The Muslim Woman

The Muslim Woman, their lifestyle, their joy, their struggle, their life

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Are women really equal to their counterparts in Egypt?

The State shall guarantee coordination between a woman’s duties toward her family and her work in the society, considering her equal to man in the political, social, cultural and economic spheres without detriment to the rules of Islamic jurisprudence (Shari’a). -Article 11, Constitution of the Arab Republic of Egypt Despite the fact that women in Egypt were granted citizenship and full political rights in the 1956 Constitution, the social and economic environment in the country has worked against women exercising their political rights. Violence against women: Violence against women in Egypt continues to be a major issue with 35 percent of women in Egypt reported as being beaten by their husbands. Honor killings, whereby women who are suspected of tarnishing the family’s reputation through their sexual indiscretions are murdered by male family members, are also carried out periodically but the Egyptian government isn’t interested in researching or providing statistics. Most rural women take gender-related disadvantages for granted, as they have been told from birth that their only role in life is to marry and have children. Girls’ education is seen as a luxury. Traditional notions: The prevalence of certain traditional notions in some communities, like the Bedouins in Egypt or some tribes in Jordan, Egypt, and Lebanon, sometimes prevents women from going out or from mixing with men. The endurance or tolerance of violence or even its perception as such is also socially determined. Circumcision in Egypt is a practice which is greatly tolerated by women who perceive it as the right thing to do and greatly rejected by women who recognize a violation in it. The same women who agree to the procedure that is meant to control woman’s desire until her marriage, admit to the woman’s right to enjoy her sexual life within marriage, and in fact do enjoy this life. Women are less educated: Egyptian Organization for Human Rights has revealed that nearly half of the population in the region is illiterate, with women occupying the major ratios. Illiteracy predominantly centers on rural areas among underprivileged women between the ages of 15 and 45. Girls here are actively discouraged from going to school with some schools failing to provide girls’ toilets and, in many cases, with female students being relegated to the back of classes. Discriminatory Personal Status Laws: The situation for Egyptian women in the workforce has improved somewhat as increasing numbers leave menial and low-paying blue-collar jobs in factories and offices, and as street cleaners, janitors, hospital aides, and domestic servants. However, despite more women joining professions including education, engineering, and medicine, they are still in the minority, and their numbers are well below those of men employed in the same categories. In addition, the Egyptian government’s obstruction of a woman’s right to divorce exemplifies its unwillingness to grant women legal equality. Profoundly discriminatory family, penal, and civil laws reinforce the unequal status of women in the family and in Egyptian society. Laws condoning domestic violence and policies that exclude women from the judicial bench foster and perpetuate women’s second-class status. Bottom line The issue of violence against women must go beyond legal action. Although relevant laws have been improved, however, there were still many weaknesses in the way the issues of domestic violence, rape and genital mutilation were dealt with. Policies in that regard were somewhat gender blind and this requires changing the attitude of people behind the scene which cannot be done in a single go, it’ll be a gradual process and will take time. Image: [1], [2] Read

Women, taking an active part in all walks of life in Algeria: Is it a quest for identity?

Women in Algeria are making a silent move, which reminds me of ‘storming of the Bastille’ but in here, I am not hinting at the noiseless and creeping revolution part instead I am stressing at the collective move which the women as a whole are making towards their emancipation. More and more women are becoming conscious of their individuality and hence are taking plunge in nearly all walks of life. Right from the education sector till the administration realm, they could be seen fluttering the flag of their identity. If we go according to the statistics, we find: 1. Women comprises of 70% of lawyers and 60% judges in the nation. 2. Women in huge numbers have occupied higher position in the field of medicine. 3. They have outnumbered men in higher studies, since, 60% of the university seats have been occupied by the fairer sex. 4. Their contribution is more to house hold income their male counter part. There’s hardly any arena left where women have not made a mark. They could be seen driving buses and cabs. But even then they do not enjoy a high profile position, since they represent 20% of the work force only. Hugh Roberts, a historian has asserted that unlike previously, educational qualifications are not taken as a plausible ladder in the direction of economic well being; hence more and more men discontinue their studies and decide to leave country in search of some employment. But in here, the perception of women is all together different, they do not tread on to the steps of the men instead they go in for higher degrees, which becomes instrumental in placing them in an improved standard of living. This does not mean that women have abandoned their conventions rather they are still carrying forward their religious ideologies and are modern in their approach towards life. They could be seen fully clad in their Islamic cloak, visiting mosques and driving vehicles. Sociologists have noticed that the age of marriage for women too have experienced an inclination. Formerly, women used to marry around 17 or 18 but now, they prefer to get betrothed at the age of 29, since, they have become more career oriented than before. Some scholars have even gone to the extent of anticipating that if the trend continues then the time is not far when women could be seen handling all the administrative services in this strife torn region. They have personified women as Algeria’s most potent force for social change. Abdel Nasser Djabi, a professor of sociology at the University of Algiers holds the view, Women, and the women’s movement, could be leading us to modernity. As could be expected (from a chauvinistic driven country) some socio- political groups are not ready to digest the powerful emergence of women on the scene. They have completely put the blame o’er the shoulders of the fairer sex postulating that the country is experiencing such turmoil because of women’s ‘new role’. Some have even gone to the extent of saying that women are ‘violating’ their traditional faith. No matter what people are concocting, women are enjoying the world out side their stereotypical shells and ‘are brimming with enthusiasm’. This is actually what is required, before changing the attitude of male driven societies, it is very important to change the mind sets of the women folk. Read