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They hate women, don't they?
Muslim and secular feminists pity one another. It is time
they realised they have much common ground, argues Arzu Merali*.
"It must be terrible having to wear all that," a friend of mine was told
last December as she attended a meeting to discuss the future of
Afghanistan, particularly its women - "all that" being some baggy clothing
and a headscarf. "Not particularly," she retorted, putting an abrupt end
both to the conversation and to the prospect of building bridges between
Muslim and secular feminists.
My friend is the founder of an NGO dedicated to penal reform. A convert to
Islam, she is as British and as white as the participant who so earnestly
assumed she was a victim of the Taliban and in need of liberation. No doubt
the woman meant well, but no amount of good intentions justifies the way
that she, like many others, berates Islam for embodying all things
anti-women. This misconception predates the Rushdie era - indeed, so
oppressed were we deemed to be in the 80s that even an illicit affair with
Ricky Butcher in EastEnders provided an avenue of liberation.
The Islamic Human Rights Commission receives case after case of employers
and educators using this image of the downtrodden Muslim woman to excuse
discrimination. Muslim women are denied many opportunities on the assumption
that they will - if not on a whim then by force - get married, or have many
children. Or they face the horrendous dilemma of having to choose between
employment and their Islamic garb.
Muslim women have become an absolute symbol of oppression, and distorted
images of them permeate news coverage. While Daisy Cutters began to thunder
down on Afghans last year, journalists from across the political spectrum -
from Boris Johnson in the [conservative] Daily Telegraph to Polly Toynbee in
the [left-wing] Guardian - maintained that it was Islam that oppressed
Afghan women. Beware Muslims, they screamed in their unlikely unanimity.
They hate women, don't they?
As soon as they turn their attentions to Islam, commentators become
missionaries. Muslim women must be saved from a religion that reviles,
objectifies and veils them. Everything is proof of this. Afghan women had to
wear the head-to-toe burka (although it turns out they did not); were not
allowed to work (although they did); and could not vote (nor could men under
Mullah Omar's regime).
Even an Iranian (yes, Iranian) movie has become part of the iconography of
the campaign to rescue the Afghan and, by extension, Islamic woman. Mohsen
Makhmalbaf's Kandahar has been held up as a critique of Islam and its
treatment of women. The fact that it may actually be an appraisal of the
Taliban's prejudices is a subtlety grasped only by a few. It is almost
impossible to find a mainstream critique of the horror of the Taliban that
is not itself an Islamophobic diatribe. Muslims, who could provide such a
critique, are left out of the debate. Their reactions might as well not
exist.
The cartoonish realisation of long-held prejudices in the Taliban's
Afghanistan has given succour to an anti-Islamic clamour that the
experiences of "western" and "Muslim" women are utterly distinct. While
western women are assumed to have, or at least be approaching, equality with
men, Muslim women are simply the victims of terror and oppression. So
unfettered are western women in this scenario that they are what, according
to Johnson, "Islamic terrorists" are really afraid of.
But this language of liberation disguises an exclusionary discourse.
Conversions in the west are increasing and more women than men opt for the
faith. Perhaps, the argument goes, they are not able to see how oppressive
their choice is. Donning the headscarf as a means of negotiating modernity
invites contempt for Muslim women's non-conformity to a single vision of
female emancipation. "No letters please from British women who have taken
the veil and claim it's liberating," Polly Toynbee wrote not so long ago.
"It is their right in a tolerant society to wear anything, including rubber
fetishes." Either insane or masochistic, the motives and beliefs of Muslim
women are voiced by everybody except themselves.
The polarisation and
misrepresentation works both ways, however. Marginalised Muslims have
accused liberal society of objectifying, reviling and unveiling women.
Western society, they charge, is pornographic, voyeuristic and exploitative.
The gender pay gap is shocking. None of this would happen in a truly Islamic
society. Women's financial independence and property rights are absolute in
Islam. No woman is considered a commodity and pornographers would face
punishments.
While the gap between Muslims and the west is widening the most striking
feature of each other's critiques of their treatment of women is the lack of
dissimilarity. Violence, workplace discrimination, educational opportunity
and a desire for basic respect from men are universal issues.
Whether we are western, Muslim, both or neither, we must wake up to the
possibility that what we see as problematic for women is much the same
whoever and wherever we are. Plastered over billboards, or banished from
view, women are subjugated by patriarchy. Demeaning Islam excludes the
voices of Islamic women and that liberates no one.
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• Arzu Merali is director of research for the Islamic Human Rights
Commission.
Source:
http://www.islamfortoday.com/women01.htm |