Author: Miriam Cooke
Publisher: Routledge, New York
& London
Price: £13
Year: 2001
Pages: 175
ISBN: 0-415-92554-1
The normative status of women in Islam
has been the subject of furious debate both among Muslims as well as between
Muslims and others. Almost all that has been written on the subject has,
however, been by men, which has meant that the debate has necessarily been
somewhat one-sided. Patriarchal interpretations of Islamic law have been
taken at face value, and have been assumed to represent the ‘true’ Islamic
position on women’s status. Of late, a growing number of Muslim women have
taken to writing about themselves and about Islam, seeking to interpret
the faith for themselves. In the process, new understandings of Islam that
remain faithful to the fundamental sources of the religion and at the same
time offer the hope of empowerment to Muslim women are being articulated
in this new genre of writing. It is with these Islamic ‘feminist’ perspectives
and what, in turn, they imply for notions of religious authority that this
book is primarily concerned.
Cooke bases her study on the writings,
particularly novels and autobiographies, of a new generation of Arab Muslim
women, mainly from Syria, Lebanon, Kuwait and Egypt, to present a general
picture of what she calls ‘Islamic feminism’. In contrast to an earlier
generation of Arab women activists, influenced by socialist and secular
thought, she writes, these women consciously choose to identify themselves
as Muslims. This is to be seen in the context of the growing popularity,
since the 1970s, of Islamic movements in many Muslim societies and as a
search for ‘roots’ and religious and cultural ‘authenticity’ more generally.
These women seek to claim their rights within a strictly Islamic paradigm.
This means a re-reading of the corpus of Islamic texts, going straight
to the Qur’an and to the Hadith, by-passing centuries of
the accumulated tradition of Fiqh, much of which is dismissed as
patriarchal aberration that is seen as having no legitimacy in Islam as
such. They insist that since the Qur’an is meant for all believers,
they, too, have a right to read it and interpret it. Cooke writes that
this has crucial implications for the nature of religious authority in
Muslim societies. No longer are the male clergy to be considered to be
the only authoritative interpreters of the faith. Indeed, it is implicitly
argued, they have been complicit, whether consciously or otherwise in distorting
Islam to deny women the wide range of rights that Islam provides them.
The book looks at the diverse ways
in which more gender-positive understandings of the faith are being sought
to be articulated by Muslim women in the Arab world. Thus, some would seek
to advance women’s rights by working within Islamic tradition in a somewhat
instrumentalist fashion, recognizing that to ignore religion in deeply
religious Muslim societies is self-defeating. These include writers such
as the Maghrebi activist-scholars Assia Djebar and Fatima Mernissi, and
the Egyptian novelist Nawal el Saadwi. On the other hand are Muslim women
who are deeply involved in Islamist groups, such as the Egyptian Zaynab
al-Ghazali. These women, Cooke shows, are working for a more visible role
for Muslim women in the public sphere based on a new vision of what it
means to be a Muslim woman today, one who is true to her faith and, at
the same time, capable of playing a role as an active citizen. The question
of the veil and women’s seclusion necessarily assumes central importance
in this regard. Cooke shows how these women challenge notions of complete
seclusion of women, arguing that this is a later development and has no
legitimacy in the Qur’an. Indeed, she shows, the veil might actually
help women by allowing them access to the public sphere in a manner and
to an extent hitherto not possible.
In addition to Muslim women writers
living in the Arab world, Cooke also looks at the role of a new generation
of Arab Muslim women living and working in the United States. She examines
the growing assertiveness of these women, linking up with other marginalized
women to struggle for their rights and for a more gender-sensitive and
socially just America. She also looks at the growing networking between
these women and Muslim women in other parts of the world through the Internet.
She argues that the Internet has radical possibilities for developing new
understandings of Islam and women’s rights, and that it can lead to a further
decentralization of religious authority in Muslim, as indeed in other,
societies, as more people, including women gain new access to the sources
of the faith and can interpret and debate them on their own.
Although the scope of the book, despite
its title, is limited, focusing largely on middle-class women writers in
selected countries, Cooke’s observations would seem to have a broader relevance
for Muslim women elsewhere.
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