International Women’s Day, which is held on 8 March every year, aims to celebrate the achievements of women while calling for greater gender equality across the world. To mark the event, Nourhan Elsayed writes on debates over the rights of Muslim women. She argues that campaigners in the West should seek to develop a more accommodative approach, where their non-Western counterparts are understood on their own terms as equal partners, rather than simply helpless victims.
When Barack Obama flew with his wife to Saudi Arabia earlier this year to offer his condolences for the death of King Abdullah, and boost a long-standing relationship with the Saudi monarchy, discussions on social media focused less on the purpose of the visit, and the implications of the enthronement of a new king in Saudi Arabia. Instead, a great many social media users appeared more interested in the attire of the first lady.
With the Charlie Hebdo attacks fresh in their minds, along with the anti-Islamic sentiments they provoked, many observers took Michelle Obama’s unveiled hair as a symbol of a revolution against the allegedly oppressive, patriarchal code of dress that Islam and Muslim men enforce on (Muslim) women. A day later, a number of journalists, who were better informed about the Saudi diplomatic protocol, remarked that it was a mistake to think the first lady was willfully staging a revolutionary act, pointing out that first ladies and senior officials from the US and other countries had always visited Saudi royals without a headscarf, and that forced veiling is simply not part of the protocol.
Thanks to the media, Islam, especially after the September 11th attacks of the World Trade Center in New York and the subsequent American invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan, has been presented to the Western TV viewer and newspaper reader as a violent, intolerant religion. More particularly, Islam has been portrayed as having a systematically oppressive stance towards women.
Indeed, one of the publicly announced justifications for the American intervention in Afghanistan was to defend the rights of Muslim women, who were supposedly oppressed by the Islamic faith. This “crusade” to “save” Muslim women also manifests itself in more subtle, less militaristic ways, ranging from Michelle Obama’s misinterpreted outfit to the “struggle” of many French feminists in 2010 to save Muslim women by campaigning for the banning of the hijab (headscarf) in public spaces, in what became known as the hijab controversy.
In most – if not all – the mainstream feminist debates on Muslim women, the hijab serves as a symbol around which to mobilise efforts to emancipate these women. In Sirma Blige’s words, it became an over-determined cultural signifier that mainstream feminists in the West associate with, among other things, the subordination of women to Islamic patriarchy and their developing of a false consciousness. The “subordination” argument rests on an assumption that women who wear the hijab were forced by men to wear it.
As for women who contend that wearing the hijab was their own choice, they are described as having developed a “false consciousness”. Yet what both of these interpretations have in common is that they dehumanise Muslim women by denying them their agency. This implies that the veiled woman “does not know what is good for her” and that women in the West, by contrast, can teach her how to understand lofty concepts like agency and freedom.
Corollary to this form of Orientalist feminism is that Muslim women’s voices are silenced, and their opinions on what the hijab actually means to them go unheard. What most veiled women have to say about the hijab is actually substantially different from the feminist critique. As anthropologists Saba Mahmood and Lila Abu-Lughod point out, the justifications most often given by Muslim women for taking up the hijab relate to modesty, piety and morality.
A person with the most basic knowledge of Islamic thought would not find these claims far-fetched. There is an agreement in the Islamic legal literature on the importance of dressing modestly, and there are rules on how to achieve that for both men and women. Hence, if feminists are to fully comprehend Muslim women’s motivations for wearing the hijab, religion must be incorporated into the discussion. Whether these motivations stem from “true agency” or qualify as “free choices” are entirely subjective matters. For the headscarf is a neutral object; it only gains meaning through the symbolism that its wearer attaches to it.
So how can feminists in the West (or anyone interested in the issue) understand Muslim women and the hardships they face? The first step, paradoxically, is to stop using the label “Muslim women” in discussions. The label is generic and broad to such an extent that it ceases to be useful or meaningful in any serious, nuanced exploration of the plight of the women it is concerned about.
As Lila Abu-Lughod argues, this term lumps together women from a most diverse set of cultural, social, political and economic backgrounds, effacing the (often radical) differences between them, and assembling them together under one fictitious distant geography. By doing so, the usage of the term leads one to neglect the unique challenges that ‘Muslim women’ living in different conditions experience and may lead to inadequate solutions for problems that do not exist.
The second step in understanding the plight of Muslim women – or more accurately, the plight of any group of women – is to adopt what feminist academics call an intersectional approach. Intersectionality involves understanding that women around the world experience different kinds of oppression, and that their experiences are qualitatively different. To gain insight into their experience, one has to understand how different systems of oppression (such as gender, race, ethnicity, class, political conditions, nationality, disability, etc.) intersect to produce a specific experience of oppression that is unique to certain women.
For example, to understand the experience of Muslim women in the UK, one would have to study the life experiences of groups as diverse as white middle-class British female converts, second-generation working-class Somali women, and first-generation middle-class Pakistani women, to name just a few. The necessity for a multi-layered, intersectional approach arises from the fact that aspects of identity, such as gender and race, do not always act independently, but often overlap and play a role in producing systems of oppression.
Simply put, the alternative approach that is needed is the development of a more accommodative form of mainstream feminism, one in which women in the West understand their non-Western counterparts in the latter’s own terms, and treat them as equal partners, not helpless minors.
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Note: This article gives the views of the author, and not the position of EUROPP – European Politics and Policy, nor of the London School of Economics. Featured image credit: Oxfam
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Nourhan Elsayed – Georgetown University School of Foreign Service
Nourhan Elsayed is located at Georgetown University School of Foreign Service in Qatar. Her academic interests include gender and politics, social justice, American foreign policy and the history of the Middle East.
If wearing a headscarf is a decision that some Muslim women take freely (and not all all free to choose), why is it that the isue of wearing it or not is so often talked about in pre-marriage discussions between the families of the future spouses? As I have been told by people in Jordania, whether the woman will work or stay at home is also a subject of discussion. Does it mean that those Muslim women who give up their professions because it is their husbands`will, do it out of their own choce?
If wearing a headscarf is a decision that some Muslim women take freely, why is it that so many Muslim men argue that they prefer their fiancés and future wifes to wear it because in this way they are “protected” from the lustful look of other men? Is women´s hair sinful?
Wearing a headscarf does not conceal the social class of women, so I find it debatable to argue that it is a symbol of modesty.
If women are not discriminated against in Muslims countries (and I am not claiming that they are entirely free of discrimination in the Western world), why is it that when a strange man enters the household, they have to hurridly leave the room where this person is? out of physical protection? so that they are not exposed, once again, to the “dirty” look of the male univited guest?
If women are not discriminated against in Muslims countries, why is it that they can not shake hands with a man if he has just prayed? Men can do it, but women are simply offered the arm of the male person who has just done his prayers? Please, do not give me the standard and unconvincing answer: cultural reasons (ergo religious reasons) that have nothing to do with the different treatment women and men are subject to.
Separate but equal was th famous sentence that opened up the way to the Jim Crow system of racial discrimination and segregation in the United States at the end of the XIX century. Surely, the Supreme Court did not justify its famous verdict in terms of discrimination!!!!
I guess the answer here is not that women aren’t discriminated against at all in Muslim countries (though really there is such a large variation in Muslim countries that it’s difficult to make any generalised statement about them). Discrimination does exist and in certain countries it’s no doubt far worse than anything in any western countries.
But we also have to be careful to recognise that some things we see as discrimination (the hijab, etc.) can also be choices. In the West when we see discrimination against women we often don’t think that the woman is helpless or contributing to her own problems, yet that seems to be more common in our views of women in “other cultures” (i.e. anything not in the West).
The bottom line is that we still have to see women being discriminated against as human beings capable of making their own decisions. I personally find the “false consciousness” argument a little dangerous because it’s often used to promote a kind of “we know what’s best for you” elitism that doesn’t actually address some of the real issues women are dealing with. The implication in any appeal to false consciousness is that the person making it doesn’t have their own misunderstandings or cultural biases – that they have unique access to the truth and that anyone with a different opinion must just have been brainwashed or tricked into believing something different.
Hi Becky,
I am not claiming that I know best,that is, that I know better than Muslim women themselves. I am simply expressing my doubts about how free they are to choose and whether those who are entirely free to do so are an incy-wincy minority.
I also think that a clothing code which only applies to women is offensive. What if a woman decides not to be pious (one of the reasons used to justify the headscarf), that would be completely unthinkable!!!
The weight of religion on everyday life in Muslim societies is so strong that it is nearly impossible to dissociate it from freely chosen or not practices. And as we know, most religions (above all, monotheist ones) tend to be gender-discriminatory