Our Expectations of the Muslim
Woman
by
Dr. Ali Shariati
Prior to
beginning my lecture, I would like to propose some practical
suggestions. Just speaking about women's rights, women's
personality and Islam's view of women is very different from
realising the actual value which Islam gives to human beings,
and to women in particular. Most often, we are satisfied by
pointing out that Islam gives great value to science or
establishes progressive rights for women. Unfortunately we never
actually use or benefit from this value or these rights. We
could benefit from these if we were to act according to the
understanding which we could acquire of them.
A great many
people are acquainted with Islamic views of society, social
relations, women's rights, children's rights and family rights,
but these same people then actually follow non-Islamic, ancient
cultural traditions and do not dare to base their lives upon
Islamic values. That is, they do not practice what they preach.
Thus we always remain at the stage of talking. We must complete
Islamic views and intellectual discussions with practical
solutions. We must find a way whereby we reach these values and
rights in practice. After proposing my views, the question
should be asked as to how we can actually put them into
practice. Throughout history, the problem of women's rights and
their role has always been considered to be an intellectual
problem. Thus, various religious, philosophical and social
systems have reached varying views in this respect.
From the 18th
through to the 20th century (particularly after World War 2) any
attempt to address the special problem of the social rights of
women and their specific characteristics has been seen as a mere
by-product of a spiritual or psychic shock or the result of a
revolutionary crisis in centers of learning or as a response to
political currents and international movements. Thus,
traditional societies, historical societies, religious
societies, either in the East or in the West (be they tribal,
Bedouin, civilized Muslim or non-Muslim societies, in whatever
social or cultural stage of civilization they may be) have all
been directly or indirectly influenced by these thoughts,
intellectual currents and even new social realities.
Unfortunately
the crisis of the problem of women's liberation which began in
the West and has been strengthened by the ruling superpowers in
the 20th century has influenced all human societies, even closed
traditional and religious societies. There are only a few
cultural, traditional and even religious societies which have
been able to properly stand against this flood. Such societies
have frequently been confronted by a particular kind of
modernism, which they have adopted under the guise of the
liberation of women, either by rejecting old traditions or by
undertaking reckless struggles. None of them have succeeded in
standing against this attack. In such societies the
newly-educated class, the pseudo-intellectuals, who are in the
majority, strongly and vigorously welcome this crisis. They
themselves even act as one of the forces that strengthen this
corrupting and destructive transformation.
In traditional
religious societies, including Islamic communities, neither
group could stand against the attack of the modern view of the
liberation of women as announced by the West. The
pseudo-intellectual and modern class of Islamic and non-Islamic
societies in the East considered a modern style of dress to be
the symbol of modern civilization, progress and awareness. The
old, traditional group passed through and confronted this crisis
with non-scientific and illogical tactics due to their lack of
experience. It is a general law that when there is a fire
resulting from a spill of oil, if someone tries to hurriedly and
unskilfully put the fire out, it only spreads more rapidly and
more vigorously! Thus such unskilled struggles against the West
have frequently been carried on in a manner that has created
complex and differing reactions inside such societies. In this
way they have paved the way for acceptance of Western ideas and
innovations. There are very few societies who have been able to
stand against, to adequately resist, and to show an effective
reaction to the modern West by consciously selecting their own
manner and type of lifestyle.
One of the most
important factors that can assist Eastern societies in
confronting and standing against the intellectual and cultural
attack of the West (as it relates to the view of modern woman)
is to have a rich culture and history full of experiences,
values and ideas. It is important to have progressive human
rights and, in particular, to have perfect and complete human
models in the religious history of those societies and
communities. Fortunately from this point of view (although they
have not been able to consciously stand against the colonial
attack of the West), Islamic societies have cultural power and
possibilities, have a very progressive history, value system and
religion, and are in this way very rich. Thus they can, by
relying on these values and sources, and by reviving and
progressing towards the high humanitarian values existing in
their culture and their past history encourage their new, young
generation to stand and resist the West's attack. The most
effective weapon to confront Western values and the most
important factor for creating a conscious struggle within the
new generation in our Islamic societies against the West's
seduction is to hold up as examples some very noble,
distinguished and characteristic role models, real personalities
from Islamic history. If the lives of such personalities are
known in detail, are described precisely, and they are revived
and introduced properly, scientifically and deliberately, and
are scholastically recognized and presented to our societies,
the young generation will sense that there is no need to accept
the seductions of the West; no need to deteriorate in the guise
of modernism. Rather, they will sense that there are very noble,
elevated symbols in their own history and religion to be
followed and to be considered as models for self-reconstruction.
It must be
taken into consideration that all matters related to women, to
science, to lifestyle, to class relationships, to scholastic
understanding, to one's world view - all have been designed,
described and discussed in Islam. We have only to solve our
present difficulties, to answer the intellectual challenges, and
to reduce our sensual needs. How can we understand our values?
How can we use and obtain actual results from them? Our
essential aim must be to solve the problem of proper
understanding and recognition. The members of the Prophet's
family, in the view of all of the intellectuals of Islamic
countries (who possess a more reverent image of them) have
always been the manifestation of the most elevating and
liberating humanitarian and Islamic values. These values are not
limited to a particular tribe, or even to all Muslims. Thus, all
of the people of the world can easily see and understand these
symbols and examples which have come out of a small house which
is greater than the whole of history. Anyone who believes in the
values and virtues of humanity will admit that the symbolic role
of the members of this family in various aspects and fields is
beyond the historical values of class or tribe. They are,
rather, the highest, meta-historical, meta-tribal values. They
are permanent symbols and role models for humanity. Thus, anyone
who is a human being respects them. Anyone who is aware of the
values of humanity, any committed intellectual in the world,
will admit to the values and virtues which this small house
created in the arena of human history.
Therefore, when
we describe the biography of Fatima, as one of the members of
the Prophet's family, we must learn lessons from her
personality, her role, her social, mental, and political status
and use them to guide our lives in our communities and in our
societies. The problem of proper understanding is the most
important and essential problem of our time. At the present
time, the struggles of committed Muslim intellectuals should be
directed to a proper understanding and recognition of Islam's
history and religion. This proper understanding, including the
proper understanding of Fatima, is the key to our salvation.
After World War
Two, the issue of womens' status was considered to be the most
important and sensitive problem in the West. The war itself was
the main cause for family relationships to be strained and
destroyed. Traditional religious values such as ethics, morals
and spirituality collapsed. Also, due to the war, crime,
cruelty, violence and theft increased. From the intellectual and
ethical point of view, it had very diverse effects, causing
decline in traditional culture in the post-war generation. Its
undistinguished effect, after a quarter of a century since World
War Two, can be seen in the spirit, thought, philosophy and even
the art of the present time. Those who have seen France,
Germany, England, and even the USA (the latter was far from the
actual field of battle), prior to the war and visited those
countries after the war, can clearly see that, although it seems
as if centuries have passed, actually the traditional cultures
collapsed within one generation. Therefore, the overthrow of the
traditional ethical value-system was one of the natural outcomes
of the war, and woman was its standard-bearer.
But it should
be noted that prior to the war, the West had already started a
multi-dimensional fight, from the various philosophical, mental,
social, productive and cultural points of view, with the
Catholic religion, the ruling religion in the Middle Ages, and
thus had unconsciously destroyed all of the traditional ethical,
intellectual and ideal values, as well as the restrictions and
limits which the Church had defended in the name of religion.
One of the values which the Church defended in the name of
religion was women's rights; women's values, both spiritual and
social. This defence co-existed with the decline in anti-female
traditions, bonds and limitations. But after the Renaissance and
the development of the bourgeoisie, the bourgeois revolution,
the bourgeois culture (which is the culture of individual
liberty) defeated the Church, and consequently, with this
victory, the rule of the Church over moral, spiritual,
scholastic and legal values was abolished. Thus, all of the
restrictions and values concerning women which the Church had
defended and supported in the name of religion, succumbed to the
rise of the bourgeoisie and its culture.
Then suddenly
the phenomenon of sexual liberation appeared. Women realized
that under the banner of sexual liberation, all of the inhuman
limits, restrictions, and bonds which restrained them could be
destroyed. Women welcomed this change wholeheartedly to the
extent that sexual liberation entered the arena of science! What
is normally designated as the scientific understanding of
religion is not a pure scientific and scholastic understanding.
It is rather a bourgeois cognition. After the Middle Ages,
Science, which had been in the service of religion and the
Church, was made to serve the contempory ruling bourgeois
system. If nowadays Science appears to oppose religion and moral
values, it is not really Science that opposes these, but it is
the ruling bourgeoisie which does so, just as in the Middle
Ages, it was feudalism which defended aristocratic social-moral
traditions in the name of religion. It was Christianity which
was, in fact, defending feudalism, and now it is Science which,
in fact, defends the bourgeoisie. It is intellectuals - those
who believe that economic and materialistic social foundations
are the basis of all social transformations - who will more
easily accept my argument and logic. Up to the appearance of
Freud (who was one of the agents of the bourgeoisie), it was
through the liberal bourgeois spirit that scientific sexualism
was manifested. It must be taken into consideration that the
bourgeoisie is always an inferior class. Although feudalism was
an inhuman system, it nevertheless relied on an aristocratic
elite and their moral values, even though these moral values led
to a decline. The bourgeois mentality denies all of the
elevated, exalted human values, and believes in nothing except
money.
Therefore, a
scholar or scientist who lives, thinks and studies during the
bourgeois age, measures collective cultural and spiritual values
(the sacrifices of mankind, the martyrdoms, struggles,
literature, art etc.), with only the scale of naked economy,
with production and consumption and with nothing else. One who
studies psychology or anthropology, looking at all the
dimensions and manifestations of the mystic spirit of human
beings, that which religion believes to be the spirit of God and
the manifestation of metaphysical virtues, sees only unsatisfied
sexual appetites. Belief, culture, mental illnesses all are
related to the struggle to release an imprisoned and condemned
sexual complex. The bourgeois social scientist looks at all of
the delicate human sensations and feelings (even a mother
caressing her child, or the worship of the beloved by the lover,
and all other issues) in relation to sex. Freud, a modern
bourgeois, armed himself against all moral and human values,
against all elevated and exalted manifestations of the human
soul, and called it "realism". Freud's realism was not that of
the bourgeoisie, but rather that of the scientist, scholar,
philosopher, psychologist, and anthropologist who serve the
bourgeois class, for all of these bring the human being down to
the level of a sexual and economic animal! Thus, the
bourgeoisie, by alienating all values and virtues, made only one
religion, one school, one temple and one messenger for all the
miserable men of this age; a religion for which all must be
sacrificed. This messenger was named Freud. His religion was
sex. His temple was Freudianism, and the first to be sacrificed
on the threshold of this temple was woman and her human values.
We who live in
the East always speak about Western colonization, but I would
like to explain that this does not mean that Western
colonization only colonizes or exploits the East. It is a
world-wide power representing a class of people that exploit and
colonize both the East and the West. If I had the opportunity, I
would explain that this power has alienated the European masses
even more than the Eastern masses. The European has been
overtaken by colonialism's legacy of unemployment and misery and
will continue to be in the future. They will continue to be
victims of anti-colonialism. This ruling colonial power
influences Eastern people in many ways, such as placing emphasis
upon unimportant, sensational and emotional matters; spreading
rumors, discrimination, and hypocrisy; and sowing discord and
pessimism, to keep Easterners occupied with mundane and
unimportant issues. By these means Easterners are kept in a
state whereby they are unaware of what Western colonization is
doing to them, unaware of their fate and destiny. These
conspiracies then cause young Europeans, likewise, to become
alienated and destructive, and commit more deception and crime.
All of these actions are taken in the name of the colonization
of Eastern countries without the Easterners realizing it.
*****
For example, we
all know about the widespread international police network and
the extensive intelligence services which observe even the
minutest movement anywhere in the world. And yet there are tons
and tons of narcotics which are freely transferred from the East
to the West. They are distributed and sold by huge international
organizations and transferred through their factories, planes,
ports, ships and offices. Why is it that the international
police cannot prevent the distribution of narcotics among the
younger generation in Europe and the U.S.A.? Why? Because the
ruling powers prevent the young generation from understanding
what is going on in Europe and the U.S.A. The ruling powers
prevent them from caring about who rules the destiny and fate of
humanity. These are the same ruling powers which colonize both
West and East; only their methods and relationships differ. At
any rate, in both East and West, human beings are victims of
this inhuman world-wide power.
One of the most
important tools that has been created by this ruling power from
the intellectual, social, economic and moral point of view, is
Freudian sexualism. This has become the communal social spirit
of our age and has become the substitute for all values, virtues
and liberties. It is not accidental that Freud's view of
sexuality came to prominence after the Second World War and
became the fundamental basis and foundation of art. Most motion
pictures are based on only two elements; violence and sexuality.
Both of these are legacies of the war. Motion pictures are one
of the most important examples of the relationship of art to
Western capitalism because film production is the only art which
cannot exist and develop without the aid of capital. Thus it
differs from the arts of painting, literature, poetry and music.
A poor painter, writer, poet or musician can create the greatest
work of art, but a film producer must have capital of millions
of dollars to create a saleable film. Thus, this art is
unconsciously supporting capitalism. The pseudo-intellectuals
and pseudo-scholars of the third and fourth worlds suppose that
Freudism is really the science of the present age. Modern
scholars research and record Freud's works in a special way. It
is interesting to note that in underdeveloped countries, under
the guise of intellectuality and modern scientific psychology,
scholars and scientists serve these universal powers free of
charge. In the name of Science, they freely propagate inhuman
ideas among the intellectuals and the younger generation. How
miserable are these thinkers and intellectuals who serve the
capitalistic ruling powers! They really believe that they are
serving humanity, freedom, liberty and science!
Thus, in order
for the superpowers of bourgeois scientism to dominate, both the
East and the West must be sacrificed. They must become the
victims of narcotics as well as Freudianism. From Scientism's
point of view, every young person who is still human and who
still shows sympathy and sensibility towards the destiny of his
or her nation and other nations, must be caused to change his or
her mind, must be made indifferent to his or her destiny and the
destiny of others. In order to accomplish this, any means is
permissible and advisable, whether it takes the form of science,
art, sports, literature, history, tradition, or religion. It
does not make any difference. One must be amused by any form.
One must be removed from the scene so that one takes notice of
nothing. The best way is scientific and mental stupifaction and
the strongest factor, particularly among the younger generation,
is sex! Why sex? Because it can be logically explained. It is
new. It can easily and freely be accepted. It is the most
important factor that can attract the young generation, who, in
turn, are the most important victims of Freudianism. Thus all of
their intellectual, human, artistic, social, political and
financial investments must strengthen this School of thought. It
is not strange to see how rapidly it progresses and develops.
It must be
noted that there is another group who co-operates, albeit
unconsciously, in a most effective way with this world-wide
power, to achieve the aim of attracting the younger generation,
particularly women, to Freudianism and to sex. This group
unskilfully fights Freud's innovations by relying on old,
strict, illogical and inhuman traditions to create restrictions
and produce psychological complexes in the young generation,
particularly women. You may want to know how they co-operate in
this inauspicious endeavor. They co-operate by pushing the young
generation towards pessimism. While Freudianism invites woman
out of the house, this old group tries to hold her inside by
creating bonds, obligations, and restrictions, and by depriving
her of all her human and religious rights, thus unconsciously
preparing the way for Freudianism. It is in this way that they
co-operate with Freud. Statistics show that the insidious
invitation of Freudianism has been most successful in
traditional societies and countries where women have been most
deprived. Thus we cannot fight and confront this universal
illness and danger only by relying on ancient traditions,
customs, restrictions, bonds, etc. which deny rights to women.
There is only one solution; to give human and Islamic rights
back to women. Yes! This is the only way! If the human and
Islamic rights of woman are given back to her, you have armed
her with the weapon whereby she can personally resist and
confront Freudianism. But if you deprive her of her rights, you
insure that this satanic invitation will ensnare her. You have
pushed her towards it.
The essential
and important problem, which we have confused, is the
distinction between culture and religion. Culture and religion
have mixed with each other throughout history. They make up the
collection of ideas, tastes, behavior, feelings, customs and
legal relationships which are sacred and honored in a society.
For example, in Islamic societies, Islamic rights, values,
precepts and laws relating to the economy, the family, the
community and even the social system have been mixed with local
and tribal traditions formed over the centuries. These are
certainly not related to Islam. They are only ancient tribal and
local traditions and customs supported and protected by society.
Thus an intellectual wishing to be released from such ancient,
local, tribal traditions, must fight a combination of religion
and custom in order to be free of both. Thus, both groups who
defend religion and those who do not, must defend the mixture of
ancient customs. Those who fight against traditions also
confront the living and uplifting values of Islam. None of these
groups, neither the progressive modern intellectuals nor the old
traditional religious group, can distinguish between religion
and culture. Why should they be separate and distinct from each
other? Because we Muslims believe Islamic rights and laws are
derived from the essence of humanity and the essence of nature,
and are made by the Will of the Creator of the laws of nature.
The laws of nature are stable and never grow old. Thus laws
which are based on the general dignity of creation never grow
old. On the contrary, social traditions based on production and
consumption (in cultural systems where they are not fixed laws)
have to change.
Religion, a
living, permanent phenomenon which could be effective in the
present age, can no longer play an effective role in the social
life of a community, a society or a generation, because Religion
has been captured by ancient, declining, ossified, deviated
traditions, and thus can no longer effectively confront the
danger of the superpowers. An aware intellectual is a historian,
traditionalist, Islamologist, chronologist and sociologist whose
most important cultural mission and responsibility is to
distinguish Islam as a living faith, removed from the old
traditional moulds which are not Islam but rather tribal
customs, and to put the true Islamic ideas and faith into new
moulds which match the necessities of the present age. The
everlasting, living, moving, progressive Islamic contents must
be protected, and put into new moulds which meet the challenges
of each age. Based on my own experience, I have to say that even
the most progressive, intellectual, rebellious and revolutionary
thinker, when confronted by pure Islamic values and virtues,
(once these values have been separated from inherited, tribal,
ancient, ignorant customs), will be attracted to them and submit
easily to them.
The visage of
Fatima; the visage of the woman who existed, who spoke, who
lived, who played a role in the mosque, in society, in the home
training her children, in her family's social struggles and in
Islam; a woman whose role should be made clear in all its
dimensions to the present generation (not only to Muslims, but
to any human being, man or woman, who has human feelings, who
believes in human values, and who is faithful to real freedom)
should be accepted as the best and most effective role to be
imitated by the present generation. I myself have experienced
this. I have seen so-called religious histories which lack
religious feelings, which have no idea about religion, which
even deny and oppose religion. When a proper picture of the
Prophet's family, all of whom showed humility and submission,
emerges, we feel that they are really living personalities. When
I say that Islam is living, I mean it is a collection of living
thoughts and ideas. It is alive because of its living social
laws and rights. It is alive because exemplary, living
personalities have been trained by it.
When the
beautiful image of Hosein is presented, no human society, no
matter what form of production it may have, no matter what
social system it may use, no matter at what cultural stage it
may be, can deny his unique and exceptional personality. No one
can deny he is an eternal human symbol who should be followed,
admired and praised. All accept him.
Remember Zeinab
at Karbala! She had withstood the difficult task of witnessing
martyrdom after martyrdom in her captivity in the Kufa bazaar
and in the courts of Ibn Ziyad and Yazid. What woman of whatever
class, at whatever stage of life, in whatever system of
particular tribal, religious and social ideas, who believes in
the eternal values of womanhood and exalted values of the
feminine, does not accept Zeinab as a permanent everlasting
symbol of the social, human and progressive leadership of women?
Such people are
living. They are symbols of Islam. To be alive means to be
effective, to show the right way, to guide humanity in whatever
stage it may be, in whatever land it may live, and to whatever
race it may belong.
But,
unfortunately, customs and religion have been mixed together.
This mixture of customs (which are changeable, and vary from one
social, tribal, and local system to another, and which are
related to and produced by economic and social relationships),
and Islamic values (which are unchangeable, eternal and related
to inspiration, revelation and the prophetic mission) is
defended in the name of religion. The intellectual, seeing the
deprivations and abuse of women on one hand and the semblance of
social freedom, class advantages and sexual liberty on the other
hand, becomes confused. When the religious group in a community
(who are acquainted with religion and believe it), are unable to
distinguish between the religion and the local, tribal, cultural
customs, how can we expect young, modern intellectuals (who are
willing to fight against ancient customs) to make a distinction
between religion and customs? If the distinguished scholars of
Islam, who are acquainted with Islamic truths, do not perform
this task, then what organization, what power, will do so?
The Prophet of
Islam, who was such an elevated personality and one before whom
history is humbled, when he entered his home was kind, lenient
and gentle. When his wives quarrelled with him, he left his home
and made a place for himself in the storage area without showing
any harsh reaction against them. This behaviour of the Prophet
of Islam must be considered as an Islamic example, in contrast
to the behaviour of a supposedly religious, but in reality an
abusive, man. Such un-Islamic, abusive behaviour was based on an
ethnic, cultural tradition. Therefore, distinctions should be
drawn between ethnic, cultural customs and Islamic religious
instructions. The Prophet's behaviour was so humane that it
amazes us. For example, some of the young girls of Medina showed
interest in participating in the Battle of Hunayn, a place
between Mecca and Jeddah. There is a distance of more than 600
kilometers between Medina and Mecca and then an additional
distance from Mecca to Hunayn. This journey took several months.
Nevertheless, the Prophet of Islam took a group of fifteen young
girls along with the army's entourage so that they could assist
in the war effort.
In the
Prophet's Mosque in Medina, there was a porch used for social
affairs. Each corner of it was devoted to a different social
purpose. In one corner was the tent of Ruqiya who, at the
Prophet's command, had established a tent inside the Prophet's
mosque, Islam's place of prayer, to hospitalize, care for, and
nurse the war-wounded. Sad ibn Maaz (the Islamic chief officer
who was wounded in the Battle of Khandaq by a spear) was
hospitalized there. This tradition of looking after the sick and
nursing them, continued for many centuries afterwards in Islam.
I personally read about this in Ibn Yamin's book in which he
praised Aladdin, the governor of Sabzevar, and mentioned that
Aladdin built a hospital in a very large paradise-like garden in
a village near Sabzevar. Describing the hospital, Ibn Yamin says
that there were beautiful girls, like angels, who looked after
the patients and nursed them.
*****
When there was
such a hospital, with such staff, in a remote village near
Sabzevar in the 7th and 8th Islamic centuries, there must
certainly have been more important and well-equipped hospitals
in larger cities like Rey, Tus, Balkh, Bukhara and Baghdad. But
we see that our ethnically-oriented intellectuals announce that
a European or American woman serving in the First World War
established Nursing in the world. They deny and denigrate the
nurses who worked in the early phase of Islam, because it is a
religious tradition. Therefore, you can see how facts may be
confused, how rights are abolished, how great talents are
sacrificed in the name of religious traditions, and how many
great religious values and Islamic virtues are forgotten in the
name of intellectualism and opposition to traditional religious
beliefs!
Thus the
responsibility of those who understand both present society and
Islam (and who live in the present century) is very heavy. They
must bear the burden of many centuries of emotions, ideas and
faith. It is not an easy task to travel such a long distance and
discover the truth which exists beyond it.
As I mentioned,
one of the most important factors that enables Islamic
communities to stand against and resist the insidious invitation
of pseudo-scientific Freudianism and its dreadful use of
sexuality is the presence of exemplary religious models in a
humane culture. In the same way that Western world-wide
colonialization stupefies the minds of its own youth through
narcotics, Western colonialism designs and promotes Freudianism
and sexual liberty for Eastern countries. Western colonialism
exports sexual liberty to the Eastern countries in exchange for
their raw materials. In return for the oil, diamonds, gold,
rubber, etc. which the West takes from the East, it gives them
sexual liberty. When a young man or woman is introduced to
sexual liberty, he or she will become pre-occupied with it and
will not think about other things, such as the problems of
freedom. And when such young people have matured, they will be
so involved with installment payments, sexual obsessions, etc.
that they will never come to look at or think about other
problems! The most important weapon of Islamic youth against
this insidious invitation from the West is the possession of
symbols leading the mind to genuine spiritual experiences. The
spiritual symbols made available to the present generation,
which is unwilling to be enslaved either by hollow,
conservative, anti-human, anti-Islamic ethnic traditions or by
the stupefying culture of indecent Western modernism, are the
best weapons against the West's attack.
The woman of
the Third World must be one who selects, who makes a choice. She
is the woman who neither accepts the inherited mould nor the
imported novelty. She recognizes both of them. She knows and is
aware of both of them. The one which is imposed upon her, in the
name of tradition which she inherits, is not related to Islam at
all but is related to the ethnic customs of the period of
paternalism and even slavery. And the one which is imported from
the West is not science, not humanity, not freedom and not
liberty. It is not based on sanctity and respect for women at
all. Rather it is based on the low tricks of the bourgeoisie,
stupefying consumerism and mindless self-indulgence. She wants
to select, to choose, but what role-model should she choose? She
wants neither the model of the traditional, strict woman, nor
the model of the modern degraded woman. She wants the face of a
Muslim woman. Fortunately both the material and history are
available to construct this third figure. And even more
authentic than history, more logical than scientific arguments
are the objectively exemplary personalities who are symbols from
our Islamic history. All of them were members of one family. All
lived in a small room; a family, each of whose members is a
symbol, a model. Being Hasan-like means having patience and
peace. Being Husayn-like means participating in spiritual and
religious struggle in the way of God (Jihad ), and martyrdom.
Being Zeinab-like means bearing the heavy social mission of
justice and truth. Being Fatima-like means being a real woman.
Being Ali-like means being virtuous.
I do not intend
to once again repeat the life of Fatima as a model. All I knew
in this respect I have already said and written. But I would
like to mention once again that it is not sufficient only to
understand and repeat the historical biographies. We must
realize how to describe, how to understand, and how to learn
lessons from Fatima's life. When the Prophet of Islam said that
Fatima was one of the four greatest women in the world, when he
consoled her for all the pains, miseries and disturbances in her
life and implied she would be selected as the woman among the
women in the world, he was not intending to superficially praise
her or to give her false consolation. He was quite serious in
this respect. He recommended that she be patient and bear the
heavy burden and responsibility of being Fatima. Fatima's
sisters did not have such a responsibility and were living with
their husbands like ordinary Muslim women. But Fatima was
exceptional. Thus the Prophet, by calling her "the woman among
the women in the world", was intending neither to make an idol
for his followers to worship, nor to praise her as a victim in
order to mourn for her. He intended to introduce her as a
role-model and a symbol, for people to learn lessons from her
way of life and to act in accordance with it. This is the
meaning of being "the woman among the women in the world". How
can we learn from Fatima's life? You all know the various
dimensions of her life and thus there is no necessity to repeat
them here. The only point that I would like to make is that we
should try to learn from this great personality . For example,
when we consider the farm called Fadak in Fatima's life, we must
see what lesson we can learn from it. Fatima's insistence upon
having Fadak returned to her was not for the sake of possessing
a small farm. Her struggle must not be reduced to that level.
Her struggles and efforts were to take what she thought was her
right, even though the companions of the Prophet tried to
demonstrate that their opposition to this was in accordance with
Islamic standards. Therefore, the real value of Fadak is as a
symbol, an example, a reason and an embodiment, not as a farm.
Today Fadak does not exist. Some may say that such historical
subjects must not be thought about and discussed so much. But,
on the contrary, I believe that these are living subjects which
must be recalled and discussed, not as historical events which
are taught in schools, but rather as subjects from which one can
gain valuable lessons. What lessons? A lesson to be learned
about the highest manifestation of motherhood in Islamic
history, about Fatima, about the edifying symbol of womanhood in
the house, in marriage, in relationships, in motherhood, in
training and nourishing children like Hasan, Husayn and Zeinab,
and in companionship with her husband Ali. She was a woman who,
throughout the whole of her life, from her childhood to her
marriage, from her marriage to the end of her life, felt herself
to be a responsible, committed person, a part of the destiny of
the community, defending what was right, supporting justice in
thought, idea and deed, and confronting the dispossession,
oppression and deviation which existed in her society. She was
always available to help with all social problems and
confrontations. She did not remain silent until her death, even
though she knew that she would not succeed in this fight. This
is the meaning of social commitment and responsibility. This is
the lesson that can be learned from Fatima's life. When she was
still a small girl about ten years old, she went everywhere in
Mecca with the Prophet of Islam, her father. No one expected a
small girl to go hand-in-hand with her father in such a social,
political and ideological situation. But Fatima felt herself to
be responsible for the destiny of the Islamic Revolution,
although because of her age, she was not responsible. So she was
present at any confrontation. She was present wherever the
Prophet of Islam was alone against the enemy. She stood beside
him. Numerous cases have been recorded. For example, once when
the Prophet's enemies poured dust onto his head from a balcony,
it was Fatima who cleaned the dust from the face of the Prophet
with her small hands. It was she who gave him consolation. The
Prophet and his family were exiled in the desolate valley for
three years. Heroes such as Sad ibn Waqqas (the famous officer
and commander), even many years later, when recalling those
days, would tremble with terror. Throughout that time, when the
whole responsibility for the blockade, imprisonment,
humiliation, loneliness, hunger, and other difficulties, rested
on the shoulders of the Prophet, Fatima was there. She caressed
her elderly mother and her hero father, and she even consoled
her older sisters! She was the only source of love, kindness and
enthusiasm in this horrible valley through those hard and
difficult years. When the Prophet migrated to Medina, she bore
the difficulties of the time of the migration. Even in marrying
Ali, she showed social commitment, because everyone knew that
Ali was not a man of the house, but rather a man of battle. Thus
he was not a desirable husband from the point of view which
seeks only a home, pleasures and comfort. Everyone knew that Ali
possessed nothing except a sword and love. They knew he would
not possess anything else up to the end of his life. Fatima knew
that Ali would never return home with full hands. She knew that
the hand of destiny had made Ali like an anvil which must bear
many blows, tortures and hardships. Thus by selecting a warrior
like Ali as a husband, Fatima shouldered a great intellectual,
human and social responsibility. Thus Fatima consciously made
her selection. She gloriously bore the heavy burden of this
mission until her death. She made a home which is unique in
history, beyond man-made measurements and standards. For
everyone, whether Muslim or not, admits that her home was a
paradigm of the human situation, a home in which Ali was the
father, Fatima was the mother, Hasan and Husayn the sons, and
Zeinab the daughter. All of them were elevated symbols. All of
them were together in one family, not dispersed throughout
history so as to need to be chosen and introduced separately.
They were all of one time; living inside one house. It is really
painful, for Muslims who had such role-models, such a religion
and such a culture, to have such a destiny. A great personality
like Fatima was among the members of this family. She was such a
unique woman that Ayisha, the Prophet's wife, praised her,
saying "I never saw anyone higher than Fatima, except her
father, the Prophet."
Thus it is
sufficient for any intellectual woman to read a book about
Fatima (or about other distinguished Islamic women like Khadija
or Zeinab), to know these figures and compare them with figures
who are introduced in the name of modernism. When the Prophet
migrated to Madinah, Fatima bore the difficulties of the period
of migration. Even in marrying Ali, she showed social
commitment. Any women comparing Fatima with women who are
introduced through modern magazines will recognize significant
differences and reach the proper and inevitable conclusions.
Therefore the most important duty of the aware, responsible,
writers and preachers is to introduce these figures clearly,
enthusiastically, responsibly and accurately, to the present
generation, thus holding up the most efficient, responsible,
humane role-models, to defend against and resist the West's
attack.
A real figure
of a Muslim woman can be seen in the Battle of Siffin, the
battle that took place between Ali and Muawiyah. In this battle,
the women who were in Ali's army, by singing epic poems,
reciting verses, by their encouragement, and by giving
enthusiastic lectures and speeches, inspired Ali's army against
Muawiyah. After the Battle of Siffin and the death of Ali,
Muawiyah ordered these women to be pursued in order to take
revenge against their families. One of these women was captured
and sent to Muawiyah's court in Damascus. Muawiyah told her that
she had a very sinful past. In order to avoid Muawiyah's
revenge, she said "God bless you. Overlook the past." But
Muawiyah said "Do you know that you shed the blood of our army
when we fought Ali's army in the Battle of Siffin?" She
courageously answered "God bless you that you gave me this
blessed news, the news that I participated in that war against
you and your army". This is the face of a Muslim woman! If we
study the books which have been written about Muslim women, we
will notice that wherever Islam ruled throughout history, Muslim
women have shown the greatest talents in science, literature and
social issues. But wherever Islamic societies have declined,
women's talents also declined.
Our
intellectuals have never taken the opportunity to study the life
and personality of Zeinab properly, and to record her real
figure and role. When Zeinab saw that the revolution had begun,
she left her family, her husband and her children, and joined
the revolution. It was not for the sake of her brother Husayn,
who was the leader of this revolution, that she joined it. She
did so because of her own responsibility and commitment to her
society, her religion and her God. When she saw that a struggle
and revolution had begun against an oppressive system, she
joined the revolution and was beside her brother Husayn in all
the phases of those difficult days. Even after the martyrdom of
Husayn and his companions, she carried the flag of the
continuation of Karbala's revolution. She accomplished her
mission thoroughly, perfectly and fairly. She accomplished her
mission with strength and courage. She expressed with words the
truth that Husayn expressed with blood. She shouted out against
tyranny in any land. She sowed the seeds of the revolution in
any land that she entered, whether she was free or as a
prisoner. It is no accident that Muslims, wherever they are,
show a great and deep sympathy towards the Prophet's family and
love them. It was Zeinab, the Prophet's grand-daughter, who
stood against and confronted the ruling oppressive power, and
who overcame all resistance. She accomplished all this against a
tyrannical Caliphate which had conquered Iran and Byzantium. She
spread the thoughts and ideas of Husayn's School of revolution
and martyrdom everywhere and in every land. She took the drops
of blood of Karbala as a symbol of courage and justice to all
places and all times. Yes! All of these miracles belonged to a
woman!
Thus when a
woman, a thinking and responsible, committed woman, sees such
heroics from a woman who belonged to Fatima's family, she
understands where she must look, how she must be. She realizes
that a woman of any epoch and any century can emulate this
model. These are the values that will not change or grow old,
nor do they depend upon the customs of the social, cultural or
economic systems. These are stable and permanent values which
will be destroyed only when there is no longer any humanity in
existence.
Thus, the
present-day woman must know that Fatima was a woman who was a
warrior during her childhood, a woman who showed patience and
tolerance in the hard days of the economic blockade, a woman who
endured three years of imprisonment in the desolate valley in
Mecca, a woman who co-operated with and showed great sympathy to
the Prophet of Islam after the death of her mother. She was the
woman who acted like his mother and, therefore, was entitled to
be addressed by the Prophet as "her father's mother". She was
the woman who, in Medina, was the wife of Ali, the great
warrior, the man whom she herself had selected. When she married
Ali, she entered a home which lacked everything except poverty
and love. Then as Ali's wife, she showed the most commendable
example of companionship, fellowship, and the most uplifting
spirit. She was always beside Ali as a wife, a friend, a
companion, and a confidante who kept his secrets and bore his
hardships. And finally, she was the nourisher and teacher of
Hasan, Husayn and Zeinab. Her part in teaching Zeinab was even
more important than with Husayn, the symbol of humanity, because
Husayn had grown up inside the Prophet's mosque and among the
companions of the Prophet. He had grown up in Medina at the
center and peak of the confrontations and historic social
events. But Fatima had trained Zeinab inside her home and on her
lap. The role of Zeinab in the revolution of Karbala and in its
continuation and progress, resulted from Fatima's teaching and
from the high spirit of Zeinab herself. From every corner of
Fatima's house, a symbol and a embodiment of humanity appears.
The Prophet's family was considered to be the benchmark of
Islamic understanding for every age and time. Even after the
victory of the Prophet in Medina, Fatima was still the emblem of
the tolerance of poverty, harshness and difficulties outside the
home, and was the highest calibre of mother inside it. At the
hight of victory and the glory of Islam, when her father was the
leader of Islam, Fatima was still the example of a woman who
lived like your sister and my sister. She bore hunger like a
slave. She bore hardships and tolerated deprivation for the
glory of her husband and the leadership of her father. And after
the death of her father, when those difficult days returned, she
once again started the struggle. Throughout the crises (when all
the companions of the Prophet and all the warriors from the
battles of Badr, Hunayn and Uhud kept silent in Medina) this
solitary mother did not cease her resistance. She actively
continued her struggle. Even at night she visited the companions
of the Prophet and influential political personalities. She
spoke with the great friends of the Prophet and important
personalities. She brought awareness to all. She criticized all
of them. She analyzed and foresaw the calamity. This was her
social role from that time until she died. But even with her
death, she created a political event! She asked to be buried at
night. After her death, her memories, actions, and struggles
created a revival in Islamic history. She became the
manifestation of the search for justice and truth in all the
revolutionary uprisings from the second to the eighth centuries
in countries from Egypt to Iran. Even at the present time, she
acts as a model for Muslim women, as a daughter of God's
Prophet, as a mother who trained a girl like Zeinab and sons
like Hasan and Husayn, as a wife, a great, exalted, and
exemplary wife to her husband, and as the companion throughout
Ali's solitude, hardships and difficulties. She was beside him
everywhere as a committed social woman, a woman who, from the
early stages of her life, never left her father and fought
beside him and struggled with him. She was the woman who fought
against tyranny on the external front and who fought against
deviation, usurpation and oppression on the internal front. She
died in solitude and in silence. She asked Ali to bury her in
secret, at night. Here was a woman who even used her death and
burial ceremony as a means to maintain the struggle in the way
of truth. This is what it is to be a Muslim woman in the present
age.
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