In Recognition of Women
Dr. Khalid Abou El Fadl
WHEN Imam Zuhri, a famous scholar of Sunna
(Prophet Muhammad's traditions), indicated to Qasim ibn Muhammd (a scholar
of the Qur'an), a desire to seek knowledge, Qasim advised him to join the
assembly of a well-known woman jurist of the day, Amara bin Al-Rahman.
Imam Zuhri attended her assembly and later described her as "a
boundless ocean of knowledge." In fact, Amra instructed a number of
famed scholars, such as Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Hazama, and Yahya ibn Said.
Amra was not an anomaly in Islamic history,
for it abounds with famous women narrators of jurisprudence, starting with
Aisha, the Prophet's wife. A conservative count would reveal at least
2,500 extraordinary women jurists, narrators of Hadith, and poets
throughout history.
That was then, but now we encounter hardly
a single Islamic woman jurist. Women are all but absent from Islamic
public and intellectual life. There are remarkable women activists in many
Mosques and there are a few impressive writers, such as Zaynab al-Ghazali.
But these are exceptions. One will rarely find a woman lecturing to
a mixed audience about a gender-neutral topic such as "riba"
(usury), for example. And while it is common to encounter professional
Muslim women in every walk of life, it is very rare to find them on the
boards of Islamic centers, or holding leadership positions.
There are several reasons for this alarming
phenomenon. A particularly disturbing one is the derogatory attitude that
seems to have infected many Muslim men. Very few are willing to be
instructed or taught by women. Muslim men, in North America and elsewhere,
seem to have developed a woman-phobia that consistently aspires to exclude
women from conferences, meetings, gatherings, and even the Mosques.
May God bless Fatimah bint Qais, who
tenaciously argued with Hazrat Umar and Hazrat Aisha over a legal point
and refused to change her opinion. And there was Umm Yaqab, who on hearing
Abdullah ibn Masud explain a legal point, then confidently told him,
"I have read the entire Qur'an but have not found your explanation
anywhere in it."
The fact is, that Islam neither limits
women to the private sphere, nor does it give men supremacy over the
public and private life. One notices that the Greek and Roman cultures
that preceded Islamic civilization did not produce a single eminent woman
philosopher or jurist. Likewise, until the 1700s, Europe failed to produce
a single female social, political, or legal jurist. Islam did exactly the
opposite in every respect, so much so that Hazart Umar bin al-Khitatab
used to entrust Shaffa bint Abdullah as an inspector over the market in
Medina. Moreover, Islamic history is replete with examples of female
professors who tutored famous male jurists.
Yet the sad legacy of our time is that we
have taken women back to the pre-Islamic era by excluding them from public
exposure or involvement. A modern scholar, Muhammad al-Ghazali, once
described this phenomenon as the "ascendency of Bedouin fiqh (jusrisprudence)."
What he meant by this term is that in much of contemporary culture... the
world revolves around men and everything is channeled to their service.
The sunna (traditions) of the Prophet
reveals that he used to assist his wives in household duties.
But most modern scholars have not had the probity to suggest that
the practice of men lending a helping hand in the home is to be
recommended or even required in certain circumstances. Most men are
content to ignore this and selectively emphasize whatever in the sunna
serves only their interests. It is well-known that women like Aisha, Umm
Salamah, Laila bint Qasim, Asma bint Abu Bakr, Khaula bint Umm Darda, and
many others, were trusted with preserving and teaching one fourth of our
religion.
Isn't it time we again trusted women to
contribute to our public and intellectual lives? May the Muslim community
in North America lead the way in producing the first Muslim woman jurist
in more than two centuries. It is certainly long overdue.
[Edited slightly from an article first
published in the July/Aug 1991 issue of THE MINARET and reprinted in
VOICES, vol. 1, no. 2, Dec/Jan 1992, by Professor Khalid Abou El Fadl. Dr.
Abou El Fadl is a law professor at the University of California, Los
Angeles, where he specializes in Islamic Law.] |