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"Rose Hamid is as American as they come. She drives a Ford
station wagon, leads a local Girl Scout troop, shops at the Gap and just
attended her 20-year high school reunion" writes Laurie Goodstein in a
recent New York Times article (A1). From this brief description of Rose,
readers may have formed a particular picture of her in their minds. If they
were told, however, that "Rose Hamid wears a head scarf in keeping with her
Muslim faith,'" that picture might take a drastic turn (Goodstein A1). She's
Muslim? Images of suppressed, meek, black-enshrouded women submitting to the
demands of their dominating husbands race through some readers' minds. But
why is this the case? Would we see Rose any differently if she were
Christian or Jewish? The answer is probably no, but since she is a Muslim
woman, it is difficult not to have some preconceptions of her.
I don't understand why, in the West, Muslim women are clumped into one large
group and viewed as homogenous clones of one another, while their Christian
and Jewish counterparts are rarely ever stereotyped in this way. Many people
don't realize, due largely to biased media interpretations, that there are a
large variety of Muslim women around the world, from areas such as the
Middle East, South Asia, South East Asia, Yugoslavia, Northern Africa, and
the Southern parts of the former USSR, just as there are Christian and
Jewish women in various countries. For instance, one probably wouldn't
classify a Mexican woman with a French woman, though both may be Roman
Catholics and hold the same beliefs. In the same way, American Muslim women
are different from Pakistani Muslims, who are different from Saudi Muslims.
In these three countries, women are accorded different rights and privileges
because of the government and customs in the area. For example, many
American Muslim women are discriminated against because they cover their
heads; Pakistani women have political rights but are often exploited by men;
Saudi women have no public role, yet they are "protected" by Saudi men.
The negative stereotypes of Muslim women probably arise from this varying
treatment of women. The Western media, for some reason, latch on to a few
examples of unjust behavior in the Islamic world, brand Islam as a backwards
and "fundamentalist" religion, especially in its treatment of women, and
ignore that it was the first religion to accord women equal rights. While
Christian and Jewish women were still considered inferior, the originators
of sin, and the property of their husbands, Muslim women were being given
shares in inheritance, were allowed to choose or refuse prospective
husbands, and were considered equal to men in the eyes of God. However,
through time, slowly changing customs, and the rise of male-dominated,
patriarchal nation-states, Muslim governments began placing restrictions on
women which had no grounds in the Quran, the Islamic holy book; or the
hadith, the teachings of the Prophet Muhammad. On the other hand, Christian
and Jewish women in the West have slowly been awarded rights not called for
in the biblical tradition.
Traditionally, Judeo-Christian women were thought to be inferior to men and
were given a low status in society. These negative attitudes toward women
arose because Judaism and Christianity placed such a heavy emphasis on Eve's
role in the expulsion from Paradise. Because Eve, rather than Adam, was the
first to be seduced by Satan and eat fruit from the Tree of Knowledge, she
supposedly caused the fall of mankind. Therefore all women, as the
descendants of Eve, were thought to be evil and morally weaker than men
(Sherif 2). In the Bible, there are several references to women in this
uncomplimentary light: "I found more bitter than death the woman who is a
snare, whose heart is a trap and whose hands are chains. The man who pleases
God will escape her, but the sinner she will ensnare" (Ecclesiastes
7:26-28). "No wickedness comes anywhere near the wickedness of a woman. . .
.Sin began with a woman and thanks to her we all must die" (Ecclesiastes
25:19,24). Early church fathers such as St. Tertullian reiterated these
negative concepts of women by making statements such as, "Do you know that
you are each an Eve?. . . . You are the Devil's gateway. . . .You destroyed
so easily God's image, man. On account of your desert even the Son of God
had to die." In Christianity, women carried the extra burden of causing the
death of Christ, as Tertullian points out (Sherif 2). Because Adam and Eve
passed on their sin to all future generations, Jesus had to purge humankind
from this "original sin" by sacrificing his life (Sherif 2). Thus, by
causing the fall of man, Eve also caused the death of Christ. In the Jewish
tradition, women receive no less harsh treatment. Because of Eve, all women
have to face punishment on Earth including pregnancy, pain in childbirth,
menstruation, and subjugation to men (Sherif 3). Orthodox Jewish males still
recite in their daily prayers: "Blessed be God King of the Universe that
Thou has not made me a woman . . . . Praised be God that he has not created
me woman" (Menahot 43b)
These early prejudiced attitudes gave rise to discriminatory treatment of
women. Because the Judeo-Christian tradition spans such a vast amount of
time, it is difficult to deal with the condition of women in any specific
period. Therefore I will deal with women mostly as they are referred to in
the Bible and by influential church fathers and rabbis. Often, the
discrimination against females began immediately upon birth since baby girls
were thought to be shameful, a view found several times in the Bible: "The
birth of a daughter is a loss" (Ecclesiasticus 22:3). Jewish rabbis also
expressed displeasure at the birth of a female, saying that boys brought
peace into the world, whereas girls brought absolutely nothing (Sherif 4).
This unhappiness at a female's birth arose partly because of the large dowry
that had to be given to a Jewish or Christian girl's husband upon marriage,
a tradition adhered to until recently (Sherif 8). Hence, a girl was often
thought to be a "liability and no asset" (Sherif 8).
Additionally, as Kevin Harris, senior lecturer at the University of New
South Wales, puts it, "women are portrayed in the bible quite consistently
as appendages of men; as possessions of men; as goods which may be sold,
disposed of, given away, traded, or just ordered about by men" (30). One
section in the Bible which is a testament to this view is Exodus 21.7, which
expressly condones a man selling his daughter into slavery or concubinage:
"When a man sells his daughter as a slave, she shall not go out as the male
slaves do." A man also controlled the sexuality of his daughter, as can be
seen in the case of Lot (among many others), who offered his virgin
daughters to the homosexual men of Sodom in Genesis 19.8: "I have two
daughters who have not known a man. . . . do to them as you please." When a
woman was married, in which she usually had little or no say, she became the
property of her husband rather than her father, and he then had the right of
"purchasing and selling" her (Schmidt 127). He owned not only her person,
but also all of her property. "The household articles, even the crumbs of
bread on the table [were] his. Should she invite a guest to her house and
feed him, she would be stealing from her husband" (San. 71a, Git. 62a). A
woman could regain her property only upon divorce or her husband's death,
but she was never allowed to inherit any of his property (Sherif 8). In
fact, Western women had no property rights at all until the late nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries.
Because of the inferior status of women in the Judeo-Christian tradition,
there often existed a double standard between men and women, especially in
areas of sexuality. For example, if a woman was not a virgin at marriage,
she could be taken to her father's house by her husband and stoned to death
(Schmidt 112). The man, on the other hand, was never subjected to this
punishment or indeed to any codes of conduct governing his sexuality
(Schmidt 112). In fact, even if he raped or deflowered a virgin, he was not
put to death but was instead forced to marry her and give money to her
father, which seems more of a punishment for his female victim than him!
(Harris 57). After marriage, a Hebrew male could arbitrarily accuse his wife
of adultery, even with the slightest suspicion, and make her take the
humiliating "bitter-water" test to determine her innocence or guilt (Schmidt
121). If she was found guilty of having slept with another man, regardless
of his marital status, she would be stoned to death (Sherif 6). A Hebrew
man, whether married or not, on the other hand, was only said to have
committed adultery if he slept with a married woman (Schmidt 118). As Vern
Bullough, author of Subordinate Sex, explains, "Adultery was not a sin
against morality, but a trespass against the husband's property" (Schmidt
118). Since the wife was the husband's property, she could not be violated
without his permission. This view of adultery changed with the advent of
Christianity, when Jesus introduced the idea that adultery could be
committed against a woman also, but later many of the church's theologians
"reverted to the patriarchal understanding of adultery" (Schmidt 122). In
present-day Israel, however, the old law still pertains. A married man can
have an affair with an unmarried women and have children that are considered
legitimate (Sherif 6). If a married woman, on the other hand, has an
extramarital affair, her children "are considered bastards and are forbidden
to marry any other Jews except converts and other bastards" for ten
consecutive generations (Sherif 6).
Judeo-Christian practices also often ignored women's rights in cases of
divorce. In original Christianity, divorce was expressly forbidden, and
Jesus supposedly said that "anyone who divorces his wife, except for marital
unfaithfulness, causes her to become an adulteress, and anyone who marries
the divorced woman commits adultery" (Matthew 5:32). This harsh view failed
to take into account the possible incompatibility of a man and woman and
condemned unhappy couples to stay together against their wills. This
situation was especially difficult for women because society did not allow
them extramarital relations but condoned the relations of married men with
prostitutes and other single women (Schmidt 50). In Judaism, divorce was
allowed and even encouraged at times. Early Jewish scholars disagreed over
the reasons a man could divorce his wife, and their views can be found in
the Talmud: "The school of Shammai held that a man should not divorce his
wife unless he has found her guilty of some sexual misconduct, while the
school of Hillel say [sic] he may divorce her even if she has merely spoiled
a dish for him. Rabbi Akiba says he may divorce her even if he simply finds
another woman more beautiful than she" (Gittin 90a-b). The Hillelite law
predominated among the Jews and now Jewish men can divorce their wives for
any reason whatsoever. The Talmud even obligates divorcing a woman if she
"ate in the street drank greedily in the street suckled in the street" or if
she does not bear a child within ten years of the marriage (Sherif 9). A
Jewish woman, however, could not and cannot divorce her husband. He must
give her a bill of divorce voluntarily and even the courts have no power to
make him do this (Sherif 9). A man may desert his wife, marry another woman
or simply live with one, and have legitimate children, while his first wife
is trapped because she cannot have extramarital relations (Sherif 9). This
sort of woman is known as an agunah (chained woman); there are approximately
1000 to 1500 Jewish agunah women in the United States today and around
16,000 in Israel (Sherif 9).
Suffering such blatant discrimination, it seems amazing that most
Judeo-Christian women have overcome the odds and achieved equal rights with
males. However, this has been a fairly recent development, largely occurring
in this century. Within the past hundred years, women began to be considered
citizens of states, were given voting rights, property rights, and easier
access to divorce. Now many Muslim women hold the former position of
Judeo-Christian women, but generally all they receive from the latter is
scorn, derision, misunderstanding, or pity. It is ironic that the religion
which significantly improved the status of women as compared to both Judaism
and Christianity, and indeed was the first religion to grant women equal
rights in all areas of life, including religion, sexuality, inheritance, and
law, is now regarded as one that oppresses women.
One of the basic principles of Islam is justice for all humans and equality
in the eyes of God. Women are considered no less than men in aspects of
religion and are not denigrated anywhere in the Quran. First of all, in the
Quranic Creation story, Eve is not mentioned as being seduced by the Serpent
and taking the first bite of forbidden fruit. Rather, it says: (my italics)
"by deceit he [Satan] brought them to their fall: when they tasted the tree
their shame became manifest to them (7:19:23). Both Eve and Adam were held
equally responsible. Hence, women in Islam do not bear the stigma as the
daughters of a sinful Eve nor are they to be blamed for corrupting innocence
(Sherif 3). Nor were women created as inferior to men, or solely for
pleasure and procreational purposes as the Judeo-Christian scriptures
sometimes imply "the man is not of the woman; but the woman of the man.
Neither was the man created for the woman; but the woman for the man"
(Corinthians 11:3-9). In contrast, the chapter in the Quran entitled "Women"
begins with the passage saying, "O humanity, be reverent to your Lord who
created you from one soul and created its mate from it, and from these two
disseminated many men and women." Here, in very blatant terms, it is stated
that women and men are made from the same soul, and therefore, how could one
gender possibly be inferior? In fact, neither gender is inferior, as the
Quran states: "And their Lord answered them: Truly I will never cause to be
lost the work of any of you, Be you a male or female, you are members of one
another" (3:195).
This concept of gender equality in Islam begins immediately upon birth. When
baby girls were born in Pre-Islamic Arabia, they were often buried alive to
prevent shaming the tribe or family. In response to this infanticide, the
Quran forbade treating a female child as disgraceful and states that both
baby boys and girls are equally a blessing from God: "To Allah belongs the
domination of the heavens and the earth. He creates what He wills. He
bestows female children to whomever He wills and bestows male children to
whomever He wills" (42:49). Prophet Muhammad even guaranteed Paradise to
those fathers who bring up their daughters with "benevolent treatment" and
also encouraged both males and females to pursue knowledge and education
(Bukhari, Muslim).
Furthermore, in Islam girls are not considered the property of their fathers
and have complete control over their sexuality, in contrast to the
Judeo-Christian tradition (Sherif 8). A free woman can never be sold it
would be abhorrent for a father to sell his daughter as a concubine nor can
she be married against her wishes, or the marriage can be annulled. After
the marriage, a woman does not become the possession of her husband and is
supposed to retain her own name and identity. "An American judge once
commented on the rights of Muslim women saying: A Muslim girl may marry ten
times, but her individuality is not absorbed by that of her various
husbands. She is a solar planet with a name and legal personality of her
own'" (Sherif 8). Additionally, Islam does not imply that a woman is made
entirely for the pleasure of her husband but refers to spouses as equal
partners: "They are your garments and you are their garments," the function
of garments being to protect, cover, and adorn (Quran 2:187). Today, Western
media often convey the idea that Muslim women are completely submissive to
their husbands, but in fact, even the wives of the Prophet Muhammad (the
most important and noble man in Islam) used to fight with him if they didn't
get their way; they were far from the submissive, meek stereotypes of Muslim
women today.
Another area in which Muslim women had greater rights than those of
Judeo-Christian women is property. In an Islamic marriage, rather than
paying the husband a dowry, the wife receives a substantial gift from him
which then remains under her control, not his or her family's, even if she
is later divorced. "In some Muslim societies today," Dr. Mohammed Sherif,
author of the published essay entitled "Women in Islam Versus Women in the
Judaeo-Christian Tradition: The Myth and The Reality" says, "A marriage gift
of a hundred thousand dollars in diamonds is not unusual" (8). Any other
property a woman may happen to own at the time of the marriage is also
exclusively hers and the husband has no right to use it. Even if she earns
her own income, it is the husband's responsibility to maintain her and the
children, and she has no obligation whatsoever to provide for the family.
Furthermore, a woman in Islam can inherit money or property from any one of
her relations, including her husband.
In the early years of Islam, a woman's rights were also protected concerning
sexuality and divorce; a double standard did not exist between males and
females. According to Islam, both genders are supposed to remain chaste
until marriage, not just the women, and adultery consists of any married
person engaging in sexual intercourse with someone other than a spouse. The
punishment for both men and women who commit adultery, if the actual act is
witnessed by four other people, is death by stoning. If a husband
arbitrarily accuses his wife of being unfaithful, they both take an oath
upon God, and if the wife swears that she is innocent and the husband swears
that she is not, the marriage is irrevocably over and the woman is not
considered an adulteress. However, throwing loose accusations around about
any woman is highly discouraged in Islam. A woman's dignity should not be
toyed with and one should not, under any circumstances, speculate about her
sexual conduct without very secure evidence (Quraishi 299). The Quran sets
forth a very harsh punishment for those people who do: "Those who defame
chaste women and do not bring four witnesses should be punished with eighty
lashes, and their testimony should not be accepted afterwards, for they are
profligates (24:4). Asifa Quraishi, author of "Critique of the Rape Laws of
Pakistan," writes that, "In the face of any hint of a woman's sexual
impropriety, the Quranic response is: walk away. Leave her alone. Leave her
dignity intact. The honor of a woman is not a tool, it is her fundamental
right" (299).
A similarly just attitude prevails in cases of divorce. First of all,
divorce is not at all encouraged in Islam but allowed under compelling
circumstances, and both men and women are allowed to obtain one. The Prophet
said that "among all the permitted acts, divorce is the most hateful to God"
(Abu Dawood). Couples are told in the Quran to live with one another in
kindness: "Live with them on a footing of kindness and equity. If you
dislike them it may be that you dislike something in which Allah has placed
a great deal of good" (4:19). In the hadith, this view is reiterated: "The
believers who show the most perfect faith are those who have the best
character and the best of you are those who are best to their wives
(Tirmidthi). However, in some cases, divorce is inescapable, and Islam
attempts to make it as amicable as possible.
The last way I will mention that Islam uses to protect women is the hijab,
or the veil. This is ironic because Western media often portray the Muslim
veil as a suppressive force in a woman's life. Every Muslim woman is
required to wear a scarf or some sort of head-covering and loose-fitting,
modest attire. This is not a means of controlling a woman's sexuality or
suppressing her but rather, is used to protect her. It is hoped that by
dressing this way she will not be seen as a mere sex symbol but will be
appreciated for her mind. Furthermore, it will not subject her to unwanted
sexual advances or harassment. It is interesting to note that the
head-covering for women is not an Islamic innovation but was practiced by
Judeo-Christian women centuries earlier, and yet is scoffed at by the West
today (Sherif 15). Dr. Sherif says: "It is one of the great ironies of our
world today that the very same headscarf revered as a sign of holiness' when
worn for the purpose of showing the authority of man by Catholic Nuns, is
reviled as a sign of oppression' when worn for the purpose of protection by
Muslim women" (16).
Hence, Islam in its original state gave women privileges and imposed no
harsh restrictions or double standards upon them. However, with the
progression of time, the rights of Muslim women began deteriorating, and
today, very few Muslim countries adhere to the Islamic ideal in their
treatment of women. This deviance from Islam can be seen when evaluating the
rights that women possess in different countries. The three main countries I
will deal with are the United States, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia simply
because I am familiar with them, having either lived or visited each
extensively.
Though the United States is not a Muslim country, it is supposed to be the
"land of freedom," and it is interesting to see how Muslim women are treated
here. A Muslim woman is allowed to practice Islam without restrictions
placed upon her by the government. As an American citizen, she has the
rights of any woman to vote, to voice her opinions, and to move around as
she pleases. Rose Hamid, the woman mentioned earlier, is one such American
Muslim. This is not to say, however, that American Muslim women do not face
prejudice, and Hamid is a good example of this. When she began wearing a
headscarf recently, she was promptly fired by her company of ten years.
Anjum Smith, another American Muslim, faced this same problem as did Shabana
who was fired from her job at The Gap because, with her headscarf, she was
an "undesirable" saleslady. There have been reports that women with covered
hair have been "spit on, denied service, and [had] their scarves pulled off"
(Goodstein A1). Goodstein reports that "Recently, on a highway near Orlando,
Fla., one driver in a head scarf was stopped and berated by a state trooper
who later formally apologized" (A1). This discrimination, even if
unintentional, is rampant in the US; people just don't treat you the same
once you start covering your hair: "They try and cheat me out of change.
They think I'm a foreigner, and I've been here a long time. I wear American
clothes, but I wear a scarf. The scarf changes everything," says Tayyibah
Taylor, editorial director of Sisters! A Magazine of Dialogue Among Muslim
Women (Goodstein A14).
In contrast, Saudi women are compelled by law not only to cover their hair,
but also their faces and hands, and they are instructed to wear a black
cloak known as the abaya to cover their bodies. Saudi Arabia is one of the
most "fundamentalist" Islamic nations in the world, and it supposedly
implements Islamic law to ensure peace and justice. Yet, many of their laws,
especially those geared at women, are unjust and stem from patriarchal
customs. For example, the covering of a woman's face is not a requirement in
Islam, yet many times women are harassed by the mutawa, or "purity police,"
for not doing this. Furthermore, women are not allowed to sit in the front
seat of a car or walk alongside a man if he is not her husband or close
relative; nor are women allowed to drive. Havva Kurter, author of the essay
"An Outline History of the Oppression of Women," exclaims, "The Saudis think
that women will go make sin if they drive a car! Now some non-Muslims may
think of this as part of Islam" (116). But to give the Saudis some credit,
women there are given certain privileges not awarded to Muslim women of
other countries. First of all, Saudi women are almost never harassed (it is
usually the foreigners who encounter this) and are extremely protected by
their families and government. Additionally, in accordance to Islamic law,
they are offered dowries, often very high ones, and are entitled to keep
their own wealth.
This is hardly ever the case in Pakistan. Most women have virtually no
control over their own property and are usually accorded minimal dowries
unless they are of the upper classes. What is usually the case is that the
bride's family has to provide all sorts of gifts to the husband and his
family. These gifts, which range from money to cars to houses, are often
what determines the choice of a bride. This obviously is not an Islamic
practice but one that stems from the Hindu culture of nearby India.
Moreover, women in Pakistan are often exploited by the law, sexually
harassed, or raped, many times by police officers and other influential
government officials (Quraishi 291). It is ironic, then, that Pakistan has
surpassed even the United States in gender equality in that it has had a
female head of State: the former Prime Minister, Benazir Bhutto. In fact,
there are quite a few influential female politicians in Pakistan. Among
other rights Pakistani women retain is their freedom of dress; most
Pakistani women don't cover their hair and no type of dress code is enforced
upon them, but this is not to say they won't be harassed if wearing
revealing clothing in public. Additionally, women are allowed to drive,
vote, attend co-educational universities, and hold paying jobs. However,
this blend of restriction and privilege still does not make Pakistan's
treatment of women very Islamic.
In fact, I can't think of any country that really treats Muslim women the
way they are supposed to be treated as stipulated in the Quran and hadith.
Most Muslim countries' approach to women falls between the two extremes of
complete oppression and encouragement to behave like Western Judeo-Christian
women, which is certainly not what Islam intended. I have dealt, to some
extent, with the former case and believe that most people who read this
paper will sympathize with the plight of these Muslim women. Their solutions
might involve the "modernization" or "Westernization" of these women, but
this is not at all what I am advocating. It's true that Western
Judeo-Christian women have achieved freedom and independence for themselves,
but has this necessarily been beneficial for them or society? One look at
the ever-rising statistics for rape, sexual harassment, divorce, broken
homes, latch-key kids, teenage pregnancies, and AIDS cases in the West
indicates that something is definitely not right in society. Is it just
coincidental that many of these issues became actual problems only after the
Sixties' Sexual Revolution and feminist movement arose? Are these social
problems just part of a growing trend in modern society or do they have some
direct correlation to "women's liberation?" These are some questions we need
to ask ourselves before we prescribe the "Western remedy" to any other
society. The last thing Muslim women need to add to their problems at this
point is more problems. Rather, the solution for achieving true freedom,
independence, and happiness must come from within from the teachings of the
Prophet, from the depths of the Quran, and from the wealth of rich Islamic
tradition.
A 1997-98 Stanford Boothe Prize for Excellence in Writing winner:
"Shattering Illusions: Western Conceptions of Muslim Women"
by Saimah Ashraf [email protected]
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