The question of women and Islam has
attracted a lot of interest in academics. Concerns like how one understands the
situation of women in a more patriarchal
religion like Islam have taken centre in many debates. But sadly the experience
of Muslim women is often seen as same with Muslim men or other women. Either
gender over determines or community over determines the Muslim women’s question.
Whatever work is done on Muslim women, religion is seen as dominating every
aspect. While studying Muslim women, undue emphasis is given to Muslim personal
law. There is also a tendency to homogenise the category of Muslim women. This
tends to lead to cultural reductionism. What complicates a study of Muslim
women is also the absence of disaggregated community based data. The need to
talk about Muslim women when one talks of marginalised communities, rises from
the fact that Muslim women is a doubly marginalised community—being women and
being Muslims. I divided this article in two parts, in the first part I talk
about the condition of Muslim women in contemporary times with the help of the
findings of a field survey and in the second part I look at debates and
contentions regarding position of women as understood in the popular discourse
and discussions on the religion of Islam. The paper concludes with a comment on
the current situation of Muslim women in Assam.
The situation of Muslim Women
A survey undertaken by scholars Zoya Hasan and
Ritu Menon for their book Unequal Citizens is the first of its kind and tried
to fill in the gap regarding data on Muslim women. This survey took a
comparative look at the socio-economic condition of Muslim women with their
Hindu counterparts.
Muslims in India have often felt to be structurally and
systemically alienated from the mainstream. The Sachar Committee Report brings
forth the hard hitting fact about the situation of Muslims in India. The Report
goes on to say that Muslims are doing worse than Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes. And the absence of any affirmative action to redress this has worsened
the scenario. The survey mentioned above tries to take in a complete scenario
of various aspects of a Muslim woman’s life. Muslims are conspicuously absent
from formal jobs. Muslim women are unlikely to finish minimum eight years of
schooling. It seems financial constraint of Muslims works mainly against
education of girls than boys. The case of early marriage of Muslim girls also
leads to higher drop outs.
The
socio-economic status of a family is closely linked with the level of
education. Although gender disprivilege is there even when there is a level of
socio-economic upliftment, in case of constraint it is always the women who bear
the brunt. Muslims, who also insist on maintaining some kind of segregation
amongst the sexes, take out their girl child of school in case of
unavailability of sex segregated schools. While Muslims are working more in
informal sector, Muslim women opt for home based jobs which will let them carry
on housekeeping alongside. Demands of the private domain restrict their
mobility. Marriage, motherhood and housework are perceived as women’s primary occupation
pointing to the entrenched presence of a sexual division of labour.
To understand the
situation of Muslim women, one has to take into consideration the intersection
of gender, class and community. This intersectionality perpetuates a structural
disempowerment of Muslim women. And this disempowerment is mediated by poverty,
communal politics, patriarchy and personal law. There is also a tendency to
find out a direct co-relation between Islam and Muslim women. This renders the
differences within the category of Muslim women invisible.
Such homogenisation has
often led to very problematic portrayal of women belonging to Muslim world.
They were often thought of as subjects without agency. In western perception
they are “women who are victims of a
supposedly exploitative religion needing to be saved”. The veil which being
a part of attire has more to do with culture than religion came to be seen as a
marker of Islam and hence denigrated in many places. Hijab was seen as
completely exploitative and assumed to be imposed. This led to western
countries time and again taking contentious stand on the issue of visibility of
Hijab in public sphere. Turkey banning headscarf in school and France banning
veils in public spaces are sad instances in the history of secularism. Lila Abu
Lughod in an article talks about how Afghan women were portrayed as the ideal
victim of Patriarchy waiting to be saved by American army men. And this was
aimed to justify one of USA’s most brutal military interventions in Afghanistan
whose collateral damage in terms of civilian casualties should give shame to
humankind. Such homogenisation renders historical contingency in the margins.
While describing a woman, overemphasis is on religio-cultural explanation. As
pointed out by Gayatri Spivak, the discourse is still colonial: White men
saving brown women from brown men.
One cannot
deny that during Taliban regime in Afghanistan the traditional dress of Pashtun
women were imposed on non-Pashtuns also. And Americans portrayed their
intervention in Afghanistan in the name of restoring democracy which will be
liberating for women. But ironically during post-Taliban regime, women did not
throw off their veils. Veils for many are liberating in public spaces. Burqa
and different forms of veil evolved over a period of time as markers of modesty
and emerged not merely as an imposition. The perspective of the other also needs
to be accommodated. And respecting differences does not make one a cultural
relativist. Missionary work and colonial feminism are things of the past. A
foundational pillar of feminism is giving back women their voices and making
space for their varied and unique experiences.
To understand the
condition of Muslim women one has to see how the religion of Islam evolved.
Within a larger context of patriarchy, religion is an end product of patriarchy
and hence permeated by its values. The assertion of fundamental and reactionary
elements undermined the beautiful tradition of Ijtihad or creative
interpretation in Islam. Scholars like Asghar Ali Engineer lament the
absence of interpretation of the Holy Book to fit into the present context. While
core values and principles of a religion should not be changed, the laws based
on these values have to undergo change over a period of time. There is a need
to counter such innovations which have been aimed to fit conveniently to a
patriarchal society and instead bring forth the strong notions of equality,
justice, value of education, compassion which are foundational values of Islam.
There is also a need to
contextualise the rise of Islam in different parts of the world. Islam’s birth
place may be the Arab world but Islam cannot be reduced to what is practised in
Saudi Arab countries. Islam evolved differently in South Asia. Due to the
presence of a number of religions in South Asia there was enriching cultural
intermingling between these faiths. The history of Islam in South Asia brings
forth interesting elements. Iltutmish, the Emperor from the Slave Dynasty found
his daughter Razia Sultana more capable as a heir than his sons. She discarded
veil and was an able administrator. During Akbar’s reign purdah was not used by
working class women. It was only post partition that there was resurgence in
religiosity.
With the rise of communal
politics the right wing came to portray Muslim women as victims of polygamous
males and extremely regressive legal code. Communal violence against Muslims
during riots is not always perpetrated by men. Women have also worked
alongside. Many Muslims who wanted reform in personal laws were overlooked.
They were only criticised for not supporting Uniform Civil Code. But in a
situation where majoritarian politics is in place, uniform civil code may fail
to accommodate the concerns of minority communities completely. Government’s
non intervention in personal law shows a lack of commitment to improve the
condition of women.
Muslim Women and Islam
Coming to how Islam portrays women,
due to the absence of women taking active part in as interpreters in the
discourse on religion, their views have been completely left out. Controversial
verses like the one on polygamy which slowly came to be codified in Muslim
personal law failed to point out the extreme difficulty of its practise and
hence an expressed preference for monogamy.
There is a
need for more women scholars to interpret Islam. Islamic Jurists while
interpreting Hadith have often led social ethos supersede divine intent. While
the Quran gave equal rights to both men and women unambiguously, in its
practice women are made to be subservient to men. However women scholars like Fatima
Mernissi from Morocco, Amina Wadud from USA, Laleh Bakhtiyar from Iran who gave
a feminist perspective of Quran talk of a very inclusive Islam.
Few
contentious issues which raised questions about the relevance of Quran should
be looked into to understand the limits of conservative interpretation. In case
of family planning and use of contraceptives, Quran is claimed to be silent
hence giving a free hand to Mullahs to decline their use. Rather by quoting
selectively from Quran that one should not kill one’s children and Allah’s
Ummah should be the biggest, they discourage the use of contraception,
impacting adversely the health of Muslim women and the socio-economic status of
the community. But Quran rightly speaks of not killing children who are already
born. This should not include children who have not been even conceived. More
important should be to give a just and fair life to one’s children by giving
them proper education.
While in popular
discourse, Muslim fundamentalists are always in the limelight, Muslim
theologians who led movements for gender equity are not much known of. One can
mention Maulvi Mumtaz Ali who was a contemporary of Sir Syed Ahmed Khan and
talked of equality between men and women in the late 19th century.
His book Huquq un-Niswan talks of women’s rights in Islam.
Another
issue of contention is the verse on polygamy. Why it is allowed in Islam needs
to be seen within the right context. It was permitted after the Battle of Uhud
to safeguard widows and orphans left alone because of the battle and look after
their property. Underlining this is the compulsion to do justice to wives and
treat then with parity, which when rendered difficult, monogamy should be
preferred. Ulemas and Jurists while codifying this so called right of men to have
four wives, ignored both the condition of war as well as justice. Ulemas said
that polygamy was permitted to check prostitution but a reading of Quran does
not indicate so. Such a problematic assumption would point to the belief that
libido of men have social as well as religious sanction.
Arabs used hadith to
mediate their patriarchal values. Many practices which belonged to a
pre-Islamic period became a part of the Shariah. While consent of women was so
central to marriage, the Ulemas said that even a woman’s silence during
marriage should be taken as her consent. Hence while Quran and Islam as
propagated by the Prophet gave a lot of rights to women, over the period its
interpretation has taken a decline.
Hijab which was mentioned
in Quran eight times and that too in very different contexts from its present
use, have been misused and misunderstood. Hijab meant separation or a means to
provide privacy. It also asked women not to showcase their expensive clothes
and jewellery in public. It was mainly to stop rich and neo-rich from showing
their embellishments in a disparity ridden society. The verse which is most
popularly associated to veil or Hijab i.e. verse 33:53, was used specifically
for Prophet’s wives and not all women. It is by virtue of the regressive elements
that Hijab which has taken more stricter forms like the Abaya in Saudi Arab,
Chador in Iran, Burqa in Indian continent and came to be used as instruments of
control.
Thus one response of western
govts which essentialised Hijab as an imposed bondage has been to ban them in
public. But this has the opposite effect. Such an act of othering the attire of Muslim women has culturally alienated them.
As a response while some Muslim women wholeheartedly accepted western culture
and assimilated to European society, others clung more to their traditions
because they felt their identity was threatened. Media plays its own role by
portraying Muslim women as submissive victims of patriarchy. Islam’s provision
for women is understood solely in terms of Taliban’s version of modesty of
women. Kuwaiti women elected to Parliament filed a case for their right to enter
Parliament without using Hijab and won. Amina Wadud led a mixed prayer
congregation and read the khutba for Friday prayer. Media is not so vocal on
these. They always portray a very submissive image of Muslim women who needs
western saviours.
Religion which is
practised is more cultural than scriptural. Arab adat or customs were incorporated in Shariah. Hadith is
interpretation of jurists based on social structure and social ethos. Jurists
like Ibn Hazm from Spain who lived in the 14th century was very
critical of taqlid or mechanical
following and made a case of creative interpretation.
Muslim Women in Assam:
Religion must not lose its
emancipatory potential. Muslims comprise around 30% of population in Assam.
However their overall socio-political condition is pitiable. As a result Muslim
women in Assam are also lagging behind. In case of Assam, the victimisation is
at multiple levels. The hinterland of Assam or the Char areas are mostly
inhabitated by Muslims. Being physically left out from the mainstream, it is
the Muslim women who bear the brunt. Absence of schools and poor communication
takes a toll on the education of these women. Apart from this, identity related
conflicts leading to displacement also jeopardise the lives of Muslim women and
children. The absence of Muslim women from the socio-political scenario of the
state has been conspicuous.
Although fundamentalist
elements have time and again imposed fatwas like declaring women’s income from
govt jobs as haram and demanding
extreme seclusion of women, there is a shimmer of hope because day by day more
and more Muslims are challenging such regressive fatwas. They no longer unquestionably accept whatever the Ulemas
say. Ulemas demanding segregation between men and women clearly point out to an
utter disregard to a woman’s character. Women are seen as essentially lustful
beings incapable of restraining themselves. The responsibility of restrain is
also essentially on women. But as the holy book says it should be on both men
and women to interact in a dignified way. And the religion be practised in an
egalitarian way which was envisaged by the Prophet when he propagated it. Hence
a fight for an egalitarian society must be launched at two levels- within the
boundary of religion as well as in the society outside where minorities have
been at the receiving end of various injustice.
References:
1.
Hasan, Zoya and Menon, Ritu (2004), Unequal Citizens: A Study of Muslim Women in India, Oxford
University Press, New Delhi.
2.
Sardar, Ziauddin (2011), Reading
the Quran, Hachette India, India.
3.
Engineer, Asghar Ali (2012), Islam: Restructuring Theology, Vitasta Publishing, New Delhi.
4.
Lughod, Lila Abu (2002), “Do
Muslim Women Really Need Saving? Anthropological Reflections on Cultural
Relativism and its Others”, American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol 104,
No 3, pp 783-790.
5.
Kazi, Seema (1999), Muslim
Women in India, Minority Rights Group International Report.
6.
Engineer, Asghar Ali (1994), “Status of Muslim Women”, Economic and Political Weekly, Vol 29, No
6.
1 Comments
After staying in Islamic country for more than a decade i can say that the issue of women in Islam is highly controversial. But I truly believe in these following lines of Prophet
ReplyDelete“The best of you is he who behaves best towards the members of his
family.”
“Paradise lies at the feet of your mothers.”
“He who brings up his daughters well, and makes no distinction
between them and his sons, will be close to me in Paradise.”