another view
Polygamy laws expose our own hypocrisy
By Jonathan Turley
Tom Green is an American polygamist. This month, he will appeal his conviction in Utah for that offense to the United States Supreme Court, in a case that could redefine the limits of marriage, privacy and religious freedom.
If the court agrees to take the case, it would be forced to confront a 126-year-old decision allowing states to criminalize polygamy that few would find credible today, even as they reject the practice. And it could be forced to address glaring contradictions created in recent decisions of constitutional law.
For polygamists, it is simply a matter of unequal treatment under the law.
Individuals have a recognized constitutional right to engage in any form of consensual sexual relationship with any number of partners. Thus, a person can live with multiple partners and even sire children from different partners so long as they do not marry. However, when that same person accepts a legal commitment for those partners "as a spouse," we jail them.
Likewise, someone such as singer Britney Spears can have multiple husbands so long as they are consecutive, not concurrent. Thus, Spears can marry and divorce men in quick succession and become the maven of tabloid covers. Yet if she marries two of the men for life, she will become the matron of a state prison.
Religion defines the issue
The difference between a polygamist and the follower of an "alternative lifestyle" is often religion. In addition to protecting privacy, the Constitution is supposed to protect the free exercise of religion unless the religious practice injures a third party or causes some public danger.
However, in its 1878 opinion in Reynolds vs. United States, the court refused to recognize polygamy as a legitimate religious practice, dismissing it in racist and anti-Mormon terms as "almost exclusively a feature of the life of Asiatic and African people." In later decisions, the court declared polygamy to be "a blot on our civilization" and compared it to human sacrifice and "a return to barbarism." Most tellingly, the court found that the practice is "contrary to the spirit of Christianity and of the civilization which Christianity has produced in the Western World."
Contrary to the court's statements, the practice of polygamy is actually one of the common threads between Christians, Jews and Muslims.
Deuteronomy contains a rule for the division of property in polygamist marriages. Old Testament figures such as Abraham, David, Jacob and Solomon were all favored by God and were all polygamists. Solomon truly put the "poly" to polygamy with 700 wives and 300 concubines. Mohammed had 10 wives, though the Koran limits multiple wives to four. Martin Luther at one time accepted polygamy as a practical necessity. Polygamy is still present among Jews in Israel, Yemen and the Mediterranean.
Indeed, studies have found polygamy present in 78% of the world's cultures, including some Native American tribes. (While most are polygynists — with one man and multiple women — there are polyandrists in Nepal and Tibet in which one woman has multiple male spouses.) As many as 50,000 polygamists live in the United States.
Given this history and the long religious traditions, it cannot be seriously denied that polygamy is a legitimate religious belief. Since polygamy is a criminal offense, polygamists do not seek marriage licenses. However, even living as married can send you to prison. Prosecutors have asked courts to declare a person as married under common law and then convicted them of polygamy.
The Green case
This is what happened in the case of Green, who was sentenced to five years to life in prison. In his case, the state first used the common law to classify Green and four women as constructively married — even though they never sought a license. Green was then convicted of polygamy.
While the justifications have changed over the years, the most common argument today in favor of a criminal ban is that underage girls have been coerced into polygamist marriages. There are indeed such cases. However, banning polygamy is no more a solution to child abuse than banning marriage would be a solution to spousal abuse. The country has laws to punish pedophiles and there is no religious exception to those laws.
In Green's case, he was shown to have "married" a 13-year-old girl. If Green had relations with her, he is a pedophile and was properly prosecuted for a child sex crime — just as a person in a monogamous marriage would be prosecuted.
The First Amendment was designed to protect the least popular and least powerful among us. When the high court struck down anti-sodomy laws in Lawrence vs. Texas, we ended decades of the use of criminal laws to persecute gays. However, this recent change was brought about in part by the greater acceptance of gay men and lesbians into society, including openly gay politicians and popular TV characters.
Such a day of social acceptance will never come for polygamists. It is unlikely that any network is going to air The Polygamist Eye for the Monogamist Guy or add a polygamist twist to Everyone Loves Raymond. No matter. The rights of polygamists should not be based on popularity, but principle.
I personally detest polygamy. Yet if we yield to our impulse and single out one hated minority, the First Amendment becomes little more than hype and we become little more than hypocrites. For my part, I would rather have a neighbor with different spouses than a country with different standards for its citizens.
I know I can educate my three sons about the importance of monogamy, but hypocrisy can leave a more lasting impression.
Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law at George Washington Law School.
Find this article at:
http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinion/columnist/2004-10-03-turley_x.htm


5 Comments:
I don't usually watch TV or watch movies, but today I must admit I made a trip to blockbuster when they first opened to rent Volumes 1 and 2 of the HBO series called "Big Love." Big Love is a hit and what is it about? A man married to three wives living in Suburbia Utah. He has three wives, 7 children, and I think he is mormon. I can't wait to watch it. People (non-Muslims) were actually surprised after watching it how normal their lives seemed. It was not as big of a deal that all three of his wives live next door to eachother and share a backyard; They were a real family with real problems just like the rest. It isn't portrayed as one big orgy as many people would imagine it. Well I guess there was a break through in the movie industry where they are now introducing the subject. I even heard that their is a reality show that comes on TLC on a polygamous man married to two women and dating or getting to know his third soon to be wife. Anyways I just thought I'd share that. When I watch them I will share insha Allah what it's about.
assalaamu ^alayki vena. i am very aware of the show "Big Love" and have watched the entire first season, as has my co-wife and our mother-in-law. i think that it is an excellent show and portrayal of polygyny, showing both the beauties and blessings as well as the struggles. enjoy it and let me know what you think after watching it all.
As Salaamu Alaikum,
Since Polygamy seems to be a universal norm amongst a majority of the worlds cultures, so when did it become so abnormal? I am going to take a wild guess that possibly the formation of the Catholic Church had something do with it, or Henry the 8th would had just had been a polygamist instead of a murderer. So has anyone found the turning point?
Also, in terms of polyandry in Tibet - this is really divised to keep land rights within a family. Usually the women marries brothers, so her children are not only siblings, but cousins as well. It is more a situation where the brothers choose her, rather than she choosing them.
The first time I had seen plural marriage in action was when I was in Kenya. My friend's kiswahili language tutor, Husna was telling us that she was arrested over the weekend . . . no joke. She said she got into a fight with her husband's other wife at a wedding. The women there where cotton scarves called kanga's that have swahili proverbs written across them, I guess this one hit a nerve. As well the women will show off a bit in front of co-wives, ex-wives and anyone else whose in their way. Historically, many of the women were "what their right hand possesed." So polygyny is how they became who they are now; a mixture of Arab/Africans. Also, something for those of us who have girls . . . training our girls to be patient and pleasing co-wives. Actually, I have seen 12 year old muslimah's play co-wives and even some instead of asking to be BFF, instead make a pact to be co-wives.This is beautiful, masha'Allah.
No, I haven't watched "Big Love" and probably won't a chance too, wonder the impact of such a show will have on public policy and oppinion. Always love to share
aishah
This is an interesting and thought-provoking article. The institution of marriage has religious origins, and changing this religious institution to fit the needs of a secular world (e.g. gay marriage) is a challenge faced by secular governments around the world.
Although the author of this article comes to a conclusion that happens to support a specific Islamic ruling, i.e. polygamy, I think muslims should not identify with this article nor its author.
Why? Because the reasoning behind his conclusion is a completely secular one, a legal framework whose criteria for permissibility are based solely on its utility and role in the dunya. In this legal framework, the State has no business in prohibiting things that are of no direct injury to other people. Based on this framework, yes, polygamy is allowed; but so is marriage between a man and another man, even if that man is his own son, as long as everyone is of decision-making capacity (i.e. not children). In this framework, there is no reason why pornography should be illegal, nor gambling. Marijuana? It is no more mind-altering than alcohol, and is not significantly more carcinogenic than cigarettes.
The legal framework of Muslims could hardly be more different. We believe that prohibitions come from a divine source with greater wisdom, and that these prohibitions involve issues of society and individual alike, issues of public life and personal life alike. Some of these prohibitions are to be enforced personally, such as backbiting, and some are to be enforced by law, such as the ban on pornography.
The strange bedfellows with whom we American Muslims often find ourselves is often due to the fact that American Muslims are politically liberal and socially conservative. Which is why we have more in common with an Orthodox Jew living in a West Bank settlement than than the tongue-ring wearing blue-haired gay socialist standing next to us at the MSA "Free Palestine" rally. We may (and should) disagree with the Orthodox Jew about Palestine, but our world view - i.e. based on our understanding of our relationship to God, family, and society - is far more similar to that of the Orthodox Jew than to the guy with the blue hair.
Getting back to the point, my muhajjabah wife may benefit from Halloween when she is joined by everyone walking around with colorful headgear... But you won't see me handing out candy.
i should have mentioned that my intention in posting this article was not necessarily as an expression of my own views but was merely my sharing an article that i came across and found interesting. there are things i agree with and things i don't agree with in the article. masha'Allah that's for another post. jazaki Allahu khair to all those who have commented thus far.
Post a Comment
<< Home