In Commemoration of March 8
Islam,
Political Islam and Women in the Middle East
Maryam
Namazie
The
situation of women living in Islam-stricken societies and under
Islamic laws is the outrage of the 21st century. Burqa-clad and
veiled women and girls, beheadings, stoning to death, floggings,
child sexual abuse in the name of marriage and sexual apartheid
are only the most brutal and visible aspects of women's rightlessness
and third class citizen status in the Middle East.
This
is Nothing but Islam
Apologists
for Islam state that the situation of women in Iran and in Islam-stricken
countries is human folly; they say that Islamic rules and laws practised
in the Middle East are not following the true precepts of Islam.
They state that we must separate Islam from the practice of Islamic
governments and movements. In fact, however, the brutality and violence
meted out against women and girls are nothing other than Islam itself.
According to the Koran, for example, the fornicator must be flogged
a hundred stripes (The Light: 24.2). Those who are guilty of an
'indecency' must be 'confined until death takes them away or Allah
opens some way for them.' (The Women, 4.15). 'Men are the maintainers
of women' and 'good' women are obedient. Those that men fear 'desertion',
can be admonished, confined and beaten' (The Women, 4.34). Wives
are a 'tilth' for men, which they can go into their 'tilth' when
they like (The Cow, 2.223). Veiling is promoted in the Koran: 'O
Prophet! Say to your wives and your daughters and the women of the
believers that they let down upon them their over-garments' (The
Clans, 33.59).
Apologists
for Islam say that these verses have been misinterpreted. They go
so far as to claim that there is gender equity in Islam and Islam
respects the rights of women. Regarding the verse in the Koran sanctioning
violence against women, they say that Islam only permits violence
after admonishment and confinement and as a last resort. They say,
since men would beat their wives mercilessly at that time, this
is a restriction on men to beat women more mercifully (Women Living
Under Muslim Laws, For Ourselves Women Reading the Koran, 1997).
In a Gender Equity in Islam Web Site, this verse is explained in
this way: 'In extreme cases, and whenever greater harm, such as
divorce, is a likely option, it allows for a husband to administer
a gentle pat to his wife that causes no physical harm to the body
nor leaves any sort of mark. It may serve, in some cases, to bring
to the wife's attention the seriousness of her continued unreasonable
behaviour.' On the verse that says women are men’s tilth, they
say the Koran is encouraging sexuality, even though women are killed
for expressing theirs (Women Living Under Muslim Laws, For Ourselves,
Women Reading the Koran, 1997). Regarding the fact that women are
not to judge or consult, one mullah from Qom using a female pseudonym
says: “Or, Let’s suppose that in other planets, women
are stronger and more learned than men, do we accept their custom
or do we reject it totally?” (Zanan 4 and 5). On the Gender
Equity in Islam Web Site it states that 'Islam regards women's role
in society as a mother and a wife as her most sacred and essential
one. This may explain why a married woman must secure her husband's
consent if she wishes to work. However, there is no decree in Islam
that forbids women from seeking employment whenever there is a necessity
for it, especially in positions which fit her nature best and in
which society needs her most.'
These
'Islamic feminist' interpretations are an insult to our intellect
and cannot be taken seriously. Islam has wreaked more havoc, massacred
more women, and committed more holocausts than can be denied, excused,
re-interpreted, or covered up with such feeble defences. Misogyny
cannot be interpreted to be pro-woman even if it is turned on its
head just as fascism, Zionism and racial apartheid cannot be interpreted
to be pro-human. These are mere justifications for people who want
to legitimise their beliefs and religion or reactionary states and
movements with a vested interest in maintaining Islamic rules and
laws. They apologize because even they don't want to associate with
the outrages committed by Islam throughout the world. Nothing can
hide the fact that Islam, like other religions, is anti-woman and
misogynist and antithetical to women's rights and autonomy.
Political
Islam is a Contemporary Reactionary Movement
There
are always those who say that we can't blame Islam for the status
of women in Islam-stricken countries. Apologists like Jackie Ballard,
an ex-MP from the UK says blaming religion for the denial of women's
rights in countries like Iran 'disguised as concern for human rights'
is tantamount to 'blaming Protestantism in Britain or Catholicism
in Mexico for endemic domestic violence' and to seeing 'paedophilia
as a symptom of a Christian or western culture'. This is nonsense.
Islam is in political power in Iran and many countries of the Middle
East and North Africa and cannot be compared to Protestantism in
Britain. The Bible is not the law of the land in Britain, while
the Koran is in Iran; it is not in the constitution and penal code
nor enforced in the courts and by morality police in Britain, while
it is in Iran.
And
that is exactly why Islam, and not Christianity for example, is
at the forefront of the debate on women's rights in the 21st century.
Islam in political power, or as a movement targeting political power
(political Islam), is as much a political ideology as it is a religion;
it aims to establish Islamic states and rules and needs political
power to do so. This political power has enabled it to maim, gag
and kill women on a mass scale. Political Islam is a reactionary
contemporary movement that was the Right's alternative during the
Cold War and also the result of Arab nationalism's failure. In Iran,
in particular, political Islam was brought to the fore of the 1979
revolution vis-à-vis the Left and as a Cold war tool and
because of an anti 'westernisation' and Islam-ridden tradition dominant
in a majority of the intellectual and cultural sections of society.
It was in Iran that the Islamic movement became a notable political
force vying for power. This meant that the misogyny in Islam was
given a state, laws, courts, the military and herds of police, Pasdars,
Baseej, sisters of Zeinab, and Hezbollahs at its disposal to carry
out its laws. In Iran, women were slashed with razors and had acid
thrown in their faces, many were killed and imprisoned until the
Islamic regime in Iran was able to enforce compulsory veiling and
establish its rule.
It
is Racist not to Condemn Islam and Political Islam
This
vile political Islam - which has sentenced women who have been raped
to death for 'adultery', and has blamed mothers for not satisfying
husbands as the cause of child sexual abuse - also has its defenders.
Some of them say that women in England, like in Iran and Afghanistan,
also face violence. Of course women face violence everywhere but
surely the situation of women in Afghanistan and Iran are incomparable
to situation of women living in France and England. And since when
do we excuse violations because they happen elsewhere? When speaking
of the status of women in Iran, they compare it with Afghanistan
and state it is better. As if that's all those born in the region
can expect. They even go so far as to state that women in Iran have
freedoms denied to many in the West. According to these racist cultural
relativists, it is as if women living in Iran cannot expect more
freedoms or don't want them. They say Iran is an Islamic society
and are incensed when we say it is not Islamic but Islam-stricken.
They choose one of the many complex characteristics of a number
of people living in Iran and label the entire society with it. Did
they call it Islamic during the Shah's rule? They go on to say it's
the people's culture and religion. They ignore the fact that Islam
imposed its rule in Iran through violence and terror. They say Iran
is Islamic so that they can more easily ignore the violations committed
against women by implying it is people's choice to live the way
they are forced to. In fact, there is an immense anti-Islamic backlash
in Iran with people resisting Islam and its state despite the repression.
They call Iran Islamic so they can prevent us from condemning Islam
and political Islam by implying that any condemnation is an insult
to people's beliefs. In fact, they call it Islamic in order to make
it so. Though it’s untrue, even if every person living in Iran
had reactionary beliefs, it still wouldn’t be acceptable. If
everyone believes in the superiority of their race, must we respect
and accept their beliefs? Respecting people's freedom of expression,
belief and religion or atheism is one thing; that doesn't mean that
we must respect any belief, however heinous. Of course human beings
must be respected, but that doesn't mean that all beliefs must also
be respected. Should we respect fascism, racism, nationalism, and
ethnocentrism - they are all beliefs after all. And when we raise
these realities, condemn Islam and political Islam and defend women's
rights, they say we are racists and are promoting abuse against
Muslims. Criticising beliefs is not racism. Is it racist to condemn
fascism, nationalism, capitalism, sexism, religion? Does a critique
of fascism, nationalism or racism promote abuse against fascists,
nationalists, and racists? If we criticise child labour, does it
mean we are promoting abuse against children who are forced to work?
This is the pathetic whining of reactionaries who want to silence
defenders of women's rights and frighten them into inactivity and
submission. Racism, rooted in capitalism, exists in society and
has nothing to do with a critique of Islam. Don't non-Muslims also
face racism? These apologists go so far as to call it Islamophobia.
This is nonsense. Xenophobia and homophobia, for example, are the
hatred of people: foreigners and homosexuals. You cannot have a
phobia against an idea. If we are opposed to racial or sexual apartheid,
does that make us apartheid-phobic! If we are opposed to racism
and fascism does that mean we are racist-phobic and fascism-phobic?
Come on. Opposing violations of women's rights in Islam-stricken
countries does not serve racism - just like opposing Zionism does
not make one an anti-Semite. In fact, it is racist to assume that
all those living or born in the Middle East are supporters of Islam
and political Islam and that these vile governments and the Islamic
movement represent women when in fact women are their first victims.
Labelling women's rights activists as racists is a dim-witted ploy
to justify and excuse women's status under Islam and political Islam,
and deny women and people living in the Middle East and Iran universal
rights and freedoms. Those who say these things do so because they
want to maintain Islam. They want to justify it. Excuse it. They
have an interest in safeguarding religion and political Islam. Or
at best, they believe women in Iran and the Middle East are sub-humans
who actually enjoy being segregated, veiled, stoned, flogged and
dehumanised. Like Islam, political Islam is antithetical to women's
rights. It is not just a matter of consciousness-raising and creating
a renaissance that pushes religion out of the public sphere and
eliminating its role in people's social lives, but also completely
eliminating political Islam and Islamic states and its movement
(as was done with Christianity). Well-meaning people assert that
we need to separate Islam from political Islam in order to defend
rights. In fact, to defend universal rights, we must have the courage
to confront both. Any compromise with Islam is a compromise on women's
rights. There can be no compromise on people's rights and dignity.
September
11: The True Face of Political Islam
On
September 11, the world came to know political Islam as never before.
What happened in New York is happening everyday to women and people
living under the sword of Islam. On September 11, the monster created
by Western governments moved beyond its control and the West is
now moving to contain it. The USA and Western governments want to
contain only aspects of it - those aspects of it that are moving
outside of the region. It has no problem leaving it contained in
the region to continue its reign of terror. That is where 'fundamentalism'
comes into good use. It distinguished between the Islamists acceptable
to the West and those which are not.
This
is an important moment for those of us who have struggled against
Islam and political Islam. For us, though, none is acceptable. Just
as it not acceptable for women, men and children to be massacred
in New York, it is unacceptable for them to be slaughtered in Iran,
Afghanistan and Northern Iraq. Getting rid of political Islam is
a precondition to any improvements in the status of women and people
in the Middle East. The establishment of a Palestinian state and
an end to sanctions against Iraq will get rid of the primary grounds
for political Islam's recruitment. The overthrow of the Islamic
regime in Iran will also weaken political Islam considerably. The
Islamic Republic of Iran is a pillar of political Islam; its overthrow
is being delayed by Western government support. Those who truly
support women's rights must demand secular societies in the Middle
East. The separation of religion from the state, education, and
a citizen's identity, relegating religion to the private affair
of people is not only realizable but a necessity after the experience
in Iran, Afghanistan and the Middle East. They must also defend
the right to asylum for all women fleeing Islam-stricken societies.
It is our task to move public opinion towards people's movements
in Iran and the Middle East for secularism, freedom and equality
and universal rights and away from both poles of USA and Islamic
terrorism.
The
21st Century must be the century that rids itself of political Islam.
This will begin in Iran.
The
above is Maryam Namazie's speech at a March 8, 2002 conference entitled
'Islam, Secularism and Women in the Middle East' in London.
FOR
MARX'S ESSAY ON THE NEED FOR REVOLUTIOANRY COMMUNISTS TO CHALLENGE
RELIGION AND THEOLOGY SEE MY EXCERPTS OF AND MY COMMENTS ON
FOR A RUTHLESS CRITICISM OF EVERYTHING EXISTING
'The basis of socialism is the human being… Socialism is the movement
to restore human being's conscious will.'

Mansoor
Hekmat,
the great Marxist thinker and leader of the
Worker-communist Party and
Worker-communist movement of Iran and Iraq
1951-2002
*
New archive for the Marxist Library: Mansoor Hekmat
*
About the Crisis in the Middle East Interview with Mansoor Hekmat
*
The World After September 11
by Mansoor Hekmat
Islam
and De-Islamisation
Interview with Mansoor Hekmat
*
Ensuring the People's Right to Determine the Future System of Government
in Iran
Resolution adopted by The Worker-communist Party of Iran Political
Bureau
*
Call to opposition parties to pledge their commitment to
The Declaration of Political Freedoms
* Mansoor Hekmat's
Biography by: Hamid Taghvaie
*
Mansoor Hekmat Foundation
*
The History of the Undefeated
A few words in ommemoration
of the 1979 Revolution
by Mansoor Hekmat
*
Against Sexual Apartheid in Iran Interview
with Azar Majedi
*
Federalism is a Reactionary Slogan
Interview with Mansoor Hekmat
*
Iranian communists against attack on Iraq
*
What is this war about?
*
Gory dawn of the New World Order
*
Neither USA/NATO Terrorism, nor Islamic Terrorism
*
Let's turn a dark scenario into a bright future A look at the Iraqi situation
By: Azar Majedi