Expectations from the Muslim Woman
"Expectations from the Muslim Woman" is one of Ali Shariati's most important lectures and regards women's rights in Islam.
The point of his lecture is not to show that Women's rights do not exist in Islam, however the point of his lecture is to show that Anti-Islamic traditions among Muslims have had tragic results for Muslim women. Even Muslims who have attempted to liberate Women by getting rid of the Hijab haven't helped, since the Hijab is supposed to protect women, not deprive them of doing certain things. He believed that the liberation of Women in Iran at the pre-revolutionary era should not have anything to do with the Hijab and those who were forced not to wear it have been deprived of their rights as women in a nation where Muslims form practically all of its population.
He uses Fatima Zahra, the daughter of Mohammad[?] as an example stateing that she played a significant role in the societies social and political status. To him the proper understanding of Fatima's life was the key to Muslim's salvation. He argues that the traditional ethical value-system should not be the standard-bearer of women's rights.
He begins his lecture by stating that:
He states that Muslims have been following Non-Islamic and traditional laws for many years and it has become one of the resons why Women's rights have been violated in many Islamic states or among Muslims. "Thus we always remain at the stage of talking", sine we do not practice what we preach.
He continues by stating that:
He argues that the crisis of the problem of Women's liberty has begun in the west and many fear of it occurring in the Muslim world, patially due to the fact that they are misinformed Muslims and have not looked at Islam through a historical perspective and are using their own misinterpretations of Islam:
Shariati believed that women in Iran were only sexually liberated and they did not have any social freedom. He blames this partially on the "rather bourgeois cognition", by arguing that before our time Science was meant to serve religion, although now the scientific understanding of religion is unpure. He partially blames the Freudian ideal of sexual liberation. To Shariati Freud was one of the agents of the bourgeois:
He concludes that therefore, a scholar or scientist who lives, thinks and studies during the bourgeois age, measures collective cultural and spiritual values with the scale of economy, production and consumption.
See also: Fatemeh is Fatemeh