18th
December, 2023
PRESS RELEASE:
ALLOW
MARRIED WOMEN TO BEAR THEIR FATHERS’ NAMES – MURIC
A call has gone to
the Federal Government for a reform of Nigerian marriage laws that will allow married
women to bear their fathers’ names. Making the call was an Islamic human rights
advocacy group, the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC).
A statement signed by the group’s director, Professor Ishaq
Akintola, on Monday, 18th December, 2023, described the current
practice whereby married women are forced to bear their husbands’ surnames as gender
discriminatory, archaic and oppressive.
MURIC condemned the current practice for depriving women of their Allah-given fundamental human right to personal and
parental identity in marriage. The group advocated the adoption of the women-friendly
Islamic practice which allows married women to bear their fathers’ surnames after
marriage.
The full statement reads:
“Our attention has been drawn to the plight of married Muslim women
who are being disallowed by employers from bearing their fathers’ names. This amounts
to forceful enslavement, denial of Allah-given fundamental human right to parental
identity and wrongful dismissal of loco parentis.
“We condemn the
current practice for three major reasons, namely, for generating confusion in
the society, for creating a monumental identity crisis among married women and
for depriving women of their Allah-given
fundamental human right to personal as well as parental identity in marriage.
“Instead of this, we advocate the adoption of the women-friendly Islamic
practice which allows married women to bear their fathers’ surnames after
marriage.
“No woman dropped suddenly from the sky and even if some appear out
of nowhere, they must have been born, bred, nurtured, buttered and marmaladed by
certain parents before they grew up and matured into womanhood. Their education
was also sponsored by their parents at a
time that the future husband probably knew nothing about them and spent no kobo
on their upbringing and their education.
“It therefore beats logic, fairness and natural justice that a
husband appears out of nowhere to commandeer a woman’s parental identity simply
by marrying her. Such identity robbery also has its advantages.
“For instance,
women who are educated are forced to advertise change of names to their
husbands’ surnames after marriage in order to retain the validity of their
documents and properties. It often becomes very difficult and sometimes
impossible for married women to be located or to retain old friends due to such
change of name.
“Those who want to be sincere among married women today will confirm
the stress they have gone through from this experience. Islam sets women free
from such stress by permitting married women to retain their original family
names.
“Contrary to the general claim that
Islam discriminates against women, Islamic liberation theology actually teaches
respect for the dignity of women in all circumstances. One of such
circumstances is the period when women are in wedlock. Whereas Western civilization
robs married women of their original family identity by insisting that they
should bear their husbands’ surnames, the Shari’ah allows women to bear their
own fathers’ names even after marriage.
“We therefore invite
the Federal Government and other relevant authorities to set the machinery in
motion towards allowing married women to bear their fathers’ names. In
particular, we charge both houses in the National Assembly, Senate and the
House of Representatives, to introduce the necessary bills that will set
Nigerian women free from undue masculine domination.
“This advocacy is
not for Muslim women alone. We are certain that Muslim women are not the only
ones who feel the pinch. MURIC will love to see every married woman who desires
to be identified by her father’s name enabled to do so. Our lawmakers should frame
the clauses in such a way that all women can enjoy the freedom to choose between
bearing their fathers’ names or their husbands’. It is time to set Nigerian
women free. They are the mothers of our society.
“We contend that the whole gamut of women liberation struggle boils
down to a sham and a mirage until this goal is achieved. A married woman is not
a slave. She is not just a dot in social statistics. She has a soul and that
soul yearns for love. She covets to love and be loved, not only by her husband
but also by her family and vice versa. Nigeria must not fail her. Parental
identity is sacrosanct. Husbands can never replace fathers in matters of
parental identity and that is what the current system compels women to go
through. Enough is enough.”
#LetNigerianWomenBreathe
#SetTheWomenFree
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Executive Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC).
No comments:
Post a Comment