| 
 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
   | 
		
		Shariah, Fiqh and Women’s Rights – Part 7 
		
		By Professor Nazeer Ahmed
 
		
		(Dr. Nazeer Ahmed, educated at Cornell University and other 
		institutions. He is author of several books and innumerable research 
		papers. He has also been featured as an invited speaker in many 
		countries. Dr. Nazeer Ahmed was a Chief Engineer for the Hubble Space 
		Telescope and several Star War projects.  He was Institute Scholar at 
		Caltech, and Adjunct Professor to University of New Mexico. He has also 
		been Consultant to numerous other institutions of high training and 
		research here and abroad.  He is currently President of WORDE, a 
		non-profit NGO based on Washington, D.C. He is also Executive Director 
		of American Institute of Islamic History and Culture and Consulting Dean 
		to HMS Institute of technology, Bangalore, India) Amina 
		Wadud recently caused a global stir by leading a mixed gathering of men 
		and women in prayer. I heard speeches as far away as a village near 
		Bangalore denouncing this event, and one in Dallas, TX by Professor Ali 
		Mazrui supporting it.
 Neither 
		the event nor the responses deserve much attention. This was a 
		non-event. Were it not for the attention of international media, it 
		would have passed without much ado. As far as this writer is aware, a 
		woman leading a mixed gathering of men and women is not sanctioned by 
		historical precedents, social customs (a’dat), or religious edicts in 
		any of the schools of fiqh. There are far more basic and fundamental 
		issues facing the position of women in modern Islam than that of a woman 
		leading a mixed gathering in prayer. It is like arguing about where to 
		put a traffic light at an intersection when there are no roads leading 
		up to the intersection.
 There are 
		perhaps more articles written, and more sermons given about women’s 
		rights in Islam than perhaps any other subject. And there is no other 
		issue that is used by the detractors of Islam to whip up a dislike for 
		this religion.
 Islam 
		provides an exalted position for women. She is the spiritual co-equal of 
		man and a partner in their common spiritual destiny. Men and women are 
		described in the Qur’an as “garments” of each other, meaning that each 
		is the honor, the embellishment and the beauty of the other. They are 
		intertwined, like two bundles of light, complementing each other, and 
		like an endless spiral, elevate the spiritual station of one with 
		respect to the other.
 But alas! 
		This nobility is not reflected in the world of man. In many parts of the 
		Islamic world, women are denied even their most fundamental human 
		rights. There are entire regions where women cannot get a meaningful 
		education, look for honorable work, drive a car, venture out of their 
		homes without an escort or vote in a democratic election. Illiteracy is 
		rampant. Health care is abysmal, and childcare non-existent. Protection 
		from the legal systems is at the mercy of local customs. Women are 
		beaten, subjected to “honor killings” and are abused for reasons that 
		are unquestioned and unreported. Such human rights violations do not 
		just happen “over there”; there are cases of abuse right here in the 
		United States.
 In this 
		article, we examine briefly the position of women’s rights from a 
		spiritual perspective and offer some insights on how they may be 
		implemented in the modern global context.
 We take 
		as our point of departure the positions taken by two of the intellectual 
		giants of the twentieth century. The Turkish poet Zia and Mohammed Iqbal 
		of Pakistan reiterated the primacy of spirit over the physical and 
		emphasized the construction of a spiritual democracy requiring inputs 
		from all Muslims, not just from a few muftis. In other words, they 
		argued for opening up the process of Ijtihad to all people, the ruler 
		and the ruled, the prince and the pauper, the trader and the civil 
		servant, the alim and the unlettered. Men and women, brothers and 
		sisters, sons and daughters, mothers and fathers, grandmothers and 
		grandfathers must all be participants in the process of applying the 
		Shariah to social issues.
 There are 
		two separate elements in this position. One, the formulation and 
		promulgation of legislative edicts is not just the privilege of a mufti; 
		it is the privilege of all Muslims. Secondly, this process is as much 
		open to women as it is to men. A legislative body, reflecting the will 
		of women and men, would be fully responsive to the rights and 
		responsibilities of both.
 There are 
		historical precedents for supporting both individual and collective 
		ijtihad. During the Caliphate of Omar ibn al Khattab (r), it was Ali (r) 
		who was often called upon to give legal opinions. Even Emir Muawiya, 
		while he was locked in mortal combat with Ali (r), sought the latter’s 
		advice on legal matters. The edicts of Ali (r) provided a foundation for 
		much of Maliki fiqh in later years. The principles of Istehsan (creative 
		juridical opinion based on sound principles) and Qiyas (deduction by 
		analogy by a learned scholar) are allowed in some of the Sunnah schools.
 On the 
		other hand, all four of the Sunnah schools of fiqh use the ijma 
		(collective opinion) of the Companions for their legal standings. The 
		establishment of the Caliphate, the election of Abu Bakr (r) and later 
		of Othman (r) offer concrete historical examples of collective ijma.
 Women 
		have had a profound impact of the development of fiqh from the very 
		inception of Islam. The blessed ladies of the Prophet’s household were a 
		source of a large number of traditions. Both Aisha (r) and Fatima (r) 
		are a source of many ahadith which form the basis for fiqh.
 Thus 
		history supports both individual as well as collective ijtihad. In 
		modern times, with the complexities of a global civilization, it is 
		difficult for a single individual to grasp the interrelationships and 
		subtleties of economic, technological, social, political and ethical 
		implications of an issue. Collective ijtihad of a legislative body 
		offers a more comprehensive methodology for tackling the issues of 
		modern life. In such a legislative body, women must have as much of a 
		say as men, as voters, participants, discussants and decision makers. 
		Full and complete legislative empowerment of women is a first step in 
		the full realization of spiritual democracy in Islam.
 Once a 
		legal position is taken, and a law is enacted by a legislative body, can 
		it be implemented by a woman, acting as a judge? Historical precedence 
		provides an answer in the affirmative. In the year 1236 CE, at the 
		height of the Mongol onslaught, Razia Sultana ruled a vast empire 
		extending across North India, Pakistan and Afghanistan. Upon the death 
		of her father Al Tumash, she wrote to the Abbasid Caliph Al Mustansir in 
		Baghdad for permission to rule in his name. The permission was granted 
		and Razia made the following proclamation in Delhi: “In the time of Imam 
		al Mustansir, Ameer ul Momineen, Malika al Tumash, daughter of Sultan al 
		Tumash, she who increases the glory of Ameer ul Momineen……”. She ruled 
		as the executive and legislative head of the empire (with the advice of 
		a Chief Kazi) for four years until the jealousy of men caught up with 
		her and she was dethroned and slain (1240 CE). Similarly, Shajarat ul 
		Durr ruled as the queen of Egypt from 1251 to 1252 CE. In the 
		seventeenth century, a succession of six queens ruled Acheh in 
		Indonesia.
 Both 
		history and custom support the position that a woman can act as a judge 
		and as a head of state. This has been reaffirmed in modern times with 
		the election of women to the highest executive positions in countries as 
		diverse as Bangladesh,  Indonesia, Pakistan and Turkey. The Arab world 
		is behind on this score, as it has been for centuries. The world 
		traveler Ibn Batuta who toured much of Asia, Africa and Europe during 
		the years 1332-1351 CE records how women enjoyed considerably greater 
		freedoms in non-Arab Anatolia (Turkey), India and sub-Saharan Africa, 
		even in the fourteenth century. There are historical reasons for these 
		differences between the Arab and non-Arab components of the Islamic 
		world. These I have covered in my books Islam in Global History (Amazon.com).
 The 
		Shariah, as implemented in the dynamics of human matrix, requires that 
		the legislative, executive and judiciary space be completely open to 
		women, as much as it is to men. Only when a woman takes responsibility 
		for legislation that affects her, and for its implementation and 
		execution, can she attain fully the exalted spiritual potential that 
		divine compassion has bestowed upon her.
   |