More Muslim women are opting for khhula, their right to ‘instant divorce’
The Hindu
Data from the Darul Qazas show most cases of divorce are filed through the khhula method
More Muslim marriages end with khhula, the woman’s inalienable right to instant divorce, and not as it’s widely perceived through instant triple talaq, which was set aside by a Supreme Court verdict in 2017, or through talaq-e-hassan, divorce at the man’s initiative. Data available at the Imarat-e-Shariah’s Darul Qaza or Islamic arbitration centres show most cases of divorce are filed through the khhula method, and an increasingly larger number of women are opting to end their marriage through khhula.
Unlike talaq, which is pronounced by the man, in the case of khhula, it’s the woman who initiates divorce, and surrenders her mehr (wealth transferred or promised to the woman at the time of marriage) at the time of such a divorce. Khhula can be effected orally or through a document called the ‘Khhulnama’. It has the effect of an instant divorce. If the mehr had not been given to the woman by the time she opted for khhula, she cannot demand the mehr as the marriage is being called off at her behest.
While cases of talaq-e-biddat are automatically ruled out due to the very nature of the act, there are few cases coming to the Islamic arbitration centres of women complaining against cases of talaq-e-hassan, the pronouncement of three divorces separated by at least a month between each pronouncement, or even mubarat, which is mutual divorce granted to a Muslim couple by the Shariah.
“In the last Islamic year corresponding to 2021-22, we had 572 cases in Imarat Shariah Markaz. Almost all cases were of khhula with only a handful of mubarat cases and none of triple talaq,” Anzar Alam Qasmi, the chief quazi responsible for deciding issues of marriage and divorce at Patna's famed Imarat-e-Shariah, told The Hindu.
Mr. Qasmi speaks only of the Imarat Shariah headquarters. Data from all such centres in Bihar-Jharkhand show a bigger picture. In 2020-21, corresponding roughly to the 1443 Islamic calendar, there were nearly 5,000 cases of khhula at all Darul Qazas. The data show a similar rising trend in Delhi and Mumbai.
“From 2019 to 2021, there were 300 cases of khhula at Darul Qaza on Mira Road. In Mumbai city, there were 900 cases in recent years. There are five Darul Qazas in Mumbai. Every year, 300 cases of khhula are resolved at these centres. The maximum cases, around one hundred, come from the Mumbai city centre,” Azimuddin Sayed, president, Darul Qaza Committee, said.
Muzaffarnagar district’s Madrasa Islamia Arabia, which had never received cases of khhula until 2017, now receives three-four cases of it every month. Similar figures were reported from the Riyazul Uloom recently. The cases are referred to the Deoband for further arbitration.