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Dr Amina Wadud: For a Progressive Islam Trisha Sertori , Contributor , Ubud |
Thu, 11/19/2009 10:33 AM | People JP/J.B.
Djwan The Islamic scholar, author, imam and activist — Dr Amina
Wadud — started life as Mary, a Methodist child of the US borderline Southern
State of Maryland in 1952. She grew up witnessing African Americans sawing off the
shackles of racial inequality during an often brutal period of US history. As a 16-year-old, Wadud would have watched in horror the
assassination in Memphis of Nobel Peace Prize winner and human rights activist,
Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968. Perhaps it was this monumental tragedy in the formative
years of an African American, who had tasted too often racism’s bitter fruit
that led her in later life to work toward justice and equality with the
foundation of that equality, housed in Islam’s sharia which translates as
justice. Her father’s questioning mind led Wadud to examine
religious doctrines and philosophies from early in life. “I was closer to my father than my mother. I got a lot of
inspiration from him on the sacred. I was a seeker and practiced Buddhism for a
year, then I started reading about Islam and that’s where I am now,” says
Wadud. This scholar and feminist, who was a panelist during the
interfaith International Bali Mediators Festival last weekend, is perhaps
best-known internationally for her leading of Friday prayers at a New York
church in 2005 — like all women, Wadud was banned from leading the mixed-gender
Jumu’ah prayer in mosques. She is also well-known for her progressive position
within Islam and seeking justice for women under sharia. Her first book,
Qur‘an and Woman: Rereading the Sacred Text from a Woman’s Perspective, and its
sequel, Inside the Gender Jihad: Women’s Reform in Islam, are seen as
definitive texts in progressive Islamic thought on the role of women in Islam. “I’m talking about the subtleties of reforming the
[Islamic] laws for equality and justice, not just for today but forever. My
first book is on the Koran and attempts to address the tension in certain
Koranic passages, of justice – the interpretation of justice, or Musawah,” says
Wadud, A visiting professor at Gadjah Mada University’s Center
for Religious and Cross-Cultural Studies in Yogyakarta, Wadud says Indonesia is
one of the leading nations on progressive Islamic thinking, well in advance of
the “lazy” Liberal Islamism of the United States, where Islam is the fastest
growing religion. “When I led the Friday prayer [in March 2005] there was
huge controversy, but scholars here in Indonesia studied the hadith of the
Prophet. They researched two competing hadith; one on the woman the Prophet
appointed to lead prayer and another that said women could not lead. “The hadith that wrote a woman can lead prayer was found
to be the stronger. To me that is taking the research and saying let’s truly
examine this, with the discovery that women can lead prayer. This [study and
research] was something that did not happen anywhere else,” says Wadud. That dedication to researching the traditions of Islam to
achieve a “progressive Islam which is a wedding of traditional Islamic thought
and postmodern thinking”, allows for the reformation of Islamic laws to achieve
greater justice and equality for women and children, according to Wadud. Working with the Musawah movement, made up of Islamic
scholars and activist from around the globe, Musawah examines the Koran and
sunnahs to redefine and reform Islam’s laws on family. All research highlights
the notion of sharia, “justice and equality” for all. And this progressive thinking of Islam is best practiced
in Indonesia, explains Wadud of her choice to live in the archipelago after
having taught at Malaysia’s International Islamic University. “I love Malaysia because it is multicultural and
multireligious, but there is so much tension between these groups. “Indonesians, on the whole, are more progressive and
well-versed in Islamic thought. Indonesians bring together Islamic thought,
culture and postmodern thinking, so I was really impressed by what was going on
in Indonesia,” says Wadud of Indonesia’s Islam of the 21st Century. In an almost physical expression of this Islamic thought
married to postmodern thinking, Wadud lightly straddles the Islamic dress code.
In conferences and interviews, she wears the jilbab and long sleeves, when
visiting monkeys in Ubud’s Sacred Monkey Forest it’s a T-shirt, trousers and
exposed long dreadlocks. “I straddle this intentionally; scarf on, scarf off. For
thirty years I wore the jilbab just to collect the mail outside my front door.
I wore the jilbab when exercising, all the time.” Now, in response to women’s right of choice — not force,
Wadud wears the jilbab on her own terms. Of the niqab, Wadud explains this
dress is cultural, not Islamic. “When women from these countries [where niqabis are
cultural] perform a pilgrimage [the Haj] they must uncover their faces, so it
is not Islamic,” Niqab-wearing in countries like Indonesia tends to be
temporary, Wadud says. “What I find is the wearing of the niqab is transitory.
When it is not part of the cultural dress it never lasts long.” This recognition of a woman’s right to choose is based on
the “need to embrace diversity. At the end of the day, if someone decides to
wear the black niqab in Indonesia, it’s her choice”, says Wadud. With much of her work dedicated to gender equality, based
on studied knowledge of the Koran, hadith and sunnahs, she is appalled at the
current push for a Polygamy Club in Indonesia and Malaysia. However, dragging such conservative and “weak” behavior
into the light is, explains Wadud, better “Unless we are honest about a weak tendency — the desire
for more than one wife is a weakness, to make a joke of it in terms of a club,
to bring it out into the open, can lead to transparency.” She points to the most conservative, who use violence to
enforce their viewpoint and numbers polygamists not far above these. “At one end of the spectrum is progressive Islam, at the
other end is the violent conservatives. The worst are the violent ones who say
you should be killed, but although the polygamist club is not that extremist,
it is untenable in Islam,” says Wadud. Her hope for the future is an embrace of diversity of
religions and cultures, an increasing awareness and practice of spirituality
and the dismantling of patriarchy as a social paradigm. “Patriarchy got us out of the caves but it can now be
retired in favor of equality and compassion,” says Wadud who challenges that
patriarchy from within the beating heart of Islam in the leading of Friday
prayer. Copyright © 2008 The Jakarta Post - PT Bina Media
Tenggara. All Rights Reserved. Source
URL: http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2009/11/19/dr-amina-wadud-for-a-progressive-islam.html |
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