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Women, Islam, and the New
Iraq
By Isobel Coleman
January/February 2006 – (Foreign Affairs) Although questions
of implementation remain, the new Iraqi constitution makes Islam
the law of the land. This need not mean trouble for Iraq's women,
however. Sharia is open to a wide range of interpretations, some
quite egalitarian. If Washington still hopes for a liberal order
in Iraq, it should start working with progressive Muslim scholars
to advance women's rights through religious channels.
THE IMPACT OF SHARIA
Article 14 of Iraq's new constitution, approved in a nationwide
referendum held on October 15, states that Iraqis are equal before
the law "without discrimination because of sex." Yet the
constitution also states that no law can be passed that contradicts
the "established rulings" of Islam. For this reason, the
new document has been condemned by critics both inside and outside
Iraq as a fundamental setback for amajority of Iraq's population
-- namely, its women. According to Isam al-Khafaji, an Iraqi scholar,
the document "could easily deprive women of their rights."
Yanar Muhammad, a leading secular activist and the head of the Organization
of Women's Freedom in Iraq, worries that the Islamic provision will
turn the country "into an Afghanistan under the Taliban, where
oppression and discrimination of women is institutionalized."
These criticisms are not without merit, and the ambiguity of the
new constitution is a cause for concern. The centrality of Islamic
law in the document, however, does not necessarily mean trouble
for Iraqi women. In fact, sharia is open to a wide range of understanding,
and across the Islamic world today, progressive Muslims are seeking
to reinterpret its rules to accommodate a modern role for women.
Iraq's constitution does not specify who will decide which version
of Islam will prevail in the country's new legal system. But the
battle has already begun. Victory by the progressives would have
positive implications for all aspects of the future of Iraq, since
women's rights are critical to democratic consolidation in transitional
and war-torn societies. Allowing a full social, political, and economic
role for women in Iraq would help ensure its transition to a stable
democracy. Success for women in Iraq would also reverberate throughout
the broader Muslim world. In every country where sharia is enforced,
women's rights have become a divisive issue, and the balance struck
between tradition and equality in Iraq will influence these other
debates.
In many Islamic countries, reformers have largely abandoned attempts
to replace sharia with secular law, a route that has proved mostly
futile. Instead, they are trying to promote women's rights within
an Islamic framework.
This approach seems more likely to succeed, since it fights theology
with theology -- a natural strategy in countries with conservative
populations and where religious authority is hard to challenge.
Now that the United States has helped midwife an Islamic state in
Iraq, U.S. officials would, for similar reasons, be wise to move
beyond their largely secular interlocutors. If Washington still
hopes to create a relatively liberal regime in Iraq, it must start
working with progressive religious Muslims to advance the role of
women through religious channels.
RETHINKING THE LAW
Sharia is the body of Islamic law that was developed by religious
scholars (ulama) after the death of the Prophet Muhammad. Meant
to provide moral and legal guidance to Muslims, sharia is based
on the Koran and the Sunna (the recorded traditions or customs of
the Prophet). The Koran has about 80 verses concerning legal issues,
many of which refer to the role of women in society and to important
family issues, such as marriage, divorce, and inheritance.
Because neither the Koran nor the Sunna cover most day-to-day issues,
however, after the death of the Prophet the ulama created other
means for addressing them. As a last measure, qualified legal scholars
could study a question, apply independent reasoning (ijtihad), and
issue a nonbinding fatwa. In the eleventh century, however, to consolidate
their control, the Sunni ulama crystallized their legal judgments
into various schools of Islamic jurisprudence and banned ijtihad.
With the gates of independent interpretation closed, the traditionalists
imposed their own conservative positions on mainstream Islamic jurisprudence,
and these have remained largely frozen for almost a millennium.
Some scholars, however, have continued to search for Islamic answers
to the questions of modern life. Contrary to the claims of secularists
who deny the compatibility of Islam and modern notions of women's
rights, Islamic attitudes on the question actually vary quite widely.
According to "Islamic feminists," Islam is actually a
very progressive religion for women, was radically egalitarian for
its time, and remains so in some of its Scriptures. They contend
that Islamic law has evolved in ways that are inimical to gender
equality not because it clearly pointed in that direction, but because
of selective interpretation by patriarchal leaders and a mingling
of Islamic teachings with tribal customs and traditions. Islamic
feminists now seek to revive the equality bestowed on women in the
religion's early years by rereading the Koran, putting the Scriptures
in context, and disentangling them from tribal practices.
Among the pioneers of Islamic feminism are the Moroccan writer Fatema
Mernissi and the Pakistani scholar Riffat Hassan -- although neither
is entirely comfortable with the label. In fact, many religious
progressives prefer to distance themselves from the term "feminism"
and the Western cultural baggage it brings. These scholars simply
see themselves as Muslims pursuing rights for women within an Islamic
discourse. Their movement already spans the globe, is growing, and
is increasingly innovative. Many of its leading lights are actually
men, distinguished Islamic scholars such as Hussein Muhammad in
Indonesia, whose high status gives them particular credibility.
The Islamic feminists tend to focus their work on the sensitive
area of family law, since it is the area of jurisprudence that has
the greatest impact on women's daily lives -- and since it also
leaves much room for interpretation. Take, for example, the Koran's
stipulations on inheritance. One contested verse states that on
her parents' death, a daughter should receive half of what her brother
inherits. Progressives, however, point out that at the time of the
Prophet, giving a woman any inheritance was a radical departure
from Arab practice.
(Indeed, it was a radical notion in much of the West as well until
the twentieth century.) The progressives also note that the rule
made sense in traditional Islamic societies, where women had no
financial obligations, only financial rights. But today, they argue,
when many Muslim women do earn a living and men do not always provide
the necessary support, it is important to adapt the law to changing
circumstances.
The Koran, like the Bible, also includes many multilayered, seemingly
contradictory passages, and Islamic feminists tend to emphasize
different verses than the traditionalists. On the sensitive subject
of polygamy, for example, one verse of the Koran says, "Marry
those women who are lawful for you, up to two, three, or four, but
only if you can treat them all equally." Later in the same
chapter, however, the Koran reads, "No matter how you try you
will never be able to treat your wives equally." Many Muslim
scholars today read the two verses together, as an effective endorsement
of monogamy. Many tribal communities, on the other hand, focus on
the former verse alone and cite it as a justification for having
multiple wives.
The rules on veiling are similarly inconclusive. Progressive Muslims
point out that nowhere does the Koran actually require the veiling
of all Muslim women. Veiling was simply a custom in pre-Islamic
Arabia, where the hijab was considered a status symbol (after all,
only women who did not have to work in the fields had the luxury
of wearing a veil). When the Koran mentions veils, it is in reference
to Muhammad's wives. The "hijab verse" reads, "Believers,
do not enter the Prophet's house ... unless asked. And if you are
invited ... do not linger. And when you ask something from the Prophet's
wives, do so from behind a hijab. This will assure the purity of
your hearts as well as theirs." In the Prophet's lifetime,
all believers (men and women) were encouraged to be modest. But
the veil did not become widespread for several generations -- until
conservatives became ascendant.
What all this suggests for Iraq is that sharia is not inherently
inimical to women's rights. It also suggests that the question of
who gets to interpret sharia is critical -- especially on areas
such as gender equality, where the letter of the law is vague.
STATUS ANXIETY
For nearly 50 years, Iraq's personal-status law provided women with
some of the broadest legal rights in the region. The law, enacted
in 1959, included several progressive provisions loosely derived
from various schools of Islamic jurisprudence. It set the marriage
age at 18 and prohibited arbitrary divorce. It also restricted polygamy,
making that practice almost impossible (the code required men seeking
a second wife to get judicial permission, which would only be granted
if the judge believed the man could treat both wives equally). And
it required that men and women be treated equally for purposes of
inheritance. When he was challenged by clerics over this provision,
Abdul Karim Kassem, the Iraqi prime minister at the time, responded
that the verse in the Koran calling for a daughter's inheritance
to be half that of a son's was only a recommendation, not a commandment.
Religious scholars were unhappy with the code from the beginning,
largely because it imposed a unified standard on Iraq's population
without allowing for the differences among its various religious
sects. Shiite clerics, in particular, viewed it as another aspect
of unwanted Sunni oppression. But the legislation played an important
role in modernizing the role of women in Iraqi society. Under secular,
albeit brutal, Baathist rule, Iraqi women made significant advances
in numerous areas, including education and employment.
With the overthrow of Saddam Hussein in March 2003, Shiite leaders
quickly made clear that they expected the new Iraq to be an Islamic
state. One of their first priorities was to try to annul the personal-status
law. In December 2003, a conservative contingent on the U.S.-appointed
Iraqi Governing Council (IGC) voted behind closed doors for Resolution
137, which canceled Iraq's existing family laws and placed such
issues under the rules of sharia. Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, the Shiite
leader of the powerful Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution
in Iraq (SCIRI), held the rotating chairmanship of the IGC at the
time of the vote.
Resolution 137 was worryingly vague about exactly what form of Islamic
regulation would replace the old legislation, although the decree
seemed to imply that each Islamic community would be free to impose
its own rules on issues such as marriage, divorce, and other important
family matters. This ambiguity worried not only women's groups,
but also those who feared that such an Islamic free-for-all would
exacerbate sectarian tensions.
Women's organizations and moderates across the country quickly mobilized
against the new regulation. They held rallies, press conferences,
and high-level meetings with the American authorities to make their
concerns known. They even gained the support of several moderate
Islamic clerics. L. Paul Bremer, the head of the Coalition Provisional
Authority, ultimately vetoed the IGC's resolution. But the intentions
of Iraq's powerful conservative Shiite leaders -- to broadly assert
sharia over a whole range of legal questions -- had been made clear.
MOSQUE AND STATE
This determination was soon directed at a new target: Iraq's constitution.
Sharia quickly became one of the most contentious issues facing
the drafting committee. Moderate Shiite leaders such as Grand Ayatollah
Ali al-Sistani insisted that they did not want to replicate Iran's
theocratic system (in which clerics run most aspects of the government).
But after years of brutal suppression by Saddam, the Shiites were
nonetheless determined to give Islam a central role in Iraq's reconstituted
state. In an August 2003 statement, Sistani announced, "The
religious constants and the Iraqi people's moral principles and
noble social values should be the main pillars of the coming Iraqi
constitution."
The Kurds and secular Sunnis were equally adamant about keeping
religion out of government. Speaking to a reporter in early 2005,
Kurdish leader Jalal Talabani (shortly before he became president
of Iraq) insisted, "We will never accept any religious government
in Iraq. Never. This is a red line for us. We will never live inside
an Islamic Iraq." Maysoon al-Damluji, president of the Iraqi
Independent Women's Group, worried that "the interpretation
of sharia law will take us backward." But with polls showing
that a majority of Iraqis endorsed sharia, there was never really
any question of whether Islam would be in the constitution; the
real debate was over how much weight to give it.
Secular Iraqi women were marginalized during the drafting process.
The composition of the constitutional committee reflected the results
of the January 2005 national elections: about half of its 55 members
came from the Shiite United Iraqi Alliance (uia), and another quarter
came from the Democratic Patriotic Alliance of Kurdistan. Of the
eight women on the committee, five represented the uia, two were
Kurdish representatives, and only one, Dr. Rajaa al-Khuzai, was
an independent.
The committee spent months arguing over whether Islam would be the
source of legislation for the country (as the religious parties
wanted) or a source (a compromise sought by the Kurds and other
secularists). The disagreement had not been resolved by the time
the original August 15 deadline passed, and the debate spilled over
into the extension period. Conservative Shiite leaders remained
intransigent and threatened to scuttle talks if Islam did not get
a central place in the constitution. As the arguments dragged on,
U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad finally intervened to avoid a stalemate.
To gain concessions in other areas, he supported provisions that
strengthened Islam's influence. Ultimately, the Kurds acquiesced
too, both because they had other priorities to defend and because
they recognized that conservative Shiites were not going to capitulate.
Article 2 of the final version of the constitution makes Islam the
official religion of the state, cites it as a basic source of legislation,
and says that no law can be passed that contradicts its "undisputed"
rulings. Interpreting this provision will fall to the Supreme Court,
which the new constitution says may include clerics; their number
and method of selection were not specified, but will be defined
by a subsequent law that must be approved by a two-thirds majority
of parliament.
Secularists and women's advocates are also worried about Article
39, the section dealing with personal-status law. As foreshadowed
by the battle in the igc, Article 39 deems Iraqis "free in
their personal status according to their religions, sects, beliefs,
or choices," but leaves it up to subsequent legislation to
define what this means. If Shiite leaders truly meant for the provision
to give Iraqis the freedom of choice -- allowing Shiites to live
under Shiite law and Sunnis to live under Sunni law -- then the
progressive 1959 code may also be kept on the books for those who
want it. Allowing such freedom could lead to a confusing but relatively
benign system (not unprecedented in the region), under which Iraqis
with legal questions could choose among different codes and court
systems -- Sunni, secular, or Shiite -- depending on which they
thought would give them the most favorable treatment.
Many secular Iraqis worry, however, that Article 39 will lead instead
to an Iranian-style theocracy, which would severely limit women's
rights in particular. Adnan Pachachi, the former Iraqi foreign minister
and a secular Sunni leader, told The New York Times in August that
although he agreed with much of the new constitution, he was troubled
by its more overtly Islamic provisions. "They want to inject
religion into everything, which is not right," he said. "I
cannot imagine that we might have a theocratic regime in Iraq like
the one in Iran. That would be a disaster."
Indeed, Iran's theocracy has been a disaster on multiple fronts,
including women's rights. In the aftermath of the 1979 revolution,
Iran's new government quickly suspended the country's progressive
family law, disallowed female judges, and strongly enforced the
wearing of the hijab. Within a few months, sharia rulings lowered
the marriage age to nine, permitted polygamy, gave fathers the right
to decide who their daughters could marry, permitted unilateral
divorce for men but not women, and gave fathers sole custody of
children in the case of divorce. Over the intervening years, Iranian
activists, including some conservative religious women, have managed
to soften some of the harshest inequalities. But anything approaching
the Iranian system would still represent a major setback for Iraq's
women.
Skeptics might wonder whether the legal debate in Iraq really matters.
After all, most Middle Eastern countries have elegant constitutions
guaranteeing many rights and freedoms to their citizens, yet lack
the sorts of strong institutions that could defend those rights
with any consistency. And indeed, Iraq may slide down this path
over time. In the short term, however, the heavy U.S. presence there
ensures that the political process will emphasize constitutional
provisions and the rule of law. Moreover, according to an analysis
by Nathan Brown, a George Washington University professor and a
constitutional expert, Iraq's constitution has fewer loopholes for
limiting basic freedoms than those of Iraq's neighbors. The new
document also designates certain institutions, such as the Human
Rights Commission and the Federal Supreme Court, to defend individual
rights. Although the structural details of these bodies remain to
be determined by Iraq's legislature, there is still reason to hope
they will effectively defend Iraqis' freedoms.
LEARNING FROM OTHERS
No matter how effective such institutions turn out to be, the fact
remains that the new constitution makes sharia supreme in Iraq.
If moderates hope to advance women's rights, therefore, they will
have to do it within an Islamic framework.
Fortunately, there are good precedents for such a process. Morocco,
for example, recently revised its personal-status code (moudawana)
but claimed to be doing so on Islamic grounds. The reforms were
the result of over a decade of pressure from progressive Moroccan
nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), which pushed to raise the
marriage age from 15 to 18, abolish polygamy, equalize the right
to divorce, and give women the right to retain custody of their
children. Such efforts were opposed by religious groups. But Morocco's
modernizing young king, Muhammad VI (who claims to be a direct descendent
of the Prophet), backed the reformers and appointed a committee
to examine potential changes to the moudawana. In October 2003,
he formally presented parliament with a set of sweeping revisions
to the family law, defending the changes with copious references
to the Koran. In fact, both religious and secular supporters of
the reforms used the language of religion and Islamic jurisprudence
to advocate gender equality, and despite conservative opposition,
parliament approved the changes.
Indonesia provides another example of how progressive change can
come from within Islam. A group called Fatayat, the women's wing
of the country's largest grass-roots organization (known as Nahdlatul
Ulama), now trains its members in Islamic fiqh (jurisprudence) so
that they can hold their own in religious debates. An NGO known
as P3M (the Indonesian Society for Pesantren and Community Development)
also uses fiqh to encourage Indonesia's many pesantren (religious
schools) to promote women's reproductive health and family planning.
And Musdah Mulia, the chief researcher at Indonesia's Ministry of
Religious Affairs, caused a sensation in 2004 by calling for important
changes to sharia in areas such as marriage, polygamy, and the wearing
of the hijab -- changes that she defended through meticulous references
to Islamic jurisprudence. Her controversial recommendations have
not yet been enacted, but they have sparked an important debate
across Indonesian society that may eventually lead to significant
changes.
An organization known as Women Living Under Muslim Laws (WLUML)
provides another, transnational example of how women are pushing
for change from within Islam. Founded in 1984 to oppose the harsh
interpretation of sharia emerging in Algeria, WLUML functions by
giving information on progressive Islamic systems around the world
to local activists, who use the information to fight for greater
freedoms. The network remains up and running today, providing women's
groups around the world with powerful Islamic justifications for
gender equality.
TURNING NUMBERS INTO INFLUENCE
In Iraq, unlike in many other Muslim nations, women will have a
strong advantage in their fight for equality: namely, a provision
in the new constitution that guarantees them 25 percent of the seats
in parliament. This quota is the product of intense lobbying by
women's groups, who feared being left out of the new Iraqi politics.
It also has some grounding in Iraqi history. The Baathists gave
women the vote and the right to run for office in 1980; within two
decades, women had come to occupy 20 percent of the seats in Iraq's
rubber-stamp parliament (compared to a 3.5 percent average in the
region) and some prominent cabinet positions. After the invasion,
U.S. policymakers were sympathetic to women's concerns that they
would lose their political position in an election process dominated
by conservative Shiites. Washington also wanted to support Iraqi
women without directly challenging religious convictions. Instituting
a quota seemed a good way to do both.
The process started with the Transitional Administrative Law, the
interim constitution issued by the Americans and the igc in 2004,
which stated that women should constitute no less than a quarter
of the members of the National Assembly. In the run-up to the January
2005 elections, political parties were required to field electoral
slates on which every third candidate was a woman. As a result,
women captured 31 percent of the seats.
At the time of the elections, some Western commentators pointed
to this high level of female representation as evidence that a grand
social and cultural transformation was under way in Iraq. With so
many women in parliament, they reasoned, Iraq's new government would
have to take a progressive stance on women's rights in drafting
the new constitution and limit the role of religion. But assuming
that merely having women in government would produce liberal legislation
was a mistake. After all, nearly half of the women elected had run
on the uia list, and they have toed their party's conservative Shiite
line.
When the constitution-drafting process began, progressive women,
sensing that they would lose the battle over Islam, focused on holding
on to their 25 percent quota in parliament. Several women leaders
actually hoped to expand the quota (a few mentioned 40 percent as
their goal) and apply it to other decision-making positions as well.
But conservatives responded by attempting to have the quota phased
out altogether after two rounds of elections. In the end, the quota
did make it into the final draft of the constitution, which will
give women in Iraq one of the highest levels of representation in
the world (after all, women make up less than 15 percent of the
U.S. Congress). Many of these seats may continue to be filled by
female conservatives unlikely to support progressive legislation
on women's issues in the near term. Over time, however, these same
legislators may start advancing women's rights within an Islamic
context.
The future of Islamic feminism in Iraq will depend on politicians
such as Salama al-Khafaji, a dentist turned politician who is also
a devout Shiite. After losing her son in an ambush, Khafaji was
rated the most popular female politician in Iraq in a survey conducted
in June 2005 (and was ranked the 11th most popular politician overall).
As a member of the IGC, she incurred the wrath of secular women's
groups by voting for Resolution 137. But Khafaji (who has pursued
her political ambitions despite the objections of her husband, who
divorced her as a consequence) defended her position by arguing
that Islamic rules actually provide better protection to women in
divorce and custody proceedings than does secular law. Khafaji sees
herself as a positive force for change on women's issues; as she
told a journalist last November, "I have Islamic ideas on justice,
but I am moderate." And her ability to work with both secular
and Islamic parties could make her an effective legislator.
The status of women in the future Iraq will also depend in large
part on the strength of the country's judicial system. Here, too,
there is reason for guarded optimism; although Iraq's court system
needs significant reform, it does include many qualified lawyers
and judges (although their expertise lies mostly in secular law,
not sharia). Iraq also has a tradition of women serving as judges.
The country's first female judge, Zakia Hakki, was appointed in
1959 (she is currently a prominent member of parliament). Today,
women are widely accepted as judges in the Kurdish north and in
the more secular parts of Baghdad.
But keeping women on the bench elsewhere will not be easy, as the
story of Nidal Nasser Hussein illustrates. In 2003, the U.S. authorities
appointed her the first female judge in the Shiite holy city of
Najaf. The decision was met with widespread outrage. Several senior
clerics quickly issued fatwas saying that under Islamic law only
men can be judges, and angry protesters showed up at her swearing-in
ceremony. In the face of such unexpected opposition, the senior
U.S. commanding officer in Najaf decided to delay Hussein's appointment
indefinitely, and she has yet to take her seat on the bench. As
conservatives consolidate their control in the Shiite south, such
conflicts are likely to intensify. Iraqi women should respond by
invoking Islamic scholars who argue in favor of female judges.
Although having the right judges on the bench will determine the
formal rights of Iraqi women over the long term, in the short term
religious vigilantes, who are forcing their own fundamentalist views
on Iraq's besieged population, are having the greatest impact. Over
the past two years, various towns in both Shiite and Sunni areas
have fallen into the hands of extremists who are imposing stringent
restrictions there, such as requiring women to wear full-length
veils, forbidding music and dancing, and enforcing strict segregation
of the sexes in public. Many of these vigilantes are unemployed,
undereducated followers of demagogues such as Muqtada al-Sadr. But
at least some are reportedly also members of the police force in
several southern cities (notably Basra). As their activities suggest,
the greatest danger to Iraqi women stems not from any legal restrictions,
but from lawlessness.
FRIENDS IN HIGH PLACES
Although the status of Iraqi women will ultimately depend on Iraqis
themselves, the United States can still play a constructive role.
Washington should start by identifying and cultivating Islamic feminists
within Iraq's mainstream religious parties. These women (and men)
may not want to cooperate with the United States at first, and some
of them will hold anti-American views. But these individuals wield
far more political influence than the secular but marginalized Iraqi
leaders who are popular in Washington, and the United States must
learn how to work with them.
Indeed, the United States should work with Iraqi women across the
religious spectrum in order to cultivate new leaders. Thanks to
the quota system, there is no question that Iraqi women will continue
to play a significant role in national politics in the years ahead,
and Washington should help ensure that it is a moderating one. Most
of the women elected to parliament will be new to politics. The
United States should provide them with technical training (through
organizations such as the National Democratic Institute for International
Affairs, an NGO that provides practical assistance to leaders advancing
democracy) and help them to network across sectarian lines. Iraqi
politicians should also be encouraged to work with their more moderate
Iranian counterparts. The current U.S. policy of excluding Iranian
parliamentarians and activists from U.S.-funded conferences in the
region is counterproductive and should be abandoned.
The United States should also assist with judicial reform. This
means not only helping the courts modernize technologically, but
also training judges, especially women, in modern Islamic jurisprudence.
These training programs could be developed in partnership with the
leading institutions of Islamic jurisprudence throughout the region,
and they should be open to judges from across the Muslim world.
To help women defend their rights, Washington should also educate
Iraqis about what their rights are -- both under the new constitution
and under sharia. A recent Freedom House report assessing women's
rights in 17 Arab countries found that with the exception of Saudi
Arabia, each has a constitution that formally mandates gender equality.
The problem in these countries, however, is that the governments
make little effort to inform the people of their rights. To avoid
such a scenario in Iraq, the United States should support educational
programs and a nationwide media campaign to promote better understanding
of Iraqis' freedoms, under both the constitution and other laws.
Washington should also encourage open dialogue on various interpretations
of sharia governing personal-status laws. Religious scholars and
international Islamic groups, such as Sisters in Islam and WLUML,
should be invited to join and inform the discussions, which should
be widely broadcast through media outlets such as Radio Al-Mahabba
(a U.S.-funded Iraqi station dedicated to raising awareness on women's
rights).
In the long term, female education may be the best way to advance
the status of women. During the difficult decade of the 1990s, school-enrollment
rates for girls in Iraq declined significantly, making Iraq one
of the few countries in the world today where mothers are generally
better educated than their daughters. Although reliable literacy
figures are hard to come by, most observers agree that Iraq now
has one of the worst gender literacy gaps in the world. As Iran,
with its female literacy rate of more than 70 percent, has shown,
educated women inevitably become effective advocates for their own
rights. The United States should therefore champion female education
in Iraq at all levels -- primary, secondary, and tertiary -- and
promote adult-literacy programs for women.
In the next year, a new Iraqi parliament will be elected with the
power to write laws that will shape the country for the next generation.
Washington must therefore do everything it can to aid Iraqi women's
groups and programs designed to help women leaders there. Efforts
such as the U.S.-funded legal-education program at the University
of Baghdad, where women make up 40 percent of the participants in
rule-of-law seminars, should be expanded to other universities and
cities across Iraq. Washington should also consider establishing
a women's college in Baghdad, which could become a center of learning
and critical thinking for the entire region.
The United States should also start channeling a significant portion
of its reconstruction dollars to Iraqi businesswomen. Economic empowerment
is a good way to boost the status of women. Despite the enormous
sums of American aid flowing into Iraq, the U.S. mission in Baghdad
has so far resisted having an adviser on gender issues on the ground
in Iraq -- where programs to support women are actually implemented.
As a result, its many gender initiatives have not been nearly as
effective as they could have been.
Although the United States has now missed this and several other
important opportunities to promote the role of women in post-Saddam
Iraq, the imposition of sharia there was virtually inevitable. But
the resurgence of Islamic law in Iraq need not be a disaster for
women. Although it may well mean a short-term setback in certain
rights enjoyed under Saddam, in the long run, Iraqis may manage
to build a more equitable society that accommodates both Islamic
principles and a modern role for women. This outcome is far from
guaranteed, but it is also not too much to hope for.
ISOBEL COLEMAN is a Senior Fellow and Director of the Women
and U.S. Foreign Policy Program at the Council on Foreign Relations.
From: http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20060101faessay85104-p0/isobel-coleman/women-islam-and-the-new-iraq.html
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