Refleksi:  Bukankah dikatakakan bahwa agama Islam menghormati wanita dan dunia 
dibawah telapak kaki wanita, jadi mengapa wanita di negeri Islam menuntut 
reform yang lebih besar?


http://www.arabnews.com/?page=7&section=0&article=93624&d=14&m=3&y=2007&pix=opinion.jpg&category=Opinion

Wednesday, 14, March, 2007 (24, Safar, 1428)

      Women in Islamic Countries Call for Greater Reform
      Basma Al-Mutlaq, Arab News
     
        
      AT A MEETING held at London's Chatham House on Feb. 14, Sheikha Mozah 
Al-Mesned, wife of the emir of Qatar, said that there needs to be a major 
reciprocal awakening in order to arrive at a better understanding between Islam 
and the West.

      Sheikha Mozah had been invited by Chatham House, also known as the Royal 
Institute of International Affairs, to speak about the conflict between Islam 
and the West. Her speech was tellingly entitled "From Illusions of Clashes to 
an Awakening of Alliances: Constructing Understanding between Islam and the 
West."

      The Sheikha - who is the consort of the emir of Qatar, chairperson of the 
Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development, president of 
the Supreme Council for Family Affairs and vice chairperson of the Supreme 
Education Council - began her speech by rejecting the "faulty terminology" of 
Islam and the West, and stated her objective to deconstruct the current 
paradigm of the clash of civilizations by emphasizing common goals and an 
awakening of alliances.

      She also underlined the importance of both political and cultural 
solutions to current tensions and warned that in order to build an alternative 
reality there needs to be an engagement in critical thinking.

      Sheikha Mozah highlighted the positive exchanges that existed between 
Muslim and European civilizations in the past, as well as conflicts that took 
place. The challenge for now, she said, is to establish a "global ethic" and to 
confront the problem of political disenchantment, especially among the young. 
She added that the answer lies in educational reform, although education 
without new avenues for political mobilization, is no guarantee for 
nonviolence. She also said that the media was greatly to blame for prioritizing 
violence.

      Credit should be given to Sheikha Mozah for her charismatic presence and 
her enthusiasm in representing her country in a positive light. When asked 
about the situation of women in Qatar, she simply answered by pointing out two 
young women sitting in the front row and said, "These two women are ministers 
in Qatar. I need not say more."

      The emancipation and empowerment of women in Qatar would never have been 
achieved without, firstly, Sheikha Mozah's philanthropic and effective role in 
pushing Qatari women forward, and secondly, Qatari people's readiness for and 
compliance with these changes. The Qatari example is unprecedented in the 
region given the time and scale of such profound changes. Qatar's major 
accomplishment lies primarily in achieving an equilibrium by preserving its 
Islamic identity whilst adopting a progressive policy - a policy that grants 
women equal rights as citizens.

      The success of women in countries like Kuwait, Bahrain, UAE and Qatar 
makes many women in neighboring Saudi Arabia look at their own meager 
achievements, especially in the public arena. Women in Saudi Arabia, who have 
made significant contributions in the areas of business, education and culture, 
still lack recognition and equal remuneration, and struggle for visibility. 
Even in the medical fields, where Saudi women have habitually flourished, women 
are persistently denied positions of power.

      What strikes observers at this point is the idea that if Gulf countries 
share the same religion, values and traditions as Saudi Arabia, why is the 
"women issue" so peculiarly problematic for Saudis?

      As is commonly reported, religion dominates almost every aspect of life 
in Saudi Arabia making it almost impossible for women to question their rights 
for fear of being stigmatized, ostracized and "accused" of being liberal and 
secular (the list goes on). We can, however, question some of the 
misrepresentations of Islam and the prevailing social practices that have 
filtered through society, such as forced marriages, forced divorces, violence 
against women, guardianship (a woman has to be chaperoned by a male relative 
and show a permit signed by her guardian at every port) and biased divorce and 
child custody laws.

      It is crucial to modify social and cultural patterns by means of drawing 
a line between religion and social practices; between an interpretation of 
Islam that is enhancing to women's position in society, and, social practices, 
that are stifling and oppressive. In "Muslim Women's Rights in the Global 
Village; Challenges and Opportunities," Azizah Al-Hibri writes, "Women in most 
Islamic countries strive for more understanding and adherence to Islamic 
principles; they believe that existing laws and practices are not conducive to 
a happy home life or a just society." 

      What women are demanding in the majority of Islamic countries, therefore, 
is a rethinking of their position in society and the proper observation of both 
the rights and obligations of men and women in Islam.

      Violence against women and other related issues in the Kingdom and 
elsewhere have become a global issue in this age of information technology that 
has shrunk our world into a global village and has affected women's rights, by 
bringing change, albeit slowly.

      The rationale of the measured and cautious change taken by most of the 
Islamic countries may be attributed to their fear of neocolonialism. The 
international focus on the "women issue" has been recognized by many Islamic 
countries as a true post-colonial challenge. For how can we have progressive 
change without complying with Western laws exemplified in the Convention on the 
Elimination of Discrimination Against Women and yet preserve our cultural 
identity, which colonialism has consistently sought to annihilate?

      It is vital at this point to scrutinize the milieu of Islamic radicalism 
which has prevailed in the Kingdom during the past few decades, and which has 
created a purely patriarchal society that sees women as a symbol of Islam to be 
secluded and protected from an evil world.

      Boundaries are never established gratuitously and cause an aberration in 
the dynamics of society, as the writer of "Beyond the Veil" observes: "Society 
does not form divisions purely for the pleasure of breaking the social universe 
into compartments. The institutionalized boundaries dividing the parts of 
society express the recognition of power in one part at the expense of the 
other."

      As a nation we tend to think of ourselves in terms of binary opposites: 
Man/woman, good/bad, superior/inferior. In other words, people have been 
seduced into the trap of binary thinking. Labor law in Saudi Arabia, therefore 
- in a reflection of the public mood - has prescribed women's confinement to 
certain spaces and jobs. Article 150 prevents women from working at night and 
Article 149 empowers the minister of labor to declare certain industries 
"hazardous" and thus unsuitable for women. 

      Modest results have been reached by the Labor Ministry - in an attempt to 
negotiate new spaces for women in the country - such as allowing women lawyers 
to work in law firms. Reforms in Saudi Arabia may be taking place, and severe 
strictures on women are easing to some extent, but residues of tenacious 
radicalism still exist.

      The Kingdom must internalize moderation and normalize life for current 
and futures generations by committing its energies, instead, to real and urgent 
reform.

      - Basma A. Al Mutlaq has a Ph.D. in Comparative and Feminist Literature 
in the Middle East from SOAS, London University.
     

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