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   | Islam's Women ScholarsBy Yoginder Sikand
 
 One indicator of the development of a society is its
 female literacy rate and, related to this, the number
 of its female scholars. On both these fronts, India's
 Muslims are among the lowest of all the communities in
 the country. This unfortunate fact provides a basis
 for negative stereotyping of the community,
 particularly in matters related to inter-gender
 relations. This, however, is ironical, given that
 Islam is one of the few religions to have declared
 education to be a duty binding on all its followers,
 men as well as women. The irony is further heightened
 by the fact that early Islamic history provides
 examples of numerous Muslim women scholars who made
 valuable contributions to the intellectual life of
 their communities.
 
 That little known story is precisely what an Urdu book
 I recently read with avid interest is all about.
 Penned by a Pakistani alim, Maulana Syeed Ghulam
 Mustafa Bukhari Aqeel, the book, titled 'Muslim
 Khawatin Ki Ilmi Khidmat' ('The Intellectual
 Contributions of Muslim Women') contains vignettes
 about scores of early Muslim women scholars, who could
 serve as major sources of inspiration to Muslims,
 including Muslim women, today if only they were more
 widely known, a task that the Maulana takes upon
 himself.
 
 Many of these early Muslim women scholars were experts
 in various Islamic sciences, in contrast to today's
 case where we have few, if any, such female scholars.
 The book refers to Ibn Hajar Asqalani as writing that
 the early centuries of Islam record more than 1500
 female scholars of Hadith, traditions attributed to
 the Prophet Muhammad, including several wives of the
 Prophet and his companions as well as women in
 succeeding generations. Many of these were also
 narrators of Hadith reports. Fatima bint Qais is said
 to have had long debates with the caliph Umar on an
 issue related to fiqh, and, so the book says, the
 majority of the ulema gave preference to her view.
 Similarly, the noted historian Khateeb Baghdadi
 mentions 32 famous female scholars of his times, and
 one of them, Karina Bint Ahmad Maruzia, taught him the
 collection of Hadith by Imam Bukhari. Likewise, the
 noted Muhaddith Imam Zahri described Umra Bint Abdur
 Rahman, a woman brought up by Hazrat Ayesha, as 'an
 unending sea of knowledge'.
 
 Several of these women scholars had male students,
 something quite inconceivable for many Muslims today.
 Thus, Ayesha Bint Sad bin Al-Waqas, a scholar of
 Hadith, had a large number of students, including the
 great Imam Malik. Imam Shafi, so the book tells us,
 would attend the lectures of Hazrat Nafisa,
 grand-daughter of Imam Husain. The Abbasid Caliph
 Malik Marwan would sometimes attend the lectures of a
 woman scholar Sahima Bint Yahya al-Osabia.
 
 Other women wrote books on religious and other
 subjects, many of which, unfortunately, have been now
 lost. Fatima Nishapuri wrote a tafsir or commentary on
 the Quran; Zainab Bint Usman bin Muhammad authored
 several books on fiqh; Razia, sister of al-Hakim of
 Andalusia, wrote extensively on History and Geography;
 Aisha Khas, a noted calligrapher and musician,
 translated several books from Sanskrit and Greek and
 so on. The book also mentions several Indian Muslim
 families from royal families who were accomplished
 authors, mainly in the fields of Sufism, history and
 royal biography.
 
 In this early period of Islamic history, numerous
 women founded madrasas, including some specifically
 for Muslim women. Thus, says the book, the first
 madrasa, as separate from a mosque as a centre for
 education, was founded by a woman, Fatima Bint
 Muhammad al-Fahari, in Morocco in the mid-ninth
 century. The enormous structure of the madrasa could
 accommodate some thirty thousand worshippers praying
 together.
 
 Other notable women founders of madrasas in this
 period included Maryam Bint Yaqub, who established a
 girls' madrasa in Seville, where besides the Islamic
 sciences, subjects like Philosophy, History,
 Geography, Mathematics, Astronomy and various crafts
 were taught; Bint Qazi Shihabuddin al-Tabari, whose
 madrasa catered to orphans; Tazkira Rabai Khatun's
 madrasa in Egypt for poor girls; a school for training
 women in martial arts set up by Geti Ada Begum,
 daughter of Murad Khan, ruler of Zabulistan; and the
 Dar ul-Zubaida, a madrasa built on the spot of the Dar
 ul-Arqam, the place outside Mecca where the Prophet
 would himself teach his followers, built by Talib
 ul-Zaman Habshia, a female slave of the Abbasid Caliph
 Nasirbillah.
 
 These early Muslim women show how Islam, as they and
 the men who supported their endeavours understood it,
 positively facilitated women's scholarship and
 intellectual pursuit. In a context as in India today,
 where the number of female Islamic scholars is
 negligible and even books on Islam and women are still
 written almost wholly by men and are often shaped by
 patriarchal prejudices, these women provide numerous
 lessons that we could well profit from.
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