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Women's Enews (USA), January 9, 2005
Egyptian Women
See Divorce as Religious Right
CAIRO (WOMENSENEWS)--As Egyptian women push to
eliminate gender bias in divorce laws here,
they find themselves entering a struggle over
competing visions of Islam.
"We always use Islam now," says Iman
Bibars, director of the Cairo-based Association
for the Development and Enhancement of Women,
which has long struggled to amend Egypt's divorce
laws.
To make their case, many advocates are advancing
a vision of Islam in which men and women enjoy
equal rights in all matters, including divorce.
"Men control the subject in a backwards
way," contends Dr. Zeinab Abdel Meguid
Radwan, a member of the National Council for
Women and a scholar of Islamic philosophy.
"This is why there is a big difference
between true Islamic Sharia, and what happens
in reality." Sharia is the Islam-derived
legal code whose meaning and interpretation
vary according to different theological schools.
Egypt's constitution states that Islamic Sharia
is the principle source for legislation.
Radwan says the Islamic Sharia reflected in divorce
law resulted from men picking those aspects
of Sharia that fit their world view.
Under Egyptian law, men have an absolute and
unilateral right to divorce. Women, by contrast,
must turn to the courts, where they must provide
exacting proof of abuse. The decision is left
to Egypt's male-dominated judiciary and decisions
can be appealed by husbands wishing to prolong
the process.
With approximately 8,000 judges and 14 million
pending cases in Egypt, a divorce settlement
can take years. While the case slogs through
the legal system the woman is left in legal
limbo, her husband oftentimes no longer supporting
her, and unable to remarry until the case is
decided.
Locked in Divorce Proceedings
Naira Al Sheikh, a 23-year old committed Muslim,
has first-hand experience with the situation.
In the last two months she has been pushing
divorce proceedings against a husband she says
was abusive and who refuses to support her
or to acknowledge the existence of their 7-month-old
daughter. But she knows the entire process--given
the way the laws are stacked against her--is
likely to take years.
She denounces Egyptian women's unequal access
to divorce because, she says, they violate
Islamic Sharia.
"Allah has been so fair to women, but the
(Egyptian) law hasn't," says Al Sheikh.
"If I say my husband is not treating me
right, he calls me names or whatever, I get
a divorce right away by Sharia."
At the end of November, the New-York based Human
Rights Watch agreed with her. In a 62-page
report, "Divorced from Justice: Women's
Unequal Right to Divorce in Egypt," it
criticized "profoundly discriminatory
laws and practices premised on women's inferiority,
particularly in matters related to the family"
and called for a complete overhaul of the current
divorce system.
Reform Began in 1979
The current state of divorce law reflects decades-long
tumult over the nation's family laws. A series
of sought-after changes to divorce law were
pushed through parliament by Jihan Al Sadat,
the wife of then-President Anwar Al Sadat,
in 1979.
In 1985, however, the Supreme Constitutional
Court ruled that the 1979 laws were unconstitutional
and invalid, dealing a blow to the women's
movement.
Since 2000, however, women's rights advocates
have chalked up a series of victories in Egypt.
That year saw the approval of a new divorce
law, which allowed women to divorce their husbands
for any reason whatsoever so long as they repaid
the dowry and gave up their right to alimony.
In 2003, Egypt's first female judge was appointed
by presidential decree and later that year
women's groups won a decade-long struggle to
grant citizenship to the children of Egyptian
mothers and non-Egyptian fathers. This spate
of victories recently prompted a writer for
the pan-Arab daily Al Hayat to proclaim 2004
"the year of the Egyptian woman."
Other Side of Struggle
Support for change is far from unanimous. In
a musky office lined wall-to-wall with books
on Islamic jurisprudence, Mustapha Al Shakaa,
an authority on Islamic law and the author
of over 40 books, stands on the other side
of the struggle.
The elderly Al Shakaa is a member of Al Azhar's
Islamic Research Academy, best known to readers
of the Western press as the body that determines
which books should be banned as offensive to
Islam.
Shakaa says those who are advocating change in
Egypt's divorce laws are trying to alter Sharia.
"Divorce does not have a law in Egypt.
Divorce is a part of Islamic doctrine. So divorce
law is in Islam and not in Egyptian law."
He would like to see a 2000 law, which gave women
the right to divorce without their husbands'
consent, reversed.
"This law made big problems," Al Shakaa
told Women's eNews. "Many of the wives
rushed off to get divorced without thinking
. . . Because the woman is more emotional,
if we put the right of divorce in her hand
she might divorce for the smallest reasons.
But the man, known for bearing more responsibility,
will not divorce except in states of extreme
necessity."
Dr. Zeinab Abdel Meguid Radwan, the female scholar
in Islamic philosophy, is poised with a theological
retort.
Radwan is a former provost of the Dar Al Ulum
Faculty at Fayoum University. With alumni such
as Hassan Al Banna, founder of the Muslim Brotherhood,
and Sayid Qutb, often deemed the father of
modern Islamic fundamentalism, it has one of
the most religiously conservative faculties
of any Egyptian university. Nonetheless, Radwan
boldly rejects the veil and consistently frames
her arguments with passages from the Quran
and other Islamic legal sources.
"The religion does not force the woman to
have to go to a judge in order to get a divorce
and wait five years for a divorce, while he
is out getting remarried," she says. "And
since he is still technically married to her
he should be supporting her, but he doesn't.
She sits four, five years without any money,
and the judge cannot force him to pay until
he rules on the divorce. All that is un-Islamic."
Charles Levinson is a freelance journalist living
in Cairo. His articles have appeared in the
Boston Globe, the San Francisco Chronicle,
the Christian Science Monitor and elsewhere.
For more information:
The Human Rights Watch-- - Women's Unequal Access
to Divorce in Egypt: - http://hrw.org/reports/2004/egypt1204/
Egypt's most noted feminist Dr. Nawal El Saadawi:
- http://www.nawalsaadawi.net/
The National Council for Women: - http://www.ncwegypt.com/
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