New Famous Women
Untitled START Untitled Untitled Untitled Untitled Untitled Untitled Untitled Untitled Untitled
index_img1.gif 1. Untitled
2. START
index_img2.gif 3. Untitled
Main Issues
The importance and legitimacy of the topic
Early Islamic feminist discourse
The effect of colonialism on the Muslim feminist discourse
During the period of nineteenth-century colonialism, feminism was strongly opposed in Britain and Europe. What was the nature of the introduction of feminist discourse into Muslim countries like Egypt at that time? How did that affect the future attitude of many Muslims toward the feminist enterprise?
index_img3.gif 4. Untitled
The status of women in Muslim society: Neither monolithic or uniform
It will show that the status of women in Islamic societies has never been uniform or monolithic but has shifted from place to place, from age to age, and from class to social class. There were also differences between nomadic and sedantary, Arab, Turkic, and Mongol Tribes provided avenues for strong women [of tribal status].
The core versus the periphery
We know little about Muslim in societies beyond the core zones. Ibn Battuta tells us about West Africa, Mauritius, etc. There were matriarchal societies.
Generalizations about the Prophetic period
The greatest disparity, however, has been between the norms of the Prophetic period and those of subsequent ages. Prophetic society lacked the rigid divisions of social space that became characteristic of many traditional Islamic societies, and, as a rule, Prophetic society was more open and less patriarchal, giving women greater freedom and allowing them a conspicuous role within the matrix of social and civic life.
Modern versus Medieval
"Islam liberated women"
Gender is a charged issue. Some Muslims confront it simply by declaring that "Islam liberated women." This is about as meaningful as saying that "Islam is peace" or "Islam is against terrorism." Such pronouncements are hollow if they do not address the real issues and problems in Muslim societies: the status of women needs liberation; Muslims must stand up against terrorists in their midst and solve the underlying social and economic problems. Yet who condemns Osama ben Laden, who condemns the suicide terrorists, who have become so common that Islam has become identified with them?
Many Muslims only want to be told that Islam is great
Many Muslims are psychologically and spiritually insecure. They need to be told over and over again that Islam is great and we are great--despite the wretched present that we find almost everywhere than we find Muslims.
'Abduh: Muslims have become the best argument against their religion
'Abd al-Hakim Winter as a new Muslim: Muslims are always their worst enemy
The issue of power structures: Who benefits?
There are those in Muslim societies--including Islamic centers and mosques--who have vested interests in blocking women's rights in Muslim society.  They "camouflage their self-interests by proclaiming that you either have their way (which is Islamic) or the other way, which is un-Islamic. Women's rights are not a problem because of the Prophetic legacy but because of male elites that benefit from the status quo.
index_img4.gif 5. Untitled
Gender does not just concern women
The incapacitated lung (symbol)
20th Century Muslim reformers and the centrality of women's issues
Concern with the "socio-moral degeneration of Muslim society." [We used to talk about this in the 1970s. Then it became popular to talk about how bad everybody else was and how oppressed we were. We became very judgmental--judging everyone but ourselves.)
'Abduh and the demeaned status of Muslim women
'Abduh: Reforms regarding women are necessary for the rebirth of sound Islamic society. Many of our problems go back to child rearing and are a function of the feminine matrix in which that takes place-- uneducated, neglected women, disempowered women. Anti-social behavior is typical of women in the Muslim world: dirty bathrooms, dirty prayer areas, talking during khutbas. In the West you expect women to be cleaner than men; in the East it is the other way around.
Raising a generation of slaves
'Abduh: Men who want only to be masters of their homes and oppress the women in their households, should also be content to raise a generation of people only worthy of being slaves to others.
Today both men and women need liberation
Both men and women need liberation in the context of modern Muslim societies.
     There is an immense waste of our human resources throughout the Muslim world-- in body and mind.
The greatest issue: Mental liberation
The Muslim mind must be liberated --empowered. These are the greatest shackles that keep us from Qur'an and Sunnah and the light of guidance.
Deconstructed, reconstructed--made authentic--and empowered.  Made understanding, self- confident, and dynamic as of old.
Liberation from the overpowering bonds of false understanding, misdirected values, invalid ideas, strange conceptions that have dominated Muslims for decades and centuries.
Complex ignorance = applied complex ignorance.   
Socio-Moral Soundness Can Only Be with Sound Women
Women must have access to social and economic space. They must know what is happening in "the world of men."
Gender Rights Are Essential to "Modernity"
Pluralism, human rights, women's rights, equal suffrage, economic equality: Cultural Modes that are adapted to the new dynamics of economy and communication. THE NEW AXIAL AGE.
The Centrality of Family to Our Identity
Modernity has had a severe impact on the social system of Islam. But the family remains central to the Islamic social system and sense of identity. Thus, issues of women in the context of the family receive a disproportionate amount of attention in the discussions of Islam in the modern context.
index_img5.gif 6. Untitled
Raising the sails of the memory ship
The world is old but the future springs from the past.   The sleeping past can animate the present. That is the virtue of memory. Let us raise the saild of the memory ship: this is to speak the language of freedom and self- development. NOTE: And we must allow ourselves to be inspired by the inspirational tradition.
Al-Udar al-Karima (d. 1360)
I wanted to study the biographical dictionaries on women--simply because, in terms of methodology, this is a first. We cannot judge a thing without knowing what and how it was. We cannot generalize in historiography about women based on how they are in the Muslim world today-  -Just as we cannot generalize about Islamic Civilization in the past based on the ruins and garbage heaps of the contemporary Muslim world.
MY SURPRISE: When I began to look into the dictionaries--I opened to al Udar. Then I found this amazing array of great women.
The legacy of famous women
Sailing into the future
index_img6.gif 7. Untitled
Al-Jahiz and an early feminist discourse
Al-Jahiz Amr b Bahr d. 255 / 869
Basrah: mu'tazili but among the greatest of Islamic thinkers and the most remarkable.
NOTE: Jahiz has Fakhr as-Sudaan ‘ala l-BiDaan; the Book of Misers; the Book of Mules; the Book of Animals.  The Book of Granting Precedence to Dogs over Many Who Walk Upright.
The legacy of Islamic humanism
Untitled
index_img7.jpg
Al-Jahiz' contention
The relation of men and women was natural
Men and women spoke with each other in Jahiliyah and Islam until the hijaab was placed upon the wives of the Prophet, peace be upon him.
     Jahiz is arguing from the lives of the Companions and the early generations of Muslims that it is permissible to discoure with women properly and look at them in the course of that and that it is forbidden to look at that of their bodies which only the husband and mahram can see.
Remarriage was no problem
He then discusses how the early Muslims saw no harm in women remarrying as long as there were men who were still interested in her.

“But today they loathe that and regard it to be a type of depravity in some [women], and they expect a free woman who has already been married [once] to remain chaste [the rest of her life without remarrying] and they attribute shame and scandal to anyone who seeks to marry her.
The equality of men and women
We do not say nor does anyone with intellect say that women are above men or below them by one degree or by two or more than that.
Yet we have seen people who disparage them to no end and look upon them with the greatest disdain and  blatantly deny them most of their rights.
And verily it is a [strange type] of incapacity [impotence] when a man cannot fulfill the rights of his fathers and paternal uncles except by denying the rights of his mothers and maternal uncles, and for this reason we have [taken it upon ourselves] to call to mention a large number [jumlah] of the praiseworthy attributes of women….
Loving and hating things
[NOTE: Jahiz had said at the beginning of the article that the feeling of love in one’s heart is what produces immeasurable good, while the feeling of hatred in the heart is what produces immeasurable evil.
Therefore, hatred of women produces great evil.
A question of rights, not natures
Jahiz notes that, although it is much more common and apparent for people to speak of the superiority of men over women—the [regardless of that issue]:
“…it must never be the case that we fall short as regards the rights of the woman. It must never be the case that the aggrandize the rights of the fathers by belittling the rights of the mothers, and likewise the brothers and the sisters, and the sons and the daughters…”.
The issue of male honor
It is our opinion that ghairah has no place except regarding that which is forbidden. If there were nothing forbidden, there would be no ghairah….
Going too far
…But this is a matter in which the the multitude [al- muta’addun] have gone too far beyond the limits of ghairah to those of bad character and narrowness of parochialism [Diiq al-‘aTan]—such that it has become for them like an obligatory right.  “…Can you not see that ghairah, when it goes beyond the limits of what God has made forbidden, is batil?…but some go to the extent that they have ghairah regarding women even on the basis of zann or a dream that they saw in their sleep…..”
Moderation and proper limits
“There are limits that embrace everything in the world and that comprise all of their extents that have been set for them in due proportion. Thus, each moral attribute [khuluq] that goes beyond  the limits that have been set for it—even in deen and wisdom, which are the most excellent of all things—is ugly and deserving of blame.
 I will make clear to you what is beauty. It is the perfection of moderation. [It is to be perfect in [your] moderation….to go beyond that is to diminish beauty [in all things]].
index_img8.gif 8. Untitled
Fast Forward: Gender and the Colonial Legacy
The issue of women only emerged as the centerpiece of the Western narrative of Islam in the nineteenth century, and in particular the late nineteenth century.
Making feminism a handmaid to Imperialism
Colonial duplicity: Double standards for feminism
People like Lord Cromer combated feminism within their own societies, but fostered in Muslim societies white supremacist views, androcentric and paternalistic convictions, and feminism in conjunction with the imperial idea.
The language of colonialism and feminism combine to eradicate cultures
Here the languages of colonialism and feminism are combined to “render morally justifiable its project of undermining or eradicating the cultures of colonized peoples.”
Feminism as a weapon of cultural genocide
Colonial feminism: feminism as used against other cultures in the service of colonialism. It was shaped into various constructs each tailored for a particular culture as the immediate target of domination: India, the Islamic world, and sub-Saharan Africa.
Feminism was a fundamental missionary agenda
Focusing on symbol, not substance cast off the veil, cast off Islam
All essentially insisted that Muslims had to give up their native religion, customs, and dress, or at least reform their religion and habits along the recommended lines.
Trapping gender concerns in cultural struggle
    • The assumption that issues of culture and women are connected has trapped the struggle for women’s rights with struggles over culture. An argument for women’s rights is often perceived and respresented by opponents as an argument about the innate merits of Islam and Arab culture comprehensively. But it is neither Islam nor Arab culture which is the target of criticism but “those laws and customs to be found in Muslim Arab societies that express androcentric interests, indifference to women, or misogyny. The issue is simply humane and just treatment of women, nothing less, and nothing more—not the intrinsic merits of Islam, Arab culture, or the West.”
The colonial discourse gives new meaning to the veil: A symbol of resistance
    • It is the Western discourse that determined the new meanings of the veil and gave rise to its emergence as a symbol of resistance. "Because of this history of struggle around it, the veil is no pregnant with meanings." But the veil—as an item of clothing—has little relevance to substantive issues.
Legitimate gender concerns carry the taint of colonialist strategy
Feminism was given the taint of having served as an instrument of colonial domination, rendering it suspect in Arab eyes and vulnerable to the charge of being an ally of colonial interests. “The taint has undoubtedly hindered the feminist struggle within Muslim societies."
Qasim Amin (1899): Internalizing the colonial perspective
Qasim Amin's The Liberation of Women (1899): Amin’s book triggered the first major controversy in the Arabic press: more than thirty books and articles appeared in response. Most were critical.
Untitled
index_img9.jpg
The beginning of feminism or a new colonial narrative
Untitled
index_img10.jpg
Westernization not feminism was the basic premise of Amin
Analysts routinely treat the debate as one between “feminists”—Amin and his allies—and “antifeminists”—Amin’s critics. They accept Amin’s equation at face value. But the fundamental and contentious premise of Amin’s work was its endorsement of the Western view of Islamic civilization, peoples, and customs as inferior, whereas the author’s position on women was profoundly patriarchal and even somewhat misogynist.
Generating an indigenous anti-colonial narrative rejecting the entire colonial premise
The opposition it generated marks the emergence of an Arabic narrative developed in resistance to the colonial narrative.
Setting the symbolic and superficial tone of the debate
index_img11.gif 9. Untitled
The feminist discourse today: Assertiveness and our own values
The new feminist discourse among Muslims is dominated by Muslim women and highly influenced by the effect of post-modernism and the academic and psychological space it opened. Modernism came with a Western and class agenda. Post-Modernism opposed this with a spirit of assertiveness and the will to direct our own futures in terms of our value systems.
index_img12.gif 10. Untitled
index_img13.gif 11. Untitled
Summing up
Untitled
index_img14.jpg
Untitled
index_img15.jpg
Compatibility with our times and our society
Abu Shaqqa and the 2 Jahiliyyas
Abu Shaqqa: There are 2 Jahiliyyas today: one of the 15th century=ghuluw, tashaddud, and blind taqlid; another of the 20th=libertinism, scandal and blind imitation of the West.
Muslim disaffection over all this
Abu Shaqqa: Many Muslims have fled from Islam today because of positions that its scholars have taken in its name.
Again, the issue of power structures
What blocks full participation of Muslim women today is not pious adherence to a patriarchal law-- although Verses and Traditions are sometimes used as sledge hammers--but it is that some men have vested interests in blocking women's rights and camouflage their self-interest by denying full access to our inspirational tradition.
Women must partake of the discourse
Amina Wadud: Muslim women must be the subject and object of their own discourse. NOTE: Women have a long legacy in Tradition and Law. Today they must resume that legacy. This does not exclude men but does not allow them a monopoly either.
The main problem with the traditional approach: It has been the work of men alone
Barbara Stowasser said this. NOTE: Despite the fact that we are directed to take half of our religion 'Aishah. The 'Aishah's of succeeding generations had little to say about how issues of gender would be elaborated.