Introduction
In the name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful, praise be to Allah,
blessings and greetings be on His Messenger and his family, his Companions
and whoever flows his guidance. It is common talk that women constitute
half the society and that the society should not neglect them, leave them
idle, maltreat them nor dissolve their rights.
This is all true.
It may as well be argued that although women constitute half of the population,
their influence exceeds their number, since women, for good or ill, influence
their husbands and children. The poet Hafiz Ibrahim struck this note when
he described the woman as a whole school, the sound management of which
leads to the production of a noble society.
For these reasons scientists, thinkers, leaders, reformers, preachers and
educators have all shown interest in the case of the woman. They have called
for doing her justice, treating her with respect and for the abolition
of forms of unfairness and repression towards her so that she can have
her rightful access to learning, work, responsibility and choice in marriage.
Some did not find this enough; they wanted to give her the right of sexual
permissiveness, homosexuality, unrestricted abortion, rebellion against
the family, and disregard of values of religion and society.
These were some of the aims the International Conference on Women in Peking
1995 impelled. It has provoked a lot of controversy in the Islamic and
even Christian worlds. We Muslims have a divine document that truly honours
women and treats her with justice; it is a document that rescued her from
the gloomy injustice of Pre-Islamic darkness. This document of The Noble
Qur'an-honours the woman as a human being, as a feminine being, as a daughter,
wife, mother and, no less, as a full member of her society. True, some
Muslims have wronged women in different ages by depriving her of her right
to solid religious knowledge and her right to work. They have even forbidden
her from going to the mosque for worship or leaming, compelled her to marry
someone she did not like and confined her to her home. But this has happened
in the absence of any sound religious awareness. Nor did it prevail everywhere;
there have always been Muslims willing to reject this, something we have
seen happening in rural areas.
Islam's true stance on the status of the woman is what this small treatise
seeks to make clear. Although the issues relating to women and the family
are dealt with in some of our previous books, particularly The Lawful and
the Prohibited in Islam (Al-Halal wal-Haram fil Islam) and Contemporary
Legal Opinions (Fataawa Muserah), the reader may find in these pages a
light that guides the way to knowledge of the correct opinions on this
critical issue, between harsh austerity and excessive indulgence. "And
my guidance cannot come except from Allah, and in Him I have put my trust
and unto Him I repent.'' [Surah
11:88]