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Islam discourages social interaction between men and women when they are alone but not all interaction between men and women. This is shown in the example of Khadijah, who employed Muhammad and met with him to conduct trade before they were married, and in the example set by the other wives of Muhammad, who taught and counseled the men and women of Medina. In some Islamic countries, sex segregation has been or is strictly enforced.
[edit] NamusMain article: Namus In the Muslim world, preventing women from being seen by men is closely linked to the concept of Namus.[1][2] Namus is an ethical category, a virtue, in Middle Eastern Muslim patriarchal character. It is a strongly gender-specific category of relations within a family described in terms of honor, attention, respect/respectability, and modesty. The term is often translated as "honor".[1][3] [edit] SourcesThe textual basis for insisting on the controlled interaction of the sexes is the hadith on zina (fornication and adultery) of the "senses" (looking, touching, etc.) narrated from ibn Masʿud by Imam Ahmad in his musnad with a strong chain: "The two eyes commit zina, the two hands commit zina, the two feet commit zina, and the genitals commit zina." Another wording with a passable chain in the musnad includes the tongue and specifies in the end: "Then the genitals actualize it or belly it.". However, it does not necessarily follow that this hadith can be used as justification for saying "Therefore, according to Shari'ah, to look, speak, listen, etc. to any ghayr mahram (women you are not related to or married to) except at the time of extreme necessity is haraam and impermissible." The Qur'anic verses which address the interaction of men and women in the social context include:
and
Implicit in these verses is the expectation that men and women will be interacting. Muslims are instructed to do so in such a way as to focus on attributes other than the physical, namely the spiritual and intellectual. The following hadith indicate that the separation practiced in some Islamic societies today has little precedence in early Islamic practices: Narrated Sahl,
Narrated Anas bin Malik,
Narrated Ar-Rabiʿ bint Muʿawidh,
Other hadith also confirm that men and women eating at the same place, and even at the same table, is not haram. Abu Hurairah reported,
Another narration is,
Based on this hadith, the scholars concluded that it is part of hospitality that the husband and wife eat with their guest. Also, Imam Malik, as reported in Al-Muwatta', was asked about a woman eating with non-mahram, and he said: "There is no harm in doing this."[citation needed] Similarly in many Muslim communities today, women are discouraged or prohibited from going to the mosques. Yet, Muhammad specifically admonished the men not to keep their wives from going to the mosques: Ibn Omar reported,
Also, it is clear from the following hadith that the women simply prayed behind the men and were not separated in a separate room or even concealed by a curtain or partition as is practiced in so many mosques today: Asma' daughter of Abu Bakr said,
The emphasis in the Qur'an and the Sunnah is thus not on total segregation but on minimizing factors that promote physical attractiveness or may lead to the unlawful. Thus Islam requires believers to:
[edit] Sex segregation in Islamic countries
[edit] AfghanistanSee also: Taliban treatment of women Afghanistan, under Taliban religious leadership, was characterized by feminist groups and others as a "gender apartheid" system where women are segregated from men in public and do not enjoy legal equality or equal access to employment or education.[4][5] In 1997 the Feminist Majority Foundation launched a "Campaign to Stop Gender Apartheid in Afghanistan", which urged the U.S. government and the United Nations to "do everything in their power to restore the human rights of Afghan women and girls." The campaign included a petition to U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan and U.N. Assistant Secretary General Angela King which stated, in part, that "We, the undersigned, deplore the Taliban’s brutal decrees and gender apartheid in Afghanistan."[6] In 1998 activists from the National Organization for Women picketed Unocal's Sugar Land, Texas office, arguing that its proposed pipeline through Afghanistan was collaborating with "gender apartheid".[7] In a weekly presidential address in November 2001 Laura Bush also accused the Taliban of practising "gender apartheid".[8] The Nation referred to the Taliban's 1997 order that medical services for women be partly or completely suspended in all hospitals in the capital city of Kabul as "Health apartheid".[9] According to the Women's Human Rights Resource Programme of the University of Toronto Bora Laskin Law Library "Throughout the duration of Taliban rule in Afghanistan, the term "Gender Apartheid" was used by a number of women's rights advocates to convey the message that the rights violations experience by Afghan women were in substance no different than those experienced by blacks in Apartheid South Africa." [10] [edit] IranSee also: Sex segregation in Iran and Women's rights in Iran For many years, breaking the barrier of confinement of the private sphere has been a major source of frustration for advocates of women's rights in Iran. But the Iranian revolution broke the barrier overnight. When Ruhollah Khomeini called for women to attend public demonstration and ignore the night curfew, millions of women who would otherwise not have dreamt of leaving their homes without their husbands' and fathers' permission or presence, took to the streets. Khomeini's call to rise up against the Shah took away any doubt in the minds of many devoted Muslim women about the propriety of taking to the streets during the day or at night.[11] The late 1980s and early 1990s witnessed a marked increase of employment for women, compared to the era under the Shah.[citation needed] Such dramatic change in the pattern of labor force participation might not have been possible if Khomeini had not broken the barriers to women entering into the public sphere. Educational attainment for women, also a product of free education and the literacy campaign, contributed to this increase. In fact, today there are more women in higher education than there are men. The Islamic Republic had adopted certain policies to expand educational levels for women in order to ensure that sexual segregation paid off. These policies were to encourage women to become skilled workers in domains exclusive to women. For example, the government set quotas for female pediatricians and gynecologists and set up barriers against women wanting to become civil engineers.[11] Khomeini supported family planning, a program through which the government called upon women to distribute contraceptives.[11] Iranian women have a majority in Iranian educational institutions and Universities. Women have also enjoyed continuous presence in Iran's parliaments, city councils and cabinet. [edit] MalaysiaIn 2006 Marina Mahathir, the daughter of Malaysia's former Prime Minister, and a campaigner for women's rights, described the status of Muslim women in Malaysia as similar to that of Black South Africans under apartheid. She was apparently doing so in response to new family laws which make it easier for Muslim men to divorce wives, or take multiple wives, or gain access to their property. Marina stated "In our country, there is an insidious growing form of apartheid among Malaysian women, that between Muslim and non-Muslim women."[12] According to the BBC, she sees Muslim Malaysian women as "subject to a form of apartheid - second-class citizens held back by discriminatory rules that do not apply to non-Muslim women."[13] Her comments were strongly criticized: the Malaysian Muslim Professionals Forum stated "Her prejudiced views and assumptions smack of ignorance of the objectives and methodology of the Sharia, and a slavish capitulation to western feminism's notions of women's rights, gender equality and sexuality," and Dr Harlina Halizah Siraj, women's chief of the reform group Jamaah Islah Malaysia said "Women in Malaysia are given unlimited opportunities to obtain high education level, we are free to choose our profession and career besides enjoying high standard of living with our families."[12] [edit] Saudi ArabiaSee also: Women's rights in Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia's practices with respect to women have been referred to as "gender apartheid",[14] and according to Jan Goodwin, this issue is serious enough to warrant attention from the international human rights community.[15] Others criticize U.S. government words of support for the plight women and children in Afghanistan as a "cynical public relations ploy", arguing that the Bush administration has remained silent about the gender apartheid practiced by Saudi Arabia.[16] According to Rita Henley Jensen while Saudi Arabian women "have the right to own property, transact business, go to school and be supported by their husbands, while maintaining their separate bank accounts", "Women on Saudi soil must have a husband or male relative as an escort. We are not allowed to drive. When sight-seeing we must wear a full-length black gown known as an abaya. During Saudi Arabia's first elections, held the week before my arrival, women were not permitted to vote or run for office." She states that hotels have no female employees, and that segregated eating areas in hotels and beaches for women have poorer facilities. She also criticizes Saudi law for setting female inheritance at half of what men inherit (see Female inheritance in Islam).[17] Ann Elizabeth Mayer sees gender apartheid as being enshrined in the Saudi Basic Law, particularly articles 9 and 10, which, in her view, deny women "any opportunity to participate in public law or government".[18] Though Mary Kaldor does not differentiate between gender apartheid in Saudi Arabia and that enforced by the Taliban in Afghanistan,[19] Margaret L. Andersen and Howard Francis Taylor see strictures such as the Saudi refusal to let women drive as indicative of a less extreme form of gender apartheid.[20] Daniel Pipes, too, sees Saudi gender apartheid as tempered by other practices, including the Saudi policy of allowing women "to attend school and work".[21] Andrea Dworkin refers to these Saudi practices regarding women simply as "apartheid":
Daniel McNeill in his book The Face: A Natural History writes that "the apartheid is starkest in Saudi Arabia":
Others refer to these practices as "sexual apartheid".[24][25] Colbert I. King quotes an American official who accuses Western companies of complicity in Saudi Arabia's sexual apartheid:
Azar Majedi, of the Centre for Women and Socialism, attributes sexual apartheid in Saudi Arabia to political Islam.[27] According to The Guardian, "[i]n the kingdom of Saudi Arabia, sexual apartheid rules", and this sexual apartheid is enforced by mutawa, religious police, though not as strongly in some areas:
On 2008-03-18, the first women's-only hotel opened in Saudi Arabia[29]. In addition to only servicing female clients, all employees are women as well. [edit] Sex segregation in mosquesFurther information: Mosque Women in Islam are encouraged to go to mosques, and whoever tries to stop them are viewed as criminals under Islamic law. However, as Islam spread, it became unusual for women to worship in mosques because of fears of unchastity caused by interaction between sexes; this condition persisted until the late 1960s.[30] Additionally, hadiths that assign more benefit for the women who pray at home has made prayer in the mosque less a central concern for practicing Muslim women than it is for practicing Muslim men. Since then, women, at least in North America, have become increasingly involved in the mosque, though men and women generally worship separately.[31] In attempting to provide some practical reasons for separation, some Muslims explain this by citing the need to avoid distraction during prayer prostrations that raise the buttocks while the forehead touches the ground, although the primary reason cited is that this was the tradition (sunnah) of worshippers in the time of the prophet.[32] Separation between sexes ranges from men and women on opposite sides of an aisle, to men in front of women (as was the case in the time of Muhammad), to women in second-floor balconies or separate rooms accessible by a door for women only.[32] There is a growing movement of women (such as Asra Nomani) who complain of second-class conditions in separate female sections of mosques.[33][34] [edit] Sex segregation onlineMuslim website developers have realised the importance of segregation between men and women on the Internet and have taken the initiative to build social network with segregation[35]. These such social network enables user to interact with people of same gender and restricts interaction with opposite gender to certain extent. [edit] See also
Case studies:
[edit] References
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