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Women Islam 1cont.

The document provides historical context on women's rights before Islam and discusses what rights Islam granted women in the 7th century, including rights to inheritance, divorce, financial independence, and limiting polygamy. It explores various topics like inheritance differences between men and women, issues around stoning and Qiwama, and conditions around polygamy.

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Faiz Akhter
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
88 views34 pages

Women Islam 1cont.

The document provides historical context on women's rights before Islam and discusses what rights Islam granted women in the 7th century, including rights to inheritance, divorce, financial independence, and limiting polygamy. It explores various topics like inheritance differences between men and women, issues around stoning and Qiwama, and conditions around polygamy.

Uploaded by

Faiz Akhter
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Women and

Islam
Week#1
By Dr. Monia Mazigh
Summer, 2016©
2

Historical Context

 The events of today are the reflection of


history

 Todayin Canada, can we speak about


the women mouvement without knowing
the Famous Five or the suffragettes?
3

Map of the Middle East


4

Our Main Reading


 “Women and Gender in Islam: Historical
Roots of a Modern Debate” by Leila
Ahmed, Yale University Press, 1992
5

Leila Ahmed

Leila Ahmed, born 1940, is an Egyptian


American writer on Islam and Islamic feminism
as well as being the first women's studies
professor at Harvard Divinity School. Ahmed
was the recipient of the 2013 University of
Louisville Grawemeyer Award in Religion for her
analysis of the 'veiling' of Muslim women in the
United States.
6

Questions
 How were women rights around the world
before Islam?
 How were women rights in Arabia before
Islam?
 What did Islam brought to women in the
7th century?
7

Main Points
 Study Mesopotamia, Greece, Egypt, Iran

 Judaism and Christianity and


Zoroastrianism were the prevailing
religions in the Byzantine and the Sasanian
empires: the two major powers at the rise
of Islam.
8

Main points
 Subordination of women in the Ancient
Middle East appears to have become
institutionalized with the rise of urban
societies and with the rise of the archaic
state, by Lerner
 Mesopotamia: first cities.
 Class- based societies
 Codification of laws
 Paternity of property-heirs
9

Main Points
 Control women sexuality (more children,
more free labours, more land, better
status)
 “Respectable” women vs. “disreputable
women”
 The harem of Assyrian king (12 century
BCE) consisted of 40 women. Just before
the Muslim conquest Khusrau 531-79 CE
consisted of some 12,000 women.
10

Main Points
 Veilwas a sign of respectability. Married
women should wear it
 Slaves and prostitutes can’t wear it

 Upper class women had property rights,


managed their affairs. They had
privileges.
 Their privileges came from their male
connection ( father, husband, sons…)
11

Main points
 Mesopotamian, Persian, Hellenic and
Christian cultures shared the same
traditions and attitudes toward women:
veil, seclusion
 Diminished role: sexual and reproductive
being
12

Sasanian Empire
 Prevailed in Iraq-Iran region
 Large harems
 Zoroastrianism: patriarchal family, total
obedience of the wife to her husband
13

Rare gold Dinar of Khusrau II


14

Byzantine Empire
 Religion: Christianity
 Prevailed in Syria and Turkey
 Main aspect: chastity of women, virginity
 Many Christian women died in martyrs for not
willing to renounce to their vows of chastity
 Important to note that the celibacy notion
constituted a big threat to male authority and
to the socioreligious order of the time and of
the region
15

Gold Solidus of Heraclius and


son
16

Mediterranean Region
 Boy birth is greeted with cries of joy but
not for the girl.
 Early marriages for girls
 Women seclusion
 Veil is the sign of respectability: honest vs.
prostitute
 Using the eunuchs to enforce the
separation and guard the women space
17

Ancient Greek
 The qualities admired in girls were silence
and submissiveness
 Socrates, attributed the fall of Sparta to
granting freedom to women, a freedom
that pushed women to prostitution.
 Aristotle: “the purpose of marriage and
the function of women was to provide
heirs”
18

Ancient Egypt
 Same rights as men to terminate marriages.
 No polygamy for men…
 Woman had the right to own property and to
inheritance.
 She maintained the family during her
husband's absence.
 But, she depended on man who was the
master.
 Women were offered as sacrifice to the Nile
River and to the gods.
19

Ancient Egyptian Marriage


 The purpose of marriage among
Egyptians was the shared life and the
pleasures and comforts it offers.
 The more Greek and Roman laws spread
the less rights for Egyptian women.
20

Judaism, Christianism and


Patriarchy
 Patriarchal ideas and regulations
regarding women in Judaism were
influenced by Mesopotamian laws.
 Polygamy, concubinage, unrestricted
divorce for men were allowed in Judaism
 Some aspects were later accepted by
Christianism but not polygamy for
instance
21

Other civilizations in brief


 InIndia female were excluded from
inheritance. A female is always
dependent of a man.

 Old Chinese say: “Women is like a ball,


the harder you kick it the higher it goes”
22

Arabia Before the rise of Islam


 No right to inheritance

 Different types of marriages: patrilineal,


matrilineal, uxorilocal, polyandrous and
polygamous.

 Infanticide reserved mainly for girls. Woman


was considered as shame and disgrace.

 Some women were ‘naditum’ or priestesses.


They enjoyed high social status
23

What Islam Brought to Women


in the 7th century?
 There is no original sin attributed to
woman in Islam.
 The message of the Quran is universal: to
men and women
 Woman is Equal to man in reward and
punishment.
24

Verse about equal reward


 "If
any do deeds of righteousness, be they
male or female, and have faith, they will
enter Heaven and not the least injustice
will be done to them." S. 4, A. 124.
25

Verse about equality


 "O mankind! Fear your Guardian Lord,
who created you from a single soul,
created, out of it, his mate, and from
them twain scattered (like seeds)
countless men and women; Fear Allah,
through Whom ye demand your mutual
(rights), and be heedful of the wombs
(that bore you); for Allah ever watches
over you." S. 4 A. 1.
26

Verse intended for Men and


Women
 "For Muslim men and women, for believing
men and women, for devout men and
women, for true men and women, for men
and women who are patient and constant,
for men and women who humble themselves,
for men and women who give in charity, for
men and women who fast, for men and
women who guard their chastity, and for men
and women who engage much in Allah's
remembrance, for them has Allah prepared
forgiveness and great reward." S. 33, A. 35.
27

Quranic text about Adam and


Eve
 "And we said: 'O Adam! Dwell thou and
thy wife in the Garden; and eat of the
bountiful things therein as (when and
where) you will, but approach not this
tree, or you run into harm and
transgression.'" - S. 2, A. 35,
 "Then we said: "O Adam! Verily, this is an
enemy to thee and thy wife: so let him not
get you both out of the garden, so that
thou art landed in misery." S. 20, A. 117.
28

Islam gave women rights


 Right to inheritance
 Right to divorce
 Right to financial independence
 Polygamy was limited to four wives with
the strong condition to limit to ONE wife
29

The Issue of Inheritance


 Inheritance for woman is half of a man
 But:
 Woman in Islam do not to spend on their
family. They keep their wealth for
themselves
30

The Issue of stoning


 The Quran speaks about lashes to the
adulterer and the adulteress. Nothing
about stoning
 “The adulteress and the adulterer, each
receives a hundred lashes” S.42:2
 Today in Iran and Pakistan only women
are stoned, why about men
31

The Issue of “Qiwama”


 Qiwama is being in charge of ( protector
and maintainer)
 “Men are the protectors and maintainers
of women, because God has given the
one more [strength] than the other, and
because they support them from their
means. Therefore the righteous women
are devoutly obedient and guard in [the
husband’s] absence what God would
have them guard”S.4:
32

Shared obligations
 Men are responsible for protecting
women from harm and providing food
and shelter for them.
 Women should remain faithful to their
husbands
 If ONE of the TWO fails to fulfill the
obligations then punishments ensue for
BOTH.
33

The Issue of Polygamy


 Allthe Muslim scholar agree that the verse
about polygamy was received after the
battle of ‘Uhud’ where large number of
Muslim men were killed.
 The patriarchal interpretation of the verse
embraced the possibility to take FOUR
wives and didn’t insist on the the
condition of Equality and Justice.
34

Your thoughts…

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