Here, incidentally, although it dates to 2002, is a useful little piece about the situation of women in Afghanistan:
http://www.un.org/events/women/2002/sit.htmOkay. (Takes a deep breath.) I've been told that antishock8's post is worth reading, so I'll give it a shot.
antishock8 wrote:The Quran does indeed uphold and provide "religious authority" for the oppression of women, including the taking of women as prizes of war and plunder and generally designs a subordinate place and "second class" status for women in society.
That's absolutely true. It's never been in dispute.
Of course, it would be useful to compare and contrast the status of women in the Qur’an with their status in pre-Islamic Arabia.
antishock8 wrote:There IS a reason why so much male hostility and oppression toward women occurs within the Islamic world. From honor killings to the burning down of a girls' school in Saudi Arabia, woman-hate is sanctioned by Islamic relgious authority, which justifies its rationale from the Quran and Hadiths.
"Woman-hate"? That's a very broad generalization. Islam isn't a monolith.
antishock8 wrote:It's clear, that the major ulemahs within Sunni Islam (85-90% of the world's Muslims), are pretty much united in their condemnation of women.
Another overly broad generalization.
antishock8 wrote:Women are beat. It's sanctioned.
This is a matter of contemporary debate within Islam.
antishock8 wrote:Women are assigned a second-class status. It's sanctioned.
That, I think, is more or less true in certain ways. But women vote in Egypt and Iraq and elsewhere, sit in the parliaments of the major Islamic nations, and, in Islamic countries from Morocco to Indonesia, hold cabinet rank, have served as presidents and prime ministers, teach at universities, serve as lawyers, work as physicians, etc., etc.
antishock8 wrote:Women are taken as sex slaves. It's sanctioned and happening RIGHT NOW.
In certain places, yes. But not in all or even most. And far and away not only in Islamic countries. (Has anybody here ever heard of Bangkok?)
antishock8 wrote:Men divorce women with ease, but it's nearly impossible when the roles are reversed. That's sanctioned under Shariah.
Again, a matter of contemporary dispute under Islamic law.
antishock8 wrote:Pedophilia is sanctioned as long as the girls is "married". It's sanctioned. What do you think the odds of a little girl who is married off and most likely impregnated early are with regards to receiving a good education?
This does happen in some Islamic societies, yes. In others, it doesn't.
antishock8 wrote:Across the Islamic world there exists a gulf for women having equal access to education, equal opportunities for higher education, and being free to choose their subject of study when allowed to go to school.
That has been very true in the West, as well, and within living memory. Is the Islamic world somewhat behind the West in this regard? Absolutely. But not quite as far as some here wish to pretend.
antishock8 wrote:Islam may not be the sole factor in the repression of women. Local, social, economic, political, and educational forces as well as the prevalence of pre-Islamic customs must also be taken into consideration.
I doubt that women in Bolivia, Cambodia, Burma, Sri Lanka, Bulgaria, Mexico, the Congo, and scores of other countries on the planet -- perhaps including the United States, the United Kingdom, France, and Germany -- have precisely equal status with men, or entirely equal access to education, or equal freedom in their careers. Anybody who cares to do so is welcome to look into the relevant statistics.
This is a worldwide issue.
antishock8 wrote:But Islam and the application of the Islamic law remain a major obstacle to the evolution of the position of women in the Muslim world.
In many ways, that's indisputable. And I haven't disputed it. I've been studying the Islamic world seriously for more than thirty years; these aren't new discoveries for me.
antishock8 wrote:Anyway. On and on... The apologia I'm seeing conducted on this board on behalf of Islam, as it relates to women, is sobering.
All you've seen (from me, at least) is a flat denial that Islam, as such, punishes the education of women, or opposes the education of women. I stand by that denial. It's simply true.
The notion that I regard the status of women in the Islamic world (or, for that matter, anywhere else) as having reached utopian perfection was ginned up by harmony in her "passionate" rants. I've never said anything remotely like that.
antishock8 wrote:It makes sense to observe Mormons defend Muslims in their treatment and subordination of women, because deep down they both have the same goals in mind: Keeping women in their place.
This is nonsense.
Oh. Look! There's another antishock8 note that's fairly civil! I guess I should address it, too.
antishock8 wrote:It's about priorites, Dr. Shades. If you were an Islamist state, and a scholar of the Quran and Hadiths, you have to figure out what's most important to enforce first, and then second, and then third, so on and so forth. The Taliban aren't against women being educated per se,
I'm not an authority on the Taliban version of Islam, but could you provide some evidence that the Taliban don't oppose the education of women as such, but merely see it as something a bit further down their list of priorities? Is there any evidence, say, that the Taliban have ever seriously contemplated something like an all-women nursing school or an all-female medical college or an Afghan women's university?
antishock8 wrote:but it's something that should be done in total exclusion and isolation where risk of contact with men, who isn't a husband or immediate family, is zero. And until that happens any girls who turn 8 are withdrawn from school and either married off or sent home. Their education is less important than them being exposed to men. Way less. Like... Way down that priority list. So, sure.. They can say they're for education, but as long as it's compliant with their laws, based on their interpretation of Shariah.
And that, of course, even on
your reading, would be entirely consonant with my consistent comment here that it's the Taliban
understanding of Islam, not Islam
as such, that opposes the education of women.
Egypt and Jordan and Syria and Malaysia and Indonesia and Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states are Islamic, too, and they have extremely influential scholars of the Qur’an and the
hadith. Yet the orthodox Sunni Islamic Al-Azhar University is co-educational (I know; I've spoken there), as are the University of Cairo, Ayn Shams University, Zagazig University, the University of Alexandria, and other universities in Egypt. As are the University of Jordan and Damascus University. (I know; I've spoken at both.) As are the Islamic schools I've spoken at in Malaysia and Indonesia. The new and lavishly-funded King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia is coeducational. There are women's universities in the Gulf states (a friend of mine presides over one). And so on and so forth.
antishock8 wrote:Speaking of which...
http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/04/ ... .marriage/What are the odds this little girl's mother's appeal will win? What are the odds that this girl, growing up in the most pious Muslim country, will go on to be one of Dr. Peterson's female physicist friends? What are the odds, that ANY girl, in the Islamic world, that is married off will end up being highly educated and a light on the hill for the rest of us to marvel at?
Harmony's passionate rants notwithstanding, I've never suggested -- because I don't believe -- that the Islamic world as a whole is a feminist utopia. Quite the contrary. So I feel no need to defend that notion.
antishock8 wrote:So. This goes back to Islamic priorities.
And here, I fear, we're getting back into overly broad generalizations.
Islam is no more a monolith than is Christianity or "the West."
antishock8 wrote:Sure, Muslim males aren't totally adverse to women being educated, as long as it suits them. Women don't really have a say in their world... If they end up being educated it's most likely an anamoly rather than the norm.
Have you ever looked in the personals section of one of the American Muslim magazines? The entries most often read something like the following: "Muslima, 26, doctoral candidate at MIT, seeks Muslim man, 26-35, for marriage." The emphasis on women's degrees is so constant and frank that I've long actually found it amusing.
Here, incidentally, are some links (easily assembled in a matter of two or three minutes) to a variety of Muslim views on the education and status of women:
http://www.answering-christianity.com/education.htmhttp://www.ias.org/articles/Women_in_Islam.htmlhttp://science.jrank.org/pages/9097/Edu ... Women.htmlhttp://www.angelfire.com/mo/MWSA/rights.htmlhttp://www.themodernreligion.com/women/true-edu.html (see "Women and True Education," and what follows)
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/290/5489/55