Muslim Grrrls

Sep 18, 2010 18:37


Four or five years ago, the term Sharia, which for Muslims denotes Islamic law, meant scant little to Americans. As I write this in the fall of 2010, America’s perceptions of Islam and Muslims have changed markedly. A few months from now, when Oklahoma voters march to the polls, they will face “question 755” on their ballots. Born out of the “ ( Read more... )

global feminisms, islam, international women's issues, middle east

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Comments 10

fall_of_sophia September 18 2010, 23:08:12 UTC
hey it looks like the author and the source could probably use the hits, would you mind editing some out so that people have to click to read it all?

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proofrawk September 18 2010, 23:14:43 UTC
Sure thing. I edited out a chunk from the middle.

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fall_of_sophia September 18 2010, 23:17:33 UTC
i kinda figured because i saw you wanted to emphasize stuff at the end. i just figured she might actually be getting paid by the page hit. thanks.

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proofrawk September 18 2010, 23:22:04 UTC
That didn't even occur to me! Thanks for pointing that out.

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phaetonschariot September 19 2010, 00:15:48 UTC
This is really interesting, and a very telling example of how Western laws and ethics really are not always in the best interests of the ~poor oppressed foreigners~ who haven't been properly exposed to our obvious superiority. /sarcasm Even though Zainab's marriage contract is, at the heart of it, based on sexism - the idea that she needs support after the marriage ends - we have to acknowledge that the world we live in is sexist and will be for quite a long time and sometimes you need a little sexism to fight a lot of sexism. Ideally a woman would have plenty of options after divorce, sure - but right now she doesn't, and blanket reactionism against Islam would have blocked her from her rights in two different cultures, putting her in the worst of both worlds rather than the best. It's only an egocentric view of the world that lets people deny that there could be anything worthwhile in Islam, that there have never been people in the affected countries who were able to fight for compromise to protect themselves and their families at ( ... )

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addienfaemne September 19 2010, 03:28:19 UTC
Really interesting perspective, thank you.

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wathsalive September 19 2010, 04:58:17 UTC
This is a really good article. Thank you for sharing it.

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maenads_dance September 19 2010, 14:47:46 UTC
Fascinating. I'm forwarding this on to some relatives who have been resistant to the idea of Muslim feminism.

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