¶ … treatment of Western women to treatment of Middle Eastern women
This paper will compare the treatment of women in the West with the treatment of women from the Middle East. It should be borne in mind that the term 'Middle East' is a term constructed by people of the West to describe an area in which the West has a military interest; there is no such geographic area as the 'Middle East'. Further, the peoples of the Middle East are very heterogeneous, including people from Turkey, Iran, the Kurds, Armenians, Israelis, Palestinians, and others from a wide variety of Arab countries. Bearing these considerations in mind, therefore, in order to give some generalization to this paper, I will use a religious axis upon which to base my study of the treatment of women in the Middle East: the treatment of Middle Eastern women following Islam, and those following Judaism, will be compared with the women of the West (i.e., those following the Judaeo-Christian tradition).
In the West, Islam is interpreted, particularly nowadays, following September 11th, as a system of female subordination. Yet, on a thorough examination of Islam, Judaism and Christianity, there seems to be little difference between the fundamental 'laws' as laid down with regard to women (with regard to the laws as laid out in the ancient texts, not as these laws are followed today). Indeed, in the ancient texts, the Quran, from the beginning, at the Story of Creation, puts equal blame on Adam and Eve for the transgression. The Quran does not mention that Eve tempted Adam to eat the apple from the tree, and there is no evidence that Eve ate anything before Adam. This is because, in the Quran, God does not punish anyone else for another's faults. It is this very moment in the Bible, the temptation of Adam by Eve, that led to the idea of women as temptresses in the Judaeo-Christian tradition, and which has had a negative impact on women throughout this tradition. So, from the beginning, Islam has a less negative view of women than that as laid out in the texts of the Judaeo-Christian tradition (indeed, in Judaism, Orthodox Jewish men recite the following in their daily morning prayer "Blessed be the king of God, that Thou has not made me a woman").
In the Islam tradition, the view of women is no different to the view held of men; they are both here on Earth, as God's wishes, and their goal is to worship their God, do righteous works, and to avoid evil. If they follow these guidelines, as laid out in the Quran, they will both be judged equally and accordingly in the eyes of God.
Indeed, special treatment is given to people who give birth to daughters, as the Quran says "He who is involved in bringing up daughters, and accords benevolent treatment towards them, they will be protection for him against Hell-fire." This, and other quotes like this from the Quran, show just how open Islam is to the idea of the preciousness and importance of women's place in society. Islam, therefore, gives women equal rights as men, something that is not given in other religious traditions. The rights that Muslim women enjoy, and have enjoyed for centuries, women in the West, in the Judaeo-Christian tradition, have had to struggle for centuries to achieve, and often have not yet been achieved (the sons of Jewish mothers, for instance, are not recognized as Jews; only sons with Jewish fathers). Suffrage, war-work, all of these struggles were what eventually achieved a more equal treatment for women in Western societies.
Where does this popular myth that the women of the 'Middle East', of the Islamic tradition, are suppressed come from? Media images of the Taliban (an extremist Islamic group, condemned equally vigorously by the majority of muslims worldwide) helped to fuel the recent condemnation of Islam's treatment of women; the misuse of the laws with regards to women as laid out in the Quran in certain Arab countries of the 'Middle East' have also helped to lower Western opinions of the treatment of muslim women. But what are the truths, as laid out in the Quran, with regards to how a woman should behave as an individual, in her family, and in society? According to the Quran, women have the right to: obtain an education, own their own independent...
Thorough reviews of the Q'uran have revealed that it actually forbids sexual oppression of women. Several and well-entrenched customary practices in the region, however, violate women's basic human rights. These practices include honor crimes, stoning, female general mutilation, and virginity tests. Women researchers and activists did not find a basis for these practices in the Q'uran (Ilkakaracan). Modernization in the 19th and 20th centuries, the foundation of nation-states and the
Women and the Home Front in Western North Carolina and Eastern Tennessee during the Civil War This paper examines the living conditions and attitudes that shaped the lives of the women in western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee during and after the American Civil War. The thesis statement should deal with the breakdown of long standing ties between the people of the mountains as they chose to fight for the
Western Religion In his book, "Western Ways of Being Religious," (Kessler, 1999) the author Gary E. Kessler identifies the theological, philosophical and societal ramifications of the evolution of religion in the West. Christianity, Judaism and Islam can be traced to a single origin but their divergence has been very marked. Kessler sets his thesis very early in the book. He avers that there are two approaches to religion. One is to
Esposito finds that the premodernist revival movements of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries contributed to the pattern of Islamic politics that developed and left a legacy for the twentieth century. These movements were motivated primarily in response to internal decay rather than external, colonial threat (Esposito 40-41). At the same time, many areas of the Islamic world experienced the impact of the economic and military challenge of an emerging and
The Representation of Muslim Women in Eastern and Western Literature: A Comparison Representations of women in Middle Eastern literature represent a means by which the appreciation, perspective and overall role of women and how they are viewed by society can be determined. While some argue that literature and actually lived daily life are separate, literature serves as a measuring stick by which one can ascertain a definitive viewpoint on what the
PTSD in the Middle East Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is one of the most common mental health or psychological disorders facing people in the Middle East region. This condition emerges from episodes of social upheaval, combat, and violence that have become common in the Middle East over the past few years. Some of the major areas in the Middle East that have been characterized by increased conflicts in recent years include
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now