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Wahhabi Islam: From Revival and Reform to Global Jihad
By Natana J. DeLong-Bas
Excerpts from Chapter Four
Women and Wahhabis: In Defense of Women's Rights

 

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EDITOR'S NOTE

The Saudi-American Forum is very pleased to present excerpts from the new book Wahhabi Islam: From Revival and Reform to Global Jihad by Natana J. DeLong-Bas.  Today, we present excerpts from chapter four of the book and will follow with other excerpts over the coming weeks.  In addition to reading the excerpts, we hope you will join a discussion of the book and view the additional material about Wahhabi Islam: From Revival and Reform to Global Jihad.

  • Click here to read the introduction to the book.

  • Click here to read excerpts from chapter one of the book, "Muhammad Ibn Abd al-Wahhab and the Origins of Wahhabism: Eighteenth-Century Context."

Related Material:

Wahhabi Islam: From Revival and Reform to Global Jihad
By Natana J. DeLong-Bas

EXCERPTS FROM CHAPTER FOUR

WOMEN AND WAHHABIS: IN DEFENSE OF WOMEN'S RIGHTS

Pages 123-124

Wahhabism in the contemporary era is largely portrayed as misogynist, denying women their human rights, insisting on strict gender segregation, forbidding women access to public space, and subjugating them by considering them inferior to men. Women under Wahhabi regimes are assumed to have second-class citizenship, if not slave status. Critics of Wahhabism point to extreme examples like the Taliban and Saudi Arabia's requirement that women wear the full burqa' or abaya covering them from head to toe, leaving barely enough room to breathe; the ban on women driving or being recognized heads of households; and the Taliban's forbidding women to go to school, work, or seek medical care as evidence of Wahhabism's oppression, suppression, and repression of women in accordance with an extremely conservative interpretation of Islamic law. [1] All of these stereotypes and images are assumed to be based on the conservative Wahhabi interpretation of Islam despite the fact that no systematic analysis of Muhammad Ibn Abd al-Wahhab's writings about women and gender has ever been undertaken. In addition, no distinctions have been made between tribal customs, local traditions, and Islamic law in these portrayals.

While these contemporary views and concerns have come to define Wahhabism for Western human and women's rights activists and Muslim feminists alike, the assertion that these attitudes are characteristic of Wahhabism risks inaccuracy because the term Wahhabism is rarely defined. Many of the regimes and movements labeled as Wahhabi in the contemporary era do not necessarily share the same theological and legal orientations. [2] The reality is that Wahhabism has become such a blanket term for any Islamic movement that has an apparent tendency toward misogyny, militantism, extremism, or strict and literal interpretation of the Quran and hadith that the designation of a regime or movement as Wahhabi or Wahhabi-like tells us little about its actual nature. [3] Furthermore, these contemporary interpretations of Wahhabism do not necessarily reflect the writings or teachings of Ibn Abd al-Wahhab.

In fact, Ibn Abd al-Wahhab's life and writings reflect a concern for women and women's rights reminiscent of Muhammad. Like Muhammad, he sought to ensure that women's rights, as granted by the Quran, were implemented and that women were aware of them. Like other jurists and Muslim legal thinkers of his time, he was engaged in the discussion of the appropriate place of women in Muslim society. [4] His interactions with women indicate that he recognized them as human beings capable of serving as positive, active agents in both the private and public realms and who therefore deserved access to both education and public space. Rather than demonstrating misogyny or the relegation of women to seclusion, these interactions and encounters reflect the consistent application of the principles of social justice, the equality of all believers, and the need to preserve public welfare and order that permeate all of his other theological and legal writings.

These interactions also stand in marked contrast to conventional wisdom about customs and traditions in Arabia both during this time period and in the contemporary era, as well as traditional interpretations of Islamic law. Consistent with his legal and theological methodologies, Ibn Abd al-Wahhab sought to rediscover the earliest sources of Islamic revelation with respect to gender issues in order to reinterpret them (ijtihad) through contextualization, both historically in terms of the broad values taught by the Quran and hadith. He used this methodology to construct an Islamic vision of gender.


Terms:

  • abaya - Islamic dress that covers a woman from head to toe

  • hadith - written accounts of the sayings and deeds of Islam's prophet, Muhammad

  • ijtihad - independent reasoning in the interpretation of Islamic law

[for more visit the SUSRIS Glossary]

ORDERING INFORMATION

Wahhabi Islam: From Revival and Reform to Global Jihad
By Natana J. DeLong-Bas

Book Description
Before 9/11, few Westerners had heard of Wahhabism. Today, it is a household word. Frequently mentioned in association with Osama bin Laden, Wahhabism is portrayed by the media and public officials as an intolerant, puritanical, militant interpretation of Islam that calls for the wholesale destruction of the West in a jihad of global proportions. In the first study ever undertaken of the writings of Wahhabism's founder, Muhammad Ibn Abd al-Wahhab (1702-1791), Natana DeLong-Bas shatters these stereotypes and misconceptions. [more]

Click here for ordering information.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Natana J. DeLong-Bas is a senior research assistant at the Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding at Georgetown University, Washington, DC.  She is the author of Notable Muslims:  A Biographical Dictionary (2004) and co-author of Women in Muslim Family Law, revised edition, with John L. Esposito (2001).  She has served as editor for and contributor to The Oxford Dictionary of Islam (OUP, 2003), and contributor to The Encyclopedia of the Qur'an (2004) and The Encyclopedia of the Islamic World (OUP, 2004).  She is a frequent public speaker on Islam, Wahhabism and Saudi Arabia.

   

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