Muslim Women in the Mirror

A really good read.

A look at how we deal with the issue of Women in Islam

O you who believe! Stand out firmly for justice, as witnesses to Allah, even though it be against yourselves, or your parents, or your kin, be he rich or poor, Allah is a better Protector to both (than you). So follow not the lusts (of your hearts), lest you may avoid justice, and if you distort your witness or refuse to give it, verily, Allah is Ever Well-Acquainted with what you do (Quran 4:135).

“I have seen the enemy and it is us,” says Khadija Haffajee about Muslims’ attitude towards the issue of women in Islam.

Haffajee should know. She’s been a Muslim women’s activist in North America for over 30 years and she’s seen the state of Muslim sisters and brothers throughout this time.

As Muslims, we have rightly claimed that when it comes to women in Islam, the media has it all wrong.

Women are not oppressed, we argue passionately. Women were given property rights in 7th century Arabia, while prior to Islam, women were considered property.

Women have the right to education. Women have the right to earn money, which remains theirs. Women have the right to keep their last names after marriage. Islamic dress protects women, it doesn’t hinder them. And on and on and on.

But in these discussions, Muslims compare Islamic ideals with Western reality. They do not look at the sad, sad reality of so many Muslim women today.

Wife battery. Sexual and physical abuse. Denial of education. Denial of wages. Humiliation. Favoring boys over girls in families. Women-unfriendly spaces in the Muslim community. These are all hard, cold realities be it where Muslims live as a majority or as a minority.

After all, these are human problems.

One would think, that given Prophet Muhammad’s (peace and blessings be upon him) slow but steady change towards improving the situation of women, (which was mandated by Divine Guidance and by other men), Muslims would be at the forefront today of the fight for the honor, respect and dignity of women.

But for the most part, we’re not. We’re too busy being defensive, apologetic. We’re too busy trying to apologize for things we should be fighting against. Or things for which we have not even been implicated in.

The Good news is…

We’ve got the truth…

“At the core of our being, we know Islam is right,” says Shahina Siddiqui, executive director of the Islamic Social Services Association United States and Canada (ISSA).

Most Muslims, women and men, know that Islam is the solution. And that’s not an empty slogan.

After all, we’ve seen the results Islam produced in the past in changing the status of women for the better. “We know that it transformed the early Muslims from burying their baby girls alive to being champions of women’s rights,” notes Siddiqui. But she adds, “we don’t see the staying power of that.”

And Muslim women know it

Alhamdu lillah, a number of Muslim women, worldwide are waking up to the reality of Islam. They are seeking and searching for the Truth directly from the Quran and Sunnah.

This isn’t just being done on a public level. It’s being done in the privacy of homes, where young Muslim women are speaking up and claiming what has always been rightfully theirs in Islam. Whether it is the right to speak their mind freely as Aisha (may Allah be pleased with her) did with her husband the Prophet, or the right to accept or refuse marriage proposals.

There is also a rage amongst Muslim women against the abuse of Islam by the Western media. The use and abuse of the problems present in the Muslim world as an excuse to vilify Islam angers Muslim women as much, if not more so, than Muslim men.

The bad news is

Culture versus Islam

Islam came to change the oppression of women, my halaqa (Islamic study circle) teacher, a brilliant Palestinian woman once explained to me. “But our (ethnic) culture is stronger than our religion,” she added.

How true, and how sad.

It’s this culture which seeks to justify female genital mutilation, honor killings, the denial of basic education to women. It’s this culture which has stripped women of the dignity inherent in Islam, which has been given to all human beings, men and women, black and white.

It’s this culture, for the most part, which so many call for when they deny Muslim women the right to go to the mosque. Or when they are stuck in small, cramped and dirty women’s sections, while men are afforded expansive, clean space in comparison.

It’s this culture in whose name Muslim women are often denied the Islamic right to Shura (consultation) and Nasihah (advice) in decision-making in mosque matters, let alone community affairs.

There is clearly a crisis between the beautiful and just theory of Islam, versus the practical reality.

Where do we go from here?

When Muslims talk about standing up for justice, it’s usually in the context of horrific crimes like those happening in Chechnya, Kashmir and other places where Muslims are suffering from attack, hunger and disease.

But what about right here, in our communities? When we hear the cries of the sister whose husband, out of ignorance, beats his wife and children, what do we do?

Obviously, this is a brother who has a problem. Where is our desire to stand up for justice - not just for his wife and kids - but for him as well? Saving him and his family, in the long run, is an act of saving one unit of our already weak Muslim communities.

But we turn away, usually, whether we’re individuals, Imams, community leaders, relatives. We don’t stand up for justice, because it seems our stands are based on minimal effort and trouble. Sure I’ll stand up for justice, just as long as I don’t have to go beyond making posters and shouting slogans at a rally for Kosova or Chechnya.

“We are not here to answer to the West,” notes Sr. Kathy Bullock, a convert to Islam. She’s right. We have to stop the apologizing. We need to challenge the West to rethink the way it defines Islam and Muslim women. The West should not set the agenda for Muslims. Muslims should do so.

Afterall, it’s not the West we will face on the Day of Judgment. We will face Allah. When will we start standing up for and implementing justice for our sisters so that we can face Allah, Insha Allah (if Allah wills) knowing we did the best that we can?

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Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

[quote=“Muslim_Queen”]
A really good read.

A look at how we deal with the issue of Women in Islam QUOTE]

Good article M_Q

Just a bit confused, writer wants Muslims to stand up for what is right and against any wrong. At the same time, there is plenty of anti-west rhetoric. If the idea is to say what is right, then why not admit that the West has a much better record when it comes to protecting the weaker segments of society. Rights for children, women and minorities are much more clealry defined and better implemented. A much more worrying factor that needs to be asked is why the adherents to Muslim faith show deteriorating standards towards rights of the mentioned above? Lack of faith is not the right answer, cause there are plenty of faithfuls who have shown immense inetrest and fervour towards their religion. Thks

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

I had taken the article home to read last night and I got the same thing. It was a bit confusing that way, but I liked it also. Especially the culture vs religion and the tendency to stick to culture even when religion tells you otherwise. Can apply here in the US, too. Gave it to my daughter and her friend.

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

The American Dream is not everyones idea of a perfect life. Yeah I agree that places such as Canada do have much better rights which protect the citizen, but I think that in order for the Western countries to be where they are - other nations had to, and still have to pay. I dont think there is any anti west agenda in this article. These are two completely different outlooks in life. Anyhow sometimes one has to look at whats happening behind that so called perfect picture as far as Western nations are concerned. Its not a lack of faith, more so of how far people are willing to go to benefit themselves.

minah -- Glad to hear that, thank you. :)

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

I really feel sorry for the Muslims of our age. Up until a couple of centuries back, Muslims were the pioneers in justice and human rights. But due to the ignorance of the next generations, we lost all that. The west picked up our morals and systems from there, adopted them and started criticizing our faith for lack of morality. Why did this happen? We left Islam as our basic guideline and innovated cultures that were - and still are - a grotesque misrepresentation of Islam. The Indo-Pak sub-continent is the worst by far.

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

^ We're worse than the Arabs? Please. The same people who cannot defeat little tiny Israel? Pakistan was much better before leaders like Zia starting importing arab ideas such as wahabism into our country.

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

Enough already, this is a great thread, please don't have it deleted because neither of you know how to behave civily. I ignored the first one because I thought it would end there, but I guess not.

This is a thought-provoking article that has nothing to do with what you guys are going to start doing.

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

I'm not talking about who's better or worse. If other Muslims have strayed from their religion, they know it and others know it. The problem with us, is that we THINK we're following Islam, when in reality, we're following our culture. I'm talking about people who think that the best form of worship is listening to Qawwali's and prostrating themselves on shrines. I'm not commenting here, I'm stating a fact.

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

It is, indeed, a good article.
Don’t mind me taking out my frustrations.

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

Well I agree with differentiating with culture and religion is important. As for sentencing a female victim of rape to death, has that ever happened in Pakistan or the Arab world. I know it happens with instances of honor killings and village courts but has a country officially done that?

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

Bro … I wasn’t implying anything at a political level.
People are getting ticked off :rolleyes: so I’m not gonna say any more :hehe:

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

It's okay yaar, I wasn't getting ticked off. It's good to talk about these things. I appreciate your views but I just don't think people going to shrines or listening to qawali is a real threat to Islam. The real threat lies in illiteracy, poverty which we don't do anything about. That in turn leads to fundamentalism, extremism and Taliban-like creations.

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

I didn’t mean you. Some one else was getting ticked off before. I’m not gonna take names. coughMinah_Pacough
Damn this cough :blush:

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

How dumb are muslim women that they have to look towards 1400 year old Arabian customs and scripture to find out if they can own property today?

Pease rate on a scale of 1 to 12.

Thank you.

The second question is if Quran and the customs dictated that Muslim women can't own property, would they obey that?

Thank you again. For answering.

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

…need a lozenge, Hunk?

Just trying to head this off. Things have a tendency of disappearing quickly here…

Never mind :rolleyes: , I give up since Madhanee seems intent on riling the women now.

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

Madhanee go back a few steps. Thread is about "religion" and not customs. And yes you're very welcome.

The Hunk -- I dont see how anyone can throw all Muslims into one category and likewise for the Westerners.

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

Individualism is is only significant in the present. I’m looking at the bigger picture. A few hundred years from now, people wouldn’t say ‘Oh … 56% of the 21st century Muslims were good people and the rest were evil’.

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

No thanks. I’m doing quite good now :blush:
Coughed the virus out :dixsi:

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

Thanks MQ ji.

Women were given property rights in 7th century Arabia, while prior to Islam, women were considered property.<<<<

MQ ji, What does the writer mean by the above? Is it women in Arabia alone or all over the world? Please explain. Give some historical reference from some books. The world didnt start in 7th Century Arabia. Really. I know it is hard to believe.

Re: Muslim Women in the Mirror

It's that type of Arab-centric thought that gives people cause to consider Islam by the Arabs, of the Arabs and for the Arabs