Showing posts with label polygamy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label polygamy. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Couple Fined for Assaulting Man’s First Wife

An interesting look into Islamic polygamy.  This is the sort of thing we are importing into the West.  Along with honor killings, female genital mutilation and forced marriages, we also import the whole of Islamic culture.  How quaint, the guy just shows up with his new wife (second) and says, honey I have a surprise for you, meet the new girl.

FROM KHALEEJTIMES.COM:

Couple Fined for Assaulting Man’s First Wife


18 November 2009 DUBAI — A 42-year-old school teacher and his second wife were each sentenced to paying Dh2,000 in fine by the Court of Misdemeanours on Tuesday for assaulting the man’s first wife.

The case dates back to December 11 last year when the Emirati teacher’s first wife, an Emirati teacher of a school, filed a complaint with the Al Qusais police against her husband and his 30-year-old second wife who is an Iraqi. The Emirati woman told the cops that as she returned to her villa in Mizhar that day, she was surprised to see the couple sitting in their villa’s majlis.

“It was about 7.30pm. My husband, to whom I have been married for 20 years, asked me to say ‘Hi’ to his second wife, aged 30,” the plaintiff said.
Following that, a verbal argument started between the two parties and the plaintiff alleged that her husband pulled her hair, pushed her to the ground and then punched her. She claimed her husband’s second wife assisted him in punching her repeatedly.

The man and his second wife told the prosecutors that the plaintiff had started the fight by insulting them with abusive words.

Defence counsel Abdullah Taher argued in the court that the complaint was malicious and vindictive. “The Emirati wife was obviously upset because her husband had married the second time and brought his second wife to live with them in the same villa,” the counsel argued.

Taher also said the statements of the plaintiff were contradictory. “She told the cops that they had pushed her to the ground and hit her on different parts of her body. However, she claimed during the prosecution investigation that the couple had chased her outside the home and thrown stones at her,” the counsel said. Taher told the court that there is no legal ground for the case since the two parties had reconciled with each other at the Family Guidance Section at the court in August this year.

The teacher has five children from his compatriot wife while he has one child from his Iraqi wife, to whom he has been married for about two years.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Principal of Islamic school in Buffalo ousted over sex allegations

Mohammed Ibrahim Memon

Well, well, well, imagine that, an Imam having more than one wife, in America no less. I'm shocked that muslims would import their barbaric religious practices into the West. This is basically a puff piece designed to show how Americanized the muslim community has become. But it really shows the extent that islam has infiltrated the West.

The article never says that imam Mohammed Ibrahim Memon committed polygamy.

The reporter never asked the police if Memon was being prosecuted for polygamy.

I guess no one wanted to spark another "insulted muslim" riot.

Dhimmitude reigns at the Buffalo News and Buffalo police department.


FROM BUFFALONEWS.COM:

Principal of Islamic school in Buffalo ousted over sex allegations
He may have taken student as second wife
By Mark Sommer NEWS STAFF REPORTER

The principal of an Islamic boarding school on Buffalo’s East Side has been forced to resign after allegations that he was sexually involved with one of his students and that he claimed to have taken her as a second wife.
Evidence suggests Mohammed Ibrahim Memon, a father of seven, persuaded Sajidah Khan, then 21, to marry under Islamic law as a pretense to sleep with her.
Memon, an Islamic scholar and imam, has agreed to leave his post at Darul-Uloom Al-Madania, 182 Sobieski St., for a minimum of seven years. The private, Islamic secondary school and institute of higher learning is located alongside Masjid Zakariya mosque in the Broadway-Fillmore neighborhood.
Memon also agreed to never teach in the girls school again if reinstated.
Dr. Khalid J. Qazi, president of the local chapter of the Muslim Public Affairs Council, expressed disappointment over Memon’s “inappropriate and intimate relationship.”
“Parents have trusted their best assets, their children, to Imam Ibrahim, and he has broken that trust,” Qazi said.
READ IT ALL:

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Some Muslims in U.S. Quietly Engage in Polygamy

An interesting whitewash from NPR on Islamic polygamy in the U.S. One gets the impression from the article that maybe polygamy isn't such a bad thing. Because, you know, all religions are equal.

FROM NPR.ORG:

Some Muslims in U.S. Quietly Engage in Polygamy

by Barbara Bradley Hagerty

Although polygamy is illegal in the U.S. and most mosques try to discourage plural marriages, some Muslim men in America have quietly married multiple wives.
No one knows how many Muslims in the U.S. live in polygamous families. But according to academics researching the issue, estimates range from 50,000 to 100,000 people.
You can see some of the women involved in polygamous marriages in the lobby of Sanctuary for Families, a nonprofit women's center in New York City. It bursts with color as a dozen women in bright African dresses and head wraps gather for a weekly noon meeting for West African immigrants. The women come each week to this support group where they discuss hard issues, such as domestic abuse, medical problems, immigration hurdles and polygamy.
Polygamy is freely practiced in parts of Africa, (And indeed, in most of the Islamic world.) and almost every one of the women in the group has experienced polygamy firsthand – either as a wife in a plural marriage or having been raised in families with one father who has two or more wives.
Group member Sarah says that in her native Guinea, the husband springs it on his wife that he's going to marry someone else. Sarah, like the others interviewed for this story, would give only her first name.
"Sometimes he say, 'OK, I am going to be married tomorrow,' or 'I'm going to be married today.' He's going ask you like that. It happened to me," she says.
Sarah begins to cry. Others nod in sympathy. These women are all Muslim. The Koran states that men may marry up to four women. The Prophet Mohammad had multiple wives.
But there's a restriction, says Sally, another group member. The husband cannot favor one woman over another – with his wealth or his heart.
"You have to love them the same way, share everything the same way, equally," says Sally. "Nobody can do that. It's impossible."

Invisible Lives

Still, Muslims practice polygamy in the U.S., despite state laws prohibiting it.
Here's how a man gets around the laws: He marries one woman under civil law, and then marries one, two or three others in religious ceremonies that are not recognized by the state. (In other words, an Imam knowingly marries them in to a polygamous relationship) In other cases, men marry women in both America and abroad.
Many women keep quiet for fear of retribution or deportation.
For example, Sally's husband moved to the United States from the Ivory Coast before she did. When Sally joined him, she found he had married someone else in America. But without legal immigration papers, (so she was here illegally) she didn't dare come forward and report him to the authorities.
She said when she arrived in the U.S., her husband and his new wife put her in the basement.
"They told me to cook, clean, do everything. I didn't speak English. And he told me, 'Don't say nothing. You say something, she's going make you deported. And me, I'm going to be in jail.'" (Another example of Islamic male domination over women)
Eventually, Sally left the house with her children, and now works at a hair braiding salon. (Still here illegally ?) But that fear of deportation prevents many from leaving their polygamous relationships.
"Legally, they're invisible," says Julie Dinnerstein, a senior attorney for Sanctuary for Families. "If you are the second or third or fourth wife, that marital relationship is not going to be recognized for immigration purposes. It means if your husband is a citizen or green card holder, he can't sponsor you. It means if your husband gets asylum, you don't get asylum at the same time. The man is always going to be in a position of greater power."

Secret Ceremonies
In the past decade, Muslim clerics began to notice that some men who wanted a religious wedding were already married to someone else. (Just in the past decade, but not the previous 1,400 years?)
According to Daisy Khan, who heads the American Society for Muslim Advancement and is married to an imam, polygamy is more common among conservative, less educated immigrants from Africa and Asia. It is rarer among middle-class Muslims from the Middle East. She adds that nowadays, imams do background checks on the grooms to make sure they're not already married in their home countries. ( She seems to speak for all imams, how does she know?)
Some clerics in the U.S. perform second marriage ceremonies in secret. (Illegally)
Khan, who does pre-marriage counseling, says she always raises the issue of polygamy with engaged couples.
"I also explain to them that as a woman, you have certain rights, and as a man, he may one day exercise his right to have a second wife," Khan says." (So Khan totally supports the validity of Islamic polygamy) And usually the man says, 'No, no, no. I'm never going to do that.' And I say, 'Well, in case you ever get tempted, how about we put that in the contract?'" (Interesting idea, but is it ever put into a contract?)

For Others, a Blessing
Abed Awad, a family law attorney in New Jersey, says for many Muslim men, multiple wives means many children — which is considered a blessing in Islam. And since Islam allows for sexual relations only in marriage, polygamy legitimizes the relationship in God's eyes. (Not quite true, Islam allows for a man to have sex with "that what his right hand possesses" in other words, slave women and women captured in battle)
Awad says conservative Muslims argue that in polygamy, "You're actually responsible for that person as your spouse. And the sexual relationship becomes a relationship of love and companionship as opposed to just a sexual fling."
Awad stresses he does not condone polygamy. But he says some conservative Muslim women see some advantages — particularly those who are divorced or widowed.
Mona, a Palestinian woman with six children from her first marriage, is happy to be a second wife. When Mona got divorced in 1990, she became a pariah in her conservative Muslim community in Patterson, N.J.
"When ladies divorce," she says, "the people look down on her — looking to her like [she's] second class."
Then 14 years ago, a man approached her to be his second wife. She resisted at first but then grew to admire him and agreed to become his wife. She says her problems evaporated.
"When I married the second husband, everybody's OK," she says, smiling. "If I go anywhere, I'm free, nobody talks, because I have a husband."
He provides for both of his families, and he divides time between the two homes. Mona says the first wife was initially angry, but she got used to it.
"What is the problem? If he is not happy with the first marriage, why he stay all the life like this? You know, my religion is good because it gives man and woman another chance to be happy."
NPR is not revealing Mona's last name, (So NPR is conspiring to conseal a felony) and her husband would not be interviewed for this story. Her husband could be charged with bigamy.
'One Is Enough'
At Mam African Hair Braiding salon in Queens, N.Y., husbands are often the topic of conversation.
As the Senegalese owner, Miriam Dougrou, weaves cornrows on a young woman, she says that her father married four women and she had 19 or 20 siblings. She lost count. So did her father.
"Sometimes he doesn't know who's who, and he forget the name" of his children and wives, she said.
"He calls them No. 1 and No. 2," says Dougrou's husband, Timothy.
Miriam Dougrou does not want Timothy to have a second wife. "Sometime he talked about it — like a joke. But I told him, 'I'm not joking. Don't tease me because I won't be a second wife. I'm going to be the first and last wife.'"
So does Timothy, who's sitting in the corner keeping awfully quiet, want a second wife?
"No," he says with a half smile. "One is enough for me."