Mahram
In Islam, a is a family member with whom marriage would be considered permanently unlawful. A woman does not need to wear hijab around her mahram or spouse, and an adult male mahram or husband may escort a woman on a journey, although an escort may not be obligatory.
Overview
People with whom marriage is prohibited
permanent or blood mahrams include:- * all direct ancestors
- * all direct descendants
- * siblings
- * siblings of parents, grandparents, and further antecedents
- * children and further descendants of siblings
These are considered mahram because they are mentioned in the Quran :
All of the man's female relatives mentioned in these two verses are considered his maharim, because it is unlawful for him to marry them, except the wife's sister, whom he can marry if he divorces her sister, or if his wife dies. The notion of mahram is reciprocal. All other relatives are considered non-maharim.
Legal escorts of women during journey
A woman may be legally escorted during a journey by her husband, or by any sane, adult male mahram by blood, although an escort may not be required, including:- her father, grandfather or other male ancestor
- her son, grandson or other male descendant
- her brother
- her uncle, great uncle, or uncle from a previous generation
- the son, grandson, or other descendant of her sibling
Rules
Mahram
A Muslim woman's mahrams form the group of allowable escorts when she travels.For a spouse, being mahram is a permanent condition. That means, for example, that a man will remain mahram to his ex-mother-in-law after divorcing her daughter.