اضيف الخبر في يوم السبت ٣٠ - يناير - ٢٠١٠ ١٢:٠٠ صباحاً.
Islamic feminism and Muslim women’s rights activism in India: from transnational discourse to local movement - or vice versa?
1
Abstract
The very recent phenomenon called Islamic feminism receives quite a lot of attention
from academia and media alike. Although it is basically a discourse whose strategy
and praxis is primarily script related, there seems to be an overt tendency to equate Islamic
feminism with an
ideology for a transnational social or political movement. As a perceived , Islamic feminism is often distinguished from two other supposedly discursive movement, and the distinct local, national or transnational all increasingly referring to this discourse. In India,
Keywords:
Introduction: Indian Muslim citizens and the quest for modernity
For quite some time, the renewed orientation of many Muslims worldwide towards
the normative sources of their religion has been equated with a perceived quest for
the legitimacy of an “anti-Western,” “dogmatic” or “rigid” Islam. That this is not necessarily
the agenda behind it becomes very clear when one looks at recent developments in
India. Faced with enormous political, social and economic challenges, more and more
active “lay” Muslims in India are engaging in fresh interpretations of the Islamic tradition,
which for them as
the majority community or society in general and not detach them from it any further.
This effort is not restricted to a tiny minority of Muslim intellectuals, as it is supported,
for example, by sections of the newly emerging Muslim middle class in India and
many grass-roots movements all over the country. One could even argue that the discussion
of burning questions, such as education, reform, the political representation of Indian
1
Societies at Humboldt University Berlin, Germany. Her areas of research include media systems in South
Asia; convergence/intermediality and new media forms; processes of medialisation; transcultural communication
and Islam in India. One of her current research projects focuses on the translocal and local dynamics
of Islamic feminism in India. She can be reached at nadja-christina.schneider@asa.hu-berlin.de.
Journal of International Women’s Studies Vol. 11 #1 November 2009 57
Muslims, and above all the legal and social status of Muslim women, has led to the emergence
of a new public sphere in India in recent years which, in turn, is linked to many
other transnational and/or local Muslim publics (see Eickelman and Anderson 1999 and
Salvatore/Eickelman 2004). As Sikand points out, the language of this new Muslim public
sphere is English, not Urdu, which may be one of the reasons why it has gone largely
unnoticed by the academic community so far, since Urdu is still regarded by many as the
preferred language of Indian Muslim discourse (Sikand 2006).
These new Muslim actors in local, national, and transnational spaces argue that
believing Muslims do not depend on religious authorities in order to understand the Koran,
but that they can rather and should indeed read and interpret the Koran for themselves.
Thus, like other contemporary reform movements
be seen as an answer to the perceived crisis of religious authority as well as the crisis of
(political) representation, on the local, national and global level (see for instance Göle
2002 and 2004, Sharify-Funk 2004, Mahmood 2005 and 2006, and Krämer/Schmitdke
2006).
Especially with regard to India, not much attention has been paid to this discursive
movement so far. This holds true also with regard to the emerging Muslim women’s
rights movement in India that came to life in the aftermath of the heated controversy on
the religion-based personal laws for Muslims in India in the 1980s (Muslim Personal
Law). Much more than in its initial phase, this emancipatory movement seems to be informed
by and draw a lot of inspiration from the global discourse of Islamic feminism,
which gained momentum in the 1990s (see for instance Badran 2007, Barlas 2002, Wadud
2006 and Moghadam 2007). Hence their claim to reform gender unjust laws within
Muslim Personal Law is not necessarily based on the Indian constitution
principle of human rights, but first and foremost on the authority of the Koran. The central
argument of Islamic feminism is that the Koran guarantees a number of rights to
women, which are constantly denied to them as a consequence of prevailing patriarchal
interpretations.
As a perceived
“Muslim feminism” and “Islamist feminism”. With regard to India, however, I will argue
in this article that these ideal types are not very helpful as analytical categories, since the
growing influence and reference to Islamic feminism simply cannot be associated with
one distinct group of proponents or one movement exclusively. Therefore, I will suggest
that a distinction should rather be made between Islamic feminism as a
and the distinct organizations or movements that are
and hence to focus more on the enormous potential that Islamic feminism has for Muslim
women’s subjectivity and agency in India.
Islamic feminism: discourse or social movement?
2
the Internet. There are, for instance, a number of very interesting weblogs, such as indianmuslims.
in, anindianmuslim.com, and websites, such as twocircles.net. Even if they declaredly cater to the
needs of Indian Muslims, they also form part of the transnational and translocal dynamics of current Muslim
Internet activism and debate.
3
to secure for the citizens a uniform civil code throughout the territory of India”.
Journal of International Women’s Studies Vol. 11 #1 November 2009 58
According to Moghadam, Islamic feminism is first and foremost a discourse
whose strategy and praxis is primarily script related (Moghadam 2007). Nevertheless,
there seems to be a clear tendency among observers to equate this discursive strategy or
praxis with an
political movement, or - as the critics of Islamic feminism maintain - that is bound to fail
in this respect. Accordingly, it is often stated that the Islamic feminist
with “ideological divisions”, a “weak interconnectedness”, “internal conflicts”
among Islamic feminists and “divisions weakening the movement as a whole” or with
“frictions inside the movement” (Vatuk 2008)
on the idea of a more or less coherent, singular movement grounded in Islamic feminism.
I will argue here, however, that in the specific Indian context, the very recent
emergence of Islamic feminism can be best understood as a discursive praxis that is
adapted by women’s rights activists who, in many cases, have already been associated
with local/regional or national women’s movements
movements and organizations alike, such as the Jamaat-e-Islami Hind (JIH)
we can observe in India and elsewhere, the increased turning of certain groups within
these distinct movements to the global discourse of Islamic feminism does not mean that
they become sort of “natural allies”. Nor does it necessarily imply that these actors and
different local movements feel the need to build networks or develop a common agenda,
not to mention a singular movement.
Hence, rather than conceptualizing Islamic feminism as an ideology or category
for a transnational social or political movement, it is considered here a
or
is corroborated by the fact that many Muslim women’s rights activists who draw
upon this discourse would never accept the label “feminist” or “Islamic feminist” as it
still has a negative or ambiguous connotation in non-Western contexts
Abou-Bakr 2001 and Barlas 2005).
Critical absence of Muslim women in the grand historical narratives
Until very recently, observers were not at all convinced that Islamic feminism
would ever come to light in India. In the eyes of Asghar Ali Engineer (2008) and Zarina
Bhatty (2003), for instance, two essential preconditions for the long overdue appearance
of an Islamic gender critique in India were missing, firstly a qur’anic hermeneutics based
4
or the Quest of Authenticity?”, Berlin, 26-28 May & 2 May 2007, retrieved from
http://eumeberlin.de/fileadmin/arbeitsgespraeche_workshops/workshop_Reconsidering_islamic_feminism_
april_may_2007.pdf
5
Pakistan in 1947, the remaining parts of the movement in India united under the umbrella of the Jamaat-e-
Islami Hind. Today, it is one of the leading social and religious organisations (and movement) of Muslims
in India, but unlike the Jamaat organisations in Pakistan or Bangladesh, the JIH is not a political party.
However, in January 2009 the JIH announced that it would launch a political party of its own soon. See
“Ammeer-e-Jamaat on Terrorism, SIMI & politics in India”. Retrieved from http://www.-
jamaateislamihind.org/index.php?do=category&id=37&pageid=381 (undated).
6
world-view of their own and that they simply follow the dominant Western feminist discourse, which they
seek to propagate in an Islamic guise” is exemplary for this critique. Mazhari (2009). “Islam, Women and
Islamic Feminism”, retrieved August 11, 2009, from http://www.indianmuslimobserver.com/2009/08/-
indian-muslim-news-women.html. Translated from Urdu by Yoginder Sikand.
Journal of International Women’s Studies Vol. 11 #1 November 2009 59
on gender equality and, secondly, the inclusion of Muslim women in women’s and gender
studies (Engineer 2006, Bhatty 2003). Regarding the latter deficit, Tahera Aftab (2008)
argues in her groundbreaking bibliography “Inscribing South Asian Muslim women” that
studies on the history and contemporary situation of Muslim women in South Asia are
generally scarce. According to Aftab, South Asian Muslim women are generally
represented as “oppressed”, “backward” and “victims of the double tyranny” of their religion
and the specifically South Asian form of patriarchy which is grounded in the traditional
Hindu view of femininity (Aftab 2008). Historians like Gail Minault (1998), Barbara
Metcalf (1990) and Azra Asghar Ali (2000) - to mention just a few - have shown
that Muslim women and men alike have constantly strived for new or re-definitions of
existing women’s rights since the second half of the 19
Among them were and are until today many eminent writers and poetesses of the 20
21
just these few. At present, the poetic voices (and sociopolitical actions) of Tamil author
and poet Salma
12
on an international level.
construction of the Muslim woman as a “passive victim” by putting forward differentiated
narratives and alternative images, the stereotypes seem to persist, especially in India.
As Nigar Ataulla, editor of India’s largest-selling English-language Islamic magazine
Islamic Voice
status of Muslim women, the focus invariably falls on the notorious form of repudiation
known as “triple talaq”, the question of polygamy and the veil. She calls this essentialist
perception of Muslim women a “dangerous triangle” (Ataulla 2006) and her observation
is confirmed by a study on the perception of the Muslim minority in India. Especially
when compared to women of other denominations, Muslim women are perceived as
“submissive”, “fragile” and “too weak to fight for their rights” (see Kidwai 2003,
Schneider 2005).
7
and translated by Mohammed Asaduddin, New Delhi: Penguin, and idem (1990). The guilt & other stories.
Translated by Tahira Naqvi. New Delhi: Kali for Women.
8
and idem (1999). A Season of Betrayals. A Short Story and Two Novellas, translated with an introduction
by C.M. Naim. New Delhi: Kali for Women.
9
New Delhi: National Book Trust.
10
Zubaan Books.
11
Joseph, Vasanth Kannabiran and Ritu Menon (2004). New Delhi: Kali for Women/Women Unlimited.
12
New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi.
13
of Urdu or Tamil literature and poetry) is certainly another area where a lot of research needs to be done.
See for instance, Christina Oesterheld (2004). Urdu and Muslim women. In Daniela Bredi (ed.). Islam in
South Asia (monographic number of Oriente Modern, No.1, 2004): 217-243, and id. (1994). Voices from
the inner courtyard (On early women poets of Urdu). In Dilip Chitre et al. (ed.)(1994). Tender Ironies. A
Tribute to Lothar Lutze. New Delhi: Manohar.
Journal of International Women’s Studies Vol. 11 #1 November 2009 60
“Inscribing” Muslim women into the grand narratives or making them more visible
as social actors thus remains a very difficult undertaking. What makes it even more
problematic is the fact that Muslims in India are still seen as an obvious community that
draws its specificity from an inhe">others, by Hindu nationalist actors who called for the substitution of existing religionbased
personal laws by a Uniform Civil Code as envisaged by the Indian constitution. In
the course of the debate, it became clear that this “secular” civil code would in fact resemble
more or less the already existing Hindu Code, since secularism for the representatives
of Hindu nationalism in the context of this debate meant “secularism in a Hindu
way” (see Schneider 2005:244ff.). Moreover, the avowed commitment to an overarching
civil law code was increasingly equated with a “commitment to the nation”. Muslim
groups and individuals who argued for the retention of Muslim Personal Law as an
integral part of their cultural rights were subsequently not only branded as “backward”
and “misogynist” but increasingly also as “anti-national” and “unwilling to integrate” into
Indian society (Schneider 2005:216ff.).
Faced with the growing polarization about this question, the Congress government
under Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi somewhat hastily adopted the so-called Muslim
Women (Rights of Protection on Divorce) Bill in 1986. The law gave Muslim personal
law priority over criminal law in maintenance issues, and by doing so effectively excluded
Muslim women from seeking criminal procedure. By adopting this law, the Indian
state also put an end to the repeated attempt of Muslim women since the 1980s to obtain
14
Khan to pay monthly maintenance to his divorced wife Shah Bano. Khan was unwilling to accept this
judgment and appealed to the Supreme Court in Delhi. He argued that Muslim women only have a right to
maintenance payments during a three-month period (
in 1985, prompting a fierce controversy between supporters of the decision and Muslim community
leaders, who felt their cultural rights as a minority had been violated. Their outrage was fuelled by the
clearly disparaging remarks on Islam in the presiding Supreme Court Judge Chandrachud's final comments.
To assuage its Muslim voters, the Congress government under Rajiv Gandhi rushed through an act on the
“protection of the rights of Muslim women” in 1986. The law gave Islamic personal law priority over criminal
law in maintenance issues, effectively excluding Muslim women from seeking criminal procedure.
Journal of International Women’s Studies Vol. 11 #1 November 2009 61
maintenance under secular jurisdiction (Chhachhi 1999). It was thus the Indian state itself
that, which by its legislative power, sought to re-establish and re-confirm the patriarchal,
religiously justified control over Muslim women, as Chhachhi argues. It seems important
to me to highlight this aspect, especially with respect to the controversy on Islamic feminism
and the oft-repeated critique that it represents a “compromise with patriarchy”
(see Moghissi 1999, Mojab 2001).
Regarding the development in India, one could rather argue that it is above all due
to this entanglement between state intervention and patriarchal claims to power on the
part of Muslim organizations like the All-India Muslim Personal Law Board, that Muslim
women’s rights activists were forced to look for new ways to engage with religious and
political discourse and to seek legitimacy
departure that recent feminist thinking in India stresses the necessity and possibility of
reform
achieve gender-just laws.
For the secular women’s movement, which had gained strength since the 1970s,
the Muslim Women Bill marked a watershed-moment in its postcolonial history. For secular
women’s rights activists, the whole agitation over Muslim women’s rights on maintenance
contained a series of bitter lessons of experience (Kumar 1995). Starting with the
seeming ease with which the Indian state had bowed to the communitarian agenda, to the
disregard for a key principle of liberalism, namely that religiously defined rights and religious
freedom must not supersede individual rights. For many decades, the diverse secular
women’s movement in India had been united by the idea that the State should encourage
the society’s cultural, social and political progress through legislation and thereby
strengthen “national integration”. This is also the reason for the movement’s longstanding
support for the claim for an overarching Civil Law code in India. And this, on
the other hand, explains the appearance of a very peculiar argumentative alliance with
regard to Muslim personal law in the 1980s, which was, among others, supported by extremist
Hindu nationalist organizations such as the Shiv Sena in Maharashtra, the Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), and parts of the Indian women’s movement (Schneider
2005:188 and 289).
Initial doubts with respect to the secular nation-state came up only in the context
of the general critique of secularism from the mid-1980s onwards. Following this critique,
the elitist assumption that social change and progress were inherent to the process of
nation-building, was now more and more challenged. Faced with the appropriation of
their claim for an overarching Civil Law Code by Hindu nationalist actors, these doubts
grew stronger in the aftermath of the Shah Bano case. Especially the critique of wellknown
women’s rights activists such as Madhu Kishwar
important in this context. The disillusionment with the state and the realization that Hindu
15
since 1979. She has authored and edited several books, among others, Madhu P. Kishwar (2008).
Deepening Democracy. Challenges of Governance and Globalization in India. Oxford University Press
India, and idem (1999). Off the Beaten Track. Rethinking Gender Justice for Indian Women. Oxford University
Press India.
16
domestic violence, feminist jurisprudence and minority rights. See, for instance, Flavia Agnes (1999). Law
and Gender Inequality: The Politics of Women’s Rights in India. Oxford University Press India. She is also
the founder of „Majlis“, a legal advocacy programme for women based in Mumbai.
Journal of International Women’s Studies Vol. 11 #1 November 2009 62
nationalist actors had more or less seized a genuine feminist demand led to a growing
dissociation of feminist actors from this agenda. As a result of this, the claim for a Uniform
Civil Code seems to be no longer supported by major women’s organizations in India
at present (Hasan 1999:138). It remains a debated issue, however, which strategies
should be best followed in order to achieve greater gender equality under the existing religion-
based laws, i.e. Hindu, Muslim, Christian and Parsi Laws.
Increasing visibility of Muslim women in public spheres
Contrary to the experience of the secular women’s movement in India, the Shah Bano
case and the adoption of the Muslim Women Bill represent a point of departure for the
emerging Muslim women’s rights movement in postcolonial India and a very recent phenomenon
that is labeled as Islamic feminism. Many local Muslim women’s rights groups
and initiatives were founded in the late 1980s, such as the Goa Muslim Women’s Association
or Awaaz-e-Niswan in Mumbai. Although many of these organizations have been
active for more than 20 years, the English-language press in India, for instance, has only
started to cover their activities and agenda to a significant extent from the late 1990s onwards
(Schneider 2008). Especially during the last three years, quite a number of reports
and interviews with Muslim women’s rights activists have been published. Many of these
articles put a focus on Muslim women’s organizations and activists who
question religious authorities, especially the Ulama,
1) strive for reforms of existing laws within the framework of Muslim Personal Law
in order to strengthen the rights of Muslim women,
2) are planning to found a mosque for women,
3) point out that Islam as a religion does not discriminate or oppress women but rather
the patriarchal system that has been established on the basis of a highly selective
interpretation of the normative sources, especially the Koran.
Against the background of the absence of Muslim women from media discourse and
their clichéd representation as “passive victims” of violence and discrimination within
their religious community, the increasing visibility of self-conscious Muslim women’s
rights activists in Indian public spheres may indeed be seen as a surprise. More correctly,
one could perhaps speak of a
(1996). Luhmann argues that one of the basic principles of modern mass media is that
they always rely on what has been publicized before and thus concentrate on specific variations
of what is already known (in German: “das Bekanntsein des Bekanntseins”, Luhmann
1996). In that sense, the sudden representation of Muslim women’s rights activists
in the Indian English-language media may well be regarded as a media-specific surprise
since they are depicted as an “unexpected and new variation” in the all too well known
narrative on Muslim women in India that has persisted for decades.
Having said that, it is important to note that these new actors are not simply “discovered”
by journalists who are looking for new stories, but that Muslim women’s rights
groups have also actively developed new public relations strategies for themselves and
established good relations with the media in order to attain more attention for their agenda.
And this increased media activism on their part could also help to explain why representations
of Muslim feminist thinking and activism in the Indian media have become
more frequent only very recently. Nonetheless, it remains a highly ambiguous relationship
for many Muslim women’s rights activists in India, as the predominantly negative
Journal of International Women’s Studies Vol. 11 #1 November 2009 63
and biased representation of the Muslim minority in Indian mass media has been and until
the day continues to be a very central issue of concern and debate among Indian Muslims
(Attaulla 2007).
From local grass-roots activism to nationwide agenda setting: Muslim women’s
rights activism and the struggle for legal reform
It becomes quite clear from Vatuk’s (2008) pioneering ethnographic study of
Muslim women’s organizations in India that very few, if any, of them were initially
founded in order to pursue the goal of legal reforms, nor to create more publicity for the
Islamic feminist agenda. Most of them rather seem to have emerged from local grassroots
initiatives, which are so typical for the vital civil society in India. Vatuk (2008), for
example, describes that the main activities of the largest and best-known organization led
by Muslim women, Awaaz-e-Niswan (AeN), concentrate around the professional education
of poor women with the goal of enabling them to make a living for themselves and
their children. In addition to that, AeN offers marriage counseling on a weekly basis.
These services are not only available to Muslim women exclusively. Nor does the way in
which this counseling is carried out refer to a specific Muslim tradition, but rather follows
a pattern which according to Vatuk is very typical for the world of feminist or women’s
NGOs in India (Vatuk 2008).
For these grass-roots initiatives, the increasing cooperation and networking of
Muslim women’s organizations on a national and even on an international level seems to
be a more recent phenomenon. In these new contexts, the focus is not so much laid on
help for individual women, but rather on a dialogue within the Muslim community, especially
with the Ulama. As mentioned before, media campaigns and public relations strategies
play a significant role on this level of activism: for example, when resolutions are
passed on big conferences, they are immediately forwarded to the press and interview
partners are made available. These organizations and networks often coordinate demonstrations
in cooperation with secular women’s organizations, and they organize so-called
legal awareness camps for poor women in rural areas or urban slums as well as protest
actions against so-called “anti-women fatwas” which mostly receive a lot of publicity
(Engineer 2005).
The All-India Muslim Women’s Rights Network (MWRN), which was founded
in 1999 by activists from AeN and from the Mumbai-based Women’s Research and Action
Group (WRAG), is the most successful network with a nationwide radius. Every one
or two years, they hold conferences, which at the same time serve as a meeting point for
all the organizations which are active in this network. For instance, in 2005, about 300
delegates met in Lucknow and discussed questions such as the role of the State with respect
to women’s rights, the effects of communal violence on Muslim women and the
challenges that Muslim women’s rights activists are facing in India right now.
Between 1994-98, WRAG conducted an extensive study titled “Women & Law in
the Muslim Community”, with the declared aim of collecting, documenting and analyzing
the diverse civil or family laws that are applied to Muslims in India. It is often overlooked
that the term Muslim Personal Law does not refer to a codified or unified family
law code and that laws may differ more or less significantly from region to region (see
17
from http://www.countercurrents.org/sikand240409.htm.
Journal of International Women’s Studies Vol. 11 #1 November 2009 64
Mahmood 1986, 1993). One of the findings of this research project was that Muslim
women in India clearly support the demand for reform of Muslim Personal Law in India
(Nainar 2000). As WRAG describes on its homepage, it was this claim, which among
other things, led to an increase in awareness-rising campaigns, which shall help to inform
Muslim women about the rights that are guaranteed to them in the Koran and thereby encourage
new impulses for debate on reform of MPL.
name of Bhartiya Muslim Mahila Andolan (BMMA) was founded for this specific goal.
BMMA claims to be the first pan-Indian movement uniting Muslim women across the
various existing castes and classes in Muslim Indian society. It is this organization that
most explicitly states its reference to the global discourse of Islamic feminism in the formulation
of goals by declaring that BMMA strives “to explore possibilities of reforming
personal laws based on male dominance”.
From the self-description and development of Muslim women’s organizations in
Mumbai, it becomes very clear that they are increasingly influenced by the discourse of
Islamic feminism. At the same time, many of them remain firmly rooted in local grassroots
initiatives and they also regard themselves as an integral part of the national women’s
movement in India.
A very similar development can be observed with regard to the well-known South
Indian women’s organization STEPS which was founded by Daud Sharifa Khanam in
Pudukottai in Tamil Nadu in 1987. Like the Mumbai-based organization Awaaz-e-
Niswan, STEPS was not founded for Muslim women exclusively. Interestingly, STEPS
dedicates a lot of space on its website to the self-description of the organization, its origins,
motives and goals. According to this account, STEPS was originally founded to
fight against the discrimination of and violence against young girls and women. In 2003,
the organization announced its intention to establish a monthly
women in order to provide them with a public space for articulation
about the patriarchal interpretation of Islamic principles by male religious authorities.
This idea of a
among Muslim women in Pudukottai about the decisions that are made by the (exclusively
male) Jamaat members regarding questions of dowry, divorce, domestic violence, custody
or child abuse. Provided that Muslim women even go to the local police station and
seek help there, most of their complaints are transferred by police officers to the local
Jamaat to which women have no access. Which means that the Jamaats make their opinion
without even listening to the women and as a result of this, the judgments passed by
them are often biased and one-sided (Bhatty 2008, Subramanian 2008).
In other words, by declaring their intention to found their own
women, STEPS activists fundamentally question the authority of the traditional Jamaat
system as well as the legitimacy of its claim to exert control on the Muslim community.
What attracted a remarkable amount of media attention in this context, was the plan of
these
erected on a site that had been donated to them especially for this purpose. Besides the
18
19
Zakia Nizami Soman, one of the founder members of the BMMA: Yoginder Sikand (2009). “Why can’t
Muslim women also lead the whole community: BMMA”, retrieved from http://www.twocircles.net/-
2009nov02/why_can_t_muslim_women_also_lead_whole_community_bmma.html.
Journal of International Women’s Studies Vol. 11 #1 November 2009 65
prayer room and a coordination office for questions related to education or job vacancies
for women, the
on Islamic law and jurisprudence. While Khanam and her fellow-activists have
experienced a lot of support and media attention during the last two years, they are at the
same time faced with massive resistance on the part of conservative Ulama all over India
and have received several death threats.
Access to mosques for women, not only in the sense of a place for prayer but as a
public space
issue among Indian Muslims. Following role models such as Sharifa Khanam and
others, similar plans to erect mosques for women can be observed in different regions of
the country.
Despite the fact that they are faced with severe opposition and financial problems,
the women activists in Pudukottai stick to their plan to build a mosque and Sharifa Khanam
herself coordinates a big network of Muslim women in Tamil Nadu today.
her case, again, the formulation “from transnational discourse to local movement” only
serves to highlight certain aspects of the development whereas the opposite “from local
movement to transnational discourse” seems to be equally correct. Various local Muslim
women’s rights movements are clearly moving towards the global discourse of Islamic
feminism, but this does not mean that they do not consider themselves as an integral part
of a national women’s movement any longer, nor does it mean that they don’t function as
grass-roots organizations on the local or regional level any more.
actors are involved, the concept of a
frameworks, forms of organization and communication. The discursive strategy or
praxis of Islamic feminism indeed seems to be only one, albeit increasingly important,
among other discursive strategies that are involved by Muslim women’s rights
activists in India in their pursuit of gender-justice.
Seen in this perspective, recent developments in India clearly seem to underline
Ahmed-Ghosh’s argument that feminism in Muslim contexts cannot and should not be
conceptualized in terms of mutually exclusive analytical categories such as “secular” or
20
these new Muslim actors are generally facing a lot of opposition and hostility, not only in India or
South Asia, but also on a global level (see Zaman 2002). Especially in India and due to the highly problematic
situation of Indian Muslims as a minority, they are also accused of being “disloyal” to their “community”
(see Ataulla 2006).
21
to press reports, 150 women took part in prayer on the opening day. See, for instance, Anju Azad. “A
masjid for women in Shillong”, retrieved Nov 17, 2008, from
http://www.twocircles.net/2008nov17/masjid_women_shillong.html.
22
and Asra Q. Nomani is available on the internet. Retrieved from http://video.aol.com/video-detail/indiasteps-
ngo-for-muslim-womens-development-avi-file/3526873420.
23
activism based on the discourse of Islamic feminism, the increasing “politicization of Muslim women”,
even in less urbanized regions of Tamil Nadu, is now regarded by secular feminists as one of the “most
exciting” developments in contemporary Tamil society. See Sumi Krishna (2007). Feminist Perspectives
and the Struggle to Transform the Disciplines: Report of the IAWS Southern Regional Workshop.
Journal of Gender Studies
Journal of International Women’s Studies Vol. 11 #1 November 2009 66
“Islamic” feminism but should rather be seen as a hybrid construction - in theory and
practice (Ahmed-Ghosh 2008).
The question is, however, if this can be applied to the emergence of Islamic feminist
thinking and activism within Islamic revivalist groups such as the Jamaat-e-Islami
Hind as well? Or should we rather assume that the oft-cited assertion that Islamic feminism
is an unwanted, albeit legitimate, child of political Islam simply does not hold true
for India?
Islamic feminism within ‘Islamist’ groups: A different phenomenon altogether?
Islamic or “Islamist” organizations like the JIH were among the strongest proponents
of a return to the normative sources of Islam and have thereby unknowingly created
the precondition for Islamic feminism. The discourse of Islamic feminism is also based
on the interpretation of the scriptural sources, although obviously not from a patriarchal
or neo-patriarchal perspective, but from the perspective of gender justice. And this is exactly
the reason why Islamic feminism has been called the “unwanted child of political
Islam” by Ziba Mir-Hosseini
of political Islam, as theoreticians of this discourse like Mir-Hosseini argue, a feminist
qur’anic hermeneutics could surely be expected to emerge from within Islamic or
“Islamist” groups such as the Jamaat-e-Islami (JIH) Hind, too. And indeed, there seems
to be some evidence that such a development is actually also taking place inside the JIH.
For example, when approximately 30.000 followers of the women’s wing of the JIH gathered
in Hyderabad in February 2006, Nasira Khanum, the president of this suborganization
was quoted saying: “Islam advocates protection of women rights but mendominated
society hides the facts. Women themselves should know about their rights and
learn to snatch them if denied”.
Anwaar, state Jamaat chief, that the organization would enroll women members in a
big way to take up various issues confronting the woman today.
Interestingly, Vatuk states that by using this markedly feminist rhetoric, “the
leader of a religiously orthodox Islamist mass organization (…) essentially echoes what
the leaders of so many much smaller organizations with longstanding and serious commitments
to the pursuit of feminist goals, have been striving for two decades to communicate
to the Muslim clerical establishment and the Muslim community at large” (Vatuk
2008:518). So is it merely a “derivative discourse”, to quote the famous phrase coined by
Partha Chatterjee (1993), or does it represent a distinct development that has taken place
within the JIH?
Contrary to Vatuk’s (2008) assessment, Ahmad (2008) offers a very different
perspective on this question. He uses the concept of Islamic feminism as an analytical
category for what he calls a “transformative movement within Islamist groups in India”.
In his view, this current grew stronger especially in the years following Maududi’s death
in 1979, and it was reinforced by the emergence of critical voices and a new generation
that began questioning Maududi’s “neo-patriarchal and misogynist ideology” (Ahmad
24
Between Law and Feminism.
25
26
Journal of International Women’s Studies Vol. 11 #1 November 2009 67
2008). In the 1990s, these voices had finally become so strong that they had coined a new
critical language that could be labeled as Islamic feminism.
Thus, it becomes clear that the local dynamics of the transnational discourse of Islamic
feminism in India display some unexpected features that have not been taken into
consideration so far and certainly need to be analyzed in greater detail. I would argue,
however, that further research on Islamic feminism in India should not be conceptualized
on a “national” level exclusively. Especially with respect to the two South Asian sister
organisations of the Jamaat-e-Islami Hind in Pakistan and Bangladesh, i.e. Jamaat-e-
Islami Pakistan and Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami, there seem to be some interesting parallels,
but also some significant differences that need be discussed more systematically in a
comparative study of the dynamics of Islamic feminism in South Asia.
Conclusion
From the literature that has been published on Islamic feminism in India so far, it
seems that a twofold dilemma manifests itself on a theoretical-conceptual level. Firstly, it
has to be taken into account that many social actors who are subsumed under the category
“Islamic feminist”, would not necessarily accept this label for themselves, and this holds
true not only with respect to India but also to Muslim women’s rights activists in other
countries. And secondly, I would argue that a clear distinction should be made between
Islamic feminism as a
based on texts, and the local, national or transnational movements that are now
making use of this discursive praxis, but in many cases actually precede the emergence of
Islamic feminism in the 1990s. By making this distinction, the focus of analysis can be
shifted from the repeated finding of “ideological divisions and frictions” within an assumed,
singular Islamic feminist movement to the focus on the “unifying potential” that
this discourse may or may not possess for the different actors in women’s movements and
Islamic groups and perhaps even more importantly, to the question of their agency vis-àvis
established religious authorities.
Notwithstanding this important differentiation, it is an indisputable fact that Islamic
feminism as a discourse and strategy has become a very important point of reference
for different groups and contexts in India. For the time being, the achievement of
gender equality within the framework of Muslim Personal Law in India is certainly not in
reach yet, and especially the tedious attempt to convince Ulama that gender-just rights are
an imperative is exhausting for many Muslim women’s rights activists. Ever since the
27
organizations such as the Jamaat-e-Islami Pakistan, Jamal argues (similarly to Ahmad (2008) that Islamic
feminism exemplifies the potential that political Islam has for modernization and therefore, Islamic or “Islamist”
movements themselves could be said to contribute (willingly or unwillingly) to processes of reform
and “modernization” (Jamal 2009, see also Marsden 2008). Contrary to India, however, secular feminists in
Pakistan are afraid that Islamic feminism rather than contributing to the debate on gender discourses in a
productive way is now likely to replace secular feminism completely. They argue that Islamic feminism as
the dominant discourse in Pakistan today tends to put gender relations and the question of women’s rights
into an increasingly exclusive Islamic framework (see Zia 2009, and with regard to the general debate on
feminism in Pakistan, also Dedebant 2003). Significant changes with regard to the initial position on gender
relations and women’s rights also seem to have taken place within the Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami also,
albeit in a very different political context. According to Shehabuddin, the party has only very recently begun
to stress the “individuality” of women in Islam and to support the claim for Muslim women’s rights
(Shehabuddin 2008).
Journal of International Women’s Studies Vol. 11 #1 November 2009 68
foundation of the All-India Muslim Women’s Personal Law Board (AIMWPLB) in February
2005, however, which attracted a lot of media attention in India and beyond, it can
hardly be ignored any longer that Muslim women in India have an increasingly audible
voice in the newly emerging Muslim public sphere. Like many of their male counterparts,
they encourage believing Muslims to read and to interpret the Koran for themselves and
to find new ways to bring their religious belief in accordance with the prerequisites of
today’s life. And perhaps even more pronounced, Muslim women argue that the “modernization”
and future of the Muslim minority heavily depends on the achievement of
gender equality within the community
Indian citizens by the majority community.
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--
Allah, Farid, juhdi hamesha
Au Shaikh Farid, juhdi Allah Allah.
Acquiring Allah’s grace is the aim of my jihad, 0 Farid!
Come Shaikh Farid! Allah, Allah’s grace alone is ever the aim of my jihad
(Baba Guru Nanak Sahib to Baba Shaikh Farid Sahib)
Check out my blogs: www.madrasareforms.blogspot.com
www.islampeaceandjustice.blogspot.com
singular movement
singular movements, namely “Muslim feminism” and “Islamist feminism”. With
regard to India, however, these ideal types don’t seem to be very helpful as analytical
categories, as the growing influence and reference to Islamic feminism there simply cannot
be associated with one distinct group of proponents or one movement exclusively.
Therefore, I will argue here that a clear distinction should rather be made between Islamic
feminism as a
social and political movements that are
these movements in many cases precede the emergence of Islamic feminism in the
1990s. So by making this distinction, the focus of analysis can be shifted from the repeated
finding of ideological divisions and frictions within a supposedly singular Islamic
feminist movement to the focus on the enormous potential that this discourse obviously
has for Muslim women’s agency in general as well as for the emergence of new female
subjectivities in India (and elsewhere) which in turn seem to challenge and change secular-
national gender discourses.
دعوة للتبرع
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ابو بكر الزنديق : أتفق معك فى بعض ما قول واختل ف فى البعض . واكثر...
الغيب ونزول القرآن..: قلت إن القرآ ن الكري م نزل مرة واحدة كتابا ،...
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