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2985503/02/2008

Marriage of close blood relatives at the beginning of creation

Question: 104638

If all of humanity are the descendants of Adam, does this mean that marriage to close blood relatives (mahrams) was permissible at the beginning of creation? Then when did it become prohibited?

Praise be to Allah, and peace and blessings be upon the Messenger of Allah and his family.

Necessity dictated
that the children of Adam (peace be upon him) had to marry one another in
order to produce offspring and populate the Earth. 

In some reports it
says that no son was born to Adam (peace be upon him) but a girl was also
born with him, so the boy born from this pregnancy married a girl from
another pregnancy, and the girl born from this pregnancy married a boy from
another pregnancy; it was forbidden for the boy and girl from the same
pregnancy (i.e., fraternal twins) to marry one another. 

This is mentioned in
reports narrated by Ibn Jareer at-Tabari in his Tafseer (10/205-207)
from Ibn ‘Abbaas and Ibn Mas‘ood (may Allah be pleased with them). 

However, we do not
find in the Holy Qur’an or the Prophet’s Sunnah any mention of the
historical development of stages in the rulings on prohibitions on marriage
to close relatives (mahrams) or on the degree of blood relationship that
makes a person a mahram (and thus prohibited in marriage). But what we do
find in the Holy Qur’an is the prohibition on marriage to mahrams, where
far-reaching degrees of kinship are mentioned. It includes marriage to one’s
brother’s daughter, one’s sister’s daughter, one’s father’s wife and even
includes mahrams because of breastfeeding. That is the verse in which Allah,
they He be glorified and exalted, says (interpretation of the meaning):

“Forbidden to you
(for marriage) are: your mothers, your daughters, your sisters, your fathers
sisters, your mothers sisters, your brothers daughters, your sisters
daughters, your foster mother who gave you suck, your foster milk suckling
sisters, your wives mothers, your step daughters under your guardianship,
born of your wives to whom you have gone in – but there is no sin on you if
you have not gone in them (to marry their daughters), – the wives of your
sons who (spring) from your own loins, and two sisters in wedlock at the
same time, except for what has already passed; verily, Allah is
OftForgiving, Most Merciful”

[an-Nisa’ 4:23]. 

Anyone who speculates
about the historical development of the rulings on marriage to close
relatives, and the details of that, is only speculating on matters of
conjecture about events in history and the laws of the Messengers, basing
it, for the most part, on reports from the People of the Book. This – as is
obvious – is likely to be wrong and based on imagination, and subject to
addition and subtraction, as narrated by the historians in the story of Adam
(peace be upon him) and by some of the mufassireen in their commentary on
the verse in which Allah, may He be exalted, says (interpretation of the
meaning):

“And (O Muhammad)
recite to them (the Jews) the story of the two sons of Adam (Habil (Abel)
and Qabil (Cain)) in truth; when each offered a sacrifice (to Allah), it was
accepted from the one but not from the other. The latter said to the former:
‘I will surely kill you.’ The former said: ‘Verily, Allah accepts only from
those who are Al-Muttaqoon (the pious)’”

[al-Maa’idah 5:27]. 

Some contemporary
writers have also looked for such information in the Torah and Gospel which
have been distorted, and in some of the history books of earlier nations. 

There is no benefit
in knowing when marriage to close relatives was forbidden in earlier laws;
if that were the case, Allah, may He be exalted, would have mentioned it, or
His Messenger (blessing and peace of Allah be upon him) would have mentioned
it, for he did not omit anything that was beneficial or useful but he told
us of it. What should concern us is the fact that Allah, may He be exalted,
has definitively forbidden marriage to close relatives (mahrams) in His
Book, and this is also indicated by the Prophet’s Sunnah and scholarly
consensus. 

And Allah knows best.

Source

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