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   | Article 406 Women and Islam: 
		the real deal By Kourosh Safavi,
 [Kourosh Safavi is a journalism junior and sports 
		senior staff writer for The Daily Aztec-a publication of San Diego State 
		University.] In this day and age, it's saddening to witness people basing knowledge 
		on stereotypes while nobody takes the time to seek the truth for 
		themselves.
 
 Unfortunately, since 9/11, stereotyping, mainly in regard to the issue 
		of terrorism, has targeted Islam. But with the latest developments of 
		the new Iraqi constitution, the public is now scrutinizing women's 
		rights in Islam.
 
 As a Muslim, I have no problem with people criticizing the way Muslim 
		women are treated in the so-called "Islamic States." There's no doubt 
		some of the laws in these countries are oppressive toward women and it's 
		completely understandable for people to think women have fewer rights in 
		these countries. The problem lies in the fact that - out of their 
		ignorance - the majority of people equate these laws with the teachings 
		of Islam.
 
 To view a religion fairly, one must judge it solely on its founder's 
		teachings and the way it was implemented during the founder's time. It's 
		evident throughout history that when teachings are changed and people 
		begin to follow what others say, the original beliefs become corrupt. 
		This misguidance is then mistaken for truth. Examples of this include 
		the fact that Jesus never taught the doctrine of Trinity during his 
		lifetime. It was a doctrine invented by Saint Paul and is now something 
		regarded as the basis of Christianity. Another example is that Buddha 
		explicitly ordered his followers to never create statues or idols of 
		him, yet this is a practice carried out by many modern-day Buddhists.
 
 In this regard, there seems to be a double standard toward Islam. Most 
		of the American public doesn't consider Christianity as a religion 
		against African-Americans because Klu Klux Klan members call themselves 
		Christians. Nor do people believe Christianity is a religion of 
		terrorism after Timothy McVey, a known Christian, committed the 
		horrendous Oklahoma City bombing. Unfortunately, people don't apply this 
		same train of thought to Islam. Because of ignorance, people don't 
		realize the Prophet Muhammad taught his followers to value women and 
		that Muslims are ordered by God in the Quran to do so.
 
 It was Muhammad who emphasized the importance of women when he said, 
		"The best of you are they who behave best to their wives."
 
 A man once asked the Prophet, "O Messenger of God, who is the person who 
		has the greatest right on me with regards to kindness and attention?" He 
		said, "your mother" three times before saying "your father," according 
		to Sahih Al Bukhari Vol. 8, Book 73, No. 2.
 
 It's obvious from these authentic narrations that in Islam, the woman 
		deserves an immense amount of respect and is by no means a second-class 
		citizen. If anything, these narrations indicate women as having a higher 
		status than men. Furthermore, in the 1600s, the Catholic Church debated 
		whether women have souls. A thousand years prior, the Quran revealed 
		pure equality between men and women.
 
 Before the rise of Islam in the Arabian Peninsula, the Arabs considered 
		women subhuman. There was no equality to men in the areas of marriage, 
		inheritance, education, the right to own property and independent legal 
		rights. Women were dehumanized; burying infant females became a common 
		practice. It's safe to say pre-Islamic Arabia was one of the most 
		unequal societies in human history.
 
 Conversely, when Islam became the state religion, it gave women the 
		right to inherit, to freely choose a husband and the right to own 
		property.
 
 In America, people feel as though Muslim women are oppressed because 
		they wear the hijab, a garment, which covers the head and body. 
		But nuns, who are covered from head to toe, are admired for their piety.
 
 Americans brag about U.S. freedoms and how they are unmatched by any 
		nation, but the idea of male/female equality is relatively new. The 
		truth is, the most oppressed women in the world are the ones living 
		here. Americans treat women merely as sexual objects of men's desire. 
		From an early age, young girls are taught it's OK to reveal their body 
		because it's socially acceptable. For women, the concept of being 
		accepted for good character has been completely washed away by societal 
		"values" our country has developed. I find it interesting that so many 
		feel as though Islam is a religion that oppresses the rights of women 
		when Islam is the fastest growing religion in America and the world, and 
		the majority of American converts are women.
 
 Next time the media or those around you tell you something about women's 
		rights in Islam, do yourself a favor and seek the truth yourself. Who 
		knows, you could be enlightened.
 
 
 Courtesy: The Daily Aztec  a Publication  of San Diego State University. 
		- Opinion
 Issue: 10/6/05
 
			 
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