Fearless Gazelles of Islam
Nusaybah bint Ka`b, seeing the Prophet ( PBUH) unprotected during
the Battle of Uhud, ran to shield him with her sword alongside her husband and
son. She received many wounds, and the Prophet himself (PBUH) said, wherever he
turned, whether to the right or to the left, he saw her defending him. She was
present at a number of battles, and at the age of 60 fought at Al-Yamamah,
receiving 11 wounds, also losing her hand.
When Khawla bint al-Azwar’s brother was taken captive by the
Byzantines, she put on armour and charged into the Byzantine troops to rescue
him. Taken captive at the Battle of Marj al Saffar, she fended off the
Byzantines with a tentpole, killing seven.
Muslim women were an important part of every battle rallying
their men, or tending to the wounded, sometimes taking up arms or composing taunting
poetry. Ghazala al-Haruriyya called out to the fleeing Umayyad General “You are
a lion against me but were made into an ostrich which spreads its wings and flees
on hearing the chirping of a sparrow.”
The first Muslim martyr was 65 year-old Abyssinian, Sumayyah
bin Khabbat, who refused to curse the Prophet ( PBUH) despite being severely
tortured by Abu Jahl. She spat on him saying “You are smaller to me in my eyes
than a beetle that I would step on in the ground.” The enraged Abu Jahl impaled
her on his spear.
The Prophet’s wives, his daughter, Fatima, granddaughter
Zainab, and even his great-great-granddaughter Nafisa, whose students included
the founders of the Shafai and Hanbali school of thought, earned great respect,
not simply because of their lineage but their strength of character. There were hundreds of learned women from
Spain to Samarqand, whose knowledge was sought after by men and women. Umm
Al-Darda Al-Soghra and Fatima al-Samarqandi were renowned jurists, Fatima
al-Fihri established the first Muslim university. Imam Abu Hanifah took the
name of his daughter after she solved a problem he could not. Rābi‘a Basri was the first to introduce the
Sufi concept of “Divine Love.”
There was even a pirate queen, Sayyida al-Hurra who, alongside
the famous Ottoman admiral Hayreddin Barbarossa, protected Morocco from the
Spanish fleet. Malahayati, appointed Admiral in 16th C
Indonesia, commanded a fleet of war widows, protecting the kingdom from the
Portuguese and the Dutch.
Muslim women played a significant role in the Freedom
Movement of India and Pakistan, during which over two hundred lost their lives
at the hands of the British. Many are well known, such as Hazrat Mahal and Bi
Amma. Less known is the courtesan Azizan, who organised and trained a battalion
of women fighters. The wives of Maulana Muhammad Ali, Hasrat Mohani, Abul
Kalaam Azad, Maulana Shafi, Liaquat Ali Khan, the sister of Jinnah, and many others,
were fearless activists.
Today, once more, women are proving their mettle, participating
in political movements, enduring imprisonment, rejecting the image of the weak,
powerless woman.
All early societies, while dividing work between men and
women, gave each equal value, reflecting the Taoist principle of Yin and Yang. However,
influential thinkers like Confucius, declared women were subordinate to men,
and Aristotle promoted the idea that “the male rules and the female is ruled”. Church
Law adopted this belief, although The Bible states “there is no longer male and
female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus”.
19th Century Western society accepted Darwin’s conclusion that the
male was superior in the survival of the fittest. According to scholar Siran
Hovhannisyan, the Western feminist backlash imposed their ‘gender’ politics on
non- western cultures. As a consequence, Tanzanian scholar Norah Hashim Msuya says, “Women have been left with the
unpleasant situation of choosing between their rights or their culture”.
In the Quran, Surah al-Ahzab makes clear that men and women
are equally and independently responsible for their actions. But local cultures
resurface. In India the ancient Manusmriti code, defining Hindu family life, dictates
a woman must be secluded, serving only her husband, father or son.
Seen through western eyes, Muslim women are oppressed, but
in the light of history, Muslim women were, and still are, a vibrant, active
force, ‘holding up half the sky’ in the words of Chairman Mao.
Durriya Kazi
June 28, 2023
Karachi
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