shaonashraf
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According to Islam home is the best place for women. So the pious men dont permit their wives to work outside home. They may be awarded by allah for this reason.
A source for this?According to Islam home is the best place for women. So the pious men dont permit their wives to work outside home. They may be awarded by allah for this reason.
Islamically speaking, can the husband prevent his wife from working?
Finally a male says it. ^
A source for this?
My original question posed on another forum [I was going to edit the question in light of the replies made but I decided not to]
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Just wondering.
Seen several marriage CV's in my time and the requirement is for the sis to be educated to degree level or going on to uni etc etc.
Alhamdulillah I'm in my second year at the mo but...If you ask most brothers they'll say they dont want their wives working after marriage. And since a degree + PGCE means a job for most of us... What is the point wanting the sis to have a degree but not wanting her to work?
Why not go for a sis who only has her A-Levels then?
Hmm?
WassalamuAlaykum
If you think about it, your degree and how much you study and what, gives you a status in the society. It is as simple as that.
To study, today, doesn't just show you are smart or have the means to, but also that you have some kind of perspective in your life, you are motivated and aim somewhere, something interests you so much that you want to actually keep your nose in the books and fulfill the high quality the work demands and that you are someone who can keep the quality high for the enxt generation (educated parents want to educate their children (this is just very, very general and I am aware of several situations/factors that are not like this, same goes with precentage)).
My sentiments exactly.
Does it have to be sent with a covering letter and application form?
Of course, if circumstances are such that she has to work, then her being degree educated would help her to get a good job.
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Junior, as the man of the house, it would be my duty to earn the bread, there is no getting out of it, regardless of the fitna that is out there. Women, however, don't need to work (i.e. it is not obligatory upon them).
i think with some bros its a pride thing. he feels hes the man of the house, so he has to be the provider.What is the point wanting the sis to have a degree but not wanting her to work?
absolutely not... btw, by "dunya education," you mean academically educated, right?...because to me you don't have to be academically educated to be intelligent.And my question was, does dunya education really = intellectuality (is that even a word) ...
absolutely not... btw, by "dunya education," you mean academically educated, right?...because to me you don't have to be academically educated to be intelligent.
I never claimed status is the most important. Status is made out of many things in today's sociaty, money, your degree, where you live, what you do, what you wear, where you go, what you eat... etc.It depends on what you deem most important huh, status when it comes to Ilm of the Deen or worldly status amongst peers and the like. I dislike it when the desgree becomes a title, a means of boasting and nothing more. Humans can be so much more than a piece of paper at graduation.
You're gonna play me?I'm going to be playing devils advocate in all my replies so dont mind me![]()
Definitely yes. I have no idea what kind of situations you have encountered, but that definitely screams motivation and what she has chosen in this life. But you have to understand and really accept, what an offical academic degree can do for you, in this country, in this world.I think too much importance is placed on the actual title, 'degree'. What if a sister exerted all her efforts in learning the Arabic language, took regular classes at the local community centre...went to the weekly circles at the masjid, yet didnt come out with an official recognised academic degree, wouldnt you say she had a direction, an aim....motivation?
yet no degree...
Of course that's important, actually, it can be so very important, especially if a man seeks a woman who can always support their children's Islamic knowledge. Although she might not have such an official academic degree, doesn't mean she can't read or write.I mean a sister might have ilm of the deen to the highest level and might be intellectual and intelligent enough to refute even the most hardcore of nonmuslims yet be without a degree. How does that hold up?
I guess being intellectually compatible means having the same sort of educational background which helps with the understanding you both have? having gone through the same sort of format of being taught? It may also form similar judgments and perceptions one may hold due to the experience of obtaining the education, at a degree level?
Wanting to marry educated sisters, would also benefit the upbringing of future children, I dunno..but I guess, at the end of the day, having a degree would signify the level of intellect one has without fully knowing a person.
It shouldn't be a deciding factor when marrying someone because at the end of the day one doesn't need to be educated at a degree level to be intellectually compatible to you, and there are many marriages which exemplify this. You could always teach her any new things you might want her to know if it is of benefit to your marriage/relationship.
And more importantly, the level of knowledge one has of the deen is of much more importance and I guess this should be the primary concern of brothers wanting to marry 'educated' sisters.
Maybe bro's are different before marriage and after they're married.
Most bro's I know would like to be the ones to provide for their wives and would rather their wives take care of things at home. But then again, I dont know many bro's
Not really. I think it's a lot more to do with finding out if someone is passionate about knowledge.
Having been to university and done a decent subject shows that you're not afraid of learning and studying. Alternatively you could have not gone to university and instead studied your deen, or studied another subject at home. That's just as admirable, provided you can show that you weren't just a lout...waiting to get married. Or you could have gone to an Islamic institution. It doesn't matter - most people look for that passion...which if lacking shows that you're intellectually dead.
i have seen many "dumb" men and women with degrees, no manners, dont know how to talk, know next to nothing about islam and dont try to either.
Not all are like this but for those who put degrees at the forefront of their "wants" on the marriage CV....well hope all goes well with that one...
Salaam,
There are many aspects to consider for the reason why a brother may want to have his prospective to be university educated:
1. He may want her to work after marriage to support the family.
2. He may want himself to be assured that if anything happens to him, i.e. an accident leaving him unable to work or even death, then the wife would have greater job opportunities available to her in order to support herself and the kids on her own.
3. Aside from the job aspect now, university education opens up our mind immensely, it challenges us in many ways both with ideas brought forward in academia as well as with the interaction with people from different backgrounds and cultures. It opens our eyes and broadens our horizons.
4. Education breeds understanding and knowledge. Knowledge is power and light.
Obviously the above 4 pointers are only the things that I can think of according to my own understanding of the issue and they may not be the reasons applicable to every brother who wishes his wife to have university level education.
people are educated in different ways, having a degree proves nothing. there are people with degrees who behave like spoilt children, or have huge indestructible ego's, or well, are just not as intelligent as those who do not have degrees but ARE educated.
a lot of men these days -as well as women- just look for the degree which is so silly, because again, it doesn't prove their intelligence, or their ability to carry a good conversation and it definitly does not determine them being good people.
i believe that for a women Islamic education is the most important.
That's being over protecting and if I may say, underestimating.I know a brother who would like his wife to attend university but is worried about her deen being affected due to the company she may be forced to keep in her lectures.
I guess what you're trying to say here is that she must constantly remain working, even when there is no need, just so that she remains experienced in her field with the possibility in mind that one day she might be forced to work?
To answer your question, there are two possibilities for her to have experience: One is that she works in a safe environment and the other is that she works in an unsafe environment.
I have nothing against her working in a fitnah free environment as long as she abides by what I mentioned in my last post. If such were the case, I would even encourage it.
But, if she insists on working in a fitnah-fied environment, just to "stay ahead of the game", when there is no critical need, then I'd wonder why I even married her. In doing such a thing, she'd be chasing the dunya and being negligent of her hereafter.
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That's being over protecting and if I may say, underestimating.
I wouldn't necessarily equate university education with free range chickens.yeah you could compare this to free range chickens and caged chickens, the free range ones are so much happier but the caged ones are cooped up in a cage which saddens them thus producing thinner and weaker eggs!
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