Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, October/November
1998, pages 69-71
A Country Report on Tunisia
Womens Rights in Islam: The Position of
Islam in Family Planning
By Dr. Wassila Ben Hamda
Following is the full text of a speech delivered
by Tunisian Islamic scholar Dr. Wassila Ben Hamda at the Conference
on Women: Islam and Family Planning in Niamey, Niger. Dr. Ben Hamda
is the subject of a personal profile in the accompanying article,
Three Faces of Tunisian Women.
The Rights of Women in Islam and the Position of Islam
on Family Planning are very important themes in the present world
context, and have been studied by many researchers of various backgrounds
in Islam, both supporters and adversaries, for nearly two centuries
now.
I. The Place and Rights of Women in Islam
The Quran calls Muslims the community of
the happy medium. Avoiding extremism and fanaticism, Islam
guides us toward the straight path, love of our neighbor and equity
in all things. Thus have we made of you an Ummat justly balanced.
That ye might be witnesses over the nations, and the Messenger a
witness over yourselves. (The Cows, 143)
During the great pilgrimage of March 632, the Pilgrimage
of Adieu, the Prophet pronounced a memorable sermon in which
he recalled, one by one, the great spiritual and human values of
Islam—respect of the individual, the inalienable rights of women,
prohibition of racial hatred, total brotherhood in the relations
among people, and specific recommendations for respecting women.
Thus women were recognized and respected as full-fledged individuals,
with no discrimination or difference being made.
O mankind! We created you from a single (pair) of
a male and a female, and made you into nations and tribes, that
ye may know each other (not that ye may despise each other). Verily
the most honored of you in the sight of Allah is the most righteous
of you. And Allah has full knowledge and is well acquainted (with
all things). (The Apartments, 13)
The Prophet said: Women are the equals of men.
When invited out, the Prophet frequently went accompanied by his
wife, and he always refused invitations addressed exclusively to
himself. A number of passages from Tabari attest to this.
With respect to prayer, women always went with men to
the mosque, and might pray behind or in front of the Imam, beside
or behind the men; their prayers are just. This is proven in a work
entitled The Theology of the Four Doctrines. In our day,
however, and despite advances in customs, some view these principles
unfavorably and oblige women to pray in a separate part of the mosque,
removed from the sight of men.
Women were equal in social life, and in addition to
assuming their traditional roles of procreation and maternity had
taken a place in every decision and in all fields of social life,
helping to establish a better life. Women were writers, poets, warriors,
scholars, advisers, and they even had the right to vote.
O Prophet! When believing women come to thee to take
the oath of fealty to thee, that they will not associate in worship
any other thing whatever with Allah, that they will not steal, that
they will not commit adultery (or fornication), that they will not
kill their children, that they will not utter slander, intentionally
forging falsehood, and that they will not disobey thee in any just
matter—then do thou receive their fealty, and pray to Allah for
the forgiveness (of their sins) : for Allah is oft-forgiving, most
merciful. (Mise l preuve, 12)
The Quran also speaks of women leaders in political
life. I found (there) a woman ruling over them and provided with
every requisite; and she has a magnificent throne. (The Ants,
23)
Aisha, the Prophets wife, mentioned by el-Boukhari
among others, is a fine example of the learned woman, active at
all levels in society. A good student of the Prophet, she was consulted
by many of his most outstanding companions. She was the most erudite
woman of her time. She participated in a battle against Ali Ibn
Abi Taleb, the fourth caliph. A perfect Muslim, Aisha had the courage
to oppose the powers of the time as politician, scholar and warrior.
She was responsible for reporting more than a thousand hadith. She
and a number of other women are mentioned in the Quran, most
of them not by name but through their lives, qualities or problems.
They were the object of divine grace.
Allah has indeed heard (and accepted) the statement
of the woman who pleads with thee concerning her husband and carries
her complaint (in prayer) to Allah: and Allah (always) hears the
arguments between both of you: for Allah hears and sees (all things).
(The Discussion, 1)
Because of her intelligence and wisdom, Om Salama,
another of the Prophets wives, advised him on questions related
to war and also in times of peace. The Quran refers several
times to this woman, whom the Prophet married despite her advanced
age. Ettirmidhi, in his Anthology, and El Hakem Naisabour
in Al Mostadrak, report that Om Salama said to the Prophet,
I have not heard God speak of women. The reply, from
the Quran, was as follows: And their Lord hath accepted
of them, and answered them : Never will I suffer to be lost the
work of any of you, be he male or female: ye are members, one of
another. (The Family of Imran, 195)
A second Quranic reference to Om Salama refers
to a wish she expressed, in the presence of the Prophet, that God
should speak of women on equal terms with men: For Muslim men
and women, for believing men and women, for devout men and women,
for true men and women, for men and women who are patient and constant,
for men and women who humble themselves, for men and women who give
in charity, for men and women who fast, for men and women who guard
their chastity, and for men and women who engage much in Allahs
remembrance. For them has Allah prepared forgiveness and great reward.
(Les Coalises, 35)
Al Mustadrak also mentions that Om Salama asked the
Prophet why women were victimized by extermination. Why do
men fight, when women are deprived of that right? Why do we receive
only half the inheritance? The answers to these questions
are found in the sura The Women, 32 which says: And
in no wise covet those in which Allah hath bestowed his gifts more
freely on some of you than on others: to men is allotted what they
earn, and to women what they earn: but ask Allah of his bounty.
For Allah hath full Knowledge of all things.
The Quran praises the intelligence, maturity
and wisdom of other women as well—the mother of the prophet Moses,
the holy Meriem, mother of the prophet Jesus, the wife of the Pharaoh,
and the queen of Sheba, among others.
It is impossible to speak of the place and rights of
women in Islam without referring to the Quran. As a good Muslim,
I cannot neglect the importance of the two major sources of Islam,
the Quran and the Sunna, nor can I neglect the place occupied
by ijtihad in Islamic thought. Ijtihad is the intellectual
effort furnished by the scholars (ulemas, fukahas,
and others) to understand the deeper meaning of the texts.
Islam emphasizes a balanced family life, considering
the union of the spouses as an inviolable alliance,
to complete their shared life and make it happy.
To summarize what I have just said, Islam affirms the
following:
- The equality of women with men.
- The right of women to freedom of belief and expression.
- The right of women to share political responsibility.
- The economic independence of women.
- The right of women to education, training and a working life.
- The right of women to a balanced, stable family life.
- The preservation of the womans physical and mental health.
II. Islam and Family Planning
In Islam the family is considered the essential unit
of society, encouraging a balanced, healthy, happy family life.
The religion established marriage as the only legitimate institution
for creating a family and for establishing a life in common and
all the relations between husband and wife; it has also set up the
conditions for forming a family and protecting it from collapse
and instability:
- Both spouses must be suited for marriage, of sound body and
mind.
- The husband must have the material means for meeting his familys
needs, including housing, food, clothing, and all that will assure
his children of education, training and well-being.
When these conditions are met, marriage becomes an inviolate
bond between husband and wife, assuring a family life that will
be filled with tenderness, affection and mercy.
And among his signs is this, that he created for
you mates from among yourselves, that ye may dwell in tranquillity
with them, and he has put love and mercy between your (Hearts):
verily in that are signs for those who reflect. (The Romans,
21)
Islam requires that each spouse treat the other with
respect. The Prophet, preparing himself to meet Allah as he was
about to die, said: treat women with the greatest possible
favor. (Al-Boukhari, Anthology, Anbiya 1)
If the required conditions cannot be guaranteed, the
Quran recommends delaying marriage.
Let those who find not the wherewithal for marriage
keep themselves chaste, until Allah gives them means out of His
grace. (The Light, 33)
If some of the conditions are met, the marriage may
take place, but since this generally leads quickly to the birth
of a child, most of the fukahas consider Islam as authorizing
the use of some means to prevent conception, and recommend a healthy
family, small if need be.
There is no passage in the Quran that categorically
authorizes or prohibits the use of contraceptive means. In practice,
however, there has since the Prophets time been what is called
el azl, coitus interruptus, used by a number of Muslims for
family or personal reasons. One of the Prophets companions,
Jaber, reported that el azl was practiced, and that the Prophet
was aware of the fact and did not prohibit it.
Other companions of the Prophet discussed the practice,
and Omar and Ali said that it was permissible. But despite it being
permitted during the Prophets time, and despite the consensus
of his companions, the fukahas, who generally look for divergences
of opinion, are divided on the subject. In chronological order:
the Hanafites authorize el azl. The Malikites authorize it
provided the wife is informed. The Shafiites adopted two different
views. One was to permit el azl, especially if the wife achieved
orgasm, since in that case she received what she expected of her
husband. The other was that el azl was not allowed when practiced
with the intention of preventing procreation. The Hanbalites allow
el azl provided the wife gives her authorization. The Shiites,
Ibadites and Sahirites all have an opinion on the matter, the Zahirites
prohibiting el azl, and the Zaidites (Shiites) and the Ibadites
authorizing it with the wifes consent. The Shiites consider
the practice to be blameworthy if the wife has not given her consent.
This subject of el azl brings us to the problem
of abortion, which has been widely discussed among the fukahas
of the different schools.
Positions on abortion often refer to whether it is practiced
before or after insufflation of the soul. The latter is prohibited
by most fukahas, although some authorize it when the pregnancy
presents a clear danger to the mother. Abortion before insufflation
of the soul is authorized by some, prohibited by others. Most, however,
authorize it from the position that a fetus is not alive before
it has received a soul, a situation it obtains at the end of the
fourth month of pregnancy. A third group of fukahas prohibit
abortion without exception, but these are in the minority.
In the contemporary world, given social problems and
deteriorating living conditions due to the lack of housing, schools
and hospitals, a number of ulemas have examined the question
and have pronounced fatwas authorizing the use of contraceptive
means and abortion under certain conditions: in the case of abortion,
that it be practiced before the pregnancy has advanced beyond the
fourth month; that the family be poor; and that the pregnancy constitute
a threat to the mothers health.
We in Tunisia have pioneering experience in the field
of family planning of which I have just given an overview. Since
the advent of Islam, two major cultural centers, Kairouan (the Okba
mosque) and Tunis (Zitouna University) have influenced our country
and its neighbors, spreading Islamic culture in all its genuineness
and progressive attitude.
A great reformist current appeared in the 19th century
with Kheireddine, Salem Bouhajeb, and Beyram V. In the 20th century,
Tunisian women had two great emancipating defenders in the reformist
Tahar Haddad and my late professor, the learned fekih Sheikh
Mohamed El Fadhel Ben Achour. Haddads book Our Women in
the Sharia and Society is an important reference, and the fatwa
of Sheikh Ben Achour is the fruit of the ijtihad of that
great reformist innovator, who was the Mufti of the republic and
rector of the Zitouna University. Just after achieving independence,
Tunisia acquired a Code of Personal Status, and with President Ben
Ali this code has been revised and updated. It does honor to the
Tunisian, Arab, African and Muslim woman.
The Code of Personal Status had a positive effect
on the couples sexual life, abolishing polygamy, and punishing
marriage outside the legal forms, a practice which was widespread
in Tunisia before its enactment. It also condemns concubinage. The
Code requires that a women be allowed free choice of her husband,
that both spouses consent to the marriage, that both spouses have
equal rights and duties in divorce, and that divorce may be obtained
on the grounds of failure of the other spouse to provide sexual
satisfaction. The amendments of 1993 further improved legislation
on behalf of couples.
Tunisia is a country which is tolerant, open, and at
the same time highly faithful to its Arab and Muslim identity. It
has approached womens promotion and the issue of family planning
on the basis of the opinions of its great fukahas, who have
found in ijtihad an inexhaustible source of renewal, modernity
and development.
Dr. Wassila
Ben Hamda is a professor of theology at the University of Zitouna
in Tunisia and a renowned scholar in her subject. |