NOT ALL WOMEN ARE OPPRESSED
[THE NATAL MERCURY: TUESDAY, AUGUST 5 1997]
Fatima ***** says that the many myths surrounding
Muslim women are misconceived....
While many people may view the Muslim woman as an
oppressed object, she in no way feels insignificant or
mistreated.
In a society ridden with myths about islam, the most
misunderstood aspect of the religion is the role of
the Muslim woman.
People, misinformed by movies like NOT WITHOUT MY
DAUGHTER in which the Muslim man is depicted as a
heartless tyrant, generally view the Muslim woman as a
deprived, suppressed and pathetic little creature.
A media which passes off incidents of female
circumcision in Egypt - which are not necessarily
Islamic- as an Islamic practice, further contributes
to this shallow notion.
The Muslim woman who dresses Islamic, either by her
face or by wearing a scarf, has had to learn the hard
way: she is often the target of open ridicule - in the
form of rude gestures, as well as sarcastic comments.
Women who veil their faces have become quite
accustomed to having a wide variety of unimaginative
nicknames including 'ninja' and 'boogyman' thrown at
them.
They also smoke blown into their faces, and parents
threaten their children with "I'll call that ghost for
you."
As a Muslim woman who wears a scarf, I have often been
termed a fundamentalist. I sometimes get the
impression that people see me as a rather unliberated
person.
What most people forget is that the western concepts
of fundamentalism and liberation differ from the
meanings Muslims attach to these words.
All practising Muslims are fundamentalists in the
sense that they adhere to the fundamentals of Islam.
It is the west which has twisted the word
'fundamentalism' around to denote something violent.
As for liberation, the average Muslim woman already
feels liberated. She was liberated more that 1400
years ago when the last prophet of Islam,
Muhammad[peace be upon him] informed mankind of her
rights,through the Qur'an which was revealed to him,
and through his own behaviour and attitude towards
women.
These rights include the right to vote, the right to
inheritance, the right to rear her children, the right
to seek a divorce on justifiable grounds [for example,
extreme cruelty], the right to choose her husband as
well as the right to education. The Muslim woman is
also under no obligation to change her name at
marriage, and she may propose to a man she wishes to
marry.
One of the most important rights she enjoys is the
right to protection and respect. It is in relation to
this right that her dress is prescribed to her by the
Qur'an in various verses, one of which instructs her
not to show off any of her adornment, "except that
which is apparent/or may ordinarily be revealed."
Although some scholars interpret this verse to mean
that the face can be left uncovered, others produce
overwhelming evidence to prove that the covering of
the face in the presence of strangers is compulsory.
It is agreed that the dress of a Muslim woman should
be loose and non-transparent. The head, bosom, arms
and legs also have to be covered.
These dress codes are not a means of restricting
her,they are a means of protecting her from all forms
of sexual harassment and to prevent men from
harbouring sexual thoughts about her, something which
is abhorred in Islam. She is instructed to cover her
body because there is no need for everybody to see it.
The Muslim woman who observes these dress codes does
so, not out of some cultural or fashion adherence, but
because she wants to fully embrace her religion and
please her Creator [Allah].
Contrary to popular belief, the woman who dresses in
Islamic garb is not forced to do so by her husband,
father or in-laws. She is not a robot who is
programmed by some superior male who man-handles her
into doing things she meekly accepts. In the
exceptional cases where this does happen, it should be
these people, and not Muslims in general, who should
be questioned.
Behind that veil, or under that scarf, is an
intelligent woman who understands the requirements of
her religion as is laid out to her by her Creator, not
by her husband.
And yes, whether her face is covered or not, she is
fully aware of the stares that follow her.*
FATIMA ***** IS A FINAL YEAR JOURNALISM STUDENT AT
TECHNIKON NATAL, AND IS WORKING AT THE MERCURY AS A
TRAINEE JOURNALIST