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   | Article 418Muslim women in scienceBy Corey Elizabeth HabbasMs. Habbas is a freelance writer from St. Paul, 
		Minnesota, USA, Westerners are comfortable with stereotypes 
		that Muslim women are oppressed because of Islam The fact is that the United States falls behind 
		six Muslim countries in the percentage of women graduating in science to 
		the total science graduate population.....
 There is an ingrained value in every Muslim, man and woman alike, to 
		pursue knowledge and to learn about God’s truth by studying the 
		surrounding world. Prophet Mohammad , advised his followers to seek 
		knowledge wherever it can be found. In keeping with this value, Muslim 
		women are continuing to make headway in the field of science and their 
		graduation ratios often exceed those of western women in pursuing 
		scientific degrees according to figures recently released by UNESCO.
 
 Yet, very seldom do positive depictions of Muslim women get portrayed by 
		the western mainstream media. In some cases, media profit depends upon a 
		production team’s ability to feed the myopic fantasies and stereotypes 
		etched in the minds of many non-Muslims.
 
 Westerners are comfortable with stereotypes that Muslim women are 
		oppressed because of Islam, which could not be further from the truth. 
		The Islamic message, which stresses gender equity and rights for women, 
		is often corrupted by competing cultural values that have no basis in 
		Islam scripture.
 
 The quest for knowledge has always applied to women in Islam. God has 
		made no difference between genders in this area. The Prophet once said: 
		“Seeking knowledge is a mandate for every Muslim (male and female).” (Sahih 
		Bukhari)
 
 During the International Congress on Muslim Women in Science Towards a 
		Better Future, King Mohamed VI stressed that “...the integrated 
		development of the principles of Islam and of scientific knowledge must 
		be achieved irrespective of gender”, according to a UNESCO report on the 
		gathering that took place in 2000.
 
 Muslim women in science have become leaders in their fields, receiving 
		awards, earning patents and making contribution that further man’s 
		knowledge of the world, and yet the eyes of western cameras see through 
		these women as if they do not exist.
 
 A tendency to avoid praise for Muslim achievements hides the seldom 
		explored comparisons.
 
 The fact is that the United States falls behind six Muslim countries in 
		the percentage of women graduating in science to the total science 
		graduate population. The countries whose ratio of women science 
		graduates exceeds that of the United States are Bahrain, Brunei 
		Darussalam, Kyrgyzstan, Lebanon, Qatar and Turkey. Morocco exceeds the 
		United States in the ratio of women engineering graduates as a 
		percentage of the science graduate population.
 
 Rehab Eman, a Muslim woman with a Bachelor of Science in Architectural 
		Engineering, and a Masters degree in Islamic Studies on Jerusalem 
		credits Islamic values for what inspired her to pursue knowledge in a 
		scientific field. Instead of holding Eman back, the Muslim men in her 
		life, including her father and brother, encouraged her to work hard for 
		her education.
 
 ”My lecturers were men, my supporters were men, my sponsors were men. 
		They believed in my talents...,” she shares.
 
 Traditionally, Muslim women have not been discouraged in the sciences to 
		the extent that Western women have, which might be why statistics show 
		such high ratios of Muslim women graduates in science fields as a 
		percentage to the total science graduate population. However, in Muslim 
		countries the real hurdles that affect women’s education are the very 
		same hurdles that affect men’s education. These hurdles take the form of 
		poverty, illiteracy, political instability and the policy of foreign 
		powers.
 
 Data that explains the real problem can be found by comparing the total 
		educated populations of countries and regions of the world. A high 
		degree of illi teracy and low levels of secondary school enrollment 
		account for why there are less graduates overall in poorer countries 
		than there are in wealthier regions like North America and Europe. In 
		locales defined by UNESCO in their recent report, gross secondary school 
		enrollment ratios are very low: Africa (below 40%), West Asia (below 
		60%), and East Asia (below 75%).
 
 While some Islamophobic pundits are all too ready to make a correlation 
		between poor education and what type of religion one practices, more 
		accurate relationships can find their foundation in hard figures. 
		National wealth and education forge a tight relationship. According to 
		data from the UIS (UNESCO Institute for Statistics), national wealth is 
		directly related to educational enrollment. Statistics show that the 
		vast majority of medium-high and high income countries have a secondary 
		school enrollment ratio above 90 percent. Poorer countries don’t have 
		the resources needed to make education a priority. Undoubtedly, the next 
		question that gets asked is, “How do countries become poor?” Well, to 
		the dismay of many hostile to the deen, poverty and Islam cannot be 
		correlated any more successfully than illiteracy and Islam.
 
 While there is more than enough scriptural proof that Islam encourages 
		education for both men and women, some fail to realize that when the 
		disease of poverty attacks, it does so in disregard to any cultural or 
		religious boundaries.
 
 Obstacles to Education
 
 Although there are obstacles to education in much of the non-Muslim 
		world today, the Muslim world has endured some of the most hostile 
		attacks in recent decades, which has affected the overall quality and 
		safety for youth trying to obtain education. In war torn Afghanistan and 
		Iraq, schools of all levels have been bombed and shelled by U.S. 
		military forces. Public health is in jeopardy and infrastructure has 
		been damaged and not rebuilt.
 
 When state-sponsored super-power terrorism isn’t being waged on weaker 
		civilian populations, a form of quiet economic warfare is being waged 
		behind a smokescreen of Public Relations razzle-dazzle by organizations 
		like the IMF and World Bank, the culprits responsible, in part, for 
		increasing third-world national debts and hitting other nations’ 
		education systems like a homerun out of Yankee Stadium.
 
 A self-proclaimed Economic Hit-Man, John Perkins, former Chief Economist 
		for Chas. T. Main, confesses in a radio interview with Amy Goodman that 
		his job was to build the American Empire by increasing other countries’ 
		national debt by using any means necessary.
 
 ”This empire, unlike any other in the history of the world, has been 
		built primarily through economic manipulation, through cheating, through 
		fraud, through seducing people into our way of life, through the 
		economic hit men. I was very much a part of that,” says Perkins.
 
 Gender Inequity
 
 Gender inequity does exist, but it is not relegated to Muslim countries. 
		Some disparaging gender gaps in higher education exist where the 
		religion of Islam isn’t even practiced by a majority of the population.
 
 For example, only 44% of people enrolled in higher education in 
		Switzerland are women, Guatemala (43%), Rwanda (37%), Korea (36%), 
		Bhutan (34%), Cambodia (29%) and Liechtenstein (27%).
 
 On the other side of the coin, in Tunisia, a country where 98% of people 
		practice Islam, there were 5% more female students enrolled than males 
		in higher education. Malaysian women made up 55% of the enrolled 
		population in higher education, Lebanon (54%), Jordan and Libya (51%). 
		Bahrain even exceeded the United States in the ratio of women enrolled 
		in higher education by 6%. If education is freedom, then it looks like 
		Muslim women in Bahrain are more liberated than American women.
 
 Rather than Islam threatening a woman’s right to education, governments 
		hostile to Islam often set up roadblocks to prevent Muslim women from 
		obtaining education. Both France and Turkey are guilty of this type of 
		exclusionary persecution, all under the false guise of secularism.
 
 According to Human Rights Watch (HRW), a prestigious nongovernmental 
		organization, these bans exclude thousands of women from institutions of 
		higher learning each year. A 2004 HRW report states, “This restriction 
		of women’s choice of dress is discriminatory and violates their right to 
		education, their right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion, 
		and their right to privacy.”
 
 Exemplary Muslimah Scientists
 
 Despite the fact that the Muslim woman is constantly being harassed 
		about her choice in religion and must withstand relentless western media 
		stereotypes that ridicule her faith and demonize the men of her culture, 
		there exists an Islamic tradition celebrating women in science of which 
		Muslims must remind the world. Today, the Islamic culture in which women 
		are encouraged to participate, excel and lead in scientific fields 
		continues to express itself, not only through statistical data, but in 
		real, living, breathing and praying people. Although these women are 
		exceptional, they are by no means the exception to the rule.
 
 Professor Samira Ibrahim Islam
 
 Professor Islam was nominated as a distinguished Scientist of the World 
		For the Year 2000 by UNESCO. She made significant contributions in drug 
		safety by defining the Saudi profile for drug metabolism. She has held 
		several academic leadership posts in her own country as well as 
		international diplomatic posts with the World Health Organization. 
		Professor Islam has also been a key figure in building academic 
		infrastructure, beginning in the ‘70s, to support women studying science 
		in higher education in Saudi Arabia.
 
 Sameena Shah
 
 Recently at the international Workshop on Machine Learning in Canada, 
		Samira Shah, presented an innovative algorithm in computerized cognitive 
		leaning that she and a team of colleagues developed at IIT Delhi, India. 
		Her previous academic contributions include a “Global Optimizer” for 
		which a patent is pending. She is currently pursuing a doctorate degree 
		from IIT Delhi.
 
 Professor Dr. Bina Shaheen Siddiqui
 
 Dr. Siddiqui has made significant contributions to medicine and 
		agriculture through her study and classification of indigenous plant 
		materials. She has been awarded several patents for anticancer 
		constituents and biopesticides and has written more than 250 research 
		articles. Pakistan Academy of Sciences elected her as a Fellow and she 
		co-founded the Third World Organization for Women in Science. She 
		received her Ph.D. and D.Sc. from the University of Karachi, Pakistan. 
		She has been honored with several prestigious awards including the 
		Khwarizmi International Award of Iran and Salam Prize in Chemistry.
 
 Historic records show that women participated in science and medicine in 
		Muslim societies. By contrast, in America, during the 1890’s women could 
		not be doctors, and yet, Muslim women doctors were seen as equals to 
		their male counterparts hundred’s of years earlier, they were even 
		responsible for written contributions in the field. Also, women like 
		Ijliya, an astrolabe builder, were employed as skilled scientists in 
		Muslim courts. Others made progress in pharmacology like Ishi Nili
 
 Seeking knowledge is one of the most rewarding ways to connect to Al-Alim 
		(The All Knowing) besides prayer. The believing faithful hold a deep 
		love for Allah in their hearts. Perhaps it is this deep love that 
		inspires believing men and women to strain and reach with their minds, 
		through scientific learning in order to bring themselves closer to the 
		One to whom they are so thankful.
 
 ”Iqra!” (read) was Allah’s first command to Mohammad (peace be upon him) 
		and its implications are numerous to Muslims living today. Read, be 
		literate, seek and learn, discover and use the gifts and talents that 
		Allah has granted us above animals.
 
 Use the mind to move closer to Al-Haadi (The Guide), as the Muslimah 
		scientists have done in the past and are doing today.
 
 Women graduates in science and engineering
 
 The data for years 2002/2003 contained in these tables describes the 
		percentage of women graduates in science and engineering out of the 
		total science and engineering graduate population in each country, and 
		pertains to higher-education in science (life sciences, physical 
		sciences, mathematics and statistics, computer sciences) and Engineering 
		(engineering and engineering trades, manufacturing and processing, 
		architecture and building) fields in countries with Muslim majorities 
		for which data was available.
 
 **************************
 (Statistics from the “Global Education Digest” report released from 
		UNESCO Institute for Statistics 2005)
 ************************************
 Bahrain 74%
 
 Bangladesh 24%
 
 Brunei Darussalam 49%
 
 Kyrgyzstan 64%
 
 Lebanon 47%
 
 Qatar 71%
 
 Turkey 44%
 
 Compared with...
 
 U.S. 43%
 
 Japan 25%
 
 Women Graduates in Engineering
 
 Eritrea 4%
 
 Morocco 25%
 
 Compared with...
 
 U.S. 19%
 
 Japan 13%
 
 ************************************************************************Courtesy: 
		News from Bangladesh,     Monday    October 24, 2005
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