Gendar Apartheid

It is high time that we begin to reject our position as the carriers of the male burden

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Gendar Apartheid
by Samira Mohyeddin
02-May-2010
 


In 2005 I attended a conference in Montreal and presented a paper on The Discourse of Cultural Authenticity and the Impeding of Women's Movements in Iran - it was to be a rough sketch of my PhD dissertation and looks explicitly at the writings of some of the Islamic revolutions ideologues...Ali Shariati in particular. It also looks to see how feminism is viewed as a derivative concept, "Western", and how this assertion is made by opponents of women's rights in order to bring any movement into disrepute.

I am now building upon that paper in order to also show how the rise of a non-critical scholarship about the Islamic Republic has further impeded any advancement that women might make. What is very disheartening is that this rise in non-critical scholarship is due mostly to SOME Iranian so-called academic feminists who, a decade ago were promulgating the oxymoronic notion of an Islamic feminism is inherently secular and view all religions as patriarchal constructs and are now touting the new recycling program of the Islamic Republic known as the Green Movement; where ex-prime ministers clamour to become presidents and ex-presidents become Guardian council leaders; one big regurgitation every four years that is what an Islamic Republic looks like.

On another note, adding insult to injury, the United Nations has given a seat to the Islamic Republic on its women's council, despite a petition signed by Iranian women activists urging them not to allow this most perverse form of satire. The United Nations have now enshrined my right to be stoned, they have enshrined my judicious right to be half a person; my right not to divorce or child custody, my right to no freedom of mobility, my right not to higher education after marriage without permission of my husband. The country that guarantees my subjugated role in society is now sitting on the women's council of the United Nations.

The Islamic Republic has refused to ratify CEDAW based on cultural and/or religious reasons since its inception. Meaning, somehow it is in our Iranian culture to treat women as subordinate beings. That the only thing available to us, the only woman that we are to emulate or strive to be, as Islamic ideologue Ali Shariati advised, is Fatima. Fatima, daughter of Muhammad; Fatima wife of Ali, Fatima mother of Hassan and Hussein, Fatima nothing of her own. This is what is offered to the women of Iran and now the United Nations is complacent in this. If I sound indignant it's because I am.

We all know that to see signs which display - COLOURED ONLY - or - WHITES ONLY - is wrong and morally repugnant. And yet, when it comes to women and gender apartheid all these other factors are brought into play to justify and further demean women, in the name of social mores, religion, culture, etc. For hundreds of years Southern Americans referred to slavery as being an integral part of their socio-cultural fabric and so for the past 31 years the Islamic Republic has tried its hardest, even bringing on board a lot of comprador female intellectuals who advance their agenda, to convince the international community that women in Iran are different but equal.

The 'different but equal' argument comes from Islamic feminism and Islamist ideologues like, Muhammad Abduh, Ali Shariati, Sayyid Qutb, Hassan al Banna and the like, who allocate different rights and responsibilities to men and women based on their biological make-up. This form of thinking is so base and from Schopenhauer to Shariati women's biological reality has been used to keep women out of certain positions. The noble laureate SHIRIN EBADI, who now only can speak ad nauseum about the commonalities of Islam and democracy, was actually a judge before the Iranian revolution and after she and all other female judges were fired and asked to take secretarial positions, while uneducated clerics took their positions and became judge, jury and executioner all in one. Women are thought too emotional to be judges in the Islamic Republic, they are thought too arousing to walk around without a head covering or an all encompassing shroud; they cannot ride bicycles because the physical act is again arousing to men. It is high time that we begin to reject our position as the carriers of the male burden and we cannot begin to do that until we name all the ways in which we are burdened.

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vildemose

You are so on target with

by vildemose on

You are so on target with your assessment of Ali Shariati.  I would even take it up one more notch and declare that people like Shariati and Aal Ahmad were even more dangerous to our nation than Khomeini himself.

Too true. I'm glad someone finally has brought this significant point to our attention. Only God know how many are still under the influence of that sadistic monster shariati.


vildemose

The Islamic Republic has

by vildemose on

The Islamic Republic has refused to ratify CEDAW based on cultural and/or religious reasons since its inception. Meaning, somehow it is in our Iranian culture to treat women as subordinate beings. That the only thing available to us, the only woman that we are to emulate or strive to be, as Islamic ideologue Ali Shariati advised, is Fatima. Fatima, daughter of Muhammad; Fatima wife of Ali, Fatima mother of Hassan and Hussein, Fatima nothing of her own. This is what is offered to the women of Iran and now the United Nations is complacent in this. If I sound indignant it's because I am.

We should all be indignant. Alas, some are deeply vested in propping this misogynist of a government.

Look forward to more of your articles.


Harpi-Eagle

Roots ...

by Harpi-Eagle on

Dr. Mohyeddin,

Once again, another great read, thank you.  To get rid of the backward and archaic way of thinking that this misguided religion has enforced upon us and many other nations, we have to De-Arabize our culture, go back to our "ROOTS", if you like.  Fortunately that is just around the corner based on my observations during a recent trip to Iran.  You would not believe how many Iranian youth I saw with Faravahar pendants and, Faravahar tatoos, and how many time I heard these great young people express how fed up they were with Islam.

You are so on target with your assessment of Ali Shariati.  I would even take it up one more notch and declare that people like Shariati and Aal Ahmad were even more dangerous to our nation than Khomeini himself.  I observed first hand what an idol "Bot" the brightest minds of the 70's in Iran had made of these gentlmen, I saw firsthand how many of the Tehran University students chose to overlook the idealogical shortcomings of Shariati and his lectures in Hoseinieh Ershad.  They all chose to look the other way when he was condoning Islamic Hejab and other set backs for our women, and continued to do so until it was too late.

But, as I said, do not despair as fundamental changes are just around the corner, and once the IRI thugs are defeated, these principle alterations to our nations's philosophy will take place.  Of course, Shariati was just a tool himself, the actual problem is with the core philosophy itself, after all what do you expect of an idealogy that was created by Mohammad, a man who married a 9 year old girl at age 54, one that condoned extreme violence and felt that the end justfied the means no matter what. 

Payandeh Iran, our Ahuraie Fatherland