Description:
The veil and its meaning in Islam and the Judeo-Christian
tradition, as well as a brief look at the Islamic
stance towards women. Part 1: The concept of veiling
in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.
The Islamic veil or hijab refers to the loose-fitting,
plain and opaque outer garments which cover a Muslim
woman’s body. While basically identical to
the clothing depicted in traditional Christian representations
of Mary (may God praise her and her son), and every
nun who has sought to emulate her since, the hijab
is readily singled out as sign of extremism, the
supposedly inferior status of Muslim women, Those
who see Muslim women as little more than sex objects
are dismayed at the phenomena of educated, professional
or, in any case, ‘free’ Western women
turning to Islam. The claim that female converts
are either brainwashed fanatics blinded by their
veils or suppressed victims frantic to be liberated
is no longer accepted. Although, sensationalist
and often politically-motivated reports of oppressed
Muslim women in some contemporary backward societies
still enforce the negative stereotype. What follows
is a brief look at the status of women in Islam
though comparing the role of the veil in both Islam
and Christianity.
“Whoever
works righteousness, man or woman, and has faith,
verily , to them We will give a new life, good and
pure. And We will bestow on such their reward according
to the best of their actions.” (Quran 16:97)
In
what would form part of a ‘New Testament’,
St. Paul obligated the then common practice of the
veil for all women:
‘And
every woman who prays or prophesies with her head
uncovered dishonors her head - it is just as though
her head were shaved. If a woman does not cover
her head, she should have her hair cut off; and
if it is a disgrace for a woman to have her hair
cut off or shaved off, she should cover her head.
A man ought not to cover his head, since he is the
image and glory of God; but the woman is the glory
of man. For man did not come from woman, but woman
from man; neither was man created for woman, but
woman for man.[1] For this reason, and because of
the angels, woman ought to have a sign of authority
on her head.’ (I Corinthians 11:4-10)
St.
Tertullian (the first man to formulate the Trinity),
in his treatise, On the Veiling of Virgins, even
obliged its use at home: ‘Young women, you
wear your veils out on the streets, so you should
wear them in the church; you wear them when you
are among strangers, then wear them among your brothers.’
So
Islam didn’t invent the veil, it merely endorsed
it. However, while Paul presented the veil as a
sign of man’s authority, Islam clarifies that
it is simply a sign of faith, modesty and chastity
which serves to protect the devout from molestation.
“O
Prophet! Tell your wives and daughters and the believing
women that they should cast their c1oaks over their
bodies (when outdoors) so that they be recognized
as such (decent, chaste believers) and not molested...”
(Quran 33:59)
The
19th century Orientalist, Sir Richard Burton, observed
how:
‘The
women who delight in restrictions which tend to
their honor, accepted it (the veil) willingly and
still affect it, they do not desire a liberty or
rather a license which they have learned to regard
as inconsistent with their time-honored notions
of feminine decorum and delicacy. They would think
very meanly of a husband who permitted them to be
exposed, like hetaerae, to the public gaze.’
In
truth, the Muslim’s veil is but one facet
of her noble status a status due in part to
the tremendous responsibility that is placed upon
her. Simply put, woman is the initial teacher in
the building of a righteous society. This is why
from the most important individual obligations upon
a person is to show gratitude, kindness and good
companionship to their mother. Once, the Prophet
Muhammad, may God praise him, was asked:
“O
Messenger of God! Who from amongst mankind warrants
the best companionship from me? ‘The Prophet
replied: ‘Your mother.’ The man asked:
‘Then who?’ The Prophet said: ‘Your
mother.’ The man asked: ‘Then who?’
The Prophet repeated: ‘Your mother.’
Again, the man asked: ‘Then who?’ The
Prophet finally said: ‘(Then) your father.”
(Saheeh Al-Bukhari, Saheeh Muslim)
While
the mother is given precedence over and above the
father in kindness and good treatment, Islam, like
Christianity, teaches that God designated man to
be the natural head of the household.
“…And
they (women) have rights (over their husbands) similar
(to the rights of their husbands) over them
according to what is equitable. But men have a degree
(of responsibility) over them…” (Quran
2:228)
In
Islam, man’s authority is in proportion to
his socio-economic responsibilities,[2] responsibilities
which reflect the psychological and physiological
differences with which God created the sexes.
“…And
the male is not like the female...” (Quran
3:36)[3]
Marriage
is the means by which both sexes can fulfill their
different but complementary and mutually beneficial
roles.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Footnotes:
[1] Islam teaches that God is not a man, but the
Creator of man (and woman); and He created both
sexes for one noble purpose: “I have not created
jinn (spirits) and humans except that they may worship
and serve Me (alone).” (Quran 51:56)
[2]
Hence, the Muslim man is granted a greater share
of inheritance than the woman. He is legally bound
to provide for and maintain all the females of the
household from his personal wealth while the woman’s
wealth is hers alone to spend, invest or save as
she pleases.
[3]
Dr. Alexis Carrel, the French Noble Laureate, reinforces
this point when he writes: ‘The difference
existing between man and woman do not come from
the particular form of the sexual organs, the presence
of the uterus, from gestation or from the mode of
education. They are of a more fundamental impregnation
of the entire organism ... Ignorance of these fundamental
facts has led promoters of feminism to believe that
both sexes should have the same powers and the same
responsibilities. In reality, woman differs profoundly
from man. Every one of the cells of her body bears
the mark of her sex. The same is true of her organs
and, above all, of her nervous system. Physiological
laws ... cannot be replaced by human wishes. We
are obliged to accept them just as they are. Women
should develop their aptitudes in accordance with
their own nature, without trying to imitate males.’
(Carrel, Man and the Unknown, 1949:91)
The
Veil Unveiled:
The True Status of Women in Islam (part 2 of
3) |
Description:
The veil and its meaning in Islam and the Judeo-Christian
tradition, as well as a brief look at the Islamic
stance towards women. Part 2: Women in relation
to sex, education, and the original sin in Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam.
“And among His signs is that He created
for you mates from among yourselves; that you may
dwell with them in serenity and tranquility. And
He has put love and compassion between your hearts.
Truly in that are signs for those who reflect.”
(Quran 30:21)
‘Islam’s
appeal, wherever it has triumphed, has been in its
simplicity. It requires submission to some basic,
straightforward rules which are easily kept, and
in return it offers that most wonderful and rare
commodity, peace of mind ... its discipline, safety
and certainties have an appeal for girls lost in
the churning seas of permissiveness, whose own families
have been weakened by the crumbling of the two-parent
family, the absence of fathers and the impermanence
of husbands, if there are husbands in the first
place rather than boyfriends and “baby-fathers”.
And in most societies it is the women who sustain
religions in the home and among children.’
(Peter Hitchens, Will Britain Convert to Islam?
Mail on Sunday, 2/11/03)
“…They
(your wives, O men) are a garment for you and you
(men) are a garment for them…” (Quran
2:187)
Sex itself
is not taboo in Islam. On the contrary, lawful sexual
relations are regarded as deeds of charity! Renowned
scholar and former nun, Karen Armstrong, writes:
‘Mohammed
certainly did not think that women were sexually
disgusting. When his wife had her period he used
to make a point of reclining in her lap, of taking
his prayer mat from her hand, saying for the benefit
of his disciples, “Your menstruation is not
in your hand.” He would drink from the same
cup, saying, “Your menstruation is not on
your lips” ... The harsh sexual punishments
meted out to sexual offenders in some Islamic countries
is because sexuality is valued and the ideal has
been debased, not, as in the past in the West, because
sexuality is abhorrent.’ (The Gospel According
to Woman, 1986:2)
The Church’s
traditional justification for man’s authority
is one it inherited from Judaism: the inherent evil
of woman! According to the bible, Satan seduced
Eve to disobey God by eating from a forbidden tree
and Eve, in turn, seduced Adam to eat with her.
When God rebuked Adam for his disobedience, Adam
blamed Eve, and so God condemned her:
“I
(God) will greatly increase your pains in childbearing;
with pain you will bear children. Your desire will
be for your husband and he will rule over you.”
(Genesis 3:16)
It was
this image of Eve as a deceiving temptress that
left a negative legacy for women throughout both
Judaism and Christendom. Paul, himself a once vehemently
anti-Christian Jew, wrote in the bible: ‘A
woman should learn in quietness and full submission.
I don’t permit a woman to teach or to have
authority over a man; she must be silent. For Adam
was formed first, then Eve. And Adam wasn’t
the one deceived; it was the woman who was deceived
and became a sinner, but women shall be saved through
childbearing.’ (I Tim. 2:11-5)[1]
Again,
the Islamic conception of woman is radically different.
The Quran clarifies that Satan was the only deceiver
in the story of the Garden, while Adam and Eve receive
equal blame for their disobedience. There is not
the slightest hint that Eve was the first to eat
the forbidden fruit or that she tempted Adam to
do so. Both Adam and Eve committed a sin, asked
God for His Forgiveness, and He duly bestowed it:
“They
said: ‘Our Lord! We have wronged our own souls
and if You forgive us not and do not bestow upon
us Your Mercy, we shall certainly be lost.”
(Quran 7:22-23)
Linguistically,
the Quranic terms for ‘womb’ and ‘mercy’
are synonymous. This is because, rather than God’s
punishment, childbirth in Islam is seen as one of
His countless blessings. Besides, the notion that
God condemns the innocent is quite blasphemous!
And, while Christianity holds every newborn baby
to be a sinner - the fruits of its mother’s
punishment, Islam teaches that all children are
born innocent and sinless upon the fitra: a natural
monotheistic and righteous disposition. Hence, one
who embraces Islam is said to revert back to their
natural religion. It is only the child’s immoral
upbringing that converts it into a rebellious sinner.
“Whosoever
works evil will not be requited except with its
like; and whosoever works righteousness, whether
male or female, and is a true Believer, such will
enter Paradise, wherein they will have provision
without limit.” (Quran 40:40)
Paul’s
words, earlier, also show how Eve’s sin was
used to justify limiting women’s educational
aspirations. In Islam, however, women are equal
to men in the pursuit of knowledge. The Prophet
said:
“The
seeking of knowledge is compulsory upon every (male
or female) Muslim.” (Ibn Maja)
Furthermore,
the most honored position one can reach in Muslim
society is that of a scholar [Islam has no Priesthood].
The Prophet’s wife, Aa’isha, from whom
leading Companions acquired knowledge, is but one
example of learned women who continue to greatly
influence Islamic society. As were several female
teachers of the celebrated sage, warrior and master
of the Islamic sciences, Ibn Taymiyya (d. 1328).
“…Are
those who know equal to those who know not? It is
only those with understanding who will remember.”
(Quran 39:9)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Footnotes:
[1] The Church’s founding fathers, men who
formulated Christian belief and canonized the Bible,
supported this view: ‘Don’t you know
that you are each an Eve?’ God’s sentence
on this sex of yours lives in this age: the guilt
must of necessity live too. You are the Devil’s
gateway: you are the unsealer of the forbidden tree:
you are the first deserter of the divine law: you
are she who persuaded him whom the devil wasn’t
valiant enough to attack. You destroyed so easily
God’s image, man. (St. Tertullian)
“Woman
is a daughter of falsehood, a sentinel of Hell,
the enemy of peace; through her Adam lost paradise.”
(St. John Damascene)
‘God
created Adam Lord of all living creatures, but Eve
spoiled it all. Women should remain at home, sit
still, keep house and bear children. And if they
(women) grow tired or, even, die (from giving birth),
it does not matter. Let her die from in childbirth;
that’s why they are there.’ (Martin
Luther).
The
Veil Unveiled:
The True Status of Women in Islam (part 3 of
3) |
Description:
The veil and its meaning in Islam and the Judeo-Christian
tradition, as well as a brief look at the Islamic
stance towards women. Part 3: Status of women in
some Muslim countries, why ‘free’ Western
women are turning to Islam, and a brief look at
some of the rights Islam granted to women
Many of the resurgent pre-Islamic cultural practices
that have tragically come to be associated with
Islam, such as forced marriages, female genital
mutilation, bridal (as opposed to groom-paid) dowries,
honor killings and the criminalization of rape victims,
only resurfaced following the disruption caused
by colonialism and the resulting disconnect between
the common Muslims and their sources of knowledge.
It is always the learned scholars of Islam, men
and women, who are the first victims of any imperialist
purge. Nevertheless, in light of the Quran and Sunnah,
the veil of misinformation cloaking the true status
of women in Islam is easily removed. Moreover, Islam
continues to grow faster than any other way of life
with women, accounting for some 75% of all European
and American reverts - ironic, given the widespread
Western prejudice that ‘Islam oppresses women!
‘Westerners
despairing of their own society - rising in crime,
family breakdown, drugs and alcoholism - have come
to admire the discipline and security of Islam.
Many converts are former Christians, disillusioned
by the uncertainty of the church and unhappy with
the concept of the Trinity and the deification of
Jesus.’ (Lucy Berrington, “Why British
women are turning to Islam”, Times, 9/11/93)
These
women have acknowledged the same truth that led
the Christian Negus of Abyssinia to embrace Islam
following a speech in which the Companions informed
him: ‘God’s Messenger forbade us to
speak evil of women.’ (Ibn Hisham)
“Verily,
those who slander chaste women; innocent unsuspecting
believing women: they are cursed in this world and
the next. And for them will be a great torment.”
(Quran 24:23)
Today,
many nuns and devout women of the Orthodox, Catholic,
Near Eastern and African churches still wear the
Christian veil. The Muslim woman too wears her hijab,
declaring her faith in humility and servitude before
God. Only those given divine sanction - her immediate
family and other believing women - may view her
bodily beauty. In effect, she is saying: ‘Judge
me for my faith, not my body - I give you no other
choice.’ When faithfully implemented, as it
was by its earliest adherents, Islam offers women
the freedom, dignity, justice and protection that
have long remained out of their reach. Mankind inherited
from the Prophet a great Islamic tradition when
he said:
‘The
best of you (men) are those who best treat their
women.’
While
Christian women inherited a tradition of misogyny
from both Jewish rabbinism and Greek thought. It
was Western woman’s reaction to this poor
status afforded to her and to her ‘sexploitation’
that led to the rise of the feminist movement.
“The
believing men and women are protectors of one another.
They enjoin the good and forbid the evil; they establish
prayer and give alms (to the needy); and they obey
God and His Messenger. These, God will have mercy
on them. Lo! God is Mighty, Wise.” (Quran
9:71)
Islam
granted women contractual rights, conjugal rights,
the right to inherit, to initiate divorce, to independently
own and control wealth and property, to set up and
run businesses, to earn and receive equal pay, to
retain their maiden names, etc., over 1400 years
ago while the democratic West granted similar rights
only in the last 50 years of the 20th century! In
fact, besides casual abortion, much of what feminists
still fight for had already been sanctioned by Islam.
Not to mention that Western-style emancipation –
essentially women copying men – has not
only imposed impossible demands on the weaker sex,
but has also left womanhood without any intrinsic
value. As for the veiled Muslim celebrating her
womanhood, she is but a reflection of chastity,
humility and dignity, a mirror of her devotion to
and belief in God - factors which liberate, not
subjugate - and for this she can expect a great
reward.
“For
Muslim men and women, for believing men and women,
for devout men and women, for truthful men and women,
for patient men and women, for humble men and women,
for charitable men and women, for fasting men and
women, for men and women who guard their chastity,
and for men and women who engage much in God’s
praise: for them has God prepared forgiveness and
a great reward.” (Quran 33:35)