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   | Can A Woman Be A 
		Leader of Muslims?-Part 2 By Fatima Mernissi (The writer is 
		Professor of Sociology at the University of Rabat, Morocco and the 
		author of Beyond the Veil and Women in Muslim Paradise).
 Nothing bans me, as a Muslim woman, from making a double investigation - 
		historical and methodological of a Hadith.
 
 
 What did Prophet Muhammad (Pbuh) say about civil war? How is the Muslim 
		to behave in such a case? How, among the various pretenders to the 
		caliphate, is the best qualified one to be chosen? Should one accept an 
		unjust caliph if he can guarantee peace, should one fight him even if it 
		throws society into civil war?
 
 
 The science of establishing the Hadith collection consists not in 
		putting the content of the Hadith at the disposal of readers, but also 
		in furnishing them with information about the informants. The principle 
		of the isnad (transmission chain) thus makes it necessary to give the 
		biography of the person. The believing reader has the right to have all 
		the pertinent information about the source of the Hadith and the chain 
		of its transmitters, so that he or she can continually judge whether 
		they are worthy of credence or not. Islam was, at least during its first 
		centuries, the religion of reasoning, responsible individuals capable of 
		telling what was true from what was false as long as they were well 
		equipped to do so, as long as they possessed the tools of knowledge - 
		specifically, the collections of Hadith. The fact that, over the course 
		of centuries, we have seen believers who criticise and judge, replaced 
		by muzzled, censored, obedient, and grateful Muslims, in no way detracts 
		from this fundamental dimension of Islam.
 
 
 Hazrath Ali (RA) was chosen caliph in June AD 656 in a Madinah that was 
		in a state of total disarray. Many Muslims took up arms because they 
		challenged his selection. ‘A’isha (RA) took command of them, and with an 
		army of insurgents, she went forth to fight Ali at Basra a year later at 
		the famous Battle of the Camel. Ali inflicted a brushing defeat on her, 
		and it was after this battle that the Hadith declaring defeat for those 
		who let themselves be led by a woman was pronounced.
 
 
 According to Al-Bukhari, it is supposed to have been Abu Bakr (RA) who 
		heard the Prophet (Pbuh) say: “Those who entrust their affairs to a 
		woman will never know prosperity.” Since this Hadith is included in the 
		Sahih - those thousands of authentic Hadith accepted by the meticulous 
		Al-Bukhari - it is a priori considered true and therefore unassailable 
		without proof to the contrary, since we are here in scientific terrain. 
		So nothing bans me, as a Muslim woman, from making a double 
		investigation - historical and methodological - of this Hadith and its 
		author, and especially of the conditions in which it was first put to 
		use. Who uttered this Hadith, where, when, why, and to whom?
 
 
 Abu Bakr (RA) - (not to be mistaken for Abu Bakr, the first Caliph) was 
		a Companion who had known the Prophet (Pbuh) during his lifetime and who 
		spent enough time in his company to be able to report the Hadith that he 
		is supposed to have spoken. According to him, the Prophet pronounced 
		this Hadith when he learned that the Persians had named a woman to rule 
		them: “When Kisra died, the Prophet, intrigued by the news, asked: ‘And 
		who has replaced him in command?’ The answer was: ‘They have entrusted 
		power to his daughter.’” It was at that moment, according to Abu Bakr, 
		that the Prophet is supposed to have made the observation about women.
 
 
 In AD 628, at the time of those interminable wars between the Romans and 
		the Persians, Heraclius, the Roman emperor, had invaded the Persian 
		realm, occupied Ctesiphon, which was situated very near the Sassanid 
		capital, and Khusraw Pavis, the Persian king, had been assassinated. 
		Perhaps it was this event that Abu Bakr alluded to. Actually, after the 
		death of the son of Khusraw, there was a period of instability between 
		AD 629 and 632, and various claimants to the throne of the Sassanid 
		empire emerged, including two women. Could this be the incident that led 
		the Prophet to pronounce the Hadith against women? Al-Bukhari does not 
		go that far; he just reports the words of Abu Bakr- that is, the content 
		of the Hadith itself- and the reference to a woman having taken power 
		among the Persians. To find out more about Abu Bakr, we must turn to the 
		huge work of Ibn Hajar al-’Asqalani. In the 17 volumes of the Fath al-bari, 
		al-’Asqalani does a line-by-line commentary on Al-Bukhari.
 
 (To be continued)
 
 
 
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