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I would now like to move the debate on to specifically faith related matters of good and bad. One area of specific interest to me is the place of women in Islam and whether that 'place' is morally justifiable, indeed good, best or better than elsewhere or specifically better than that typically found in Western or other religious cultures. For purposes of continuity here and to allow those who want to follow it up I will paraphrase from Wafa Sultan's book "A God who Hates" published in 2009 with ISBN 9780312 538354.
The Koran says: "There is a good example in Allah's apostle" (33:21). So it has relevance to this thread, do we simply accept that because a certain persoin performed and act it is automatically 'good' and the act itself need not be considered?
In this instance, the Prophet contracted his marriage with Aisha when she was six years old and he was fifty. The marriage was consummated when she was nine. If we consider now the book "Wives of Mohammed" written in 1959 by the very well respected scholar, Bint al-Shati' she describes that day for us in Aisha's words:"The Prophet married me when I was six years old and the marriage was consummated when I was nine. The Prophet of God came to our home in company with men and women who were among his followers. My mother came [to me] while I was in a swing between the branches of a tree and made me come down. She smoothed my hair, wiped my face with a little water then came forward and led me to the door. She stopped me while I calmed myself a little. Then she took me in. The Prophet of God was sitting on a bed in our home, and she sat me in his lap. Everyone jumped up and went out, and the Prophet consummated his marriage with me at our home."Here can we discuss its moral importance and what it has done, and is still doing, to destroy the moral and mental fibre of Muslim men and women. A fifty-year-old man marries a six-year-old girl and consummates their marriage when she turns nine. The question is simple was this act a crime or an example, indeed an ideal example to be followed?
If we step aside from the event itself and look at the religious and legal legitimization it has been accorded it is the moral example that the individual Muslim extracts from this incident which invest it with its importance and gravity. So Islamic custom attaches no value to childhood. A child is his father's property, who has the right to dispose of him as he would of any other property. When a mother picks up her young daughter of no more than nine years and places her in the arms of a man her grandfather's age, her daughter's child-hood has surely been irreparably violated. When the mother's action acquired religious and legal legitimacy, it became a way of life for fourteen centuries. I cannot see any other way to view this but I wait to see what others might add.
Much of what you have written here is a great deal of nonsense.. and I quote Ansar from another thread:
This is a misunderstanding of Islamic law. Actions which the Prophet did do not automatically become part of the religion unless he recommended them, in which case they become Sunnah. Riding a camel is not considered part of the religion, for example.
Also, the Prophet pbuh normally married women much older than A'isha, so why would the exception and not the norm become the tradition to be followed?
the topic is discussed here at length:
http://www.islamicboard.com/clarifications-about-islam/5337-marriage-aisha-prophet-pbuh-6.html
Aisha (ra) was in fact engaged to someone else before her marriage to the prophet, I don't know if that is something you are aware? I also don't know if you are aware of biblical law, (whether or not you choose to follow them) plus secular laws not a century or so ago:
What is the minimum age of marriage according to Jewish law?
by Rabbi Naftali Silberberg

In ancient (and not so ancient) times however, marriage was often-times celebrated at a rather young age. Although we do not follow this dictum, technically speaking, a girl may be betrothed the moment she is born, and married at the age of three.2 A boy may betroth and marry at the age of thirteen.3
Footnotes
What is the minimum age of marriage according to Jewish law? | AskMoses.com - Judaism, Ask a Rabbi - Live
this one is from bringhamton.edu
of most states set the age of consent at the age of ten or twelve, and in one state, Delaware, the age of consent was only seven. Women reformers and advocates of social purity initiated a campaign in 1885 to petition legislators to raise the legal age of consent to at least sixteen,
website
Campaign to Raise the Legal Age of Consent, 1885-1914, Lesson Plan
and lastly,
Abishag Was a young virgin from the town of Shunem, North of Jezreel and Mount Gilboa, in the territory of Issachar. (Jos 19:17-23) She was "beautiful in the extreme" and was chosen by David's servants to become the nurse and companion of the king during his final days.
see 1Ki 1:1-4.
David was now about 70 years of age (2Sa 5:4, 5), and as a result of debilitation he had little body heat. Abishag waited on him during the day, doubtless brightening the surroundings with her youthful freshness and beauty, and at night she "lay in the king's bosom"
The age of consent or marriageability isn't an injunction to be of a certain age to follow in the lead of the prophet.. else people should also be marrying folks 20 years their senior, for his first wife was exactly that.. Do you find something wrong marrying a younger person but not an older one?
try some common sense please and familiarize yourself with your own books, with secular society laws and then put everything into perspective, so that someone's practices millenniums ago or even a century ago can be put into proper context rather than made into some sort of religious injunction!
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