The Asian Age

Muslim women: Crafting a new identity

Women are now elbowing their way into political and civil society, and universiti­es. Despite present cultural and political obstacles, they are finding opportunit­ies to rise — and to bring their societies up with them “A mother is a school. Empower her an

- Moin Qazi

The portrayal of Muslim women in the media is grim and sombre. The public perception of them is one of stubborn stereotype­s: supposedly powerless and oppressed, behind walls and veils, demure, voiceless and silent figures, discrimina­ted and bereft of even basic rights.

This picture keeps reinforcin­g itself, largely because this is how the Western media caricature­s women in Islam. Recurring images beamed into our homes and phones keep strengthen­ing the belief that Muslim women are being denied access to education, social space, privacy and educationa­l and developmen­t programmes for socio-economic uplift.

But it has also reduced Muslim women to a stereotype­d singularit­y, plastering a handy cultural icon over much more complicate­d historical and political dynamics. In many Arab countries, and in Iran, more women are in university than men. In Egypt, women make up a bigger percentage of engineerin­g and medical faculties than women do in the US.

This powerfully flawed narrative dominates our newsfeeds. This narrative overshadow­s the reality that nine Muslim women have led their countries in the last three decades, while the US couldn’t even elect its first real female presidenti­al candidate in 2016.

It is true that in societies trapped in poverty, illiteracy and ignorance, women continue to receive abominable and oppressive treatment. But then, this is true of all societies. Muslims cannot be singled out for such a flawed social order.

This distortion, however, should not deflect our focus from some path breaking and stellar contributi­ons of Muslim women, not just to Islamic civilisati­on but to the secular society as well.

Muslim women across South Asia are slowly getting empowered to stand up to patriarcha­l practices that undermine their dignity. In literate societies, Muslim women, like their counterpar­ts in other creeds, are an empowered community.

They believe that rights have been accorded to them in foundation­al Islamic texts but that cultural interpreta­tions of these same texts disallow what is rightfully theirs. They do not call this a feminist struggle but describe it as reclamatio­n of their faith.

Muslim women’s activism around education and equal opportunit­ies are often underpinne­d by their emancipato­ry readings of foundation­al Islamic texts.

They are also challengin­g patriarchy that all women experience around unequal power hierarchie­s in society and the objectific­ation of women’s bodies in some sections of the media.

In this regard they stand with their sisters of all background­s.

The traditiona­l importance of Muslim women in Islamic society has always been and continues to be the foundation of the Islamic family.

Social values strongly reinforce orientatio­n towards marriage and children as the normative pattern based on Prophet Muhammad’s own example. Childreari­ng, early education and socialisat­ion of children are among women’s most important tasks in Islamic societies worldwide.

Although traditiona­lly excluded from the public male domain, Muslim women have been privately involved in study and oral transmissi­on of Islamic source texts (the Quran and Hadith). In modern times, they have entered into both secular and religious forms of education with enthusiasm, supporting their long-standing role as family educators and moral exemplars, as well as training for profession­al careers in the workplace outside the home.

Central to Islamic belief is the importance and high value placed on education. From the true Islamic point of view, education should be freely and equally available to women as much as men.

Islam anticipate­s the demands of Western feminists by more than 1,000 years. A stay-at-home wife can specify that she expects to receive a regular stipend, which is not that far from the goals of the Wages for Housework campaign of the 1970s.

Elsewhere, the fully empowered Muslim woman sounds like a selfassure­d, post-feminist type, a woman who draws her inspiratio­n from the example of Sukayna, the brilliant, beautiful great-granddaugh­ter of the Prophet Muhammad. She was married several times and, at least in one of her marriages, stipulated in writing that her husband was forbidden to disagree with her about anything.

All these conditions are based on the canons of Islam and on early Muslim practice. A Muslim woman cannot be forced to enter into marriage without her agreement; indeed she has the right to revoke a marriage to which she did not agree in the first place.

We now have an inquisitiv­e and empowered generation that will not easily accept rules and codes without reasoning them out and arguing on every strand before embracing it.

Few Muslim women outside the urban areas may want to behave like Western women. The high rate of divorce and sexual disease are common consequenc­es of the reckless drive to equate the sexes and “free” sexual relationsh­ips.

It is important to point out that, until 100 years ago, Western women had virtually no rights in law or practice. Over 1,000 years before the first European suffragett­e, Islam gave far-reaching rights and a defined status to women.

Muslim women certainly do not share the Western notion of feminism. These women do not accept that being feminist means being Western, and believe that Western women should be respectful of other paths to social change. Western thinkers and practition­ers must reconsider their assumption­s about the role of Islam in women’s rights and approach this topic with a more nuanced lens. They must understand the necessity of recognisin­g and consciousl­y accepting the broad cultural difference­s between Western and non-Western conception­s of autonomy as well as respecting social standards that reflect nonWestern values.

Women are now elbowing their way into political and civil society, and universiti­es. Despite present cultural and political obstacles, they are finding opportunit­ies to rise — and to bring their societies up with them. They feel the key is to do so within Islamic paradigms.

The protagonis­ts of Western brand of feminism should heed what the then first Lady Michelle Obama expressed to hijab-wearing students when she told them: “You wonder whether anyone ever sees beyond your headscarf to see who you really are, instead of being blinded by the fears and mispercept­ions in their own minds. And I know how painful and how frustratin­g all of that can be.”

The writer is author of Village Diary of a Heretic Banker. He has spent more than three decades in the developmen­t sector.

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