Aya

1953
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The Social System in Islam

1420 AH / 1999 CE

:: Content ::

Introduction

1 The View of Man and Woman

2 The Impact of this view on the relationship between Man and Woman

3 Regulating the Relations between Man and Woman

4 Private Life

5 It is Obligatory to Separate Man from Woman in Islamic Life

6 Looking at Women

7 It is not obligatory for the Muslim Woman to cover her face

8 Man and Woman before the Shari’ah Commandments

9 The Activities of the Woman

10 The Islamic Community

11 Marriage

12 Women to whom Marriage is Prohibited

13 Polygymy

14 The Prophet’s Marriages

15 Married Life

16 Coitus Interruptus (al-‘Azl)

17 Divorce

18 The Lineage (An-Nasab)

19 The Imprecation (al-Li’aan)

20 The Guardianship of the Father

21 Custody of the Child

22 Maintaining Good Relations with Kith and Kin (Silat-ur-Rahm)

Many people overstep the mark and apply the term ‘social system’ to all systems of life. This is an erroneous application; given that the systems of life befit more to be called the ‘systems of society’ since in reality that is what they constitute, as they organise the relationships which arise between a people living in a particular society regardless of their meeting or dispersing. The meeting of people is not considered, what is noted is only the relationships (‘Alaqat). Consequently, they will be diverse and differ according to the different relationships. They include economics, ruling, politics, education, penal code (‘Uqubat), societal transactions (Mu’amalat) and the rules of (testimonial) evidences (Bayyinat) etc.

Thus, the application of the term ‘social system’ to all of these relationships is meaningless and inapplicable. Besides, the word ‘social’ is a description of a system, thus the subject matter of this system should be the organisation of the problems arising from the meeting (of people) or the relationships that arise from people meeting together. The meeting of a man with a man and a woman with a woman does not require a system because no problems arise from it, nor do relationships arise which require a system. Only the organisation of their interests requires a system in view of the fact that they live in the same country even if they did not meet. As for the meeting of a man with a woman and vice versa, it is from this meeting that problems and relationships arise which need to be organised by a system. Thus, this meeting (Ijtima’) befits more to be designated as the social system, because in reality it is this system which organises the meeting between men and women, and the relationships which arise from such meetings. That is why the social system is confined to the system which demonstrates the organisation of the woman’s meeting with the man and vice versa, and organises the woman’s relationship with the man and vice versa. Thus the social system addresses the relationships that result from men and women meeting and not from their interests (Masalih) in society, and it clarifies all that branches out from this relationship. Thus, trade between men and women pertains to the systems of society and not to the social system, because it falls within the economic system. As for the prohibition of (Khalwa) seclusion between men and women, or when a woman has the right to instigate divorce for herself, or who has the right of custody for a child, all of these issues pertain to the social system. Therefore, the social system is defined as: the system which organises the meeting of a man with a woman and vice versa and organises the relationship which results from their meeting and all that branches out from this relationship.