Islamic marriage advice and family advice

If I ask my husband to separate 3 times is it khula?

AOA,

If I ask my husband to separate 3 times is it considered khula? I was living in a different country at the time and could not return to the original country where our Nikkah was to file for separation myself. In the papers he even wrote that he is doing this on my request.

I actually don't want to divorce him anymore. This happened about 4 years ago and we would like to reconcile. I just want to know our status.

Thanks for your help in advance.

-batoolk928


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2 Responses »

  1. Salaamu Alaikum, may Allah guide you and help you with the correct Islamic way in reconciliation with your husband, In shaa Allah this may help, someone will asked a similar question. Here is the scholar's answer.

    His wife asked him for khula‘ and he agreed to that on condition that she return some things to him, and she accepted that; then he had intercourse with her after that
    216408

    Question
    My question is about the khul/khula.
    My wife asked for khula 3weeks ago and we agreed that she give back the rings I gave her and she did. When I was looking up this subject on Islam q&a, the most correct opinion was that she was to observe an Iddah of one menstrual cycle before the marriage ends. We have had intercourse several times before her period came, did we commit zina or a sin? Also, because we had sex, does that count as a marriage reconciliation? Last, does her period have to end before the khula conditions are complete or does the marriage end the day she gets her period?
    Answer

    Praise be to Allah

    Once khula‘ has taken place between the spouses, the marriage contract between them is annulled, according to the more correct scholarly view. Many of the scholars are of the view that khula‘ counts as an irrevocable divorce in the minor sense. According to both views, there is no way that the husband can take the wife back during the ‘iddah if khula‘ has taken place. But the majority of scholars are of the view that it is permissible for him to remarry her during the ‘iddah with her consent in a new marriage contract and with a new mahr (dowry). This has been discussed in detail in fatwa no. 202629.

    If you separated from your wife by means of khula‘, and the khula‘ was done in words that clearly expressed khula‘ or other words that expressed the same meaning, then in that case the marriage contract between you was annulled from the moment the khula‘ occurred. Hence what you did of having intercourse after the khula‘ is something haraam (forbidden), for which you have to ask for forgiveness from Allah. This intercourse does not count as taking her back, according to scholarly consensus, because you had no right to take her back in the first place.

    But if the khula‘ was not done in words that clearly expressed khula‘ or other words that expressed the same meaning, rather it only happened by means of agreeing to it, then this is not regarded as anything and does not result in annulment of the marriage; rather the marriage is only annulled with khula‘, and khula‘only occurs with the offer and acceptance. This has been discussed previously in fatwa no. 200341

    In fatwa no. 186809 we have explained that khula‘ at the time of menses is permissible and valid.

    However we should point out that the one who is observing iddah following khula‘ should not observe ‘iddah with her husband in such a way that she mixes freely with him; rather she should observe ‘iddah in her family’s home, or in any other place she likes. It is permissible for her to observe ‘iddah in her husband’s house if she has a place that is separate from him and has her own facilities, so that she will be safe and will not mix freely with the one who was her husband. This has been explained in detail in fatwa no. 196077

    And Allah knows best.

    • Annulled is not a proper word in terms of khula. If a woman wants to end her marriage via khula, after the prescribed waiting period, the couple are considered divorced. An annulment invalidates the marriage, not ends it. It reflects that a marriage actually did not take place. If the couple had children during the marriage, that would challenge the status of any children born into the marriage.

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