Women's Equality in the Mosque: How to explain Hadith which seem to 
discourage Women's Participation in the Masjid?
By Kaukab Siddique
Br. Shoaib, a well-read, thoughtful and thought provoking Muslim, 
active in the Muslim community in the London, England area has asked 
how one 
can explain hadith which seem to create an impression that it is better 
for women to pray at home and not go to the mosque. Here is my response:
The Qur'an gives the broad principle about the kind of people who 
should be in charge of mosques:
"The mosques of Allah shall be visited and maintained by such as 
believe in Allah and the Last Day, establish regular prayers, and pay the 
zakat, and fear none (at all) except Allah. It is they who are expected 
to be on true guidance." [9:18]
[I don't know about England, but most imams of mosques in 
America 
are disqualified by the final condition in that verse, 'fear none except 
Allah', 
as they are by and large bootlickers of the American power structure and 
hangers on of the rich and the powerful.]
Obviously 9:18 includes all believers, men and women, who have the 
given qualities, as those who are entitled to visit and maintain 
mosques. As 
Yusuf Ali's commentary points out (p.502), "ya'amuru" (roughly 
translated as 
'visited and maintained') includes all mosque activities, four of which 
he lists: 1. To build or repair. 2. to maintain in fitting dignity. 3. to 
visit 
for purposes of devotion 4. fill with light and life and activity.
The concept of "masjid" or mosque as taught by the Prophet Muhammad 
(pbuh) is so broad and comprehensive that there is no question of 
keeping anyone out of it who means well:
"Abu Huraira (r.a.) narrates that the messenger of Allah, pbuh, said: 
The ENTIRE earth has been made for me pure and a masjid." [Literally: 
place of prostration in worship.] Hadith, Sahih Muslim, kitabus salat, 
Tirmizey Sunan, kitabus siir, Ibn Maja's Sunan, kitabut taharah.
In the pre-Islamic ethos, women were given a secondary position in 
places of worship. In pagan temples, as in the Hindu religion, they 
were sent 
into places of worship to be made into servants of men and sources of 
entertainment. Pagan men often thought that women should bring 
enjoyment for men in places of worship. 
Islam 
rejected pagan use of women for 
entertainment. Hence the new entrants into Islam were very sensitive to 
the idea of women entering places of worship. They did not want mosques to 
go the way of pagan temples. [This fear was similar to the one related to 
rituals of 
Hajj which the pagans had corrupted. The Qur'an, for instance, taught 
Muslims 
that they should run up and down the hills of Safa and Marwa and not stay 
away just because they had seen the pagans going there. Islam was 
reclaiming the original worship for those who had cast paganism aside.]
Hence the Prophet (pbuh) commanded:
[From Nafi', who narrates from Abdullah ibn ‘Umar (r.a.): The Prophet, 
pbuh, said]: Do not stop the maid servants of Allah from the mosques of 
Allah. (Hadith, Muwatta of Imam Malik, compiled  late in the first 
century of Islam, published in the second.)
Then there was the element of lawlessness because Madina was under attack 
and the streets of the city were not lighted. In spite of the element 
of danger, Prophet, pbuh, insisted:
[From ‘Amash, from Mujahid from Ibn ‘Umar] The messenger of Allah, pbuh, 
said: "Do not stop women from going to the mosque at NIGHT." [Hadith, 
Bukhari, Muslim, Abu Dawud, Tirmizy, kitabus salat.]
Imam Abu Hanifa, who began his hadith studies in the first century of 
Islam, and completed his work in the first half of the second century 
compiled this specific hadith about women's participation in the mosque 
prayers at the difficult times of morning, before sun rise, and at night:
"Abu Hanifa narrates from Hammad from Ibrahim from Sha'abi from Ibn ‘Umar 
(r.a.): The Prophet, pbuh, permitted women to go forth and participate in 
fajr and ‘Isha. (Musnad of Imam Abu Hanifa, under the heading: The 
benefit of participation in Fajr and Isha prayers.]
Hazrat ‘Ayesha narrates the ongoing process of women coming for 
collective [jamaat] prayers in the mosque so early that it was pitch 
dark and the women could not be recognized:
"From the Mother of the believers, ‘Ayesha (r.a.): After the messenger 
of Allah completed the fajr prayer, the women, wrapped in their outer 
garments, returned homes. It used to be so dark that they could not be 
recognized." [Hadith, Bukhari, Muslim, Abu Dawud, Nasai, kitabus 
salat.]
IT APPEARS THAT NOT ONLY WOMEN PARTICIPATED WITH THE PROPHET (pbuh) 
in the PRAYERS, with male sahaba, companions of the Prophet, the women 
also HELD THEIR OWN COLLECTIVE PRAYERS IN THE MASJID:
Tamima, the daughter of Salama, narrates that the Mother of the 
Believers, ‘Ayesha (r.a.) led the women as their imam in Maghrib 
prayers. She 
stood in the center (of the first line) and recited loudly. [Darqutni, 
with reference to the musannaf og Abdur Razzaq, 3:141]
Hujaira, the daughter of Husaain, narrates: Umm Salama, mother of the 
believers, led us inb Asr prayer and stood in the middle (of the first 
row). [Compiled by Ibn Saad in his Tabaqat, vol.8, p.356. Darqutni has 
collected 
this narration from Ibn Abi Shaiba, Abdur Razzaq and Imam Shafii.]
Taus narrates that the mother of the belivers, ‘Ayesha Siddiqa, (r.a.) 
used to call the adhan and the iqama (before leading prayers). (The 
musannaf of Ibn Abi Shaiba, 1:223)
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Nearly 99.9% of hadith collected by the scholars of Islam are 
authentic. There are a very few, however, which are defective or out of 
context. There are even a couple of fabrications which managed to 
survive the 
intense scrutiny of scholars; hence the hadith is put second to the 
Qur'an, and not equal to it, as the source of Islamic knowledge.
Related to the issue of women's equal participation in mosques, here is 
a discouraging hadith which opponents of women's rights in the mosque, 
use:
"From Ibn ‘Umar (r.a.): The Prophet (pbuh) said: Do not stop your women 
from going to the mosque and their homes are better for them." [Hakim 
in his Mustadrak vol.1, p.209.]
It is also related in Abu Daw'ud's Sunan under the heading: "Collective 
prayer and its blessings."
As we noticed above, there are hadith with excellent chains of narration 
from Ibn ‘Umar (r.a.) accepted by the imams of Hadith, Bukhari and 
Muslim, in 
which the Prophet (pbuh) commands: Do not stop women from going to the 
mosque. So why the contradiction in this hadith attributed to Ibn ‘Umar 
(r.a.) himself?
My understanding is that this hadith is narrating two pieces of 
narration and has left out what went on between them. It is narrated 
that when ‘Ibn ‘Umar (r.a.) narrated the Prophet's (pbuh) command not to 
stop women, Ibn ‘Umar's son objected and said their homes are better for 
them and 
that  people will use the hadith permitting women to go "to weave the 
webs of 
deception." His son insisted that he would stop his wife. At this ‘Ibn 
‘Umar was extremely upset. He said to his son: "I am telling you what the 
Prophet 
said and you are saying you will stop your wife!" (Musnad of Abu Hanifa) 
Other narratives say that ‘Ibn ‘Umar cursed his son for opposing the 
Prophet's command. Some even say that he thereafter refused to talk to 
his son.(Musnad of Ahmed)
My understanding is that the words "their homes are better for them" 
are a fragment from the bitter words between father and son and have been 
inserted along with the Prophet's command into the collections of Hakim 
and Abu Dawud. [Note that Ibn ‘Umar's son was not a sahabi and his opinion 
does not count as a religious text.]
Imam Bukhari and Imam Muslim left the fragment "their homes are better 
for them" out of their collections which are universally accepted as 
the most authentic of Hadith collections.
Opponents of women in the mosques also bring a narration which says:
"Abdul Hamid bin al-Mundhir Ansari narrated from his grandmother or his 
mother's aunt, not clear which, Umm Humaid, as follows: The Prophet, pbuh, 
said, your prayer in your home, is better than the one you pray with 
me" (in masjid nabawi): (Ahmed in his Musnad, vol.6, p.371)
This has a number of variations, one of which appears in Ibn Khuzaima's 
collection to the effect that "it is better for a woman to pray in the 
inner little room of her house than to pray in the main room of the house, 
better 
to pray in the local mosque than in the main mosque ..." (Attributed to 
hazrat ‘Ayesha in Baihaqi's Sunan.)
Abdul Hamid al-Mundhir's narration is not acceptable because the 
scholars of Hadith say that he is MAJHUL. No one knows who he was. The 
narrations which support women's rights have well known, in fact 
famous, narrators at every level of narration.
The narration attributed to hazrat ‘Ayesha (r.a.), if taken at face 
value, contradicts the numerous narrations which assert that women used 
to pray in the mosque in the time of the Prophet (pbuh) and in the 
caliphate of 
Abu Bakr, ‘Umar, Usman and Ali (Allah be pleased with them). In fact ‘Umar 
and Ali (Allah be pleased with them), leaders, along with ‘Ayesha (r.a) 
of Islamic thought, took extra efforts to appoint imams to lead women in 
prayers 
in the main masjid, especially when the crowds were big in Ramadan and 
the main imam could not be heard by the women.
‘Ayesha the exalted (r.a.) not only prayed in the masjid BUT LED 
PRAYERS in masjide nabawi.
I have been trying to trace the cause behind this narration from 
‘Ayesha (r.a.) given by Baihaqi. It appears that there was a woman who 
was so 
poverty stricken that she did not have enough clothes to cover herself 
to travel from her home on the outskirts of Madina to the mosque of the 
Prophet 
(pbuh). At the same time she was too self-respecting to accept charity. 
The Prophet (pbuh) understood her dilemma and her modesty. He gave her a 
blessing 
that if she prayed in the innermost closet room of her home, she would 
get the same rewards as if she was praying in the mosque of the Prophet 
(pbuh). [Allahu Akbar wa lillahil hamd.] This it was not an effort by the 
Prophet (pbuh) to curtail the participation of women in the mosques, which 
would have 
contradicted his entire mission, but to give special blessings to a 
woman's vibrant faith and sincerity.
It would be extremely CONTRADICTORY for all those women to be going to 
the masjid at FAJR and ‘ISHA (as quoted in sahih hadith above) if they 
could 
have just stayed at home and gotten more rewards for praying at home. I 
don't think the opponents of women's rights have a case here.
Finally there are some narrations which claim that ‘Umar (r.a.) did 
not like his wife to go to the masjid. [Perhaps he remembered how women 
were 
used as sources of corruption in the pagan forms of worship even in the 
most 
sacred of places, the Ka'aba.] However, remembering the command of the 
Prophet (pbuh) he never actually stopped his wife. In fact the relevant 
narration is very instructive about the tension created by the 
emergence of 
the new revolutionary Islamic community coming out of a background of 
jahiliyya and exploitation of women: 
"Mu'ammar narrates from Zuhri that ‘Atika, the daughter of Zaid 
ibn'Umru bin Nufail, was marrried to ‘Umar ibn al-Khattab (r.a.). She 
used to 
pray regularly in the masjid. ‘Umar used to say to her: By Allah! You 
know that I don't like this. She would reply: I will not stop until you 
actually 
forbid me. ‘Umar would say:, No, I will not forbid you. The day ‘Umar 
(r.a.) was assassinated, ‘Atika was in the mosque." (Abdur Razzaq's 
collection, vol.3:148)
Ibn Hazm has a superb comment on this situation. He says, ‘Umar (r.a.) 
could have said that ‘Atika you are doing something inferior (praying 
in the 
masjid) as opposed to praying at home which  according to the narration 
we discussed above is superior. Also, I, as husband,  disapprove of it. 
How could a sahabia (‘Atika, r.a.) continue to act in a way which was 
inferior in 
worship and aroused the displeasure of her husband, and a husband who 
was a great Muslim, a great teacher of Islam and the greatest Khalifa the 
Muslims 
have ever had. Obviously both ‘Umar (r.a.) and ‘Atika (r.a.) knew that 
‘Umar 
was simply expressing his gut feeling and not an Islamic edict. She was 
torn 
by the assassination of ‘Umar (r.a.); she loved him beyond herself. All 
the women of Madina respected him as their older brother. Their mourning 
knew no 
bounds when he was assassinated. He is the one who got down from the 
mimbar 
in humility when a woman of Madina objected to a point he had made in his 
khutba in MASJIDE NABAWI. [I have referenced this incident elsewhere in 
my writings.]
In ‘Umar's armies there were thousands of Islamic women, both married 
and unmarried, who went forth to topple the empires of Rome and Persia. 
I have documented this fact in a critique I wrote of Fatima Mernissi who 
was ignorant of basic facts about ‘Umar (r.a.) and made some false 
statements 
about this great servant of Allah, great leader and mujtahid.
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2002-09-28 Sat 17:00ct