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Women's 
Role in Islamic RenaissanceBy Dr. 
Syed Amir
 Bethesda, MD
 In his 
memoir, In the Line of Fire, 
President Musharraf has enumerated the measures his Government has adopted to 
empower Pakistani women. Included among these are greater female representation 
in the Government, reservation of sixty seats for them in the National Assembly 
and a vigorous program to curb the laws and mores that discriminate and promote 
violence against them. Meanwhile, one of the most infamous regulations, the 
Hudood Ordinance, that had generated world-wide outrage, has been modified by 
the National Assembly, making it less odious. These are welcome developments.
Discrimination against women, however, is not confined to Pakistan. The recently 
released Arab Human Development Report crafted by Arab scholars and 
intellectuals and sponsored by the United Nations Development Program focuses on 
the low status of women in the Arab world. Although the data are drawn mainly 
from Arab sources, the findings and conclusions apply equally well to the entire 
Muslim world.
 The 
authors, alluding to the Golden Age of Islamic learning, argue that an Arab 
renaissance cannot be achieved without the rise of women, representing half the 
population, in Arab countries. The latest report is the fourth and final in the 
series, the first of which was launched in 2002. Arab scholars initially 
identified three key areas that have kept their countries backward: the 
acquisition of new knowledge, absence of political freedom, and the suppression 
of women’s rights. The first three documents dealt with the first two topics, 
while the current report concentrates on women’s issues in the Arab/Muslim 
world.
 The lack 
of opportunities for women in the Arab World is endemic and this deficit is 
manifested in a variety of cultural and social realms. While some impressive 
improvements in educational opportunities have been made in the region, about 
half of all women remain illiterate, compared to one-third of men. Even more 
significant, educated women are clustered mostly in social sciences and liberal 
arts, disciplines in which lucrative jobs and career opportunities are scarce. 
Despite overt discrimination and low representation at educational institutions, 
girls do well and account for nearly half of the highest achievers in the 
college education system. Yet, they earn far less than men in the same 
professions with equivalent qualifications, especially in the private sector.
 In 
Jordan, for example, women graduates earn only 71 percent of the salary earned 
by male graduates, and the gap in earnings is even wider at lower level jobs. In 
most Arab countries, women find it much harder to obtain meaningful employment 
than men do even in low paying jobs. The silver lining, however, is that an 
overwhelming majority of Arab public opinion firmly believes that women should 
have the same right to higher education as men.
 The 
deficiency in female representation is perhaps most conspicuous in the political 
arena. Lebanon was the first Arab country to grant women the right to vote and 
contest national elections in 1952. Now, most Arab countries have granted these 
twin rights; even Kuwaiti women, following a struggle lasting nearly forty 
years, were granted these rights in 2005. Nevertheless, no Kuwaiti woman has yet 
been elected to parliament.
 The same 
general trend is evident elsewhere. Despite a quota system in some countries, 
women’s overall share of parliamentary seats in Arab countries is lower than 9 
percent, as compared to some 40 percent in Scandinavian countries. In Yemen, 
there has been only one female parliamentarian elected since 1993, out of a 
total of 301 members. Women rarely occupy powerful political offices, and few 
ever rise to the level of cabinet ministers. Even when they do, they are 
assigned relatively less prestigious portfolios, such as education, health, 
tourism or cultural affairs. Historically, Egypt and Iraq have been relatively 
progressive, as they appointed their first women ministers in 1956 and 1959, 
respectively. The authors recommend institution of some form of parliamentary 
quota system or affirmative action, much like the one currently operating in 
Pakistan, to ensure a minimum female representation in the legislature for a 
limited period.
 The poor 
state of women’s health in some Arab/Muslim countries constitutes another area 
of concern, according to the authors of the report. There is a great variation, 
however, in figures relating to female morbidity and mortality; the variation 
largely correlates with the economic conditions of the countries. For example, 
the two poorest countries, Mauritania and Somalia, record a mortality rate of 
1,000 women per 100,000 childbirths. In contrast, in Qatar, where the level of 
medical care is much superior, only about 7 women die for every 100,000 live 
births. In general, more women than men spend a substantial part of their lives 
suffering with ill health, which is attributed to stresses arising from their 
lower status within the family and consequent lack of preventive care and 
adequate nutrition.
 The Human 
Development Report refutes the widespread notion that Arab women are 
intellectually inferior to men. In fact, whenever afforded the opportunity to 
compete freely; they have proven equal to men, even excelling occasionally in 
subjects such as natural and physical sciences. The Arab authors cite a number 
of cases where Arab/Muslim women luminaries demonstrated exceptional talents in 
various fields of knowledge, including science, medicine, genetics, astronomy, 
literature and fine arts. In one specific case, Dr. Mervat Badawi occupied a 
number of prestigious academic positions at the University of Paris in the 1970s 
-- her brilliant career culminated when she was not yet 30 years old in her 
appointment to the highest position, the director of research, at the National 
Institute of Scientific Research. Arab women writers have frequently generated 
better-quality literature than men writers. A number of myths have evolved over 
the centuries that promote the perception than women are unsuited for military 
duty. However, experience in other countries has shown this notion to be 
patently false. In Iraq and Afghanistan, 155,000 American women have served in 
combat-related duties during the past five years without any major trouble.
 The UN 
report expresses dismay that in the twenty-first century, women continue to be 
the victim of domestic violence, often perpetrated in the name of honor 
killings, and are subjected to horrible practices such as female circumcision. 
The authors note that female domestic servants working in Arab countries are 
physically abused and sexually exploited while the prevailing labor laws offer 
them no protection against these excesses.
 The Arab 
intellectuals emphatically dismiss the accusations made frequently in the 
Western media that the suppression of the women’s rights is deeply imbedded in 
the Islamic faith. They argue that Islam confers equal rights and 
responsibilities on both men and women and its historic mission has been to 
uplift the status of women. Rather, women’s emancipation is thwarted by archaic 
and biased interpretation of religious scriptures by conservative religious 
authorities, unappreciative of the imperatives of modern times, and is 
reinforced by centuries-old tribal and cultural customs that have become 
enshrined in Islamic jurisprudence. This argument draws its major strength from 
the recent experiences in Afghanistan where the Taliban regime, in the name of 
Sharia, nearly pushed the country back to medieval ages.
 The 
report concedes that the situation in not entirely gloomy. Enlightened new 
thinking has brought new rights to women in several Arab/Islamic countries. In 
2000, Egyptian Women won the right to initiate divorce proceedings (Khula), 
travel without the permission of their husbands and claim Egyptian nationality 
for their non-Egyptian husbands. Similarly, some welcome changes in family laws 
have taken effect in other countries, including Tunisia, Morocco and Algeria. 
The Arab scholars end their dissertation on a positive note, proclaiming their 
collective optimism that “the release of Arab women’s captive energies in the 
field of knowledge and creativity would be the freshest sign of spring in the 
blossoming of the Arab world.”
 Source: www.pakistanlink.com |