http://www.iht.com/articles/2009/02/15/asia/women.php

 
A woman practicing yoga in Kuala Lumpur on Nov. 26. (Zainal Abd Halim/Reuters) 


Islamic women seek recognition of their rights 
By Sabrina Tavernise

Sunday, February 15, 2009 
KUALA LUMPUR: The religious order banning women from dressing like tomboys was 
bad enough. But the fatwa by Malaysia's leading clerics against yoga was the 
last straw.

"They have never even done yoga!" said Zainah Anwar, head of a Malaysian 
women's rights group called Sisters in Islam.

Anwar argues that the edict, issued late last year by Malaysia's National Fatwa 
Council, was pure patriarchy. Islam, she said, was only a cover.

It was frustrations like these that drew several hundred Muslim women to a 
conference in this Muslim-majority country over the weekend. Their mission was 
to come up with ways to demand equal rights for women. And their tools, however 
unlikely, were the tenets of Islam itself.

"Secular feminism has fulfilled its historical role, but it has nothing more to 
give us," said Ziba Mir-Hosseini, an Iranian anthropologist who has been 
helping to formulate some of the arguments. "The challenge we face now is 
theological."

The advocates came from 47 countries to participate in the project, called 
Musawah, the Arabic word for equality. They spent the weekend brainstorming and 
learning the best Islamic arguments to take back to their own societies as 
defense against clerics who insist that women's lives are dictated by men's 
strict interpretations of Islam.

"We are trying to develop a new language, offer it to the world and use it," 
said Marwa Sharafeldin, an activist from Egypt.

Anwar, the main organizer, said her group was almost alone when she started it 
20 years ago, but now it is one of many. "It's a movement whose time has come."

The repression comes not from the Koran, the women argue, but from the human 
interpretation of it, in the form of Islamic law, or Fiqh, which has ossified 
over the centuries while their globalized lives have galloped ahead. So they 
are going back to the original text, arguing that its emphasis on justice makes 
the case for equality.

"Feminist Islamic scholarship is trying to unearth the facts that were there," 
Mir-Hosseini told a room of eager activists Sunday morning. "We can't be afraid 
to look at legal tradition critically."

She referred to the work of Muslim intellectuals, like Nasr Abu Zayd of Egypt 
and Abdolkarim Soroush of Iran, among others, reformers who argue that the 
Koran must be read in historical context, and that laws derived from it - 
stoning for adultery, for example - can change with the times. Both men are in 
exile in the West.

Mir-Hosseini argues that Muslim societies are trapped in a battle between two 
visions of Islam. One, legalistic and absolutist, emphasizes the past. The 
other is pluralistic and more inclined toward democracy. In Iran, reformers 
were gaining ground, she said, but President George W. Bush's war on terror put 
them on the defensive.

"It's really a struggle between two worldviews," she said, adding that time was 
on the side of the women, who call themselves Islamic feminists.

It was the rise of political Islam that brought the women together. As 
Malaysia's progressive family laws began to be rolled back in the late 1980s, 
Anwar and several other women formed a reading group for the Koran.

"There is an understanding that mullahs know best, that you cannot speak," 
Anwar said. "Muslim women's groups are coming out to challenge that authority."

Some scholars argued that the effort sounded unrealistic and would have no 
impact, mainly because it appeared to ignore more than a thousand years of 
Islamic legal scholarship and practice. Religious authorities are the only ones 
with the power to interpret laws, and circumventing that well-entrenched system 
would require replacing it altogether.

"This kind of argument is being made at the margins of the Islamic world," said 
Bernard Haykel, an expert on Islamic law at Princeton University. "It has shape 
and form, but no substantive content. There's no real way of actually bringing 
about these changes."

But others made the case that change, though incremental, was happening at the 
grass roots in a number of Muslim societies. Isobel Coleman, a senior fellow at 
the Council on Foreign Relations who attended the conference, maintains that 
women's movements are making progress, as girls' education increases and the 
Western world is a click away on satellite TV. Women are even taking positions 
in religious institutions, she said: A woman has headed the Shariah College at 
Qatar University.

"It's a slow shift," said Coleman, whose book on the topic, "Paradise Beneath 
Her Feet," will be published by Random House in 2010. "It's just beginning to 
come together as a movement."

There have been some successes. In Morocco, sweeping changes of family in favor 
of women went into effect in 2004. Critics argue that it was only possible 
because the country's king approved it, but Moroccan activists said it never 
would have happened at all if they had not spent years lobbying and formulating 
legal arguments, some of them Islamic.

That has had ripple effects. Elaheh Koolaee, a professor from the University of 
Tehran who formerly served in Iran's Parliament, said that Iranian women had 
been watching the Moroccan example, and that a Muslim success was an invaluable 
tool.

"It's important for us to show positive experiences from within Muslim 
societies that are not from the U.S. or Europe," she said.

For Mir-Hosseini, change is coming. It's just a matter of when.

"There's so much tension and energy there now," she said. "It will be a flood."


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