Introduction
Jewish marriage has always been a shining example of a strong and stable family cell. It differs from the Catholic Christian marriage, which is an institution surrounded by the halo of a holy sacrament that cannot be nullified, even with the agreement of the two partners: “Therefore what God has joined together, let no man put asunder.”Footnote 1 It also differs from the Islamic marriage, which is closer to a legal agreement than to a sacrament,Footnote 2 wherein the husband alone may annul the marriage, either unilaterally or by mutual consent.Footnote 3 This is especially true of the Shi'ite marriage—the muta Footnote 4—which may be annulled without any divorce proceedings at a predetermined date. Between these two extremes is the Jewish marriage, which may be annulled under specific circumstances or by the agreement of both partners.Footnote 5
The marriage depicted in the Written Law, or the Torah, the central reference of Judaism, consisting of the five books of the Hebrew Bible that were given by G-d to Moses (hereinafter “the Written Law”), is similar to the Muslim marriage. The husband alone has the right to dissolve the marriage, and the wife can neither initiate nor demand a divorce.Footnote 6 However, the decrees of Rabbenu Gershom Meor ha-Golah (c. 1000 CE), equated the wife's position with that of her husband, and the husband could no longer divorce his wife against her will, but both sides had to agree to the divorce. In other words, just as a marriage requires that both parties agree to it of their own free will, from that time onward, the dissolution of a marriage also required the consent of both parties.Footnote 7 I point out that this is not substantive equality, but rather formal equality; as experts in different aspects of Jewish family law point out, the definitions of unfaithfulness that are a sufficient basis for the dissolution of a marriage, the justifications for divorce, and the methods of compelling divorce, are not symmetrical, with the husband's position far stronger than that of his wife.Footnote 8
Moreover, a woman's status in a Jewish marriage is much worse when her husband obstinately refuses to grant her a divorce or her brother-in-law refuses to carry out halitzah (the process by which a childless widow and a brother of her deceased husband may avoid the obligation of a levirate marriage) in order to release her from a levirate marriage. As is explored at length elsewhere,Footnote 9 there has been considerable discussion regarding the source of the problem of the woman's status and possible solutions for this unique situation of levirate marriage and of the husband's refusal to grant a divorce, which in the opinion of many halakhic authorities is the most problematic and difficult halakhic issue in general, and in family law in particular.
In my previous research,Footnote 10 I explored also the use of contractual devices, such as conditional marriage and prenuptial agreements, to, inter alia, deal with, or at least lessen, the dismal plight of the agunah (Jewish chained woman). Throughout that research, I also tried to overcome the main halakhic obstacle to using contractual mechanisms, the well-known Talmudic dictum that “there is no conditional marriage.” With this background in mind, in this article I take the issue one step farther and explore a unique contractual stipulation that may be perceived as a form of conditional marriage: the temporary marriage.Footnote 11 As opposed to my previous writing in this field, which has been written almost entirely from the standpoint of the dogmatic method of halakhic research,Footnote 12 this article focuses more on the historical method.Footnote 13
In this article I illustrate Talmudic sources of the Jewish temporary marriage and trace its influence on halakhic rulings, on the responsa literature, and on the rulings of the rabbinical courts. I first analyze the Talmudic sources regarding “Who would be mine for a day?” which, in the eyes of many commentators and scholars, is a classic Talmudic application of a temporary marriage. I next discuss the Shi'ite temporary marriage for pleasure, its historical sources, its modern applications, and its influence on Jewish and Karaite responsa. I then explore the common roots of the Talmudic temporary marriage and the Shi'ite marriage for pleasure in ancient Persian law.
Man Havya le-Yoma? (Who Will be Mine for a Day?)
In exploring Talmudic sources that are relevant to this discussion, I found a puzzling—and astonishing—issue in the Babylonian Talmud. There are two parallel sources that may perhaps serve as evidence for the validity of a temporary marriage that is agreed upon at the time of the marriage ceremony itself. Such marriages are dissolved by a get (religious divorce), and according to some of the authorities discussed above, a get itself may not be necessary for dissolving the marriage. I am referring to the discussion of kiddushin lezman (temporary marriage) evoked by the appeal of Rav and R. Nahman, two of the most important Babylonian amoraim (the Talmudic sages, or Jewish scholars, of the period from about 200 to 500 CE): “Who will be mine for a day?”Footnote 14 Below is the text:
Whenever Rav came to Darshis, he would announce: Who would be mine for a day? Whenever R. NahmanFootnote [15] would come to Shekunziv he would have it announced: Who will be mine for a day?Footnote [16] But has it not been taught: No man should marry a woman in one country and then go and marry a woman in another country lest they < their children > marry one another, with the result that a brother would marry his sister or a father his daughter, and one would fill all the world with bastardy to which the scriptural passage refers: And the land became full of lewdness?—I will tell you: <The affairs of > the Rabbis are well-known. But did not Rava say: If one has proposed marriage to a woman and she has consented then she must await seven clean days?—The Rabbis informed them before by sending their messenger earlier. Or, if you like, say: They only arranged for private meetings with them, because “You cannot compare one who has bread in his basket with one who has no bread in his basket.”Footnote 17
The Talmud is amazed that the sages allowed themselves such behavior, as their conduct violates a ruling in a beraita (external Mishnah, i.e., a tradition in the Jewish oral law not incorporated in the latter), which forbids marrying a woman in one place and then leaving her to reside in another place. As R. Eliezer ben Yaakov, in the abovementioned Talmudic passages, points out, this is because of the danger that a brother will not know about his half sister from the same father, and they will inadvertently marry and produce mamzerim (bastards). This text is extremely difficult to comprehend. The rabbis have reason to fear their evil inclination (yetzer hara), but they must also fear their Creator. On the one hand, if we are talking about cohabitation that is not fully halakhically valid, as in the case of an additional wife to the first wife who is legally married to the sage (and is living in a different place), how do we justify these sages’ inappropriate deeds?Footnote 18 Perhaps the text is an amoraic documentation of the halakhic approach to temporary marriages of a predetermined length and their annulment at the end of that period (apparently with a get, although opinions are not unanimous). On the other hand, if the text is indeed referring to a temporary marriage, how do we explain this immoral behavior of sages who were already legally married yet took an extra wife for a predetermined periodFootnote 19 and made the specific condition of a temporary marriage before the marriage?Footnote 20
Rashi, in his commentary to the texts in Yoma and Yevamot, explains that the words “Who will be mine for a day?” refer to a search for a woman who would agree to be married for one or several days while the sage is in town, after which they would separate.Footnote 21 It would seem that the text is referring to a full marriage requiring a divorce procedure to end it. On the other hand, the Talmud suggests—and such suggestions sometimes have the status of a halakhic ruling—that the woman is not fully married but has simply been designated for him. Indeed, many of the early rabbinic authorities followed the opinion of the tosafist RI- (Rabbi Yitzhak ben Shmuel the Elder), who asserts that the text is not referring to a proper marriage, but a situation in which a woman is allocated to the sage de jure but not de facto. The purpose was to ensure that the sages would be able to satisfy their sexual needs,Footnote 22 but the marriage was not a full marriage that requires a get. Footnote 23 Similarly Yitzhak bar Sheshet Perfet (Rivash, ch. 398) writes as follows:
But it would seem that this is only a designation; in other words a woman is selected and makes preparations to marry the rabbis if the rabbis should wish to do so. The rabbis would not marry them; but would make a condition to marry them should they [the rabbis] so desire. This would calm their sexual urges, as a woman was available in the town and was prepared to marry them should they so wish.Footnote 24
Isaiah the Elder of Terani (Rid) holds a similar view. He writes that this is not a full marriage with the right to have intercourse, but only permission to be with the woman: “One may claim that they were not alone together in one bed, but were together in the same house; he remained with the men and his wife remained with the women.”Footnote 25 One group of early rabbinic authorities is of the opinion that the marriage was a fully legal marriage, but without sexual intercourse. Therefore, the sage would set down a condition at the time of the marriage that the marriage is valid only while he is in town, and when he leaves town, the woman will agree to a divorce. According to Rabbenu Hananel, this is a fully legal marriage that requires a get to dissolve it before the sage leaves town. He writes, “So, who will be mine for a day and when I leave the place I will divorce her … . How can you say that they had intercourse with her. They did not [have intercourse] but only enjoyed her company.”Footnote 26 Meiri, in his work Bet ha-Behirah, explained the Talmudic text as follows:
This describes how one of our sages would marry a woman temporarily in every town in which he stayed, even where his stay was as short as one day, in order to control his sexual urges, and he would make a condition that he was marrying her for a short period in order that she should agree to a divorce afterwards, and no sexual relations took place. They would merely occupy the same house, so that he should not feel the lack of a wife and could more easily resist his urges.Footnote 27
Some rabbinic authorities tried to dismiss the problem of the Talmudic text by claiming it to be pure slander and not originally part of the Babylonian Talmud, inserted by a student of one of the sages who had erred in his ways or wished to mock.Footnote 28 According to Chaim Bloch, the text was inserted by residents of Shekunzib, who were known for their sense of humor. The sages made no such declaration, but rather it was simply a joke by a resident of Shekunzib, in which he incorporated the name of a prominent person.Footnote 29 Other commentators attempted to mitigate the problem of taking a wife in a temporary marriage for a predetermined period rather than conducting an official marriage ceremony with a hupah (the Jewish canopy) and kiddushin (the Jewish betrothal) by defining this deed as pilagshut, whose only purpose was to save these sages from their evil inclinations. Shmuel Shtrason (Rashash), in his commentary to this text in Yoma, explains, “We would explain that he did not marry by means of kiddushin and hupah but retained them for intercourse as a pilegesh [concubine] according to the rulings by Ra'avad and Nahmanides that a pilegesh is permitted to commoners … A regular marriage requires counting seven days of purity, but this form does not.”Footnote 30
Yaakov ben Zvi Hirsch Ashkenazi Emden (1698–1776) used this precedent for his famous ruling permitting a man to take a pilegesh, based on these two sages who took women without a hupah and kiddushin. He writes,
It is said in the first chapter of Yoma that when Rav reached Darshish, he announced, “Who will be mine for a day?” People were amazed and asked if he had intercourse with her. I wrote that this proves that a commoner is allowed to take a pilegesh, because it is obvious that a commoner would not write a ketubah (Jewish marriage contract) for one day, but would take her as a pilegesh and he does not have to write ketubah for her, therefore there is no problem that he is not allowed to remain with her without a ketubah. The intention is that a man should not hold his wife in contempt and be able to divorce her easily, and this permanence refers only to taking a wife who requires a ketubah. Since this permanence was explicitly agreed between them, he cannot change the conditions without her agreement. However, in the case of a pilegesh, she has agreed to his conditions. This is obviously the case for those rabbis who were interested in a temporary arrangement for one day and would be leaving the following day.Footnote 31
Other authorities were of the opinion that this was not a legal marriage in which sexual intercourse is permitted, but rather a marriage for a fixed time that did not include sexual relations but simply serving the husband, such as housekeeping and the like. As explained in a geonic commentary, “There was no sexual intercourse but the woman would serve in the house during the day.”Footnote 32 Some early rabbinic authorities were of the opinion that the marriage was legal, and there was no need for divorce when the sage left town because the women were available every time the sage returned.Footnote 33 Other authorities ruled that the marriage was valid and a get was required in order to abrogate it. According to Avraham min ha-Har (1315) in his commentary to Yevamot, s.v. “le-Yome,” we can understand that the text is referring to a valid marriage, which must be dissolved by providing a get: “Who will be mine for a day while I am staying here and I will divorce her. They would do so in every place they visited, even though they already had wives and children. This is the first explanation.”Footnote 34
Other academic scholars offered some strange explanations in their struggle to understand this puzzling text. Yet all were an apologetic attempt to avoid the obvious meaning.Footnote 35 In their opinion, it cannot be deduced from the text that the reference may indeed be to a temporary marriage. Their explanations included the following: Rav wished to do away with the negative custom of a wedding that was conducted without prior matchmaking and therefore asked his fellow citizens to arrange a marriage for him; the act was to counter the evil inclination and to prevent a possible test of a sexual nature, and the sage therefore wished to marry in order to neutralize his evil inclination;Footnote 36 due to the halakhic prohibitions of being alone with the wife of the innkeeper and questions of kashrut regarding the food, together with problematic relationships with the sages’ wives, the sages preferred to take an extra wife, if “she [the extra wife] agreed”Footnote 37; the Persians used to offer a woman to important guests who arrived without their wives, and therefore the sages made the fictitious announcement that they were looking for wives in order to prevent the Persians from sending them a Persian woman.
Further explanations include that the announcement, “Who will be mine for a day?” is not a search for a woman with whom to conduct marital relations, but a search for a place to stay while in the town; this is neither a public declaration nor a search for a wife, but a halakhic statement or popular saying briefly alluding to the issue of sexual intercourse on the Day of Atonement; these statements are a result of problems between the sages and their wives, hinting that they could take additional wives, or perhaps the wives’ behavior may have been the result of these declarations.Footnote 38
Before presenting a novel explanation of the Talmudic text, and what I consider an interesting approach, which I discuss in some detail below, I offer the following discussion of an ancient and unique Muslim form of marriage that does not appear to be relevant to our discussion and is most certainly antithetical to the spirit of Judaism but might, however, shed light on the ancient Persian-Babylonian roots of temporary marriage, which are reflected in the Babylonian Talmud.
The Shi'ite Temporary Marriage for Pleasure (زواج متعة — Muta)
General
The Shi'ite temporary marriage—muta—is a temporary marriage whose main purpose is pleasure. When the marriage contract expires, the woman is available again for marriage to anyone, without this entailing any formal divorce procedure. This form of marriage has been discussed in some detail in the scholarly literatureFootnote 39 and has even been the subject of a film that examines this unique type of marriage.Footnote 40 Traditionally, the muta marriage has been one of the points of contention between Sunni and Shi'ite Islam; it was permitted by the latter but categorically forbidden by the former.Footnote 41 It seems that today, the situation is reversed, and those who previously forbade the marriage tend to permit it, while those who used to permit the marriage now raise objections to it in order to limit its prevalence.Footnote 42 There are those who claim that Shi'ite Islam tended to permit it because the Shi'ites were a persecuted minority, fleeing from place to place, and it was necessary to develop a form of marriage that was suitable to this way of life.Footnote 43 Other scholars claim that this was the reason Shi'ite ideologists clothed the institution in holiness,Footnote 44 to the extent that some imams have ruled that a person who has not tried this form of marriage has not completely fulfilled the precepts of Islamic marriage.Footnote 45
One of the interesting religious justifications for this Shi'ite approach is the Sunni opposition. Any Shi'ite who enters into such a marriage gains spiritually, especially if he marries one of Muhammad's descendants. It would seem that ignoring the prohibition to the muta marriage laid down by Caliph Omar in the seventh century CE would probably give God pleasure according to the Shi'ite approach, particularly in view of Sunni opposition to it.Footnote 46 This form of marriage is built on mutual agreement (lāzim), established by the marriage proposal and its acceptance (ḳabūl and īd̲j̲āb), and requires specifying the time span for the marriage (ad̲j̲al), which may vary from one day to several years, but no more than ninety-nine years. It is not clear what happens to an agreement that has no clearly defined time span. Does it become a standard marriage or is the marriage contract null and void?Footnote 47 The contract must also include the exact payment to be made to the woman who agrees to these conditions (ad̲j̲r/mahr), otherwise the contract is null and void.Footnote 48
The muta marriage was customary for traveling men, but not exclusively, and it permitted them to take additional wives over and above their four legal wives. The muta marriage expires at the agreed upon time; however, the groom can terminate the agreement at any time, whereas the bride cannot terminate it at all. Thus, in these temporary marriages, women are treated like the object of a lease: the man can discard them at any time, thus breaking the contract, and thus giving the male a lot of freedom.Footnote 49 However, a muta marriage cannot be extended, even by mutual agreement. Instead, a new marriage ceremony and bridal contract is required prior to the expiry of the original contract. This marriage does not place any obligations on the husband with regard to his wife, not even food and lodging, and there are no rights of inheritance on either side. However, according to some opinions, if the marriage contract contains a specific stipulation, it must be legally validated.Footnote 50
The Ancient Roots of the Shi'ite Temporary Marriage
The muta form of marriage was common among Arabs as early as the fourth century CE.Footnote 51 It appears that muta marriages were known in the Jahiliyya period (the time period before Muhammad received his first revelation of the Qur'an) and were also very common in Eritrea.Footnote 52 Thus, the institution has a long history prior to its adoption by Islam.Footnote 53 It should be pointed out that in addition to the sources already mentioned, there are references to muta marriages in the fourth century, not only in the Arabian Peninsula, but also in Egypt.Footnote 54 It is, however, most common nowadays in Iran (previously Persia), which was governed by Islamic law after the Arab conquest and the death of Muhammad in 632 CE. It was relatively easy for different peoples to accept Islamic religious rule, as it offered equality and tolerance of the state that existed prior to the conquest.Footnote 55
The term muta does not appear in the Qur'an. Some commentaries suggest that there is a verse in the Sura about women (سورة النساء 4:24) that contains a reference to this concept: “Pay women who give you pleasure whatever you have promised.”Footnote 56 It is generally accepted that Muhammad's warriors were allowed muta marriages when engaging in holy wars of jihad away from home.Footnote 57 There are also a number of recorded cases of muta marriages at the beginning of Islam. In the hadith Sahih Al-Bukhari collection, for example, there are four references to a muta marriage. In one case, permission for it was issued by Muhammad himself: “We were in the army and a messenger arrived from Muhammad and said: Muhammad agreed that you should enjoy yourselves, so enjoy [muta marriages].”Footnote 58
Later on, muta marriages were forbidden among Muslims. It is not clear when Muhammad forbade these marriages, but all Sunni authors of the hadith agree that muta marriages were forbidden. On the other hand, Shi'ite sages claim that everyone knows that these marriages were permitted, and in the absence of evidence to the contrary, the practice is still permitted. An example of the dispute over when the marriages were prohibited may be found in the book Sunan Al-Darimi, which suggests different dates for Muhammad's prohibition. The first source is, “he said: Muhammad forbade the muta marriage in 629.”Footnote 59 The second source: “Muhammad forbade the practice of muta marriages and marriages between blood relations in the Hibar year.”Footnote 60 However, other scholars claim that muta marriages were still practiced in the eleventh to thirteenth centuries, at the time of the Caliph Abu Bakr.
Contemporary Temporary MarriageFootnote 61
There is comprehensive early eighteenth-century documentation of marriages for a limited time period that were brought for discussion to the Qadi in Sounan (Ṣan’ā’), in Southern Arabia.Footnote 62 In Mecca, both in modern and ancient times, the Sunnis conducted marriages for limited periods of time. These marriages were official and valid, but incorporated the divorce formula (ṭalāḳ) for the time when the marriage would expire. This combination produced the same type of marriage as their Shi'ite brethren's muta marriage.Footnote 63 Documentation also exists about the practice of these marriages into the beginning of the twentieth century in Eastern Syria at Deir ez-Zor,Footnote 64 as well as for the practice of this type of marriage among the Falashas in Ethiopia today, where it is known as a “soldier's marriage.” It is one of three types of Falasha marriages for a limited period of time which is mutually agreed upon by the couple.Footnote 65
There are recent claims that temporary marriage has been used to disguise prostitution in some Middle Eastern countries. Others argue that a temporary marriage is morally superior to the free “and decadent” male-female relationships in modern Western societies. Others maintain that such marriages are becoming newly popular among the majority Shi'ite population in Iraq and they are becoming a convenient way of effectively legalizing prostitution and concubinage, with muta contracts for as short as an hour being upheld by Shi'ite clerics.Footnote 66
In recent years, there have been a small number of civil-secular court rulings regarding muta marriages. It is perfectly clear, even from this small number of examples, that these marriages are not recognized, even as putative marriages, as demonstrated in a ruling in the United States in re Marriage of Vryonis.Footnote 67 The case involved an Iranian woman in an unhappy muta marriage who sued for alimony. Her so-called husband denied the existence of any such marriage. In spite of the woman's honest and naïve belief that she was married, the court ruled that the marriage was invalid. The reasons for the ruling were basically procedural, since the marriage was not compatible with California civil law. With regard to the marriage itself, there were no witnesses, no written proof, and no cohabitation. Therefore, there was absolutely no basis for the claim that there had been a marriage. A muta marriage was also addressed in Canadian law in the case of Y.J. v. N.J., where the court discussed the question of custody of a five-year-old Muslim girl born of a muta marriage, which was her father's second marriage. Again, the Canadian civil courts ruled that the marriage was invalid. The court did not relate to the religious aspects of such marriages, including the girl's legitimacy.Footnote 68
Shi'ite Temporary Marriage in Rabbinic and Karaite Halakhic Sources
The negative opinion of the sages regarding muta marriages is already apparent in geonic literature. The first to express an opinion in this regard was Saadia Gaon (882/892–942). In his commentary to the Pentateuch, he notes several times that the prohibition of the kedeshah refers to a muta marriage, and the muta marriage is therefore a biblical prohibition.Footnote 69 This opinion is found in the Cairo Genizah manuscript version of his commentary to Deuteronomy 23:18.Footnote 70 In his discussion of prostitution, Saadia Gaon places it in the first, most lenient category, as explained below (translated from the Arabic):
The first category is a marriage for a limited period, for a woman who agrees to the marriage is called a kedeshah, as in the case of Tamar, the daughter-in-law of Yehudah. And it is written, “There shall be no harlot [kedeshah] of the daughters of Israel,” a warning to both the husband and the wife. And why is it in the first category of forbidden marriages? Because it is a marriage with a ketubah and witnesses and kiddushin. The prohibition applies only because of the woman's situation after the termination of the marriage.Footnote 71
Similarly, in a fragment from the Kaufmann manuscript of Saadia Gaon's Sefer ha-Mitzvot, which was found in the Cairo Genizah, he writes: “It is prohibited for a man to marry a woman in a muta marriage, or for a woman to be married [in a muta marriage] for both of them are bound by ‘There shall be no kedeshah of the daughters of Israel.’”Footnote 72
Saadia Gaon's consistent approach raises two questions, one related to the content, and the other, technical. In both his commentary to the Pentateuch and in his halakhic writings, Saadia Gaon wants to prove that the prohibition against a muta marriage has the status of a biblical prohibition. According to Moshe Zucker, this approach is not indisputable. According to Jewish halakhic sources, marriage for an agreed period is legal and valid, and according to most authorities, may be dissolved only by means of a get, as demonstrated in my detailed discussion of Babylonian and Palestinian Talmudic sources. Thus, if the status of this woman who has completed a marriage for a fixed period of time and remarries without a get from her first husband is the same as the status of an unmarried woman, the second marriage is permitted, as we have seen in the case of “Who will be mine for a day?” But if at the end of a temporary marriage without a get, this woman's status is the same as that of a married woman, then in effect she is still married to her first husband and now faces the more serious problem of being an adulteress, not a kedeshah (prostitute).Footnote 73
In addition, Professor Eliezer Schlossberg (Department of Arabic, Bar-Ilan University) pointed out to me that this explanation of Saadia Gaon is extremely difficult to understand, because he interprets the Bible's general and sweeping prohibition of a kedeshah as referring to a very particular type of marriage that, in his day, was practiced only among Shi'ites. A possible explanation for these two points, one relating to the content, and the other, technical, is offered by Haim Z. Hirschberg (Department of Jewish History, Bar-Ilan University):
Zucker concludes that Rabbi Saadia Gaon's ruling “requires careful analysis” from a halakhic point of view. It seems that one should look for a historical explanation in the customs of Muslim society that influenced certain phenomena in Jewish society. Marriages for an agreed period, which are called muta (pleasure) marriages are permitted in the Shi'a branch of Islam, which has been, and is still followed by the Muslim population of Persia, half the population of Iraq and a large proportion of Muslims in Syria and Lebanon. In Saadia Gaon's time, Isma'ili (extreme Shi'ite) influence increased in North Africa, and reached Egypt. It is conceivable that Jews in Persia, Iraq and Syria were influenced by Shi'ite Islam and demonstrated a more lenient approach to marriages for agreed periods, and left a woman without giving her a get … Saadia Gaon's intention in translating Deuteronomy 23:18 in this way was to warn against those who wished to permit muta marriages.Footnote 74
Mordechai A. Friedman (Department of Talmud, Tel-Aviv University) adds another dimension by claiming that Saadia Gaon went even further and prohibited marriages for agreed periods even when the woman was given a get at the end of that period. He writes as follows:
It seems more likely that Saadia Gaon was referring to temporary marriages with a get, even though under Shi'ite Islamic law a woman is released from a muta marriage without a divorce. The fact that Jewish sages writing in Judeo-Arabic use a term borrowed from Islamic law does not necessarily mean that the Jewish institution is identical to the corresponding Islamic institution. They were referring to the closest equivalent to the halakhic institution … . It would seem that the influence of the Islamic muta marriage led to the definition of kadesh and kedeshah in this way. The muta marriage was certainly regarded as abhorrent by Saadia Gaon and other sages, including Karaite sages. To them, this was not a marriage, but rather, legalized prostitution … what is indubitable is that the Jewish leadership regarded temporary marriages as contrary to Jewish sexual ethics … their abhorrence led them to take extreme measures: using creative hermeneutics, they created a new Torah prohibition.Footnote 75
Indeed a similar approach to that of Saadia Gaon was adopted by Karaites such as Daniel AlkumsiFootnote 76 and David ben Avraham Alfasi,Footnote 77 who ruled that a muta marriage is forbidden and is nothing less than prostitution.
A Common Persian Origin: A Comparison of the Babylonian Talmudic Marriage and Shi'ite Temporary MarriageFootnote 78
Unlike the variety of problematic explanations of “Who will be mine for a day?” reviewed above, there are scholars who attribute this appeal by the sages to the Persian influence in Babylonia in the early centuries of the Common Era. Marrying a woman for an agreed period, which is problematic according to the modern halakhic conception of marriage, was a well-known practice in the Persian era, at the time that the Babylonian Talmud was compiled. This practice derives from a more general practice of giving objects for a stated period, as “a gift to be returned.” This fascinating approach appears in an article by Yaakov Elman (Department of Jewish History, Yeshiva University) in which he claims that the close contact of the Amoraic elite with Persian culture had a considerable influence on religious Jewish law, including the laws of marriage. He bases this conclusion on the fact that two of the most important amoraim in the Talmud openly admit to entering into what were apparently temporary marriages. He writes as follows:
This is so even though two very prominent rabbis, the aforementioned R. Nahman and the first-generation amora Rav, entered into such marriages [temporary marriages] … . This is but one of many indications that the relationship of the Babylonian rabbinic elite to Sasanian culture was much closer than has been supposed … . The entire discussion presupposes that such marriages were contracted by prominent rabbis.Footnote 79
In his article, Elman paints a fascinating picture of the ancient Persian practice of giving articles for an agreed period, with the articles including women. It is therefore not surprising, in his opinion, that this practice was adopted by Babylonian Jews, including the sages. He notes that the need to fight the practice seems to prove the extent to which it had spread and become accepted, both socially and halakhically:
The fact that these traditions continued to circulate with only technical objections raised, rather than objections that go to the heart of the institution, indicates that such temporary marriages had taken deep root within the Babylonian Jewish community … . Though the second explanation by the redactors suggests that the marriage was not consummated then, this was only for technical reasons: no moral opprobrium was attached to such temporary arrangements … . The nexus of the discussions is the potential violation of incest or the rules of impurity, not the impropriety of polygyny or temporary marriage.Footnote 80
There are scholars who claim that this Persian practice is the basis for the Shi'ite muta, which slowly became an accepted social practice in the Persian-Shi'ite period prior to the emergence of Zoroastrianism.Footnote 81 Indeed, in a later period, the Persian book of rulings (the Sasanian law book) Madayan i Hazar Dadestan, Footnote 82 contains a number of records of temporary marriages in which a woman is handed over by her legal husband, or by her father—even though she may be married to another man—for a predefined period of time, or instructions for dealing with the case of a woman who admits that she gave herself to a man to serve as his wife for ten years, and so on.Footnote 83
It seems highly likely that this Persian practice is the source of the Shi'ite muta marriage, and Babylonian Jews, most probably living in this environment, felt the impact of its influence on the structure of Jewish marriage in their community. Scholars such as Salo Baron point out that the institution of temporary marriage was almost certainly influenced by the polygamy that was prevalent in BabyloniaFootnote 84 but was foreign to Erez Israel, where it was banned by the Roman authorities.Footnote 85 In all of the above writings, it appears that the Talmud is the only source not deterred by the possibility that the case of “Who will be mine for a day?” involved a temporary marriage for an agreed period despite the fact that this case categorically contradicts the halakhic principle that it is forbidden to take more than one wife, especially when the wives are located in different towns.
It seems fairly obvious that these sages indeed sought wives for short periods of time when visiting towns far from home. The compilers of the two sources related only the technical issues involved, without any implied condemnation of this practice. The other explanation, that temporary marriages are not real valid marriages, is examined by the compilers only from a technical perspective, and there is no discussion of the substantive principles involved. The only question of principle discussed is the fear that these marriages may result in sibling marriages, thus resulting in incest. There is no condemnation of polygamy or of temporary marriages for a limited period.Footnote 86
Thus, scholars such as Isaiah Gafni (Department of Jewish History, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem) have concluded that the Jewish community was influenced by the Persian environment, where temporary marriages were common, and this was the background for the sages’ attempt to enter into temporary marriages for an agreed period of time.Footnote 87 According to Zeev Falk,Footnote 88 Rashba may have reversed his earlier opinion—allowing a marriage for a predetermined period, after which the marriage would dissolve itself automatically without any divorce procedure—due to the negative effects of this practice on the structure of the Jewish family, whereby marriage would resemble the muta marriage: “Rashba was perhaps influenced by the disgust of Muslim judges for temporary marriage—muta—also known as renting, ljara,Footnote 89 which they regarded to be closely related to prostitution.”Footnote 90
It is of interest that contemporary scholars of Islamic family law in Israel have noted the Persian influence on the muta marriage,Footnote 91 and both Shlomo D. Goitein (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem) and Aharon Ben Shemesh (Tel-Aviv University) have pointed out the possible connection between a muta marriage and the “one day” rabbinical marriage and the influence of Persian culture on the Jewish community in Babylonia.Footnote 92 Incidentally, even today, muta weddings are common in Persian culture, and it has even been proposed that the muta wedding be incorporated into Iranian law.Footnote 93 While the approach today is to make these marriage contracts for long periods, such as ninety-nine years, there are brokers who offer to conduct temporary marriages for traveling Persians, offering this service in any town for even the shortest periods of time. There is a Persian term for this service—ezdevaje sigeh or ezdevaje movaghat—which is translated as a sort of contract.Footnote 94
Conclusion
This article explores the common origin of two current, seemingly totally different marriage structures the Babylonian Talmudic marriage and the Shi'ite temporary marriage. As I explain in the opening of this article, the biblical Jewish marriage is very similar to the Muslim marriage. Nonetheless, from then until now, the two faiths, Judaism and Shi'ite Islam, have crafted their preferred marriage structure totally differently. In Judaism, unlike in Islam, marriage is intended to be permanent rather than temporary, and therefore not subject to stipulation, and certainly not annulled without a get. In addition, divorce is not a constitutive judicial decree adjudicated by a judge or a religious authority that ends a marriage.
According to the Written Law, a divorce depends entirely on the willingness of the husband to give his wife a get. All that remains for the rabbinical court is to oversee the husband's handing the bill of divorce to his wife. Although nowadays there are huge differences, it is very reasonable to claim that throughout the ages, at least in Babylonia during the Talmudic era, the second to fifth centuries CE, the Shi'ite temporary marriage was very similar to the Babylonian Talmudic marriage. This is a very important lesson that can be learned from the ancient history of those two faiths: through a deep and thorough exploration of the origins of marriage traditions, a commonality of origin is found.Footnote 95
Acknowledgments
Special thanks are due to Michael J. Broyde, Israel Z. Gilat, and Ronnie Warburg, who provided me with helpful comments while I was writing this article.