Muslim women don’t feel oppressed: poll
None of the 8,000 women surveyed
even mentioned the use of the head scarf or the full-length burqa
in open-ended questions, the Times said.
Despite the suffragist leanings,
Muslim women set aside their own issues and said their countries had greater
problems, such as violent extremism, corruption and lack of unity among Muslim
countries.
Although women largely said they
should be able to work outside the home and serve in the highest levels of
government, they linked sexual equality with the West: 78 per cent in
However, when asked what they
least admired about the West, they said moral decay, promiscuity and pornography,
which degraded women.
A majority of the women said
that economic or political advancement in Muslim countries would not improve
with the adoption of Western values, the survey said, according to the
Face-to-face interviews were
conducted among 8,000 women last year for ‘What Women Want: Listening to the
Voices of Muslim Women’, part of The Gallup World Poll, a project to canvass 95
per cent of the world’s people.
Overwhelming majorities of the
women said the best aspect of their cultures was their countries’ ‘attachment
to moral and spiritual values’, the Times said of the poll.—AFP