Relationships (Outline) |
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Cousin marriage is a form of consanguinity (marriages among couples who are related as second cousins or closer). As of 2003, an average of 45% of married couples were related in the Arab world.[1] While consanguinity is not unique to the Arab or Islamic world, Arab countries have had "some of the highest rates of consanguineous marriages in the world".[2] The bint 'amm marriage, or marriage with one's father's brother's daughter (bint al-'amm) is especially common, especially in tribal and traditional Muslim communities,[3] where men and women seldom meet potential spouses outside the extended family.[1]
Anthropologists have debated the significance of the practice; some view it as the defining feature of the Middle Eastern kinship system while others note that overall rates of cousin marriage have varied sharply between different Middle Eastern communities. In pre-modern times rates of cousin marriage were seldom recorded.[4] In recent times, geneticists have warned that the tradition of cousin marriage over centuries has led to recessive genetic disorders, due to inbreeding.[1]
History
Pre-Islamic
Prior to the origins of Islam cousin marriage was an acceptable practice in the Middle East according to writings in the Bible. Abraham sent his servant back to his brother to get a wife for his son Isaac. Isaac eventually married his second cousin Rebekah (daughter of Bethuel the son of Nahor, Abraham's brother.)
The Persian king Ardashir I of the Sasanian Empire advised his lawyers, secretaries, officers, and husbandmen to "marry near relatives for the sympathy of kinship is kept alive thereby." The same motivation is given in ancient Arabic sources referring to the practice of marriage between paternal cousins prevalent in pre-Islamic Arabia. The Kitab al-Aghani similarly features the story of Qays ibn Dharih, who was not allowed by his father to marry a beautiful maiden from another tribe because, in the words of the father felt that as a rich and wealthy man he did not want his son to take the side of a stranger. There is the related consideration that a man who grows up with a cousin in the intimate setting of one extended family knows her and so may develop his own liking or love for her. There is also the benefit of knowing the qualities of the spouse: a Syrian proverb reads, "Ill luck which you know is better than good luck with which you get acquainted." Keeping property in the family is a final reason for cousin marriage. One of the earliest examples of this is the five daughters of Zelophehad from ancient Israel (Numbers 36:10–13) who upon inheriting from their father all married their father's brother's sons.
Relation with spread of Islam
A 2000 study (by Andrey Korotayev) found that parallel-cousin (Father's Brother's Daughter – FBD) marriage is likely to be common in areas that were part of the eighth-century Umayyad Caliphate and remained in the Islamic world, i.e. North Africa and Middle East. Korotayev argues that while there is some functional connection between Islam and FBD marriage, the permission to marry a FBD does not appear to be sufficient to persuade people to actually marry FBD, even if the marriage brings with it economic advantages. According to Korotayev, a systematic acceptance and practice of parallel-cousin marriage took place when Islamized non-Arab groups adopted Arab norms and practices even if they had no direct connection with Islam to raise their social standing.[5]
Religious aspects
In the holy book of Islam, the Quran, Sura An-Nisa (Q.4:22-5) gives a fairly detailed list of what sort of marriages are prohibited in Islam, (including "... your fathers' sisters, and your mothers' sisters, and brother's daughters, and sister's daughters, and your foster-mothers ...") but does not include first cousins,[6] and ends by saying: "Lawful to you are all beyond these".
Pious Muslims look to the life of the Islamic Prophet Muhammad and early Muslims as examples to be followed, and "several ... members of the Prophet's family and inner circle were married to their cousins." One of Muhammad's wives – Zaynab bint Jahsh was the daughter of Muhammad's aunt. However, Muhammad didn't have children with Zaynab, his children being all children of him and Khadija bint Khuwaylid,[7] except one with Maria al-Qibtiyya.[8] Ali, cousin of Prophet Muhammad and the fourth Rashidun caliph, was married to the Prophet's daughter Fatimah.[6]
The Quranic law dictating that daughters receive a portion of the inheritance appears to have provided a financial incentive to cousin marriage, as the inheritance would remain in the extended family.[9] 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".[10][11] However, the fatwa center at IslamWeb.net was unable to find "any scholar who mentioned" this hadith, and lists several scholars (Al-Qaadhi Al-Husayn, Imaam al-Haramayn (Al-Juwayni), Ibn al-Salah) who have stated the hadith is inauthentic.[11]
Prevalence in modern times
Prevalence of marriages up to and including distance of second-degree cousin in the world according to The National Center for Biotechnology Information in 2012.[12]
Besides Muslims, some Jewish and Arab Christians in the Middle East have a history of cousin marriage. In addition, some Muslim groups living outside the Middle East, such as Bangladeshi Muslims or expatriate Pakistanis living in England, also practice consanguinity.
Arabian Peninsula
Raphael Patai reports that in central Arabia no relaxation of a man's right to the father's brother's daughter (FBD, or paternal female cousin) seems to have taken place in the past hundred years before his 1962 work. Here the girl is not forced to marry her paternal male cousin but she cannot marry another unless he gives consent. Among the Jews of Yemen this rule is also followed albeit not as rigidly. In northern Arabia the custom is very strong and any outsider wishing to marry a woman must first come to the paternal male cousin, ask his permission, and pay him what he wants, and a man who marries off his daughter without the consent of the paternal male cousin may be killed by family members. The right of the paternal male cousin is such that a shaykh may not be able to prevail against it. Among the Bedouin it can happen that a paternal male cousin can lodge a complaint after the marriage has taken place, compelling the father to reimburse the bride price or have the marriage annulled. If the paternal male cousin cannot marry his paternal female cousin immediately due to financial or other considerations, the paternal male cousin can also "reserve" her by making a public and formal statement of his intentions to marry her at a future date. A more distant relative acquires priority to marry a girl over her paternal male cousin by reserving her soon after her birth...[13]
In Kuwait, 22.5-64.3% of marriages are consanguineous according to a 2009 study in the journal Reproductive Health.[14] The same study found that the rate in Bahrain was 39-45% of marriages, Oman 56.3 in Oman, and 54 in Qatar.[14]
Egypt
As of 2016, about 40% of marriages in Egypt were between cousins.[15] Another source (Reproductive Health) puts the figure at 20.9-32.8% for marriages between blood related partners as of 2009.
In Egypt cousin marriage may have been even more prevalent than in Arabia in past periods, with one source from the 1830s observing that it was common among Egyptian Arabs and native Egyptian Muslims, but less so in Cairo, where first cousin marriage accounts for 35 percent of marriages. Reportedly the husband and wife would continue to call each other "cousin" because the tie of blood was seen as indissoluble while the marriage was not. In the upper and middle classes, the young man was seldom allowed to see the face of his female cousin after she reached puberty. Cousin marriage is not only practiced by Muslims, but also by Egyptian Copts in the past century, although at a lesser rate (approximately 7-12% of all Coptic marriages). This rate has decreased to a very small percentage where Copts choose to marry cousins.[16] Estimates from the late 19th and early 20th century state variously that either 80 percent of the Egyptian fellahin marry first cousins or two-thirds marry them if they exist. Cousin marriage was also practiced in the Sinai Peninsula, where a girl is sometimes reserved by her cousin with money long before puberty, and among Bedouins in the desert between the Nile and the Red Sea. Cousin marriage was practiced in Medina during Muhammad's time, but out of 113 recorded marriages in one sample only 15 were between abnaa 'amm or paternal cousins of any degree.[17]
Iran
Cousin marriages are decreasing among Iranians. Since the Pahlavi era fewer Iranians have practised cousin marriages.[18][19][20] There is a strong preference for marrying a first cousin, but no specific preference for the father's brother's daughter. For the quarter of women married after age 21 it was found that the incidence of consanguinity declined to 28%. Additionally, the proportion of cousin marriage among urban families stayed constant: it was only rural families that drove the increase. For all periods the proportion of cousin marriage among highly educated women was somewhat lower than among uneducated women. It is hypothesized that decreases in infant mortality during the period may have created a larger pool of eligible cousins to marry.[21]
Iraq
47-60% of marriages in Iraq are consanguineous, according to a 2009 study in the journal Reproductive Health.[14] In Iraq the right of the cousin has also traditionally been followed as cousin marriage accounts 50%.[22] The uncle of the girl – or father of the boy – assigns or reserves his niece to his son at an early age, the parents from both families arrange for the marriage usually early. This is usually done to preserve wealth in the family and is more common in rural areas. Among the Jews of Iraq, if the cousin cannot be persuaded to forgo his rights, then he is paid a sum of money by the girl's father. Among the Kurdish Hamawand tribe the paternal male cousin must give his consent for the marriage to take place, though in the southern Kurdish regions the cousin right is not as strongly emphasized. Among Arabs and Berbers in Morocco[23] the cousin right has also traditionally prevailed.
Barth finds in his study of southern Kurdistan that in tribal villages 57% of all marriages were cousin marriages (48% bint 'amm marriages) while in a nontribal village made up of recent immigrant families only 17% were cousin marriages (13% bint 'amm).
Israel
Jews
Patai states in his other book The Myth of the Jewish Race that the percentage of cousin marriage among Jews varies extensively with geographic location. Among Israeli Ashkenazi Jews, the first-cousin marriage rate was measured in a 1955–7 study at 1.4% and other cousin marriages at 1.06% of all marriages. But among non-Ashkenazim the first-cousin marriage rate was 8.8% and an additional 6.0% of marriages were between more distant cousins. Thus a total 14.6% of marriages between non-Ashkenazim were consanguineous compared with only 2.5% for Ashkenazim. The highest frequencies of cousin marriages were found among Jews from Iraq (28.7%) and Iran (26.3%). High rates were also found among couples from Yemen (18.3%), Aden (17.8%), Tunisia (13.4%), and among Oriental Jews from the USSR (6.9%). Jews from Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, and Turkey saw rates of 7–10.7%. A later 1969–70 study rated the first-cousin marriage rate among Ashkenazim at 0.3% and other cousin marriages at 1.0%, while for non-Askhenazim the respective figures were 6.2% and 8.1%. Among the Habbani Jews in Israel, 56% of marriages are between first cousins. The Samaritans also had very high rates of inbreeding, with 43% of marriages between first cousins and 33.3% between other cousins.
Arabs
A 1984 study of consanguineous (primarily first cousin) marriages among the Arab population in rural Western Galilee found it occurred among 49% of Druze, 40% Muslims, and 29% of Christians.[24] A 1990–92 study of all of Israel found similar results: 47% among Druze, 42% among Muslim Arabs, and 22% among Christian Arabs.[25] In the South Palestinian village of Artas in the 1920s, 13.3% of marriages, were paternal male cousin marriages; 26.1%, were cousin marriages.[26]
Levant
Jordan
28.5-63.7% of marriages in Jordan are consanguineous according to a 2009 study in the journal Reproductive Health.[14]
Lebanon
12.8-42% of marriages in Lebanon are consanguineous according to a 2009 study in the journal Reproductive Health.[14] A 1983-84 study of cousin marriage among 2,752 households in the capital, Beirut, found a 7.9% rate of marriage between first cousins among Christians, and a 17.3% rate among Muslims.[27]
In Lebanon first-cousin marriage rates differ among religious affiliation as it is found to be 17% for Christians and 30% for Muslims throughout the past century, however first-cousin marriage is declining among all marriages in Lebanon.[28]
Syria
30-40% of marriages in Syria are consanguineous as of 2009.[14]
In Syria the right belongs to the paternal male cousin alone and the maternal male cousin has no special rights. The custom is however less frequent in big cities such as Damascus and Aleppo. Patai reports that in the decades preceding 1962 the right was often ignored among the Syrian urban middle class. Among the upper classes it appeared to be again more common, as certain leading families protected their wealth and status by reserving daughters for their cousins, though sons had more freedom of choice. This situation was also loosening at the time of Patai's work. This holds also among the Syrian Turks and Kurds. But the Syrian Circassians hold cousin marriage absolutely forbidden, similar to the Circassians of the Caucasus.[29]
In her discussion of the city of Aleppo during the Ottoman Empire, Meriwether finds a rate of cousin marriage among the elite of 24%. Father's brother's daughter was most common but still only represented 38% of all cousin marriages, while 62% were with first or second cousins. But most families had either no cousin marriages or only one, while for a few the rate was as high as 70%. Cousin marriage rates were higher among women, merchant families, and older well-established families.[30] Meriwether cites one case of cousin marriage increasing in a prominent family as it consolidated its position and forging new alliances became less critical. Marriage patterns among the elite were, however, always diverse and cousin marriage was only one option of many. Rates were probably lower among the general population.
Turkey
In Turkey the rate of consanguineous marriages based on previous studies is around 1 in 5 marriages, where most cases of consanguineous marriage are found commonly in rural Turkey and Eastern Anatolia regions of Turkey where the population is mainly Kurdish.
Outside the Middle East
Consanguineous marriage are also notably high in several places nearby the Middle East.
Sub-Saharan Africa
In the Malian town of Timbuctoo, a field investigator found that among the Arabs one third of marriages are with first cousins. Half of these are with the father's brother's daughter and slightly fewer with the mother's brother's daughter. It is possible that the high MBD marriage rate is the result of Songhai influence, one group of which prefers the MBD type and shuns the FBD type, and another group of which have a preference for both. The third ethnic group of Timbuctoo are the Bela, who are Tuareg slaves, and among whom marriage between cross cousins is preferred in principle, though in practice FBD marriage also occurs.[26]
According to a 2009 study, the percentage of consanguineous marriages in Sudan is between 44.2 and 63.3%.[14] Cousin marriage is common among the Kababish tribe of Sudan.
North Africa
5-10% of all marriages in Algeria are consanguineous according to a 2009 study in Reproductive Health.[14] In the oasis-village of Sidi Khaled, some 170 miles south of Algiers, among the Mzabites further south, among the Chaamba, and among the Moors of the extreme western Sahara, cousin marriage is preferred.[26]
A 2009 study put the percentage of consanguineous marriages in Libya at 48.4%.[14] In Mauritania the study found the rate to be 47.2%; and Morocco at 20–28%.[14]
South Asia
The prevalence of cousin marriages is estimated to be 46.2% in Afghanistan. Regional differences exist in the rate, the Kabul province has a rate of 38.2% while Bamayan is higher at 51.2%. First cousin marriages (27.8%) were the most common type of consanguineous marriages, followed by double first cousin (6.9%), second cousin (5.8%), beyond second cousin (3.9%) and first cousin once removed (1.8%).[31] The pattern of inheritance of genetic abnormalities in Afghanistan has a significant impact on prevalence. Autosomal recessive genetic abnormalities were observed at most and 75.4% of the total reported cases, followed by autosomal dominant 19.7%. The main reason behind the high percentage of autosomal recessive conditions is the union between groups of people known to share genetic traits inherited from one or more common ancestors.[32] Hereditary disorder might be one of the fundamental causes of the high death rate in Afghanistan. Based on this study, infants under the age of 2 years are mostly experiencing metabolic disorders and its frequency is up to 38.9%, followed by children in the age group 3–11 years (22.2%). Adolescents have comparatively less percentage (12.5%), but with diverse genetic anomalies, and adults have a high percentage (25.0%) of various genetic disorders, while older people (1.4%) are only affected by neurological disorders.[33]
In Pakistan, cousin marriage is legal and common for economic, religious and cultural reasons.[34] Consanguineous marriage in Pakistan was reported to be higher than 60% of the population in 2014.[35][36][37] In some areas, higher proportion of first-cousin marriages in Pakistan has been noted to be the cause of an increased rate of blood disorders in the population.[37] According to a 2005 BBC report on Pakistani marriage in the United Kingdom, 55% of British Pakistanis marry a first cousin.[38]
In India, consanguineous marriage is seen mostly among first-cousins, and mostly practised in the southern states of Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Tamil Nadu, and Karnataka except Kerala. The National Family Health Survey found that consanguineous marriage was most common among Hindus (26.9%) followed by Sikhs (13.9%) and Muslims (12.7%), but only 2.3% for Christians.[39]
Social aspects
Familial responsibility and honor
Of particular significance in the Middle East is marriage to a father's brother's daughter. Many Middle Eastern peoples express a preference for this form of marriage. Ladislav Holý explains that it is not an independent phenomenon but merely one expression of a wider preference for agnatic solidarity, or solidarity with one's father's lineage. Due to placing emphasis on the male line, the daughter of the father's brother is seen as the closest marriageable relation. According to Holý the oft-quoted reason for cousin marriage of keeping property in the family is, in the Middle Eastern case, just one specific manifestation of keeping intact a family's whole "symbolic capital". Along with an aversion to hypogamy that prevents the loss of a man's loyalties to the higher ranking relatives of his wife, FBD marriage more closely binds the agnatic group by ensuring that wives are agnatic as well as affinal relatives. In fact cousin marriage in general can be seen as trading off one socially valuable outcome, namely marital alliances with outsiders and the resulting integration of society, with the alternative outcome of greater group solidarity. But for demographic reasons the ideal of in-marriage can never be fully realized and hence societies allowing it can always draw on the advantageous aspects of both in- and out-marriage.[40]
The notion of honor is another social characteristic Holý identifies as being related to Middle Eastern cousin marriage. The honor of the males surrounding a woman is sullied in many societies when she misbehaves or when she is attacked. In societies like Europe that place greater value on affinal relations, responsibility for a married woman rests with both her husband's family and her own. In the Middle East the situation is different in that primary responsibility continues to rest with the woman's own family even after she is married. Her agnates therefore cannot release her from control upon marriage due to the risk to their honor. They and not the husband may be responsible for killing her, or sometimes her lover, if she commits adultery. Similar rules may apply in case of the payment if she is killed and for the inheritance of her property if she has no male heirs. Her natal family may continue supporting her even against her husband. This is an idealized system: some Middle Eastern societies do mix it with other systems that assign more responsibility to the husband's family.[41]
Berti people in Pakistan
Holý's field experience among the Berti people of Pakistan allowed him to undertake an extensive study of cousin marriage in their culture. Holý believed that many of his findings from field experience among the Berti people of Pakistan could generalize to other Middle Eastern groups. He noted that stated reasons for cousin marriage could be both pragmatic and symbolic. Stated pragmatic reasons for cousin marriage might be stated in terms of advantages for the husband such as warmer relations with his father-in-law, quicker entertainment of the husband's family by the wife in the case of a visit due to them being her relations, greater loyalty and devotion of the wife, and the ease of regaining a wife after a serious quarrel where she has withdrawn to the house of her own family. Stated pragmatic reasons for the parents included gaining access to the labor of a daughter's children by marrying her to a kinsman and thereby keeping her family close by, increased attentiveness on the part of a wife to her aging in-laws if she is related to them, and the ease of marital negotiations if the parents are brothers, or in the next best case, if the mother of one child is the sister of the father of the other child.[42]
Holý states that despite all this, creating a general theory of the existence of a preference for FBD marriage in terms of pragmatic reasons is not possible. Instead any realistic theory must take into account the symbolic reasons that both are created by and help to create Berti culture. Frequently such reasons protected the symbolic but vitally important honor of the stakeholders involved. One reason was that in Berti (and Middle Eastern) culture one's honor is affected if a cousin becomes pregnant out of wedlock. The responsibility to see her married is directly proportional to the responsibility for her chastity and one's genealogical distance from her. One can eliminate this directly by becoming her husband. Another reason is the relationship between cousin marriage and agnatic solidarity. Holý argues from the case of the Palestinians that FBD marriage should not be viewed as simply "adding" affinal ties to previous agnatic ones. Instead they recognize the strength of the existing ties. Distant agnates can increase their bond and become close agnates via intermarriage.[43]
Discouragement
Advice on cousin marriage in the Middle East has not always been positive, however. Al-Maydani makes the following exhortation: "Marry the distant, but not the near." The reason given for the inadvisability of cousin marriages is most frequently the belief that the offspring of such marriages will be feeble.[44] An early Arab author, Ibn 'Abd Rabbihi, states in his work Kitab al-'iqd al-farid of a hero that "He is a hero not borne by the cousin (of his father), he is not weakly; for the seed of relations brings forth feeble fruit." Abu Hamid al-Ghazali (1059–1111) in his principal ethical work, the Ihya 'ulum al-din, gives the different reason that "the woman should not be a near relative of the husband, because near relationship diminishes the sensuous desire." Finally the ancient Arabic poet 'Amr b. Kulthum states, "Do not marry in your own family, for domestic enmity arises therefrom." Similar sentiments are expressed by certain Moroccan and Syrian proverbs.[45]
Patai summarizes the Middle Eastern situation by saying that a preference for paternal male cousin marriage exists in many Middle Eastern ethnic groups but that right to the bint 'amm exists in only some of these. The cousin right is the "complete" form of the institution of the cousin marriage and preference without right the "incomplete" form. Patai explains the differences between cultures exhibiting these two forms in terms of the geographic centrality to Middle Eastern culture, with groups on the outskirts of the Middle East likely to fall into the "incomplete" category, in terms of the cultural marginality of the group, with groups adhering tightly to older traditions better able to resist the "complete" form, in terms of modernization and Westernization, with this tending to discourage cousin marriage. The Copts of Egypt who chose to marry a cousin is considered not ideal among Copts due to cultural traditions although not common among Copts in comparison to other ethnic groups and those of different beliefs.[46]
Bride prices
Cousin marriage normally results in a reduced mahr in Islam. Patai states that bride price to a cousin is usually about half as high as to a nonrelative. Due to the poverty of many families this outlay often requires exceptional effort, and especially because the decision traditionally is in the hands of the groom's father, these considerations may weigh heavily on the outcome. The bride's family moreover is expected to spend much of the bride price on the bride herself, so there is a reduced incentive to gain a higher price by avoiding cousin marriage.[47]
Biological impact
Marrying a close relative significantly increases the chance that both parents carry recessive genes, which can carry defects and diseases. While babies of Pakistani heritage accounted for roughly 3.4% of all births in the UK (2005), "they had 30% of all British children with recessive disorders and a higher rate of infant mortality," according to research done by the BBC.[48]
See also
- Coefficient of relationship
- Consanguinity
- Cousin marriage
- Endogamy
- Exogamy
- Genetic distance
- Genetic diversity
- Genetic sexual attraction
- Inbreeding
- Inbreeding avoidance
- Inbreeding depression
- Incest
- Incest taboo
- Legality of incest
- Mahram
- Muslim Reform Movement
- Polygyny in Islam
- Prohibited degree of kinship
- Proximity of blood
- Sexual taboo in the Middle East
- Watta satta
References
- 1 2 3 Kershaw, Sarah (1 May 2003). "Saudi Arabia Awakes to the Perils of Inbreeding". The New York Times. New York Times. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
- ↑ Tadmouri, Ghazi O; Al Ali, Mahmoud T; Al Khaja, Najib; Hamamy, Hanan A; Obeid, Tasneem; Nair, Pratibha (2009). "Consanguinity and reproductive health among Arabs". Reproductive Health. 6: 17. doi:10.1186/1742-4755-6-17. PMC 2765422. PMID 19811666. S2CID 18004631.
- ↑ Halim Barakat (14 October 1993). The Arab World: Society, Culture, and State. University of California Press. pp. 109–. ISBN 978-0-520-91442-1.
- ↑ Holy, also Patai, p. 140
- ↑ Korotayev, A.V. "Parallel Cousin (FBD) Marriage, Islamization, and Arabization" // Ethnology 39/4 (2000): 395–407.
- 1 2 FARHAT, A Q (29 January 2013). "Cousin Marriages: A Fair and Balanced View". The Muslim Times. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
- ↑ Paul Gwynne (23 Dec 2013). Buddha, Jesus and Muhammad: A Comparative Study. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9781118465493.
According to Sunni Islam, Khadija bore Muhammad four daughters (Zaynab, Ruqayya, Umm Kulthum and Fatima) and two sons ('Abdallah and Qasim).
- ↑ G. Smith, Bonnie, ed. (2008). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History: 4 Volume Set (illustrated ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 17. ISBN 9780195148909.
- ↑ Patai, Myth of the Jewish Race, 169-72
- ↑ Naik, Zakir (7 November 2012). "Why are first cousin marriages allowed in Islam? Dr. Zakir Naik (3 minutes 55 seconds)". You Tube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-15. Retrieved 19 October 2020.
- 1 2 "Islamweb Fatwas, n.334594". Islamweb.net. 23 October 2016. Retrieved 19 October 2020.
- ↑ Hamamy, H. (2011). "Consanguineous marriages Preconception consultation in primary health care settings". Journal of Community Genetics. US National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health. 3 (3): 185–192. doi:10.1007/s12687-011-0072-y. PMC 3419292. PMID 22109912.
- ↑ Patai 145–153
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Tadmouri, Ghazi O; Al Ali, Mahmoud T; Al Khaja, Najib; Hamamy, Hanan A; Obeid, Tasneem; Nair, Pratibha (2009). "Consanguinity rates in Arab populations. Minimum and maximum reported rates are indicated when available". Reproductive Health. 6 (17): Table 1. Archived from the original on 2011-10-03. Retrieved 21 October 2020.
- ↑ "Keeping it in the family". The Economist. 25 February 2016. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
- ↑ Patai, p. 139-40
- ↑ Patai 141
- ↑ Golden River to Golden Road, R. Patai, 136
- ↑ Women in Ancient Persia, 559–331 BC By Maria Brosius, p. 68
- ↑ Patai, p. 139
- ↑ Givens 1994
- ↑ Tierney, John (28 September 2003). "Marrying a Cousin Is Way of Life for Many Iraqis". Sun-Sentinel.com. The New York Times. Retrieved 2019-05-28.
- ↑ Patai 168
- ↑ Freundlich, E; Hino, N (November 1984). "Consanguineous marriage among rural Arabs in Israel". Isr J Med Sci. 20 (11): 1035–8. PMID 6511329. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
- ↑ Vardi-Saliternik, R.; Friedlander, Y.; Cohen, T. (Jul–Aug 2002). "Consanguinity in a population sample of Israeli Muslim Arabs, Christian Arabs and Druze". Ann Hum Biol. 29 (4): 422–31. doi:10.1080/03014460110100928. PMID 12160475. S2CID 28335793. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
- 1 2 3 Patai 141-3
- ↑ Khlat', Myriam (1988). "Consanguineous Marriage and Reproduction in Beirut, Lebanon". American Journal of Human Genetics. 43 (2): 188–96. PMC 1715345. PMID 3400644. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
- ↑ Inhorn, Marcia C.; et al. (April 2009). "Consanguinity and family clustering of male factor infertility in Lebanon" (PDF). Fertility and Sterility. 91 (4): 141–142. doi:10.1016/j.fertnstert.2008.01.008. PMID 18367181. Retrieved 20 October 2020.
- ↑ Patai 153–161
- ↑ Meriwether, p. 135
- ↑ Saify, K.; Saadat, M. (2012). "Consanguineous marriages in Afghanistan". Journal of Biosocial Science. 44 (1): 73–81. doi:10.1017/S0021932011000253. PMID 21729362. S2CID 206228103.
- ↑ Zadran, Suleman Khan; Ilyas, Muhammad; Dawari, Shamsia (2021). "Genetic variants associated with diseases in Afghan population". Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine. 9 (5). doi:10.1002/mgg3.1608. PMC 8172208. PMID 33486863.
- ↑ Zadran, Sk.; Ilyas, M.; Dawari, S. (2021). "Genetic variants associated with diseases in Afghan population". Molecular Genetics and Genomic Medicine. 9 (5): e1608. doi:10.1002/mgg3.1608. PMC 8172208. PMID 33486863.
- ↑ Shaw 2001, p. 322
- ↑ Zahid, Muhammad; Bittles, Alan H.; Sthanadar, Aftab Alam (September 2014). "Civil Unrest and the Current Profile of Consanguineous Marriage in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province, Pakistan". Journal of Biosocial Science. 46 (5): 698–701. doi:10.1017/S0021932013000552. ISSN 1469-7599. S2CID 72915638.
- ↑ Hakim, A. (1994). "Comments on "Consanguineous Marriages in Pakistan"". Pakistan Development Review. 33 (4 Pt 2): 675–676. ISSN 0030-9729. PMID 12346200.
- 1 2 Shami, Schmitt & Bittles 1989.
- ↑ Rowlatt, Justin. "The risks of cousin marriage". No. 16 November 2005. BBC News. Retrieved 17 October 2020.
- ↑ Acharya, Sumana; Sahoo, Harihar (December 2021). "Consanguineous Marriages in India: Prevalence and Determinants". Journal of Health Management. 23 (4): 631–648. doi:10.1177/09720634211050458. ISSN 0972-0634.
- ↑ Holý, 110-17
- ↑ Holý, 120-7
- ↑ Holý, Chapter 2
- ↑ Holy, Chapter 3
- ↑ Safdar, Anealla. "Marriage between close relations debated in Doha". The National.
- ↑ Patai 173-75
- ↑ Patai 175-6
- ↑ Patai 144–145
- ↑ Lall, Rashmee Roshan (17 November 2005). "Ban UK Pakistanis from marrying cousins". Times of India. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
Bibliography
- Holý, Ladislav (1989). Kinship, Honour, and Solidarity: Cousin Marriage in the Middle East. Manchester University Press. ISBN 9780719028908. Retrieved 17 October 2020.
- Patai, Raphael; Win, Jennifer P. (1989). The Myth of the Jewish Race. Wayne State. ISBN 9780814319482. Retrieved 17 October 2020.
- Patai, Raphael (2016). Golden River to Golden Road Society, Culture, and Change in the Middle East (3rd edition, ebook ed.). Retrieved 17 October 2020.
- Shami, S A; Schmitt, L H; Bittles, A H (1989). "Consanguinity related prenatal and postnatal mortality of the populations of seven Pakistani Punjab cities". Journal of Medical Genetics. 26 (4): 267–271. doi:10.1136/jmg.26.4.267. PMC 1017301. PMID 2716036.