Women and Islam

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Women and Islam: An Historical and Theological Inquiry is a book by Fatima Mernissi that discussed the patriarchal and elite corruption of Islam that turned into into an exemplar of the suppression of women.


Notes

"Ample historical evidence portrays women in the Prophet's Medina raising their heads from slavery and violence to claim their right to join, as equal participants, in the making, of their Arab history. Women fled aristocratic tribal Mecca by the thousands to enter Medina, the Prophet's city in the seventh century, because Islam promised equality and dignity for all, for men and women, masters and servants. Every woman who came to Medina when the Prophet was the political leader of Muslims could gain access to full citizenship. the status of sahabi, Companion of the Prophet, Muslims can take pride that in their language they have the feminine of that word, sahabiyat, women who enjoyed the right to enter into the councils of the Muslim umma, to speak freely to its Prophet-leader, to dispute with the men: to fight for their happiness, and to be involved in the management of military and political affairs. The evidence is there in the works of religious history, in the biographical details of sahabiyat by the thousand who bui]t Muslim society side by side with their male counterparts." [1]

Footnotes

  1. Mernissi, Fatima. Women and Islam: An Historical and Theological Inquiry. Translated by Mary Jo Lakeland. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1991. p. viii.