This is not an attempt to re-invent the wheel,
but rather to place the concepts within their paradigmatic context.
This is to highlight the origin of dispute between the secularists
and those who see Islam as an all encompassing religion that
represents a different view to that of Christianity—and to that of
secularism for that matter. With the absence of the Church as an
institution in the first place in the faith of Islam, the idea of
separation between church and state is thus meaningless.
The core question is the difference in the frame
of reference.
Defining Secularism
Secularism, in theory, and secularization, as a
historical process, do not mean the mere separation between church
and state, for this supposes that secularizing processes are
confined to the political and economic realm. Yet an increasing
number of scholars are arguing that secularism is a comprehensive
world outlook that operates on all levels of reality through a large
number of explicit and implicit mechanisms.
The secularist outlook is basically one that
starts by marginalizing God, or sometimes even announcing His death,
placing the human at the centre of the universe as its logo. The
complex duality of transcendental monotheism is replaced by a sharp
dualism between the human being and nature, which manifests itself
through a conflict between the two; while at the same time
attempting to explain human nature by focusing solely on its
physical or material dimension. The problem, however, is eventually
resolved in favor of the natural, and the category of the human is
thereby absorbed in and reduced to the category of
nature.
The initial enlightenment humanism is replaced
in the course of the secularization process by a naturalistic
anti-humanism. And the initial dualism of the human being and nature
is replaced by a thoroughly naturalistic monism: that is, the
reduction of reality to one natural law, imminent in all matters.
This is the epistemological basis for a process of deconstructionism
and desanctification that became not only the perspective through
which nature was seen, but of the human being itself and all its
transcendental criteria.
Feminism: A Stage of Secularism
Trying to contextualize feminism and to
understand its archaeology is very much linked to the history of
secularization of the European mind and of all sciences. The
mentality of generations of women’s liberation activists and
theoreticians has also been shaped by Marxist notions of patriarchy
and position towards family. Those ideas are related as well to the
Marxist stance towards religion as a male-made set of oppressive
ideas, especially when it comes to women. These ideas infiltrated
even non-Marxist circles and became embedded in the majority of
feminist writings and discourse.
It is interesting to see how the analysis of the
social construction of reality in the sociology of the sixties was
taken further by feminists to focus—by the nineties—on the sexual
construction of reality instead. The social contract on which the
humanist enlightenment liberal approach based its equality notions
was deconstructed, as well and an alternative sexual contract that
has been at the centre of debate.
Forms of lesbian and bisexual feminism can be
given as examples of this self-referential or self-contained
discourse; where the body has become the logo of a
Weltanschauung (worldview), pushing the naturalization of the
human being as far as one can imagine and achieving full lucidity in
questions of morals. Now the shift from the human being as the
center of the world to the body becomes clear. This sort of analysis
can be applied at the level of political theory in order to
understand the shift from the modern concern about the political
body, to the feminist and post-modern enthusiastic interest in body
politics. This too, is a historic secular moment.
Though feminism has, and with lots of insight,
criticized many social circumstances that are hindering and
restricting women in the Third World, very little has been done from
the other side of the globe to contextualize feminism, its sociology
of knowledge, and paradigmatic limitations. More attention should be
given to re-examine its declared universality as an answer to
women’s problems, an answer that almost implicitly claims in this
regard is the end of history.
The Legal Leviathan
Since 1945, more than twenty different
international legal instruments that deal specifically with women’s
issues have been drafted.
Starting with the United Nations Charter, which
was the first multilateral treaty in that regard, it clearly
enunciated a norm of non-discrimination on the basis of sex. There
were also the conventions concerning the protection of women from
exploitation, the improvement of their conditions of
employment—finally arriving at the Declaration on the Elimination of
Discrimination Against Women.
It is important to analyze the assumptions made
within these documents concerning the role of women in society and
which identify some basic patterns that have emerged in this process
of codification. Three analytic categories can be applied to the
provisions of the treaties regarding the status of women. They seek
to establish or maintain protective, corrective, and
non-discriminatory causes.
First, some writings
argue that the protective category describes those provisions which
reflect a societal conceptualization of women as a group which
either should not or can not engage in specified activities. The
protection normally takes the form of exclusionary provisions,
articles which stipulate certain activities from which women are
prohibited.
Second, the corrective
category also identifies women as a separate group that needs
special treatment, but their aim is to alter and improve them,
without making any overt comparison with the treatment of men in
these areas.
Third, the
non-discriminatory, sex-neutral category that includes provisions
which reject a conceptualization of women as a separate group and
rather reflect on men and women as entitled to equal treatment. The
idea here is that biological differences should not be a basis for
the social and political allocation of benefits and burdens within a
society.
One can argue that these categories represent a
historical evolution, as previously mentioned, of feminism as a
subtext of the process of secularization. Such secular laws are
considered unjust and patriarchal, and their process of legislation
have become the target in themselves in order to gain a
feminist-style equality; hence the recent preoccupation with power
and political power.
Having the legislative power in its hand, the
state became an important actor in this process. The state also
played a very important role in the secularization process that led
to the disappearance of many social bonds and the dominance of
contractual relations. The state became the major actor on all
scenes, and many functions were transferred to it as a result of the
decline of extended family values and the new reality of the
increasingly shaky nuclear one. The state also took over most of the
activities once performed by the religious institutions and became
the guardian of all aspects such as education and health care. Even
morality—a secular morality without ethics—became the order of the
day.
The feminist thought and movement evolved then
around the search for power, trying to become more and more
empowered; looking to law as a mere tool to obtain equal rights in
accordance with the feminist understanding of equality, especially
in the political sphere. Little attention was given to the announced
“death of the family.” Seeing the situation, many started to defend
family values, even those who worked for causes like individualism
and independence.
With the “coming out” of the lesbian and gay
movements and the powerful theorization on lesbian epistemology,
many women became intimidated, nay, confused. Within the same line
of thinking, in the last (secular) analysis, one should not define
the family according to some fixed, biased, pre-modern measures! The
classical family structure, according to gay and lesbian discourse,
is to be renegotiated; a new form and understanding of “a family”
must be given.
Against that, if one expresses a different
perspective from that of the gay movement, the mildest accusation
would be homophobia, the strongest would be
fundamentalism.
Islam Feminized: Parenting the
State
The feminist discourse in the Arab and Muslim
world also witnessed a qualitative change, moving from general
demands of equality to adopting more or less the broad international
agenda of the feminists; though not criticizing religion, as such,
but rather the male, or to be more correct, the patriarchal
interpretation of it. Demands of lesbianism were not openly
discussed due to the cultural circumstances of the Arab and Islamic
societies.
The movement increasingly used a legal approach
to women’s problems. The crisis of family values in modernizing
societies did not seem to be of much concern. The recent campaign
led by feminists, mainly professional lawyers, to change the
personal status law, the one that concern family cases, in Egypt,
Lebanon, and Morocco, and their ongoing effort to change the
marriage contract to guarantee greater equality, are indicative
examples.
How equality can be guaranteed within social
structures that are facing increasing poverty and deteriorating
conditions for basic life under the Structural Adjustment Programs
dictated by the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank is
not a question asked by the majority of feminist activists. The
answer would lead to a deeper discussion of state social and
economic policies, and as they are desperate to have the state’s
approval of their agenda to translate it into legal changes, they
would not wish to upset the regimes.
The political conditions related to the feminist
legitimate presence are, in general, restrictive. Until now, the
law, working as a bargaining instrument, has been successfully
abused by the state as well as by the feminists. Within that balance
of power, the feminist movement has become one of the allies of the
regimes against the fundamentalist threat. In the discourse of Arab
feminist movements, the direct discussion of the question of full
implementation of Shari`ah (Islamic law) had to be marginalized, in
order not to lose the support of the masses of women who would not
tolerate a direct attack on Islamic principles.
The epistemological and the political approach
are therefore very important in understanding the real dilemmas of
feminism in the Islamic world, especially regarding the question of
equality and the legal rights of women. No profound understanding
can be achieved unless this analysis is also done on the
international level—namely addressing international law, as well as
international networking of NGOs and their role in dealing with the
relations between the North and South as agents of the New World
Order, or at least facilitators of its structural
mechanisms.
Society: Togetherness!
The bitter lessons we learned from modernity
should not be repeated. We need to open up to new ideas, but we do
not have to repeat the same mistakes, falling into the same traps
that no one could have foreseen when the European enlightenment
project started. We have the golden opportunity to construct our own
renaissance by carefully looking into where and how things went
wrong.
If sociologists in the West are carefully
studying the changing nature of social relations in the late
capitalist era, this analysis is highly important for us. We still
have the chance to change our social structures, and work on issues
like social equality and social justice in relation to the existing
social bonds—without having to lose those relations or helplessly
watch them decay. We do not have to settle down with a form of
togetherness if we can liberate women and still keep the
family.
There are many complex aspects of women’s lives
and issues that we, as social scientists committed to political
struggles for justice and human dignity, need to explore. Recent
socio-anthropological studies carried out by Western
researchers—native researchers are not usually permitted to
undertake such studies—attempted to approach the life of the
majority of poor (supposedly oppressed) women in a different way.
Such studies found out how these women overcame their bitter reality
by using the social and kinship ties around them in their survival
strategies, and how these strategies succeeded in making their lives
better, as well as their children’s. The importance of household
economy as an informal sector for women to use to their benefit is
also under focus now.
We do not have to turn the past of the West into a
future for the East. Many educated
women in the Islamic world are rediscovering the liberating
potential of their religious traditions. They demand respect, they
actively participate in economics and politics, but they also are
proud of motherhood as a value and a role, they believe in the
family as a social institution and regard themselves as the
guardians of the culture. Increasing numbers of them choose,
sometimes against the wish of their own families, to be within the
wider Islamic resurgence. They suffer from restrictions and
sometimes rigid discrimination and violation of their human rights
by the political regimes.
Their life is also worth looking at and drawing
lessons from, and what’s more, to show how simplistic approaches
regarding their identity and consciousness need to be
revised.
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