Articles
Political
Islam and Democracy
Paper presented by
Nawal al Saadawi and Sherif Hetata
Conference on Religion and Democracy,
Mansfield College
Oxford
10-12 September 1999
Introductory
Remarks
Since the collapse
of the Soviet union and the end of the Cold War there has been an
increasing interest in matters related to religion in academic circles.
Academic conferences on religion have become a frequent occurrence,
and we have attended quite a number. All of them without exception
were about Islam. Only a few months ago we were in Edinburgh University
attending a conference on Islam and Development in Africa . Each
time we have asked the same question: Why when dealing with religion
is there this emphasis on Islam, on the Islamic revival, on Islamic
fundamentalism ? Why is it that the other monothestic religions
like Christianity or Judaism receive little attention?
The revival
of religion and the growth of fundamentalism which we have witnessed
over the last quarter of a century or so is not limited to Islam.
We taught together at Duke University in North Carolina for four
years and became familiar with related developments in American
society, with the increasing strength and influence of the Christian
Fundamentalist movement, and of Political Christianity,
the growth of the Christian coalition to a membership of over two
million, its political alliance with the Republican party, its expanding
base in the economy, in education (schools), in culture, and in
the media, with the activities of the Baptist movement, the pressures
exerted by it to re-introduce prayers, and abolish the teaching
of Darwin, in schools to ban abortion and close down abortion clinics
often by violent means, and with the development of what has come
to be known in the USA as the Bible belt.
We worked in
India for a number of years. There too religious fundamentalism
has developed rapidly over the last two decades amongst Muslims,
Sikhs and Hindus and today a Hindu fundamentalist government is
in power.
In the region
of the world where we live political Islam and Muslim fundamentalism
have gained in strength but in addition across the border from Egypt,
in Israel, the Jewish fundamentalism movement has become a prominent
force in Israeli life.
Every day we
can observe how similar to one another these movements are in the
religious ideas and practices they propagate, in the rigid backwardness
of their thought, in the way they act.
The growth of
politically active religious movements, of religious fundamentalism
is almost universal, and this conference will be discussing aspects
related to the three religions Islam, Judaism and Christianity.
In the past years the concentration on Islam has often served the
political aims of ruling circles in the West. In addition it tends
to obscure the role played by the religious revival, and by religious
fundamentalism in our post-modern world, in maintaining and reinforcing
the free market, and the political and economic system promoted
by global multi-national capitalism.
[1] Egypt.
Fundamentalism-the cultural and the economic
The cultural
atmosphere prevailing in Egypt today is very different from that
which we knew at the end of Nassers rule (1970) and even before
under King Farouk. A few years ago we moved to a populous district
of Cairo called Shoubra. The majority of people living in this district
are Copts (that is Christians) but from the tens of mosques scattered
around our building microphones blare out the Islamic call to prayer
five times a day. The first call is at dawn, the last one and a
half hours after nightfall. The calls to prayer may be preceded
by half to one hour sermons delivered in a thunderous voice through
the same microphones with promises of Paradise and Allahs
mercy, or threats of eternal Hell fire. When we go up in the lift
to our flat located on the twenty sixth floor if we ask one of the
occupants which button to press for him, he will answer If
Allah wills I will go up to the tenth floor meaning that the
slightest move made by a human being is ordained by God, and God
might have decided to stop the lift, or make it drop, or give one
of us a heart attack. On the days in which we drive to our small
village house 125 kilometers north of Cairo we meet flocks of young
girls going off to school or coming back their heads enveloped in
ample veils of white cotton cloth. Before coming to this conference
we spent ten days on the North West Coast. Every day we walked at
dawn and swam before sunset in the turquoise blue waters of the
Mediterranean sea. Women and young girls on the beach also plunged
into the sea but fully dressed, under the watchful eyes of a husband,
a father, an uncle, or a spouse. In the morning newspaper a reader
wanted to know whether a Muslim could accept a blood transfusion
from a Copt to which the Sheikh who deals with religious matters
answered only if there is no alternative by which we can save
his life. On the pavements of Cairo thousands of books popularizing
conservative religious ideas about women and other matters and propagating
superstitious beliefs, or faith in miracles, or magic or sorcery
lie side by side with pornographic magazines and pamphlets on sex.
Television and radio broadcasts devote hours to religious programs,
serials, plays and talks. During the past year more than eighty
books have been censored or seized as a result of direct intervention
or pressure from Al Azhar the official theological authority in
Egypt. If you write a letter or give a talk without pronouncing
the ritualistic opening phrase In the name of Allah the most
Merciful and Forgiving you can be sure that ninety nine times
out of a hundred in the audience there will be a small click, a
quick glance at the feet or a short holding of the breath.
In the last
two years after the government struck out successfully at the more
fanatical religious terrorist groups the atmosphere has improved.
The bullets have been stopped, but the same conservative religious
cultural atmosphere largely prevails except amongst the Westernized
upper or middle class groups most of whom manage to combine a religious
ritualism with a consumer culture. This in a country known for its
religious tolerance and for an easy going pragmatic attitude towards
religion in every-day life.
The danger of
the cultural change and its impact on democratic attitudes
and practices in private and public life cannot be minimized. If
people believe in obedience to God, to the patriarch (father, husband,
elder
etc.), in fate and destiny then autocratic, authoritarian
ideas and systems will flourish. People become their own police,
accept chains or even create them.
A religious
revival, a cultural change of this scope and nature has had many
implications. One of them is the growth of active fundamentalist
movements, a greater activity and out-reach of politico-religious
movements.
It seems paradoxical
that a cultural change of this nature should take place in many
parts of the world including Egypt at the beginning of the third
millenium. Why at this stage, in our post-modern world should we
be faced with a revival of religious fundamentalism which in some
ways takes us back to the Middle Ages. If this revival was limited
in nature, if it did not involve many countries in the world and
most of its religions we could have sought the reasons for it in
causes related to specific situations. But since (together with
racial, ethnic and nationalistic fundamentalisms) it is universal
in nature, then the causes themselves are to be sought in global
changes.
Why are we witnessing
this growth of Islamic, (and Coptic) fundamentalism in Egypt, why
the increasing influence of anti-democratic politico-religious movements
called by some scholars an Islamic revival?
The cultural
change characterized by the growth of Islamic fundamentalism
in Egypt is an integral part of our post-modern era, of the changes
that have affected all countries, and all peoples, of developments
in multi-national global capitalism. It is a reaction to the socio-economic
crisis of the so-called free market, to the lack of perspectives
for the future, to the sufferings, the insecurity, the economic
difficulties, the lack of opportunities for youth, the unemployment,
the loss of hope amongst people. In this worsening situation people
have sought comfort in God, in what is familiar and simple and gives
easy explanations. Having lost faith in the system and in the rulers
who lead us, in the belief that they wish to change things and will
find a way out, a return to God has become the alternative, and
a growing number of people have turned to the fundamentalist movement
as the instrument through which God will make changes.
The defeat suffered
by Egypt in the 1967 war and the end of the hopes placed in Nassers
revolution, followed by his death and replacement by Sadat opened
a new era, an era in which the popular gains achieved under Nasser
were liquidated, in which under Sadat neo-colonial powers headed
by the USA gained economic and political domination over Egypt.
It is the era, in which the multinationals and the World Bank have
implemented policies of structural adjustment for the developing
countries of Latin America, Africa and part of Asia, an adjustment
which has made the majority composed of poor people poorer and the
small minority of rich richer.
The religious
revival and the growth of Islamic fundamentalism has also
been a retrograde cultural reaction against the West
perceived as being responsible for the increasing woes of people.
But while the West is pointed out as the cultural
enemy the economic ties between fundamentalist forces and
movements and transnational capital have become closer and closer.
Fundamentalism remains an integral part of capitalist globalization.
Globalization centralizes and concentrates capital at the top, in
the hands of the few. Fundamentalism helps to maintain the power
and control of global capital by dividing people at the bottom on
a religious basis. It has been used by global capital to foment
religious strife, between Muslims and Copts in Egypt, to exert pressure
on the government when it is not as obedient as the United States
would want, to send trained guerillas to Afghanistan and other places
to lead the daily struggle for democratic freedoms and rights astray.
Tens of millions
of Egyptians who migrated during the past decades in order to work
in the oil rich Gulf countries have been influenced by the extremely
conservative religious societies in which they spent years of their
life. They have developed an economic and cultural affinity with
the sources of their new found welfare and often wealth. In cooperation
with the ruling families of the Gulf countries policy makers in
the United States, Britain, France and Germany have helped in setting
up Muslin fundamentalist networks, harboured and protected their
leaders, given them financial, military , logistic and technical
help to serve their political ends inside and outside the region.
The conservative theocratic regimes in the oil rich Arab countries
draw their main support from governments and multi-nationals in
the West and would be unable to survive without this
support.
Successive
Egyptian governments have encouraged and cooperated with the fundamentalist
movement for long periods of time. Religious conservatism has permitted
them to mislead people, to accept their fate, engage in strife instead
of uniting for change. Fundamentalist movements have been used to
halt the growth of liberal, national democratic, or left wing political
and social forces and religious fundamentalism has become an integral
part of the economic, political and cultural structure in the country
and of the system of control. Despite differences related to culture
it would not have been possible to impose the policies of the World
Bank without the growing influence it has exercised over the way
people think. It was Sadat who opened the door to free market
policies, to the United States, and to the explosive growth of the
fundamentalist movement during the seventies. But when the fundamentalist
leaders started to steal towards power they clashed with him using
the Camp David agreement with Israel as an excuse. On the 6 October,
1980 he was assassinated by members of the armed forces at a military
parade. They belonged to a fundamentalist group called Al
Gihad (meaning Holy Combat, or Struggle).
The Gihad
was a splinter group which differed with and broke away from the
Moslem Brotherhood. It accused the latter of not being
radical enough. All the terrorist groups
which appeared on the scene successively during the past years have
been off-shoots of the main fundamentalist movement with a mass
following known as the Moslem Brotherhood. This is seen
by some analysts as a new division of labour imposed by the continuing
failure of the Moslem Brotherhood to size power. In
this new division of labour the terrorist groups undertake
the task of destabilization while the Moslem Brotherhood
moves towards power by strengthening its mass support, and playing
the electoral game.
To speak or
to write about Political Islam and Democracy in Egypt
is to speak or write about the Moslem Brotherhood. The
second sector of importance in political Islam is the official,
establishment, or government sector of political Islam constituted
by the theological University of Al Azhar, the Ministry
of Wakfs, the religious Sheikhs and Imams and a network of around
90,000 mosques as well as schools, prisons and prayer corners spread
all over the country. In other words by the complex politics religious
structure born more than a thousand years ago. The two sectors are
not strictly separated for their linkages are manifold. Nevertheless
we will not deal with official government Islam which has adapted
itself to the semi-secular interests and policies of successive
governments in Egypt. It is the Moslem Brotherhood which is the
more political the less theological or clerical,
and by far the most militant and popular of the two. It is also
the movement which is competing for power in the present set-up.
II- The Moslem
Brotherhood, Political Islam and Democracy
The Moslem Brotherhood
was founded in 1924 by Hassan al-Banna, a school teacher who studied
in Al-Azhar University and Dar al-Ouloum the college from which
teachers of Arabic graduated. He started his daawa
or preachings in the city of Ismaileya head quarters of the Anglo-French
Suez Canal Company and advanced command of the British occupational
forces. This detail indicates its close links with colonial circles
right from the start.
In 1932 the
headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood were moved to Helmeya
al Guedida a populous district in Cairo. Its third congress
held in 1935 laid down the basic tenets of the movement. The Moslem
Brotherhood was described as The Islamic Movement meaning
that only those who belonged to it could be considered real
Muslims, that it was the only authentic representative of Islam,
thus denying all other institutions or movements their true Islamic
character. It was declared a social non-political organization but
its members were not allowed to adhere to any other organization,
a ruling clearly in contradiction with its alleged non-political
aims. It did not seek to define a clear platform or program apart
from the general principles of Islam, and the need for a moral reform
of society. This left the supreme guide Hassan al Banna free to
decide on all matters without making him accountable for any decisions
he might take. It also meant a blind obedience and submission on
the part of all members to his directives and commands.
During the Second
World war the Brotherhood grew rapidly and by the year 1940 had
over two million members and two thousands branches scattered all
over the country, an armed militia, 10,000 mosques partially, or
wholly under its control, a network of social services including,
clinics, hospitals and schools as well as hundreds of small or middle
size economic enterprizes run by its members, including printing
presses, publication houses and a newspaper.
This rapid expansion
of its activities was facilitated by several factors. The economic
difficulties faced by people during the Second World War, and the
social unsecurity in a changing situation encouraged many people
especially belonging to the lower and middle classes in society
to seek refuge in a religious movement. The British colonialists
were perceived as the main cause of the worsening situation, of
inflation, and rising prices. The rhetoric of the Muslim Brotherhood
against these foreigners won support for their cause.
On the other hand the colonialists did not consider this religions
movement as a threat. On the contrary it could be used as an instrument
when the need arose, as a fundamentally autocratic force replacing
nationalism with Islam, of democracy with blind obedience, and unification
with religious strife. Right from the start the British occupation
forces, the palace, the Egyptian police and successive governments
with the exception of the Wafd (the main secular democratic and
national party of the people) encouraged the movement and gave it
financial as well as other forms of support[1].
In 1946 at the
university and schools the Muslim Brotherhood countered the slogans
raised for national independence and democracy by a broad front
including most of the political parties, student organizations and
Trade Unions, womens groups and cultural clubs with slogans
against alcohol, material values and moral corruption.
People they said should obey their ruler King Farouk and worship
Allah. Allah is great was their battle cry and to impress
this on peoples minds they beat up those who did not agree
with them with iron chains and long curved knives called gazelle
horns. By 1945 the Brotherhood had built up an armed militia
of 47,000 young men who sometimes paraded through the streets of
cities with lighted torches in a show of force. In 1948 just before
the movement was disbanded this militia called boy
scouts had reached 75,000 with a well-organized core command,
training camps and weapon stores.
To understand
the ideology of this movement. It might be appropriate
to quote some of the ideas formulated by Hassan al Banna at the
time.
- Science and
art have progressed. Riches have grown and the land has become greener,
attractive to the eyes. But does that mean that we know peace when
we lie in our beds, and that the tears have ceased to drop from
our eyes.
- Foreign legislation
has not solved any of our problems. These can only be solved if
we apply Shariat (religious jurisprudence)[2].
- All parties
should be abolished. The struggle between parties is a negative
thing. We have only one leader and he is the Prophet. We should
refuse all Western ideas including democracy. All our ideas should
come from Islam. However we can take certain things from the West
but only in the following areas:
· Administrative
systems.
· Applied
sciences.
· Communications.
· Services.
· Hospitals
and drug stores.
· Industry,
animal husbandry, agriculture, and environmental production.
· Nuclear
energy for peaceful purposes.
· Urban
planning, construction, housing and traffic flow.
· Energy.
Apart from this
we do not need any thing. Islam includes all things.
- Islam is worship
and leadership, religion and state, spirituality and action, prayer
and militancy (holy struggle), obedience and ruling, Koran and Sword.
All these are
inseparable dualities.
- Our system
of government should be the Caliphate. It is the only system acceptable
to us. It combines political and religious rule in the Calyph with
no separation.
The Struggle
for Power
The Arab Israeli
war of 1948 enabled the Muslim Brotherhood to strengthen its political
influence by capitalizing on its stand against the creation of the
Israeli State and the participation of its Volunteers
in the war. At the same time it was able to collect more arms, and
expand, as well as train the members of its militia and military
leadership. It prepared to take over power. Nokrachi Paslia the
Prime Minister of Egypt, leader of the feudo-capitalist Saadist
Party and a close collaborator with the King outlawed the movement.
The Muslim Brotherhood retaliated by assassinating him and six months
later Hassan al Banna the Supreme Guide of the movement was shot
by members of the secrete police on the streets of Cairo. He was
replaced by Ahmed Al Hodeibi a judge in the Court of Appeal with
close links to the palace in an attempt to improve relations with
the King.
In July 1952,
the Free Offices movement came to power. In the beginning the Muslim
Brotherhood tried to exercise a leading role and gradually take
complete control over the revolution, but Nasser was determined
to follow an independent path. In 1954 negotiations started with
the British for an eventual withdrawal of the British forces occupying
Egypt, the Muslim Brotherhood after some time started secret talks
with the British as a part of a pressure game on the new regime,
but also in an attempt to present themselves as an alternative force
with which the British could reach agreement. Nasser cracked down
on the movement, jailed its leaders and hundreds of its followers.
In the summer of 1955 members of the movement tried to assassinate
him while he was addressing over a quarter of a million people gathered
in the huge al- Mansheya Square in Alexandria.
Followed long
periods of imprisonment which lasted over ten years. But meanwhile
within the movement change was taking place. This was the development
of a more fanatic radical wing which manifested itself in the successive
breakaway of different splinter groups, composed of young men and
women with a strong base in the University, in South Egypt, and
amongst semi-educated groups.
The spiritual
leader and ideologist of this group was a man named Sayd Kotb. He
was the radical successor of Hassan al Banna, the product of different
factors including the successive failures, persecutions and imprisonments
through which the Muslim Brotherhood had to live. For Sayed Kotb
the society was living a period similar to the one preceding the
advent of Islam, known to Islamic scholars as al-Gahileya
which means the era of Darkness and ignorance. This
society and the people in it were heretical non-believers. It had
to be destroyed by an Islamic force, this would permit re-instituting
the absolute rule of Allah and imposing it on all aspects of life.
Only those who participated in the creation of this force were true
believers. They had to accept absolute submission to Allah in everything
they did. All other people were heretics to be destroyed unless
they joined the ranks of this unique Islamic movement called al
Gamaa al Islameya.
Letting the
Genie out of the Bottle
When Sadat came
to power at the end of September 1970 he quickly emerged as a ruler
who had different views and represented different interests to those
of Nasser, and his supporters.
To implement
his policies he had to overcome those who opposed him because they
believed in national independence and an economy geared to satisfy
the basic needs of people. Under the guise of a multi party system
and a new liberalism, and after naming himself al Raiss al
Moumin which means the President Believer he reverted
to the old game of encouraging and supporting the Islamic political
movement, to counterbalance and overcome the opposition composed
of Nasserites, and different national progressive and left wing
movements.
Once again the
followers of the Islamic political movement started to surface,
the young men bearded, the women wearing the veil. Their slogans
Allah is Great or Islam is the Solution
reappeared on the walls, on taxis and cars, posters and stickers,
or were shouted out through hundreds of microphones. But once again
when they grew strong they started to steal towards power. A favourable
moment seemed the Camp David Peace Treaty unpopular with many people
and to which they declared open opposition. But on the 5 September
1981 Sadat arrested 1536 members of the opposition the majority
of whom belonged to the Muslim politico-religious movement. One
month later militants of this movements assassinated him during
a military parade held in commemoration of the victory
against Israel in the war of 1973.
Released from
jail by his successor Moubarak they resumed their activities,
growing more powerful everyday. But to many of the young members
the Moslem Brotherhood seemed to have grown old, lost
its vigour, become too mild. The Iranian revolution had entered
on the scene as a new factor. Events in the Sudan, in Algeria, in
Afghanistan involvement with the CIA, all played their role.
Over the years
the pattern of the movement had changed. It became characterized
by a greater sophistication and complexity coupled with an increasing
tendency to resort to violent methods. Violence has always been
a part of the ideology and action of the movement but now it seemed
to have split into violent and non-violent groups. On the one hand
there were numerous extremist hard core groups, some of them quite
small, mushrooming or growing like a grape vine, so that if one
was destroyed it was replaced by others existing or newly born[3]
which all propagated, doctrinaire terrorist teachings. On the other
the main bulk with a mass following remained the Moslem Brotherhood,
an ostensibly more moderate mainstream no longer engaged in terrorist
activities. Learning from past experience it was now making use
of the multi-party system and elections equated by Western ruling
circles to a democratic system playing the electoral game to get
into parliament, or local government to gain control of professional,
cultural, trade union, and social organizations. It was also moving
more and more into the media (newspapers, T.V., radio, publishing
houses, continuing to work hard at setting up a network of health,
educational and other services, using the thousands of mosques more
effectively, infiltrating into the judiciary, banks and economic
enterprises, making use of the considerable resources and high level
connections at its disposal especially in the Gulf countries.
As a result
of these developments, the roles were now nicely divided between
the moderate mainstream movement and the small radical
terrorist groups. While the terrorist groups threw the bombs at
Presidents, ministers, high level civil and police authorities intimidated
or assassinated intellectuals, killed tourists and disrupted the
economy by creating an atmosphere of insecurity and showing that
democracy was a failure, the mainstream movement could
steal towards power step by step. It no longer needed a militia,
or a military wing. Others probably supported by it in different
ways, off-shoots of the big brotherhood could do the job for it
while it presented a moderate face for all to see, and appeared
as the savior of society from the fanatical Muslims, as the only
force capable of putting an end to all the chaos and destruction.
To these ends it used the language of religion, of God, of morality
exposing the corruption of Arab governments, standing up as the
opponent of Western encroachment on the norms, traditions, values,
and interests of the people. It capitalized on the protest movement
of people harassed by poverty, unemployment, and the heavy hand
of governments who protected the rich and had failed to implement
any policies that would make their situation
easier, and who applying the polices of the World Bank and the International
Money Fund were making the poor poorer and the rich richer.
But the time
came when those in power had to intervene or else step down. It
was Moubaraks turn to crack down first on the terrorist groups
which were the immediate threat, then on the Muslim Brotherhood.
So now the situation lives an uneasy equilibrium and future developments
may depend on whether Western ruling circles? will need an Islamic
alternative. For the time being they have moved away from what seemed
under consideration sometime ago, since the more secular systems
in Egypt or Algeria are less unpredictable than the backward and
narrow minded movements of political Islam. Nevertheless amongst
these movements more modern, open minded and younger leaderships
have developed slowly over the years and so one day they may be
looked upon as an alternative if things go wrong under present regimes,
or if they lose face as we say in our part of the world.
Within the Moslem
Brotherhood this process of modernization has been accompanied by
limited democratic changes in the mentality and attitudes of its
protagonists who belong to new generations of the movement. However
these changes remain extremely limited. In addition a small number
of Islamic intellectuals and professionals have sought to introduce
more liberal interpretations of Islam. Nevertheless these developments
continue to be of a minor nature the absence of democratic changes
and an influential democratic movement within the society as a whole.
This does not mean that the Islamic political movements cannot develop
one or other form of liberation theology similar to some of the
movements which have developed in the West, but all these trends
will tend to affect only a minor sector of the political religious
movement as long as the present balance of forces is maintained
not only in our region but also in the rest of the world. All religions
are political in nature and the direction in which they evolve depends
very much on the socio-economic structures and trends within which
they operate.
The Moslem
Brotherhood and Women
The third and
final section of this paper will deal briefly with the teachings
of the Moslem Brotherhood on the status and role of women in society.
It will confine itself to some of the positions and ideas which
reflect the attitudes and position of the movement towards women.
It will not deal with the impact of the politico-religious movement
on the situation and rights of women. During the past two decades
or so there have been plethora of books, publications, studies,
doctoral theses, papers and articles in the West often politically
motivated the situation of women in Muslim and especially Arab countries,
and this is not the subject of our conference.
During and
after the Second World War, Hassan al Banna was in the habit of
giving a weekly talk every Tuesday evening at his headquarters.
The meetings were held on the spacious roof of the three storey
building painted pure white with dark brown doors and shutters minutely
carved in Arab Islamic designs. They were open to young men and
women who flocked to hear him speak in his rambling rhetorical style
about Islam and the aims of the Moslem Brotherhood. The young women
were always veiled even at that time where there was not a single
veiled female student in the University and they sat in a corner
to one side. If one of these young people moved by what he had heard
decided to join the Brotherhood he was taken down to a small room
to meet Hassan al Banna and be sworn in. The ceremony consisted
in an oath taken over the Koran and a pistol lying side by side
on a table.
The basic tenets
of Islam on which Hassan al Banna insisted when dealing with the
Brotherhoods position on women may be summarized as follows:
(1) Men are
guardians over women. Women must be obedient and men should be
merciful. In every institution people need a director or a guide.
Those who share in the institution can never be equal and that
is why Islam has given the role of supervisor to men because their
minds are more complete, more perfect than those of women.
Sayed Kotb
repeats the same ideas but hands over supervision to men for another
reason namely the inability of women to maintain stability in
the family and hold it together.
Basing themselves
on Koranic verses they both go on to say that this supervision
entitles a man to correct his wife. This correction includes giving
advice or warning, abstaining from sexual relations with them,
or beating them.
(2) Since
women are lacking in their minds and their faiths they should
not be allowed to vote, to stand for elections, to work as lawyers
or as judges. However with the changes in the tactics of the Moslem
Brotherhood in more recent years this position has been modified.
In 1993 the Brotherhood published a pamphlet entitled The
Muslim Woman in a Muslim Consultative and Multiparty Society
in which we can read the following:
The
Brotherhood considers that there is nothing in the texts which
prevents a woman from voting or standing for election. However
a woman cannot take over the role of a supreme Imam (leader) and
this means also that she cannot be a head of state.
(3) In the
courts a woman cannot act as a witness in major criminal cases
(involving blood) or a major punishment. In court
cases dealing with financial matters a woman is considered only
half a witness. Therefore only two women can act as a complete
witness and be the equivalent of a male. This discrimination is
based on the argument that women are emotional whereas men are
reasonable.
(4) Polygamy
is allowed according to the Koran and the Prophets teachings.
However more recent trends within the Brotherhood consider it
undesirable except under exceptional circumstances.
However these exceptional circumstances have not been
defined.
(5) In his
teachings Hassan al Banna maintained that Islam considers
that the use of make-up and products to show off a womans
beauty, mixing with men, and being alone with them is Haram
(sacrilegious)
The role of a woman is to be a good wife
and mother, to stay at home, manage the affairs of her household,
look after her husband and children.
This position
has remained central in the ideology of the Brotherhood. However
with the education of women (40-45% in all schools, university colleges)
and the numbers of women who go out every day to work more liberal
trends have made their way although with the fundamentalist backlash
of recent years, and the growing economic crisis more and more voices
are being raised to maintain that a womans place is in the
home.
The Muslim Brotherhood
like all religions fundamentalist groups insists on the inferior
status of women. But in all religions women are not equal to men,
and it is the changes in society that make the difference.
Because women
do not constitute a strong political force they suffer more than
men from the vicissitudes of economic and political changes. They
are the first victims of the economic crisis, of the attack on fundamental
human rights and democracy, and the first victims of the politico-religious
movement which has spread to many countries of the world.
References
(1) Tagroubit
Misr al Liberaleya. Egypts Experience of Liberalism, 1922-1936.
Afaf Lotfi
al Sayed.
(2) Al Ikhwan
al Muslimoun fi Mizan al Hak. The Muslim Brotherhood and the Balance
of Truth, 1964.
Anwar Al Guindi.
(3) Al Haraka
al Seyaseya fi Misr. The Political Movement in Egypt, 1945-1952.
Tarek al Bishri.
(4) The Relevance
of the Islamic Alternative in Egypt.
Esprit 4 April
1983.
(5) Faith and
power, the Politics of Islam, 1982.
Edward Mortimer.
(6) Al Farida
al Daia. The Missing Obligation, 1989.
Farag Foda.
(7) A study
of Islamic Radical Movements, 1993. Ibn Khaldoun centre.
Saad al Dine
Ibrahim.
(8) Al Islam
al Siyasi fi Misr. Political Islam in Egypt, 1992
Hala Moustapha.
Published by
the Centre for Political and Strategic Studies (Al- Ahram).
(9) Houkouk
al Maráa Bayna al Mawatheek al Dawleya wal Haraka al Islameya.
Womens rights in International Conventions and in the Islamic
Political Movement.
A paper by Omar
Karay presented to the Cairo Centre for the Defence of Human rights,
June 1999.
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[1] The Suez
Canal Company is known to have given generous donations to Hassan
al Banna especially in the early years.
[2] Known to
be extremely anti-democratic and against women. Includes cutting
off the hand of those who steal, stoning a woman who commits adultery.
[3] Examples
of the most important are al Gamaa al Islameya, al Gihad
(responsible for the assassination of al-Sadat al Takfer
Wal Higra, al Nagoun Min al Nar.
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