M
Mariem2
Guest
That Muslim country must have been in Disneyland if you think men and women were praying together in a mosque. The call to prayer is quite charming when heard in the distance as you relax in the sunshine, drink in hand. Not so charming in the early morning when the crackling noise from the loudspeaker atop the nearby mosque disturbs your sleep. (I, too, have been to Muslim countries).I wonder if people are jumping the gun a little here. The Muslim religion should be respected. It sounds to me like the husband is getting a lot of pressure from his family and that he feels torn between the two religions.
I’m not sure why you would want to leave your husband if you love him. Doesn’t getting a lawyer, getting a divorce, and running away with the children add insult to injury?
This is a very difficult situation, but adults have been known to change religions. I have been to a Muslim country, and I think the call to prayer is quite charming. Does God really care if we pray sitting up, kneeling down, or bending over and touching the floor?
I think you should continue to go to Mass yourself. I don’t think it would be wrong to accompany your husband to the mosque as long as you have been to Mass.
It is probably prudent to keep religious pictures out of Facebook if his family will see them there.
If you and your children end up physically abused because you went to Mass, then things are bad enough to do what some of the other posters suggested.
Getting a lawyer doesn’t mean getting a divorce. It’s about getting all the information the OP needs to safeguard her interests. What are the chances of her husband deciding in a couple of years that divorce and remarriage to a Muslim woman is the best way he can fullfil his obligation to raise his son to be a good Muslim? Shouldn’t the OP be prepared for that? A man who tried to coerce her into converting to Islam despite having committed to a Catholic marriage isn’t one to be trusted because he subsequently agreed to allow her and her daughters attend Mass. He’s likely to sing a different tune when the son is old enough to understand what Mass is about.
Are you aware that the travel section of the US government website actually has a section devoted to international child abduction? Jumping the gun, maybe, but unwise to dismiss the possibility. You’re correct that hiding US passports is pointless, especially if the children are eligible for Saudi passports.