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Palestinians Debate Women's
Future Under Hamas
April 23, 2006 -(WomensENews)Since its January victory, Hamas has
been preoccupied with first forming and now running a controversial
government. But some Palestinian women fear the Islamist government
will at some point start curbing women's rights.
Only Ghada Ewais' spirited brown eyes can be seen from the niqab,
a full veil that covers her head and nearly all of her face. The
fourth-year university student is among the few women on campus
who wear this ultra-modest Islamic covering, which she says, brings
her closer to Allah and to paradise.
But even Ewais believes no one has the right to obligate women to
change their choice of dress or become more religious.
"Allah will punish us, or let us go to the paradise,"
said the 21-year-old English major during a break at Birzeit University
near Ramallah in the West Bank. "This is not the work of Hamas."
Since Hamas' parliamentary victory in January, the Palestinian Islamist
organization has faced intense international scrutiny. The United
States and the European Union have cut off aid to the group arguing
it must renounce violence, recognize Israel's right to exist and
accept previous agreements the Palestinians have made with Israel.
Israel has also cut off all ties with the Hamas-led Palestinian
government and is boycotting foreign diplomats who meet with Hamas
officials.
Beneath those headline-grabbing events, however, a lower-volume
debate goes on here about the Islamist organization's intentions
toward women.
Is it only a matter of time before the Hamas-led government tries
to impose the traditional Islamic veil or headscarf, close coffee
shops where men and women mix freely, or demand separation of the
sexes in all schools and universities?
Will the fundamentalist women who conducted a successful grassroots
campaign that spurred women in their homes to vote and helped Hamas
to their stunning victory become dominant while secular women are
marginalized?
While Hamas officials say no, some women's rights activists worry
about the movement's long-term influence and see hints of a more
restrictive attitude in an increasing number of signs posted by
Islamic organizations on Palestinian buses urging Muslim women to
dress modestly and wear the veil.
Open Atmosphere in West Bank
Palestinian women are both veiled and unveiled and enjoy an atmosphere
of greater openness, particularly in the West Bank, than women in
many Arab countries.
"We are a secular community. Religion has never been a practice
in our code of life," says Eileen Kuttab, director of the Institute
of Women's Studies at Birzeit University. "Our lifestyle has
been more of an open lifestyle."
Although domestic matters for Muslims such as divorce and inheritance
are handled by Islamic courts, religious adherence is not strict.
During Ramadan, the Islamic holy month of fasting, for instance,
it's not unusual to see someone eating on the streets during the
day in diverse cities like Ramallah.
Women make up 14 percent of the Palestinian labor force. While they
mainly work in traditionally female fields such as teaching and
as secretaries, some also work as police officers, judges and journalists,
according to 2005 data from the government's Palestinian Central
Bureau of Statistics.
But women such as Kuttab and Rose Shomali, general director of the
Women's Affairs Technical Committee, a Ramallah-based coalition
of prominent Palestinian women's organizations, worry about their
fate under the new Hamas-led government.
"We fear that this pluralism, this diversity of culture, this
diversity of thought that gives space for dialogue and creativity
and for development will not be there," said Shomali, who is
a Christian.
Other activists, however, were more sanguine.
"It's not the strategy of Palestinian Islamists to impose any
type of social code on women," said Islah Jad, a secular Muslim
and an associate professor at Birzeit's Institute of Women's Studies.
"They have enough political burden . . . that they wouldn't
think to apply something that might bring on them more problems
than support."
Hamas Says No Obligations
Hamas officials say they will not obligate women to wear a veil,
or force other changes upon them. Instead, they talk of the importance
of education, equal opportunities in employment, improving life
under Israeli occupation and raising the standard of living of Palestinian
women, 30 percent of whom lived in poverty in 2003-04, according
to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics.
Islam does not force anyone to do anything against her will, says
Muna Mansour of Nablus, who in January was elected to the Palestinian
Legislative Council on a Hamas ticket and wears the veil.
"It's a religion that gives women their rights and their freedom,"
said Mansour, whose husband was a popular Hamas leader assassinated
by an Israeli air missile strike in 2001. "Among these rights
is the women's right to work, to get an education, to her beliefs,
political participation, choosing whom to marry, inheritance . .
. We will use Islam to deliver those rights."
Sheikh Mohammed Abu Teir, who was elected as Hamas' No. 2 candidate
on its electoral slate, agreed. "Women can do whatever they
want," he told Women's eNews during an interview in his elegant
East Jerusalem home. "Hamas is not holding swords."
But secular activists worry about the new minister of women's affairs,
Maryam Salleh, an Islamist who will be working closely with Islamic
women's groups.
"She will favor women Islamists, and she will also develop
and promote the programs to convert women" to a more Islamic
lifestyle, said Walid Salem, the Jerusalem director of Panorama:
Palestinian Center for the Dissemination of Democracy and Community
Development.
Similarly, with the rise of Islamist women, the voices of secular
women could become more marginalized in political and social realms,
Salem said.
Converting the Populace
At the Islamic University of Gaza, for instance, Salem said it is
understood that unveiled women would not be hired to teach because
they are not considered devout Muslims. Hamas might promote similar
practices at other universities and schools. "They will not
do that by force, but try to convert people to such positions,"
he said.
Today, personal status issues such as marriage and divorce are adjudicated
under Sharia, or Islamic law, which some argue discriminates against
women. For example, a Muslim man can marry more than one woman and
when it comes to inheritance, a Muslim son usually receives double
the share of his parents' wealth than that of a daughter. Hamas
is expected to maintain such laws, Salem said.
On the other hand, Salem expects Hamas to ensure that Muslim women
receive their rights to inheritance, which--even at half that of
their brothers--are often denied entirely to Muslim women in villages
and conservative areas such as Gaza, Hebron and the northern West
Bank.
"What Hamas will be doing will be better than social practices
that deprive them of their right of inheritance," Salem said.
Ewais, the Birzeit University student, believes Hamas might benefit
women in very conservative Muslim families on several fronts.
Because it is an Islamist movement and is respected by many religious
families, it could clarify women's many rights under Islam and encourage
families to loosen unfair restrictions on women, such as forbidding
daughters to choose their own husbands or hold a job.
"This is very wrong in our religion," said Ewais, who
married a suitor of her choice earlier this month. "A woman
has to choose her life."
From: http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/2714/context/cover/
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