Adopting a Child in Islam

The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) once said that a person who cares for an orphaned child will be in Paradise with him, and motioned to show that they would be as close as two fingers of a single hand. An orphan himself, Muhammad paid special attention to the care of children. He himself adopted a former slave and raised him with the same care as if he were his own son.

However, the Qur’an gives specific rules about the legal relationship between a child and his/her adoptive family. The child’s biological family is never hidden; their ties to the child are never severed. The Qur’an specifically reminds adoptive parents that they are not the child’s biological parents:

“…Nor has He made your adopted sons your (biological) sons. Such is (only) your (manner of) speech by your mouths. But Allah tells (you) the Truth, and He shows the (right) Way. Call them by (the names of) their fathers; that is juster in the sight of Allah. But if you know not their father’s (names, call them) your brothers in faith, or your trustees. But there is no blame on you if you make a mistake therein. (What counts is) the intention of your hearts. And Allah is Oft-Returning, Most Merciful.”

(Qur’an 33:4-5)

The guardian/child relationship has specific rules under Islamic law, which render the relationship a bit different than what is common adoption practice today. The Islamic term for what is commonly called adoption is kafala, which comes from a word that means “to feed.” In essence, it describes more of a foster-parent relationship. Some of the rules in Islam surrounding this relationship:

•An adopted child retains his or her own biological family name (surname) and does not change his or her name to match that of the adoptive family.
•An adopted child inherits from his or her biological parents, not automatically from the adoptive parents.
•When the child is grown, members of the adoptive family are not considered blood relatives, and are therefore not muhrim to him or her. “Muhrim” refers to a specific legal relationship that regulates marriage and other aspects of life. Essentially, members of the adoptive family would be permissible as possible marriage partners, and rules of modesty exist between the grown child and adoptive family members of the opposite sex.
•If the child is provided with property/wealth from the biological family, adoptive parents are commanded to take care and not intermingle that property/wealth with their own. They serve merely as trustees.
These Islamic rules emphasize to the adoptive family that they are not taking the place of the biological family – they are trustees and caretakers of someone else’s child. Their role is very clearly defined, but nevertheless very valued and important.

It is also important to note that in Islam, the extended family network is vast and very strong. It is rare for a child to be completely orphaned, without a single family member to care for him or her. Islam places a great emphasis on the ties of kinship – a completely abandoned child is practically unheard of. Islamic law would place an emphasis on locating a relative to care for the child, before allowing someone outside of the family, much less the community or country, to adopt and remove the child from his or her familial, cultural, and religious roots. This is especially important during times of war, famine, or economic crisis – when families may be temporarily uprooted or divided.

“Did He not find you an orphan and give you shelter? And He found you wandering, and He gave you guidance. And He found you in need, and made you independent. Therefore, treat not the orphan with harshness, nor drive away a petitioner (unheard). But the bounty of the Lord - rehearse and proclaim!”

(Qur’an 93:6-11)

There's a few threads of GS about adoption. We are considering adoption-however we've hit two stumbling blocks:

1) we wish to adopt from abroad-the costs are quite high
2) the length the process takes-which is very long

We'll keep trying, but TBH just looking at the fees of adopting say from Pakistan via an orphanage is over £4,000 and then you factor in things like the amount of time you have to take off work, tickets, accomodation and so on.

dude, there is a large number of orphans or abandoned kids in many muslim countries including Pakistan, just wanted to note that so people dont think that there is no problem with orphaned/abandoned kids in the muslim countries.

I have personally been to a number of orphanages, one had over 600 kids.

PM myself or Muniya and we may be able to help if you are serious. she adopted a boy from Morocco, and I adopted twins from Morocco. The process is a little annoying and you need to have your patience on high the whole time but for us the process was one trip of a week and another or 2 weeks, I think she was able to do it in one trip of 2-3 weeks, ours was a learning experience since we were the first ones to go through the system without being moroccan residents and they had to almost build policies on the fly.

travel costs will be minimal because London to marrakech tickets on ryan can be 350 quid. There are no real adoption fees paid to the orphanage but there are charges for applications and passports etc with different agencies, plus whatever fees you need to pay in UK to get approval for adoption and immigration permits for the kid.

Pakistan is more complex, kid has to be there for 6 months after you become the guardian, and if you are trying to adopt a very young kid, they will call you and u have to make a go-no go decision in 72 hours, and that is touch, getting time off work on the drop of a hat and flying off for a few weeks to get the process started and then figuring out how you can keep the child there for 6 months, do u take time off, do you do something else etc.

Someone I know adopted a kid from Pakistan but the American embassy in Pakistan refused to recognize the legality of that adoption . She showed them the proper documentation and all but still no visa for the kid. Now the mum is stuck in Pakistan because she can't get visa for her adopted child.

Re: Adopting a Child in Islam

^ Aww that's such a shame! :(

X2, is that why you chose Morrocco specifically, because of the easier adoption process?

ahhh thats not it, its the issue that Pakistan does not have adoption the same way it is in pakistan, when we adopted from Morocco, we ran into similar issues but had to provide a statement from the judge that a 'kafala' i.e. guardianship there is essentially the same as an adoption in US but they dont call it adoption because of religious issues etc.

also, did she get all her approvals done in US? homestudy? background checks, application to bring an adopted kid from overseas? one cant just go to Pakistan and adopt someone.

Re: Adopting a Child in Islam

X2 Bhae… I want to adopt a baby girl :hmmm:

Re: Adopting a Child in Islam

oh and maroush aside from the issues on moroccan side who had never done it the US embassy in Morocco had no idea how to do their part, and had to be coached by the director of adoptions bureau of immigration in US, had to get their butts kicked by letters from Dennis Haestert who was the speaker of the house, as well as an ass kicking letter from Barack Obama.

In terms of the number of issues, there were more in Morocco, in terms of the severity of the delay and pain, it was US embassy in Casablanca who we had massive issues working with.

where are you located? I can help you but the people there will not do much until you have your local requirements taken care of. so depending on where you are figure out the adoption laws and processes and make sure you are ready officially. I am not saying no i will not help or just brushing you off, I mean it with this. Muniya knows how the place works first hand. I am stating this because someone else who adopted from there was mad at us because they thought we were trying to discourage, while we were just noting all that they needed to do.

Re: Adopting a Child in Islam

^ Im in US.. but IM not us citizen yet...

and my mom said if you really want to adopt a child then why dont you adopt from pakistan .. coz they have many in Edhi center..

You may be right about her not doing the proper paper work from here. She and her husband are not very educated and do things randomly. The American embassay did raise the religious point about adoption. But yeah she is still in Pakistan and not willing to come without her kid.

Re: Adopting a Child in Islam

Heres a sad thing...the last time my hubby went home for a wedding, there was a servant who had given birth to her 7th baby and tried to give her to my husband. If it were possible, he would have taken her home with him and she'd be a cherished daughter here. But the laws prevent this so the beautiful baby girl will havethe life that her mother can best provide for her.

I agree with your mom ! once I read it not sure if it's true that Edhi centre has stopped printing pink forms that are for girls since no one wants to adopt a baby girl. May Allah bless you for this.

This is very very sad :(

Re: Adopting a Child in Islam

Well Guys Why I Came Out Regarding This Adoption Thread Is ......... Few Days Back I Adopted A Infant Baby Girl From The Hospital, Babys Biological Parents Disown The Baby From The Family Just Because She Is A Girl Child. .... Well I Was Searching Online Regarding The Adoption In ISLAM So I Came Across This Above Article.... Just Posted Here ........ To Know The Views Regarding This Article.... Well Its Great To Read Everybodys Comments Thank You All For This.......... Well I Can Say This Much........... In This Whole World Lot Of Orphans Are Thier ....... I Wish Could Help All ........ But Just Alone Cannot Do Without Everybody`s Help Inshallah ........ If Not The Whole World Atleast I Can Do Something In My Own City Inshallah......... Well Guys My Baby Pics Are Posted In MultiMedia Section !!!!!!!!!
Thank You All For Your Comments Its Helping Me !!!!!!!!

Re: Adopting a Child in Islam

Wow! Many congratulations to you!!! What wonderful news! May your family be bless with much happiness!

Definitely more complex in ways. My cousin and his wife adopted a baby girl from pakistan via the Edhi foundation, but they went through a lot to get to the end. They got the baby almost as soon as it was born, just a few days old. But the girl had her family get the baby and she quit her job here and stayed in pakistan for 6+ months to get all the paper work in order. I don't know all the details but it was very difficult for them. She mentioned something about difficulty of finding judge/lawyers to work on adoption case etc.....but in her case she was lucky to have contact with good lawyers/judges thru her sister's in-laws so that helped a lot.

Boredman, congrats!

Thank You Very Much !!!!!!!!!!

X2, will send you a PM as we are serious about adopting. To be honest I didn't really think of Morocco so I'm really happy to here you've managed to adopt from there.

Thank you for offering to share your experience/advice and so on on the subject.