ISLAMIC TRADITIONS AND THE
FEMINIST MOVEMENT: CONFRONTATION OR COOPERATION?
By: Dr. Lois Lamya' al Faruqi
Whether living in the Middle
East or Africa, in Central Asia, in Pakistan, in Southeast Asia, or in
Europe and the Americas, Muslim women tend to view the feminist movement
with some apprehension. Although there are some features of the feminist
cause with which we as Muslims would wish to join hands, other features
generate our disappointment and even opposition. There is therefore no
simple or "pat" answer to the question of the future cooperation or competition
which feminism may meet in an Islamic environment.
There are however a number of
social, psychological, and economic traditions which govern the thinking
of most Muslims and which are particularly affective of woman's status
and role in Islamic society.Understanding these can help us understand
the issues which affect male and female status and roles, and how we should
react to movements which seek to improve the situation of women in any
of the countries where Muslims live.
THE FAMILY SYSTEM:
One of the Islamic traditions
which will affect the way in which Muslim women respond to feminist ideas
is the advocacy in Islamic culture of an extended rather than a nuclear
family system. Some Muslim families are "residentially extended" - that
is, their members live communally with three or more generations of relatives
(grandparents, parents, uncles, aunts, and their offspring) in a single
building or compound. Even when this residential version of the extended
family is not possible or adhered to, family connections reaching far beyond
the nuclear unit are evident in strong psychological, social, economic,
and even political ties. Mutual supports and responsibilities affecting
these larger consanguine groups are not just considered desirable, but
they are made legally incumbent on members of the society by Islamic law.
The Holy Quran itself exhorts to extended family solidarity; in addition
it specifies the extent of such responsibilities and contains prescriptive
measures for inheritance, support, and other close interdependencies within
the extended family.
[1]
Our Islamic traditions also
prescribe a much stronger participation of the family in the contracting
and preservation of marriages. While most Western feminists would decry
family participation or arranged marriage as a negative influence because
of its apparent restriction of individualistic freedom and responsibility,
as Muslims we would rgue that such participation is advantageous for both
individuals and groups within the society. Not only does it ensure marriages
based on sounder principles than physical attraction and sexual infatuation,
but it provides other safeguards for successful marital continuity. Members
of the family provide diverse companionship as well as ready sources of
advice and sympathy for the newly married as they adjust to each others'
way. One party of the marriage cannot easily pursue an eccentric course
at the expense of the spouse since such behavior would rally opposition
from the larger group.
Quarrels are never so devastating
to the marriage bond since other adult family members act as mediators
and provide alternative sources of companionship and counsel following
disagreements. The problems of parenting and generational incompatibility
are also alleviated, and singles clubs and dating bureaus would be unnecessary
props for social interaction. There is no need in the extended family for
children of working parents to be unguarded, unattended, or inadequately
loved and socialized because the extended family home is never empty. There
is therefore no feeling of guilt which the working parent often feels in
a nuclear or single-parent organization. Tragedy, even divorce, is not
so debilitating to either adults or children since the larger social unit
absorbs the residual numbers with much greater ease than a nuclear family
organization can ever provide.
The move away from the cohesiveness
which the family formerly enjoyed in Western society, the rise of usually
smaller alternative family styles, and the accompanying rise in individualism
which many feminists advocate or at least practice, are at odds with these
deep-rooted Islamic customs and traditions. If feminism in the Muslim world
chooses to espouse the Western family models, it should and would certainly
be strongly challenged by Muslim women's groups and by Islamic society
as a whole.
INDIVIDUALISM VS. THE LARGER
ORGANIZATION:
The traditional support of the
large and intricately interrelated family organization is correlative to
another Islamic tradition which seems to run counter to recent Western
trends and to feminist ideology. Islam and Muslim women generally advocate
molding of individual goals and interests to accord with the welfare of
the larger group and its members. Instead of holding the goals of the individual
supreme, Islam instills in the adherent a sense of his or her place within
the family and of a responsibility to that group. This is not perceived
or experienced by Muslims as repression of the individual. Other traditions
which will be discussed later guarantee his or her legal personality. Feminism,
therefore, would not be espoused by Muslim women as a goal to be pursued
without regard for the relation of the female to the other members of her
family. The Muslim woman regards her goals as necessitating a balance with,
or even subordination to, those of the family group. The rampant individualism
often experienced in contemporary life, that which treats the goals of
the individual in isolation from other factors, or as utterly supreme,
runs against a deep Islamic commitment to social interdependence.
DIFFERENTIATION OF SEX ROLES:
A third Islamic tradition which
affects the future of any feminist movement in an Islamic environment is
that it specifies a differentiation of male and female roles and responsibilities
in society. Feminism, as represented in Western society, has generally
denied any such differentiation and has demanded a move toward a unisex
society in order to achieve equal rights for women. By "unisex society,"
I mean one in which a single set of roles and concerns are given preference
and esteem by both sexes and are pursued by all members of the society
regardless of sex and age differentials. In the case of Western feminism,
the preferred goals have been those traditionally fulfilled by the male
members of society. The roles of providing financial support, of success
in career, and of decision making have been given overwhelming respect
and concern while those dealing with domestic matters, with child care,
with aesthetic and psychological refreshment, with social interrelationships,
were devalued and even despised.
Both men and women have been
forced into a single mold which is perhaps more restrictive, rigid and
coercive than that which formerly assigned men to one type of role and
women to another.
This is a new brand of male
chauvenism with which Islamic traditions cannot conform. Islam instead
maintains that both types of roles are equally deserving of pursuit and
respect and that when accompanied by the equity demanded by the religion,
a division of labor along sex lines is generally beneficial to all members
of the society.
This might be regarded by the
feminist as opening the door to discrimination, but as Muslims we regard
Islamic traditions as standing clearly and unequivocally for the support
of male-female equity. In the Quran, no difference whatever is made between
the sexes in relation to God. "For men who submit [to God] and for women
who submit [to God], for believing men and believing women, for devout
men and devout women, for truthful men and truthful women, for steadfast
men and steadfast women, for humble men and humble women, for charitable
men and charitable women, for men who fast and women who fast, for men
who guard their chastity and women who guard, for men who remember God
much and for women who remember - for them God has prepared forgiveness
and a mighty reward" (33:35). "Whoever performs good deeds, whether male
or female and is a believer, We shall surely make him live a good life
and We will certainly reward them for the best of what they did" (16:97).
[2]
It is only in relation to each
other and society that a difference is made - a difference of role or function.
The rights and responsibilities of a woman are equal to those of a man,
but they are not necessarily identical with them. Equality and identity
are two different things, Islamic traditions maintain - the former desirable,
the latter not. Men and women should therefore be complementary to each
other in a multi-function organization rather than competitive with each
other in a uni-function society.
The equality demanded by Islamic
traditions must, however, be seen in its larger context if it is to be
understood properly. Since Muslims regard a differentiation of sexual roles
to be natural and desirable in the majority of cases, the economic responsibilities
of male and female members differ to provide a balance for the physical
differences between men and women and for the greater responsibility which
women carry in the reproductive and rearing activities so necessary to
the well-being of the society. To maintain, therefore, that the men of
the family are responsible for providing economically for the women or
that women are not equally responsible, is not a dislocation or denial
of sexual equity. It is instead a duty to be fulfilled by men as compensation
for another responsibility which involves the special ability of women.
Likewise the different inheritance rates for males and females, which is
so often sited as an example of discrimination against women, must not
be seen as an isolated prescription.
[3] It is but one part of a comprehensive
system in which women carry no legal responsibility to support other members
of the family, but in which men are bound by law as well as custom to provide
for all their female relatives.
Does this mean that Islamic
traditions necessarily prescribe maintaining the status quo in the Islamic
societies that exist today?The answer is a definite "No." Many thinking
Muslims - both men and women - would agree that their societies do not
fulfill the Islamic ideals and traditions laid down in the Quran and reinforced
by the example and directives of the Prophet Muhammad, salallahu alehi
wasallam. It is reported in the Quran and from history that women not only
expressed their opinions freely in the Prophet's presence but also argued
and participated in serious discussions with the Prophet himself and with
other Muslim leaders of the time (58:1). Muslim women are known to have
even stood in opposition to certain caliphs, who later accepted the sound
arguments of those women. A specific example took place during the caliphate
of 'Umar ibn al Khattab.
[4] The Quran reproached those
who believed woman to be inferior to men (16:57-59) and repeatedly gives
expression to the need for treating men and women with equity (2:228, 231;
4:19, and so on). Therefore, if Muslim women experience discrimination
in any place or time, they do not and should not lay the blame on Islam,
but on the un-Islamic nature of their societies and the failure of Muslims
to fulfill its directives.
SEPARATE LEGAL STATUS FOR WOMEN:
A fourth Islamic tradition affecting
the future of feminism in Muslim societies is the separate legal status
for women which is demanded by the Quran and the Shari'ah. Every Muslim
individual, whether male of female, retains a separate identity from cradle
to grave. This separate legal personality prescribes for every woman the
right to contract, to conduct business, to earn and possess property independently.
Marriage has no effect on her legal status, her property, her earnings
- or even on her name. If she commits any civil offense, her penalty is
no less or no more than a man's in a similar case (5:83; 24:2). If she
is wronged or harmed, she is entitled to compensation just like a man (4:92-93;
see also Mustafa al Siba'i 1976:38; Darwazah n.d.:78). The feminist demand
for separate legal status for women is therefore one that is equally espoused
by Islamic traditions.
POLYGYNY:
Although the taking of plural
wives by a man is commonly called polygamy, the more correct sociological
designation is polygyny. This institution is probably the Islamic tradition
most misunderstood and vehemently condemned by non-Muslims. It is one which
the Hollywood stereotypes "play upon" in their ridicule of Islamic society.
The first image conjured up in the mind of the Westerner when the subject
of Islam and marriage is approached is that of a religion which advocates
the sexual indulgence of the male members of the society and the subjugation
of its females through this institution.
Islamic tradition does indeed
allow a man to marry more than one woman at a time. This leniency is even
established by the Quran (4:3).[5] But the use and perception of that institution
is far from the Hollywood stereotype. Polygyny is certainly not imposed
by Islam; nor is it a universal practice. It is instead regarded as the
exception to the norm of monogamy , and its exercise is strongly controlled
by social pressures.[6] If utilized by Muslim men to facilitate or condone
sexual promiscuity, it is not less Islamically condemnable than serial
polygyny and adultery, and no less detrimental to the society. Muslims
view polygyny as an institution which is to be called into use only under
extraordinary circumstances. As such, it has not been generally regarded
by Muslim women as a threat. Attempts by the feminist movement to focus
on eradication of this institution in order to improve the status of women
would therefore meet with little sympathy or support.
II. DIRECTIVES FOR THE FEMINIST
MOVEMENT IN AN ISLAMIC ENVIRONMENT
What can be learned about the
future compatibility or incongruity of feminism in a Muslim environment
from these facts about Islamic traditions? Are there any general principles
to be gained, any directives to be taken, by those who work for women's
rights and human rights in the world?
INTERCULTURAL INCOMPATIBILITY
OF WESTERN FEMINISM:
The first and foremost principle
would seem to be that many of the goals of feminism as conceived in Western
society are not necessarily relevant or exportable across cultural boundaries.
Feminism as a Western movement originated in England during the 18th century
and had as one of its main goals the eradication of legal disabilities
imposed upon women by English common law. These laws were especially discriminatory
of married women. They derived in part from Biblical sources (e.g., the
idea of man and woman becoming "one flesh," and the attribution of an inferior
and even evil nature to Eve and all her female descendants) and in part
from feudal customs (e.g., the importance of carrying and supplying arms
for battle and the concomitant devaluation of the female contributions
to society). The Industrial Revolution and its need for women's contribution
to the work force brought strength to the feminist movement and helped
its advocates gradually break down most of those discriminatory laws.
Since the history and heritage
of Muslim peoples have been radically different from that of Western Europe
and America, the feminism which would appeal to Muslim women and to the
society generally must be correspondingly different. Those legal rights
which Western women sought in reform of English common law were already
granted to Muslim women in the 7th century. Such a struggle therefore holds
little interest for the Muslim woman. In addition, it would be useless
to try to interest us in ideas or reforms that run in diametrical opposition
to those traditions which form an important part of our cultural and religious
heritage. There has been a good deal of opposition to any changes in Muslim
personal status laws since these embody and reinforce the very traditions
which we have been discussing.In other words, if feminism is to succeed
in an Islamic environment, it must be an indigenous form of feminism, rather
than one conceived and nurtured in an alien environment with different
problems and different solutions and goals.
THE FORM OF AN ISLAMIC FEMINISM:
If the goals of Western feminism
are not viable for Muslim women, what form should a feminist movement take
to ensure success?
Above all, the movement must
recognize that, whereas in the West, the mainstream of the women's movement
has viewed religion as one of the chief enemies of its progress and well-being,
Muslim women view the teachings of Islam as their best friend and supporter.
The prescriptions that are found in the Quran and in the example of the
Prophet Muhammad, salallahu alehi wasallam, are regarded as the ideal to
which contemporary women wish to return. As far as Muslim women are concerned,
the source of any difficulties experienced today is not Islam and its traditions,
but certain alien ideological intrusions on our societies, ignorance, and
distortion of the true Islam, or exploitation by individuals within the
society. It is a lack of an appreciation for this fact that caused such
misunderstanding and mutual distress when women's movement representatives
from the West visited Iran both before and after the Islamic Revolution.
Second, any feminism which is
to succeed in an Islamic environment must be one which does not work chauvenistically
for women's interest alone.Islamic traditions would dictate that women's
progress be achieved in tandem with the wider struggle to benefit all members
of the society. The good of the group or totality is always more crucial
than the good of any one sector of the society. In fact, the society is
seen as an organic whole in which the welfare of each member or organ is
necessary for the health and well being of every other part.Disadventagous
circumstances of women therefore should always be countered in conjunction
with attempt to alleviate those factors which adversely affect men and
other segments of the society.
Third, Islam is an ideology which
influences much more than the ritual life of a people. It is equally affective
of their social, political, economic, psychological, and aesthetic life.
"Din," which is usually regarded as an equivalent for the English term
"religion," is a concept which includes, in addition to those ideas and
practices customarily associated in our minds with religion, a wide spectrum
of practices and ideas which affect almost every aspect of the daily life
of the Muslim individual. Islam and Islamic traditions therefore are seen
today by many Muslims as the main source of cohesiveness for nurturing
an identity and stability to confront intruding alien influences and the
cooperation needed to solve their numerous contemporary problems. To fail
to note this fact, or to fail to be fully appreciative of its importance
for the average Muslim - whether male or female - would be to commit any
movement advocating improvement of women's position in Islamic lands to
certain failure. It is only through establishing that identity and stability
that self-respect can be achieved and a more healthy climate for both Muslim
men and Muslim women will emerge.
NOTES:
[1]. For example, see Quran
2:177; 4:7,176; 8:41; 16:90; 17:26; 24:22. [2]. See also Quran 2:195; 4:124,32;
9:71-72. [3]. "God (thus) directs you as regards your children's (inheritance):
to the male, a proportion equal to that of two females..." (Quran 4:1 [4].
Kamal 'Awn 1955:129. [5]. "... Marry women of your choice, two, or three,
or four; but if you fear that you shall not be able to deal justly (with
them), then only one, or (a captive) that your right hands possess. That
will be more suitable, to prevent you from doing injustice." [6]. It should
be remembered that any woman who wants her marriage to remain monogamous
can provide for this condition under Islamic law. REFERENCES Kamal Ahmad
'Awn, Al Mar'ah fi al Islam (Tanta: Sha'raw Press, 1955) Muhammad 'Izzat
Darwazah, Al Dastur al Quran fi Shu'un al Hayat(Cairo: 'Isa al Babi al
Halabi, n.d.). Mustafa al Siba'i, Al Mar'ah baynal Fiqh wal Qanun (Aleppo:
Al Maktabah al 'Arabiyyah, first pub. 1962)
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