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The author devotes this volume to a debate concerning the
application of the rule of cause prevention. He shows that a strict
and extremist application has been the reason for many restrictions
that social tradition in many Muslim countries have imposed on
women, depriving them of much that is permissible in Islam. He
cites clear evidence confirming that women’s full participation
in social life was part of the Prophet’s guidance. His approach
is always balanced between the freedom Islam gives to women’s
participation in life’s activities and the need to adhere to
Islamic regulations and values concerning attire and
behaviour.Â
In this volume, the author highlights the rights relevant to
marriage. These include the right of all young men and women to
early marriage. They are entitled to state help to achieve this. We
learn in this volume that the woman has the full right to choose
her husband and the right to terminate her marriage. The author
lays strong and needed emphasis on the fact that Islam gives men
and women equal rights in their marriage and family life. As he
discusses divorce and polygamy, he stresses the Islamic manners and
controls that apply to both.
The emancipation of women cannot be complete unless it is coupled
with the emancipation of men. This can only be accomplished by
drawing our social values from the Qur'an and the sunnah. In this
volume, the author shows that mixed social life was the pattern in
the early Muslim society established by the Prophet. This 8-volume
series is the author's abridged version of his longer work with the
same title, spanning a 25-year study of the main sources of Islamic
teachings: the Qur'an and the authentic sunnah. The author's study
comprised 14 great anthologies of hadiths, but in his book he only
rarely includes hadiths from any anthology other than the two most
authentic ones of al-Bukhari and Muslim. This series will
illustrate the status of the Muslim woman that is greatly different
from what is assumed in most Muslim societies today.
In this volume of his work, the author starts a debate taking two
full volumes to answer the objections that are often raised
concerning social mixing and keeping a woman's face uncovered in
Muslim society. This is a tradition in Islamic studies, when
scholars present their views in opposition to other scholarly
views. They state the view they disagree with, showing its basis
and the arguments that are stated in its support before responding
to it. The author gives an in-depth study showing that the rulings
that were specific to the Prophet's wives are not addressed to
other women. Therefore, emulating the Prophet's wives in these
particular aspects is neither required nor recommended.
This 8-volume series is the author's abridged version of his longer
work with the same title, spanning a 25-year study of the main
sources of Islamic teachings: the Qur'an and the authentic sunnah.
The author's study comprised 14 great anthologies of hadiths, but
in his book he only rarely includes hadiths from any anthology
other than the two most authentic ones of al-Bukhari and Muslim.
This series will illustrate the status of the Muslim woman that is
greatly different from what is assumed in most Muslim societies
today. The Prophet established complete equality between men and
women, with both having their respective special functions. This
volume draws the features of the Muslim Woman in everyday social
life in accordance to the Qur'an and Sunnah drawing upon specific
examples of incidents as well as different prominent female figures
in Islam during the Prophet's lifetime. It shows that much of what
we imagine to be Islamic rules are no more than social or cultural
tradition.
The emancipation of women cannot be complete unless it is coupled
with the emancipation of men. This can only be accomplished by
drawing our social values from the Qur'an and the sunnah. In this
volume, the author shows that mixed social life was the pattern in
the early Muslim society established by the Prophet. This author's
study of authentic sayings of the Prophet Muhammad will illustrate
the status of the Muslim woman that is greatly different from what
is assumed in most Muslim societies today.
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