Tags
dignity, gender equality, Islam, language and mind, political psychology, psychology, Quraan, religion
I have altered the provocative voice to maintain only the line of thought pursued.
The answering voice, and more at length here, enough so to justify my noting that I have Martin Pembroke Harries’ permission to reprint his views here, takes an atheist’s stance in the formulation of ethics. We’ve had some back-and-forth about circumcision, Abraham, obedience, and conscience, but here the topic around which the notes weave is grrrrrl power, which he defends well.
Other editing: I’ve added line breaks for readability and italicized the “point” voice to Pembroke’s counterpoint.
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Women are shy in the Koran and won’t perceive the crime the way a male would.
Is this a wind-up? I can’t decide whether you’re serious or a master of sarcasm.
If you are being serious, when you suggest to, say, Sheikh Hasina the prime Minister of Bangladesh, or Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, the prime Minister of Argentina, or Hilary Clinton, the former US Secretary of State, that their testimony would be worth half that of yours simply because you are a man, you would be well to stand well beyond their swinging fist distance!
While the Koran authorizes beating a wife after other steps have been tried, it tells us not to maim them. In the west, it seems there are no rules.about how to beat one’s wife.
Again, is this for real?
If so, this is what religion can do to a nominally decent man, it forces him to justify the indefensible.
Do you think that because Sharia states that you can’t break her face when you beat your wife, that is some how a reflection of the nobility of Islam?
That is so sad first of all, but monstrously embarrassing soon afterward.
And let’s be honest, there is nothing in the Quran that states you can’t break your wife’s face when you’re beating her – If you actually read the Quran 4:34, you’ll find that there is no restriction at all.
Please don’t tell me I can find on the book shelves of my local mosque library “101 Halal ways to beat your wife!”, or “How to lovingly protect your wife from the shame of her disobedience through the use of a good timely thrashing” or “Sharia Wife-beating made simple and with a Smile – avoid the face, and Carry On!”
A woman in Islam may be a wife, mother, sister, or daughter. There is no disrespect in that.
I’ve read numerous Muslims state that there is this nominal respect for one’s OWN mother and one’s OWN sister, but once your average MENA Muslim male leaves the house, that’s where respect for women, in general, ends.
Women lead in the percentage of Muslim reverts in the United States. If the religion was so bad for them, why would they revert?
Yes, This is the case because non-Muslim females are marrying Muslim males – for love no less!
It’s probably to please the groom’s parents more than actually believing Mohamed’s story; whereas Muslim females are forbidden to marry non-Muslim men – often at the threat of her life. Again, this a shameful example of not giving equal rights to women. If Muslim men were forbidden to marry non-Muslim women the number of ‘converts’ would plummet.
Lastly, have you got the statistic of how many ‘converts’ have subsequently unconverted? Or how many have converted only nominally in order to facilitate the marriage? Those numbers would be far less flattering wouldn’t they?
Islam disallows Muslim daughters from marrying non-Muslims. If you have a problem with that, it’s your problem.
Well, first of all it’s the daughters’ problem.
I respect your atheism. I want you tor respect my belief in Allah.
No. I respect *your right to believe* what you want, but there is no way you should expect me to automatically respect *what you believe*. Nor should you expect me to automatically respect your right to practice your religion if the tenets of the religion are anathema to rational social harmony – and on those grounds masking the face would be contrary to those ideals. I’ll respect what you believe with respect to Mohamed’s story and social mores only if it reflects justice, morality and rationality – and there is your problem. But it shouldn’t be a big problem, it’s only unsubstantiated religion – folklore – after all.
There are probably a number of non-religious issues upon which we might agree. For instance, I reckon chicken biryani is a food of the gods!
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Harries is entitled to his opinion, but I myself never regard folklore as trivial: language is always (always) a cultural tool and what is invented in it, whether out of necessity and the need for useful signals or out of desire or play or the want of excitement and greatness (even if only in our own heads), each language and its lore and literature becomes a suspension for cultural self-concept.
With that, I’ll take this post a little further.
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Surat 4:34:
“Men are in charge of women, because Allah has made the one of them to excel the other, and because they spend of their property (for the support of women). So good women are the obedient, guarding in secret that which Allah has guarded. As for those from whom you fear rebellion, admonish them and banish them to beds apart, and scourge them. Then if they obey you, seek not a way against them. Lo! Allah is ever High Exalted, Great.” (Pickthall’s version of the Koran, Quran, 4:34)
The first commentary I’ve opened from web search: A Commentary on The Qur’an 4:34 By Dr. Ahmad Shafaat
Dr. Shafaat gets into the matter of entangled loyalty well with this statement on the violence involved:
“Beat them”. If even separation fails to work, then it is suggested that men use beating. To this suggestion of the Holy Qur’an there have been two extreme reactions on the part of some Muslims. The first reaction is being apologetic or ashamed of the suggestion. The second is to use it as a justification for indulging in habitual wife battering. Needless to say that both these reactions are wrong. The Quran as we believe is the word of God and is thus every word in it is full of wisdom and love. To be apologetic about any part of the Quran is to lack both knowledge and faith.
For every word to be “full of wisdom and love”, some additional exegesis seems necessary, for Dr. Shafaat continues:
In regard to the suggestion about beating, the following further points should also be noted:
a) According to some traditions the Prophet said in his famous and well-attended speech on the occasion of his farewell pilgrimage that the beating done according to the present verse should be ghayr mubarrih, i.e. in such a way that it should not cause injury, bruise or serious hurt. On this basis some scholars like Tabari and Razi say even that it should be largely symbolic and should be administered “with a folded scarf” or “with a miswak or some such thing”. However, to be effective in its purpose of shaking the wife out of her nasty mood it is important that it should provide an energetic demonstration of the anger, frustration and love of the husband. In other words, it should neither seriously hurt the wife nor reduce it to a set of meaningless motions devoid of emotions.
That power continues to reside in the man (this is a locus-of-control issue) and not in the woman (how should one of the fair sex respond to or treat a “rebellious man”?) seems less an issue than the management of the degree of violence expressed, either physically or symbolically.
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In working with thought as language behavior subject to modification by context in time plus the relative insularity of minds and the language-inventing cultures that create content and self-concept as well as a righteous sense of both license and prohibition, there’s much conversation needed about what I’ve started calling the “humanity of humanity”, i.e., mankind’s better potential in character, and in relation to that, a reconciled psychological outlook.
I have recently promoted Fazeela Siddiqui’s article in the Huffington Post, “10 Muslim Women Every Person Should Know” (March 24, 2012) on this blog and on Facebook.
It’s worth a look, especially to men who may have doubts about how tough may be the “rebellious” woman they have been otherwise so licensed to beat, they themselves having been so pandered to as to have been granted by power on high exclusive control over what many other humans might as fervently and justifiably believe ideal as an equally empowered and inclusive love and partnership.
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One more note on the laying on of hands by either partner in a marriage: when it has come to that, somebody, one or the other, please, leave the home, call a lawyer, and arrange for a separation.
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# # #
Regarding the text re: beating with a tooth stick – I have seen such a device being used in the mosque to clean the teeth. Smallish in size. The greater concern is the first means of discipline, that of denying marital rights. Cruel. It is cruel for a man to tell his wife that he will no longer have sexual relations with her.
Some clerics, write about the glory of not leaving a mark, so that the beating will be kept private in nature. These writings have moved underground. But a moderate Grand Ayatollah posted the rules for disciplining a wife on his website. He noted that a man should not beat his wife if his son has a dirty shirt. Save it, for bigger issues.
A similar ayat comes to mind regarding Islam’s natural order of things: Aa-Baqarah (The Cow) 228. One of the longer Surah, it is chock full of jurisprudential anchors. But the “degree” men have over women is a ranking system. Scholars will tell you that the degree involves responsibility, but based on other readings, it leans more heavily toward the locus–of-control.
Surah al-Mujadila (a Maddi revelation) is about the woman who complains that her husband has denied her the marital bed. She is “as his mother’s back” to him – an insult, also based on preferred method of coitus in Madinah, as compared to the man-on-top scenario for Meccan men. (Yes, this is the story relayed by a scholar, I can’t make this stuff up.)
Other scholarly historians and lawyers will note that verses specifically pertaining to women, the smattering that gave a few basic rights – were added, after the Prophet received complaints from his wives regarding the textual content and jurisprudence of a nascent Islamic state. There was very little mention of the role of the women. Women’s issues are seen in greater display within the works of the major Muhaddithun.
It seems important to note that the anomalous few Muslim women who have made it to the top of the political heap are not representative of Muslim women overall. Saudi Arabia comes to mind. Their women are not allowed to drive. And across the world, women are still stoned for adultery or for that matter, rape. Ahmad-i-nejad segregated the elevators when he was the mayor of Tehran. Women, may work in the same space as men, if breastfed by them. (Fatwa out of Egypt several years ago)
The list goes on….
Enjoyed reading this post, Jim.
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That Quranic ‘scholars’ (you have to laugh) squirm and twist and try and fit a square peg into a round hole attempting to justify Q 4:34 is nothing but fumbling risible entertainment – if only it didn’t reinforce misogyny.
If a woman is being rebellious, how about determining WHY she is rebellious? Could it be that her rebelliousness might be presented on the back of a well-made reasonable point?
Lamentably, implicit in Q4:34 is the notion that such an event would be unnatural.
As a passage for allegedly properly guiding one’s life, Q4:34 is nothing more than concentrated camel turd.
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The persistent and promoted themes related directly to dominance, submission, and masculine power (in analysis, “phallic will”) may be what Arabic in language integrated with mind and culture supports. That mechanics promotes a boundary around what may be perceived — not what is evil, permissible, or possible in humanity, but simply and literally what is seen. Getting to modernity, as we may conceive of it and believe in it, then requires new language, which, fairly, may be supplied in the exegesis but is not directly within a text legend for its plain instructive — by exhortation to do and injunction to do not do — qualities.
This may happen with the Torah too when some reach to title Adam and Eve’s expulsion from Eden “The Fall” when it may be equally as much or more the introduction out of the Animal Kingdom a humanity recognized as possessing consciousness, self-consciousness, and conscience, and that never to return to an infantile existence in a garden full of life and with humans absent of the knowledge of good and evil.
If to progress means to say, “It really wasn’t meant that way it sounds” (oh, yes, it was, but a long time ago), than the humans, finally exercising the humanity of their humanity, are writing it, and there may wait an additional lock in the prohibition of invention.
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Beating of women in Quran r we as Muslims ashamed of this Ayat in the Quran or no I think no muslims men or women are ashamed of it, to us Quran is the words of Allah n every n each word of it is full of wisdom.
The problem with today world is tht it has become a fashion to say something against Muslims n Islam n we Muslims r on the reciving end of it these days.
every Tom n Harry without having the knowledge of Quran simply takes 1 Ayat n thinks tht he or she have done their masters in it.
Like Mr Harries have taken 1 Ayat tht men can beat their wife now to understand this Ayat I think Mr Harries needs to understand Arabic n once he understand Arabic then I guess he would be able to talk on it in a better way.
Arabic is very vast n 1 single word have lot of meanings 1 of the meaning of this Ayat is to go away.
Let me give u an example in sura Tuba it’s written n this Ayat is mostly used against Islam by non muslims n it says tht (kill them where every u find them) now non muslims r very happy to use this Ayat against Muslims n Islam but they on the other hand don’t read the whole thing tht y Allah have said this in Quran n then y in the end of the AYat Allah says tht escort them to the safe place of their choice to make it short 1 have to read the whole Ayat before they talk on it.
The same case Allah say in Quran tht men n women r equal n the only edge men have is cuz they have to take care of the household.
Torah n Injal ( Bible) is the word of God n if u read it wht does it says abt the women when they r going through their monthly periods . There r lot of things God have forbidden but people r doing it to men it means tht they don’t believe in the words of GOD.
Finally I will say call HIM by any name GOD/ ELLA/ALLAH/ESHWAR or the non beleivers they call HIM MOTHER NATURE is the same 1. Now who is right n who is wrong let us leave this to HIM to the day we all met HIM.
In The end I will say tht I have lived in America for 18 years n I have convert 5 people in which 3 were women n Mr Harries they didn’t convert in the love of some man or to make any human happy but just to make Allah Happy 🙂
May Allah have HIS Mercy Upon us
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