| Western Feminists: At the Service of Radical Islam |
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by Phyllis Chesler "The Islamization of America has begun. Pro-Islamist, anti-American, anti-Israeli, and anti-Jewish hate speech is protected on American campuses by concepts such as academic freedom and freedom of speech..."
One might expect Western feminists to take the lead in challenging Islamic gender apartheid, but sadly, this is not the case. Rather, they tend to be more concerned with Israel's "occupation" of Palestine or the U.S. "occupation" of Afghanistan and Iraq than with the Islamist persecution of women. They consider it "racist" to condemn gender apartheid of the most savage sort, and "racism" trumps concerns about gender.
Incredibly, those same Western feminists who condemn as patriarchal Western institutions of marriage, biological motherhood, heterosexuality, and religion now view Islamic veiling, the hijab (head scarf), purdah (seclusion of women), arranged marriage, and polygamy as sacred religious rights. Those same feminists who condemn Christianity and Judaism for more minor (but still serious) misogynist practices only whisper about major Islamic misogyny—lest it be viewed as politically incorrect criticism of a formerly colonized culture. Like other academics, feminists will not characterize a culture as "barbaric" if it is an Arab or Muslim country—not even if that culture or country is perpetrating genocidal violence against Muslims and what I call gender-cleansing—as is the case in the Sudan. Western feminists and leftists do not feel it is their right to condemn Muslim-on-Muslim violence. Muslim Women Activists in North America and A History of Women's Seclusion in the Middle East: The Veil in the Looking Glass take such thought disorders to new Orwellian heights. Both books are published by university or academic presses; both have many footnotes, and the latter volume has a long, somewhat outdated bibliography. These academic trappings notwithstanding, neither volume is a scholarly work, but each is a work of propaganda, in the latter case, of a rather fevered imagination. Both volumes illustrate the worrisome trend of prestigious presses publishing non-scholarly works disguised as works of scholarship. (Other examples include the University of California Press publishing Norman Finkelstein, Oxford University Press publishing Tariq Ramadan, and Farrar, Strauss, and Giroux publishing John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt.) When Bullock mentions Muhammad, she consistently follows his name with the phrase "peace be upon him" and refers to "Muslim religious theology" as "the Islamic sciences." She views Muslim communities in North America as "under siege" and condemns imaginary, omnipresent "Muslim bashing" and "hate crimes" against Muslims. In her view, "covered" women are not oppressed because "many do positive volunteer activism." Paradoxically, however, Bullock herself notes that many such "covered" and "non-oppressed" Muslim women in this volume themselves write about "negative pressures" from within the Muslim community regarding a "woman's right to speak publicly, [and] be involved in community decision making." Such women have only been able to resist community pressures with the "help of a father or husband."
Bullock's authors also propound some chilling ideas. Nimat Hafez Barazangi, born in Syria and currently living in Ithaca, New York, views herself as a "feminist activist." But I see her as an Islamist exploring ways to use the American legal system to wrest some separate-but-equal gender justice for Muslim women and girls (and only for them, not for other groups of girls and women).
I do not oppose such efforts, but they are far short of what Muslim women, even in Ithaca, probably need. Proudly, Barazangi reports how she used Title Nine and the Fourteenth Amendment to persuade Ithaca town officials to allow Muslim girls to swim separately from boys. However, she was unable to persuade Muslim families to allow their daughters and wives to swim at all. Gul Joya Jafri, a Canadian Muslim and self-described activist, worked with the Afghan Women's Organization. She addressed the way in which the mainstream media portrays Muslim women. Her activism consisted of monitoring media outlets and fighting against "anti-Islam" forces. Joya Jafri's activism does not find it incumbent to protest women's forced wearing of burqas or women's mistreatment by the Taliban. Instead, she laments that the media chooses to portray only these aspects and stories about Afghanistan. It is "true," she says, "but it doesn't need to be reported in that way." As a high school student, Joya Jafri "dreamily quoted the U.N.'s Universal Declaration on Human Rights: ‘Everyone has a right to life, liberty and security of the person,'" but as an adult, she focuses on a fair portrayal of Muslims in the media—presumably a portrayal that does not focus upon or condemn forced veiling, forced marriage, wife beating, female genital mutilation, and honor murders but that, instead, focuses on a Muslim woman's right to practice Islam in a highly visible and separatist way in the West. Like Bullock and Barazangi, hers is a faith-based perspective—one that does not focus on a Muslim woman's right not to cover, become an "apostate," or to live in a way in which the separation of mosque and state is viewed as an advantage.
Chamberlin's work amounts to a romantic hodgepodge moored in American feminism of the 1970s. In effect, she argues that Western women who seek to integrate previously male-only space are far more "conservative" and "patriarchal" than are American lesbian separatists or veiled Muslim women who live in purdah. She sees women-only religious rituals and women-only space as equivalent to anti-patriarchal protest or resistance movements.
Chamberlin's approach is seductive and dangerous. It caters to a woman's desire to feel morally separate and superior, valued, and safe. Chamberlin claims that slave women in the pre-Islamic and pagan Middle East were forced to work naked and to be sexually available at any moment to all men. Thus, "covered" and secluded women were safer than slave or "uncovered" women—mainly because they only had one male master, not many. The distinction is similar to that between housewives and prostitutes. |
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