Zainabiyat: Temporary marriage for Houthi militia members
The Iranian-backed Houthi militia
uses the weapon of fatwas to justify its actions and mobilize its followers in
accordance with the political and sectarian agenda of Tehran, with the aim of
spreading the mullahs’ ideas, which are forbidden by the Islamic religion and
all Arab peoples.
These fatwas have varied in recent
years, either in order to achieve political goals or to justify the
appropriation of citizens' money for the purpose of armament, in addition to
tempting young people who join militias into temporary marriage.
Recently, Hassan Nasrallah, the
leader of the pro-Iranian Lebanese Hezbollah, called on the Shiite religious
authorities in Lebanon to urge the Lebanese Zainabiyat (Shiite women's
militias) to accept temporary marriage from the militants of the Houthi militia
in Yemen, dissolving their presence in Lebanon.
According to the Yemeni Scene
website, quoting the Lebanese media, Maria Maalouf, who tweeted on Thursday,
November 4, that Nasrallah “switched to permitting temporary marriage.”
Maalouf’s tweet included an attached
document issued by Hezbollah urging religious authorities in Lebanon to invite
Zainabiyat to marry Yemeni Houthis and encouraging them to do so.
The document, which is considered a
Shiite religious fatwa, included an increase in the amount of the marriage
subsidy provided by Hezbollah by 300% to Lebanese women wishing to obtain
Yemeni citizenship.
According to the fatwa, signed
officially under the name of Hassan Nasrallah, the subsidy for temporary
marriage requires that the duration of the contract of enjoyment should not be
less than 14 days.
This fatwa was preceded by a Houthi
fatwa issued by Badreddin al-Houthi calling on Yemeni women to enter into tempory
marriages with the Houthi militia, and it was widely circulated. The militia
did not deny or confirm the fatwa for fear of a popular backlash in a
conservative society.
In a number of governorates under
their control, the Houthi authorities have sponsored dozens of special
operations by issuing official documents that facilitate temporary marriage.
According to legal and human rights
sources, the Houthis’ sponsorship of the signing of the so-called “facilitating
marriage” documents that establish temporary marriage, which is forbidden in
Islamic Sharia and man-made laws.
The sources considered that these
documents bear a veiled injustice to women and allow honor and dignity to be
violated.
They noted that although these
documents appear to facilitate marriage for young people, they eventually cause
later problems, some of which may lead to divorce.
Temporary marriage is a contract
between a man and a woman in return for a specified dowry and for a specific
period, and there is no requirement to have witnesses or publicity for this
type of marriage.