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‘Best Among You Are Those Best To Their
Families' - Following The Way Of The Prophet (s.a.w.)
Islamic Perspectives - Muslim Journals
Arab News & Information - By Sheikh Muhammad
Al-Ghazali
The Hadith: “The best among you are those best to
their families (wife and children), and I am the best
of you to my family,” underlines the importance of
kind treatment toward women.
Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) elevated women to
a dignified level unheard of in the world nearly 1.5
millennium ago. The Prophet wiped off all stigma
attached to women by virtue of her gender and willed
in his last sermon that women be treated with respect
and kindness.
That was the Muslim society in its pristine form. The
yawning gap between the time of the Prophet and the
present time is sadly reflected in a report on the
status of women in the present world prepared by the
World Economic Forum in 2008. The report showed that
mainly Muslim countries took the last positions in a
list of 130 countries in terms of humanitarian
treatment of women. While Yemen and Chad had the
dubious distinction of coming at the end of the list,
Saudi Arabia and Pakistan took positions right before
them.
The merciless sense of male honor has also spread to
the Muslim societies on the Indian subcontinent
including Pakistan and Bangladesh. However, the men
there do not wait for the baby’s birth. The sex of a
woman’s fetus is identified with the help of a
scanning device, and if it is a girl the pregnancy is
terminated immediately so that the honor of the family
is never compromised by one more woman member!
The entire Muslim society will be answerable before
the Almighty Allah for bringing a considerable section
of His creation to a state of perpetual indignity and
mistreatment. It is sadly noted that even some pious
Muslims believe that women are the source of all evil
and hence should be treated harshly or at least kept
aloof.
In fact, the Holy Qur’an, the Sunnah of the Prophet,
the rightly guided caliphs or early Muslim thinkers
never suggested that women deserved an inferior
treatment.
On the other hand, it was Quintus Tertullianus — or
Tertullian in English — a prominent religious leader
of the third century of the Christian era, who spawned
venomous attributes to women. “You are the devil’s
gateway: you are the unsealer of that forbidden tree,
you are the first deserters of the divine law, you are
she who persuades him, whom the devil was not valiant
enough to attack. You destroyed so easily God’s image:
man,” Tertullian said of women. While modern
Christians reject Tertullian’s ideas as barbaric, the
Muslim societies of later centuries seem to have
adopted the old Christian views on women. As a result,
Islam is wrongfully viewed as a religion that keeps
women as slaves for sexual gratification and begetting
male babies.
It is the duty of the Muslims to go back to the real
teachings of the Holy Qur’an and the Prophet, and
change the wrong mindset they have developed over the
centuries. The first image a Muslim should form in his
or her mind about a woman should be that of Khadijah
bint Khuwaylid, the first Mother of Believers, may
Allah be pleased with her. All Muslims should remember
Khadijah with reverence and gratitude for the pivotal
role she played in the early stage of the Prophet's
mission. With extraordinary insight and tenderness,
that woman gave the Prophet courage and confidence to
carry on with the task of lifting human beings from
ignorance and oppression to the road of faith and
justice.
A God-fearing woman can be superior to a pious man if
she excels in her good deeds. No other religious book
has given a spiritual position to women as high as the
Holy Qur’an did.
“... I will not waste the work of a worker among you,
whether male or female, the one of you being from the
other...” (Holy Qur’an, Chapter Al-Imran: Verse 195).
Then how can we, Muslims, treat women as second-grade
citizens?
“And whoever does some good deeds, be it a man or
woman, and is a Muslim, will be admitted to Paradise
and they will not be wronged (even as much as) the
speck on a date seed.” (Holy Qur’an, Al-Nisa: 124)
“Treat your women well and be kind to them, for they
are your partners and committed helpers,” the Prophet
said in his last sermon.
Many incidents reported these days from various parts
of the Muslim world give us the impression that we, at
least in terms of the treatment of women, are going
back to a time identical to the Jahiliyya period, the
age before the emergence of Muhammad.
The Qur’an says about this era, “When news is brought
to one of them, of (the birth of) a female (baby), his
face darkens and he is filled with inward grief! With
shame does he hide himself from his people because of
the bad news he has had! Shall he retain her on
(sufferance and contempt), or bury her in the dust?
Ah! What an evil (choice) they decide on? (Chapter Al-Nahl:
58-59).
©
EsinIslam.Com
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