What is it about?
How Muslim women who are religiously-married in Germany might initiate no-fault divorce in the absence of a German registered civil marriage? Because there is no Muslim state authority to consult, local imams and Islamic leaders can resort to a community-led practice known as khulʿ (divorce initiated by the woman) to dissolve an Islamic marriage (nikāḥ) that is not recognized by civil authorities. In this article, which is the culmination of three years of fieldwork in Germany, I analyze and interpret the views and practices of two groups of religious actors - conservatives and pragmatists - towards khulʿ in cases of nikāḥ. I find that conservatives only permit a woman to divorce through khulʿwith her husband’s consent, whereas pragmatists use Muslim minority jurisprudence (fiqh al-aqalliyyāt al-Muslima) to argue that the husband’s consent is not essential to legitimize a khulʿ pronouncement.
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This page is a summary of: The Practice of Khulʿ in Germany: Pragmatism versus Conservativism, Islamic Law and Society, August 2018, Brill,
DOI: 10.1163/15685195-02612a0.
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