CRITICAL REVIEW [Part II] by 
Kaukab Siddique
FATIMA MERNISSI BLUNDERED IN HER ATTACK ON 'UMAR, r.a.
[Mernissi has been made famous in 
USA]
MERNISSI MISUNDERSTOOD HOW 
HADITH 
WORKS
Mernissi's work The Veil and the Male Elite is littered with serious and 
fundamental errors. 
My main purpose here is to deal with her attack on 'Umar, r.a., 
(one of the greatest Muslims of all times). 
However, let me refer in passing to Mernissi's procedural weaknesses. 
She builds her case largely on history books and tafseers 
[interpretations of the 
Qur'an]. 
She does not seem to understand that a scholar's tafseer on the Qur'an 
is not a source of 
Islam 
but only a source of help in understanding it. 
The sources of Islam are the Qur'an and the authentic Hadith. 
History books, even Tabari's Tarikh, are not as reliable as books of Hadith, 
such as the collections of 
Imam Bukhari 
and Imam Muslim.
Again, Hadith are not to be taken at random. 
A scholar of Hadith must have the vision to bring together all that the 
Hadith says on a subject. 
Also, understanding how Hadith was collected requires scholarship. 
If Imam Bukhari selected 7,257 Hadith out of 600,000, that does not mean 
(as Mernissi tells us on page 44) that the rest were "false." 
If a sahabi (companion) of the Prophet had 100 students and they heard 
10 Hadith from their teacher, that would technically be 1000 Hadith, 
and then each of those students might have a 100 of his own students 
and those 10 Hadith would multiply further, 
each with its separate chains of narration. 
The process of criticism of Hadith, as Mernissi knows but easily forgets, 
started with 'Ayesha, r.a., 
and had been greatly developed before Imam Bukhari brought it to perfection.
If Mernissi does not like a Hadith, 
she carries out a psychological analysis of the sahabi narrating it. 
Hence she paints weird pictures of Abu Bakra, 
Abu Huraira and 'Umar (Allah be pleased with them) 
which are nothing more than Merissi's fancy buttressed by later writers 
(as she conveniently forgets that 'Umar had many sectarian enemies who 
spread baseless stories about him).
WHO ARE THE MEMBERS OF THE "MALE ELITE?" 
One would suspect that Mernissi would refer to the corrupt (Europeanized) 
rulers of the Muslim countries, 
including her own patron the king of Morocco (bootlicker of America and 
Israel). 
Instead she targets the best of men. She writes:
"Uthman ... was a member of the small group of privileged persons from 
which were recruited the first caliphs." (p.40)
Thus 'Usman, r.a., and others who gave up all they had and followed a 
lifestyle which was so simple that no ruler in any country throughout 
history can be compared to them, are claimed by Mernissi as "privileged 
persons." It would be difficult to mention EVEN ONE privilege which they 
had. Equality is essential to authentic Islam and no one did more for 
equality than Abu Bakr, 'Ayesha, 'Umar, 'Usman, Bilal and many others with 
them. To confuse them with the Ummayad and Abbasid kings is a fatal 
mistake for a scholar.
An entire book could easily be written to refute Mernissi, 
but I want to go back to the "enslavement" of women owing to 'Umar, r.a., 
and the veil which she claims.
Mernissi does not seem to know that the curtain (hijab) is not the same as 
the modest dress prescribed in 33:59. Also she ignores the fact that the 
wives of the Prophet (pbuh) were distinguished from other Muslim women 
because they were to be the teachers of the community:
"O wives of the Prophet! You are not like any other women." 
[The Qur'an 33:32]
Thus the hijab (curtain) which was ordained to protect the Prophet's 
privacy and to stop intrusions into his small poor man's home 
(may Allah help us to follow his Sunnah and live modestly), 
was not applicable to all Muslim women. 
The curtains which have been imposed in mosques and harem-style 
Muslim homes (palaces) are not from the time of original Islam.
Merinissi's FATAL ATTRACTION for the colonizing power of the West comes 
out in her own words as she attacks 'Umar (who has no equal in his justice, 
vision, frugality, lack of love of power, desire for equality, 
and as a LIBERATOR OF WOMEN other than the Prophet, pbuh, himself). 
Here is Mernissi's claim:
" 'Umar's solution, imposing the hijab/curtain that hides women instead 
of changing attitudes and forcing 'those in whose heart is a diseas' to 
act differently, was going to overshadow Islam's dimension as a 
civilization, as a body of thought on the individual and his/her role 
in society. This body of thought made dar al-Islam (the land of Islam) 
at the outset a pioneering experiment in terms of individual freedom 
and democracy. But the hijab fell over Medina and cut short the brief 
burst of freedom. Paradoxically, 13 centuries later it was colonial 
power that would force the Muslim states to reopen the question of 
the right of the individual and of women. All debates on democracy 
get tied up in the woman question and that piece of cloth that 
opponents of human rights today claim to be the very essence of 
Muslim identity." [page 188]
Thus for Mernissi, dictator 
Mubarak 
of 
Egypt 
who wants to remove that "piece of cloth" and turn all Egyptian women 
into copies of Jihan Sadat, is fighting for "human rights," while 
Shaikh Omar 'Abdel Rahman, 
who defies U.S. imperialism, Israel and Mubarak, and wants women to wear 
that 'piece of cloth' is an opponent of "human rights!" 
Also, the former Shah of 
Iran, 
with his Pahlavi dolls in Parisian style, was for those rights, 
while Imam Khomeini, who restored Iran to a dignified independence, was 
"against" those rights because Iranian women wear chadors!
For a refutation of Mernissi, I will go to her main source 
(though I wonder if she read the actual book or picked quotes from 
somewhere) Tabari's Tarikh.
[See the stunning conclusion in Part III, inshallah.]
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2004-02-22 Sun 09:50ct