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TFive
years ago, I read in the Toronto Star issue
of July 3, 1990 an article titled "Islam
is not alone in patriarchal doctrines",
by Gwynne Dyer. The article described the furious
reactions of the participants of a conference
on women and power held in Montreal to the comments
of the famous Egyptian feminist Dr. Nawal Saadawi.
Her "politically incorrect" statements
included : "the most restrictive elements
towards women can be found first in Judaism
in the Old Testament then in Christianity and
then in the Quran"; "all religions
are patriarchal because they stem from patriarchal
societies"; and "veiling of women
is not a specifically Islamic practice but an
ancient cultural heritage with analogies in
sister religions". The participants could
not bear sitting around while their faiths were
being equated with Islam. Thus, Dr. Saadawi
received a barrage of criticism. "Dr. Saadawi's
comments are unacceptable. Her answers reveal
a lack of understanding about other people's
faiths," declared Bernice Dubois of the
World Movement of Mothers. "I must protest"
said panellist Alice Shalvi of Israel women's
network, "there is no conception of the
veil in Judaism." The article attributed
these furious protests to the strong tendency
in the West to scapegoat Islam for practices
that are just as much a part of the West's own
cultural heritage. "Christian and Jewish
feminists were not going to sit around being
discussed in the same category as those wicked
Muslims," wrote Gwynne Dyer.
I
was not surprised that the conference participants
had held such a negative view of Islam, especially
when women's issues were involved. In the West,
Islam is believed to be the symbol of the subordination
of women par excellence. In order to understand
how firm this belief is, it is enough to mention
that the Minister of Education in France, the
land of Voltaire, has recently ordered the expulsion
of all young Muslim women wearing the veil from
French schools!1 A young Muslim student wearing
a headscarf is denied her right of education
in France, while a Catholic student wearing
a cross or a Jewish student wearing a skullcap
is not. The scene of French policemen preventing
young Muslim women wearing headscarves from
entering their high school is unforgettable.
It inspires the memories of another equally
disgraceful scene of Governor George Wallace
of Alabama in 1962 standing in front of a school
gate trying to block the entrance of black students
in order to prevent the desegregation of Alabama's
schools. The difference between the two scenes
is that the black students had the sympathy
of so many people in the U.S. and in the whole
world. President Kennedy sent the U.S. National
Guard to force the entry of the black students.
The Muslim girls, on the other hand, received
no help from any one. Their cause seems to have
very little sympathy either inside or outside
France. The reason is the widespread misunderstanding
and fear of anything Islamic in the world today.
What
intrigued me the most about the Montreal conference
was one question : Were the statements made
by Saadawi, or any of her critics, factual ?
In other words, do Judaism, Christianity, and
Islam have the same conception of women? Are
they different in their conceptions ? Do Judaism
and Christianity , truly, offer women a better
treatment than Islam does? What is the Truth?
It
is not easy to search for and find answers to
these difficult questions. The first difficulty
is that one has to be fair and objective or,
at least, do one's utmost to be so. This is
what Islam teaches. The Quran has instructed
Muslims to say the truth even if those who are
very close to them do not like it: "Whenever
you speak, speak justly, even if a near relative
is concerned" (6:152) "O you who believe
stand out firmly for justice, as witnesses to
Allah, even as against yourselves, or your parents
or your kin, and whether it be (against) rich
or poor" (4:135).
The
other great difficulty is the overwhelming breadth
of the subject. Therefore, during the last few
years, I have spent many hours reading the Bible,
The Encyclopaedia of Religion, and the Encyclopaedia
Judaica searching for answers. I have also read
several books discussing the position of women
in different religions written by scholars,
apologists, and critics. The material presented
in the following chapters represents the important
findings of this humble research. I don't claim
to be absolutely objective. This is beyond my
limited capacity. All I can say is that I have
been trying, throughout this research, to approach
the Quranic ideal of "speaking justly".
I
would like to emphasize in this introduction
that my purpose for this study is not to denigrate
Judaism or Christianity. As Muslims, we believe
in the divine origins of both. No one can be
a Muslim without believing in Moses and Jesus
as great prophets of God. My goal is only to
vindicate Islam and pay a tribute, long overdue
in the West, to the final truthful Message from
God to the human race. I would also like to
emphasize that I concerned myself only with
Doctrine. That is, my concern is, mainly, the
position of women in the three religions as
it appears in their original sources not as
practised by their millions of followers in
the world today. Therefore, most of the evidence
cited comes from the Quran, the sayings of Prophet
Muhammad, the Bible, the Talmud, and the sayings
of some of the most influential Church Fathers
whose views have contributed immeasurably to
defining and shaping Christianity. This interest
in the sources relates to the fact that understanding
a certain religion from the attitudes and the
behaviour of some of its nominal followers is
misleading. Many people confuse culture with
religion, many others do not know what their
religious books are saying, and many others
do not even care. |