 At  the time Eileen Collins became the first woman to command the space  shuttle, some Muslims were debating the right of women to drive a car on  the road. This disparity in the level of public discourse on the rights  of women and role of women confront Muslim societies. New findings by a  scholar at Oxford on the historical role of women may help Muslims  forge a new perspective but still remain true to the Prophetic  traditions. Mehrunisha Suleman and Afaaf Rajbee report.
At  the time Eileen Collins became the first woman to command the space  shuttle, some Muslims were debating the right of women to drive a car on  the road. This disparity in the level of public discourse on the rights  of women and role of women confront Muslim societies. New findings by a  scholar at Oxford on the historical role of women may help Muslims  forge a new perspective but still remain true to the Prophetic  traditions. Mehrunisha Suleman and Afaaf Rajbee report.

Dr Akram Nadwi is soon to publish his 40-volume collection  on Muslim women scholars.  In 2007, Mehrunisha Suleman and Afaaf Rajbee  analysed the lost legacy of women scholars and its impact on today's  world in emel's feature on The Lost Female Scholars of Islam.  
If  you call a man a thief long enough, he will start to think he really is  a thief. Likewise, if you call a child stupid all the time, she will  grow up thinking s/he really is stupid. This swindle of self-perception  describes the deep seated anxiety surrounding women in Islam. The  sustained media and academic portrayal of Islam has been that of a  sexist, patriarchal religion that subjugates women through implicit  assumptions of their inferiority. The corrective efforts to this  perceived sexism have been shaped by conservatism and radicalism alike.  Muslim feminists throw women forward as the bastion of a new,  gender-less Islam, free from the shackles of male scholarship and  propelling them forth to become imams and state leaders. At the same  time, one can find countless imams from the Asian subcontinent who will  readily declare women’s rights as a pernicious Western import, against  which the best defence is to keep them inside the home and away from  places of work and education. In this way, there may be little that  separates misogynistic mullahs from progressive feminists: both are  reactions to a crisis of confidence in their own faith. The social and  political upheavals of the past c e n t u r y h a v e shaken the ummah  to the very core - to the point that commentators cannot seem to defend  the most basic social relationship between men and women. Amidst these  celebrations and condemnations of Islam’s supposed misogynism, Shaykh  Mohammad Akram Nadwi’s study of Al Muhaddithat: the women scholars of  hadith is a timely reminder that the gender issue need not be a problem  in Islam. The portrayal in the media of Islam as the cause of the  subordination of women was a key inspiration for the Shaykh to embark on  his decade long study. Currently a research fellow at the Oxford Centre  for Islamic Studies, he found himself confronted with disagreements  amongst Muslims about their own history. There was a gaping need to seek  out the real historical record on women’s place in the Islamic  tradition.
There are widely cited arguments that the male  gender bias in Islamic scholarship has affected the interpretations of  the Qur’an and hadith. But the historical records show examples of  fatwas issued by male jurists that were materially adverse to men and in  favour of women. Furthermore, many of the testaments of excellent  female scholarships have been recounted by their male students. Imam  Dhahabi noted that amongst female narrators of hadith, there were none  found to be fabricators. Women’s scholarly integrity and independence  were unimpeachable. Naturally, any sexist male would have a problem  admitting to these facts. Since women today participate so little in the  teaching of Hadith and the issuing of fatwas, there is a wide  misconception that historically they have never played this role. As  Shaykh Akram describes, “when I started, I thought there may be thirty  to forty women,” but as the study progressed, the accounts of female  scholars kept growing and growing, until eventually there were no less  than 8,000 biographical accounts to be found. Such vast numbers truly  testify to the huge role that women have played in the preservation and  development of Islamic learning since the time of the blessed Prophet  Muhammad. The women encountered by Shaykh Akram were far from mediocre  when compared to men, indeed, some excelled far beyond their male  contemporaries. There were exceptional women who not only actively  participated in society but also actively reformed it. Most striking was  the high calibre of their intellectual achievements and the respect  that they received for this.
Apart from well-known figures,  including Ayesha Siddiqa, the daughter of Abu Bakr, the grandeur of  forgotten scholars is rekindled in the work. Fatima Al Batayahiyyah, an  8th century scholar taught the celebrated work of Sahih al Bukhari in  Damascus. She was known as one of the greatest scholars of that period,  demonstrated especially during the Hajj when leading male scholars of  the day flocked from afar to hear her speak in person. A beautiful  picture is painted of her in an Islam that has been long forgotten – a  distinguished, elderly woman teaching her students for days on end in  the Prophet’s mosque itself. Whenever she tired, she would rest her head  on the Prophet’s grave and continue to teach her students as the hours  wore on. A n y w o m a n visiting the Prophet’s mosque now will know the  frustration of not even being able to see the blessed Prophet’s grave,  let alone rest their head on its side wall. 
Another, Zainab  bint Kamal, taught more than 400 books of Hadith in the 12th century.  Her “camel loads” of texts attracted camel loads of students. She was a  natural teacher, exhibiting exceptional patience which won the hearts of  those she taught. With such a towering intellectual reputation, her  gender was no obstacle to her teaching in some of the most prestigious  academic institutes in Damascus. 
Then there was Fatimah bint  Muhammad al Samarqandi, a jurist who advised her more famous husband on  how to issue his fatwas. And Umm al-Darda, who as a young woman, used to  sit with male scholars in the mosque. “I’ve tried to worship Allah in  every way,” she wrote, “but I’ve never found a better one than sitting  around debating with other scholars.” She became a teacher of hadith and  fiqh and lectured in the men’s section. One of her students was the  caliph of Damascus. The sheer hard work and dedication to Islam by these  women is unfathomable by standards today – but they also had some  biological advantages against men. Female muhaddi that were often sought  after by students to learn hadith because of their longer lifespan -  which shortened the links in the chains of narration. Although Shaykh  Akram’s study focuses on the narrators of Hadith, he found that women s c  h o l a r s had also contributed significantly in teaching “theology,  logic, philosophy, calligraphy and many of the crafts that we recognise  and admire as Islamic.” 
The presence of female teachers alone  does not do justice to the importance of women in Islamic history. The  Qur’an, as originally recorded on parchments and animal bones, was  entrusted to Hafsah, daughter of Umar. It was with the help of these  preserved records that Caliph Uthman disseminated six standardised  versions of the Qur’an to the major political and cultural centres in  the Islamic realm. He ordered all non-standardised editions to be  burned, an act that indicates the immense trust in Hafsah’s competence  and character. The validity of women’s teachings was never doubted by  the Companions on account of their gender, or by any respected scholar  since. 
Considering Islam’s teachings on the fundamental  equality of men and women, Shaykh Akram’s work should really be no  surprise. The Prophet taught that there is no difference in worth  between believers on account of their gender. Both have the same rights  and duties to learn and teach – from memorising and transmitting the  words of the Qur’an and Hadith to the interpretation of these sources  and giving counsel to fellow Muslims through fatwas (legal opinions).  Women have the same duty as men to encourage the good and restrain the  evil. It follows quite logically from this that if they cannot become  scholars and be capable of understanding, interpreting and teaching,  they cannot fulfil their duty as Muslims. If the subjugation of women is  not the result of Islamic teachings, then why are there such gross  violations of women’s rights in the Muslim world today? Relegating the  Muslim woman only to the role of a mother and housewife is a relatively  modern phenomenon (didn’t Ayesha lead an army and didn’t Umm Salama  avert a crisis at Hudaybiyyah?). The definitive cause to this complex  and multi-faceted problem is heavily debated, but a few contributing  factors are worth tracing here. The hegemony of Western civilisation in  the modern world brings with it an inevitability that the Muslim world  will fall victim to its own weaknesses. Women have always had a  problematic position in the Judeo-Christian tradition, the most obvious  example being the Biblical account of Adam and Eve’s fall from the  Garden. The source of mankind’s original sin is placed squarely on Eve,  who represents the weaker sex in the parable (the pains of childbirth  have traditionally been regarded as atonement for this original sin in  the Christian faith).
Theological precedents aside, the  equality of men and women has come late in the day to Western Europe,  with the status of women as “human” being debated in the 16th century  and equal legal rights to men only being established by the 19th and  20th centuries. Misogynism was internationalised, as Aisha Bewley,  writer and translator of the Qur’an describes, by western colonial  authorities who excluded women from teaching in mosques and assuming  political roles in the Muslim societies they colonised. “The lens  through which the West viewed Muslim women was already a distorted one –  and o n c e imposed or implanted among the Muslims, this viewpoint  gradually became an established norm.” As the technologically and  scientifically superior western culture impressed Muslim intellectuals,  they grew more open to the values that these cultures brought with them.
Finger-pointing  at “the West” is a comfortable answer for everyone, but it is all the  more important to realise that the fate of the Muslim woman cannot be  divorced from the fate of the Muslim community as a whole. The  retraction of women from the public sphere is also the result of fear.  “Islam’s current cultural insecurity has been bad for both its  scholarship and its women,” says Shaykh Akram. “Our traditions have  grown weak, and w h e n people are weak, they grow cautious. When they  are cautious, they don’t give their women freedoms.” Man’s desire to  protect women has gone into overdrive, to the point that it has actually  undermined the quality of Muslim communities. When the few women that  do break free begin to propagate extreme brands of feminism, the result  is a vicious circle of suspicion, fear and oppression.
The revelation  of the 8,000 strong history of Muslim women scholars will prompt a  variety of reactions from various parties. Misogynists are likely to  deny it and attempt to undermine its authenticity. Feminists will be  pleased that someone has done the hard work for them. Yet the best  lesson is most likely to be found in the motivation behind its writing.  Shaykh Akram seeks to bring people back to traditional Islam with the  purpose of demonstrating that Islam is not misogynistic and nor were  early male scholars biased against women. Accusations that his study  encourages free-mixing and the relaxing of modesty are unfounded. It is  clear in the introduction to the 40 volumes that the hijab is also the  sunnah of the Prophet and “enables women to be present and visible in  the public space in a way that is safe and dignified.” Here Shaykh  Akram’s status as a learned alim from a prestigious institution (Nadwat  al Ulama in Lucknow, India) who has studied Islam in the traditional way  stands him in good stead; scholars including Shaykh Yusuf al Qaradawi  have been more than willing to acknowledge his research and findings.
The  irony of our forgotten women scholars is that they spent their lives in  the pursuit of historical facts, whereas Muslims have long forgotten  the fact of their contribution. Historical criticism is a fundamental  principle in Islam. The Qur’an requires “O believers! If any iniquitous  person comes to you with a slanderous tale, verify it, lest you hurt  people unwittingly...” (49:6) Questioning the media frenzy on Islam is  not just a good idea, but a religious obligation for Muslims to seek out  the truth.
Once we have acknowledged the true historical  record, that women are not subjugated by Islam and have played a part  since the very beginning, we must also move on. Islam was not revealed  as a bundle of doctrines delineating women’s rights, human rights or  animal rights. Islam confers all of these rights and duties on us when  we sincerely accept Allah’s rights. Faith, and not bare-knuckled  rationality, permits us to create a society where everyone can have  their rights upheld t h r o u g h submission to His Word and His  messengers. Centuries of accusations of misogynism have been  internalised and turned into reality, making Muslims themselves believe  that Islam is fl awed. In a world where some women are kept locked in  their homes while others are vying to become presidents, Shaykh Akram’s  research should present us with some confidence in the justice of Islam.  Not because it proves that Islam has had many women scholars – but that  there were many great scholars that happened to be women.
If you call a man a thief long enough, he will start to think he really is a thief. Likewise, if you call a child stupid all the time, she will grow up thinking s/he really is stupid. This swindle of self-perception describes the deep seated anxiety surrounding women in Islam. The sustained media and academic portrayal of Islam has been that of a sexist, patriarchal religion that subjugates women through implicit assumptions of their inferiority. The corrective efforts to this perceived sexism have been shaped by conservatism and radicalism alike. Muslim feminists throw women forward as the bastion of a new, gender-less Islam, free from the shackles of male scholarship and propelling them forth to become imams and state leaders. At the same time, one can find countless imams from the Asian subcontinent who will readily declare women’s rights as a pernicious Western import, against which the best defence is to keep them inside the home and away from places of work and education. In this way, there may be little that separates misogynistic mullahs from progressive feminists: both are reactions to a crisis of confidence in their own faith. The social and political upheavals of the past c e n t u r y h a v e shaken the ummah to the very core - to the point that commentators cannot seem to defend the most basic social relationship between men and women. Amidst these celebrations and condemnations of Islam’s supposed misogynism, Shaykh Mohammad Akram Nadwi’s study of Al Muhaddithat: the women scholars of hadith is a timely reminder that the gender issue need not be a problem in Islam. The portrayal in the media of Islam as the cause of the subordination of women was a key inspiration for the Shaykh to embark on his decade long study. Currently a research fellow at the Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies, he found himself confronted with disagreements amongst Muslims about their own history. There was a gaping need to seek out the real historical record on women’s place in the Islamic tradition.
There are widely cited arguments that the male gender bias in Islamic scholarship has affected the interpretations of the Qur’an and hadith. But the historical records show examples of fatwas issued by male jurists that were materially adverse to men and in favour of women. Furthermore, many of the testaments of excellent female scholarships have been recounted by their male students. Imam Dhahabi noted that amongst female narrators of hadith, there were none found to be fabricators. Women’s scholarly integrity and independence were unimpeachable. Naturally, any sexist male would have a problem admitting to these facts. Since women today participate so little in the teaching of Hadith and the issuing of fatwas, there is a wide misconception that historically they have never played this role. As Shaykh Akram describes, “when I started, I thought there may be thirty to forty women,” but as the study progressed, the accounts of female scholars kept growing and growing, until eventually there were no less than 8,000 biographical accounts to be found. Such vast numbers truly testify to the huge role that women have played in the preservation and development of Islamic learning since the time of the blessed Prophet Muhammad. The women encountered by Shaykh Akram were far from mediocre when compared to men, indeed, some excelled far beyond their male contemporaries. There were exceptional women who not only actively participated in society but also actively reformed it. Most striking was the high calibre of their intellectual achievements and the respect that they received for this.
Apart from well-known figures, including Ayesha Siddiqa, the daughter of Abu Bakr, the grandeur of forgotten scholars is rekindled in the work. Fatima Al Batayahiyyah, an 8th century scholar taught the celebrated work of Sahih al Bukhari in Damascus. She was known as one of the greatest scholars of that period, demonstrated especially during the Hajj when leading male scholars of the day flocked from afar to hear her speak in person. A beautiful picture is painted of her in an Islam that has been long forgotten – a distinguished, elderly woman teaching her students for days on end in the Prophet’s mosque itself. Whenever she tired, she would rest her head on the Prophet’s grave and continue to teach her students as the hours wore on. A n y w o m a n visiting the Prophet’s mosque now will know the frustration of not even being able to see the blessed Prophet’s grave, let alone rest their head on its side wall.
Another, Zainab bint Kamal, taught more than 400 books of Hadith in the 12th century. Her “camel loads” of texts attracted camel loads of students. She was a natural teacher, exhibiting exceptional patience which won the hearts of those she taught. With such a towering intellectual reputation, her gender was no obstacle to her teaching in some of the most prestigious academic institutes in Damascus.
Then there was Fatimah bint Muhammad al Samarqandi, a jurist who advised her more famous husband on how to issue his fatwas. And Umm al-Darda, who as a young woman, used to sit with male scholars in the mosque. “I’ve tried to worship Allah in every way,” she wrote, “but I’ve never found a better one than sitting around debating with other scholars.” She became a teacher of hadith and fiqh and lectured in the men’s section. One of her students was the caliph of Damascus. The sheer hard work and dedication to Islam by these women is unfathomable by standards today – but they also had some biological advantages against men. Female muhaddi that were often sought after by students to learn hadith because of their longer lifespan - which shortened the links in the chains of narration. Although Shaykh Akram’s study focuses on the narrators of Hadith, he found that women s c h o l a r s had also contributed significantly in teaching “theology, logic, philosophy, calligraphy and many of the crafts that we recognise and admire as Islamic.”
The presence of female teachers alone does not do justice to the importance of women in Islamic history. The Qur’an, as originally recorded on parchments and animal bones, was entrusted to Hafsah, daughter of Umar. It was with the help of these preserved records that Caliph Uthman disseminated six standardised versions of the Qur’an to the major political and cultural centres in the Islamic realm. He ordered all non-standardised editions to be burned, an act that indicates the immense trust in Hafsah’s competence and character. The validity of women’s teachings was never doubted by the Companions on account of their gender, or by any respected scholar since.
Considering Islam’s teachings on the fundamental equality of men and women, Shaykh Akram’s work should really be no surprise. The Prophet taught that there is no difference in worth between believers on account of their gender. Both have the same rights and duties to learn and teach – from memorising and transmitting the words of the Qur’an and Hadith to the interpretation of these sources and giving counsel to fellow Muslims through fatwas (legal opinions). Women have the same duty as men to encourage the good and restrain the evil. It follows quite logically from this that if they cannot become scholars and be capable of understanding, interpreting and teaching, they cannot fulfil their duty as Muslims. If the subjugation of women is not the result of Islamic teachings, then why are there such gross violations of women’s rights in the Muslim world today? Relegating the Muslim woman only to the role of a mother and housewife is a relatively modern phenomenon (didn’t Ayesha lead an army and didn’t Umm Salama avert a crisis at Hudaybiyyah?). The definitive cause to this complex and multi-faceted problem is heavily debated, but a few contributing factors are worth tracing here. The hegemony of Western civilisation in the modern world brings with it an inevitability that the Muslim world will fall victim to its own weaknesses. Women have always had a problematic position in the Judeo-Christian tradition, the most obvious example being the Biblical account of Adam and Eve’s fall from the Garden. The source of mankind’s original sin is placed squarely on Eve, who represents the weaker sex in the parable (the pains of childbirth have traditionally been regarded as atonement for this original sin in the Christian faith).
Theological precedents aside, the equality of men and women has come late in the day to Western Europe, with the status of women as “human” being debated in the 16th century and equal legal rights to men only being established by the 19th and 20th centuries. Misogynism was internationalised, as Aisha Bewley, writer and translator of the Qur’an describes, by western colonial authorities who excluded women from teaching in mosques and assuming political roles in the Muslim societies they colonised. “The lens through which the West viewed Muslim women was already a distorted one – and o n c e imposed or implanted among the Muslims, this viewpoint gradually became an established norm.” As the technologically and scientifically superior western culture impressed Muslim intellectuals, they grew more open to the values that these cultures brought with them.
Finger-pointing at “the West” is a comfortable answer for everyone, but it is all the more important to realise that the fate of the Muslim woman cannot be divorced from the fate of the Muslim community as a whole. The retraction of women from the public sphere is also the result of fear. “Islam’s current cultural insecurity has been bad for both its scholarship and its women,” says Shaykh Akram. “Our traditions have grown weak, and w h e n people are weak, they grow cautious. When they are cautious, they don’t give their women freedoms.” Man’s desire to protect women has gone into overdrive, to the point that it has actually undermined the quality of Muslim communities. When the few women that do break free begin to propagate extreme brands of feminism, the result is a vicious circle of suspicion, fear and oppression.
The revelation of the 8,000 strong history of Muslim women scholars will prompt a variety of reactions from various parties. Misogynists are likely to deny it and attempt to undermine its authenticity. Feminists will be pleased that someone has done the hard work for them. Yet the best lesson is most likely to be found in the motivation behind its writing. Shaykh Akram seeks to bring people back to traditional Islam with the purpose of demonstrating that Islam is not misogynistic and nor were early male scholars biased against women. Accusations that his study encourages free-mixing and the relaxing of modesty are unfounded. It is clear in the introduction to the 40 volumes that the hijab is also the sunnah of the Prophet and “enables women to be present and visible in the public space in a way that is safe and dignified.” Here Shaykh Akram’s status as a learned alim from a prestigious institution (Nadwat al Ulama in Lucknow, India) who has studied Islam in the traditional way stands him in good stead; scholars including Shaykh Yusuf al Qaradawi have been more than willing to acknowledge his research and findings.
The irony of our forgotten women scholars is that they spent their lives in the pursuit of historical facts, whereas Muslims have long forgotten the fact of their contribution. Historical criticism is a fundamental principle in Islam. The Qur’an requires “O believers! If any iniquitous person comes to you with a slanderous tale, verify it, lest you hurt people unwittingly...” (49:6) Questioning the media frenzy on Islam is not just a good idea, but a religious obligation for Muslims to seek out the truth.
Once we have acknowledged the true historical record, that women are not subjugated by Islam and have played a part since the very beginning, we must also move on. Islam was not revealed as a bundle of doctrines delineating women’s rights, human rights or animal rights. Islam confers all of these rights and duties on us when we sincerely accept Allah’s rights. Faith, and not bare-knuckled rationality, permits us to create a society where everyone can have their rights upheld t h r o u g h submission to His Word and His messengers. Centuries of accusations of misogynism have been internalised and turned into reality, making Muslims themselves believe that Islam is fl awed. In a world where some women are kept locked in their homes while others are vying to become presidents, Shaykh Akram’s research should present us with some confidence in the justice of Islam. Not because it proves that Islam has had many women scholars – but that there were many great scholars that happened to be women.
 
 
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