Friday, November 11, 2016

The genuine standards of marriage



In Islam, marriage is a legitimate contract (Literary Arabic: aqd al-qirān, "marriage contract"; Urdu: ALA-LC: Nikāḥ-nāmah) between two individuals. Both the prepare and the lady are to agree to the marriage of their own free wills. A formal, restricting contract is viewed as indispensable to a religiously substantial Islamic marriage, and blueprints the rights and duties of the prep and lady of the hour. There must be two Muslim observers of the marriage contract. Separate (likewise called Tallaq when it is started from male side) (khula when it is started from Female side) is allowed and can be issued by both the lady of the hour and prep with equivalent rights according to Islamic laws and Shariah. The genuine standards of marriage and separation (frequently a portion of Personal Status Laws) can vary from nation to nation, in view of arranged law and the school of law that is to a great extent followed in that country.[1]

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