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		Muslim Women Scholars Must Bloom Again
		By Dr. Mohammad Omar Farooq
 [The author is an associate professor 
		of economics and finance at Upper Iowa University. Homepage: http://www.globalwebpost.com/farooqm; 
		email:farooqm@globalwebpost.com.]  Ever since becoming conscious about Islam on one hand and the 
		contemporary social reality on the other, I have often been disturbed by 
		realizing that, in many aspects, there is a huge gap between what Islam 
		stands for and what the social reality is. A vital area where this gap 
		is so pronounced is gender issues. After tying the knot with my beloved 
		wife and then joining the parents club through two most wonderful 
		daughters, I was compelled to take a much closer look at gender issues. 
 I have remained keen over the years to learn more about these issues. 
		However, I have been increasingly dissatisfied as I continued to 
		discover directly from the Qur'an, Qur'anic literature, Hadith, Seerah 
		and history that what we are generally adhering to, and traditionally 
		defending and promoting in regard to gender issues stands in sharp 
		contrast to the Qur'anic and Prophetic vision as well as the heritage.
 
 There is a general notion among the religious establishment of Islam, 
		and derived there from, among the common Muslims, that Islam recognizes 
		superiority of men over women. Even in Sayyid Abul Ala Maudoodi's 
		well-known and highly respected Urdu commentary, Tafhimul Qur'an, verse 
		4 of Surah an-Nisa erroneously got translated into English as following: 
		"Men are superior to women ... not in the sense that they are above them 
		in honor and excellence..." [Tr. by Ch. Muhammad Akbar, Islamic 
		Publications, Lahore, 1997 ed.; Vol. 1, p. 121; note: a more recent 
		translation from Islamic Foundation, UK has a different rendering]. Even 
		though some qualifier and clarifier have been added in the preceding 
		rendering, the very expression, "men are superior to women" - in 
		whatever sense it may be - is questionable, because if honor and 
		excellence are excluded from the scope of "superiority," what exactly is 
		the meaning and basis of superiority or excellence then?
 
 Indeed, completely discounting birth-related distinctions, he commented 
		on verse 13 of Surah al-Hujurat: "... In that (Islamic) society there is 
		no distinction based on color, race, language, or nationality. ..." One 
		should be impressed by Maulana Maudoodi's articulation as to the 
		sweeping implication of the verse that destroyed the foundation of any 
		other concept of superiority/excellence. However, is it not proper to 
		include gender in that list, too? Once again, unless we are willing to 
		accept the implication that this Qur'anic declaration (49:13) - Verily 
		the most honored of you in the sight of God is (the person who is) the 
		most God-conscious. - applies to males only, it is only Islamic that 
		Maulana Maudoodi's comment should have read, inclusive of gender, as 
		following: "... In that society there is no distinction based on color, 
		race, language, nationality or gender. ..."
 
 Muslims routinely take the position that Islam does not recognize any 
		unfair distinction based on color, race, language, or nationality. 
		Unfortunately, however, even in this age of gender consciousness, we are 
		failing to uphold and present Islam in consonance with the full scope of 
		the Qur'anic vision and the Prophetic heritage.
 
 Not too long ago, a friend of mine from Los Angeles, California 
		(teaching at a university there) called me and among other things, 
		lamented the fact that his otherwise devoted Muslim family is finding a 
		difficult time to have rooms assigned for them in Masjid with 
		appropriate or adequate ventilation. Might a little bit of natural light 
		and wind be hazardous to our women's as well as our spiritual health and 
		well-being?
 
 There are many Muslim countries where women going out for their regular 
		needs find little or no facility for women to wash and pray. Several 
		years ago I participated in the Shura (consultative) committee of one of 
		the Islamic Centers in USA. By the vote of the community, the elected 
		chairman of the Shura was joined by his wife (also elected as a member) 
		in the Shura as well. At the very first meeting, one of the brothers - 
		who must have felt that the presence of the sister, even with her 
		husband present, was a violation of Islam - to protect his own piety and 
		lodge his silent but otherwise conspicuous protest, stood up and left.
 
 Several years ago, I visited a Masjid in one of the Midwestern states in 
		USA, where I found the facilities for washing for men was not that good 
		but survivable. However, due to neglect or poor maintenance, whatever 
		might be, my young daughter, going around by herself into the women's 
		section, later on, came out crying at what she experienced there. A 
		non-Muslim woman in one of the places of America was refused the 
		taxi-service by a Muslim driver because she had a dog with him. It did 
		not matter that she was blind. The brother, feeling duty bound (?), 
		offered a prodigious lecture to this blind, non-Muslim lady. Although 
		there are many examples to the contrary, there are some disturbing 
		patterns that Muslims themselves should be confronting and scrutinizing 
		in a self-critical and proactive manner.
 
 The literacy rate is already poor in the Muslim countries and the rate 
		for women is disproportionately lower. Let us not talk about the poor 
		women in various countries who are without any protection and whose 
		life, honor and property are anybody's game. Women were robbed of their 
		professional and out-of-the home positions under strict public code in 
		Taliban's "Islamic" Republic of Afghanistan. In contrast, Muslim women 
		in Iran are doing relatively a lot better, but the top-tier religious 
		hierarchy is still a drag on the society's overall progress. In the 
		heartland of Islam with Makkah and Madina, controlled by a 
		externally-installed dynasty and dominated by Wahhabism, women don't 
		have the right to drive. It is so ironic and outrageous, because the 
		sacred city of Makkah was founded through the valiant and exemplary 
		struggle and sacrifice of a lone woman, Hajera, the wife of Ibrahim and 
		the mother of Ismail (a). Yet, now a woman does not have the right to 
		drive by herself.
 
 More seriously, quite often we hear about women being meted out capital 
		punishment for illicit sexual relations. Usually, women bear the brunt 
		of the orthodox Shariah codes, even though we all know that even when 
		raped, women, for a multitude of reasons, can't be so easily expected to 
		step up and claim to have been raped. In many countries, women are 
		routinely deprived of their property and inheritance. As personal and 
		family matters, women rarely can secure their rights even from their 
		relatives. In many Muslim countries, women are routinely subjected to 
		physical violence, often lethally, which is condoned or tolerated by the 
		broader society as personal or family matter. Vulnerable women are 
		routinely married to be added to a husband's collection and also 
		divorced at random as it pleases the husbands. The existing laws, 
		values, customs and power structures - in combination - make and keep 
		women weak, vulnerable, marginalized, and even oppressed.
 
 Of course, women are completely absent from the pertinent discourse to 
		shape and reshape the Islamic laws and codes. Islamic movements in 
		various parts of the world are chanting about the progress they have 
		made in promoting the cause of the women in accordance with Islam and 
		vainly arguing how Islam is rightfully superior in dealing with women's 
		rights. As they are still groping with the issues whether women should 
		veil themselves (i.e., use niqab, face-covering), they have no problem 
		with men playing games, such as soccer, with albeit "longer" shorts! In 
		some Muslim countries, leading Islamic parties still stubbornly insist 
		that women must cover their face as well. They might be super-lenient in 
		regard to interpreting Islam in matters of political expediency, but 
		regarding women's issues they have to be most extremely conservative. 
		Many such organizations are also promoting separate women's educational 
		institutions as well as separate women's organizations for Islamic 
		causes. At the same time, Islamic parties in many Muslim countries 
		remain at bay without broad support, especially from women, while they 
		have to contend with challenges from many home-grown, viciously 
		anti-Islamic feminists. Indeed, a whole new generation of men and women 
		is growing up with the entrenched impression - and even conviction - 
		that Islam is seriously biased in terms of gender issues. These are 
		Islamic MOVEments that seem rather unable to MOVE in a contemporary 
		context.
 
 I should clarify that my arguments and opinions herein are to be 
		applicable within the context of Islam. For example, when I am referring 
		to the insistence by Jamaat-e-Islami in Bangladesh on veiling of women, 
		it is because I consider this veiling (face-covering) Islamically 
		unwarranted and the insistence unacceptable. Such position is based on 
		extreme conservatism, especially when it comes to gender issues. Let me 
		raise some further questions now. Are men really superior to women 
		according to Islam? Why don't we have women Islamic scholars, experts, 
		and Mujtahids (jurisprudents)? To solve the problems of women, do we 
		need, or is it Islamic, to have separate Islamic 
		schools/colleges/mosques? Is it alright for women to give lectures to a 
		mixed gathering of Muslim men and women? How about doing so at Islamic 
		Centers/mosques?
 
 I hope that I have not already rung too many alarm bells. Based on my 
		study of the Qur'an, Hadith, Seerah and history, I have concluded quite 
		a while ago that what we are promoting, both by saying and doing, today 
		are mostly opposite to what Islam teaches. Then, several years ago it 
		was by chance I came across a book Struggling to Surrender by a new 
		American Muslim, Dr. Jeffrey Lang. The book was captivating. But apart 
		from its richness in terms of the experience he frankly shared and 
		thoughts he provoked, it was an important eye-opening experience for me 
		in regard to gender issues. We are generally aware that Muslim women, 
		such as Hadhrat Aishah, Fatima, Khadija (r), and others, have played 
		distinguished role during and immediately after the Prophet (s). In that 
		book, there were some brief references to a forgotten, but very 
		distinctive role Muslim women have played in Islamic history.
 
 My interest was deeply aroused. I followed up by reading the original 
		reference, Hadith Literature: Its Origin, Development, Special Features 
		& Criticism by Dr. Muhammad Zubayr Siddiqi, a late scholar from Calcutta 
		University [Cambridge: The Islamic Texts Society, 1993]. This book had a 
		chapter titled "Women Scholars of Hadith," [pp. 117-123] which was an 
		eye-opener for me.
 
 For the first time I realized one of the most basic defects in our 
		contemporary Muslim attitude and thinking in regard to gender issues. We 
		all know that beyond the few towering women personalities in the 
		earliest part of the Prophetic era, we can hardly name any woman 
		scholar. It is well-known that in our contemporary century, Islamic 
		scholars, Imams, experts, as well as leaders of Islamic movements, have 
		not been educated by men and women. Going back further, even noted 
		scholars such as Shah Waliullah Dehlavi and Shaikh Ahmad of Sarhind, 
		popularly known as Mujaddid Alf Sani did not (correct me, if I am wrong) 
		have any woman among their educators. It was simply not possible, 
		because "women scholars" of Islam - teaching men and women, in public 
		context, where many of them were, overall the best of the best of their 
		time, not just among women - have become an extinct species.
 What am I saying? Learning of Islam by men from men AND women? Tell 
		me, isn't it true that the founder of Tabligh Jamaat (Maulana Muhammad 
		Ilyas), founder of Ikhwan al-Muslimoon ( Shaikh Hasan al-Banna), Saudi 
		Arabia's late chief Mufti Shaikh Ibn Bazz, or even the founder of 
		Jamaate Islami (Sayyid Abul Ala Maudoodi) did not have among their 
		educators any contemporary women scholar? How many of us have ever heard 
		or known that there were times spanning many centuries when top male 
		Islamic scholars sometimes used to recommend their mixed groups of 
		students, men and women, to learn a particular text such as Sahih al-Bukhari 
		or Sahih Muslim from none other than some specific woman scholar? If we 
		have not, the attitude of these generations of Muslims, including their 
		leaders, scholars, mentors, vis-a-vis women, can be better understood. 
 The role of women scholars of hadith is unique in the human history, 
		prior to our modern times. There is simply no parallel to this special 
		and valuable role played by women scholars in the development, 
		preservation and dissemination of Islamic knowledge. In the words of Dr. 
		Zubayr Siddiqi, "History records few scholarly enterprises, at least 
		before modern times, in which women have played an important and active 
		role side by side with men. The science of hadith forms an outstanding 
		exception in this respect. ... Islam produced a large number of 
		outstanding female scholars, on whose testimony and sound judgment much 
		of the edifice of Islam depends. ... Since Islam's earliest days, women 
		had been taking a prominent part in the preservation and cultivation of 
		hadith, and this function continued down the centuries. At every period 
		in Muslim history, there lived numerous eminent women-Traditionists, 
		treated by their brethren with reverence and respect." [p. 117]
 
 Muslims are generally familiar with a handful of female luminaries from 
		the time of the Prophet. However, what they are generally unfamiliar 
		with is a large number of women scholars over many centuries after the 
		first generation. This is an unforgivable lapse for the Ummah.
 
 Just to mention a few, hopefully, would spark our interest in learning 
		about this neglected dimension of our remarkable history. Do we know 
		that Umm al-Darda (d. 81/700) was regarded by some of her contemporary 
		leading male Traditionists as "superior to all the other Traditionists 
		of the period, including the celebrated masters of hadith like al-Hasan 
		al-Basri and Ibn Sirin." 'Amra was specially recognized for her 
		authority on traditions related by A'isha and among her many notable 
		students was Abu Bakr ibn Hazm, the celebrated judge of Medina, who was 
		ordered by none other than the caliph Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz himself to 
		write down all the traditions known on her authority. [p. 118]
 
 Zaynab bint Sulayman (d. 142/759) "gained a reputation as one of the 
		most distinguished women Traditionists of the time, and counted many 
		important men among her pupils." [p. 118] Almost without any exception, 
		the compilers of major collections of hadith also lists a good number of 
		women Traditionists and scholars as their teachers. "A survey of the 
		texts reveals that all the important compilers of traditions from the 
		earliest period received many of them from women shuyukh: every major 
		collection gives the names of many women as the immediate authorities of 
		the author. And when these works had been compiled, the women 
		traditionists themselves mastered them, and delivered lectures to large 
		classes of pupils, to whom they would issue their own ijazas." [pp. 
		118-119]
 
 It is so unfortunate and ironic that now this hadith literature in 
		particular is used to suppress and deny the role, rights and status of 
		women and confine them to the corners of our households. During the 
		fourth century, there were women scholars, whose classes were always 
		attended by many other scholars of great repute. Karima al-Marwaziyya 
		(d. 463/1070), is one of those names that we should proudly know and 
		remember, "who was considered the best authority on the Sahih of 
		al-Bukhari in her own time. Abu Dharr of Herat, one of the leading 
		scholars of the period, attached such great importance to her authority 
		that he advised his students to study the Sahih under no one else, 
		because of the quality of her scholarship." Among her students were 
		al-Khatib al-Baghdadi, a noted Islamic scholar and historian. [p. 119]
 
 Fatima bint Muhammad (d.539/1144) received from her contemporary hadith 
		specialists "the proud title of Musnida Isfahan (the great hadith 
		authority of Isfahan)." Shuhda 'the Writer' (d.574/1178) "was a famous 
		calligrapher and a traditionists of great repute ... Her lectures on 
		Sahih al-Bukhari and other hadith collections were attended by large 
		crowds of students; and on account of her great reputation, some people 
		even falsely claimed to have been her disciples. [p. 119]
 
 Sitt al-Wuzara became well-known as an authority on Bukhari. Her 
		acclaimed mastery included Islamic law as well. Crowned as 'the musnida 
		of her time', she delivered public lectures on the Sahih and other works 
		in Damascus and Egypt. [p. 120]
 
 In fourteenth century, Zaynab bint Ahmad (d.740/1339) used to deliver 
		public lectures the Musnad of Abu Hanifa, the Shamail of al-Tirmidhi, 
		and the Sharh Ma'ani al-Athar of al-Tahawi. Do we remember the great 
		traveler Ibn Battuta? He studied hadith with her and various other women 
		during his stay at Damascus. [p. 120]
 
 Learning was by both men and women. So was teaching, and the environment 
		definitely was not a segregated one, where the learning as well as 
		teaching took place. There were hardly any notable men during those 
		centuries who did not receive teaching from women scholars as well. 
		Furthermore, it was not just one or a few isolated cases. But there were 
		a large number of women whose contribution to the field of learning and 
		teaching remains an honored tradition that we may have altogether 
		forgotten and neglected. Worse; many of us become vehemently opposed to 
		it.
 
 The famous historian of Damascus, Ibn Asakir, studied under more than 
		1,200 men and 80 women. He obtained the special ijaza of Zaynab bint Abd 
		al-Rahman for the Muwatta of Imam Malik. The famous Qur'anic commentator 
		Jalal al-Din al-Suyuti studied the Risala of Imam Shafii with Hajar bint 
		Muhammad. Zaynab bint al-Sha'ri (d.524/615-1129/1218) studied hadith 
		under several important traditionists, and in turn taught many students 
		- "some of who gained great repute - including Ibn Khallikan, author of 
		the well-known biographical dictionary Wafayat al-Ayan." [pp. 120-121]
 
 Further account of the women scholars' contribution can be found in the 
		works of Ibn Hajar, the author of the most important commentary on Sahih 
		al-Bukhari. In one of his works, he provides short biographical accounts 
		of no less than about 170 prominent women of the eighth century. Most of 
		them were hadith scholars and under many of whom the author himself had 
		studied. According to him, some of these women were acknowledged as the 
		best traditionists of the period. For example, Juwayriya bint Ahmad, 
		studied a range of works on traditions, under scholars both male and 
		female. She then taught at the great colleges of the time, and then 
		offered famous lectures on various Islamic disciplines, which used to 
		attract an audience of high reputes. Some of Ibn Hajar's own teachers 
		and many of his contemporaries attended her discourses. Another teacher 
		of him was A'isha bin Abd al-Hadi (723-816). She was regarded as the 
		finest traditionist of her time. Students from diverse backgrounds used 
		to travel long distances "in order to sit at her feet and study the 
		truths of religion." [p. 121]
 
 In a book al-Daw al-Lami, biographical dictionary of eminent persons of 
		the ninth century, Muhammad ibn Abd al-Rahman al-Sakhawi 
		(830-897/1427-1489) provides information about the great women scholars 
		of that period. In another book, Mu'jam al-Shuyukh, Abd al-Aziz ibn Umar 
		ibn Fahd (812-871/1409-1466), provides biographical notes about "1,100 
		of the author's teachers, including over 130 women scholars under whom 
		he had studied." Many of these women scholars were of the highest repute 
		and trained many of the great scholars of the following generation. [p. 
		121]
 
 There were women scholars whose field of expertise went far beyond 
		hadith. "Umm Hani Maryam (778-871/1376-1466), for instance, learnt the 
		Qur'an by heart when still a child, acquired all the Islamic sciences 
		then being taught, including theology, law, history, and grammar, and 
		then traveled to pursue hadith with the best traditionists of her time 
		in Cairo and Mecca. ... She pursued an intensive program of learning in 
		the great college of Cairo, giving ijazas to many scholars, Ibn Fahd 
		himself studied several technical works on hadith under her." [pp. 
		121-122]
 
 A'isha bin Ibrahim (760/1358-842/1438) studied traditions in Damascus 
		and Cairo, and "delivered lectures which eminent scholars of the day 
		spared no efforts to attend." [p. 122]
 
 For various reasons that should be subject of a serious study, the 
		"involvement of women in hadith scholarships, and in the Islamic 
		disciplines generally, seems to have declined considerably from the 
		tenth century of the hijra." [p. 122] There are several other 
		biographical dictionaries that list names of women scholars of the 
		subsequent period, but in vastly reduced numbers. Yet, as part of an 
		endangered group, there were women who continued their valuable 
		contribution. Asma bint Kamal al-Din (d.904/1498) wielded great public 
		influence. She delivered public lectures on hadith, and trained women in 
		various Islamic sciences. A'isha bint Muhammad (d.906/1500) taught 
		hadith to many students. She was a professor at the Salihiyya College in 
		Damascus. [p. 122]
 
 The last known woman traditionist of the first rank, Fatima 
		al-Fudayliya, also known as al-Shaykha al-Fudayliya, settled at Mecca. 
		She founded a rich public library there. "In the Holy City she was 
		attended by many eminent traditionists, who attended her lectures and 
		received certificates from her." [p. 123]
 
 History records that these women scholars "took their seats as students 
		as well as teachers in pubic educational institutions, side by side with 
		their brothers in faith. The colophons of many manuscripts show them 
		both as students attending large general classes, and also as teachers, 
		delivering regular courses of lectures." These were NOT gender-wise 
		segregated institutions either. "[O]n folio 250, we discover that a 
		famous woman traditionist, Umm Abd Allah, delivered a course of five 
		lectures on the book to a mixed class of more than fifty students, at 
		Damascus in the year 837/1433." [p. 123]
 
 Although one can't draw a superficial connection between the decline of 
		the Islamic civilization and the gradual disappearance of the women 
		scholarship and participation, the reality is that our collective 
		foundation of knowledge and heritage is based on the proud and noble 
		contribution of scholarship of both men and women, as students and 
		teachers, side by side, and there must have been substantive consequence 
		from this loss of women scholarship.
 
 The conditions of the Muslim world in general, and that of Muslim women 
		in particular, stand in sharp contrast with the Islamic vision and 
		heritage that continued through many centuries after the Prophet. Today, 
		Muslim women are rarely welcome in the public life and especially in the 
		mosque, let alone being part of our pool of educators, experts and 
		mentors. This has created serious disenchantment among the women in the 
		Muslim world, and turned some of them into bitter opponent to religion 
		in general and Islam in particular. The existing conditions are a clear 
		perversion of Islamic teachings and guidance. The absence of women 
		scholars has also caused a great imbalance in our Islamic discourse in 
		general and Islamic law (fiqh) in particular, by leaning toward the most 
		extremely restrictive positions, opinions and provisions for the women.
 
 In our contemporary time, there are Muslim women, particularly educated 
		in the West or in the western tradition, who are establishing themselves 
		as scholars of Islam. This is a very encouraging development. They are 
		making critical contributions toward a new legacy of quality 
		scholarship, especially in the field of gender issues. However, their 
		emergence is not internal to Islam, and the broader Muslim society is 
		yet to embrace them as part of the religious establishment, toward which 
		they turn for religious scholarship. Of course, the religious 
		establishment continues its orthodox resistance against such development 
		of women scholarship and participation to protect their traditional 
		turf.
 
 In order to adequately empower women from the Islamic perspective, women 
		need to equally and fully participate in our society, beginning with 
		education and scholarship. The principle of Shura (mutual consultation) 
		requires that those whose lives are affected by various 
		decisions/opinions of Islamic laws and dictates ought to be full 
		participants in the pertinent discourse. Women need to take interest in 
		and men come forward to facilitate women's development in the field of 
		education and scholarship. Muslim men need to demand such changes, as 
		our Islamic pursuit for positive change can't be either complete or 
		balanced without women being our full and equal partners. We need to 
		cherish an environment where Muslim men, side by side with women, can 
		engage in Islamic education and discourse, as students as well as 
		teachers. We need women in all fields of Islamic and other studies, 
		where men must excel in a competitive environment. We need to take this 
		pursuit seriously, until we have qualified Islamic jurisprudents 
		(Mujtahids) and scholars among women, side by side with men, whose joint 
		input would reshape our Islamic discourse and laws.
 
 This does require no less than a revolutionary change, but it is an 
		Islamic must. It is like turning Islam in our lives downside up, because 
		Islam as we understand and practice it has been turned upside down. 
		Muslims need to coalesce together to revive this glorious tradition of 
		women's scholarship. Without them, our society would be fundamentally 
		deficient and imbalanced, which will be reflected in all walks of our 
		lives. That is why we again need women scholars back: THEY MUST BLOOM 
		AGAIN.
 
 Courtesy: Monthly 
		Message International [August-September 2003]
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