Here Are the Muslim Feminist
Voices, Mr. Rushdie!
Salman Rushdie tells us in his Op-Ed essay in the New
York Times (Friday, Nov 2, 2001), that “highly motivated organizations
of Muslim men”—whom he labels “Islamists”—have been “engaged over the last 30
years or so in growing radical political movements” all over the Islamic world,
movements that have produced the terrorists who not only destroyed the symbols
of the freedom-loving West and killed 6000 innocent people in the process on
9/11, but who have been systematically destroying the very societies of which
they are a part, with much of their savage venom focused on the female
citizenry. In a parenthetical aside, Mr. Rushdie sighs, “(oh, for the voices of
Muslim women to be heard!)”
Well, I have news for Mr. Rushdie. Muslim women HAVE
been speaking out against the obscurantist Islam he decries in his essay, for
years and years and years, although clearly Mr. Rushdie, and many others, have
not paid them much heed. There are Muslim women who are feminists, theologians,
writers, lawyers, activists, scholars both in the “Islamist” societies he
paints with a broad brush, as well as in the “west,” who have been engaged in a
two-pronged struggle against BOTH Islamic extremism as well as—and this is
where their difference from Mr. Rushdie arises—the unjust foreign policies of
the United States that have contributed, and continue to contribute, to the
“hijacking” of Islam for terrorist ends. Shall I name a few? Dr. Nawal El
Saadawi is one, a dear friend and my
colleague these days at Montclair State University, who has written over 20
novels exposing the hypocrisy of Egypt’s rulers in their cynical use and abuse
of Islam to whip up public support for their repressive policies against
free-thinking writers and intellectuals like herself. For her criticism of
Egyptian state repression (aided and abetted by the foreign intervention of the
United States), she got thrown into jail by Anwar Sadat, a so-called
anti-Islamist! She is currently in self-imposed exile here after having
suffered an attempt by the Egyptian authorities last summer to have her
declared a heretic, a blasphemer against Islam and the holy Prophet. But
she—like her many counterparts all over the Muslim world, such as Asma Jahangir
of Pakistan, Fatema Mernissi of Morocco, or the women of RAWA, the
Revolutionary Association of Women in Afghanistan, to name but a few—is not
willing, unlike Mr. Rushdie—to comprehend what happened on 9/11 merely in terms
of Islam and its regressive politics of blame directed at the West, and
particularly at the United States. In a conversation I had with her shortly
after the attacks on the WTC and Pentagon, she expressed the hope that the
attacks, devastating as they undoubtedly were, might, in the long run, prompt
the U.S. to rethink its foreign policy, particularly in the Middle East.
While I think Rushdie is correct in asking Muslim
societies to look inward, to take “responsibility for many of our own problems”
so that we can then begin to “solve them for ourselves,” he is disingenuous in
implying that such “problems” can be “fixed” in isolation from global politics
and economics. In an essay entitled, “At Critical Crossroads,” published in Dawn,
the largest circulating English-language daily of Pakistan , Asma Jahangir, leading
advocate of Human and Women’s Rights and President of the Human Rights
Commission of Pakistan, (who has herself had to face innumerable death threats
from “Islamists” for her courageous defense of women victims of the most
hideous “crimes of honor”), writes from a“both/and” perspective regarding the
9/11 catastrophe, in contradistinction to Rushdie’s univocal analysis. She
observes that while the people of Pakistan, familiar with acts of terrorism and
their consequences, have almost unanimously condemned the killing of
innocent people in New York and Washington, and that while “there can be no
justification for, nor rationale behind such acts,” nevertheless, such a
terrible deed does call for reflection by the entire world leadership. Like
Rushdie, she exhorts the “Muslim world … to correct its rhetoric against ‘infidels’ and promote a culture of
democracy and tolerance within their own countries,” yet, she
simultaneously—and in contradistinction to Rushdie—insists that “The North
needs to change its policies toward the South.” She goes on to tell us that
while the majority of Pakistanis do NOT support the Taliban regime, their lack
of support for them “is not because they respect the U.S.—whom they closely
associate with the Israeli atrocities against the Palestinians—but because
there is growing resentment against domestic jihadi groups and disrespect for
the Taliban style of government.”
Should her reporting of Pakistani sentiment against unjust Israeli
policies toward the Palestinians be read as evidence of Pakistani “anti-Semitism” and “Islamic slander against
Jews” as Rushdie seems to suggest? That would hardly seem justified here.
What about the statements we have seen in recent
weeks from RAWA, posted on the internet?
In these, we are hearing the voices of revolutionary Afghani women who
have been speaking out against the atrocities of the Taliban regime for the
past twenty years at grave risk to their own lives, yet, who has been
listening? In a statement that began circulating on September 14th,
these women express their “deep sorrow and condemnation for this barbaric act
of violence and terror” that was committed against the innocent people of the
United States, yet they also wish to remind the world that, unfortunately, it
was “the government of the United States who supported Pakistani dictator
General Zia-ul-Haq in creating thousands of religious schools from which the
germs of the Taliban emerged.” They also point out that Osama Bin Laden had, at
one time, been the “blue-eyed boy of the CIA.”
What is scariest of all, perhaps is the following observation, that
“American politicians have not drawn [sic] a lesson from their
pro-fundamentalist policies in our country and are still supporting this or
that fundamentalist band or leader.” They are, ofcourse, referring to the U.S
support of the so-called Northern Alliance, which, according to a spokeswoman
of RAW I heard just a few days ago at Judson Memorial church in Greenwich
Village, has committed worse atrocities than even the Taliban, including the
rape of 70 year old women. Do all of
these observations of the Revolutionary Women of Afghanistan amount to an
unfair and crippling “politics of blame” against the U.S. as Rushdie would have
it? And if so, what does it mean that such a misguided view of world politics
is held and being propagated here NOT by fundamentalist “Islamists,” but by
their victims and staunchest critics, the ordinary Muslim (not Islamist) women
of Afghanistan?
Perhaps we should consider carefully the
bone-chilling consequences foreshadowed by RAWA in the following statement:
“The U.S. government should consider the root cause of this terrible event,
which has not been the first, and will not be the last one too.” Perhaps we should read this statement
juxtaposed next to a statement issued by the Joint Action Committee for
Citizens Rights and Peace, a committee comprised of the Institute of Women’s
Studies , Lahore (IWSL), as well as several other women’s groups and NGOs in Pakistan,
and issued on October 3rd, 2001. “Civilization,” note the JAC
members, “is not synonymous with capitalism or global political and economic
power.” Hence, the members of this coalition committee strongly believe that
forms other than the use of violence can, and must, be worked out for conflict
resolution, and they are therefore, unequivocally (like RAWA), against the U.S
waging war on the innocent people of Afghanistan. They are quick to point out
that in the current crisis in which the world finds itself, America has played
no small role, to say the least; such an analysis leads them to the inevitable
conclusion that echoes RAWA’s warning:
In this context the international community
must note the resentment generated
by
insensitive and unjust policies of the United States, particularly in their
unconditional
support to the aggressive policies of Israel towards the people of
of
Palestine and in their sustained campaign against the people of Iraq. It
should
be remembered that much of the terrorism in Afghanistan and Pakistan
stems
from international interventions in the region including by the United
States
for its own political ends in which Osama Bin Laden himself was
originally
an ally of the U.S.
Lest we be led into agreeing with Rushdie’s thesis
that such an analysis smacks of a “paranoic” Islamism that wishes to “blame all
its troubles on the West and, in particular, the United States,” we would do
well to remind ourselves that the statement was issued by largely secular,
certainly anti-Islamist women’s groups and NGOs of Pakistan, who make
explicitly clear that they have, in keeping with the “both/and” imperative I
referred to earlier, “persistently called upon the authorities in Pakistan to
take a firm stand against those groups that have promoted violence,
sectarianism, and extremism in our country.”
Thus, it is indeed possible, I would say crucially
important, to comprehend the current world crisis not in a simplistic way as
“this is about Islam” or “no it is not about Islam,” but in the complex ways
that the women of the Muslim world have been seeing and describing it even
before T-Day 9/11. The world should listen to these voices, the female voices
allied with the “secularist-humanist principles” Rushdie seems to think don’t
exist in the Islamic world.
Dr. Fawzia Afzal-Khan
Professor, Department of English
Montclair State University
Upper Montclair, NJ 07043
email: khanf@mail.montclair.edu
tel ®: 914-762-5676
fax: 914-762-6459