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Muslim Women: The Dangerous Triangle

August 5th, 2008

The following came through on a list I’m on, I thought it was very interesting so here you go:

Muslim Women: The Dangerous Triangle

By Nigar Ataulla

Four years ago, I was invited to an inter-faith dialogue programme in Bangalore organised by a Christian human rights group. Speakers from different religious communities were on the panel and they were to talk about the concept of social justice in their own religious traditions.

After my brief talk on the notion of justice in Islam, I was handed a long list of questions, some of which, predictably, read like this: Why cannot a Muslim have four husbands? Why aren’t Muslim men required to wear veils? Doesn’t a Muslim woman feel suppressed in a burkha? How can a man declare triple talaq in one sitting? And, curiously enough, why did Jemima Khan marry Imran Khan?

Think of a Muslim woman and the things that immediately flash across in the minds of many Muslims and non-Muslims alike are triple talaq, polygamy and the veil. Is that all a Muslim woman is known for? Does not a Muslim woman have her own identity, her own individuality? Why cannot society look upon a Muslim woman as just another human being, like everybody else, and not a marked out, exoticised or specially branded creature?

In the Indian context, when one talks of the status of Muslim women, the focus invariably falls on triple talaq in one sitting, polygamy and hijab. I choose to call this the “dangerous triangle”.

Last month, the Mumbai-based Centre for Study of Society and Secularism (CSSS) and the Institute of Islamic Studies organised a training programme on “The Rights of Muslim Women in the Quran—Theory and Practice”. Over 50 participants from various states across India came together to share their experiences, views and thoughts. While the majority were women activists (Muslims as well as others), there were a sprinkling of male activists too. Most of the activists at the training programme worked at the grassroots level, in slums and villages.

The key presenter at the workshop was the noted writer, Islamic scholar and social activist Dr. Asghar Ali Engineer, who is also the chairperson of the CSSS. His discussion focused on the position of women before Islam, references to women in the Quran and evolution of Islamic jurisprudence. He stressed that women should read the Quran from what he called a ‘feminist’ point of view. “The Quran has innumerable verses in favour of women. But men sometimes misinterpret verses related to polygamy and hijab to suit their whims and fancies,” he said.

Maulana Mohammad Shoaib Koti, a well-known Islamic scholar based in Mumbai, talked about the freedom of expression for women in Islam. He recalled how Muslim women during the days of the Prophet asked questions directly to him without any male intervention. He also referred to the high status enjoyed by women scholars of Hadith and Quran during those days.

Qutub Jehan Kidwai, convenor of the Institute of Islamic Studies, shared her observations of Muslim personal law reforms in Muslim countries. Mehmood Hasan, a film maker from Bangladesh, presented an engaging (and disturbing) documentary film on the practice of arbitrary triple talaq. The story, woven around a Bangladeshi family, ends on a positive note, proclaiming that triple talaq has no sanction in Islam. A noted advocate from Mumbai, Nilofer Akhtar elaborated on Supreme Court judgments in favour of Muslim women. She lamented the fact that many Muslims were not sufficiently aware of numerous laws relating to maintenance after divorce. Mufti Inamullah Khan, a scholar and activist, supported the call for codification of Muslim Personal Law in India.

In her presentation, Naish Hasan, founder of the Lucknow-based Bharatiya Muslim Mahila Andolan, spoke about her experiences of working with Muslim women in different parts of the country. Women in rural areas were most victimized through violation of their rights and also domestic violence. “With no access to education, most rural Muslim women have no idea about the courts and the laws and even what the Quran says about women’s rights. The need of the hour is to take up these cases and help women get their due rights. They become easy victims, and run from pillar to post when men desert them, dump triple talaq on them and irresponsibly use polygamy as their birthright,” she said.

I posed a question to a mufti on the panel in the programme as to why there is a huge communication gap between the madrasa-educated ulema and Muslim women. Why do women still hesitate to speak to the ulema? Surely, I felt, they needed to if they were to convey to each other their concerns, about issues that are so central to ongoing, and seemingly endless, debates about Islam and women. Surely, something had to be done to help bridge the enormous gap between women, including activists working for Muslim women’s rights, and the ulema of the madrasas. Efforts had to be made to create spaces and possibilities for dialogue and interaction between them.

The mufti’s answer was simple: The ulema, too, are not comfortable talking to women. When set against the historical reality that Muslim women spoke to the Prophet directly, the answer did not fully satisfy me. I set upon the task of exploring this issue on my own. I got this opportunity the same day.

That afternoon, I had an appointment to meet the editor of an ulema-run English magazine in Mumbai that focuses mainly on Muslim social issues. I had butterflies in my stomach to begin with, and was apprehensive about how I would be received them. I felt my Deccani Urdu was no match for their chaste language. Yet, I mustered sufficient up courage and walked alone through the rain-washed lanes of Mumbai to keep the appointment.

My initial fears were soon put to rest as I engaged in a meaningful dialogue with the ulema team of the magazine. Their courtesy and hospitality overwhelmed me. The fact that they sat on the same dastarkhan and had lunch with me was by itself a path-breaking event. I offered the early afternoon prayers in their office, after which they showed me around, exchanging ideas about Muslim media and about their own magazine, which is unique in some respects, being the only English magazine in the entire country staffed by madrasa-educated ulema.

Sitting in that office, listening to the maulanas and sharing with them my own views, I realized the need for conscious efforts to be made to bridge the gap between the ulema and Muslim women. There is a desperate need for forums whereby Muslim women and the ulema can interact, exchange views and learn from each other’s experiences in a spirit of genuine sharing. From that dialogue, who knows, might emerge possibilities of helping bring Muslim women out of that ‘dangerous triangle’ that invisiblised and silenced all their issues and concerns by framing discourse about them simply in terms of arbitrary divorce, polygamy and the veil. Sadly, the need for that dialogue is too easily brushed aside by many of those involved in debates about Muslim women who refuse to listen to other points of view—and these include many women’s activists and traditional ulema alike.

Nigar Ataulla is the Associate Editor of the Bangalore-based magazine ‘Islamic Voice’.

Muslim women’s lib

July 15th, 2008

Nesrine Malik has a piece in the Guardian on “Do Muslim women need liberating?” based on a number of talks given at a conference.

Malik hit the right balance for me: I resent being told by non-Muslims or ex-Muslims like Ayaan Hirsi Ali
that I am oppressed, but I also resent being told that I am not
oppressed at all by those who urge me to go back to the roots of my
faith and find liberation by shedding my Orientalist views and being
more understanding of the colonial hangover from which Muslim men
suffer.

Who knew there were so many Muslim female leaders

July 13th, 2008

Wow, what a list. If anyone bangs on about how Muslim women cannot be leaders, I shall know to point them to this extensive list of Muslim women leaders and influential persons.

Legalising Polygamy

June 26th, 2008

It’s on the cards if gay marriages are legalised.

Myths of the Avicennan flap

June 1st, 2008

Brouhaha in France over a judge that granted an annulment on the basis of the presumed non-virginity of a bride.

There are a lot of myths about women and their nether regions, and one of them is that all women actually bleed upon their first sexual encounter. “Some hymens are stretchier and/or more durable than others, and they may not have any problems at all with stretching to accommodate things like tampons, fingers, or a penis. Others are less stretchy and more fragile and they may tear at the slightest touch. And some are in between.” (Ref)

It also seems that it was a Muslim scientist (Ibn Sina aka Avicenna) who gave the first realistic explanation for the pain that some women (not all) experience during their first experience of intercourse. Continuing the tradition of naming female parts after the male scientists who ‘discovered’ them (i.e. Fallopian tubes, the glands of Montgomery, the G[räfenberg]-Spot) perhaps we should call the hymen, “the Avicennan flap”. What do you think?