Women and the Revival of an Authentic Muslim Consciousness & 
			Thought
			By Najma Kazi*
			When I was poor she shared her wealth with me. When I was 
			rejected she believed in me. She declared I spoke the truth, when 
			others called me a liar. And through her Allah granted me children, 
			while withholding those of other women. 
			The Prophet Muhammad’s tribute to Khadija bint Khuwalid, his 
			first wife and the first convert to Islam.
			No issue is more calculated to raise everyone's hackles than that 
			of the status of women in Islam. It is an issue most Muslims usually 
			steer clear of, for fear of entering an intractable war zone from 
			which there may be no return. Opponents of Islam on the other hand, 
			seize on this very issue, arguing that an ideology that is 
			detrimental to the wellbeing of 50% of the population has to be 
			apposed. Hence the ‘benevolent’ colonialism in the shape of the new 
			world order that is being thrust upon parts of the Muslim world 
			today, is in part justified on the premise that it will bring 
			liberation to Muslim women. 
			However the graphic images that have emerged of torture and 
			sexual humiliation of Iraqi prisoners in Abu Ghraib prison, by 
			American soldiers, have sent shockwaves of horror and anger 
			throughout the world. In part, this is because we now see women 
			soldiers sexually humiliating male prisoners and appearing to take 
			pleasure in it. Sex and pornography are used as weapons in all wars 
			to undermine the ‘enemy’, but generally it is women who bear the 
			brunt of such abuse. However these pictures focus on men being 
			sexually victimized and terrorize. The shame of sexual humiliation 
			is expressed by the male survivors who speak of how they cannot face 
			their families and the only option for them is to ‘disappear’. 
			The obscenity of these atrocities is compounded by those who 
			suggest that the American women leering on camera at the abuse and 
			humiliation of Iraqi men, are striking a blow for feminism and that 
			such ‘rough justice’ can be interpreted as a protest against the 
			maltreatment of women in Iraqi society. To expect Muslim women to 
			read sisterly solidarity in these barbaric and sadistic acts, 
			represents the height of colonial arrogance. In truth these images 
			represent racial contempt for Arab and Muslim societies. They also 
			do not augur well for our demands for equal rights. As it is, we are 
			often accused of pandering to Western’ values when we make such 
			demands. The sight of ‘liberated’ women appearing to take pleasure 
			in the humiliation of Arab men can only make our quest for justice 
			and equality harder.
			However if justice and equality are inherently Muslim values, as 
			the Qur’an stipulates, and if we the Ummah care about these values, 
			then we must confront and challenge the idea that when any Muslim 
			woman speaks out on issues relating to the status of women in Muslim 
			societies, she is being a traitor. Speaking out does not and should 
			not negate her credentials to comment on any aspect of Islam and 
			neither should she have to face an inquisition of ‘true’ believers 
			who often refuse outright to engage with the issues she raises. It 
			is difficult if not impossible to hold any kind of meaningful 
			dialogue under such circumstances. Few of us are up to the kind of 
			sustained abuse that can arise from such encounters, particularly 
			when no cogent arguments are offered as a rejoinder to our point of 
			view, other than to shower us with accusations of blasphemy or ‘out’ 
			us as ‘apostates’. 
			As members of the Ummah - the global community of Muslims, Islam 
			is our spiritual home and we have no option but to seek it’s 
			guidance and justice, even if at times we feel stunned and paralyzed 
			by the tide of belligerent self-righteousness that seems endemic to 
			so much that passes for debate and discussion, where the only 
			acceptable view is the nauseatingly predictable, time-worn and 
			tedious cliché, parroted, like a mantra, that Islam gave women 
			equality in the 7th Century…. end of story. 
			 
			Sadly it seems that Muslim women today can count on fewer rights 
			than our 7th Century predecessors. The denial of equal rights for 
			women in both the private and the public sphere is a serious setback 
			to Islam because it infringes the central tenet of Islam - 
			justice. The revelation that gave birth to Islam was aimed at 
			establishing justice here on earth. Shari’a, which represents the 
			moral and ethical values of Islam, from which Islamic law can be 
			distilled, is aimed at establishing a just society. 
			But how can Islam be credible as a force for social justice, how 
			can it proclaim itself as egalitarian, when Islamic law has come to 
			enshrine gender injustice, which explicitly denies women real, 
			tangible equality. How do we explain this seeming contradiction at 
			the heart of Islam? Is this a reflection of divine will? Or could it 
			be that masculinist ideology with it’s own interpretive slant has 
			become institutionalized into the very heart of Islam and has found 
			ways to subvert divine will, with it’s core message of justice, 
			equality and compassion? The latter is certainly possible if we 
			consider that over the centuries, distilling Islamic law from the 
			Shari’a has become the exclusive preserve of men, to the point where 
			many now appear to believe that only men, and then only a select 
			group of men – the ulama, have the divine right to interpret our 
			holy texts. Hence the balance that women’s contribution would have 
			given to Islamic law was never achieved.
			And most of our ulamas it seems are not prepared to give up this 
			monopoly in order to redress this imbalance, even in the interest of 
			justice. Instead they insist that Ijtihad must remain a closed 
			avenue, as ‘no one is any longer qualified’ to do it. But we know 
			that Ijtihad was abandoned in the 10th century by human (male) edict 
			and not by divine will. And whilst those who today challenge the 
			male hierarchy that dispenses Islamic law are often accused of 
			challenging divine will, yet the men who discarded Ijtihad with so 
			little concern for the future consequences of their action are not 
			condemned for going a step too far against divine will. So who 
			decides and on what basis do they decide, that Ijtihad must remain 
			forever a no go zone? 
			These questions cut to the heart of another major pillar of Islam 
			– knowledge. “Go in search of knowledge even to China” advised our 
			Prophet Muhammad. We are encouraged to seek knowledge in the pursuit 
			of justice and this is an obligation on Muslim men and on Muslim 
			women. In the early history of Islam it seems there was no dearth of 
			Muslim women scholars and jurists who devoted their lives to the 
			pursuit of knowledge. 
			Some of these women achieved prominence and clearly Muslim men in 
			those days did not feel it beneath their dignity to be instructed by 
			women on matters of religion, for many renowned male jurists were 
			tutored by women. In the 8th century aspiring male scholars beat a 
			path to the doors of well known women jurists such as Amra bint 
			Al-Rahman. Early Muslim history also speaks of women such as Fatima 
			bint Qais who publicly challenged establishment figures such as 
			Khalifa Umar on points of law and held their own.
			Clearly then Islam does not insist on restricting women’s sphere 
			of influence to the private, behind closed doors.
			It is high time that women articulate their aspirations and 
			vision for the revival of an authentic Muslim consciousness that 
			puts justice back on the agenda and at the heart of Islamic thought. 
			Shari’a – the right way and Islamic law which stems from it, 
			undoubtedly contain the mechanism to confer gender equality. But to 
			achieve this not only must women’s experience be taken into account 
			but women must also become pro-active and ask new and daring 
			questions.
			* Najma Kazi – Freelance TV Journalist- London -UK