Justice is Gender Equality


Toronto Star 
Oct. 20, 2003

Law professor and religious scholar urges fellow Muslims to shed their insularity and build bridges.  Azizah al-Hibri says Islamic law gives women liberty and doesn't promote patriarchy.

"Neither the sun shall overtake the moon, nor night overtake the day — this is 
universal justice"

The victimization and demonization of Muslims in post-9/11 America could spread to Canada unless Muslims shed their insularity and build bridges, warns a leading Islamic scholar.

The U.S. experience is "a preview of what might happen in Canada unless Muslims start to build bridges, work at the grassroots level and develop alliances with civil society and organizations," Azizah al-Hibri, a crusader for Muslim women's rights, told the Canadian Council of Muslim Women. "We need to shed our cultural baggage and be less insular, embracing those with knowledge and expertise regardless of gender."

She castigated the manner in which the primarily male Muslim leadership in the U.S. responded in the aftermath of 9/11, saying "they were caught unprepared and responded with a knee-jerk reaction which is inappropriate." Some of them overestimated their power and are in denial, she said, and instead of providing well-reasoned responses to 9/11, they made wild assumptions and issued ignorant statements.

Muslim women, al-Hibri said, need to be at the forefront of doing damage control.

"Islamic law gives women liberty and latitude and does not promote patriarchy. It's no longer a matter of choice — male leaders have been dissipated. It's imperative for Muslim women to rise to the front lines and not repeat the same mistakes. Our leadership is to unite and not divide the community — the best leadership is based on conflict resolution and mediation, otherwise there will be no leaders in the next generation."

Al-Hibri wondered if there were checks and balances among Canadian Muslims on the appointment and accountability of imams (leaders) in mosques and suggested this is a good place to start. "Communities get the imams they deserve," she pointed out, reiterating the importance of knowledge, reasoning and good judgment as basic prerequisites. She also stressed that leaders need to speak out when the rights of non-Muslims are contravened.

Clarifying that leadership is not about women's liberation or feminist trends but about responding to the needs of the day, al-Hibri told Muslims to "put your egos, insecurities and personal problems aside, find those who have leadership qualities and send them for training."

"The fundamental notion in the Qur'an is that of justice, and justice is gender equality. We need to examine Islamic jurisprudence and distinguish between cultural and religious practices."

Al-Hibri, a professor at the University of Richmond's T.C. Williams School of Law and president of Karamah: Muslim Women Lawyers for Human Rights, has travelled extensively throughout the Muslim world in support of Muslim women's rights. She helped form the Supreme Council for Family Affairs in Qatar to develop that country's personal status code. She has visited 13 Muslim countries and discussed with their religious, political, and legal scholars, as well as women leaders, issues of importance to Muslim women. And as a Muslim lawyer, it took perseverance and courage for Al-Hibri to find a niche in secular America.

In her address to the council, Al-Hibri related many incidents in which Muslims had been victimized after the Sept. 11 terror attacks, and expressed deep concern about the impact on Muslim women. "Our observation at Karamah is that while 9/11 affected Muslim family life as a whole, Muslim women were hit the hardest, and they are reluctant to talk about their experiences (due to fear)."

Al-Hibri suggested one solution is for Muslims to engage in dialogue and debate. "Roll up your sleeves and get involved in the political arena — so you will have a say in the decision-making process."

She also suggested Muslims send their second child to law school. Why the second child? "I know the first one will always be a doctor or engineer," she joked, "but it's very important for Muslims to become lawyers and Supreme Court judges."

Remarking on the general condition of Muslims, al-Hibri noted, "There is a rise of kingdoms and fall of democracies in the Muslim world. We have allowed rule of law to be replaced by rule of the kingdom." She suggests Muslims "need to ignore interpretations that are totally illogical and patriarchal, and offer solutions based in the Qur'an that are feminist in nature."

  
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