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Reply to "Does ISLAM allow divorce? If so, under what conditions?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Muslima] This is why it is dangerous to learn Islam by using Sheikh Google or reading Islam for dummies. I'm not going to play this game with you. I can bring you a hundred of other sites that will say the opposite of what you just quotes. Here is just one: [/quote] Why is this one better than the one I cited? [quote=Muslima]“An agreement of Khul’ is permissible with or without the presence of a judge, as it is a contract that is based on mutual agreement.” (al-Mabsut, 6/173) The same has also been mentioned in Radd al-Muhtar, al-Fatawa al-Hindiyya and other major works.[/quote] Source: http://www.questionsonislam.com/question/unable-accept-khula-wife[/quote] Why are you deflecting the argument to khul when we are talking about husband-initiated divorces? That's number one. Number two is that of course the judge is not necessary if mutual agreement is in place. The whole discussion is what to do when no agreement is in place. And the answer is that the only ironclad around it is to put everything - everything you can think of - into your marital agreement. That's how you get around the judge and husband nonsense. [quote=Muslima] Do you know who writes the answers on islam q/a? I have read throughout the years many things on that site that make no sense whatsoever. This is why whenever Muslims have a disagreement on a ruling, we have to go back to the source which is the Quran. Why do you think scholars have been debating Fiqh for the past centuries? Because Islamic jurisprudence is complex on matters that are not clear in the Quran, scholars debate these things for years and more often than not do not agree. So we follow the Quran first, and if there is a disagreement amongst scholars on a particular issue, the ruling is you are free to follow whatever scholar you choose, meaning of course someone reputable that you trust , not sheikh google. [/quote] What does the Quran say on women-initiated divorces?[/quote]
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