Muhaba
فصبرٌ جم
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- Religion
- Islam
He might prefer that she looks after the kids at home instead of others raising them, he may think the environment she is in is not what he prefers (not dr specific but any job) . I didnt say working is forbidden, some husbands just prefer their wives not working. My husband doesnt want me to work and i have no problem with that at all, its not a dictatorship, it is something we discussed and i accepted. so if a husband demands his wife works and brings home a salary to support her half of the bills, thats not oppression or dictatorship?
While i don't know whether it is a man's right to stop his wife from working or keeping her from leaving the house, i do know that a man can't demand that his wife work and pay the bills. it's the man's responsibility to support the wife and even if she works, he can't take her money.
Also, a woman can make a man agree in a marriage contract that she be allowed to work etc and then the man won't be able to stop her since prenuptual contracts have to be respected islamically.
Furthermore, in the Quran it is written that if a woman commits indecency, then the man should lock her in the house. While this verse was abrogated by the verses regarding the punishment of zina, i think that a man doesn't have the right to tell his wife not to leave the house unless he suspects indecent behavior. Also, a man can't oppress his wife but has to give her a good life and anything that's oppressive to the wife shouldn't be done in my opinion, and that includes stopping the woman from working when she wants and when her working outside the house doesn't have any harmful effect on the children or husband's rights.
Would i marry a man who tells me not to work or not to leave the house without a valid reason? Most certainly not.
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