Mediterranean Journal of Educational Studies, Vol. 6,
No. 2, November 2001:-.
BOOK REVIEWS
Extended Review
A Daughter of Isis: The Autobiography of Nawal El-Saadawi, by Nawal
El-Saadawi (translated from Arabic by Sherif Hetata). London: Zed Books, Ltd.,
1999, 294 pp. (ISBN 1-85649-680-5 paper)
Written in a very warm, intimate, emotionally engaging
style, witty, sarcastic, optimistic, and insightful, A Daughter of Isis is truly a book for everyone. At the age of
seventy, Dr. El-Saadawi is at the height of her life’s work, with the energy
and enthusiasm of a teenager. Her autobiography is an exemplary reflection of
her ideas, her goals, her struggles, and her life’s journey.
A Daughter
of Isis offers its readers insight
into the author’s struggle for authenticity, for autonomy within community, and
for social justice. These are struggles which concern millions of people
world-wide, particularly in countries which have been colonized by Western
powers and/or remain caught in the web of the neo-imperialist global capitalist
system. The development of Dr. El-Saadawi’s identity as an authentic individual
having a genuine sense of solidarity with family and community, despite the
diversity of views which led to constant struggle and conflict, is not only fascinating
at the psychological level, but inspires the reader to see the need for social engagement and social justice. After
all, our actions in our everyday lives either contribute to the status quo or to social change. The
recent horrific terrorist attacks on the United States of America have shocked
many people into re-evaluating their values, their goals, and their lives in
general. The obvious lesson in all of this is that until there is true social
justice, terrorism will continue to flourish all over the world. Until then, no
one is safe, literally.
One positive outcome of the
terrorist attack on the U.S.A. is the sudden and dramatic awareness of the need
for solidarity and community. Gone is
the focus on alienation and anomie, long considered common themes in North
American education and social science circles. Usually linked to the rise of
materialism and decline of spirituality, the loss of community, and the rise of
self-centered individualism in the West, alienation and anomie were as much a
part of Dr. El-Sadaawi’s early life in rural Egypt as they are today. A Daughter of Isis reveals that these
are universal concerns with a long history. Nawal El-Saadawi reveals the
alienation and anger she felt as a young child towards her relatives and her
society in general. She strongly opposed many of the social norms because she
believed that they underpinned the omnipresent oppression and exploitation of
most Egyptians, resulting in widespread ignorance, sickness, poverty, and
misery. Her life’s goal was to escape
this misery and make a positive contribution to her society.
Dr. El-Sadaawi’s rebellion was not
simply against her parents’ authority; it was rebellion against an unjust,
undemocratic society. She rebelled against unjust relatives, peers, teachers,
neighbours, bureaucrats, and politicians. In doing so, she was able to strike
out on a path very different from that of her other female relatives as well as
most girls and young women her age. Fortunate to have some positive female role
models, Nawal El-Saadawi rejected the gender norms and roles of her day to
become an independent, professional woman of international fame.
Here
it is obvious that teachers have an immense influence on their students. “…[A]
teacher in school to us was like a god” (p. 215). Because most of her teachers
were unthinking supporters of the status
quo, Nawal El-Saadawi rebelled against the most stifling aspects of her
schooling. “What I could not stand was the teacher, the rules of grammar, and
religion. These three things were capable of killing any budding talent” (p.
216).
However, teachers, like others, have
the choice of supporting or challenging social norms which limit the
development and freedom of individuals. Nawal El-Saadawi was fortunate enough
to have some teachers who were strong role models. They, too, valued education
and independence above ignorance, dependency, and conformity to unjust social
norms. They inspired the young Nawal to pursue her creative endeavours, and to
study at university. Indeed, she wrote her first novel at age fourteen, and has
since written more than forty. She was able to develop her interests in spite
of the societal barriers faced by women at that time, in part, because of a few
strong female teachers. Her becoming one of the first female students to be
admitted to the Medical School at Cairo University is part of their legacy.
The price paid to exercise one’s
independence against the wishes of the authorities, of course, varies greatly
from society to society. Dr. El-Saadawi was fortunate to have a father who was
strongly opposed to the Turco-Albanian monarchy and British control over Egypt.
His price was denial of career opportunities in the Ministry of Education and
being marginalized as a school inspector in his own poor, rural village. It was
a price paid by his entire family.
My father’s
dreams were different. He wanted to liberate his country from colonial rule,
free himself from the bondage of his government job, become a poet, or a
writer. He died without achieving any of these, without writing anything, lived
a life of semi-exile in faraway corners of the country with nothing to keep him
going except his love for his family and an inner pride, the feeling that he
had never given up, had always struggled for what he believed was right. (p. 6)
Al-Sayed Habash El-Saadawi’s love
for learning, however, was tempered by his more compliant acceptance of gender.
His dilemma was that Nawal’s older brother was far less successful at school.
As the eldest of six sisters, Nawal opened their path to secondary and
post-secondary education, one that was denied her female cousins. It was
Nawal’s mother who enabled her daughters to defy gender conformity.
The importance of a mother’s
education and attitudes about education for girls is recognized by sociologists
of education as critical in the educational achievement of children,
particularly girls. It is noteworthy that Dr. El-Saadawi’s mother, Zaynab, was
the first and most important supporter of her education. In fact, it was her
mother who set her course in life.
Although Zaynab came from the ruling
Turco-Albanian class --indeed, her father was a Bey, -- her family had fallen
into gentile poverty. She was married off at the age of fifteen to a man
sixteen years her elder who came from the lowest class, the peasantry. Dr.
El-Saadawi’s father, Al-Sayed, was the first man to leave his village of
farmers in a suit. He had succeeded in rising to the middle class through
educational achievement and spent his entire working life as a civil servant fighting
to extend education to all Egyptians.
Perhaps because she was forced to
stop her education, Zaynab Hanem Mahmoud Shoukry was determined that her
daughters would not be denied higher education. Nawal (p. 6) recounts her
mother’s regrets in life, indicating that they had a profound effect on her:
My mother was not a doctor, or a writer.
She had no job, no income of her own, no place in which she could live apart
from her husband’s home…
[but] Mother had a happy life in many ways. She was not like the other
women in the family. She regretted being just a housewife. Ever since her early
school days she had dreamed of other things…“I wanted to be a musician, and
play music, or to finish my education and find a place where I could experiment
and invent something useful. I dreamt of galloping on a horse to the horizon,
of riding in an aeroplane to see the world, but your grandfather Shoukry took
me out of school and married me off to your father.”
Even though Zaynab died at the age
of 45, she lived to see all of her daughters educated. The many sacrifices made
by Nawal El-Saadawi’s parents in order that their nine children receive a good
education is eye-opening to many Westerners who take good quality education and
a much higher standard of living for granted. It also highlights the
importance, however, of cooperation between parents and teachers in the
education of children. Teachers are much more effective if they are aware of
the circumstances and values of their students’ families and if they can involve
those families in the education of their children.
Nawal
El-Saadawi’s values, goals, and life path were born of the conflict she
experienced within her family, community, and society. Being raised by families
coming from opposite ends of the social spectrum introduced her to the many
injustices still inherent in Egyptian society. As Nawal (p. 18) describes her
parents’ families:
First the family of Shoukry Bey, noble descendants of
a lineage going back to the great Tala‘at Pasha of Istanbul. Then the family of
Al-Saadawi, from Kafr Tahla, with their dark, dusty faces, and the bare skin of
their cracked heels looking out from under the hem of their long garments. The
smell of mud and sweat in the threadbare gallabiyas,
the long robes worn by peasants, mingled with the sweet scent of French
perfumes in the flowing silk dresses and the smell of whiskey and dark tobacco
rising from the foreign-cut suits made of English wool.
Another important aspect of this
autobiography is Nawal El-Saadawi’s struggle to understand and accept Islam as
a religion valuing education and social justice. She rejected the dogmatic,
literalist, patriarchal interpretation of Islam which was held by many of her
relatives and is still commonly held in Egyptian society. Her recounting this
journey is insightful and useful to readers, whether Muslim or not,
particularly in light of the recent terrorist attacks in the U.S.A. by militant
Islamic fundamentalists. The interpretation of Islam held by these terrorists
is neither reflective of nor condoned by most educated religious scholars
throughout the Muslim world. Thankfully, Western politicians and military
leaders have emphasized that their impending war on terrorism is not a war on
Islam. Most Muslim states have made it clear that this is a struggle against
those who misuse the concept of jīhād
and commit acts of terror against civilians.
Given the numerous protracted wars
waging around the world today, and the fact that most warring groups claim to
have “God” on their side, it is absolutely necessary for political, military,
and religious leaders of all faiths to oppose war and work actively towards a
peaceful settlement. Peace is only secured if it is based on social justice.
Westerners should not fall into the
false dichotomization of faith and reason so typical of modernity and which has
more recently been seriously challenged by post-modernists. Some of the ancient
Greek philosophers, great Islamic philosophers, and Jesus Christ himself have
not fallen into this trap of the false dichotomy. Dr. El-Saadawi remembers her
illiterate grandmother resisting unjust officials saying, “We are not slaves
and Allah is just. People have come to know that through reason” (p. 7).
Nawal El-Saadawi reminds us that
setting reason and the rational against faith and emotion is used by
patriarchal religions and societies as a basis for subordinating and
discriminating against Others, particularly women. It is also used to pit West
against East, North against South, urban against rural. Not only is this a
false dichotomy, it is a very destructive one for human beings. In addition,
lack of religious freedom and domination by a state-sanctioned religion is the
case in most countries and would be true in practice even if not strictly in
law. This is an important factor when discussing religious values in general,
and even more so in terms of state education.
Nawal El-Saadawi provides great
insight into this and many other significant issues which arose during her
school days. The reality of diversity of views amongst students, parents,
teachers, administrators, and politicians is really no different for Nawal than
it is for many of us in other countries today. Nawal’s experience navigating
through and learning from this diversity is fascinating and instructive for all
readers.
Schools are a microcosm of society,
and Nawal El-Saadawi discovered that she faced many of the same issues,
challenges, and barriers throughout her life, whether as a student, a
psychiatrist in private practice, a university professor, a deputy minister of
health, a writer, or a human rights activist. Imprisoned and exiled for her
advocacy of human rights for all Egyptians, demonised by many in the Arab world
for her unfailing support of women’s rights in Islam, and misunderstood by many
Westerners, Dr. Nawal El-Saadawi is an inspiration for all of us to work more
diligently for social justice in our own communities as well as in partnership
with others. As Nawal learned from her father, “Allah is our conscience which
tells us we have done something wrong when we do not stand up for justice.
God’s voice comes to us from our depths and not from the pulpit of the mosque”
(p. 7).