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  2. Polygyny - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polygyny

    Polygyny is legal in Somalia and most commonly seen throughout Muslim communities. According to the Muslim tradition, men can have up to four wives. For a man to gain additional wives in Somalia, it must be granted by the court and it has to be proven that the first wife is either imprisoned or infertile. [90]

  3. Polygyny in Islam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polygyny_in_Islam

    Whilst traditional Islamic scholarship upholds the notion that Islamic law permits polygyny and furthermore enforces the divine command to "marry only one" where the man fears being unable to fulfil the rights of two in a fair manner, a substantial segment of the Islamic scholarship elaborates further on the ruling regarding men who are able to ensure complete equality amongst the multiple wives.

  4. Islamic marital practices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_marital_practices

    Muslim marriage and Islamic wedding customs are traditions and practices that relate to wedding ceremonies and marriage rituals prevailing within the Muslim world. Although Islamic marriage customs and relations vary depending on country of origin and government regulations, both Muslim men and women from around the world are guided by Islamic ...

  5. Islamic poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_poetry

    Islamic poetry is very important and it is heritage passed generation to generation. These poems and features examine Muslim faith and Islamic culture and address important events, holidays, and occasions such as Ramadan. These poets explore a range of spiritual, literary, and political concerns from the 6th century to the present day.

  6. Polygamy in Pakistan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polygamy_in_Pakistan

    In 2017, a Lahore lower court ruled against a man who remarried without obtaining permission from his first wife. [6] He was sentenced to a six-month jail term and a fine of Rs. 2,00,000. The chair of the Punjab Commission on the Status of Women, Fauzia Viqar, applauded the move, saying that it would empower wronged women to take legal action. [6]

  7. Yusuf and Zulaikha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yusuf_and_Zulaikha

    Though found widely in the Muslim world, the story of Yusuf and Zulaika seems first to have achieved a developed an independent form in Persian literature around the tenth century CE: there is evidence for a lost narrative poem on the subject by the tenth-century Abu l-Muʾayyad Balkhī (as well as one by an otherwise unknown Bakhtiyārī of apparently similar date).

  8. Marriage in Islam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marriage_in_Islam

    Only the daughter of that wife is prohibited with whom one has had conjugal contact. Only the daughter-in-law of a real son is prohibited. The sister of a wife, her maternal and paternal aunts, and her brother's or sister's daughters (nieces) are only prohibited if the wife is in wedlock with the husband. [64]

  9. Hispano-Arabic homoerotic poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hispano-Arabic_homoerotic...

    Born Jew, Ibn Sahl became a Muslim, an experience he described through homoerotic poems; thus, loving an ephebe named Musa , he abandons him for another named Muhammad. [11] One of the poems dedicated to his first lover is a sample of the preciousness of the time and the images of "second power", where the sideburns resemble the legs of ...