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A CROOKED RIB

Why do men think they are superior to women?

Dr Riffat Hassan, one of few women theologians in the world today,


sees a glaring discrepancy between Islamic ideals and the reality that
exists in many Muslims countries. To narrow the gap, she says, Muslims
must read the Quran and return to the origins of lslam.

Why do men think they are superior to women? A simple though incomplete
answer to these lies in a crooked rib on the left side of a man's body.

A more complex explanation, offered by Dr Riffat Hassan recently, includes the


rib as well as the larger picture of Creation as it has been understood and
interpreted by all three revealed religions, Judaism, Christianity and Islam.

What is intriguing and perhaps even worrying is that the explanation that has
filtered down through the ages contradicts the story of Creation in the Quran.

Yet, as Riffat, an American of Pakistani descent, pointed out, many Muslims


continue to cling to the comforting fiction of the rib story.

But before Riffat embarked on the task of putting together a plausible reason for
the unequal relationship between man and women in Islam she noted first, an
absence of women's voices on the topic.

"I was tired of hearing Muslim men pontificate upon the position or status or role
of women in Islam (and knew) that it was totally inconceivable that any woman
could presume to speak about the position or status or role of men in Islam."

She also discovered that other than women such as Khadijah and Aishah (wives
of the Prophet Muhammad) and Rabi'a al Basri (the outstanding woman Sufi)
who figured significantly in early Islam, "the Islamic tradition has, by and large,
remained rigidly patriarchal until the present time, prohibiting the growth of
scholarship among women particularly in the realm of religious thought.

"This means that the sources on which the Islamic tradition is mainly based,
namely, the Quran, the Sunnah, the Hadith literature and Fiqh have been
interpreted only by Muslim men who have arrogated to themselves the task of
defining the ontological, theological, sociological and eschatological status of
Muslim women."

She said she found it profoundly discouraging to contemplate how few Muslim
women there were today who possessed the competence, even if they had the
courage and commitment, to engage in a scholarly study of Islam's primary
sources in order to participate in theological discussions on women-related issues
that are taking place in much of the contemporary Muslim world.

When Riffat examined the theological ground on which all the anti-woman
arguments were rooted, she started with the Quran. Then she studied all the
women-related hadiths in the Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim (considered by
some to be. the two most authoritative books in Islam next to the Quran) and
read the writing of Jewish and Christian feminist theologians who were
attempting to trace the theological origins of antifeminist ideas and attitudes in
their respective traditions.

Riffat discovered that in the Islamic as well as Jewish and Christian traditions
there were three theological assumptions on which the superstructure of men's'
alleged superiority to women - which implies the inequality of women to men -
had been erected.

1. That God's primary creation is man, not woman, since woman is believed to
be created from man's rib, hence is derivative and secondary ontologically.

2. That woman, not man, was the primary agent of what is customarily
described as the "Fail" or man's expulsion from the Garden of Eden, hence all
daughters of Eve are to be regarded with hatred, suspicion and contempt.

3. That woman was created not only from man but also for man, which makes
her existence merely instrumental and not of fundamental importance.

"This issue," she said, "is the more basic and important, philosophically and
theologically, than any other in the context of woman-man equality because if
man and woman have been created equally by God who is the ultimate arbiter of
value, then they cannot become unequal, essentially, at a subsequent time.

If the Quran makes no distinction between the creation of man and woman, as it
clearly does not, why do Muslims believe that Eve was created from the rib of
Adam?

Riffat said she was certain they did not get this information from the Bible. What
seemed more likely was that it became a part of the Muslim heritage through its
assimilation in Hadith literature, which has been, in many ways, the lens through
which the Quran has been seen since the early centuries of Islam.

She found Hadiths that were anti-women not only in the significant secondary
sources of Islam but also in Shahih al Bukharai and Sahih Muslim and gave six
examples, three from the former and the rest from the latter, that have had a
formative influence upon the Muslim mind.

In all, they refer to the fact that woman was created from a rib, and that the
most curved position of the rib was its upper position and that it would break if
one tried to straighten it. So, one had to make do with it because the
crookedness would remain.

All six were cited on the authority of Abu Hurairah, a Companion who was
regarded as controversial by many early Muslims scholars, including lmam Abu
Hanifah, founder of the largest Sunni school of law.

Riffat pointed out that everything suggested and stated in the six hadiths clashed
with the teachings of the Quran which described all human beings as having
been created most justly portioned and with the highest capabilities.
And she added, even though all Muslims agree that whenever a hadith conflicts
with the Quran it must be rejected, the six hadiths discussed have not only been
rejected, they have in fact remained overwhelmingly popular with Muslims
through the ages.

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