Īlāʾ in Islam: Definition, Linguistic Roots, and the Four-Month Limit

❖ Īlāʾ: The Husband’s Oath and the Four-Month Limit​


Written by: ʿImrān Ayyūb Lāhorī


❀ Definition and Ruling​


Īlāʾ is when a husband swears an oath concerning all or some of his wives that he will not approach them.


  • If he sets a period less than four months, then he must remain apart until that specified period is complete.

❀ Linguistic Explanation​


The word “Īlāʾ” comes from the root آلى يُولِي (form: ifʿāl), meaning “to swear an oath.”
It is derived from أليه (with tashdīd on the yāʾ).
Its plural is ālāyā, similar in form to khaṭāyā.


References:


  • Lisān al-Mīzān 1/117
  • al-Ṣiḥāḥ 6/227

❀ Technical Definition​


In Islamic jurisprudence, Īlāʾ means:


A husband swears an oath that he will not be intimate with his wife for four months or more.


The four Imāms (Abū Ḥanīfah, Mālik, al-Shāfiʿī, Aḥmad) have all defined it with this meaning in slightly different wordings.


References:


  • Tabyīn al-Ḥaqāʾiq 2/261
  • Mughnī al-Muḥtāj 3/343
  • Tuḥfat al-Muḥtāj 8/188

❀ Prophetic Example​


It is narrated from Umm Salamah رضي الله عنها that the Prophet ﷺ swore an oath that he would not go to some of his wives for one month.
When one month had passed, he went back to them.


[Bukhārī: 5202, Kitāb al-Nikāḥ: Bāb Hujrat al-Nabī Nisāʾ, Muslim: 1085]
 
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