STATEMENT FROM WOMEN OF FAITH PARTICIPATING IN THE FEMINIST EXPO 2000
(Written by Dr. Riffat Hassan and endorsed by many women. The signature endorsements are growing in numbers
every day.)
We are writing this statement to strongly protest against the 
inclusion of Parvin Darabi, Ph.D, in a panel entitled "How can you get to 
heaven when you can go to Mars? Feminist Challenges to Religion," on Friday, 
March 31, 2000. We also wish to express our deep concern about the presence 
of a large number of persons in the room who cheered ever time Dr. Darabi 
made a hate-filled and mocking statement about Islam, the Qur'an, the Prophet 
Muhammad, or other religious figures (Moses and Jesus). The atmosphere 
created in the room by the wild and derisive cheering of these people made 
many persons of faith, especially the Muslims, feel as if they were in the 
midst of a rally of a hate-group, such as the neo-nazis or the Ku Klux Klan, 
rather than at a conference dedicated to celebrating women representing a 
diversity of belief systems and cultures. The hostility, marginalization, 
humiliation and intimidation that was experienced by women of faith during 
this event raises important questions both about the intentions as well as 
the agenda of the conference organizers.
With reference to Dr. Darabi's presentation, we wish to make the 
following points:
1.  Dr. Darabi has a degree in Engineering and is not academically 
qualified to be a participant in a session on religion and theology. She has 
no credentials on the basis of which she could trash Islam - the religion of 
more than one billion people in the world - a religion which is also now the second largest, and the fastest
growing, religion in the United States. We 
wish to ask the organizers on what basis Dr. Darabi was part of a panel with 
a number of well-known theologians.
2.  Dr. Darabi's hatred of Islam and Iran, the country of her origin, 
is related to personal causes. If the conference organizers were keen to 
provide her with a forum, they should have placed her in a session where 
people share their personal stories rather than one in which the participants 
expected an interchange based on sound knowledge and an educated critique of  
religion.
Dr. Darabi passed judgements upon religion, particularly Islam, which 
were totally erroneous ans misleading, quoting mistranslations of some words 
from the Qur'an entirely out of context, distorting  hadiths or traditions of 
Prophet Muhammad and making factually inaccurate statements relating to his 
character.
The purpose of making statements such as "he was married 26 times and 
made love to each of his wives each night," or that he "married one of his 
wives at age 6 and consummated his marriage with her at age 9," or that 
"these three men (Moses, Jesus and Muhammad) came and left" was to incite 
ridicule and contempt with reference to persons revered by millions of 
people. That these statements were wildly cheered by many persons who stood 
up and clapped and made loud noises of approval shows that the atmosphere in 
the room was strongly loaded against persons of faith.
3.  Those who came to listen to the panelists assumed that the 
presenters were experts in the area of their respective belief systems. Dr. 
Darabi professed to be an atheist but instead of focusing on her belief 
system, atheism, she chose to attack Islam, which she obviously detested. 
Because of her privileged position as a presenter, Dr. Darabi's comments were 
regarded as authoritative by persons in the audience who did not know about 
Islam. She was thus enabled to paint a very negative and distorted picture of 
Islam. She repeatedly misquoted the Qur'an and the hadith  and misrepresented 
significant facts of Muslim history. When Muslim women in the audience raised 
their hands to register their protest or make a correction, they were totally 
ignored and never given an opportunity to speak.
We would like to make the following points to the organizers of the 
conference:
1.  It is your responsibility to ensure that the atmosphere in which a 
discussion is conducted is one in which basic rights  of all human beings to 
be treated with respect regardless of class, color, creed or sex, is honored. 
Since this conference professes to be "global" and welcomes women from all 
belief systems and cultures, it is your responsibility to vreate and maintain 
an environment in which a religion, which is central to the lives of millions 
of people, is not trashed by a presenter who has no theological credentials, 
to the accompaniment of wild cheering. It is also your responsibility to have 
as a moderator of a session on a sensitive subject, a person who is able to 
conduct the proceedings in an orderly fashion in an an environment which is 
not  saturated with mockery, sarcasm and hate-filled jeering. There is a line 
between freedom of expression and license to incite hatred and ridilcule 
which must be observed. We feel that by allowing Dr. Darabi to proceed with 
her malicious presentation, followed by the dramatic act of donning a 
"chador," the moderator failed in her responsibility as an objective and fair 
facilitator.
2.  Dr. Darabi had widely circulated a hate statement about Islam (appended) 
prior to the session on Friday, March 31, 2000. We believe that the 
organizers were aware of her viewpoint and and that by putting her on a panel 
of experts on religion, they exhibited a deep prejudice not merely toward 
Islam, but also toward those who work within a religious framework,  as 
opposed to a secular one. It was the obligation of the organizers of the 
conference and the moderator to see to it that the environment was an open 
and receptive one where the discussion of feminist religious perspectives 
could be conducted within the parameters of civilized and enlightened 
discourse.
3.  The endorsement of Dr. Darabi as a presenter in a panel pertaining 
to religion by the organizers gives the impression that the agenda within the 
"feminist movement" in the U.S. is to delegitimize the importance of religion 
in many women's lives and to draw a distinction between emancipation, 
secularization and rationality, and oppression, faith and irrationality. This 
delegitimizes the value systems of women of faith and the decisions that they 
make based on their faith. In other words, it denies women's freedom of 
choice when they choose to make decisions based on religious conviction, as 
opposed to any secular philosophy.
4. What we experienced on Friday, March 31, makes us deeply 
apprehensive that the model of women's liberation which is being promoted at 
this conference is one based on the value system of radical western 
feminists, represented by individualistic, libertarian, white women of the 
North.  This leads, amongst other things, to the denial or marginalization of 
the value of the work of many feminist theologians who have struggled against 
Western and Eastern cultural practices and prejudices to ameliorate the 
situation of women who are not given the option of exercising their human 
rights given to them by the normative texts and teachings of their religions. 
It also leads to a denial of the capacity of women of faith to shape 
religious discourse, and to challenge patriarchal assumptions on which 
established religions and other popular cultures have created hierarchies 
that relegate women to an inferior and subordinate position. Denial of this 
capacity is disempowering and negates the very basis of this conference.
At a conference which is authentically international, it is necessary to 
ensure that the environment is truly inclusive and empowering for all 
participants. We hope that the organizers of this conference will take 
serious note of what we have said and make an effort to rectify the damage 
that has been done. One way to do this would be to make it possible for this 
statement to be read at a meeting of the General Assembly.
We also want to bring to your notice that a significant number of women from 
Asia and Africa have come to this meeting with great difficulty and at great 
personal expense. Many of these women feel alone and alienated  because no 
effort has been made by the organizers to create a mechanism whereby they can 
can engage in significant intercultural dialogue or networking with other 
women. These women have not been particularly recognized; no international 
dinner has been arranged in their honor nor have they been given any special 
opportunity to share their knowledge and experience with the larger group. 
This leads a number of non-American, non-white women to feel that there is an 
attitude of cultural imperialism which pervades this conference, and that 
their presence is only a token one.
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2000-04-03 Mon 12:14ct