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Azhar launches awareness campaigns against child marriage

CAIRO – 4 October 2017: In response to President Abdel Fatah al-Sisi’s bid to crackdown on child marriage, Al-Azhar announced the launch of awareness-raising campaigns against the practice.

Sheikh Abbas Shoman, the deputy sheikh of Egypt’s al-Azhar institute, said Friday’s sermons will primarily address child marriages and its impacts, particularly in rural areas where it is prominent.

Ahmad al-Tayeb, the grand imam of Al-Azhar said that there are no sacred texts in Islam allowing child marriages, adding that Islam doesn’t set a specific age at which people can get married.

He added that Islam explicitly prohibits any practices that could lead to health complications or unavoidable physiological harm, which can apply to child marriages.

Recently, in one of the villages of Al-Mahallah al-Kubra, in the middle of the Nile Delta, an imam approved 27 cases of customary marriages for girls below 18 years of age.

Because of a law drafted in 2008 as part of Egypt’s Child Law to raise the age of marriage to 18 prohibiting child marriages, this imam convinced the families in the village that couples could have customary marriages until girls reach the eligible age, after which the bond would be made legal.

Source: http://www.egypttoday.com/Article/2/26019/Azhar-launches-awareness-campaigns-against-child-marriage?fbclid=IwAR2er1_HWDl4q35hNObF-YWzSICsbxOT8S9CpHYe5WitDUNbZm_JZBLPmE4

al-Mursyid al-Amin lil-Banat wa al-Banin” by Sheikh Rifaah Rafi ‘al-Tahthawi

Rifaah (1801-1873 AD) was born in Egypt, six years studying religion in Al-Azhar al-Sharif Egypt. After finished his study, Rifaah was appointed a teacher at her alma mater for two years. By his teacher, Sheikh Hasan al-‘Atthar, was sent as a prayer imam and religious advisor to Egyptian military units.
Soon later, Muhammad Ali Basya, the Egyptian government, sent a number of Egyptian youth to Persia. Shaykh Hasan al-‘Aththar proposed that Rifaah be with them to Paris as a prayer imam and religious advisor. Finally Rifaah with entourage sent to Paris for five years. And back to Egypt.
The book “al-Mursyid al-Amin lil-Banat wa al-Banin” by Sheikh Rifaah Rafi ‘al-Tahthawi explains the importance of education for women, good housekeeping, women’s leadership, and independence (hurriyah). This book is a guide for scholars, teachers, staff, and government pro-policy stakeholders to the first female school pioneered by Rifaah.