Saima Noreen found refuge at her sister’s place
Embedded culture
In a small town of Anwarabad in the main city of Chakwal, every household has the same story.
Twenty-eight-year-old Saima Noreen, who now lives with her sister, was married against her will at 16, right after her class 10 exams. She wanted to continue her education but her elder brother, acting as her guardian, married her off. She had lost her parents earlier.
Noreen describes her one-year marriage as a painful experience, as both her own family and her in-laws had abandoned her without any financial and moral support. “I was always an outcaste and unwanted at my husband’s home,” she says. “My own family never visited me so I left my husband’s home and started to live with one of my married sisters.”
Despite being a differently-abled person, she acquired training and drove a female-only auto rickshaw provided by an international NGO. “I was happy that at least I was earning something and contributing financially. But since the international agency was forced to close down its operation in Pakistan, I’m now jobless.
“It feels terrible to live in someone else’s home and not be able to contribute anything,” she says. “But there are no employment opportunities for women who are not highly educated.”
The incidence of early marriages is higher among women than men in Pakistan. Recent government data by the Pakistan Demographic and Health Survey (PDHS) 2017-18 shows that 29 percent of women (age 25 to 49) were married by age 18, as compared to five percent of men (30 to 49 years). About 13.5 percent of adolescent girls aged 15 to 19 are married and 13 percent give birth by age 18, according to PDHS 2017-18. Fifteen percent of teenage girls in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa had begun childbearing as compared to only six percent in Punjab.
While the overall percentage of child marriage has slightly decreased in comparison to the last government estimates, in the age group of 15 years, it has increased from 1.6 to 1.8 percent.
Religious misconceptions
Although poverty and cultural practices promote child marriages, religious misconceptions are one of the main reasons of this menace. People believe there is no harm in early marriage and that religion promotes it. An often quoted example is the marriage of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) with Hazrat Aisha (RA) who, according to popular Islamic traditions, was nine years old at the time of marriage.
But there is another school of thought that proves, with strong circumstantial evidence, that the age of the Prophet’s wife was 18 years when the marriage was consummated.
Even if it is presumed that Aisha was nine years old, it doesn’t mean it is compulsory for society to follow the same example now, since that was the Prophet’s attribute in the context of that time and culture, says Mohammad Shareef Hazarvi, an Islamic scholar and Imam of Darusalaam Mosque, Islamabad.
Neither early marriage is obligatory nor forbidden, he says, further explaining that Islam promotes marriage when someone attains puberty and maturity and is thus in a better position to understand and handle relations to play a positive role in society. “It’s a social issue, so states and societies can make laws according to the health, education and social conditions of its citizens.”
There is also a decree by Al-Azhar University, Egypt, that gives governments the right to determine the age for marriage and supports marriage after 18.
Meanwhile, Tabassum regrets not having acquired an education. She feels if she had some education she could have been able to earn something to raise her daughter instead of relying on her parents. Her daugher is currently in Class One and Tabassum does regularly go to drop and pick her up from school. “I want her to get a good education so she does not have to suffer the way I did.”
The writer is a freelancer
Published in Dawn, EOS, May 26th, 2019