What is wrong with this sentence?
“Behind the dark burqa lies a sexy, manipulative victim who is dangerous, as well as in grave danger.”
Sobia reviews the film; Unveiled, by Bill Bannerman.
What is wrong with this sentence?
“Behind the dark burqa lies a sexy, manipulative victim who is dangerous, as well as in grave danger.”
Sobia reviews the film; Unveiled, by Bill Bannerman.
A video by 1-866 Naseeha Muslim Youth Helpline of North America.
It is hard to choose one paragraph that sums up Shabana Mir ‘s article, since she talks about various and important subjects.
In traditional faith communities, single women are usually looked upon with fear and desire. They are objects of desire because they hold out the promise of a traditional religious home complete with traditional wife and progeny to perpetuate the lineage and community. The unfulfilled promise they seem to hold out is ripe for the plucking. But they are also feared, and as objects of fear, they inspire often intense monitoring behaviors. In traditional communities, single women are watched and judged far more intensely than are single men. Single women’s main marketable commodity – virginity – is guarded and desired – and feared because it is capable of being spent – and with this spending, the honor of the collective may also be metaphorically dissipated. Men’s honor does not have far-reaching implications for the community; men are the community and the arbiters of its honor. Women’s honor is guarded and watched as well as cherished and honored.
When single women become numerous in a faith community, leaders and gatekeepers worry. Or should worry. First, because single women, unlike men, may not seek sexual fulfillment (legitimately) outside of wedlock. Second, because they, in fact, can.
And the issue of the “surplus” of single women in the Western community:
Traditional Muslims hold that Muslim women may not marry outside the faith and that Muslim men may marry Muslims, Christians or Jews, but there the choices end. So is there a smaller pool of Muslim men available for Muslim women because some of them are marrying non-Muslims? There is little by way of lifestyle-related statistics for American Muslims, so it is hard to tell whether there are just more Muslim women than men, whether Muslim men’s marriages outside the faith impacts numbers significantly, or because some men do marry abroad, traveling abroad to their parents’ birthplaces to enter arranged marriages. The last-mentioned is neither here nor there because some Muslim women also marry abroad. However, since cultural patterns of gender norms affect women intimately, Muslim women are often heard loudly protesting against the idea of marrying a man from the motherland. For many Muslim men, on the other hand, marrying a woman from the motherland means marrying a momma-replica who looks pretty and is “sweet.” (The reality may or may not be so).
Koonji insists that the dearth of eligible men is not the only reason for marriage outside the faith:
Part of the problem is what I discussed earlier in this article, modes of courtship or the lack thereof. Traditional Muslim organizations and contexts have often insisted on forms of gender segregation that sometimes make it extremely difficult to meet and identify spouses. Under the motto “God will provide,” conservative Muslims have frowned upon single men and women talking to each other. Much “talking,” I found in my research on college campuses, therefore takes place on the internet and the phone, because it is less visible and, in fact, not really happening.
“Courting” is rejected by the more traditional circles, though many have come to realize that they have to give way. But this grudging “look-away” acceptance will have to develop into something more concrete and theorized if Muslim men and women are to find mates within the community.
Svend once spoke of an Islamic Society of North America convention matrimonial event that took place about a decade ago. Single men and women were chatting with each other, under the eye of organizers. Suddenly an elderly gentleman entered, observed, and reprimanded them, “Brothers, this is not permissible. You should not be doing this.” Svend says, “I wanted to tell him, ‘Uncle, you should be grateful they’re here, and not at the bar across the street from the convention center.’” Because the bar is indeed there, and if Uncle doesn’t go there, many of the kids do.
Shabana Mir is an assistant Professor at Oklahoma State University, and runs the
Koonj blog
Via Wajahat Ali
There is currently an online campaign to help find a young Muslim woman, Etidal Abdullah, who has been missing since last Friday, September 5th. Please pray for her safe return, and help in whatever way you can, especially if you are from the area:
Friends and family of 21-year-old Etidal Abdullah are asking your help in finding the missing woman.
She was last seen on September 5, 2008 around 2:30 pm in the Save-A-Lot parking lot on Abbott Road in Lackawanna, NY.
Etidal is described as being 5 feet tall and an approximately 95 lbs.
Her family is offering a $15,000 reward for any information leading to her whereabouts.
Anyone with information is asked to call the
Lackawanna Police Department at 716-822-4900 or the tip-line at 716-563-0081
or email at findmydaughter[at]gmail.com
A photo gallery by Ange.
Another post pertinent to Ramadhan. How does one pick between the multitude of charities and charitable organizations out there? Doa writes about 4 causes that she supports and asks readers of the blog about other charities and institutions that are genuine and need help:
It seems like everyones asking for money now a days, and it can sometimes be difficult to tell who really needs the money, and whos just cashing in your checks. And sometimes when we have money to give, we dont know the best places to give it.
Although there are soo many more worthy places to give money (so I encourage the readers of this blog to comment with other places about which they know for sure that the money is going to the right place), here are four places (in no specific order) I currently recommend finding out about, and giving to, if you can, (and every little bit counts!):
The rest of the post at “A Diary of a Mad Muslim Woman”.
A recent Ijtema post linked to a story of a Muslimah in her quest to secure education. On the other side of the world, Asmaa ponders over a seemingly Catch-22 situation involving education and societal expectations and raises a lot of questions in the process:
In university, I was indoctrinated with the notion of individuality, empowerment and self-determination. I was taught that what and who I wanted to be, was completely in my hands. So I made myself in those four years, out of a combination of valuable personal relationships and classroom education.
For example, if a woman of education reaches her late 20′s and is still unmarried, it seems there is suddenly a “too-empowered” stigma attached to her name. It’s as though marriage defines women, and without it we are unnatural. I do not deny there is a natural desire for partnership, but I question our community’s perception of what a woman is without it.
I often feel frustrated being in a Muslim family. I’m not proud of these frustrations of mine. Believe me, it’s a conflicting and negative feeling to have. (Perhaps the phenomenon is also found in non-Muslim families, but I speak from experience only.)
Though we’ve been taught to make decisions on our own, I find that being female and Muslim sometimes means some of our decision are made for us, and not by us. And thus there can only be one product of that: an ever-increasing frustration with the situations we find ourselves in.
“Yes, another marriage topic!” says our own iMuslim. She’s sharing an interesting idea from a friend, to help ease the “Is it a yes? Is it a no?” confusion in the marriage proposal hunt!
Now, how we do it in my community, is that after some initial discussion between parents and go-betweens over the phone, the guy and his family comes round to visit the girl and her family. After munching on samosas and tea for anywhere between 10 minutes to an hour, the girl and the guy usually get to spend some time with one another to ask questions. Depending on the family and their customs, they may sit alone in an open part of the house, or sit in the corner while their family pretends not to listen in.
After this interview period, the guy goes back to his family, there may be some more samosa munching, but usually the boys family goes home soon after.
What follows is usually an agonising wait while the guys family makes their decision. It might be a day. It might be a week. They may never respond (yes, it happens! How rude?). True, it is only agonising if the girl is actually interested else, who cares, right? Anyway, this whole waiting period usually results in unnecessary stress for the girls family, which may lead to squabbling and other unpleasantness.
But, there is another way, my friends.