the four countries. Turkey and Somalia apply the
same concept in terms of the division of inheritance
between men and women, namely (1 : 1), in contrast
to Indonesia and Egypt, which still maintains the
concept according to the rules of faraid science,
namely the share of men and women is 2 to 1.
Furthermore, there are equality between Turkey and
Indonesia which gives part of inheritance to adopted
children and non-Muslim relatives even with
different methods, if Turkey through direct
distribution of inheritance by equating parts of
adopted children or non-Muslim relatives with
biological children and Muslim relatives.
So Indonesia gave the part of adopted children
and non-Muslim relatives through obligatory wasiat.
Sting differences clearly exist between Turkey and
the four other countries regarding the rights of
grandchildren, if Turkey equates the rights of
grandchildren as a child (if there are children and
grandchildren then they all allied with inheritance
with equal distribution), Unlike Somalia which
declares grandchildren immigrated by the existence
of a child, furthermore Indonesia gives the
grandchild the right through the successor to the
substitute only if his parents have or have died with
the heir. Whereas Egypt gave the rights of his
parent’s grandchildren to have died with the heir
through wasiat. And the last is the Equality between
Indonesia and Egypt which both share the portion of
radd to a husband or wife.
4 CONCLUSIONS
Diagonally in the Context of Interfaith Marriage, it
is clear that among the four countries, Turkey has
become the most secular country with the rules that
apply far away from fiqh so that interfaith marriages
are not questioned because religion is not a
requirement for marriage. Then, if it is reviewed,
Egypt and Indonesia can occupy the second position
after Turkey because there are still people who do
interfaith marriages, and the marriage is finally
recorded in civil records, even though by law, legal
material explicitly does not recognize interfaith
marriages. Only Somalia occupies the last position,
because the Somali Family law still stipulates that
marriages must be carried out according to religious
procedures.
In terms of family law material, (in this case
inheritance law) both in Turkey, Somalia, Egypt and
Indonesia in a vertical comparative with what is
contained in the books of Jurisprudence, then these
laws have gone far, even though this change is
appropriate with one of the fiqh which states that
legal reasons are an important consideration in the
application of the law, al-hukm yaduru ma'a 'illatih.
If considered diagonally between these four
countries Turkey, Somalia, Indonesia and Egypt,
Turkish family law can be said to be the most
secular and very modern country in the renewal of
its inheritance law.
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