On the Status of Women
Posted on 05. Oct, 2012 by Lawrence Davidson in US
An Analysis
by Lawrence Davidson
Part I - Taking Progress For Granted
People often take things for granted. Take the concept of progress. My students all assume that progress is continuous. In fact, they think that it is inevitable. Mostly they conceive of progress in terms of technology: smart phones and computers of every sort. However, there is also a sense that there is a steady and inevitable movement toward the realization of social ideals. Whether they are conservatives, liberals or libertarians, they all assume that the kind of world they want to live in is the kind of world that will evolve.
That is also true for the feminists in my classes. They know that they have to fight for gender equality and they are willing to do so. Yet they also assume the betterment of women’s conditions will be continuous and that victory for their cause is inevitable. In terms of their own local communities, they are sure that conditions for women today are better than they were in their grandmothers‘ day, and that conditions will be better still for their own granddaughters. They can’t imagine things going backward.
They may be in for a shock. It is reasonable to conclude that conditions for women, not only in places far away, but right here at home are deteriorating. That they will continue to do so is not inevitable, but it is certainly possible. Let’s take a look at the trends. We will start with the ones manifesting themselves abroad and end with the ones here in the U.S.
Part II - Women’s Progress in the Middle East?
Most of my feminist students see the Middle East as a central battleground for women’s rights. Of course, they define those rights in terms of Western secular culture and ideals and have a hard time suspending that point of view long enough to consider women’s rights from the standpoint of Muslim cultural ideals. Nonetheless, trends in the Middle East do not bode well for women’s status even in terms of Islamic precepts.
1. For instance, last week authorities in Saudi Arabia refused entry to over 1000 Nigerian Muslim women who had arrived for the annual pilgrimage known as the Hajj. The Saudi Ministry of Pilgrimage claimed the women were not accompanied by “male guardians” as required by Saudi law. Actually, the women were accompanied by “male escorts” but the Saudis had segregated the Nigerians, male from female, and then claimed the women were unescorted. When their mistake was pointed out to the Saudi officials they refused to listen. I seriously doubt that Prophet Mohammad would have reacted this way.
Perhaps an American feminist would just dismiss this as Saudi backwardness. After all we are talking about a country that refuses to allow its women to drive cars, which is a ban that cannot easily be drawn from the Quran or Hadith. Perhaps feminists feel that, over time, outside pressure will bring the Saudis around to conform to Western standards of gender relations. Yet it is quite possible that influence could flow the other way.
For instance, in early October it was reported that IKEA, the Swedish furniture company with worldwide sales, purged the company’s Saudi catalogue of pictures of females. They just airbrushed them out. The Swedes generally pride themselves on their equitable gender relations, but obviously some of their business executives are quite willing to accommodate Saudi standards when money is to be made. And, we all know that money, rather than feminist ideals, makes the world go round.
2. Then there is Iran. An American feminist would again dismiss Iran as a backward place when it comes to women’s rights. But, despite the chadors (under which one can often find designer clothes), this is a Western propaganda image that does not tell an accurate story. Upon the creation of the Islamic Republic of Iran in 1979, most women’s rights were expanded. They had open access to the job market and earned the same wages as men for the job they held. They also had open access to the country’s universities including those courses of study usually considered male preserves. Today, women make up more than 60% of those enrolled in institutions of higher learning, and women engineers, scientists, doctors, architects and the like are common. That is progress by any standard, east or west.
Yet, progress is not necessarily continuous. In September 2012 it was reported that thirty six Iranian universities have prohibited women from registering for courses in a range of subjects from chemistry and mathematics to education and business. Apparently, this was a measure demanded by powerful conservative factions who feel that women have become too “active in society” and should “return to the home.” It remains to be seen if this change is long-term.
3. Both Saudi Arabia and Iran are countries with Islamic governments, but within the Middle East the challenge to gender equality is not just a product of a conservative Muslim outlook. Thus we can move on to Israel.
According to a recently released report of the Israel Women’s Network, women have made little or no progress over the last decade. “Discrimination against women in this country is spread across all sectors of society and culture.” Twenty percent of Israeli women live in poverty (it is even worse for children and the elderly). This is so even though Israeli women tend to be better educated than men.
In the last few years the Israeli problem of gender discrimination has been illustrated by the “back of the bus” scandal occurring in Israeli cities. Orthodox Jewish communities in Israel often impose gender segregation and, as those communities expand out from their traditional urban enclaves, they insist that secular Israelis conform to their standards rather than the other way around. Thus, busses running routes that go through both Orthodox and secular communities often try to get women to restrict themselves to the back of the vehicle.
Here is how Mickey Gitzen, the Director of Be Free Israel, an NGO promoting religious pluralism, explains the situation, “It’s a slippery slope. What starts with women boarding the bus in the back because of modesty….can turn Israeli society into a segregated society in which women don’t have a place in public life.” How very Saudi of the Israeli Orthodox!
Part III – Women’s Progress in the U.S.?
That is there and not here in the U.S. Really? Consider the following:
– Conservative Christians make up more than 20% of the voting public in the United States. Their influence runs deep in the Republican party, as can be seen by the statements of many of the recent contenders for the Republican presidential nomination. And, among the lines pushed by this conservative Christian element is an exceedingly patriarchal view of the role of women.
– The American Christian Fundamentalist Pat Robertson runs a TV program called the 700 Club. It has a daily average audience of one million viewers. Here is what Robertson is telling his audience about the role of women: “I know this is painful for the ladies to hear, but if you get married you have accepted the headship of a man, your husband…the husband is the head of the wife and that is the way it is, period.”
– In an Alternet interview with author Kathryn Joyce, who has researched and written on the subject of conservative Christian views of women, she makes the following points:
1. There is a growing movement among conservative Christians that preach that women should be married homemakers, and that each must have “as many children as God will give you.” They see the God-given structure of human society as patriarchy.
2. This point of view has been endorsed by Christian leaders whose long range goal is to so powerfully influence the U.S. government that they will be able to frame patriarchal precepts into law.
3. For these Christian conservatives the major enemy, the “root of the problem,” is feminism and all those who assert a woman’s right to control her own fertility.
Some these sentiments can be found in the present Republican Party national platform. According to Jill Filipovic writing in the Guardian UK, “the entire Republican social platform is structured around the idea of the traditional family where men are in the public sphere as breadwinners and heads of households, and women stay in private, taking care of children and serving as helpmates to their husbands.”
If this Christian conservative sentiment has captured the outlook of one of the nation’s two major political parties, you know it must not stop there. A New York Times report recently asserted that there is widespread social anxiety among American men caused by the confusion of gender roles that has allegedly come with growing gender equality in the U.S. This has brought about a backlash. “The masculine mystique is institutionalized in work structures” and both men and women who try to challenged this are “often penalized.”
Part IV - Conclusion
You might have noticed how the attitudes toward women of Muslim, Christian and Jewish fundamentalists are quite similar. Each has fixated on the feminist drive for greater gender equality as a threat to their patriarchal concept of social life. But, as the New York Times piece suggests, the problem is by no means restricted to those who describe themselves as religious conservatives. It is a society wide, worldwide happening.
In the end, it is much harder to realize social progress rather than technical progress. For the latter, all you have to do is the research necessary to master elements of nature. These elements might take a lot of work to get at, but they do not consciously fight back. To achieve the former, however, you must go up against vested interests that do fight back. That is why progress in society is hardly ever continuous and never inevitable.
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Rehmat
06. Oct, 2012
I'm affraid the writer is ignorant of the status of women among the three Abrahamic religions and Hinduism. Jewish and Christian Bibles call women "Sinners" by birth while Hindu says that females are created to serve the males in their families. Holy Qur'an, contrary to all that, claims that both male and female childs are born in "purity (Islam)" – and it's their parents and society which turned them to Jews, Christians, Hindus or Atheists. They're not created to serve their husbands or father or brothers as slaves – but as equal. According to Prophetic Hadith, cooking for the family is not the job of wife or mother. When she does that – Allah considers it a charity.
What the West see being practiced in the Muslim societies, while living its own self-denial – is cultural oppression of women and sanctioned by Islam. Islam freed women from oppression and slavery over 1400 years ago. Now compare this to Canada where women were considered male family members' property and were not allowed to vote until 1939s. There was not much relief for the American women across the border. Since the establishment of USA, no woman has been elected President or the Vice-president of the country. Four Muslim countries, Pakistan, Turkey, Bangladesh and Indonesia, on the other hand, have elected women as the head of governments during the last three decades.
YES, a woman is not allowed to drive in Saudi Arabia, but she is allowed to run her own business. In New York city and Jerusalem, a woman is also not allowed to drive, sit next to a male in public bus or train – and even walk on the same footpath where men walk.
Read more at the link below:
http://rehmat1.com/2009/12/30/women-in-islam-and-society/?like=1
Abbass (Steve)
06. Oct, 2012
Mr Davidson I understand your reaction to the incident in Saudi Arabia with the NIgerian women. even I as a Muslim convert, but born of the West (I'm an Aussie) was dismayed and initially made a disparaging reference to the Wahhabis and to Saudi Arabia, something not in itself likely to raise an eyebrow with my Shia oriented wife, who is herself a good Muslim girl from Lahore. Her answer straightened me out I can tell you. I think it's best if I just transcribe her response to my criticisim on my facebook page.
ME: "This seems like a gross anti-Islamic thing to do. The worst of Islam is of course the US favorites." — (Meaning Saudi Arabia)
Mrs Abbass: "Well that is important people knew that law then why they came without their chaperones , that is rule women should be with her husband or her father or brother. nothing wrong in this ,this is for their security .
Me: "Thank you darling. It makes me sad to think they are not safe even in Mecca but I understand."
Mrs Abbass: "OHHHHHHHHHH ITS NOT THAT that is a way to teach people obviously they are safe in MECCA and MADINAH but its not mean they start to traveling alone if they would then they can give reason when in Mecca is allowed then why not in every where in the world its understandable thing, Well We should try to obey Allah how He wants us to obey Him, and not how we think we should obey Him."
Mrs Abbass: "in Islam, it is not as if the believing woman needs a mehram only to accompany her for the Hajj or Umrah pilgrimage; it is the command of Allah and His Messenger (saws) that a woman who sincerely believes in Allah and the Last Day should not travel a considerable distance to any destination without a mehram, for her own protection.
Sahih Al-Bukhari Hadith 2.194 Narrated by Abu Huraira
The Prophet (saws) said, "It is not permissible for a woman, who believes in Allah and the Last Day, to travel for (a duration of) one day and night except with a Mahram."
This Command of the prohibition of travel without a mehram is applicable to every travel of the believing woman, the duration of which exceeds a day and a night; but unfortunately, some people today have applied this law only to the travel to the Sacred House, but do not apply it to all the other travels they make."
I think she nailed it in her own inimitable style and there isn't anything I can add. As often happens I am humbled by my sweet wife's knowledge and as an example of what a good Muslim wife can be, she is a shining star.
In the West the situation for women is much more problematic and going backwards for the flip side to all the supposed advanatages they've achieved in the last few decades and this among other examples is why I agree with your main premise, that social progress is not necessarily continuous and may have reached its peak already. My ex wife as a Dane was very much from a cosicety which has supposedly acheived most in terms of "Women's rights" and yet after 20 years I recognised a deep dissastisfaction, and this began with dissatisfaction with being a woman in ther first place. Our grown daughter is the same, and as a modern "emancipated" feminist of the West she is in deep emotional trouble, on antidepressants and was pregnant as a teenager and despite being quite conservative sexually is certainly experienced and yet not happy with any relationship or with herself. Not to mention the excessive alcohol and mindless interractions and activities with equally dysfunctional others. She and my ex consider my good Muslim wife to be somehow oppressed and they feel sorry for her yet they are the ones needing pity. My wife is happy as herself and proud of being a woman. She lives for her role as my wife and the mother of our children and her ambitions centre around that point, even if she has desire to further her ediucation and maybe some career. In the West women don't see husband and home first and foremost and desirable goals, with anything extra a bonus for those who want it, they see these as merely goals among others to be persued in their course.
Theodora
06. Oct, 2012
@Rehmat:
You are wrong in your statement that women are born sinners in Christianity. Maybe this is the case in Protestantism, but Protestantism is a false doctrine brought to Catholic Europe by cryptojews like John Calvin.
In the Catholic Church evil begins indeed with a woman: Eva, but all Good begins also with a woman: Maria. You may know that Catholics pray to Maria with 'Ave' !! Maria. AVE is the contrary of EVA. In REAL Christianity all men – male or female – are born with a free will. It is up to the individual to choose foor Good or evil. It is Ave or Eva.
But Jesus was even forgivefull with the sinner Maria Magdalena at the very moment she became regretfull of her sin. That is the beauty of Christianity.
Rehmat
07. Oct, 2012
@ Theodora – When was the last time you read your New Testament? I'm a graduate of a Catholic Mission and know what I'm talking about. Let me suggest you open both NT and OT and read Genesis 2:4-3:24.
"I will greatly increase your pains in childbearing; with pain you will give birth to children. Your desire will be for your husband and he will rule over you."
The image of Eve as temptress in the Bible has resulted in an extremely negative impact on women throughout the Judaeo-Christian tradition. All women were believed to have inherited from their mother, the Biblical Eve, both her guilt and her guile. Consequently, they were all untrustworthy, morally inferior, and wicked. Menstruation, pregnancy, and childbearing were considered the just punishment for the eternal guilt of the cursed female sex. In order to appreciate how negative the impact of the Biblical Eve was on all her female descendants we have to look at the writings of some of the most important Jews and Christians of all time. Let us start with the Old Testament and look at excerpts from what is called the Wisdom Literature in which we find.
I find no major difference between Catholics, Protestans, Mormons and the rest of 68 Christian denominations. they're all man-made cults and have nothing to do with the true teaching of Jesus (as) son of Saint Maryyam (as).
Anyone, interested to knlw the real Jesus (as), read the link below.
http://rehmat1.com/2009/01/10/searching-for-jesus-as-eh/