Beijing, P.R. China
September, 1995
The last two decades have witnessed an unusual level of
interest by western feminists in the rights of Muslim women.
This interest has taken many forms, ranging from writing
articles and holding conferences, to funding local groups
in Muslim countries and supporting critics of the status
quo. These activities have no doubt been at least partly
motivated by an emerging global sisterhood that was steadily
reinforced by the earlier world conferences on women.
For these reasons, we find it remarkable that despite their
efforts some outspoken western feminists have created a
deep sense of malaise in the global women's movement. In
particular, many Muslim women have felt silenced by the
very western movement that claims to stand up for their
rights. The insistence of some western feminists at uncovering
and attacking every aspect of Muslim societies *they* consider
oppressive is reminiscent of the orientalist/colonialist
insistence at liberating Muslim women by tearing their veils.
As history shows, such approaches do not work.
Worse yet, many of these feminists who hold themselves
as experts on Islam and Islamic cultures are hopelessly
confused about both. Their statements and works attest to
this fact. Similarly, the women they select and support
as Muslim spokeswomen tend to have no Islamic grassroots
support and tend also to have a larger audience in the West
than in their own homeland. These facts, combined with various
practices surrounding earlier world and regional conferences,
have given the clear signal that at least with respect to
certain western women, their activities on behalf of women
of color and Muslim women are suspect. More importantly,
these activities tend to re-elect a patriarchal mode of
relations.
This is not a new critique of the western women's movement,
but this critique has now acquired global legitimacy. Many
years ago, women of color in the United States argued that
western feminist theories tended to be unworkable for their
communities because they reflected white middle class concerns
and values. For this reason, Alice Walker and other women
of color have chosen to refer to themselves not as "feminists"
but rather as "womanists." The difference is that
a "womanist" is committed to survival and wholeness
of an entire people, male *and* female. Not a separatist
. . . . traditionally universalist."
This too is the point of view of Muslim women, and these
women have begun to speak out in their own voice. From Copenhagen
to Cairo, they have taken issue with platforms that predominantly
reflected the interests of the industrial North. Today in
Beijing, their voices will again be heard. These are many
voices, different voices, voices that might represent substantially
different views. But regardless of their differences, they
all espouse the Qur'an as their fundamental document, and
are committed as a result to the "survival and wholeness
of [the] entire [humanity] male and femail." They also
are fully aware that the Qur'an contains all the elements
on which Muslims can found both their liberation and their
humanitarian commitment.
By participating in this Fourth World Conference on Women,
KARAMAH hopes to contribute to the global efforts of our
Muslim sisters who are seeking a better understanding of
women's rights in Islam. KARAMAH also wishes to remind some
of our western non-Muslim sisters that Islam is not an ancient
Eastern religion, but a vibrant western religion too. There
are today no less than five million Muslims in the United
States alone. Many observant, often veiled, American Muslim
women are doctors, lawyers and professors. This should not
come as a surprise to anyone, because Islam does not oppress
women, patriarchy does.