce her before he has intercourse with her. That is
the idda which Allah has commanded for women who are
divorced."
Book 29, Number 29.20.54:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Ibn Shihab from
Urwa ibn az-Zubayr from A'isha, umm al-muminin, that she
took Hafsa ibn Abd ar-Rahman ibn Abi Bakr as-Siddiq into
her house when she had entered the third period of her
idda. Ibn Shihab said, "That was mentioned to Amra bint
Abd ar-Rahman, and she said that Urwa had spoken the
truth and people had argued with A'isha about it. They
said that Allah, the Blessed, the Exalted, said in His
Book, 'Three quru.' A'isha said, 'You spoke the truth.
Do you know what quru are? Quru are times of becoming
pure after menstruation .' "
Book 29, Number 29.20.55:
Yahya related to me from Malik that Ibn Shihab said
that he heard Abu Bakr ibn Abd ar-Rahman say, "I have
never seen any of our fuqaha who did not say that this
was what the statement of A'isha meant."
Book 29, Number 29.20.56:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi and Zayd ibn
Aslam from Sulayman ibn Yasar that al-Ahwas died in
Syria when his wife had begun her third menstrual period
after he had divorced her. Muawiya ibn Abi Sufyan wrote
and asked Zayd ibn Thabit about that. Zayd wrote to him,
"When she began her third period, she was free from him
and he was free from her, and he does not inherit from
her nor she from him."
Book 29, Number 29.20.57:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Abu Bakr ibn Abd ar-Rahman and Sulayman ibn Yasar and
Ibn Shihab used to say, "When the divorced woman enters
the beginning of her third period, she is clearly
separated from her husband and there is no inheritance
between them and he has no access to her."
Book 29, Number 29.20.58:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that
Abdullah ibn Umar said, "When a man divorces his wife
and she begins her third period, she is free from him
and he is free from her."
Malik said, "This is how things are done among us."
Book 29, Number 29.20.59:
Yahya related to me from Malik from al-Fudayl ibn Abi
Abdullah, the mawla of al-Mahri that al-Qasim ibn
Muhammad and Salim ibn Abdullah said, "When a woman is
divorced and begins her third period, she is clearly
separated from him and is free to marry again."
Book 29, Number 29.20.60:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Said ibn al-Musayyab and Ibn Shihab and Sulayman ibn
Yasar all said, "The idda of the woman with a khul
divorce is three periods."
Book 29, Number 29.20.61:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he heard Ibn
Shihab say, "The idda of the divorced woman is reckoned
by the menstrual cycles even if she is estranged ." (The
reason the idda is normally reckoned by the menstrual
cycle is to see whether the woman is pregnant or not.)
Book 29, Number 29.20.62:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Yahya ibn Said
from a man of the Ansar that his wife asked him for a
divorce, and he said to her, "When you have had your
period, then tell me." When she had her period, she told
him. He said, "When you are purified then tell me." When
she was purified, she told him and he divorced her.
Malik said, "This is the best of what I have heard
about it."
Section: Idda of Women in their Houses when Divorced in
Them
Book 29, Number 29.21.63:
Yahya related to me from Malik thal Yahya ibn Said
heard al-Qasim ibn Muhammad and Sulayman ibn Yasar both
mention that Yahya ibn Said ibn al-As divorced the
daughter of Abd ar-Rahman ibn al-Hakam irrevocably, so
Abd ar-Rahman ibn al-Hakam took her away A'isha umm
al-muminin sent to Marwan ibn al-Hakam who was the Amir
of al-Madina at that time. She said, "Fear Allah and
make him return the woman to her house." Marwan said in
what Sulayman related, ''Abd ar-Rahman has the upper
hand over me." Marwan said in what al-Qasim related,
"Hasn't the affair of Fatima bint Qays reached you?"
A'isha said, "You are forced to mention the story of
Fatima " Marwan said, "If you know that evil, whatever
evil there was between those two is enough for you."
(See hadith 67.)
Book 29, Number 29.21.64:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that the
daughter of Said ibn Zayd ibn Amr ibn Nufayl was the
wife of Abdullah ibn Umar ibn Uthman ibn Affan, and he
divorced her irrevocably and she moved out. Abdullah ibn
Umar rebuked her for that.
Book 29, Number 29.21.65:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that
Abdullah ibn Umar divorced one of his wives in the house
of Hafsa, the wife of the Prophet, may Allah bless him
and grant him peace, while he was on the way to the
mosque. He went another route from behind the houses
being averse to ask permission to enter until he
returned to her.
Book 29, Number 29.21.66:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Yahya ibn Said
that Said ibn al-Musayyab was asked who was obliged to
pay the rent for a woman whose husband divorced her
while she was in a leased house. Said ibn al-Musayyab
said, "Her husband is obliged to pay it." Someone asked,
"what if her husband does not have it?" He said, "Then
she must pay it." Someone asked, "And if she does not
have it?" He said, "Then the Amir must pay it."
Section: Maintenance of Divorced Woman
Book 29, Number 29.22.67:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Abdullah ibn
Yazid, the mawla of al-Aswad ibn Sufyan from Abu Salama
ibn Abd ar-Rahman ibn Awf from Fatima bint Qays that Abu
Amr ibn Hafs divorced her absolutely while he was away
in Syria. His agent sent her some barley and she was
displeased with it, saying, "By Allah, I don't expect
anything from you." She went to the Messenger of Allah,
may Allah bless him and grant him peace, and mentioned
it to him. He said, "You have no maintenance." He then
ordered her to spend her idda in the house of Umm
Sharik. Then he said, "This is a woman whom my
companions visit. Spend the idda in the house of Ibn Umm
Maktum. He is a blind man and you can undress at his
home. When you are free to remarry, tell me."
She continued, "When I was free to remarry, I
mentioned to him that Muawiya ibn Abi Sufyan and Abu
Jahm ibn Hisham had asked for me in marriage. The
Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace, said, 'As for Abu Jahm, he never puts down his
stick from his shoulder (i.e. he is always travelling),
and as for Muawiya he is a poor man with no property.
Marry Usama ibn Zayd.' I objected to him and he said,
'Marry Usama ibn Zayd,' so I married him, and Allah put
good in it and I was content with him."
Book 29, Number 29.22.68:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he heard Ibn
Shihab say, "The woman who is absolutely divorced does
not leave her house until she is free to remarry. She
has no maintenance unless she is pregnant. In that
circumstance the husband spends on her until she gives
birth."
Malik said, "This is what is done among us."
Section: Idda of Slave-Girls Divorced by Their Husbands
Book 29, Number 29.23.69:
Malik said, "What is done among us when a slave
divorces a slave-girl when she is a slave and then she
is set free, is that her idda is the idda of a
slave-girl, and her being set free does not change her
idda whether or not he can still return to her. Her idda
is not altered."
Malik added, "The hadd-punishment which a slave
incurs is the same as this. When he is freed after he
has incurred but before the punishment has been
executed, his hadd is the hadd of the slave."
Malik said, "When a free man divorces a slave-girl
three times, her idda is two periods. When a slave
divorces a free woman twice, her idda is three periods."
Malik said about a man who had a slave-girl as a
wife, and he bought her and set her free, ''Her idda is
the idda of a slave-girl, i.e. two periods, as long as
he has not had intercourse with her. If he has had
intercourse with her after buying her and before he set
her free, she only has to wait until one period has
passed . "
Section: General Chapter on Idda of Divorce
Book 29, Number 29.24.70:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Yahya ibn Said
and from Yazid ibn Abdullah ibn Qusayt al-Laythi that
Said ibn al-Musayyab said, ''Umar ibn al-Khattab said,
'If a woman is divorced and has one or two periods and
then stops menstruating, she must wait nine months. If
it is clear that she is pregnant, that is that. If not,
she must do an idda of three months after the nine, and
then she is free to marry.' "
Yahya related to me from Malik from Yahya ibn Said
that Said ibn al-Musayyab said, "Divorce belongs to men,
and women have the idda."
Book 29, Number 29.24.71:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Ibn Shihab that
Said ibn al-Musayyab said, "The idda of the woman who
bleeds constantly is a year."
Malik said, "What is done among us about a divorced
woman whose periods stop when her husband divorces her
is that she waits nine months. If she has not had a
period in them, she has an idda of three months. If she
has a period before the end of the three months, she
accepts the period. If another nine months pass without
her having a period, she does an idda of three months.
If she has a second period before the end of those three
months, she accepts the period. If nine months then pass
without a period, she does an idda of three months. If
she has a third period, the idda of the period is
complete. If she does not have a period, she waits three
months, and then she is free to marry. Her husband can
return to her before she becomes free to marry unless he
made her divorce irrevocable."
Malik said, "The sunna with us is that when a man
divorces his wife and has the option to return to her,
and she does part of her idda and then he returns to her
and then parts from her before he has had intercourse
with her, she does not add to what has passed of her
idda. Her husband has wronged himself and erred if he
returned to her and had no need of her."
Malik said, "What is done among us is that if a woman
becomes a muslim while her husband is a kafir and then
he becomes muslim, he is entitled to her as long as she
is in her idda. If her idda is finished, he has no
access to her. If he remarries her after the end of her
idda, however, that is not counted as divorce. Islam
removed her from him without divorce."
Section: The Two Arbiters
Book 29, Number 29.25.72:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Ali ibn Abi Talib said about the two arbiters about whom
Allah, the Exalted, said,"If you fear a breach between
the two, appoint an arbiter from his people, and an
arbiter from her people. If they desire to set things
aright, Allah will make peace between them, surely Allah
is Knowing, Aware," (Sura 4 ayat 35), that the
separation and the joining were overseen by the two of
them.
Malik said, "That is the best of what I have heard
from the people of knowledge. Whatever the two arbiters
say concerning separation or joining is taken into
consideration "
Section: Oath of Men to Divorce while Not yet Married
Book 29, Number 29.26.73:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Umar ibn al-Khattab, Abdullah ibn Umar, Abdullah ibn
Masud, Salim ibn Abdullah, al-Qasim ibn Muhammad, Ibn
Shihab,and Sulayman ibn Yasar all said, "If a man has
vowed to divorce his wife before marrying her and then
he breaks his vow, divorce is obligatory for him when he
marries her."
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Abdullah ibn Masud said that there was nothing binding
on someone who said, "Every woman I marry is divorced,"
if he did not name a specific tribe or woman.
Malik said, "That is the best of what I have heard."
Malik said about a man saying to his wife, "You are
divorced, and every woman I marry is divorced," or that
all his property would be sadaqa if he did not do
such-and-such, and he broke his oath: "As for his wives,
it is divorce as he said, and as for his statement,
'Every woman I marry is divorced', if he did not name a
specific woman, tribe, or land, or such, it is not
binding on him and he can marry as he wishes. As for his
property, he gives a third of it away as sadaqa."
Section: Deadline of Men who do Not have Intercourse
with Their Wives
Book 29, Number 29.27.74:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Ibn Shihab that
Said ibn al-Musayyab said, "If someone marries a woman
and cannot have intercourse with her, there is a
deadline of a year set for him to have intercourse with
her. If he does not, they are separated."
Book 29, Number 29.27.754:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had asked Ibn
Shihab about whether the deadline was set from the day
he had married her, or from the day she raised the
question before the Sultan. He said. 'It is from the day
she presents it before the Sultan.'
Malik said, "As for someone who has intercourse with
his wife and then is prevented from intercourse with
her, I have not heard that there is a deadline set for
him or that they are separated."
Section: General Section on Divorce
Book 29, Number 29.28.76:
Yahya related to me from Malik that Ibn Shihab said,
"I have heard that the Messenger of Allah, may Allah
bless him and grant him peace, said to a man from Thaqif
who had ten wives when he became muslim, 'Take four and
separate from the rest.' "
Book 29, Number 29.28.77:
Yahya related to me from Malik that Ibn Shihab said
that he had heard Said ibn al-Musayyab, Humayd ibn Abd
ar-Rahman ibn Awf, Ubaydullah ibn Abdullah ibn Utba ibn
Masud, and Sulayman ibn Yasarall say, that they had
heard Abu Hurayra say that he had heard Umar ibn
al-Khattab say, "If a woman is divorced by her husband
once or twice, and he leaves her until she is free to
marry and she marries another husband and he dies or
divorces her, and then she marries her first husband,
she is with him according to what remains of her
divorce."
Malik said, "That is what is done among us and there
is no dispute about it."
Book 29, Number 29.28.78:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Thabit ibn
al-Ahnaf that he married an umm walad of Abd ar-Rahman
ibn Zayd ibn al-Khattab. He said, "Abdullah ibn Abd
ar-Rahman ibn Zayd ibn al-Khattab summoned me and I went
to him. I came in upon him and there were whips and two
iron fetters placed there, and two of his slaves whom he
had made to sit there. He said, 'Divorce her, or by He
by whom one swears, I will do such-and-such to you!' I
said, 'It is divorce a thousand times.' Then I left him
and I saw Abdullah ibn Umar on the road to Makka and I
told him about my situation. Abdullah ibn Umar was
furious, and said, 'That is not divorce, and she is not
haram for you, so return to your home.' I was still not
at ease so I went to Abdullah ibn az-Zubayr who was the
Amir of Makka at that time. I told him about my
situation and what Abdullah ibn Umar had said to me.
Abdullah ibn az-Zubayr said to me, 'She is not haram for
you, so return to your home,' and he wrote to Jabir ibn
al-Aswad az-Zuhra who was the Amir of Madina and ordered
him to punish Abdullah ibn Abdar-Rahman and to have him
leave me and my family alone. I went to Madina, and
Safiyya, the wife of Abdullah ibn Umar fitted out my
wife so that she could bring her to my house with the
knowledge of Abdullah ibn Umar. Then I invited Abdullah
ibn Umar on the day of my wedding to the wedding feast
and he came."
Book 29, Number 29.28.79:
Yahya related to me from Malik that Abdullah ibn
Dinar said, "I heard Abdullah ibn Umar recite from the
Qur'an, 'Prophet! When you divorce women, divorce them
at the beginning of their idda.'"
Malik said, "He meant by that, to make one
pronouncement of divorce at the beginning of each period
of purity."
Book 29, Number 29.28.80:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Hisham ibn Urwa
that his father said, "It used to be that a man would
divorce his wife and then return to her before her idda
was over, and that was alright, even if he divorced her
a thousand times. The man went to his wife and then
divorced her and when the end of her idda was in sight,
he took her back and then divorced her and said, 'No! By
Allah, I will not go to you and you will never be able
to marry again.' Allah, the Blessed, the Exalted, sent
down, 'Divorce is twice, then honourable retention or
setting free kindly.' People then turned towards divorce
in a new light from that day whether or not they were
divorced or not divorced."
Book 29, Number 29.28.81:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Thawr ibn Zayd
ad-Dili that Allah, the Blessed, the Exalted, sent down
about a man who divorced his wife and then returned to
her while he had no need of her and did not mean to keep
her so as to make the idda period long for her by that
in order to do her harm, "Do not retain them by force,
to transgress. Whoever does that has wronged himself."
(Sura 2 ayat 231). Allah warns them by that ayat.
Book 29, Number 29.28.82:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Said ibn al-Musayyab and Sulayman ibn Yasar were asked
about a man who divorced when he was drunk. They said,
"When a drunk man divorces, his divorce is allowed. If
he kills, he is killed for it."
Malik said, "That is what is done among us."
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Said ibn al-Musayyab said, "If a man does not find the
means to spend on his wife, they are to be separated . "
Malik said, "That is what I saw the people of
knowledge in our city doing."
29.30 Idda of Widows when Pregnant
Section: Idda of Widows when Pregnant
Book 29, Number 29.29.83:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Abdu Rabbih ibn
Said ibn Qays that Abu Salama ibn Abd ar-Rahman said
that Abdullah ibn Abbas and Abu Hurayra were asked when
a pregnant woman whose husband had died could remarry.
Ibn Abbas said, "At the end of two periods." Abu Hurayra
said, "When she gives birth, she is free to marry." Abu
Salama ibn Abd ar-Rahman visited Umm Salama, the wife of
the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace,
and asked her about it Umm Salama said, ''Subaya
al-Aslamiya gave birth half a month after the death of
her husband, and two men asked to marry her. One was
young and the other was old. She preferred the young man
and so the older man said, 'You are not free to marry
yet.' Her family were away and he hoped that when her
family came, they would give her to him. She went to the
Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace, and he said, 'You are free to marry, so marry
whomever you wish.' "
Book 29, Number 29.29.84:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that
Abdullah ibn Umar was asked about a woman whose husband
died while she was pregnant, and he said, "When she
gives birth, she is free to marry." A man of the Ansar
who was with him told him that Umar ibn al-Khattab had
said, "Had she given birth while her husband was still
on his bed, unburied, she would be free to marry."
Book 29, Number 29.29.85:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Hisham ibn 'Urwa
from his father that al-Miswar ibn Makhrama told him
that Subaya al-Aslamiya gave birth a few nights after
the death of her husband. The Messenger of Allah, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace, said to her, "You
are free to marry, so marry whomever you wish."
Book 29, Number 29.29.86:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Yahya ibn Said
from Sulayman ibn Yasar that Abdullah ibn Abbas and Abu
Salama ibn Abd ar-Rahman ibn Awf differed on the
question of a wornan who gave birth a few nights after
the death of her husband. Abu Salama said, "When she
gives birth to the child she is carrying, she is free to
marry." Ibn Abbas said, "At the end of two periods." Abu
Hurayra came and said, "I am with my nephew", meaning
Abu Salama. They sent Kurayb, a mawla of Abdullah ibn
Abbas to Umm Salama, the wife of the Prophet, may Allah
bless him and grant him peace, to ask her about it. He
came back and told them that she had said that Subaya
al-Aslamiya had given birth a few nights after the death
of her husband, and she had brought the matter to the
Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace, and he had said, "You are free to marry, so marry
whomever you wish."
Malik said, "This is how the people of knowledge here
continue to act."
29.31 Widows Remaining in Their Houses until Free to
Marry
Book 29, Number 29.29.87:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Said ibn Ishaq
ibn Kab ibn Ujra from his paternal aunt, Zaynab bint Kab
ibn Ujra that al-Furaya bint Malik ibn Sinan, the sister
of Abu Said al-Khudri, informed her that she went to the
Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace, and asked to be able to return to her people
among the Banu Khudra since her husband had gone out in
search of some of his slaves who had run away and he had
caught up with them near al-Qudum, (which is 6 miles
from Madina), and they had killed him.
She said, "I asked the Messenger of Allah, may Allah
bless him and grant him peace, if I could return to my
people in the Banu Khudra, as my husband had not left me
in a dwelling which belonged to him, and had left me no
maintenance. The Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him
and grant him peace, said,'Yes.' So I left. When I was
in the courtyard, the Messenger of Allah, may Allah
bless him and grant him peace, called me or summoned me,
and I answered him. He said, 'What did you say?' I
repeated the story about my husband. He said, 'Stay in
your house until what is written reaches its term.' I
did the idda in the house for four months and ten days."
She added, "When Uthman ibn Affan sent for me, I told
him that, and he followed it and made decisions by it."
Book 29, Number 29.29.88:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Humayd ibn Qays
al-Makki from Amr ibn Shuayb from Said ibn al-Musayyab
that Umar ibn al-Khattab sent back widows from the
desert and prevented them from doing the hajj.
Yahya related to me from Malik from Yahya ibn Saqd
that he had heard that as-Sa'ib ibn Khabbab died, and
his wife went to Abdullah ibn Umar and mentioned to him
that her husband had died and mentioned some land which
they had at Qanah, (a district on the outskirts of
Madina), and asked him if it would be alright for her to
stay overnight there. He forbade her to do so. So, she
went out before dawn from Madina and spent the whole day
on their land, but when evening came, she spent the
night in her house.
Book 29, Number 29.29.89:
Yahya related to me from Malik that Hisham ibn Urwa
said about a Bedouin woman whose husband died, that she
was to stay where her people stayed.
Malik said, "This is what is done among us."
Book 29, Number 29.29.90:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that
Abdullan ibn Umar said, "The only place a woman whose
husband has died and a woman who is absolutely divorced
can spend the night is in their houses."
Section: Idda of an Umm Walad when Her Master Dies
Book 29, Number 29.30.91:
Yahya related to me from Malik that Yahya ibn Said
said that he had heard al-Qasim ibn Muhammad say that
Zayd ibn Abd al-Malik separated some men and their wives
who were slave-girls who had borne children to men who
had died, because they had married them after one or two
menstrual periods. He separated them until they had done
an idda of four months and ten days. Al-Qasim ibn
Muhammad said, "Glory be to Allah! Allah says in His
Book, 'Those of you who die, leaving wives, they are not
wives.' "
Book 29, Number 29.30.92:
Malik related to me from Nafi that Abdullah ibn Umar
said, "The idda of an umm walad when her master dies is
one menstrual period."
Yahya related to me from Malik from Yahya ibn Said
that al-Qasim ibn Muhammad said, "The idda of an umm
walad when her master dies is one menstrual period."
Malik said, "This is what is done among us."
Malik added, "If she does not have a menstrual
period, her idda is three months."
Section: Idda of Slave-Girls whose Master or Husband
Dies
Book 29, Number 29.31.93:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Said ibn al-Musayyab and Sulayman ibn Yasar said, "The
idda of a slave-girl when her husband dies is two months
and five days."
Book 29, Number 29.31.94:
Yahya related to me the like of that from Malik from
Ibn Shihab.
Malik said, about a slave who divorced a slave-girl
but did not make it absolute, "He can return to her. If
he then dies while she is still in the idda from her
divorce, she does the idda of a slave-girl whose husband
dies, and it is two months and five days. If she has
been set free and he can return to her, and she does not
choose to separate after she has been set free, and he
dies while she is in the idda from the divorce, she does
the idda of a free woman whose husband has died, four
months and ten days. That is because the idda of
widowhood befell her while she was free, so her idda is
the idda of a free woman."
Malik said, "That is what is done among us."
Section: Coitus Interruptus
Book 29, Number 29.32.95:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Rabia ibn Abi Abd
ar-Rahman from Muhammad ibn Yahya ibn Habban that Ibn
Muhayriz said, "I went into the mosque and saw Abu Said
al-Khudri and so I sat by him and asked him about coitus
interruptus. Abu Said al-Khudri said, 'We went out with
the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant
him peace, on the expedition to the Banu al-Mustaliq. We
took some Arabs prisoner, and we desired the women as
celibacy was hard for us. We wanted the ransom, so we
wanted to practise coitus interruptus. We said, 'Shall
we practise coitus interruptus while the Messenger of
Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, is among
us before we ask him?' We asked him about that and he
said, 'You don't have to not do it. There is no self
which is to come into existence up to the Day of Rising
but that it will come into existence.' "
Book 29, Number 29.32.96:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Abu'n-Nadr, the
mawla of Umar ibn Ubaydullah from Amir ibn Sad ibn Abi
Waqqas from his father that he used to practise coitus
interruptus.
Book 29, Number 29.32.97:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Abu'n-Nadr, the
mawla of Umar ibn Ubaydullah from Ibn Aflah, the mawla
of Abu Ayyub al-Ansari from an umm walad of Abu
Ayyubal-Ansari that he practised coitus interruptus.
Book 29, Number 29.32.98:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that
Abdullah ibn Umar did not practise coitus interruptus
and thought that it was disapproved.
Book 29, Number 29.32.99:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Damra ibn Said
al-Mazini from al-Hajjaj ibn Amr ibn Ghaziya that he was
sitting with Zayd ibn Thabit when Ibn Fahd came to him.
He was from the Yemen. He said, "Abu Said! I have
slave-girls. None of the wives in my keep are more
pleasing to me than them, and not all of them please me
so much that I want a child by them, shall I then
practise coitus interruptus?" Zayd ibn Thabit said,
"Give an opinion, Hajjaj!" "I said, 'May Allah forgive
you! We sit with you in order to learn from you!' He
said, 'Give an opinion! 'I said, 'She is your field, if
you wish, water it, and if you wish, leave it thirsty. I
heard that from Zayd.' Zayd said, 'He has spoken the
truth.' "
Book 29, Number 29.32.100:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Humayd ibn Qays
al-Makki that a man called Dhafif said that Ibn Abbas
was asked about coitus interruptus. He called a
slave-girl of his and said, "Tell them." She was
embarrassed. He said, "It is alright, and I do it
myself."
Malik said, "A man does not practise coitus
interruptus with a free woman unless she gives her
permission. There is no harm in practising coitus
interruptus with a slave-girl without her permission.
Someone who has someone else's slave-girl as a wife,
does not practise coitus interruptus with her unless her
people give him permission."
Section: Limit of Abstaining from Adornment in Mourning
Book 29, Number 29.33.101:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Abdullah ibn Abi
Bakr ibn Muhammad ibn Amr ibn Hazm from Humayd ibn Nafi
that Zaynab bint Abi Salama related these three
traditions to him. Zaynab said, "I visited Umm Habiba,
the wife of the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant
him peace, when her father Abu Sufyan ibn Harb had died.
Umm Habiba called for a yellowy perfume perhaps khaluq
or something else. She rubbed the perfume first on a
slave-girl and she then wiped it on the sides of her
face and said, 'By Allah! I have no need of perfume but
I heard the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace, say, 'It is not halal for a woman who
trusts in Allah and the Last Day to abstain from
adornment in mourning for someone who has died, for more
than three nights, except for four months and ten days
for a husband.' "
Book 29, Number 29.33.102:
Zaynab said, "I went to the house of Zaynab bint
Jahsh, the wife of the Prophet, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace, when her brother had died. She called
for perfume and put some on and said, 'By Allah! I have
no need of perfume, but I heard the Messenger of Allah,
may Allah bless him and grant him peace, say, 'It is not
halal for a woman who trusts in Allah and the Last Day
to abstain from adornment in mourning for someone who
has died for more than three nights, except for four
months and ten days for a husband.' "
Book 29, Number 29.33.103:
Zaynab said, "I heard my mother, Umm Salama, the wife
of the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace,
say that a woman came to the Messenger of Allah, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace, and said,
'Messenger of Allah! My daughter's husband died, and her
eyes are troubling her, can she put kohl on them?' The
Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace, said, 'No' two or three times. Then he said, 'It
is only four months and ten days. In the Jahiliyya, none
of you threw away the piece of dung until a year had
passed.' "
Humayd ibn Nafi said, "I asked Zaynab to explain what
'throwing away the piece of dung at the end of a year'
meant. Zaynab said, 'In the Jahiliyya when a woman's
husband died, she went into a small tent and dressed in
the worst of clothes. She did not touch perfume or
anything until a year had passed. Then she was brought
an animal - a donkey, a sheep, or a bird, and she would
break her idda with it, by rubbing her body against it
(taftaddu). Rarely did she break her idda with anything
(by rubbing herself against it) but that it died. Then
she would come out and would be given a piece of dung.
She would throw it away and then return to whatever she
wished of perfumes or whatever.' "
Malik explained, 'Taftaddu' means to wipe her skin
with it in the same way as with a healing charm."
Book 29, Number 29.33.104:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi from Safiyya
bint Abi Ubayd from A'isha and Hafsa, the wives of the
Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, that
the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant
him peace, said, "It is not halal for a woman in
mourning for someone who has died, if she trusts in
Allah and the Last Day, to abstain from adornment for
more than three nights, except for a husband."
Book 29, Number 29.33.105:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Umm Salama, the wife of the Prophet, may Allah bless him
and grant him peace, said to a woman in mourning for her
husband whose eyes were troubling her and the pain had
become very strong, "Apply jala kohl at night and wipe
it off in the day."
Book 29, Number 29.33.106:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Salim ibn Abdullah and Sulayman ibn Yasar said that if a
woman whose husband had died feared that an inflammation
of her eyes might affect her sight or that some
complaint might befall her, she should put kohl on and
seek a remedy with kohl or some other cure even if it
had perfume in it.
Malik said, "If there is a necessity, the deen of
Allah is ease."
Book 29, Number 29.33.107:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafic that
Saffiyya bint Abi Ubayd suffered from an eye-complaint
while she was in mourning for her husband, Abdullah ibn
Umar. She did not apply kohl until her eyes almost had
ramas (a dry white secretion in the corners of the eye).
Malik said, "A woman whose husband has died should
anoint her eyes with olive oil and sesame oil and the
like of that since there is no perfume in it."
Malik said, "A woman in mourning for her husband
should not put on any jewellery - rings, anklets, or
such-like, neither should she dress in any sort of
colourful, striped garment unless it is coarse. She
should not wear any cloth dyed with anything except
black, and she should only dress her hair with things
like lotus-tree leaves which do not dye the hair."
Book 29, Number 29.33.108:
108 Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard
that the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace, visited Umm Salama while she was in
mourning for Abu Salama and she had put aloes on her
eyes. He said, "What is this, Umm Salama?" She said, "It
is only aloes, Messenger of Allah." He said, "Put it on
at night and wipe it off in the daytime."
Malik said, "The mourning of a young girl who has not
yet had a menstrual period takes the same form as the
mourning of one who has had a period. She avoids what a
mature woman avoids if her husband dies."
Malik said, "A slave-girl mourns her husband when he
dies for two months and five nights like her idda.''
Malik said, "An umm walad does not have to mourn when
her master dies, and a slave-girl does not have to mourn
when her master dies. Mourning is for those with
husbands."
Book 29, Number 29.33.109:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Umm Salama, the wife of the Prophet, may Allah bless him
and grant him peace, said, "A mourning woman can rub her
head with lotus leaves and olive oil.''
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