Key Points
- Although there is no gender equality in the Middle East (including in Israel), the phenomena of sexism and misogyny are globalnot peculiar to Islam, or to the Middle East.
- The status of women varies widely in the Middle East, and one should not project the norms in Saudi Arabiaone of the most sexist and oppressive states in the regiononto the larger Muslim world.
- Many of the causes for the inferior status of Middle Eastern women are indigenous, but the Westespecially the U.S.has exacerbated this oppression.
In discussions of general issues facing women in the Middle East, the diversity of female lifestyles and conditions is often lost. Accustomed to stereotypical depictions, Westerners are told that Middle Eastern women are passive, weak, and always veiled. It is often assumed that the severe conditions in Saudi Arabiawhere women are not even allowed to drive carsrepresent the norm for women throughout the Middle East and in the larger Muslim world. In reality, Saudi Arabias versions of both Islam and sexism are rather unique in their severities, although the rule of the Taliban in Afghanistan is now emulating the sexist Saudi model. Women enjoy political and social rights in many Muslim countries, and Egypt has recently granted women the right to divorce their husbands. In Tunisia, abortion is legal, and polygamy is prohibited. Women have served as ministers in the Syrian, Jordanian, Egyptian, Iraqi, and Tunisian governments, and as Vice President in Iran.
Yet the problems of Middle Eastern women remain acute. Islamic, Christian,
and Jewish jurists and theologiansall of them maleshave provided
Middle Eastern society with the most exclusivist and conservative interpretations
of religious laws, which have burdened women in the family, the society,
and the state. The top position in government, according to strict Islamic
laws, is denied to women based on a dubious Hadith (collections of sayings
and deeds attributed to Muhammad). According to the Interparlia-mentary
Union, the political representation of women in parliaments in Arab nations
lags behind all other countries of the world, and Kuwait has yet to grant
women the right to vote. Yet, Muslims in Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Turkey
have all been led by women. In Israel, a woman (Golda Meir) once headed
the government, although the political elite has been almost exclusively
of males since the creation of the state.
Islamic clerics continue to enjoy a tremendous amount of power, and often
exercise great influence in the field of education. The Middle East (including
Israel) is unduly hostage to clerics, who do not allow the codification
of civil personal status laws. For example, only Cyprus, of all the Middle
Eastern countries, recognizes interfaith marriages. Furthermore, Islam
has sanctioned and perpetuated many sexist practices and views, including
polygamy, the stigmatization of menstruation, the requirement of wifely
obedience to the husband, and the inequality of inheritance and court
appearances. All of these practices have at one point or another been
part of Christian and Jewish practices or cultures.
Although religion bears major responsibility for the inferior status
of women, it cannot be solely blamed for the gender problem in the Middle
East. In reality, the role of culture has been even more prominent in
perpetuating the oppression of women. Female genital mutilation, for example,
is a cultural practice that has afflicted women in several cultures at
different times in history. The practice, which in Islam garners dubious
permission in an alleged Hadith of the Prophet, is largely unknown in
most Muslim countries, though it is still practiced in rural areas of
both Muslim and non-Muslim parts of Africa. Similarly, the so-called honor
crimes have no basis in Islam. Furthermore, though veiling has become
a symbol of Middle Eastern oppression of women, the practice actually
came to Muslim cultures from Christian Byzantium.
In fact, the role of the West regarding Middle Eastern women is often
obscured. Western colonial powers have historically shed crocodile tears
over the plight of Muslim women and have vilified Islam for its role in
this oppression. Ironically, in medieval times Islam was actually attacked
by Christian polemicists for being too permissive and tolerant in social
and sexual matters.
Western treatment of Muslim women has been hypocritical at best. Leila
Ahmed, who published a study of women and gender in the Islamic world,
dubs the Western attitude as colonial feminism. According
to Ahmed, colonial feminism refers to the tendency among colonial officers
to champion Muslim womens rights, while at the same time opposing
womens rights in their own countries. Thus the status of women in
the Middle East was used merely to denigrate Islam and the culture of
the region. The legacy of colonial feminism persists; feminism in the
Middle East is often discredited, by governments and by local enemies
of feminism, because it is associated with the sequels of colonialism.
In the present-day Middle East, the Western powers responsibility
(Americas in particular) for the current state of affairs, cannot
be denied. Ever since the 1950s, successive American governments have
supported Saudi Arabian Islam and have funded and armed Islamic fundamentalist
groups, which have tormented Middle Eastern women and frustrated their
efforts at emancipation. Furthermore, since many of the oppressive governments
in the Middle East survive only because of Western military and/or economic
support, the responsibility for local oppression has external dimensions.
Problems with Current U.S. Policy
Key Problems
- The U.S. continues to support a very conservative and intensely misogynist
version of Islam through its staunch support of the Saudi Arabian government.
- U.S. financial aid supports the oppressive regimes in the region,
rather than the civil and feminist organizations.
- American policy during the cold war promoted conservative Islamic
fundamentalism, which now terrorizes the region and its women.
The U.S. government (especially since the days of Jimmy Carter, who hailed
the Iranian shahs regime a few months before its overthrow) has
for years exploited human rights rhetoric by highlighting its enemies
human rights violations and ignoring its friends violations. The
people of the Middle East have not forgotten that Washington ignored the
shah of Irans abysmal record of human rights violations while strictly
scrutinizing the human rights records of Libya and Syria, for example.
Of course Libya and Syria do violate human rights, but Washingtons
double standard is blatant and cruel.
The antipathy to U.S. economic and political interests in the Middle
East stems largely from the inability or unwillingness of the U.S. to
judge human rights on a universal and neutral basis. Not that the U.S.
should view itself, or that it should be viewed by others, as the ultimate
arbiter of the human rights situation around world. Many human rights
organizations have documented human rights violations within the United
States. But the U.S. presents itself to the Middle East, and to other
regions of the world, as the authority on and the judge of human rights
standards, and does not admit that its actions both within and outside
the U.S. often worsen human rights situations.
In the Middle East, Saudi Arabia stands as a clear example of American
hypocrisy. No serious and credible policy on human rights can ignore the
abysmal record of the Saudi royal family, which has imposed on the Saudi
Arabian people one of the most oppressive regimes in the world. Saudi
Arabias government is based on institutional sexism, misogyny, and
intolerant religious exclusiveness. The brand of Wahhabi Islam imposed
in Saudi Arabia is seen in no other country. (Qatar, which follows Wahhabi
doctrine, has been launching a series of social and political reforms
affecting women in the past few years.)
American support for the Saudi royal family has permitted that government
to violate human rights and to ignore the pleas of Saudi men and women
for reforms. Crown Prince Abdullah, who has assumed more powers in the
past two years in the wake of the near incapacitation of King Fahd, has
publicly alluded to popular demands for social, political, and legal reforms
affecting Saudi women. Yet Washington, which routinely interferes in the
minute affairs in the region and in the internal domestic situation of
many Arab countries, has not made one public statement in support of Saudi
women in the face of state oppression and discrimination. How can the
U.S. government make speeches and statements in support of 13 Iranian
Jews who are accused of treason and yet remain silent about the plight
of millions of Arab women who are oppressed daily by a pro-American government?
How can the U.S. scrutinize the human rights records of Libya and Iran
but not of Saudi Arabia? Irans political system, with all its shortcomings,
is certainly superior to the archaic political system in Saudi Arabia.
U.S. support for Saudi Arabia has also harmed the cause of reforming
Islam, because Saudi oil wealth helps to promote a very conservative branch
of Islamic theology and jurisprudence throughout the Muslim world. The
Saudi Arabian branch of Wahhabiyyah Islam targets women: they are denied
political roles, they are deprived of driving privileges, they are confined
to educational institutions inferior to those reserved for men, and they
are still subject to the legal practice of guardianship, which treats
women as legal inferiors who cannot move or travel without the notarized
legal permission of their fathers, brothers, husbands, or a remote male
relative in some cases. While Saudi Arabia welcomes technology allowing
it to accommodate U.S. military needs and requirements, it fights political
reforms under the slogan of maintaining its cultural and Islamic authenticity.
The campaign against gender equality and religious reforms spearheaded
by the Saudi royal family, is directly or indirectly sponsored by the
U.S., the main political benefactor of the Wahhabi government. Though
the Saudi case is exceptional, it is illustrative of the determinants
and consequences of U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East.
Unfortunately, U.S. aid programs dont help Middle Eastern women
either. Although the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund have
belatedly accommodated themselves to the needs of civic organizations
around the world, the U.S. foreign aid program is not based on need and
is severely tarnished by its political agenda. The Canadian foreign aid
program is geared toward the empowerment of both the poor and women, and
it awards grants and aid on the basis of need. But the largest recipient
of U.S. aid remains Israel, which has a per capita income comparable to
that of the UK. Moreover, the U.S. government still favors rewarding and
punishing governments through its aid programs. Instead of supporting
the courageous feminist and human rights nongovernmental organizations
(NGOs) in the Middle East, the U.S. aid program helps finance the defense
industry in America. This type of aid only serves to promote a culture
of corruption in the recipient countries and keeps unelected officials
in power. In recent years, Washington has been giving some money to civic
associations, but the amounts are minuscule when compared to U.S. military
aid, or to the needs of Middle Eastern NGOs.
Many private philanthropic organizations in the West have shifted their
largess to aid civic associations. NGOs now proliferate throughout the
Arab world, and these organizations suffer not only from political repression
but also from lack of resources. Feminist organizations in particular
have to navigate between the hostility of the state and the hostility
of Islamic fundamentalists in society. These organizations, and female-led
groups promoting economic development among women, would benefit from
U.S. economic aid. Yet even when some groups (like the feminist organization
led by Nawal Saadawi in Egypt) receive private American aid, their rank-and-file
members object. Wary of American motives and foreign policy, such groups
often detest and suspect American funding.
Toward a New Foreign Policy
Key Recommendations
- The U.S. needs to end its double standard relative to human rights
violations in the Middle East.
- Washington must end its traditional disregard for the plight of Middle
Eastern women and incorporate the interests and welfare of women into
its foreign aid programs.
Washingtons rhetoric on human rights is not taken seriously by
people in the Middle East, and rightly so. Although the U.S. scrutinizes
the human rights records of governments it dislikes (like Iran and Libya),
it ignores similar abuses in friendly countries like Saudi
Arabia, which perhaps hasalong with the Taliban government of Afghanistanthe
worst record on womens rights in the world. Saudi Arabia exemplifies
the essential flaws and errors of U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East:
how can Washington claim that it opposes dictators and oppressors in the
region (like Qadhafi and Saddam Hussein) while it continues its longstanding
policy of supporting the illegitimate rule of the Saudi royal family?
Furthermore, U.S. policy on human rights has never been troubled by Americas
very close and strategic relations with the state of Israel,
which has consistently violated the human rights of Arabs living under
its rule, and has showered neighboring Arab countries with unsolicited
bombs. Many of the victims of Israeli oppression and bombing have been
women. Furthermore, the record of the Israeli state toward Israeli women
has been inadequate, to put it mildly.
A new, credible foreign policy would take into consideration the human
rights abuses of all governments in the Middle East, regardless of whether
the abusers were friendly or hostile to U.S. interests and regardless
of the religion, gender, and ethnicity of the victims. Christian and Jewish
victims of oppression in the Middle East receive far more coverage in
the U.S. press and in the attention span of U.S. officials than do Muslim
victims of oppression. Such favoritism leaves Middle Eastern women out
of the scope of American foreign policy radar altogether.
Womens issues must rank more prominently on the agenda of U.S.
foreign and human rights policy. Washington currently claims to include
human rights issues in its diplomatic dealings with foreign countries,
although evidence to the contrary exists. But we have yet to hear about
significant U.S. interest in the plight of Saudi women, whose subjugation
cannot be justified even by Islamic jurisprudence. The U.S. objects, for
example, to the sheltering of Usamah Bin Ladin by the Taliban government
more than it objects to the oppression of women by that government. In
fact, it was the way that U.S. foreign policy handled the Soviet invasion
of Afghanistan that enabled the fundamentalist misogynist victors in Afghanistan
to roll back the strides of progress and success by Afghani women under
the previous secular (communist) governments.
Washington should send a message to Middle Eastern governments that U.S.
aid and diplomatic support will be tied to progress on womens rights.
Currently, the U.S. government interferes in the minutiae of Arab politics,
deciding, for example, whether the League of Arab States should hold a
summit or not, and determining what words Yasir Arafat should use in his
speeches. Yet, when pressed on the plight of women in Saudi Arabia, Washington
pleads noninterference in the internal affairs of Arab countries.
How can one buy that argument, when U.S. planes fly freely over the skies
of Iraq and when U.S. troops are overtly or covertly stationed on Arab
soil?
The U.S. government must also match its rhetoric with its actions. Instead
of funneling millions of dollars into corrupt state institutions that
only benefit ruling elites and their cronies, U.S. aid should be aimed
at enriching civic society, many of whose elements are led by Middle Eastern
women. Washington can help, not in the emancipation of Middle Eastern
womenthey can do just fine in their own self-liberationbut
in providing womens organizations in the Middle East with much-needed
resources and materials, and in removing some of the blocks from the path
of liberation. Unfortunately the unpopularity of the U.S. government has
rendered such help controversial at times, as was the case of the feminist
group led by Nawal Saadawi in Egypt.
Washington must help foster strong civic groups in the Middle East instead
of pursuing the unending spiral of militarization that continues despite
the ending of the cold war. Instead, the U.S. government still heavily
arms both Israel and Arab Persian Gulf regimes, despite its claims to
be halting the Middle East arms race.
Finally, it is important that the U.S. government avoid the pitfalls
of past colonial experiences: the struggle for gender equality in the
Middle East should not be equated with Islam bashing. Islam is not uniquely
guilty of gender inequality, and any attempt to perpetuate the negative
stereotypes of Arabs and Islam in the West will only discredit the efforts
of Middle Eastern feminists, who are often dismissed as stooges of Western
powers. The struggle for gender equality in the Middle East is a Middle
Eastern struggle, but the U.S. government, through its wealth and influence,
can play a favorable and supportive role that could enhance understanding
and harmony between Arabs and Americans.
As'ad AbuKhalil is an associate professor of political science at California State University, Stanislaus, and a research fellow at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at the University of California, Berkeley.