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 Women in Islam: Oppression or Liberation

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هزيم الرعد
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ذكر عدد المساهمات : 275
تاريخ التسجيل : 26/05/2011
العمر : 28

Women in Islam: Oppression or Liberation Empty
مُساهمةموضوع: Women in Islam: Oppression or Liberation   Women in Islam: Oppression or Liberation Icon_minitimeالسبت مايو 28, 2011 3:49 am

For centuries, Muslim women in all corners of the world have been aware
of the liberation that is achieved by adhering to the concept of hijab.
Current world events have once again brought the issue of women’s
liberation in Islam to the forefront of people’s minds.

Can a Woman Who Adheres to Hijab Be Liberated?
Can
a religion that considers morality to be a part of faith clearly define
the equality of men and women and their rights and responsibilities?
The answer is a resounding “yes.” In a day and age when the basic tenets
of Islam are being questioned by Muslim and non-Muslim alike, we must
be cautious when evaluating Islam.

The general picture that is
painted by the media is biased and unsubstantiated. The impression that
some Muslims give to the world is often not a true reflection of the
religion, one that is the completion of all religions. Islam, the
religion for all people in all places and times, which takes the
equality of men and women very seriously. It sees the liberation of
women as essential and considers modesty, good character, and manners to
be the way to achieve such liberation.

Too often, the image of a
covered woman is used to represent what much of the world views as
oppression. Her very existence is described in terms that convey
ignorance and unhappiness. Words like “beaten,” “repressed” and
“oppressed” are bandied about by the Western media in a desperate
attempt to convince the readers that women in Islam have no rights.
Descriptive and intrinsically oppressive terms such as “shrouded” and
“shackled” are used to portray an image of women who have no minds and
who are the slaves or possessions of their husbands and fathers. In the
19th century, T. E. Lawrence described women in Arabia as “death taking a
walk,” and from that time forward, the true status of women in Islam
has been shrouded by misunderstanding. The truth about women and Islam
is far from this melodramatic portrayal.

Over 1,400 years ago,
Islam raised the status of women from a position of oppression to one of
liberation and equality. In an era when women were considered
possessions, Islam restored women to a position of dignity.

In
order to gain a true insight into the real and lasting liberation that
Islam guarantees women, we must first examine the concept of liberation
as viewed by the West. In Western countries where liberation encompasses
unlimited freedom, many women are actually finding themselves living
lives that are unsatisfying and meaningless. In their quest for
liberation, they have abandoned the ideals of morality and stability and
found themselves in marriages and families that bear little resemblance
to real life.

What is liberating about working all day and
coming home at night to the housework? What is liberating about having
babies who, at six weeks old can be deposited in childcare centers to
learn their behavior and morality from strangers? Girls as young as 6
years old have been diagnosed with eating disorders, teenage pregnancy
is rampant, and women who choose to stay at home to raise their families
are viewed as old fashioned or unemployable.

Women in the West
are liberated: liberated to the point that they are no longer free to
choose the life that is natural for them. They are free only to choose
from the selection of consumer goods offered to them by their masters.
The so-called liberated women of the West have become slaves. Slaves to
the economic system, slaves to the fashion and beauty industries, and
slaves to a society that views them as brainless machines, taught to
look desirable, earn money, and shop. Even the career woman who has
managed to push her way through the glass ceiling is a slave to the
consumer society, which requires her to reside in a spacious house, wear
only the latest designer clothes, drive a luxurious car, and educate
her children at the most exclusive and expensive schools.

Is This Liberation?
The
natural inclination of women is to please, comfort, and support their
men: their husbands, fathers, brothers, or sons. The natural inclination
of men is to protect, support, and provide for the women lawfully in
their lives: wives, mothers, sisters, and daughters. Islam, the only
true religion and infallible guide to life, requires that we follow such
natural inclinations. It allows us to abandon ideas that are
intrinsically foreign to human nature and supports us in developing and
sustaining natural family relationships that spread out to form part of
the wider Muslim community.

A Muslim woman knows her place in
society and knows her place in the family infrastructure. Her religion
is her first priority; therefore, her role is clear-cut and defined. A
Muslim woman, far from being oppressed, is a woman who is liberated in
the true sense of the word. She is a slave to no man or to any economic
system; rather, she is the slave of God. Islam clearly defines women’s
rights and responsibilities spiritually, socially, and economically.
Islam’s clear-cut guidelines are empowering; they raise women to a
natural and revered position.

Women in Islam have no need to
protest and demonstrate for equal rights. They have no need to live
their lives aimlessly acquiring possessions and money. With the
perfection of Islam as the natural and only true religion came the
undeniable fact that women and men are equal, partners and protectors of
one another.

{So their Lord accepted from them; Never will I
allow to be lost the work of any of you, be they male or female. You are
of one another; so those who emigrated or were driven out from their
homes, who suffered harm in My cause, and fought and were killed, I will
verily expiate from them their evil deeds and admit them into gardens
under which rivers flow: a reward from God; and with God is the best
rewards.} [Quran 3:195]

{And whoever does righteous good deeds,
male or female, and is a true believer in the Oneness of Allah, such
will enter paradise; and not the least injustice, even to the size of a
speck on the back of a date stone, will be done to them.} [Quran 4:124]

Women
in Islam have the right to own property, to control their own money or
money that they earn, to buy and sell, and to give gifts and charity.
They have formal rights of inheritance. They have the right to an
education; seeking and acquiring knowledge is an obligation on all
Muslims, male or female. Married Muslim women are completely free from
the obligation of supporting and maintaining the family, yet may work if
they wish too.

They are in no way forced into marriage, but have
the right to accept or refuse a proposal as they see fit. Women in
Islam have the right to seek divorce if it becomes necessary, as they
also have the right to save their marriages.

Islam teaches that
the family is the core of society. In Western cultures, the fabric of
society is being torn apart by the breakdown of the family unit. It is
in these crumbling communities that the call for the liberation of women
arises. It seems to be a misguided and feeble attempt to find a path of
security and safety. Such security is available only when the human
being turns back to God and accepts the role for which he or she was
created.

Liberation means freedom, but not the freedom to do as
one pleases. Freedom must never be at the expense of oneself or of the
wider community. When a woman fulfills the role for which she was
created, not only is she liberated but she is empowered.

The
modestly dressed or covered woman you see in the street is liberated.
She is liberated from the shackles that have tied the feet of her
Western counterparts. She is liberated from the economic slavery of the
West, and she is liberated from the necessity of managing a house and
family without the support of her husband or the help of a wider
community. She lives her life based on divine guidelines; her life is
filled with peace, happiness, and strength. She is not afraid of the
world, but rather embraces its tests and trials with patience and
fortitude, secure in the fact that true liberation is only achieved by
full and willing submission to the natural order of the universe.

Oppression
is not defined by a piece of material, but rather by a sickening of the
heart and a weakening of the mind. Oppression grows in a society that
is crumbling because its members have lost sight of the true purpose of
their existence. Liberation arises and takes root in a society that is
just, cohesive, and based on natural order and divine guidelines. Islam
is such a society, and this is what makes a Muslim woman is liberated
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Women in Islam: Oppression or Liberation
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