Iran official backs temporary marriage



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Topic: Religions > Atheism
User: "stoney"
Date: 03 Jun 2007 02:32:40 PM
Object: Iran official backs temporary marriage
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070603/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iran_temporary_marriage;_ylt=Akxc2sHoI11jVOyGp6bTAPhvaA8F
Iran official backs temporary marriage
By ALI AKBAR DAREINI, Associated Press Writer Sat Jun 2, 9:02 PM ET
TEHRAN, Iran -
Iran's hard-line interior minister is encouraging temporary marriages as
a way to avoid extramarital sex, a stance many in this conservative
country fear would instead encourage prostitution.
A temporary marriage, or "sigheh," refers to a Shiite Muslim tradition
under which a man and a woman sign a contract that allows them to be
"married" for any length of time, even a few hours. An exchange of
money, as a sort of dowry, is often involved.
Although the practice exists, it's not very common in Iran, a Shiite
majority nation where many consider it a license for prostitution.
Others, however, have advocated institutionalizing the tradition, saying
it would help fight "illicit" sex in a country where sexual relations
outside marriage are banned under Islamic law.
"Temporary marriage is God's rule. We must aggressively encourage that,"
state-run television quoted Interior Minister Mostafa Pourmohammadi as
saying.
The minister, who made his comments Thursday, was the first Iranian
official to support the disputed practice in more than a decade. Former
Iranian President Hashemi Rafsanjani raised the issue in the early 1990s
but was opposed by the country's hard-line clerics.
"We have to find a solution to meet the sexual desire of the youth who
have no possibility of marriage," Pourmohammadi was quoted as saying by
local newspapers.
Half of Iran's population of 70 million is under 30. Taxi driver Reza
Sarabi, 23, expressed the frustration of many young Iranian men who
can't afford to buy a house and get married.
"I have no money to set up a matrimonial life. I don't want prostitutes.
What should I do with my sexual needs?" he said.
The "sigheh" is banned in Sunni Islam, but similar practices can be
found in Sunni countries. One such practice is the "urfi" marriage, an
unofficial arrangement that is often kept secret. Although an urfi
marriage involves signing a document in front of witnesses, the marriage
can be broken by destroying the paper.
In Iran, temporary marriage has been reported as a way some widows and
poor women help support themselves. But critics of the practice believe
such arrangements only exacerbate the country's prostitution problem and
undermine Iran's values.
"It will damage the foundation of the family," said lawyer Nemat Ahmadi,
who argues it gives wealthy men religious cover to have affairs. "This
will only promote prostitution."
Prostitution was banned in Iran after the 1979 Islamic revolution but
has increased in recent years. There are no official statistics
available in Iran on the number of prostitutes, but unofficial figures
published by some media outlets put the number at several hundred
thousand.
--
Atheist n A person to be pitied in that he is
unable to believe things for which there is
no evidence, and who has thus deprived himself of
a convenient means of feeling superior to others.
—Chaz Bufe, The American Heretic’s Dictionary
.

User: "Conspiracy of Doves"

Title: Re: Iran official backs temporary marriage 03 Jun 2007 04:30:49 PM
stoney wrote:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070603/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iran_temporary_marriage;_ylt=Akxc2sHoI11jVOyGp6bTAPhvaA8F

Iran official backs temporary marriage



By ALI AKBAR DAREINI, Associated Press Writer Sat Jun 2, 9:02 PM ET

TEHRAN, Iran -
Iran's hard-line interior minister is encouraging temporary marriages as
a way to avoid extramarital sex, a stance many in this conservative
country fear would instead encourage prostitution.

A temporary marriage, or "sigheh," refers to a Shiite Muslim tradition
under which a man and a woman sign a contract that allows them to be
"married" for any length of time, even a few hours. An exchange of
money, as a sort of dowry, is often involved.

Although the practice exists, it's not very common in Iran, a Shiite
majority nation where many consider it a license for prostitution.
Others, however, have advocated institutionalizing the tradition, saying
it would help fight "illicit" sex in a country where sexual relations
outside marriage are banned under Islamic law.

"Temporary marriage is God's rule. We must aggressively encourage that,"
state-run television quoted Interior Minister Mostafa Pourmohammadi as
saying.

The minister, who made his comments Thursday, was the first Iranian
official to support the disputed practice in more than a decade. Former
Iranian President Hashemi Rafsanjani raised the issue in the early 1990s
but was opposed by the country's hard-line clerics.

"We have to find a solution to meet the sexual desire of the youth who
have no possibility of marriage," Pourmohammadi was quoted as saying by
local newspapers.

Half of Iran's population of 70 million is under 30. Taxi driver Reza
Sarabi, 23, expressed the frustration of many young Iranian men who
can't afford to buy a house and get married.

"I have no money to set up a matrimonial life. I don't want prostitutes.
What should I do with my sexual needs?" he said.

The "sigheh" is banned in Sunni Islam, but similar practices can be
found in Sunni countries. One such practice is the "urfi" marriage, an
unofficial arrangement that is often kept secret. Although an urfi
marriage involves signing a document in front of witnesses, the marriage
can be broken by destroying the paper.

In Iran, temporary marriage has been reported as a way some widows and
poor women help support themselves. But critics of the practice believe
such arrangements only exacerbate the country's prostitution problem and
undermine Iran's values.

"It will damage the foundation of the family," said lawyer Nemat Ahmadi,
who argues it gives wealthy men religious cover to have affairs. "This
will only promote prostitution."

Prostitution was banned in Iran after the 1979 Islamic revolution but
has increased in recent years. There are no official statistics
available in Iran on the number of prostitutes, but unofficial figures
published by some media outlets put the number at several hundred
thousand.


"We are opposed to extramarital sex, but as long as you sign this
piece of paper we can call it something else"
Not that I have anything against sex outside marriage, but see the
hypocrisy and logical somersaults people are willing to tolerate in
the name of religious dogma?
.
User: "stoney"

Title: Re: Iran official backs temporary marriage 11 Jun 2007 10:50:42 PM
On Sun, 03 Jun 2007 14:30:49 -0700, Conspiracy of Doves
<mark_dp73@yahoo.com> wrote in alt.atheism


stoney wrote:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070603/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iran_temporary_marriage;_ylt=Akxc2sHoI11jVOyGp6bTAPhvaA8F

Iran official backs temporary marriage



By ALI AKBAR DAREINI, Associated Press Writer Sat Jun 2, 9:02 PM ET

TEHRAN, Iran -
Iran's hard-line interior minister is encouraging temporary marriages as
a way to avoid extramarital sex, a stance many in this conservative
country fear would instead encourage prostitution.

[]

In Iran, temporary marriage has been reported as a way some widows and
poor women help support themselves. But critics of the practice believe
such arrangements only exacerbate the country's prostitution problem and
undermine Iran's values.

"It will damage the foundation of the family," said lawyer Nemat Ahmadi,
who argues it gives wealthy men religious cover to have affairs. "This
will only promote prostitution."

Prostitution was banned in Iran after the 1979 Islamic revolution but
has increased in recent years. There are no official statistics
available in Iran on the number of prostitutes, but unofficial figures
published by some media outlets put the number at several hundred
thousand.



"We are opposed to extramarital sex, but as long as you sign this
piece of paper we can call it something else"

Yes.

Not that I have anything against sex outside marriage, but see the
hypocrisy and logical somersaults people are willing to tolerate in
the name of religious dogma?

Long long ago.
--
Atheist n A person to be pitied in that he is
unable to believe things for which there is
no evidence, and who has thus deprived himself of
a convenient means of feeling superior to others.
—Chaz Bufe, The American Heretic’s Dictionary
.



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