The Quran prohibited this practice. Marriage between people related in some way is subject to prohibitions based on three kinds of relationship.
In Islam can I marry my brother in law's younger sister? Yes, you can.
Talk to a real lawyer about your legal issue. There is no legal impediment in marrying sister of your brother-in-law (Jijaji) as this relationship does not fall within the prohibited category of relationship wherein one can not marry. But it may personal implications.
Rejecting the argument, the Bench said marriage to the wife's sister, during the subsistence of the earlier marriage, was only irregular (fasid) and not void (batil).
Yes … for example, he could be a priest or other legal officiant and she is getting married to someone else. Also … if you are legally married to your wife, it is likely the laws in your country will allow your brother to become married to your wife's sister.
It is legal. Messy, but legal. The thing with this is that if either of the marriages have problems (you always think that your marriage won't, but statistics say it will) you extended family life will become very, very messy.
Islam. Islamic law (sharia) clearly lays down rules for marriage, including who may marry whom, and although the Quran does not prohibit a man from marrying his brother's widow, it does insist that if it were to be done, it should be treated as a normal marriage with the wife's consent and a mahr.
Answering a 2012 audience question, the popular Islamic preacher Zakir Naik noted that the Quran does not forbid cousin marriage but quotes Dr. Ahmed Sakr as saying that there is a hadith of Muhammad that says: "Do not marry generation after generation among first cousins".
As far as Islam is concerned, a person's mother's cousin is lawful to him for marriage, unless there is some other reason to prevent this.
The answer is yes. Islam does not allow to marry father's sister, father's brother, mother's sister, mother's brother. But one can marry anybody who is the son /daughter of his /her parent's direct blood relation.
You are not “blood relatives” so it would be perfectly fine and if you wanted to get married and have children.
Yes you can that would be totally fine. But keep one thing in mind that both relations are different your sister in law and your husband. So if any problem occurs during marriage these relations should not get be mixed and get effected.
Brothers-in-law are related only via one marriage. Your husband and sister's husband are related via two. People also commonly refer to this relationship as brother-in-law, but it's technically incorrect. Still, I suppose it can be used informally.
Seven relations are prohibited because of consanguinity, i.e. kinship or relationship by blood, viz. mothers, daughters, sisters, paternal aunts, maternal aunts, and nieces (whether sister's or brother's daughters). In this case, no distinction is made between full and half relations, both being equally prohibited.
What are prohibited relationships under the law? You cannot marry your mother, grandmother, daughter, granddaughter, sister, niece, great-niece, aunts, or great-aunts. You also cannot marry someone who is also related to you through such relatives. For example, you cannot marry your great granddaughter.
Under the Shia Law, a Muslim may marry his wife's aunt, but he cannot marry his wife's niece without her permission. Marriage prohibited by reason of unlawful conjunction is void under Shia Law. Polygamy or marrying a fifth wife: means plurality of wives, i.e. marrying a fifth wife.
In Islam, marriages between first cousins are permitted. (Surah Nisa Verse 22-24).
Answer. In the Name of Allah, the Most Merciful and Compassionate. May Allah guide every dimension of our lives to that which pleases Him. The relative referred to in the question is not one of your unmarriageable kin, it is, therefore, permissible to marry him.
Hence Allah, may He be exalted, says in the following verse (interpretation of the meaning): “All others are lawful…” [al-Nisa' 4:24]. Based on that, the daughter of one's paternal uncle or aunt, or of one's maternal uncle or aunt, are permissible in marriage.
There is a general consensus among Sunni and Shia fiqh experts that Surah Al-Baqarah 221 and Surat Al‑Mumtahanah 10 ban Muslim women from marrying non-Muslim men. This consensus is still standing strong. On the other hand, the Quran allows Muslim men to marry non-Muslim women (“People of the Book”).
Mother's sister's daughter comes under the Degree Of Prohibited Relationship. So her daughter is also comes under the same. you can marry with your mother's sister's grand daughter as there is no spinda relationship with you and her. nobody can restrain you to do that.
The children of your uncle or aunt are your cousins, and marriage between cousins is allowed, not compulsory as some people believe. Marriage in Islam is permitted to anyone except those that are expressly forbidden.
levirate, custom or law decreeing that a widow should, or in rare cases must, marry her dead husband's brother. The term comes from the Latin levir, meaning “husband's brother.” The “brother” may be a biological sibling of the deceased or a person who is socially classified as such.
Polygamy is permitted for many social reasons. However it is by permission and not an obligation or recommendation in the Quran that a Muslim male should indulge in polygamy. at the time of the Prophet Mohamed (Peace upon Him) it was because thousands of Muslim men died in wars.
What Does the Holy Quran Say About Mahram? According to this verse, a woman's mahram is an unmarriageable person because of their close blood relationship, breastfeeding, or because of being related by marriage.