Gender 37
Gender 37
Gender 37
It is not without reason that women flourished with the coming of the
Prophet of Islam, in an era when slavery and patriarchal tribal societies
were intertwined. Distinction, discrimination and inequality are alien to
the spirit of the Quran and Towhid. The first believer in Islam was a
woman, Khadijeh, the Prophet's wife, who devoted all her wealth and
her entire life to Islam. Her effective support played a prominent role in
the advancement of the religion. The second Muslim was the Prophet's
cousin, Ali ibn Abi Talib, and the third a woman, Fatima bent As'as, a
renowned woman from the Quraish and the mother of Ali. Umar, the
second Muslim ruler after the death of the Prophet, was converted to
Islam by his two sisters. Tradition tells us that when Umar went to see
his two sisters, he found them secretly reading the Quran. The
shocking encounter humbled this famous combatant of Arabia, and
within a few moments, he had converted to Islam.
The first martyr to the cause of Islam was also a woman, Somaya, wife
of Yasser and the mother of Ammar, one of the Prophet's great
disciples. Tortured along with her husband and son by Abu-Jahl, to the
very end Somaya urged them to remain steadfast.
By the sixth year after the Be'that 20, at least 23 of the first 63
Muslims were women. Many were slaves, who endured much torment
and hardship. Of the first ten Muslims, a group which includes Ali and
Abu-Bakr, the first caliph, four were women: Khadijeh, Fatima, and two
freed slaves, Lobaineh and Zonaireh. Both women had been the slaves
of Umar, the second caliph, but were recognized as equals when they
converted to Islam. The fifth Muslim woman, Ghozaiyeh, was a nomad.
Her purity and bravery was an inspiration to other women.
The hijrat (migration)21 by Muslim women marked a major step in the
path towards the liberation of women, at a time when the tribal system
dictated punishments of death or slavery for a wife who left her
husband. The ratio of migrant women to men is also significant. The
first group of Mohajerin, who left Mecca for the Red Sea and Ethiopia
five years after the Be'that (two years after the call to convert became
public), was comprised of 15 Muslims. The names of at least four
women, Leili, Um-Salameh, Sahleh and Roghieh, the Prophet's
daughter, have been recorded in the pages of history.
In a society where being female was itself a source of shame, and girl
children were buried alive by the thousands; a society which
considered woman as property which was inherited, and whose human
dignity was not recognized, the Prophet of Islam performed Bei'at (the
oath of allegiance) with each of his women converts, and insisted on
their participation in the most important decisions that affected the
Muslim society. Then he set about providing for women's civil rights
and formulating a constitution of their human rights.
His teachings abound in expressions of admiration for women, and
exultation of their status. Little girls found peace at his side. Many
times he was criticized by other men for "hugging goats and seating
them at your side," but he replied by referring to Fatima, his daughter,
as a part of his own being, and called her his mother.22 Inspired by the
Word of God, he described her as Kowthar (the fountainhead of
continuity).
Women converts to Islam left their husbands and families in Mecca and
after much torment, migrated to Medina to join Muhammed. They were
with him in all arenas, including on the field of battle, where they
fought alongside the men. The young society of Medina founded by the
Prophet suddenly came face to face with women whose rights were
without precedent. On occasion, the men opposed and resisted these
changes, which included the right to choose one's spouse; the ban on
women's inclusion in a deceased man's inheritance; the ban on
accusing women of improprieties without due process; the right to hold
property, independent of men, and recognition of contracts and
business deals entered into by women independent of their husbands
or male family members; the right to seek recourse against their
husbands and male relatives; the right to travel and migrate; the right
to inheritance; the right to a share of war booty; the right to
guardianship of children; the ban on isolating women and various other
arbitrary forms of divorce; the right to teach, learn, and advocate their
views; the right to vote; freedom of expression; the right to take part in
all social decisions; and finally, and most importantly, the right to
leadership and directorship of the society.
Although some believe that among some early Arab nomadic tribes, a
matriarchal system was dominant, they nevertheless acknowledge that
the ruling system was patriarchal. Human rights and an independent
identity for women were not recognized. The most important short-
term objective of the Prophet was to establish social institutions and a
civil constitution giving women an independent human identity, so that
they would be recognized in the same way that men were, and no
longer defined as slaves, cattle or a man's property.
The Quran says: "... to men is allotted what they earn And to women
whath they earn..."31, that, "It is not lawful for you to take of what you
have given them....,"32 and that, "O believers, it is not lawful for you to
inherit women against their will; neither debar them, that you may go
off with part of wha you have given them..."33 These are examples of
the steps taken to create an independent identity for women. It is
significant that the last verse was revealed in Medina, after the
formation of a civil society. Previously, it had been impossible for the
Prophet to actually implement such bans. What meager property a
woman might have was considered fair game, and no safeguards
protected even her own body. Taken as a whole, the historical evidence
indicates that sexual exploitation dominated the culture of the day,
and prostitution was well established in the economic and social
system. A verse in the Quran delivered the first blow to this status quo:
"But force not your young wives to prostitutions when they desire
chastity."34
In offering an interpretation of verses 151, 152 and 153 of An'am
(Cattle), the book, Ad Dar Al Manshur... , quotes Ebadeh ibn As-Samet,
the renowned disciple of the Prophet, as saying: "The Prophet of God
addressed his selfless disciples who had helped him during the difficult
years in Mecca and the Hijrat, asking them: `Which one of you will
swear allegiance (Bei'at) with me on these three verses.'" The first part
of this passage, on which the Prophet asked for and received a solemn
oath, says: "Come, I will recite you what your Lord has forbidden you:
that you associate not anything with Him and to be good to your
parents, and not to slay your children because of poverty; We will
provide you and them; and that you not approach not any decency
outward or inward, and that you slay not the soul God has made
sacred..."
It is understood that when the Prophet requested a special oath from
his disciples, it meant that the issue was difficult for even his closest
followers to accept and uphold. The children murdered on the pretext
of poverty included daughters. The pretext was also applied to girls
who were thought to bring shame upon the family, or daughters who
might be coveted by someone incompatible with the family's stature.
These were serious matters, and the victims were buried alive.
Historians write that some men prepared a small ditch prior to the birth
of their children, and in the event that the baby was a girl, they put her
in the ditch and poured dirt on her until she died."... and when any of
them is given the good tidings of a girl, his face is darkened and he
chokes inwardly, as he hides him from the people because of the evil of
the good tidings that have been given unto him, whether he shall
preserve it in humiliation, or trample it into the dust..."35
Therefore, the first order of business for the Prophet was the fight to
eradicate this inhuman tradition, ensuring women and girls' right to
life. The issue had not been totally resolved even by the last days of
the Prophet's life, when some Muslims were still complaining about his
practice of putting his female grandchildren, (including Zeinab, born to
Fatima five years before the Prophet's death) on his lap and kissing and
caressing them. Clearly, the society in which he lived could only take
so much, and the Prophet faced serious obstacles in changing the
status quo of women.
A glimpse of the situation of a mature woman at the time is provided
by Abol Fotouh Razi in his book interpreting the Quran. Discussing
verse 23 of the chapter Nisaa, Razi writes: "During the Age of Jaheliat
(ignorance) and early Islam, it was customary when a married man
died, for one of his male heirs to place a piece of cloth on the widow or
on her tent, thereby becoming her owner. The woman would be left on
her own, without any rights or income, until such time as the man
wished to sleep with her. If this was not the case, the man would seek
compensation from the woman for letting her go, or would keep her as
a slave until she died."
Under such circumstances, it is clear that the mere mention of
independent legal rights for women would be met with resistance. The
Prophet, however, realized the equivalent of a bill of women's rights.
His male contemporaries were put off by what they considered his
bizarre practice of taking women so seriously as to accept their
conversion to Islam, let alone the conversions of slave women, a
subject of ridicule by the powerful men of the time. But not only did
the Prophet of God accept women, the Message of God revealed to him
addressed women. Gradually, verses were revealed which spoke of
women's status and rights in the family and society, and finally verses
about the equal status and rights of women and men.
Earlier in this chapter, we saw that after the death of the husband, the
wife or wives were inherited. A deceased man's property was taken
over by his tribe. The little that history has recorded suggests that the
situation of women in Iran and the Byzantine Empire was no better,
with the exception of concubines of the kings and nobility. A woman's
right to inheritance, set down in the Quran, was unprecedented. It
came about in the second half of the third year of the Hijrat, after the
end of the difficult Battle of Ohod. When the verses concerning
inheritance for daughters and women were revealed,39 there was an
uproar and men began to protest. Ibn Abbas, the renowned disciple of
the Prophet, said: "When the verses about inheritance came, a number
of people were upset about them, saying they give the wife one- fourth
and one-eighth, and the daughter half, and the son his share, even
though none of them fight with the enemy and capture war booty." Ibn
Abbas adds: "In the Age of Jaheliat, inheritance was given to the
fighting man only. They would give it to the eldest."
Writing about the events after the Battle of Ohod in his book
Almaghazi, Vaghedi quotes Jaber ibn Abdollah as saying; "We were
talking with the Prophet about the Battle of Ohod and remembering the
Muslims who had been killed, including Sa'd ibn Rabi'. The Prophet told
us to get up and leave. There were 20 of us when we arrived in the
neighborhood where Sa'd ibn Rabi' lived and the Prophet spoke to us
about him and asked God to give him peace. The wife of Sa'd got up
and said `O Prophet, Sa'd was killed in Ohod and his brother came and
took his inheritance. Two of his daughters are left without any wealth.
And you, as the Prophet, know that women are taken as wives on the
basis of their dowries.' The Prophet prayed for them and said, `Nothing
has been revealed on this matter.'" Jaber adds: "When we returned, the
Prophet went to his home. We saw him assume the position [he was
known to take] when the message of revelation would come, and he
was sweating on his forehead. Then he called for Sa'd's wife, and when
she came, he asked her, "Where is your daughters' cousin? Ask him to
come." The Prophet then sent some one to bring Sa'd's brother. When
he arrived, the Prophet told him, `Give two-thirds of your inheritance to
the daughters of Sa'd, and one eighth to your brother's wife. You can
do what you want with the remainder of the inheritance.'"
It is obvious how progressive it was to thus divide wealth among
women and men in a male-dominated society where women had no
economic standing. It should be recalled that this was an era of slavery.
It is also evident that the loyalists to the former system would strongly
oppose such radical reforms. The significance of this recognition of
women's economic independence can hardly be over-stated, in light of
the fact that today, 14 centuries after the advent of Islam, in some
western countries, women are in certain respects still economically and
legally dependent on their husbands, and do not have exclusive rights
to their own property.
Furthermore, the dynamism of Islam's teachings leaves no room for
doubt that hundreds of years after the emergence of the Prophet, Islam
bears a message of comprehensive economic equality between women
and men. It is on the basis of these teachings that the Mojahedin, a
democratic Muslim movement, not only call for equality between
women and men, but believe that for a certain period of time,
affirmative action must be taken to compensate for the economic and
social oppression of women.
The attractions of the new religion had caught the eyes of many in
Mecca, who kept their religion a secret. Others were so enthusiastic
that at their first opportunity, they left Mecca and migrated to Medina.
This threatened the sense of security among the leaders in Mecca, who
were afraid of losing their relatives and especially their slaves. Thus, in
the Hodaibieh peace treaty, in return for their promise not to attack the
Muslims and their allies, they included the provision stipulating that
the Prophet would return to them those who had escaped from Mecca.
The Prophet accepted this condition, but the treaty had just been
signed and the Prophet had not yet returned from Hodaibieh when a
major incident put the whole treaty at risk.
As the Prophet's great disciple, Ibn Abbas, recorded it, Sa'bieh, the
daughter of Hareth Eslemi, had joined with the Muslims. Her husband,
from the Bani Mahzzom tribe, went to the Prophet and citing the
agreement which had just been signed, demanded that his wife be
returned. Giving refuge to this woman was a critical decision for the
Prophet. Verse 10 of the chapter Mumtahana (The Woman Tested)
settled the matter: "O believers, when believing women come to you
as emigrants, test them. God knows very well their belief. Then if you
know them to be believers, return them not to unbelievers. They are
not permitted to unbelievers, nor are unbelievers permitted to them.
Give the unbelievers what they have expended..." To take care of the
matter of the agreement, Muhammed replied: "We have agreed to
return all men, not women." In the agreement it says, "any man who
came to you must be returned." In accordance with the verse, the
woman's dowry was returned to her husband, but she stayed with the
Prophet and was not sent back.
For the next two years after Sa'bieh's migration, when the Meccans
violated the pact and the Muslims conquered Mecca, other women left
Mecca for Medina. They included Omayeh, daughter of Bashar; Um
Kulthum, daughter of Aqabah; and Zeinab, the Prophet's eldest
daughter from Khadijeh. Except for Zeinab, whose husband later joined
the Muslims and converted to Islam, the other Mohajerin women
remarried in Medina.
Migrating despite great dangers, letting go of the old religion and
traditions, leaving husbands and family, and remarrying within the new
set of relations were truly giant strides undertaken by the women
inspired by the message of Islam. It was a unique opportunity to make
great progress toward women's emancipation. For his part, in
accepting them and especially in sanctioning their unilateral divorces
from former husbands, the Prophet took great risks and paid a heavy
price for their liberation.
After the conquest of Mecca, in the eighth year of the Hijrat, the
Prophet of Islam performed the oath of allegiance with all the women
in Mecca. Many women were still enemies of Islam, but Muhammed
nevertheless made a pact with them, the provisions of which are
stated in verse 12 of the chapter Mumtahana: "O Prophet, when
believing women come to thee, swearing fealty to thee upon the terms
that they will not associate with God anything, and will not steal,
neither commit adultery, nor slay their children, nor bring a calumny
they forge between their hands and their feet, nor disobey thee in
aught honourable,..."
According to the prevailing tribal system, Bei'at by the head of the
tribe sufficed, and there was no need for each and every member to
perform the oath of allegiance. Individual pledges by leading figures
had political significance. Therefore, the Bei'at with the women of
Mecca was meant to change these women, who were subordinate to
the system, into independent, emancipated women. Independent of
their husbands, fathers or their tribes, they individually made pledges
and thus accepted responsibility. This opened their path to progress.
The provisions of the pact also attest to the Prophet's attention to the
liberation of these women. The Prophet himself, and not the Muslim
society, were the reciprocal party to this oath. To encourage women to
make commitments and become emancipated, the greatest moral
capital of Islam and the new system, the Prophet himself, had entered
into the fray.
A review of the history of Muhammed's movement leaves no doubt the
Prophet of Islam took the women's issue very seriously, an approach
later emulated by his direct descendants.
Notes
1. The Lion and Sun, the Iranian Resistance's Journal, July 1995, p. 8.
Maryam Rajavi, addressing live via satellite a 15,000-strong audience
of Iranians in Dortmund and milions of Iranians inside the country on
16 June 1995.
2. Ruhollah Moussavi al-Khomeini, Tahrir-ol Vasileh (Instrument of
Writing), a collection of Khomeini's views and fatwas, (Iraq: 1963), vol.
2, p. 494.
3. Ibid., vol. 1, p. 492.
4. Ibid., p. 18.
5. Ibid., vol. 2, pp. 237 - 238
6. Ibid., vol. 1, p. 151.
7. Ibid., vol. 2, p. 316.
8. Ibid., p. 305.
9. Ibid., p. 327.
10. Ibid., pp. 289, 313. 11. Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, interview in
Ettela'at, 7 June 1986.
12. Hashemi Rafsanjani, interview in Kayhan, 26 April 1984.
13. Ibid., 3 May 1984.
14. Abbas Abbasi, parliament deputy, Jomhouri Islami, 8 October
1994.15. Mohammad Yazdi, Head of the Judiciary, Ressalat,
15 December 1986.
16. The Quran, interperted, by Arthur J. Arberry, (Qum: 1962, Centre of
Islamic Studies), Sura LXI, Saff (Ranks), Verse 8, p. 581.
17. Jaheliat is the Arabic word for ignorance, referring to era in the
Arabian Peninsula before the rise of Muhammed in 611 A.D.
18. Ibid., Sura XIIX: Hujurat (Apartments), Verse 13, p. 538.
19. Ibid., Sura LIII: Najm (Star), Vesre 41, p. 552.
20. Be'that is a reference to Muhammed's designation as the Prophet
of Islam in 611 A.D. He was 40 years old at the time.
21. Hijrat is the Arabic word for migration which Muhammed and his
disciples undertook in 624 A.D. from Mecca to Medina after it became
impossible to spread the word of Islam in Mecca and following an
invitation by the Jewish tribes in Medina to the Prophet to set up base
in that city.
22. In Arabic the expression "Umm-e Abiha" (the mother of her father)
reflects the Prophet's respect for his daughter, Fatima and her stature
in the eyes of Muhammed.
23. Yazdi, op. cit.
24. Ibid.
25. Khomeini, op. cit., vol. 2, p. 13.
26. Ibid., p. 447.
27. The views of the Marjas (religious leaders) in Qom in February
1952, Saheefeh Noor (The Book of Light), vol. 1., p. 31.
28. The Quran, op. cit., Sura LVII: Hadid (Iron), Verse 25, p. 567.
29. The mandate of the Prophets is essentially an invitation to the
religion and far beyond leading the society. But the Prophet of Islam
had the mandate to establish an Islamic society.
30. Saqifeh Bani Sa'edeh was a council formed after the Prophet's
death to determine the leadership succeeding him. 31. The Quran, op.
cit., Sura IV: Nisaa (Women), Verse 32, p. 77.
32. Ibid., Sura II: Baqara (Cow), Verse 229, p. 32.
33. Ibid., Sura IV: Nisaa (Women), Verse 23, p. 75.
34. Ibid., Sura XXIV: Noor (Light), Verse 32, p. 356.
35. Ibid., Sura XVI: Nahl (Bee), Verse 58,59, p. 264.
36. Ibid., Sura XI: Ra'ad (Thunder), Verse 11, p. 240.
37. Ibid., Sura IV: Nisaa (Women), Verse 32, p. 77.
38. Ibid., Sura XXIV: Noor (Light), Verse 6-10, pp. 352-353.
39. Ibid., Sura IV: Nisaa (Women), Verse 11, p. 73.
40. Abridged from the Book Al-Maghazi by Muhammed ibn Umar ibn
Vaqedi.