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http://www.boloji.com/wfs5/wfs986.htm

Feminism in the Muslim World
by Aditi Bhaduri 
   
  Is feminism Western? Is feminism compatible with Islam? Did Islamic feminism 
arise from within or from without? These are some questions that Margot Badran 
tries to respond to in her book 'Feminism Beyond East and West'.

In a series of well argued and well crafted essays, Badran argues that feminism 
belongs to both East and West, transcends both, 'is produced in particular 
places' and 'articulated in local terms'. So in Muslim societies we have 
'Islamic feminism' - a 'feminist discourse and practice articulated within an 
Islamic paradigm'. In the first couple of chapters, Badran introduces us to 
this brand of feminism, elaborating on its genesis and characteristics, at 
whose core is 'a re-reading of Islam's fundamental texts, the Qu'ran and the 
Sunnah (the Prophetic traditions)'.   
            

  Feminism in Egypt, to which Badran devotes maximum space, began well before 
the 20th century. Feminism in Egypt, culturally and militarily the most 
powerful country in the Arab world then, 'gained its initial entry into public 
space legitimized largely as a vital nationalist force'. So women decried 'the 
continued British colonial occupation' and demanded national independence in 
various ways.

The Egyptian Feminist Union also reached out to other Arab women, convened the 
Conference for the Defense of Palestine and spearheaded 'pan-Arab feminism' by 
creating the Arab Feminist Union that still exists today. Egyptian women even 
traveled to Italy to attend the International Woman Suffrage Alliance in 1923. 
Yet, after the 1952 Revolution, 'feminism was silenced'. The right to vote was 
granted to women only in 1956. Personal laws continued to be repressive, with 
major reforms coming in only 1985; the battle still continues. 

Subsequent chapters deal with Muslim women's activism in countries not often 
associated with Islam - those of the Eastern bloc and Turkey, where religion 
was suppressed for a long time. 

In Bosnia, young Muslims, not exposed to religion during their upbringing, 
found in Islamic feminism 'a path back to their lost religion and to cultural 
reconstruction'. So Amra Pandzo-Djuric, an activist in her 30s, interprets 
Islamic feminism to mean 'practicing Islam in an enlightened way'.

In Tajikistan, women who found themselves caught between local male religious 
leaders who wanted to re-impose a reactionary form of Islam and ex-Communists 
with a lingering antipathy to any new kind of religion, were trying to find a 
'new Tajikistan' - interpreted as the 'recovery of a deeper indigenous cultural 
past evoking... dynamic, humanitarian Islam'.

The chapters on Turkey and Morocco give us a comprehensive overview of how 
family and personal laws have been revised, again because of women's activism, 
so that the new Turkish Civil Code of 2002 and the new Moroccan Mudawwana 
(Family Law) of 2004 'legalized the equal headship of the family by the two 
spouses'. While Turkey is a strictly secular country, Morocco's laws are 
Shariah-backed, and therein both countries can serve as examples of 'a synergy 
between the precepts of Islam and universal values' to corresponding states 
with Muslim communities.

'Going West Post- 9/11' is a delightful tongue-in-cheek review of Fatima 
Mernissi's book, "Scheherazade Goes West'. It reveals how Western stereotypes 
about Eastern women in 1923 'remain almost unchanged seven centuries later, as 
those by males in the West operating with fertile fantasies and inherited 
stereotypes'. Yet, "In the Orient, to use the body alone...sex without a brain, 
never helps a woman''. Sheherazade dialogued with the King; and dialogue is 
what Badran advocates.

Badran understands that the path of Islamic feminism does not run smooth. The 
impediments are many, the enemies various. While there is the strange alliance 
between Muslim patriarchalists and Islamophobics, both of whom decry Islamic 
feminism (for different reasons), Islamists 'have tried to co-opt the discourse 
on women and gender in Islam' and have tried to de-secularize secular criminal 
laws in many Muslim countries. 

So in Nigeria, for example, we find Shariah-based statutory law. Badran 
narrates how two poor women convicted of the crime of 'zina' (adultery) are 
acquitted 'within the framework of Islamic argumentation' due to the activism 
of Nigerian women. Islamism, therefore, catalyzed Islamic feminism. Many 
Islamic feminists today insist not only on greater territorial space (as in the 
mosque movement), or equality in the private sphere, but also on governance by 
simply state laws rather than religious codes (like in Canada).

Finally, we come to Muslim women's activism in India. This chapter is 
disappointing. Muslim women in India have had a glorious past. Though a 
minority, Muslims in India constitute the world's second largest Muslim 
community. India is one of the few countries where Muslim women got universal 
suffrage without a struggle. There have been many leading Muslim women 
entrepreneurs and artists. Yet, Muslim personal laws remain repressive. Badran 
locates this and women's activism almost exclusively as a response to Hindutva 
(the right-wing brand of Hinduism), while the latter itself is located almost 
in a vacuum.

Compared to the chapter on Bulgaria (where Muslims constitute a minority too), 
Badran displays a certain lack of sensitivity in the chapter on India - both 
towards the Muslims and the majority community who live alongside them. Since 
it was written for a readership largely ignorant of South Asian history, the 
total silence on the 1947 Partition of India, which continues to shape the 
lives of million even today, is a glaring shortcoming for a scholar like 
Badran. It is hoped that in any future writing on Muslims in India, Badran will 
correct this oversight. Yet, the voices highlighted are interesting, 
considering they are not often heard.

Badran would also have done well to be more critical in her analysis of the 
'Islamic feminist' paradigm. She repeatedly tells us how 'spirit of the Quran' 
enshrines gender equality, but does not substantiate this with quotes from the 
Quran. There are only references to some Quranic concepts. Yet, the author 
indicts Islamism and advocates secular laws so that the interests of non-Muslim 
women living in Muslim countries can also be taken on board. Badran's style is 
original, vividly descriptive and gripping. The many typos in the book mar an 
otherwise smooth reading of a text that serves as an excellent guide to women's 
activism in the Muslim world.

('Feminism Beyond East And West' - New Gender Talk and Practice in Global 
Islam; Global Media Publications; Rs.495)   
  August 25, 2007
  By arrangement with WFS  


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