If God says I can, who can say I can’t? Well it seems Nigerian leaders wish
to do so. Ultimately as a believer I shall obey the laws of the land. The
Lord shall task those in authority who “have two heads” that took it upon
themselves to restrict me from my God-earned inalienable rights.
What am I talking about? Well Nigeria’s Emir of Kano is pushing the state
and indeed northern governments to regulate polygamous marriage among the
poor. While obviously there are many great parts of the large proposed new
law, there are some areas that quickly raise concern and prompt public
dialogue.
According to Emir Sanusi Lamido Sanusi’s proposal as I understand it,
certain bodies will review the wealth status of prospective multiple wife
takers on a case-by-case basis. Those who “cannot afford it” shall be
denied permission to have more wives.
I am left aghast. MURIC backed
<http://dailypost.ng/2017/02/22/muric-backs-sanusi-plans-bar-kano-men-marrying-one-wife/>
the
Emir citing two verses from the Quran. (Qur’an 24:33) and (Qur’an 4:3). One
said what means, “do not marry unless you can afford it.” Such verse if
turned into law will challenge even a first marriage and is not targeted at
polygamy any more than it may be at monogamy. The second verse described
“treating all wives fairly, not giving advantage to one over the other.” I
failed to see how these verses supported an argument of the state
regulating multiple marriage of the poor.
What is the religious basis if any for this new proposed legislation? Is it
borne from Islam or from colonial laws and societies and demands of Bill
Gates and the World Bank? Is it to stem the Almajiri child-abandonment
incidence which I am by all means active against
<http://saharareporters.com/2013/06/01/nigeria-almajiri-and-nuclear-alms-race>
or
is it a means of using that ban-worthy practice to fulfill other agenda? Is
it a means of population control targeting the poor?
Let’s analyse. If the new law rules that you must have a certain income to
marry more than one wife. What if you had that income and ‘Buhari came into
power’ and then you lost your job/trade and qualifying income? Will the
state proceed to ‘repossess” your second wife, sort-of like credit cards
and mortgages?
What if the second or third wife is wealthy…can afford to take care of
herself and you and perhaps others. Will the enforcers consider this in
evaluating your eligibility? I dare say that I doubt state enforcers could
navigate such complexities and do so without prejudice and sentiment. We do
know of several cases of quite wealthy wives. The first wife of prophet
Mohammed of Islam upon whom be peace, Khadija was quite wealthy. Would the
prophet have been barred from marrying a second wife if he had so desired
under this rule, if the first was capable of taking care of herself but his
own income was regarded as below the polygamy cutoff line? Cases like
Buratai’s wealthy “susu <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susu_collectors>”
“cooperative” wives comes to mind. They were ‘so wealthy’ from their susu,
they were able to purchase million dollar luxury hotels in Dubai nd snake
farms and other million dollar properties across Nigeria and other
countries. Would this law not bar the marriage of such industrious wives if
the man’s income is below threshold? I would hope such areas are clarified
before these laws are introduced.
*Is Polygamy Linked With Terrorism?*
I am not sure who the Emir is attempting to please with sensational
headlines
<http://www.vanguardngr.com/2017/02/law-ban-polygamy-theres-connection-polygamy-poverty-terrorism-emir-kano/>
like
this entertained in Nigeria’s dailies. The Almajiri child abandonment
system is of course linked with terrorism. But rather than outlaw that
system of child abandonment which is already outlawed in Islam, the Emir
focuses on outlawing what is permitted in Islam to supposedly treat
the related disorder.
It would be sufficient if the Emir’s new law prescribed punishment
including incarceration for families who abandon their children. In my
view, this should have first been attempted before considering banning the
poor from polygamy. Ban the Almajiri system and see what happens. Ban
parents from sending their children out to beg for any reason whatsoever
and see how many of them will live precariously. But to ban the poor from
polygamy!???
Quran orders:
*Quran 5:87 O you who have believed, do not prohibit the good things which
Allah has made lawful to you and do not transgress. Indeed, Allah does not
like transgressors.*
The verse warns: do not prohibit what God has permitted.
Secondly it emphasizes that Muslims should be responsible and not exceed
boundaries in all cases.
This verse in particular was used not just for polygamy but in a hadith to
defend even the practice of “mutah,” the act of temporary marriage. This
goes to show the fields covered by this particular verse. The very field
the Emir is waddling into.
Reference: *Bukhari, Volume 6, Book 60, Number 139*:
Narrated Abdullah: We used to participate in the holy wars carried on by
the Prophet and we had no women (wives) with us. So we said (to the Prophet
). “Shall we castrate ourselves?” But the Prophet forbade us to do that and
thenceforth He allowed us to marry a woman (temporarily) by giving her even
a garment, and then he recited: *”O you who believe! Do not make unlawful
the good things which Allah has made lawful for you.”*
I would be quite afraid to prohibit what God has permitted, be it for the
rich or poor. Is poverty linked to terrorism? I beg to differ.
Institutionalized
disadvantagement
<http://newsrescue.com/institutionalized-disadvantagement-not-poverty-is-reason-for-boko-haram-radiobiafra-terror-in-nigeria/>
and
not poverty is the reason for terror as I have written in the past. A
company of Nigeria’s SGF was paid $1 million to cut exotic grass
<http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/12/revealed-sgf-awarded-n220m-grass-removal-job-to-his-firm-senate-report/>
in
Yobe state. This is the reason for terror. This is where we need new laws
and the enforcement of them. This is where we hope to see our Emirs active.
The money meant for displaced persons being coveted by officials of the
presidency. Terrorism in Borno is because of Shettima, Sheriff, Dasuki,
Badeh, Babachir, SEMA, NEMA and all others misappropriating the money, food
and land of the poor. 71 IDP food trailers went missing
<https://venturesafrica.com/only-in-nigeria-with-the-rising-cases-of-starvation-and-deaths-of-idps-how-could-71-trailers-of-rice-to-be-supplied-to-idps-go-missing/>
mid
last year and nothing happened. No law was made and the Emirs did not act
or react while hundreds of the poor died of starvation. This is why we have
terror. Not because of poor people marrying. This was even Boko Haram’s
publicity pitch: that Boko (western civilization) is the reason for your
poverty…join us fight the corrupt westernized governing system that keeps
you in deprivation.
Poverty does not come before organized terror. Organized terror is
sponsored. Our religious leaders and governors in Nigeria quite often know
the sponsors. How about we first face the affluent behind the terror rather
than targeting the manipulated poor double-victims of the failures of our
religious and state leaders? The Bible and Quran both adulate the virtues
of the poor. Mathew 5:3 goes: “Blessed are the poor in spirit for their is
the kingdom of heaven.” And Luke in chapter 6 verse 24 says: “But woe to
you who are rich, for you have received your consolation.”
A cursory look at the very western societies Nigeria’s north appears to be
emulating shows that many of the problems the Emir has easily associated
with polygamy are actually problems solved where there is good governance.
Hundreds of thousands of children are birthed by “jobless” single mothers
in the United States each year. These would have become Almajiri and
terrorists had it been in Nigeria where freely administrating government
officials like Dasuki’s “procurement officer,” now CoAS, who buy luxury
homes in Dubai and others who take million dollar personal account payments
to pluck exotic grass abound, while the religious leaders look the other
way and propose no new laws like the state adopting shariah hand cutting,
to check them. But in the US there is social welfare. Social welfare is an
essential stipulation in Islam. The poor must be catered to by the state
through its earnings and taxation of the rich. So where Nigeria’s leaders
fail to provide social welfare which will stop the poor and abandoned from
becoming terrorists, they propose banning polygamy as a remedy.
Would it not be a day, the day Nigeria’s leaders, spiritual or state,
proceed with chastisements, bans and restrictions for the wealthy and not
first for the poor? There will be a combined solar and lunar eclipse on
that day.
It is quite convenient for a wealthy Emir who has married at least five
times and has at least four wives, to promote new legislation that
preferentially targets the poor. It is expected for the rich
administrators and legislators to pass this legislation and for the poor to
soon be subject to it without say and any chance to protest. But does this
make it right?
*Proverbs 29:7 A righteous man knows the rights of the poor; a wicked man
does not understand such knowledge.*
And Allah(s) knows best.
Dr. Peregrino Brimah; @EveryNigerian