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Many Muslim American men travel to foreign countries to obtain quick Islamic divorce. Most often the husband goes to a foreign country leaves his wife, property and children in the United States, get a quick divorce, returns back to the U.S. and request recognition and enforcement in a state court. This type of divorce may be valid in the foreign country but it is not necessary valid in the United States. As the United States and its allies struggle to get to grips with its new challenges in the Middle East and North Africa, pundits, scholars and journalists have combed every inch of the Muslim Brotherhood's history for clues to what might happen in the event the movement takes control over the region. Related Article Tags: , , Pakistani men residing in the U.S. travel to their homeland to get divorce decrees from Pakistan. They return back to the United States and seek recognition and enforcement of the Pakistani Islamic divorce decree in a state court. This article deals with the issues related to Pakistani Islamic divorce in U.S. courts. Under the rules of divorce in Islamic sharia, a husband has the prerogative right to divorce his wife any time, any place, with or without any reason. Under certain conditions, the wife may request from the religious judge a judicial divorce in case of 'harm' or maltreatment (darar), as stated by the Maliki School of jurisprudence. Related Article Tags: , , Muslim men with Iranian passports may choose to go back to Iran and obtain a fast track divorce in that country by stating three times, "I divorce my wife" in the presence of two male witnesses, show proof of the "mahr" payment, record the divorce in Iran, authenticate the documents, return back to the U.S. and seek recognition and enforcement of the Iranian divorce in a state court. Related Article Tags: , , Under the rules of Islamic sharia, the husband can end his marriage unilaterally by simply announcing the words "I divorce my wife" or "I divorce you" three times. He does not need to justify his decision, nor explain any reason for his divorce and never need to enter a courtroom to end his marriage. Egyptian Muslim women however are denied equal right to divorce. They are trapped in unwanted marriages or left begging for a divorce that can take years to obtain and leave them destitute.
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