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Nidal Darwish and Kholoud Succariyeh

Ring the Changes : One innovative couple pave the way to civil marriage in Lebanon

Wedding bells are ringing out for change in Lebanon. On 10 November 2012 Kholoud Succariyeh and Nidal Darwish became the first couple in Lebanon to tie the knot by way of civil marriage. They were married before a notary in Beirut, after having their respective sects removed from their official documents, the only way the bride and groom could marry in Lebanon without the religious authorities officiating. Under Lebanese law, marriages can only be performed by a religious authority, such as a church or Islamic court. In Lebanon civil marriage does not officially exist, yet.

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Civil Marriage in Lebanon

The ever rejected reform, Civil marriage as I wrote about it back in 1997

Battle of forms in civil or religious marriage
Many “mixed” couples avoid personal status law by holding their wedding abroad. Should this change?
By Diana Rhayem
Special to the Daily Star
May 15, 1997
The following article is on the juncture of law and religion. It is an exposition of basic legal differences between civil and religious marriage. It examines ways to accommodate the difficult balance between marriage as a religious institution, and marriage as a civil contract. In Lebanon, the aberration of “having to go to Cyprus” in order to celebrate marriage between two persons of different faiths, without subjecting one of them to the other party’s rituals and its legal consequences, highlights one of the absurd dimensions of the confessional system.

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