Question:
When a Muslim is allowed to marry a maximum of four wives, how is it that Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) had eleven wives?
Answer:
The
Qur’an, in Surah Nisa, chapter 4 verse 3, states that a Muslim is
allowed to marry a maximum of only four wives. Another verse in the
Qur’an makes Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) an exception to this rule.
In Surah Ahzab chapter 33 verse 52:
“It
is not lawful for thee (to marry more) women after this, nor to change
them for (other) wives, even though their beauty attract thee, except
any thy right hand should possess (as hand maidens) and Allah doth watch
over all things ”.
[Al-Qur’an 33:52]
This
verse clearly gives Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) the permission to keep all
his previous wives but prohibits him to marry any more women except
those which his right hand possessed i.e. slave girls
The
Prophet (pbuh) was allowed to keep all his previous wives because no
one was allowed to marry the Prophet’s wives (ra) after they were
divorced or widowed as they were ummul-momineen (mother of the believers)
People
falsely accuse the Prophet (pbuh) of being hypersexual, because he had
eleven wives. If you read the life history of the Prophet (pbuh), only
two of his marriages, one with Khadija (ra), and the other, with Ayesha
(ra) were marriages in the normal course. All his other marriages were
contracted as a necessity and were based on various considerations.
The
first marriage of the Prophet (pbuh) took place when he was 25 years of
age and he married Khadija (ra) who was twice widowed, and was 40 years
old. If the Prophet (pbuh) was hypersexual, why would he marry a woman who was 15 years older than him and already twice widowed?
Until
his first wife, Khadija (ra) was alive, he never took a second wife.
Khadija (ra) expired when the Prophet (pbuh) was 50 years age and only
after this, did he marry the others. If he married eleven wives for
sexual reasons, he should have had multiple wives during his youth.
Contrary to this, history tells us that all his marriages with his
remaining ten wives took place when he was between the age of 53 and 59
years.
All
his wives (ra) were between the age of 36 to 50 years, except for two
wives (ra). His reputation had spread far and wide, not only in Arabia,
but also in the neighbouring countries. Could he not have easily got
younger and lovelier girls to marry? Most of his marriages were for
political gain and for the spread of Islam.
In
Arabia, no one could carry on the work of reform and upliftment unless
he belonged to, or was related to some specific and respectable tribe.
Thus, in the interest of his mission, the Prophet (pbuh) needed
inter-tribal relationships. He wanted to weld the quarreling tribal and
clannish factions into one Muslim ummah, as brethren in faith (Ikhwan fi’d-din).
For
instance, his wife Juwayriyya (ra) belonged to the Banu Mustaliq clan,
which was very powerful. The entire clan was a bitter enemy of Islam
from the start, and they were finally sup pressed by military action.
When the Prophet (pbuh) married Juwayr iyya (ra), the Muslims released
all their prisoners, saying that they could not keep the prophet’s
relatives in bondage. It was due to this marriage that the whole clan of
Banu Mustaliq accepted Islam and became peaceful and obedient to the
laws of the new Islamic state.
Maymunah
(ra) also came from a very powerful and recalcitrant clan from Najd and
was the sister of the wife of the chief of the clan in those days. It
was this clan which had brutally murdered seventy members of an Islamic
missionary deputation. The Prophet’s (pbuh) marriage with Maymu nah (ra)
changed the whole atmosphere and Najd accepted Madinah’s au thority
under the leadership of the Prophet (pbuh).
Umm
Habibah (ra) was the daughter of the Quraysh chief, Abu Sufyan. It was
after the Prophet’s (pbuh) marriage to Umm Habibah, that Abu Sufyan
never fought against the Prophet (pbuh). This marriage was largely
responsible for the conquest of Makkah. Furthermore, Umm Habibah was
first married to a certain Ubaydullah and emigrated with him to
Abyssinia, where Ubaydullah became a Christian and a drunkard. Excessive
consumption of wine killed him since it was a double shock to her that
her husband had become a Christian and later died, she was badly in need
of solace.
Safiyyah
(ra) was the daughter of a very prominent Jewish chief, Huyyah ibn
Aktab. In consideration of her family status, she could not be merged
into an ordinary household. So the Prophet (pbuh) himself married her.
After this marriage, the Jews did not dare to revive their opposition to
the Prophet (pbuh) and his mission.
In
the case of Hafsah (ra), it was the Prophet’s (pbuh) desire to bind in
relationship with those of his great companions (sahabah) who were his
advisers and who were trained for future leadership. He had mar ried Abu
Bakr’s (ra) daughter, married two of his own daughters to Uthman (ra)
and one to ‘Ali (ra). ‘Umar (ra) could not be kept outside this wide
circle of relationship. By marrying Umar’s daughter Hafsah (ra), the
Prophet (pbuh) forged a strong bond of relationship within the Islamic
movement thus strengthening the pillars of the ummah.
The
Prophet (pbuh) had married his first cousin, Zaynab (ra), to his freed
slave, Zayd ibn Haritha (ra), whom he had adopted as his son. This
marriage of Zaynab (ra) with Zayd (ra) was intended to
break the family and social barriers, but the marriage did not prove to
be successful and ended in divorce. When the Prophet (pbuh) saw that
Zaynab (ra) was left alone, he felt his responsibility in the matter. He
also had to break another convention, according to which an adopt ed
son became a real son. This difficult problem was solved by the
Prophet’s (pbuh) marriage to Zaynab (ra) (as mentioned in the Qur’an, in
Surah Ahzab, chapt er no 33 verse 37) to annul that pre-Islamic
conception and promulgate an Islamic law instead.
Another lady Zaynab (ra), Umm al Masakin (mother
of the poor and helpless), daughter of Khuzayma ibn Al-Haith, belonged
to the Hawazin clan. Her husband was killed in the battle of Uhud. To
rescue her from widowhood, the Prophet (pbuh) took her as his wife.
After
the revelation of the verse in Surah Ahzab, chapter 33 verse 52, the
Prophet (pbuh) only married Mary the Copt who was a slave girl sent as a
present by the Christian Muqauqas of Egypt. Since the Christian
Chieftain of Egypt sent Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) a slave girl as a
present, he could not refuse this gift as a refusal would have disturbed
the political alliance. He could not keep her as a slave girl, since
Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) preached that slaves should be freed. The only
option left with him was to marry her, since the Qur’an gave him the
permission to do so. Later on she became the mother of Ibrahim (ra) who
died in his infancy.
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